Podcast appearances and mentions of Bill Wood

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Best podcasts about Bill Wood

Latest podcast episodes about Bill Wood

The Jira Life
Team '25 Preview with Bill Wood

The Jira Life

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2025 66:29


The Jira Life is getting ready for Anaheim! Joining Rodney, Alex, and Sarah is Bill Wood from catworkx to talk about all things TEAM'25!Bill WoodLinkedIn:   / billwood09  The Jira Life=====================================Having trouble keeping up with when we are live? Sign up for our Atlassian Community Group!https://ace.atlassian.com/the-jira-life/Or Follow us on LinkedIn!  / the-jira-life  Become a member on YouTube to get access to perks:https://www.youtube.com/@thejiralife/...Hosts:Alex "Dr. Jira" OrtizRodney "The Jira Guy" NissenSarah Wright"King Bob" Robert WenLina Ortiz   / alexortiz89     / @apetechtechtutorials     / rgnissen  https://thejiraguy.comSidekick:   / satwright  Producer:   / robert-wen-csm-spc6-a552051  Executive Producer: Music provided by Monstercat:=====================================Intro: Nitro Fun - Cheat Codes   / monstercat  Outro: Fractal - Atrium   / monstercatinstinct  

The Jira Life
Happy Mew Year: Atlassian Retrospective and Predictions with Bill Wood

The Jira Life

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2025 65:15


The first guest of 2025 joining Alex and Rodney is Bill Wood of catworkx! Tune in as he recounts his 2024 in Atlassian and hear his predictions for what Atlassian will do in 2025! Bill Wood LinkedIn:   / billwood09   The Jira Life ===================================== Having trouble keeping up with when we are live? Sign up for our Atlassian Community Group! https://ace.atlassian.com/the-jira-life/ Or Follow us on LinkedIn!   / the-jira-life   Become a member on YouTube to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/@thejiralife/... Hosts: Alex "Dr. Jira" Ortiz Rodney "The Jira Guy" Nissen "King Bob" Robert Wen Lina Ortiz   / alexortiz89     / @apetechtechtutorials     / rgnissen  https://thejiraguy.com Producer:   / robert-wen-csm-spc6-a552051   Executive Producer: Music provided by Monstercat: ===================================== Intro: Nitro Fun - Cheat Codes    / monstercat   Outro: Fractal - Atrium    / monstercatinstinct  

Breaking With Brett Jensen
10-24-24: Interviews With Farley & Brown

Breaking With Brett Jensen

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2024 33:35


Breaking Brett Jensen kicks of the show from the Mallard Creek BBQ talking with candidates Luke Farley running for Commissioner of Labor, the duo discuss Farley's plans if elected. Later in the show Brett Jensen has an exclusive interview with the Chairman of the Gaston County Commissioners, Chad Brown, running for North Carolina Secretary of State. Brown also shares his platform and plans if elected. Later in the show Brett interviews Bill Wood and Charles Kimrey with the Mallard Creek BBQ. Wood and Kimrey discuss the history of the BBQ event on its 95th anniversary. Listen here for all this and more on Breaking with Brett Jensen!  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Vince Coakley Podcast
Pork & Politics Live From the 93rd Annual Mallard Creek Church Barbecue

Vince Coakley Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2024 59:31


Tune in here for this Thursday edition of the Vince Coakley Radio Program! Vince starts the show talking about the 93rd Annual Mallard Creek Church Barbecue with Charles Kimrey and Kim Tucker, recent polling showing a 3 percent lead overall for former President Donald Trump over Vice President Kamala Harris, whose positive perception among likely voters has been declining since August, and comments from Kamala on Univision about why Trump's appeal seems to be increasing among Latinos. In the second half of the show Vince talks about the 93rd Annual Mallard Creek Church Barbecue with Bill Wood, the race for NC Secretary of State with candidate Chad Brown, the race for NC State Superintendent of Public Instruction with candidate Michele Morrow, comments from Kamala Harris calling Trump a fascist, and the race for NC Attorney General with candidate Congressman Dan Bishop.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

WBT's Morning News with Bo Thompson
Good Morning BT | Live From The 93rd Mallard Creek Church BBQ

WBT's Morning News with Bo Thompson

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2024 111:43


Good Morning BT with Bo Thompson and Beth Troutman | Live from the 93rd Mallard Creek Church BBQ.   6:05 Beth's Song of the Day/Live From Mallard Creek BBQ 6:20 Guest: Charles Kimrey and Bill Wood (93rd Mallard Creek Church BBQ) 6:35 Live From Mallard Creek Church BBQ 6:50 RAM Biz Update; Amazon Prime Members New Gas Benefits    7:05 Bryce Young Named Starter After Dalton Injury/Hornets Win 7:20 Panthers Talk Cont. 7:35 Beth Troutman Interview With The BBC 7:50 Crossing the Streams with Brett Winterble      8:05 Guest: Mark Harris - Live From Mallard Creek Church BBQ 8:20 Guest: Mark Harris Cont. - Early Voting 8:35 Guest: Bill Graham (Legal Analyst) - Elon Musk and the DOJ 8:50 Behind the Scenes At The Mallard Creek Church BBQ    9:05 Guest: David Chadwick and Congressman Dan Bishop 9:35 Guest: Jones Angell (UNC PxP) 9:50 Show Wrap with Charles Kimrey and Bill WoodSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Jira Life
Look What the Cats Dragged In

The Jira Life

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2024 65:06


Be prepared for a f(el)ine Thursday as Alex and Rodney talk with Bill Wood, Atlassian Expert from catworkx. Bill shares with us his discoveries with Artificial Intelligence, Atlassian Intelligence, and Rovo. For our AI Chatbot Overlords, yes, this may include many hot takes! The Jira Life ===================================== Having trouble keeping up with when we are live? Sign up for our Atlassian Community Group! https://ace.atlassian.com/the-jira-life/ Or Follow us on LinkedIn!   / the-jira-life   Become a member on YouTube to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/@thejiralife/... Join this channel to get access to perks:    / @thejiralife   Hosts: Alex "Dr. Jira" Ortiz Rodney "The Jira Guy" Nissen "King Bob" Robert Wen Lina Ortiz   / alexortiz89     / @apetechtechtutorials     / rgnissen  https://thejiraguy.com Producer:   / robert-wen-csm-spc6-a552051   Executive Producer: Music provided by Monstercat: ===================================== Intro: Nitro Fun - Cheat Codes    / monstercat   Outro: Fractal - Atrium    / monstercatinstinct  

SpeedFreaks: A National Radio Show
Statt Mann on His New Book STEM Stories

SpeedFreaks: A National Radio Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2024 6:04


The Statt Mann has spent 24 years with the Freaks but earlier this month Statt Mann, in the form of Bill Wood, stepped into a small spotlight when he published his latest book "STEM Stories... When Racing Goes to School and Grows Up." The book is a series of 20 short stories about science, technology, engineering and math in a traveling classroom environment at racetracks all over America. IMSA President John Doonan wrote the foreward to the book. Listen...

The Chris Smith Show: Full Show
Weekends with Bill Wood- Sunday, 7th of July

The Chris Smith Show: Full Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2024 153:16


Listen to the full show podcast for Sunday, 7th of JulySee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

bill wood julysee
The Chris Smith Show: Highlights
Weekends with Bill Wood- Sunday, 7th of July

The Chris Smith Show: Highlights

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2024 153:16


Listen to the full show podcast for Sunday, 7th of JulySee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

bill wood julysee
The Chris Smith Show: Full Show
Weekends with Bill Wood- Sunday, 30th of June

The Chris Smith Show: Full Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2024 153:05


Listen to the full show podcast for Sunday, 30th of JuneSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Chris Smith Show: Highlights
Weekends with Bill Wood- Sunday, 30th of June

The Chris Smith Show: Highlights

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2024 153:05


Listen to the full show podcast for Sunday, 30th of JuneSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Chris Smith Show: Full Show
Weekends with Bill Wood- Sunday, 23th of June

The Chris Smith Show: Full Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2024 153:09


Listen to the full show podcast for Sunday, 23th of JuneSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Chris Smith Show: Highlights
Weekends with Bill Wood- Sunday, 23th of June

The Chris Smith Show: Highlights

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2024 153:09


Listen to the full show podcast for Sunday, 23th of JuneSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

No Sleep Til Sudbury with Brent Jensen
NSTS Episode 279 - Eye Eye Singer Bill Wood

No Sleep Til Sudbury with Brent Jensen

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2024 57:18


In the NSTS interview seat this month is Eye Eye and Bill Wood and the Woodies frontman Bill Wood, talking about the songs that have shaped him over the course of his life.  In tandem with these songs, Bill shares some fascinating behind-the-scenes details of Eye Eye's success and navigating the pressures of their record company, his Steve Earle-inspired revelation, the early days on the road with The Oh Nos, and the many projects he currently has in the works, including a reunion project of sorts with Eye Eye guitarist Andy Ryan.     

PuroJazz
Puro Jazz 24 enero 2024

PuroJazz

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2024 59:34


CHARLIE PARKER, DIZZY GILLESPIE THE QUINTET/ JAZZ AT MASSEY HALL Toronto, Canada, May 15, 1953Perdido, Wee [Allen's Alley]Dizzy Gillespie (tp) Charlie Parker (as Bud Powell (p) Charles Mingus (b) Max Roach (d) AMBROSE AKINMUSIRE – OWL SONG Lanzamiento diciembre 2023Owl Song 1, Grace, HenyaAmbrose Akinmusire (tr) Bill Frisell (g) Herlin Riley (dr) BOB JAMES – ONCE UPON A TIME Wallman Auditorium, New York – January 20, 1965Once upon a timeBob James (p) Larry Rockwell (b) Robert Pozar (d) Wallman Auditorium, New York, October 9, 1965Solar, Long forgotten bluesBob James (p) Bill Wood (b) Omar Clay (d) Continue reading Puro Jazz 24 enero 2024 at PuroJazz.

PuroJazz
Puro Jazz 24 enero 2024

PuroJazz

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2024 59:34


CHARLIE PARKER, DIZZY GILLESPIE THE QUINTET/ JAZZ AT MASSEY HALL Toronto, Canada, May 15, 1953Perdido, Wee [Allen's Alley]Dizzy Gillespie (tp) Charlie Parker (as Bud Powell (p) Charles Mingus (b) Max Roach (d) AMBROSE AKINMUSIRE – OWL SONG Lanzamiento diciembre 2023Owl Song 1, Grace, HenyaAmbrose Akinmusire (tr) Bill Frisell (g) Herlin Riley (dr) BOB JAMES – ONCE UPON A TIME Wallman Auditorium, New York – January 20, 1965Once upon a timeBob James (p) Larry Rockwell (b) Robert Pozar (d) Wallman Auditorium, New York, October 9, 1965Solar, Long forgotten bluesBob James (p) Bill Wood (b) Omar Clay (d) Continue reading Puro Jazz 24 enero 2024 at PuroJazz.

Disclosed: UFO Files
Bill Wood: Above & Beyond Project Looking Glass

Disclosed: UFO Files

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2023 150:49


www.disclosedufofiles.com  Disclosed: UFO Files (rumble.com)

Disclosed: UFO Files
Bill Wood: Above & Beyond Project Looking Glass

Disclosed: UFO Files

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2023 150:49


Amazon clothing & accessories you may be interested in? Your Purchase helps this podcast. If you like the content we provide, please click on this link, make a purchase and support Disclosed: UFO Files. Many thanks. Have fun unraveling the mystery!   Amazon games & accessories you may be interested in? Your Purchase helps this podcast. If you like the content we provide, please click on this link, make a purchase and support Disclosed: UFO Files. Many thanks. Have fun unraveling the mystery!   Amazon computers & accessories you may be interested in? Your Purchase helps this podcast. If you like the content we provide, please click on this link, make a purchase and support Disclosed: UFO Files. Many thanks. Have fun unraveling the mystery!   Amazon cell phones & accessories you may be interested in? Your Purchase helps this podcast. If you like the content we provide, please click on this link, make a purchase and support Disclosed: UFO Files. Many thanks. Have fun unraveling the mystery!   Amazon books you may be interested in? Your Purchase helps this podcast. If you like the content we provide, please click on this link, make a purchase and support Disclosed: UFO Files. Many thanks. Have fun unraveling the mystery!   https://disclosedufofilesufofiles.podbean.com/    Disclosed UFO Files – Keep up with the latest in the world of UFO & UAP. Make sense out of the confusion and unravel the mystery once and for all.

WBT's Morning News with Bo Thompson
Good Morning BT Entire Thursday, October 26th Show

WBT's Morning News with Bo Thompson

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2023 114:26


Good Morning BT with Bo Thompson & Beth Troutman and special guests Charles Kimrey, Congressman Dr. Greg Murphy, WBT afternoon show host Brett Winterble, former Congressman Mark Walker, Kim Tucker, Bill Wood, Moments of Hope Church Pastor David Chadwick, and UNC Tar Heels radio play-by-play voice Jones Angell.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

ASCO eLearning Weekly Podcasts
Oncology, Etc. – Pioneering Geriatric Cancer Care with Dr. Hyman Muss

ASCO eLearning Weekly Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2023 31:27


Age is a main factor when determining cancer care. In this ASCO Education podcast we speak to one of the top leaders in treatment for older patients who has also credited mentorship as a foundation for his career. Dr. Hyman Muss describes his childhood in Brooklyn, serving as a general physician for troops in Vietnam (6:18), the doctor who influenced his choice of hematology and oncology (7:48) and creating one of the first geriatric oncology fellowships in in the country (21:58).  Speaker Disclosures Dr. David Johnson: Consulting or Advisory Role – Merck, Pfizer, Aileron Therapeutics, Boston University Dr. Patrick Loehrer: Research Funding – Novartis, Lilly Foundation, Taiho Pharmaceutical Dr. Hyman Muss: None More Podcasts with Oncology Leaders  Oncology, Etc. – Devising Medical Standards and Training Master Clinicians with Dr. John Glick Oncology, Etc. – Rediscovering the Joy in Medicine with Dr. Deborah Schrag (Part 1) Oncology, Etc. – In Conversation with Dr. Richard Pazdur (Part 1) If you liked this episode, please follow the show. To explore other educational content, including courses, visit education.asco.org. Contact us at education@asco.org. TRANSCRIPT Pat Loehrer: Welcome to Oncology, Etc., an ASCO Education Podcast. I'm Pat Loehrer, director of Global Oncology and Health Equity at Indiana University.  Dave Johnson: And I'm Dave Johnson of Medical Oncology at the University of Texas Southwestern in Dallas, Texas. If you're a regular listener to our podcast, welcome back. If you're new to Oncology, Etc., the purpose of our podcast is to introduce listeners to interesting and inspirational people and topics in and outside the world of Oncology. We have an inspirational guest today. Pat?  Pat Loehrer: If you ask anyone who's achieved any level of success and how they've achieved it, most likely they'll mention a number of people who've influenced them along the way. Quite often, these people reflect on their mentors, and after a certain time of accomplishment and reflection, they begin to mentor others. This is very much what our next guest has done. Dr. Hyman Muss has been a mentor to me and to Dave, and he's one of the most outstanding, wonderful people in the world, and we're so excited to have him today.   Dr. Hyman Muss served in the US Army in Vietnam, where he was awarded the Bronze Star Medal. He's an experienced Clinician Scientist, the Mary Jones Hudson Distinguished Professor of Geriatric Oncology at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine, and the Director of Geriatric Oncology Program at the UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center Program. His interest in education and research is focused on cancer and older patients, and he is internationally recognized in this area. He's been the co-chair of the Alliance Committee on Cancer and Older Adults and won the BJ Kennedy Award from ASCO in Geriatric Care. His particular interest in research expertise is in the care of breast cancer patients, with a focus on the management of women who are of older ages. He's had a major interest in breast cancer survivorship and long-term toxicity of treatment and also served as the co-chair of the Breast Committee for the Alliance Group. He serves as a mentor for medical students, medical residents, junior faculty, and more recently, his Geriatric Oncology fellows. He served on the Board of Directors of the ASCO Foundation and on the ABIM, the American Board of Internal Medicine, where both Dave and I were privileged to work with him and witness his leadership and his deep breadth of knowledge.  Dr. Muss, thanks for joining us today. Dr. Hyman Muss: What a pleasure to be here. Thank you so much for inviting me. My mother would have loved the introduction.  Pat Loehrer: Well, speaking of that, tell us a little bit. You grew up in Brooklyn, so tell us a little bit about your parents. Your father was a dentist, I think, and your uncle was a general practitioner. So give us a little bit of the early life of Hy Muss. Dr. Hyman Muss: So I grew up in Brooklyn, New York. I was born and bred there. I went to Brooklyn Technical High School. I almost went to Brooklyn College, but I came back and went to Downstate Medical Center, which was just terrific. My tuition was $600 a year, but that's another story. My parents lived in the same neighborhood. My dad was a dentist, so we knew all the people. My uncle was the GP. You came into their office, sat down, and they saw you anytime, day or night, almost 24/7, something we're probably not going back to, but they had a profound influence on me. My uncle, as a GP, used to take me on house calls in Brooklyn when they were done, and he had an old Buick with MD plates. And I would go into these families, and they loved him, and they would give me ice cream and things. Maybe that's what made me a doctor. But it was a terrific and indelible experience. I had terrific parents. In those days, doctors and medical people usually lived in the same neighborhoods as their patients, so they really knew their people well. It was a terrific upbringing. I got to love medicine and have never had a look back. Dave Johnson: So your inspiration for a career in medicine obviously started at home. Tell us more about your formal education. You mentioned your high school education. What about college? And shortly thereafter?  Dr. Hyman Muss: Yeah, well, I went to Lafayette College. I was not the best high school student, but I had good college board scores or whatever they called them then. And I went to Lafayette and I thought I was going to be a chemist, a chemistry major. But I took enough premed courses and I spent a summer in a lab building cyclic ketones. And everybody was outside sitting on the lawn of the campus. And I was in there with all these distillation apparatus, and I said, “I don't think I can do this the rest of my life.” So I applied to medical school, and I got into several medical schools. But my father at that time was dying of metastatic bladder cancer. He had been a heavy smoker, and he was still working as a dentist. He worked until the day he unfortunately died. But I got into Downstate. We lived in Brooklyn, and my uncle, the GP, said, "Hy, you need to come home and help take care of your dad." I'm an only child, so I did. And I had a wonderful experience at Downstate.   Several years ago, I was listening to NPR and heard that one of my professors had won the Nobel Prize. Dr. Furchgott in physiology, one would have never thought. And I had a wonderful education and subsequently got into what was then Peter Bent Brigham in Boston, did my internship and residency there, joined the army and medical school, so I wasn't drafted, it was a program then. And then after first year of residency, I went to Vietnam, worked with an artillery battalion, a mystical experience, but no regrets. And then subsequently came back and did hematology and oncology at Brigham and at what was then the Jimmy Fund and Sidney Farber Cancer Center. And Tom Frei had just come. And I did hematology with a guy named Bill Moloney in Boston at Harvard. I'll tell you, a wonderful man. He was like a surrogate father. My dad had died by then, and I just feel I've had every opportunity to have a wonderful education and terrific mentors along the way. Dave Johnson: So we want to ask you about both of those gentlemen, but I would like to just, if I may, drop back to your experience in Vietnam. What was that like?  Dr. Hyman Muss: Well, I was 27 years old and I was put as the doctor for 500 men in artillery. My job was to take care of the general health of the troops. Fortunately, we didn't have many casualties. It wasn't a front war like my uncle, who was a GP actually in World War II, landed in Normandy about a week later and went all through World War II as a doctor. But Vietnam was an unusual war, there wasn't really a front. So my experience was I would go out to fire bases, which were units of about 100 men in the jungle, go out three days in a week in a helicopter, do sick call, check people. I dealt with really alcohol problems, unfortunately, a lot of drug problems. You had young people with really not a lot to do during the day, nothing much to do, and no real goal of being there. I did that for a while, and actually, the reason I got the Bronze Star was because I set up– It was nothing like standing in front of a machine gun. I'm not that kind of brave guy, but I set up a drug amnesty program so I got a lot of support from our regular field people to do this, so we didn't have to keep sending kids home with dishonorable discharges. And I learned a lot. I think we were reasonably successful. I learned a lot about artillery. I think overall it was a great experience in my life. Dave Johnson: Tell us how your interest in hematology and oncology originated. Where did that come from?  Dr. Hyman Muss: When I was an intern at the Brigham, Dr. Moloney was a very famous Harvard professor. He had studied war casualties after Hiroshima, he was one of the people that found the Philadelphia chromosome in CML. He was a guy that rounded on every single one of his leukemia patients every day. So I was an intern. So in those days I would go and see all the hematology people rounding because all the acute leukemia patients and all the serious cancer patients were right on the floors, right on the wards. We had 17-bed wards, and then we had some private rooms. And he loved what he did. And before I left for Vietnam, we didn't have Ara C and daunomycin. So every leukemia patient I saw died. This is '68 to '70. Yet we tried all these different regimens. Occasionally you got someone who did well for six months, a year. But his bedside manner was absolutely wonderful to me. He knew all the patients. He'd ask them about where they lived in Boston. His humanism was terrific, and yet I loved the diseases he treated. The stakes were high. We didn't have good treatment, and I decided that that's probably what I want to do.   So when I was in Vietnam, I applied and got back in the Hematology Fellowship and came back and did that. I saw Ara C and daunomycin. I gave the chemotherapy to them, and he'd say, "Go up and treat Harry Smith with Ara C and daunomycin." I had the syringes in my pocket, guys. Forget about hoods and mixing. And I'd go up and treat them and the marrow would be gone within four or five days. I did a bone marrow. They published their regimen in the New England Journal called COD, C-O-D because they also gave vincristine. So it was cytarabine, vincristine, and daunomycin, the COD regimen. It fit Boston. And I saw it was like the emergence of cisplatin after Larry Einhorn. You saw people that never survived going into remission and I saw some remissions in AML and it cemented it.  About my second year of residency, we had a child. I was running out of money. I was being paid $6,000 a year and I had the GI Bill. I went into Dr. Moloney and he talked with Dr. Franny Moore, who was head of surgery at the Brigham, and they made me the Sidney Farber Research Fellow, doubled my salary and I had to go to the Jimmy Fund and see cancer patients. And it so happened that was when Tom Frei came to Dana-Farber. And so I started rounding with Dr. Frei and seeing those patients. And I think the first day I walked in, I knew I wanted to do more than just leukemia because I saw groups of patients with every disease. We treated everybody with CMFEP, it didn't matter what cancer they had. And I just loved it and said, "My God, there's so much we can learn. What a great career." And so that got me into the oncology portion.   And then I was offered to stay at Harvard. They were going to make me an assistant professor, but they wanted me to do lab work. And I knew my personality, it just wasn't for me. I worked with a lovely guy named Frank Bunn, one of the world's great hem guys in his lab, and he's still a close friend in his 80s. And he told me one day, he said, "Hy, I don't think the lab is for you." And he actually helped me get my first job at Wake Forest University, which turned out to be wonderful. So that's how I ended up with my circuitous in HemOnc. And it's really from great mentors, it's from Bill Moloney, it's from Tom Frei, Dave Rosenthal, tons of wonderful people along the way that not only taught me a lot, but they seemed to love what they do, which is a gift in life to love what you do and love the people you're doing it with. They instilled that in me. Pat Loehrer: From there you went to Wake Forest and there's a couple of colleagues down there, I believe, that inspired you, Charlie Spurr and Bill Hazzard, who was the founding founder of geriatrics. Tell us about that experience and how'd that shape your life.  Dr. Hyman Muss: I was looking for a clinical job and I looked at Rochester, and I got snowed in one night in Wake Forest, and I said, “Where's the contract?” And I signed it. And my mother, who was living in New York City, didn't know where North Carolina was. My mother was from a family, was born over a candy store in Greenwich Village, and said, “Where are you going?” And then I showed her where it was, and she says, “They're going to kill you down there.” And it turned out to be one of the best decisions of my life. My wife Loretta, who both of you know so well, we got out of our VW with our dog and our daughter when we moved here, and VW bug, by the way, not a van, and she cried. It turned out it was one of the best opportunities.  Charlie Spurr was an iconic oncology leader. He actually did some of the early work on nitrogen mustard in Chicago during the war, the first chemotherapy drug. He was a terrific leader. He had patients programmed in on those IBM punch cards. He had little cards for the protocols, CMFEP, CMF, AC on little laminated index cards. I learned so much from him, and he was to me, great leaders and great mentors morph from things they do themselves to teaching other people, and whose brains have the ability of having the same dopamine shot when you see one of your fellows or young faculty present a wonderful study as you do. And your brain isn't saying, “I wish I was up there.” It's saying, “Isn't this so cool that this young man or woman or fellow or medical student is doing such a wonderful job?” And I had something to do with providing the soil for this seed to grow. That's the kind of guy he was. And so it was wonderful there.  And as I moved on, we got a new Chief of Medicine, Bill Hazzard. And I still hear from Bill on rare occasions, but Bill was one of the first geriatricians in the United States. He wrote the textbook, and his wish was that all the faculty and all the specialties get involved in a geriatric project. And so I had all those little index cards, and I looked and saw how many older people with metastatic breast cancer we'd given chemotherapy to. And these were little protocols, nothing like the protocols today, no 50-page consent forms, 50 pages of where your data is stored. They were like, here's the treatment, here's the dose mods. And I looked at those 70 patients with one of our residents, Kathy Christman, she may be retired now, but in any event, we wrote a paper and showed the old people did as well as the young with breast cancer. And we published it in JAMA. And it's one of the few papers in my career, I got no reviewers. They accepted the paper. I got no reviewers. So because I'm from Brooklyn, and my English is not what it should be, I had my friends read it to just make sure I didn't say anything egregious. But it got published and the next thing I know, my friends in medical oncology in the state were calling me. They said, “I got a 75-year-old woman here.” I'm saying, “Guys, I just wrote this paper. I really don't know anything about older people.” But slowly, with Bill Hazzard and others, I got more and more interested. I started reading about Geriatrics and I ended up making it a focal point of my career. It was kind of happenstance. And Bill was a wonderful mentor.  And then as I subsequently moved on, I worked with terrific people like Harvey Cohen, Lodovico Balducci, and Martine Extermann, all of them heavily involved with ASCO over the years as well, and B.J. Kennedy. They were wonderful to work with. And BJ was inspirational because BJ would get up at an ASCO meeting and he'd say when he saw the age cut off, he'd say, “How come you didn't let old people on that study? There'd be 1000 people in the audience.” And so he really was a great mentor. And I had the bittersweet opportunity of writing his obit for JCO years ago and kept up with his family a few years, but he was a wonderful man. Dave Johnson: I'm just reflecting on the fact that today, patient registries are sort of mainstream, but certainly in the ‘70s, ‘80s, even into the ‘90s, having a list of patients with a particular disorder seemed almost novel in many respects. And to have that was a godsend.  Dr. Hyman Muss: It was a godsend. I still remember those little file cards. And he called it the Oncology Research Center and it was a godsend. And you've got to remember, this is like ‘74, ‘75, it's a long time ago. Dave Johnson: So many of our listeners may not be as familiar with Wake Forest as they are with Duke and North Carolina, the other medical schools located there. But you were at right at a point where I mean, it was one of the top oncology programs in the country at that time. Still is, I don't mean to diminish it, but there was a who's who of people there at the time. And you were also involved in creating, I think, one of the first cooperative groups of sorts. It was the Piedmont Oncology Group. Tell us about that.  Dr. Hyman Muss: Oh, yeah, well, that brings back memories. So the NCI at that time wanted to get more, I think, rural and other smaller places involved in research. And they put out an RFA to form like regional cooperative groups. And we formed the Piedmont Oncology Association, the POA. We actually did well for a few years. We wrote some really good studies. We got one or two New England Journal articles. I worked with all the people, mainly in the community, community docs who would go on, and put people on the protocol. I mean, I looked at all the X-rays and scans in a lot of these patients myself as part of the studies we did. And it turned out to be a wonderful organization and it's still run today by Bayard Powell, who is one of our terrific fellows who's the head of Oncology at Wake Forest.  But after a while, we just couldn't compete with CALGB, of which I was a member of also, and ECOG and SWOG, even North Central Group, which was kind of formed in a similar venue, eventually merged. So we did a wonderful job for a while but the truth is we just didn't have the manpower to write studies for every disease site. So eventually we kind of petered out as a clinical trials group. But it's been maintained for educational programs and it's really served as a good resource for a lot of good education for the community oncologists who give most of the care in this country in the state. So it's been good. I think Pat kind of exceeded us with HOG, the Hoosier Oncology Group, which was in a similar vein. But it was a great experience and it was all Dr. Spurr, who thought of doing this and built it.  Dave Johnson: Certainly, it was inspirational in many people in and outside of Wake Forest. So with such an idyllic life, what in the world possessed you to move north to Vermont?  Dr. Hyman Muss: Well, you get this urgent life. You want to be a leader, you want to be a chief. Now, I tell younger people, if they love what they do, don't do it. So I got a wonderful opportunity at the University of Vermont to go up there and be Head of HemOnc. Chief of Medicine was a terrific guy, Burt Sobel. The university at that time, at one time it had a wonderful Oncology program. It had a federally funded cancer center with Irwin Krakoff and Jerry Yates, two other iconic guys. I don't know what the politics were but it had lost a tremendous amount of faculty, especially its clinical faculty, and they needed to rebuild it. And I went up and I thought, “Well, I'm in my 50s. This is going to be a great opportunity. If I don't do it now, I may never get the chance.” So I went up there and actually, it was a great opportunity. We hired terrific people. We got CALGB and we participated. We had actually a very good accrual for a small place and we had a very small but very effective cancer center. So it turned out to be a really good experience.  I worked with wonderful people. I recruited some wonderful people. But over time, the issues of the business of medicine, all the issues that happened, I'm saying I'm kind of losing my focus on clinical care and clinical trials, which I love to do. I don't need to tell either of you. I mean, Dave, you've been chief and department chair and Pat has run cancer centers. After a while, the administrative tasks just were so overwhelming and I didn't enjoy them, that I said, “I've got to get back in some type of more clinical focus.” And that's when I decided to look around and fortunately found what's turned out to be a dream job at UNC.  But it was a time of life. Maybe my ego got in the way of my logic. I don't regret it. I met and I think we rebuilt a wonderful clinical program. But you realize some of the resources of big places with-  we never had the research infrastructure to hire a lot of people and get big programs going on and great translational programs, just didn't have the funding. But it was great, and I have no regrets. And I learned how to tolerate the cold weather. And I have a lovely daughter, Sarah, who still lives up there. So we get back occasionally. And I've kept up with a lot of the people there. There are some wonderful people at UVM.  Pat Loehrer: From there, though, you were pulled down to North Carolina, where you've, again, built an incredible breast program there is outstanding. But you've created a Geriatric Oncology program, one of the first geriatric fellowships in oncology in the country. So tell us a little bit about that and what you feel may be your legacy is there at North Carolina.  Dr. Hyman Muss: Well, I had the opportunity over the years when I was at Wake, really, I got to know Shelley Earp, who's our cancer center director. I think maybe you were close to him, Pat. The longest surviving cancer center director on the planet, or among them. And we were good friends. And North Carolina's legislature actually gave the University of North Carolina substantial funding to improve cancer care in North Carolina, not just research. And so I had talked with Shelley about maybe moving, and because of the generosity of the state, really, he was able to really get me going, start a Geriatric Oncology program. And what I wanted to do was develop trials. As Dave says, I built a registry in 2009 here for older cancer patients using geriatric assessment. I have 2000 patients, which has been a resource for all types of faculty and fellows, and students to write papers. But I was able, with the support, to do things like this right from the get-go. And plus, I joined probably one of the best breast groups on the planet with Lisa Carey and Chuck Perou, and Larry, terrific people, Claire Dees. I had great luck in doing this, so I was able to really focus, get great support from my colleagues to build studies focusing on older people.  And then I had the great fortune of meeting Ned Sharpless, our prior NCI director. And Ned is one of the world's great aging biologists. And I don't mean aging as an adjective, he's really been a master on why we age, the biology of aging, cell senescence. So Ned taught me all about cell senescence and the mechanisms, especially the gene expression p16, which is like our own CDK inhibitor. And so I was able to start using his lab, collect samples, treat people with chemotherapy, follow them off with geriatric assessment. It was a great opportunity to do that here, and we got a lot of studies going and we showed what the pediatricians have known for years, that chemotherapy dramatically ages people, not just children, but adults. But it also allowed me to work with my colleagues in lymphoma and lung cancer to do little studies along the way.  And we eventually then built a T32 program. We got a T32, which we're kind of completing now our first five years to train oncology specialists in geriatrics. So the way we do it is they can be surgical oncologists, GU, we had a GYN oncologist, medical. With their HemOnc training, they do a year where they work with the geriatricians, so they go on geriatric inpatient service for a month and they really learn about older people. And part of it is a project. So we've been able to build that and develop a lot of programs with that. And I should say we've been very successful with mentorship and with ASCO support for things like YIAs, the late and great Arti Hurria, who absolutely an amazing woman. Some of her legacy at ASCO, the YIAs, and things. We've been successful in applying for some. So we've been able to build a whole spectrum of med and hematologists. We have an interest in Myeloma and AML focusing on older people. We've been able to build a whole team approach, including translational projects related to older people. And it's just been a great opportunity, and hopefully, my legacy here will be, too, and I'm working on it.  We have a wonderful guy, Bill Wood, who is very effective and has built this incredible coaching program to continue this legacy. Like many of us in this field, we are bothered because we all know the stats, we all know that first slide of the demographics of cancer, and yet it's been very hard in our culture to provide a lot of the services and build the clinical trials we need to best care for older people. It's still a major problem in this country. So as I cut back on my clinical care, I'm going to still advocate to try to improve the care of older people. Do geriatric assessment, build it into your clinical programs, get your hospitals to support you, convince them, build business plans, et cetera. And hopefully, that'll be my ultimate legacy, that we've made greater awareness of the older people, other than the usual stats, and we're really trying to care for them in a much more global sense, in a much more holistic sense than we've done. I hope we'll be successful. It's a slow haul, but we've got lots of great young people coming up through the pipelines, ASCO has been a great player in this. Many of you know people like Supriya Mohile and William Dale, Heidi Klepin, people, the next generation that's going to keep building this. So I hope the legacy will be that we get more buy-in, more interest, more trained people in other oncology-related subspecialties RadOnc, SurgOnc that will really focus on the care of older people. Dave Johnson: I don't think there's any doubt that that will be a part of your legacy Hy, but I think your legacy will be much broader than the world of geriatric oncology. Your mentorship leadership, your clinical skills, your educational capabilities, all of that will certainly last for many, many years in the future.  Well, I don't want to bring up a touchy topic, but you yourself are geriatric and we're wondering what your plans are for your semi-retirement. I recognize you're not retiring, but what do you like to do outside of medicine? Dr. Hyman Muss: I'll tell everybody who's interested in hearing this. On Tuesday, I had my 80th birthday.  Dave Johnson: Congratulations.  Dr. Hyman Muss: And I think I'm one of the most blessed guys. I'm pretty healthy. I married up -  my wife Loretta, who both of you, Pat Loehrer and Dave Johnson, know well.  Dave Johnson: Yeah, you definitely married up.  Dr. Hyman Muss: Yes. It's really carried me most of my life. She's great and so she flew up our three kids and we celebrated and I'm very fortunate. I have the enthusiasm and strength to do more clinical medicine. But I think the time has come for me to cut back my clinical medicine, so I'm going to do that in June. The hardest thing I've done is say goodbye to so many of my patients here.  We've been blessed. We have a lovely family. We're pretty close. I'm never bored, probably you two know well, I love to do things like fishing, outdoor stuff. I've really gotten into woodworking, so I'm not going to be bored. But there will be a small piece out of me when I walk out of that clinic in June. I know that and my two close psychiatry friends think it's going to really be a hard fall, but I don't think so. I still have some grants. In fact, I'm working with a fellow in City of Hope, Mina Sedrak, who's been very involved in ASCO, too. We are hoping to get an R01 looking at senolytic drugs that may prevent aging, and exercise in older women with breast cancer to see if we can reverse the trends of chemo. So my brain is still on that stuff, but the clinical care is going to be tough.  I had a note and for some reason, we talked about so many things. I wanted to mention that one of my great opportunities was joining the CALGB and then the Alliance and getting the support of Dr. Schilsky, Rich Schilsky, who's been one of the icons of ASCO to build cancer in the elderly working group with Dr. Harvey Cohen at Duke. And Harvey is one of the world's great geriatricians. And using that to get studies done, to incorporate studies with Arti Hurria on geriatric assessment, and really have it as a place where a lot of younger investigators could get started on a career in geriatric oncology. And that was really a great opportunity. It was kept on by Dr. Bertagnolli, who now is our NCI director, and I think was really the first group to really give good support for this. Dave Johnson: So we want to thank you very much for being our guest today.  We also want to thank our listeners of Oncology, Etc. This is an ASCO Educational Podcast where we talk about oncology medicine and much more. So if any of our listeners have an idea or a guest they would like for us to interview, please email us at education@asco.org. To stay up to date with the latest episodes and explore other educational content, visit ASCO's website at education.asco.org.   Thanks again for being our guest, Hy.  Dr. Hyman Muss: My pleasure. Thank you so much. The purpose of this podcast is to educate and to inform. This is not a substitute for professional medical care and is not intended for use in the diagnosis or treatment of individual conditions. Guests on this podcast express their own opinions, experience, and conclusions. Guest statements on the podcast do not express the opinions of ASCO. The mention of any product, service, organization, activity, or therapy should not be construed as an ASCO endorsement.  

The Queen Mary Returns with Steve Caloca and Bill Wood

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2023 49:16


We couldn't be happier to tell you that our beloved Queen Mary is open again to the public and ghost hunting!! If you're a fan of the show, you know how much we love this place so have it closed weighted on our collected spooky souls. We were THRILLED to not only find out they were reopening but we were invited aboard to interview the team about the ships resurrection and plan for the future. Today we chat with Steve Caloca and Queen Mary's resident Ghost Guy Bill Wood about our Majestic Lady of Long Beach. We are recording LIVE on location so you'll get to listen to the ship say hello! If you haven't been, time to go! Patreon subscribers be on the look out for "Best of the Queen Mary" episode as well as our exclusive tour and investigation!   #QueenMary #HauntedShip #TheQueenMary #GirlsNextLevel

The B.I.Stander Podcast
HEY I'm Bill Wood

The B.I.Stander Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2023 66:32


Today we welcome artist BILL WOOD  I was lucky enough to catch him for a brief phone call! The B.I.STANDER Podcast is a conversational podcast unique to Bainbridge Island and Seattle Washington, that covers the Arts, Society &  Human Interest stories. The intent is to introduce interesting people, ideas, and conversations. We are not perfect and that's OK! Thank you for your support! The B.I.Stander Podcast is a listener supported show, please consider subscribing.  Thank you & tell them you heard it on: The BISTANDER Podcast! Blue Canary Auto NOW ALSO in Bremerton! Sound Reprographics Additional sound effects by: https://www.zapsplat.com/ Support the Show on PATREON

Talk Radio Europe
Bill Wood – An Odd Undertaking…with TRE's Hannah Murray

Talk Radio Europe

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2022 22:02


Bill Wood – An Odd Undertaking...with TRE's Hannah Murray

Whitgift Conversations
Speaking to the Whitgift archivist, Bill Wood

Whitgift Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2022 23:34


S2:E7 - Welcome back to Whitgift Conversations. This is the podcast where we talk to staff, parents and pupils about topics that are relevant to you. Now you might be interested in the history of the school, maybe you're not, but either way I think you'll be interested in this episode. I'm talking to Bill Wood, he's the archivist for Whitgift School and the John Whitgift Foundation. You might be wondering what an archivist is and what they do; well, Bill's about to explain all that and whole lot more too. I love this episode for two reasons. Firstly you can tell that Bill loves the work that he does, he's deeply passionate about all things historic in the organisation. But Bill also has a velvet smooth voice and it's just one of those voices you can listen to and kind of feel instantly relaxed.But enough from me, instead let's jump into some Whitgift history as we speak to the amazing archivist, it's Bill Wood.Whitgift School onlineWebsite: www.whitgift.co.ukWhitgift Global: https://www.whitgift.co.uk/globalTwitter: @WhitgiftSchool1Facebook: WhitgiftSchoolLinkedIn: whitgift-school

Vince Coakley Podcast
Economic News and Election Panic

Vince Coakley Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2022 58:47


Vince is live at the Mallard Creek Barbeque.  Bill Wood, Co-Chairman of the barbeque joins to give a history of the barbeque and explains how the money goes to a charity or charities every year. This year it is a drive through or walk up only. This is the 91st year.   The economics news continues to be mixed. The GNP is growing after some retraction in the previous quarter. The bad news is that the mortgage rates are going up to the highest number in 20 years. Interviews with some of the patrons in line to get barbeque..   Discussion about voting and specifically the Georgia election.  There is a new accuser of Herschel Walker.  Played excerpts of a news conference with Herschel Walker on all the accusations.   The politicians regardless of how bad they are cannot ruin the country. The country is about the people, and despite the reports the people are still doing well.  Hillary Clinton is giving a warning about what the right wing extremists are planning to give state legislatures the power to overturn presidential elections.    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Breaking With Brett Jensen
Grand Daddy of NC BBQ Has Big Return

Breaking With Brett Jensen

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2022 11:44


Today on Breaking with Brett Jensen Brett talked with Bill Wood and Charles Kimrey -- the co-directors of the 91st Mallard Creek BBQ. Brett talked to Bill and Charles about the importance of the event as well as the the turnout today relative to other years + the amount of food they sold before closing by 2:00pm and plans to return to the full version of the event next year. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Quantum Research Enlightenment
New Earth vs N.W.O. (Ep: 008) with Frank Jacob ~ Project Looking Glass

Quantum Research Enlightenment

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 23, 2022 118:44


#newearth #newworldorder #projectlookingglass Link to the NE vs NWO playlist: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLgT8X-j4dEdKFpA_yUEFqOSqD4QdyHsO1 Link to the Bonus Footage: part removed - 23M:34S and 01H:19M to 01H:21M so you don't have to watch the whole video again: https://rumble.com/v1cwypl-ep-008-new-earth-vs-new-world-order-frank-jacob-project-looking-glass.html In this episode 008 we talked about Project Looking Glass and how Bill Wood was able to see two different timelines, timeline 1 was the positive timeline and timeline 2 was the negative timeline. I always wonder when I 1st heard this information if timeline 1 had anything to do with the New Earth. If the New Earth had anything to do with a positive timeline. After that, we talked about the Guardians of the Looking Glass Guest: Frank Jacob Website: https://frankjacob.com/ Flims: https://projektor.com/u/screenaddiction Tale of 2 Timelines: https://www.cyberhive.tv/tale-of-two-timelines Jason Ballay: List of services I offer one on one (QHHT is in person): https://www.jasonballay.com/ Join the Q.R.E. mailing list: https://www.quantumresearchenlightenment.com/ https://www.QREnetwork.com Podcast: https://www.quantumresearchenlightenment.com/podcast/ Playlist of Meditation Music: https://bit.ly/MeditationM Crystal Energy Healing Bed: https://bit.ly/CrystalEnergyBed Q.R.E. YouTube Channel: http://bit.ly/YuTbQRE Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jj.ballay ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Tshirts / Stickers / Coffee Mugs / Yoga Pants / : https://teespring.com/stores/nyx-888 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- My other YouTube Channels: Guardians of Magic (Atlantis/Lemuria/Ancient Egypt) http://bit.ly/GOMagic Quantum Research Enlightenment (Q.R.E.) http://bit.ly/YuTbQRE Work to Invest in W.H.Y. (Wealth/Health/Yourself) http://bit.ly/Work2Invest Books By Dolores Cannon developer of QHHT https://amzn.to/2M56BXq The Convoluted Universe Book One by Dolores Cannon (My Favorite and my first) https://amzn.to/2ChQEZw Equipment used in this video: Logitech HD Pro Webcam https://amzn.to/2VFQ2pr Yeti Blue Mic (Silver) https://amzn.to/36QxloB DISCLAIMER: This video and description contain affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I'll receive a small commission. This helps support the channel and allows us to continue to make videos like this. Thank you for your support!

Saturday Night Live with Stevie Jacobs Podcast
Saturday Night with Bill Wood - February 19th

Saturday Night Live with Stevie Jacobs Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2022 120:14


Listen to Saturday Night with Bill Woods, the full show podcast See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Talkin Bass in PDX
E45 OnTalkin Bass in PDX GHunders &Bill Wood Obsession fishing Guide service

Talkin Bass in PDX

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2021 49:59


I talk Mario Winkelman of Grays Harbor Unders. For more information click on https://ghunders.com/and Bill Woods of Obsession fishing Guide service. For more information click http://www.obsessionfishingguideservice.com/. For wind information https://wx.ikitesurf.com/windlist/Gorge. For show feedback email Don Clark at gonefishingpdx@gmail.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/don-clark50/support

Ready For Takeoff - Turn Your Aviation Passion Into A Career
RFT 506: Air Traffic Controller Andy Cook's Ultimate Man-Cave

Ready For Takeoff - Turn Your Aviation Passion Into A Career

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2021 25:25


Andy Cook is one comfortable guy. He's on a Louisiana layover. Inside what's left of a retired, renovated, old New Orleans Hornets Boeing 727 airplane. WGNO's Bill Wood is there, too. He's been invited into Andy's man cave. Andy has decked out his home away from home. It's actually just behind his home. He landed his 727 man cave right in his own backyard. And it's a short commute from work. Andy Cook is an air traffic controller at the Houma-Terrebonne Airport in Houma, Louisiana. He's had a career of guiding in planes across the country. He loves planes, always has. His passion started when he was a kid. The plane he snuggles up in now flew for the NBA for New Orleans, when the team was the Hornets and for two other NBA teams. Fasten your seatbelt for one of the few 727s still in service. It's on a non-stop flight. In the first-class imagination. Right there in the driver's seat, there's a Louisiana pilot.  

Basic Folk
Oliver Wood, ep. 120

Basic Folk

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2021 49:32


Growing up, Oliver Wood thought he'd try the bass guitar, but after 6 months, he handed it to his younger brother Chris. That's right, *the* Chris Wood, virtuosic bassist of acclaimed Medeski Martin and Wood. Even at a young age, the brothers' styles were pretty clear. While Chris was getting intense about the bass, Oliver was meandering on the guitar and forging his own musical path. He ended up in Atlanta and eventually got a spot in Tinsley Ellis' band, a very well respected blues player. Oliver was playing guitar and singing background vocals, but soon enough he was shifting to the spotlight. It turns out that Tinsley was a really important mentor for Oliver: he taught him the ins and outs of the business and encouraged him to sing. After touring hard for 15 years, Oliver and his brother met up again at a fateful shared 2004 bill. He sat in with MM&W and the brothers immediately felt that familial connection through their performance. They decided to keep up playing together and formed  The Wood Brothers.Coming together in the band, Chris and Oliver discovered that the music of their folk-singing father, Bill Wood, was acting as a huge inspiration. Bill spent time on the folk circuit surrounding Cambridge, MA in the 1950s, performing with legends like Joan Baez. He would settle down with a career as a biology teacher, but kept the spirit of folk music alive for his boys. Oliver talks about how forming a band around that sound made him appreciate his father in new ways. Seven albums later and The Wood Brothers are one of the most beloved bands in the Americana community. Oliver, who is motivated by connection and community, spent 2019 co-writing with various touring musicians making their way through Nashville. While this project was just for fun, he found the results inspiring enough to make a solo album during the 2020 pandemic, resulting in his debut album, Always Smiling. Oliver talks about choosing joy, connection and feeling grounded through meditation, which has helped him immensely through the last 14 months. Thank you, Oliver! Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands

Audio-only streams of our videos
Introduction to the Scientific Teaching Series

Audio-only streams of our videos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2021 3:37


Course Directors A. Malcolm Campbell, Kimberly Tanner, and Bill Wood talk about the reasons why we need to reform undergraduate biology education and why they got involved in the Scientific teaching Series project.

iBiology Videos
Introduction to the Scientific Teaching Series

iBiology Videos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2021 3:36


Course Directors A. Malcolm Campbell, Kimberly Tanner, and Bill Wood talk about the reasons why we need to reform undergraduate biology education and why they got involved in the Scientific teaching Series project.

Soberless Thoughts
The Sh!t You Missed in 2020

Soberless Thoughts

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2021 109:52


Alex and Mike talk about all the things that happened in 2020 that maybe you didn't hear about. Grandpa Banks calls into the podcast. Song Credit: "The Boogie Woogie" by The Blackwater Fever Song Credit "Drink Tonight" by Bill Wood and the Woodies

iBiology Videos
Malcolm Campbell: Introduction to the Scientific Teaching Series

iBiology Videos

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2020 3:36


Course Directors A. Malcolm Campbell, Kimberly Tanner, and Bill Wood talk about the reasons why we need to reform undergraduate biology education and why they got involved in the Scientific teaching Series project.

Audio-only streams of our videos
Malcolm Campbell: Introduction to the Scientific Teaching Series

Audio-only streams of our videos

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2020 3:37


Course Directors A. Malcolm Campbell, Kimberly Tanner, and Bill Wood talk about the reasons why we need to reform undergraduate biology education and why they got involved in the Scientific teaching Series project.

Inside Access Control
EP 36: A conversation with Bill Wood of SALTO Systems

Inside Access Control

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2020 8:04


In this episode of Inside Access Control, sponsored by the Security Industry Association, we catch up with Bill Wood, President of North America for SALTO Systems.  "We are not looking for more. We are looking for different."

The Digital Broker Podcast
085 - Premium Financing: Option for the Insured, Value for the Agency

The Digital Broker Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2019 24:06


Customers are sometimes hesitant to pay a premium if it's too large. Premium financing allows the customer to pay the premium in installments. Bill Wood of Imperial PFS talks to Ryan Deeds about how premium financing works, what the customer can expect, and how the insurance agency receives the money.

Agnitus Life
Introducing Peter Goldsmith and Bill Wood

Agnitus Life

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2018 29:39


Get to know our podcasters. Peter Goldsmith and Bill Wood, our podcast hosts, delve into a variety of subjects, always entertaining and often provocative. But it occurred to us that you, as the listener, have no idea who these dudes are — where they come from, what they do and think about, and what floats […]

House of Mystery True Crime History
BILL WOOD CONSPIRACY - MARK JACOBSON

House of Mystery True Crime History

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2018 51:32


We are living in a time of unprecedented distrust in America: Faith in the government is at an all-time low, and political groups on both sides of the aisle are able to tout preposterous conspiracy theories as gospel, without much opposition. “Fake news” is the order of the day. This book is about a man to whom all of it points, the greatest conspiracist of this generation and a man you may not have heard of. A former U.S. naval intelligence worker, Milton William Cooper published his manifesto Behold a Pale Horse in 1991. Since then it has gone on to sell hundreds of thousands of copies, becoming the number-one bestseller in the American prison system. (Bookscan lists sales at 289,000 since 2005.) According to Behold a Pale Horse, JFK was assassinated—because he was about to reveal that extraterrestrials were about to take over the earth—by his driver, an alien himself; AIDS is a government conspiracy to decrease the population of blacks, Hispanics, and homosexuals; and the Illuminati are secretly involved with the U.S. government to manage relationships with extraterrestrials. Cooper died in a shootout with Apache County police in 2001, one month after September 11, in the year in which he had predicted catastrophe. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Strange Grooves Podcast
Taking Liberty: with Bill Wood

Strange Grooves Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2018 43:28


This week, Jeff interviews Juno Award nominee Bill Wood formerly of 80's Canadian pop stars Eye Eye. TODAY - Bill continues to release his music on his own terms which include a new album by Bill Wood and the Woodies and the Wood Family Singers. Check out more on our blog and on Jeff's page at www.strangegrooves.com Cheers

Agnitus Life
Part 3: Can We Reassemble a Broken America?

Agnitus Life

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2018 29:29


What we can do to begin the healing. In Part 3, Bill Wood and Peter Goldsmith discuss what we can do to get us to a better place. Waiting for our leaders to move the country toward unity is not likely. They are as divided, if not more so, than we citizens. In fact, they […]

Base Code
Words Create Worlds (S1E5)

Base Code

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2018


Bill Wood's stories have delighted audiences in America for almost 30 years. Basecode joins Bill on a journey to discover why and how we tell stories, starting with a shocking premise taken directly from an unexpected source. Topics include: the origin of words, creative listening, and enchantment.

State of being podcast
Episode 22 - Bea Ives - Yoga teacher

State of being podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2017 74:08


Barbara has been teaching and practising yoga for twenty five years and been teaching for over 10 years. Barbara is a British Wheel of Yoga (BWYDip) teacher and a BWY Foundation Course Teacher. Over the years Barbara has studied and practiced many styles of yoga including, Iyengar, Ashtanga, Vinyasa and Hatha yoga, Acrobatic and Aerial yoga, with many renown, experienced and inspiring teachers e.g. Donna Farhi, Doug Keller, Julie Gudmestead, Shiva Rea, Jason Crandell, Natasha Rizopolous, Sally Kempton, John Scott, Brian Cooper, Gary Carter, Peter Blackaby, Paul Fox, Bill Wood, Beverley Nolan, Mark Freeth, Lisa Sanfilippo, Julie Friedeberger, Claire Missingham, John Claxton, Liz Lark, Vonnie Bloom, Hayley Winter, Tanja Mickwitch, Erica Montes, Bonnie Argo, plus many more. Barbara has incorporated her accumulated knowledge into her own practice and into her teaching. Barbara believes we never stop learning, Barbara regularly attends intensives and workshops in the UK and abroad and attend many Local yoga events For more information http://www.yoganorfolk.com/about-barbara.php https://www.facebook.com/yoganorfolk

PLNU Chapel - Fall 2016
October 3rd, 2016 - Bill Wood (Faith Stories)

PLNU Chapel - Fall 2016

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2016 28:49


The Jim Lahey Show & Randy
Episode 9 - He Let the Liquor Do the Thinking

The Jim Lahey Show & Randy

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2016 40:01


This week, Randy hosts because Mr. Lahey tried to drink himself sober before the show. Bill Wood joins the show to perform some magic tricks and Randy cooks cheeseburger pancakes while Lahey recovers from a liquor s**tstorm...     

CMDA Chapels
How To Give Well

CMDA Chapels

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2014 11:12


Bill Wood, MD shares about the lessons to be learned from Mary's gift to Jesus.

Living Mediation 2013 Conference
Living Mediation - CMC Conference 2013 - Consultation

Living Mediation 2013 Conference

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2013 60:36


Episode 7 - In this episode, Bill Wood, CMC Vice Chair, outlines the trends and themes in the comments received so far on what the role the CMC might be in any registration/accreditation scheme for individual mediators and mediation training providers. Questions and comments from the floor reveal the variety of perceptions, concerns and ideas which surround this topic.

Project Camelot
02/01/2012 - Bill Brockbrader aka Bill Wood and Jelaila Starr

Project Camelot

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2013


02/01/2012 - Bill Brockbrader aka Bill Wood and Jelaila Starrhttp://archive.org/download/ProjectCamelot/Project-Camelot-32k-020112.mp3

The Be Love Now Channel
LivingInTheNOW-Bill (Wood) and Eva Moore w' Lisa Harrison

The Be Love Now Channel

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2012 118:00


Hosed by Kimberely...featuring May 14, 2012  Lisa's Harrison's second interview with Bill Brockbrader (Wood) and joined by Eva Moore. They primarily discussed the implications of the information Bill Released on 5/5/12 regarding Obama. They also went off into more esoteric topics and concepts. And What is going on with Drake. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qp62TWaVpOE http://www.lisamharrison.com ***************************** Sibel Edmonds http://www.brasschecktv.com/videos/the-911-files/sibel-edmonds-the-classified-woman-finally-tells-her-story.html

One 4 The Road Podcast

Join us as we visit with our good friend Bill Wood, director of Life on Life Ministry at Perimeter Church and learn about a whole new way, that really is an ancient way of passing on the secrets of the Gospel. On this podcast, Randy Schlichting is joined

Live Blog Radio
LIVE Coverage of Formula Drift, Round 1, The Streets of Long Beach

Live Blog Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2009 210:02


LIVE, from the city streets of Long Beach, CA, the first round of the 2009 Formula Drift professional drift championship series. The coverage is anchored by motorsposrts journalists, Gary Keith and Bill Wood. Drift racing expert, Mickey Andrade adds live interviews from with drivers during the event. Listeners can even call the show and participate in the coverage that begins with drivers' introductions, and continues through the end of the event and includes the podium ceremonies.

Live Blog Radio
LIVE Coverage of Formula Drift, Round 1, The Streets of Long Beach

Live Blog Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2009 210:02


LIVE, from the city streets of Long Beach, CA, the first round of the 2009 Formula Drift professional drift championship series. The coverage is anchored by motorsposrts journalists, Gary Keith and Bill Wood. Drift racing expert, Mickey Andrade adds live interviews from with drivers during the event. Listeners can even call the show and participate in the coverage that begins with drivers' introductions, and continues through the end of the event and includes the podium ceremonies.

Christ Community Church
Guess Who Is Coming to Dinner

Christ Community Church

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2006 30:07


Guest speaker from Perimeter Church in Georgia, Bill Wood

Christ Community Church
Guess Who Is Coming to Dinner

Christ Community Church

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2006 30:07


Guest speaker from Perimeter Church in Georgia, Bill Wood