POPULARITY
Recibiremos a Pablo y Cueli del Festival Vidiago Rock para que nos cuenten lo que traman para la XXI edición que se celebra este próximo fin de semana 2 y 3 de Mayo, además de soltar alguna exclusivona y hacer debutar a Joel al micro, así que tendréis que tar pendientes. Aprovecharemos para escuchar a muchas de las bandas del festival WEAK, The Lizards, Totengott, The Movement - band page, The Wizards, Aneuma, Grippers y Niña Coyote eta Chico Tornado. Pero es que además han pasado muchas cosas en la tierrina, y tenemos todo este percal: Black Pyramid, Sartenazo Cerebral, Expropiazion, Ofensivos, Amarradizo, CRUDO, Tygers of Wrath, Stonefest, Mars Red Sky, Maizu Rock, Grilo, Catalina Grande Piñón Pequeño, MortSubite, Skama La Rede y Ace Frehley
Una velada en la que volveremos a visitar Puerto de Vega, para que Jose Carlos, Toña, Diego y Alberto nos presenten la IX edición del perversiones, y lo que se puede contar del festival de la Asociación Unirock de esti año. Y además, todo este percal: Aneuma, Stonefest, VOUL, Blast Open, Ekliptika, Missouris, Ermitaños del río, Ofensivos, Teksuo, Valkyria_Oficial, Terral, Vendaval Fest , Lendakaris Muertos, Sun and Thunder, Uriah Heep, Malos Tragos, Neno y los suyos, Triana, Ghost, BABYMETAL, Buckcherry, NefariousOfficial, SIIXS, Kamikaze Helmets x2 (que hacen doblete), Against The Waves, Linda Burnetti, Black Pyramid y The Stooges.
Ep 123: Feb 19, 2025 - Rebroadcast - Where is the 550-foot-tall black pyramid that can power all of Alaska and Canada? U.S recovered non-human ‘biologics' from UFO crash sites, former intel official says YouTube video: Government Whistleblower Exposes the Alaskan Black Pyramid | Aliens in Alaska https://youtu.be/K33UIjtBwes Interview with Douglas Alan Mutschler from July, 2012 Retired CW2 Commissioned Warrant Officer Counterintelligence US Army - Fort Richardson, Anchorage, Alaska “Chinese Set Off Their Biggest Nuclear Explosion” “distinct outline of a pyramid…in that whited-out area…south of Mt. McKinley” “pyramid..bigger than the one in Egypt” Son of Western Electric employee sent to investigate pyramid top of pyramid was 150 feet underground, base of pyramid was 700 feet down, making it 550 feet tall some type of power system “had the ability to power all of Alaska and Canada” “more secret than the Manhattan Project” Interview with Mark Wood, Retired U.S. Navy Captain “flew in a Beaver from Kaltag, AK” “landed on a runway that could handle cargo planes, Telida, UK” “it's probably operating similar to Wardenclyffe Tower…generating electricity and sending it into the atmosphere” “EMI…would cause interference with airplanes…that's how they found it” “their instruments would go haywire” “a large number of planes that have gone missing over the years.” “the pyramid is within 50 miles of Denali” ==== NEW PRINTINGS NOW AVAILABLE: Glimpses of Other Realities, Vol. 1: Fact & Eye Witnesses Now available on Amazon: https://earthfiles.com/glimpses1 Glimpses of Other Realities, Vol. 2: High Strangeness Now available on Amazon: https://earthfiles.com/glimpses2 ==== — For more incredible science stories, Real X-Files, environmental stories and so much more. Please visit my site https://www.earthfiles.com — Be sure to subscribe to this Earthfiles Channel the official channel for Linda Moulton Howe https://www.youtube.com/user/Earthfiles — To stay up to date on everything Earthfiles, follow me on FaceBook@EarthfilesNews and Twitter @Earthfiles. To purchase books and merchandise from Linda Moulton Howe, be sure to only shop at my official Earthfiles store at https://www.earthfiles.com/earthfiles-shop/ — Countdown Clock Piano Music: Ashot Danielyan, Composer: https://www.pond5.com/stock-music/100990900/emotional-piano-melancholic-drama.html
After leaving Europa, the crew sets out for Mars in attempts to uncover the origins of the other Black Pyramid that crashed there, but come across a larger threat. Upon their escape, the party discovers a gigantic ring that seemingly leads to another galaxy and find a haunting revelation hidden away on a strange alien-looking ship.
Beginning the end of the Mothership trilogy, we learn the origins of how the elusive church picked up their story of finding the first Black Pyramid in the Gulf of Mexico on Earth in the 1970s. The players utilize new roles in this episode before resuming their regular characters for the rest of the season! CAST: DM - Dan Renell "Thunder" - Joe Clint - Xander Arnold - Derek
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Remote Viewing the Alaskan Black Pyramid _ Awakening Cosmic Reality Show
The Lost Egyptian black pyramid
THE DOOMED AND STONED SHOW ~Season 10, Episode 9~ Here we are with another incredibly packed edition of The Doomed and Stoned Show, featuring commentary on the May 2024 edition of the Doom Charts (https://doomcharts.com) with Billy Goate (Editor, Doomed & Stoned), John Gist (Vegas Rock Revolution), and Bucky Brown (The Ripple Effect) -- all voting members of the Doom Charts crew. Ahead of the release of the June chart, we take a look at May's, which has some incredible new discoveries and the return of old faces. Become a monthly Patron to get access to the show early, including an archive of 10 seasons of the show and much more, including show notes and an unedited, uncensored video of the podcast (with pre-show, breaks, and post-show): https://patreon.com/doomedandstoned. If you dig the music, please support the bands by buying their records and merch! PLAYLIST: INTRO (00:00) 1. MOOCH (#14) - "Hangtime" (00:31) HOST SEGMENT I (04:26) 2. DAILY THOMPSON (#18) - "I'm Free Tonight" (23:20) 3. YOUNG ACID (#21) - "Woodshed Blues" (29:18) 4. JUKE COVE (#20) - "Wait" (33:02) HOST SEGMENT II (39:39) 5. TRANSONIC SCIENCE (#33) - "Jaycoon" (53:52) 6. ISAAK (#34) - "The Whale" (58:25) 7. SPACESLUG (#24) - "Out of Water" (1:02:54) HOST SEGMENT III (1:08:43) 8. THE HAZYTONES (#10) - "Eye For An Eye" (1:24:22) 9. HUANASTONE (#9) - "If I Had a Head" (1:28:51) 10. BAARDVADER (#8) - "Save Ourselves" (1:34:47) HOST SEGMENT IV (1:41:36) 11. THE WATCHERS (#7) - "They Have No God" (2:03:26) 12. UFOMAMMUT (#6) - "Leeched" (2:08:33) 13. PALLBEARER (#5) - "Mind Burns Alive" (2:14:11) HOST SEGMENT V (2:22:08) 14. GJENFERD (#4) - "High Octane" (2:48:44) 15. ABRAMS (#3) - "Death Om" (2:52:36) 16. HIGH DESERT QUEEN (#2) - "Ancient Aliens" (2:57:08) 17. BLACK PYRAMID (#1) - "They Crypt on the Borderland" (3:02:32) OUTRO (3:10:43) BONUS TRACKS: 18. DOPETHRONE (#19) - "Life Kills You" (3:11:51) 19. KALGON (#17) - "Eye of the Needle" (3:15:21) 20. MY DILIGENCE (#37) - "Auspicious" (3:23:00) 21. VITSKAR SUDEN (#12) - "R'lyeh" (3:28:44) 22. APE VERMIN (#29) - "Return to Andromeda" (3:33:13) CREDITS: Theme Song: Dylan Tucker Thumbnail Art: Huanastone
This week we may have uncovered a full blown government conspiracy from a genuine investigative reporter, not a cat mom doing this on the side! We're back in Alaska with Jen and it's a little artsy. "Day of Chaos" by Kevin MacLeod
The **Black Pyramid of Alaska** stands as a testament to the human fascination with the unknown and the allure of ancient mysteries. This enigmatic structure, shrouded in the dense forests of Alaska, is said to eclipse the Great Pyramid of Giza not only in size but also in antiquity. The claims surrounding its existence are woven from a tapestry of unverified anecdotes and speculative theories, fueling a debate that teeters on the edge of skepticism and wonder. Despite the absence of solid evidence, the Black Pyramid remains a beacon for those drawn to its potential revelations about prehistoric civilizations, advanced technologies, and the possibility of extraterrestrial influence on Earth.
Lockdown Universe (A UFO, ALIEN, BIGFOOT, SCI FI AND PARANORMAL PODCAST!!)
PAT PRICE, THE BEST REMOTE VIEWER IN GOVERNMENT HISTORY VIEWED AN BLACK PYRAMID ALIEN BASE AT MT. HAYES IN ALASKA....HE STATES ALIENS DON'T REALLY CARE ABOUT US, BUT....WHAT ABOUT THE ALIENS THAT ABDUCT, STEAL DNA, AND PUT US BACK IN THE WRONG BED OR WRONG TOWN??? THEY OBVIOUSLY DO CARE ABOUT US!!! WHAT ABOUT THE BLACK PYRAMID. DO GOVERNMENTS CARE ABOUT CERTAIN GROUPS AND DESPISE OTHERS? LET'S DIVE INTO THE DETAILS!! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lockdown-universe/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lockdown-universe/support
In a remote corner of Alaska, a military officer stumbles upon a chilling discovery—an enormous pyramid buried deep under the icy wilderness, possibly larger than the Great Pyramid of Giza. The initial sighting during a seismic event leads to whispers of ancient technologies and hidden histories. The local news coverage mysteriously vanishes overnight. Witnesses and insiders offer conflicting stories, fueling speculations about secret military involvement and otherworldly energies. It's become known as the Dark Pyramid or Black Pyramid. What are the origins of this enigmatic structure? Why is it buried? Why so much security and secrecy? Could this be buried technology that holds truths about our past and power beyond our understanding?
72: FEBRUARY 28, 2024 - Where is the 550-foot-tall black pyramid that can power all of Alaska and Canada? NEWS HEADLINE: U.S recovered non-human ‘biologics' from UFO crash sites, former intel official says YouTube video: Government Whistleblower Exposes the Alaskan Black Pyramid | Aliens in Alaska https://youtu.be/K33UIjtBwes Interview with Douglas Alan Mutschler from July, 2012 Retired CW2 Commissioned Warrant Officer Counterintelligence US Army - Fort Richardson, Anchorage, Alaska “Chinese Set Off Their Biggest Nuclear Explosion” “distinct outline of a pyramid…in that whited-out area…south of Mt. McKinley” “pyramid..bigger than the one in Egypt” Son of Western Electric employee sent to investigate pyramid top of pyramid was 150 feet underground, base of pyramid was 700 feet down, making it 550 feet tall some type of power system “had the ability to power all of Alaska and Canada” “more secret than the Manhattan Project” Interview with Mark Wood, Retired U.S. Navy Captain “flew in a Beaver from Kaltag, AK” “landed on a runway that could handle cargo planes, Telida, UK” “it's probably operating similar to Wardenclyffe Tower…generating electricity and sending it into the atmosphere” “EMI…would cause interference with airplanes…that's how they found it” “their instruments would go haywire” “a large number of planes that have gone missing over the years.” “the pyramid is within 50 miles of Denali” ==== LINKS: Earthfiles YouTube Channel podcast: https://podcast.earthfiles.com Truth Hunter Season 2: https://www.gaia.com/earthfiles Trailer: https://youtu.be/znyrQyZjEBg ==== Earthfiles Books and DVDs: https://www.earthfiles.com/shop A Strange Harvest: https://www.earthfiles.com/earthfiles-shop/#a-strange-harvest A Strange Harvest 1993: https://www.earthfiles.com/earthfiles-shop/#a-strange-harvest-1993 An Alien Harvest: https://www.earthfiles.com/earthfiles-shop/#an-alient-harvest ===== Contact Linda directly: Email: earthfiles@earthfiles.com Secure ProtonMail: sandiacrest@protonmail.com * ProtonMail is a free, secure, encrypted email service. Mail: Linda Moulton Howe P. O. Box 21843 Albuquerque, NM 87154 **Please "Like" and "Subscribe"** — For more incredible reports on Science, Real X-Files, the Environment and so much more, please visit my site https://www.earthfiles.com/ — Be sure to subscribe to this Earthfiles Channel the official channel for Linda Moulton Howe https://www.youtube.com/Earthfiles. — To stay up to date on everything Earthfiles, follow me on FaceBook @EarthfilesNews and Twitter @Earthfiles. To purchase books and merchandise from Linda Moulton Howe, be sure to only shop at her official Earthfiles store at https://www.earthfiles.com/shop/ — Countdown Clock Piano Music: Ashot Danielyan, Composer: https://www.pond5.com/stock-music/100990900/emotional-piano-melancholic-drama.html
Lockdown Universe (A UFO, ALIEN, BIGFOOT, SCI FI AND PARANORMAL PODCAST!!)
TWO WITNESSES REPORT THE EXACT SAME SHIP REVEALED OVER CHICAGO IN 2018. WHY WOULD ALIENS LET US SEE THEIR SHIP? IS IT OURS? WHY WOULD WE LET THE PUBLIC SEE OUR SHIP IN THE BUSY SKYSPACE IN THE WORLD? WHY WOULD THEY JUST LET US SEE THEM? WHY ARE THEY JUST FLYING WHEREVER THEY WANT? LETS REVIEW SOME WHISTLEBLOWERS AND THE WITNESSES!! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lockdown-universe/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lockdown-universe/support
This week Suz leads Rob on a journey of pure insanity. Grab your tin foil hats and join us for a hilarious expedition into the Alaskan Triangle, and the mysterious Black Pyramid, where electricity is free and conspiracy theories clock in for overtime. All our links here - linktr.ee/spookyafMusic: Dank Halloween by Shane Ivers - https://www.silvermansound.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
What is The Alaska Triangle? Have you heard of the Alaska Black Pyramid? In this episode, I'm talking about them.
Tune in every Tuesday at 7pm Central for new podcast episodes, and Friday at 8pm Central for our Livestreams!
The Lost Egyptian black pyramid That Changes Everything --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/gaf/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/gaf/support
A strange phenomena in the skies above the nation's capital. A small body of evidence with disputed provenience. In this weeks episode, we're talking about a Black Pyramid over D.C.
Welcome back to the Night Shift. On this episode we get into the black pyramid possibly shutting down the human consciousness. Then we start to talk all things artificial intelligence. We also get a few call ins with theories on Egress, Ufo stories, and a Bigfoot story. Thanks for taking the time to listen to the Night Shift recap. If you can make it to the Night Shift live and interact with everyone. As always stay safe and stay weird. Facebook and Twitter @holoskypodcast Instagram @ theholoskypodcast If you have an experience of your own you'd like to share with us please do. You can email us at holoskypodcast@gmail.com you can also use your voice memo app on your smart phone or anything that can record you and send it over to the email. If you have and experience you'd rather sit down and talk to us about please send that email to holoskyinterviews@gmail.com You can also call our podcast cell phone and leave a message or time it right and grab an on the spot interview. The number is going to be 1 (618) 556-0837 If you want to send us weird shit then please do! Holosky Podcast P.O. Box 145 Fieldon, IL 62031 If your interested in our discord and becoming part of the family, then please take the time to join us! https://discord.gg/GFsbY92NgU ——-Discord Link We also have a patreon you can sign up for to get some extra goodies and help support us or just send us a one time donation on venmo. We forever appreciate each and everyone who supports us in anyway possible.
Welcome back to the show everyone, on this episode we have a submission from Mr. Monkey Puzzle. He shares his run in with what he describes as a devil monkey. Then we dive into some pyramid talk, we start off with a pyramid that was found in Alaska. The black pyramid, rumored to produce enough power to power the entirety of Canada and Alaska. Research done around pyramids has blown our minds. Apparently their are many health benefits of pyramids, they help stabilize the area around it, improve the ozone layer, all types of truly interesting things. We hope you enjoy the show, as always stay safe and stay weird. Facebook and Twitter @holoskypodcast Instagram @ theholoskypodcast If you have an experience of your own you'd like to share with us please do. You can email us at holoskypodcast@gmail.com you can also use your voice memo app on your smart phone or anything that can record you and send it over to the email. If you have and experience you'd rather sit down and talk to us about please send that email to holoskyinterviews@gmail.com You can also call our podcast cell phone and leave a message or time it right and grab an on the spot interview. The number is going to be 1 (618) 556-0837 If you want to send us weird shit then please do! Holosky Podcast P.O. Box 145 Fieldon, IL 62031 If your interested in our discord and becoming part of the family, then please take the time to join us! https://discord.gg/GFsbY92NgU ——-Discord Link We also have a patreon you can sign up for to get some extra goodies and help support us or just send us a one time donation on venmo. We forever appreciate each and everyone who supports us in anyway possible.
SEE our new ancient history channel "Ancient Wonders" HERE: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC2iIkT7bArUFR_537mZCRqA BUY A TOWER GARDEN AND SAVE MONEY HERE: https://shareasale.com/r.cfm?b=580941&u=3368756&m=52284&urllink=&afftrack= GET HEIRLOOM SEEDS & NON GMO SURVIVAL FOOD HERE: https://heavensharvest.com/ USE Code WAM to get FREE shipping in the United States! GET TICKETS to The Red Pill Expo in Salt Lake City and use code WAM HERE: https://redpilluniversity.org/expo-homepage/ref/146/ GET VITAMINS AND SUPPLEMENTS FROM DR. ZELENKO HERE: https://rdm.go2cloud.org/aff_c?offer_id=225&aff_id=1682 LION ENERGY: Never Run Out Of Power! PREPARE NOW! https://rdm.go2cloud.org/aff_c?offer_id=223&aff_id=1682 Josh Sigurdson reports from inside the Bent Pyramid at Dashur, Egypt. One of the most mysterious of all the pyramids, the Bent Pyramid was allegedly built for Pharaoh Sneferu, though there is little to no evidence of this. The pyramid is clearly an echo chamber that resembles some form of machine and it was not built in error as many say. The pyramid sits alongside the Red Pyramid and the Black Pyramid and in view of Saqqara. The Bent Pyramid was only opened to the public in 2019 after having been kept under lock and key for nearly a century. Soon after, everything closed and tourism collapsed in Egypt. On December 25th, 2020, we were given unfettered access to the Bent Pyramid. In fact, we were completely alone there, giving us an amazing opportunity to investigate the site without any distractions. The pyramid was filled with thousands of bats, but it was clear that the inside was built to produce energy of some kind. The chambers were literal echo chambers. After doing a deep dive into the inside of the Pyramid which includes a 79 meter climb down a shaft, we then explored the entire outside of the pyramid and studies the temples and the amazing cut stones sitting among rubble from the pyramid. Stay tuned for more from WAM! GET TIM'S FREE Portfolio Review HERE: https://bit.ly/redpilladvisor And become a client of Tim's at https://www.TheLibertyAdvisor.com STOCK UP ON STOREABLE FOODS HERE: http://wamsurvival.com/ OUR GOGETFUNDING CAMPAIGN: https://gogetfunding.com/help-keep-wam-alive/ PURCHASE PART 1 of TipToe To Tyranny HERE: https://vimeo.com/ondemand/tiptoetotyranny/ GET YOUR APRICOT SEEDS at the life-saving Richardson Nutritional Center HERE: https://rncstore.com/r?id=bg8qc1 OUR PODBEAN CHANNEL: https://worldaltmedia.podbean.com/ Or SPOTIFY: https://open.spotify.com/show/5JWtlXypfL8iR8gGMg9MME Find us on Vigilante TV HERE: https://vigilante.tv/c/world_alternative_media/videos?s=1 FIND US on Rokfin HERE: https://rokfin.com/worldalternativemedia FIND US on Gettr HERE: https://www.gettr.com/user/worldaltmedia Follow us on Parler HERE: https://parler.com/Joshfsigurdson See our EPICFUNDME HERE: https://epicfundme.com/251-world-alternative-media JOIN OUR NEWSLETTER HERE: https://www.iambanned.com/ JOIN our Telegram Group HERE: https://t.me/worldalternativemedia JOIN US On BitChute: https://www.bitchute.com/channel/gzFCj8AuSWgp/ JOIN US On Flote: https://flote.app/JoshSigurdson JOIN US On Odysee (formerly LBRY) HERE: https://odysee.com/@WAM:0 BUY WAM NFTs HERE: https://rarible.com/worldalternativemedia JOIN US on Rumble Here: https://rumble.com/c/c-312314 FIND WAM MERCHANDISE HERE: https://teespring.com/stores/world-alternative-media FIND OUR CoinTree page here: https://cointr.ee/joshsigurdson JOIN US on SubscribeStar here: https://www.subscribestar.com/world-alternative-media We will soon be doing subscriber only content! Follow us on Twitter here: https://twitter.com/WorldAltMedia Help keep independent media alive! Pledge here! Just a dollar a month can help us alive! https://www.patreon.com/user?u=2652072&ty=h&u=2652072 BITCOIN ADDRESS: 18d1WEnYYhBRgZVbeyLr6UfiJhrQygcgNU World Alternative Media 2022
Tajma "Taj" Myles is a cast member of WEtv's new hit reality show “Super Sized Salon”, which follows the staff of the first beauty salon that caters to the plus size community. The reality show follows six women business owners from across the country who joined forces to open the world's first recognized plus size salon, customized to accommodate women of all sizes and shapes up to 800 pounds. Tajma is one of the industry's most sought-after expert hair stylists and makeup artists. She has worked with celebrity clients such as Vanessa Simmons, Kindred Family Soul, Frenchie Davis, Sherri Shepherd, E40, Lloyd and Karen King, among others. Taj's work has also been featured on projects for Chris Brown's Black Pyramid, Amber Rose's SlutWalk, and John Legends' Darkness and Light Tour. She is the owner of The StylezByTaj Collection,a full-service luxury salon in Berkeley, California. The StylezByTaj Collection salon exudes glamour and provides a “high-end” one-stop shop for all your luxury beauty needs including hair styling, makeup application, and also features Taj's Luxury Naked Hair Line, Stylez By Taj Collection. Super Sized Salon airs Fridays at 10:30 p.m. ET on WEtv. The series will also stream on ALLBLK every Tuesday following its WEtv airing.
Lisa Thompson is a Mountaineer, cancer survivor, and sought-after speaker and coach. She worked for 25 years as an engineer and in leadership roles at technology companies. In 2008, she began climbing and has summited most of the most challenging mountains in the world, including Mount Everest and K2. She's completed the seven summits reaching the top of the highest peak of each of the seven continents. Through her company, Alpine Athletics, and other platforms, Lisa shares her message of strength and resilience with corporate and private groups worldwide. She is also the author of “Finding Elevation” which chronicles her path from novice climber to world class mountain. Learn more about Lisa. Learn more about The Passionistas Project. Full Transcript: Passionistas: Hi, and welcome to the Passionistas Project Podcast, where we talk with women who are following their Passionistas to inspire you to do the same. We're Amy and Nancy Harrington and today we're talking with Lisa Thompson, a mountaineer, cancer survivor and sought-after speaker and coach. Lisa worked for 25 years as an engineer and in leadership roles at technology companies. In 2008, she began climbing and has summited most of the most challenging mountains in the world, including Mount Everest and K2. She's completed the seven summits reaching the top of the highest peak of each of the seven continents. Through her company, Alpine Athletics and other platforms. Lisa shares her message of strength and resilience with corporate and private groups worldwide. She is also the author of “Finding Elevation,” which chronicles Thompson's path from novice climber to world class mountain. So please welcome to the show. Lisa Thompson. Lisa: Great to be here. Thanks for having me today. Passionistas: We're really excited to have you here and hear your story. And, uh, we always like to start with the question. What's the one thing you're most passionate about? Lisa: Right now, I think this has changed over the years. I'm sure that's just the normal progression of a life, but right now I am most passionate about giving back to. Women in the communities that I love communities in Nepal and in Pakistan where I've, you know, really feel at home in the mountains and have spent a lot of time and have great memories there. And it's important to me to give back to those communities, especially the women. I recently started a nonprofit to support women in Nepal and specifically to support their education. It was shocking to me to learn that something like 58% of women in Nepal over the age of 15 have had. Zero education, none at all, which is just, you know, alarming on many levels. But in one regard, they're really the center of a Nepalese family and community. And the fact that there's been no formal education for so many of those women just felt like something that was, that I wanted to impact in a positive way. Passionistas: Where did you grow up and what was your childhood like? Were you always interested in, in, uh, climbing and being outdoors? Lisa: So I grew up in the great mountaineering state of Illinois, where the highest point I believe is 120 feet. And it's so predominant that it actually has a name. Whereas in most states, if that elevation would not be named, so I didn't grow up. Aspiring to be a Mountaineer. I didn't grow up learning or reading about, you know, sir, Edmond Hillary or other sort of pioneering mountaineers. And I wasn't even really that athletic, you know, looking back, I grew up in a small farming community, uh, called Lincoln in the very center of Illinois. You know, every kid sort of makes the, the softball team or the volleyball team. I think there were a couple years where I did not even make it. I was so uncoordinated and unathletic a and I didn't grow up really with parents who pushed me to Excel. You know, I think part of their sort of distance is what motivated me to prove myself and to, you know, you know, back then it was about getting their attention. Lots of time in therapy talking about that. But one of the positives of that I've realized is that it pushed me to really want to Excel and to push myself mentally and physically. And that translated first, you know, I'm still by my account, but only person in my entire extended family to graduate from college, which is sort of sad, you know, to me, but it pushed me to do things that were unexpected. In my community and with my family. And so, you know, going to college was sort of the first step in that direction. I studied engineering, you know, not because I was super interested in it, but because I felt like that seems hard and I can probably make a decent salary when I graduate. And so I was fortunate to get a job with Hewlett Packard right out of college as an engineer, then it was, you know, that was the mid-nineties. I was the only woman at my level. And that taught me a lot. I was certainly not prepared coming from. You know, a very sort of hardworking farming-oriented family. I was not equipped to be thrown into a corporate environment at that age. I was 24. And so there was a lot of sort of flailing and trying to understand dynamics and politics. And I was often the youngest person in the room, the only female in the room. And. Upon reflection. Um, there were definitely some missteps, some things that I just, frankly didn't understand, cuz I was ill-equipped to be in that kind of environment. But one very positive thing that came of that was that through that job, I eventually moved to Seattle, which is where I live today. And here. You know, mountaineering, we're fortunate to be surrounded by the Cascade mountains and the Olympic mountain range. So climbing and mountaineering and just being in the mountains is really part of the culture in Seattle. When I moved here, uh, for that job still with, you know, it wasn't any longer with Hewlett Packard, but it was a derivation of that company. All the men at my level would go climbing on the weekend. And so I had no idea, right? I no, like I'd maybe been camping with my family, but I didn't like know anything about mountaineering. I didn't know what a crampon was. I had no idea the equipment, the gear, the, the, you know, the sort of aesthetic of climbing, nothing. But these men, you know, would go out on the weekends and they would come back to the office on Monday and they had all. You know, incredible stories. And again, it wasn't that I aspired to be in the mountains, but I aspired to be a part of their group. And I wanted them so badly to see me, the only woman on their team as capable and strong. And I wasn't getting that in the office environment. So this seemed like a way to do that. And instead of doing the totally logical thing, which would've been to say. Like oh, climbing. That sounds really cool. Can I come with you or can you tell me more about it? I just got frustrated. I got mad and eventually just decided I was gonna go climb my own damn mountains. And I had no, I again had no idea what that meant, but I started really just hiking around my house in the cascades. And then eventually in 2008, I attempted Mount Rainier, which is the highest mountain in Washington. And after that I was, I was just hooked spite no spite I was hooked at that. Passionistas: Do they know what you've accomplished since then? Lisa: I've lost track of them. I could probably, you know, through a network, get back to them, but I don't, I don't know. Probably not and they probably don't even, you know, these weren't bad guys at all. It just, I think didn't occur to them to ask me to join. And so they probably would have no reason to wonder like, Hey, I wonder if that girl ever climbed any mountains. Passionistas: You started to do this as, you know, a recreational activity, but then at some point that obviously shifted and you started to set these goals for yourself. So what inspired you to climb Mount Rainier and then to take it further from there? Lisa: Yeah, there was something about, so I didn't summit Rainier. My first attempt, the weather sort of turned bad on our second day and retreated. And, and I was relieved in that moment. I was happy cuz I just, I. Again, no idea what I was doing. Although I was with, you know, I was with a guide company and I was safe and all that, but I really just mentally wasn't prepared to be on a mountain and to just feel sort of the vastness of that challenge. And so I went back the next year before I got back to the parking lot in 2008, I was sure I was coming back. I tend to look at climbs like projects. And so even after that first year, I was like, okay, these are, you know, my backpack needs to be lighter. I need to have, you know, not red boots and have my own boots and just little things like that, that I started to like to learn and to, to tweak and adjust what I knew and my gear and my knowledge of the mountain. So I went back in 2009 and summited, and there was a moment, you know, where I sort of it's dark out and you're, you know, you can't really. Appreciate where you're at on the mountain and the sort of vastness of everything around you and the risk of falling. And because all you can see in the dark is just this little tiny circle of light from your headlamp. And so there was a moment where I remember looking what would've been east and seeing the sun just slowly start to split the horizon from the earth and. Just seeing like colors that were so magnificent and awe inspiring and thinking. This is an incredible experience and such a, a daunting place to be that taught me so much, so much humility to be learned in the mountains. When I got to the summit, I just had this incredible sense of accomplishment that I hadn't found anywhere else. I hadn't really gotten it from my parents as a kid. I hadn't gotten it at work. I, you know, graduated from college, any accomplishment I had had in my life until that point hadn't made me feel that way. And I loved that. I still love that climbing is. Obviously a very physical pursuit, but there is an enormous mental challenge that comes with climbing, you know, in any discipline of climbing. And I really loved that combination and I loved the idea of setting. Lofty goal and working hard and accomplishing it. And so I was completely hooked at that point. In two, I was 2009 and ready to just, I did, again, didn't know a lot about what to climb next, but I was sure that I was gonna keep doing it. Passionistas: You know, you were kind of inspired to do it by this being in this male dominated world. When you got to climbing, were there a lot of other women who were in doing what you were doing? Lisa” No. In fact, I, in the beginning was gonna name my book, the only girl, and it has changed. This is, you know, the late 2000s. It is getting better. You know, there's more diversity that the only, and first all black team summited Everest last month, which is incredible to see. And I was fortunate to play a small role in coaching them. So it's changing the dynamics, the face of, of people who enjoy the mountains is changing. But then I was. I don't always is maybe a strong word, but 95% of the time, I was the only woman on the team. And, you know, I was used to being in male dominated arenas, so that wasn't unusual for me, but I think it, you know, being an intense environment like climbing, just sort of heightened all of the challenges that come with that and made them much more potent. And it took me a long time to realize. Or to think about how I showed up in those roles. There was always the, like people doubted and people would say, oh, it's cute. I think you're gonna climb Mount Everest. That's a whole other conversation, but what I tended to think about myself and how I showed up in those situations. And at first I would just be one of the guys, I mean, so much so that they would undress in front of me and not even like, consider that there was a woman standing next to them. On Everest was the first time that I, that just didn't feel authentic to me anymore. It didn't feel right to laugh at crew. That were often, you know, demeaning to women. It didn't feel right to overlook little comments that just didn't sit well with me anymore. And so that was the first time. And there's a moment. And I talk about it in my book where I, you know, all men and I sort of separated myself from them for a minute because it just, I needed to feel like a woman and I needed to feel like myself in that environment. And, you know, at the time it. We're sort of arguing back and forth about my opinion about something versus theirs. But I realize now that it was me sort of stepping into my own strength and my own sort of persona as a woman and saying like this isn't okay anymore. And I'm not gonna just, you know, sit here and let it happen without saying anything. It's still challenging. It's getting better. But yeah, there were a lot of moments there just being, the only woman was a challenge for me. Passionistas: Do you think there are certain qualities that you, as a woman bring to a climb that's different than the male energy of a, of a climb? Lisa: And again, generalizing. Right. But I, I'm fortunate now that I get to coach mountaineers and I coach men and women. Um, and I, you know, I can see those nuances, even as I'm coaching them, women are much more interested in like the mental side. Of taking on a challenge, like a big mountain and making sure that they're very well rounded in their preparations. They wanna make sure that they're understanding the route. You know, they know where the challenges will be and that mentally they have the tools to get through them. And men generally, again, not always the case, but often just like they wanna like train and work hard and do all the runs and all the hikes and all the preparation climbs. And don't often sort of step back and say, There's a whole other side of this. There's a whole other, you know, facet to climbing big mountains. And, you know, my experience is that when you look at everything holistically is when you're the most prepared and when you're the most successful. And I think even on the mountains, you know, it's tough, there's difficult situations. And I find that women often add just a little bit more compassion to those situations. A little bit more empathy. and sometimes that's what you need to get through something that's difficult. So there's my experience. Yeah. There's a big difference between what men and women bring to those situations. Passionistas: So you, you have the successful Mount Rainier climb in 2009. What happens next? And how do you kind of plan where you go next? Lisa: Yeah, so I didn't do a lot of planning. I just knew, I knew I wanted to keep climbing more challenging things and there's, you know, back in the eighties, I believe it was a couple of mountaineers society. It would be really cool to climb to the highest peak of every single continent. And so I thought, okay, I'll just start doing that. You know, I don't know what to do. I picked the easiest, one of those, which was in Russia, a Mount called Elbrus and was successful there. So I thought, okay, well, Keep sort of on that track and climbing in the cascades as well, sort of, you know, like thinking, okay, I wanna be more independent and learn different skills, like building anchors and self-arrest and rope management. And so I, I would take excursions on the weekends locally to do those things. And then about once a year I would climb something big somewhere else in the world. And I was on that track and I had sort of decided. Mount Everest was kind of the next logical thing for me to climb just in terms of skill and difficulty. And at the time I felt like, oh, Everest is so commercial and there must be more interesting mountains in the Himalaya to climb. And so I had decided, and this really is a big moment. I think, in any mountaineers' career I had decided I was ready to climb in the Himalaya. So, you know, the Himalaya is this huge mountain range that bisects Asia and. It's special for a lot of reasons, but one is that. Most of the highest mountains in the world are there. And when we say high, in terms of mountaineering, we're talking about any mountain that's higher than 26,000 feet or 8,000 meters. And there's only 14 of those in the world. And so I, in 2015 thought, okay, I think I'm ready. Like I'm ready to try an easy one and just see how it goes. So. I picked that mountain, which is called Montes SL. And I was just beginning to prepare for it when I was diagnosed with cancer, you know, we, we've already established that. I'm a very stubborn person and I was a little cocky, you know, I was 42 years old. I thought and, and an athlete, like I ate organic vegetables. I wore my seatbelt. I floss my teeth. Like I, all those things that you are, you are taught to believe will keep you healthy. I thought I was doing it turns out I had a tremendous amount of stress in my job, which is, you know, like looking back and sort of analyzing how my body could get reacted that way to an external thing. It probably was a lot of stress at work, but nonetheless, I was diagnosed with breast cancer at the beginning of 2015. I was determined. Not to let cancer dictate my priorities so much so that I sat with my surgeon and said like, is there any way we could just postpone this whole cancer thing? Like, can we just like, how much could those tumors really grow in eight months? Like I just go do this climb and I'll come back and then you can do whatever you want with my body. When I get back and she very compassionately said that that would be a full hearty decision. I always remember that she used that word. And so I was very fortunate that I was able to get rid of the tumors in my, uh, breast with a bilateral mastectomy from which I did at the beginning in April of 2015. And I was, I mean, determination. Isn't a big enough word for how focused I was on getting my body ready to still travel to Nepal and attempt Montes SL. That autumn. And so I went, um, I was not, I was not a hundred percent. I had all, you know, all my doctors, all my care, healthcare providers knew what I was up to. They all thought I was a little bit crazy, but I had their support to be there. And. You know, their cell phone numbers, if anything went weird. And luckily it didn't, I didn't summit Manaslu in 2015, there was an avalanche above our camp. And, you know, the team felt that it just wasn't safe to continue. So we all turned around and I, I firmly believe that mountains and, you know, nature teaches us things. And so. When I got home, I, you know, I just sort of did some reflection about that climb. And I think sometimes you learn the most when you're not successful when you don't summit. But I realized that, you know, life is so fragile and that it's up to us. Each of us to define the lives that we will live. And so I became determined then to sort of reprioritize my life. My pause, my corporate career actually got a divorce and I decided to climb Mount Everest at that point. And, uh, went back to Nepal in 2016 to do that. Passionistas: So talk about that. Talk about preparing for that and you know, and the mental preparation, especially. Lisa: I learned a lot on Monte SL again, you know, success doesn't always mean you, you gain the most from a situation. And so I learned what my body was capable of. I knew that if I was healthy and trained, that I could be even stronger. And so I, I started working with a sports psychologist to really dig into the mental aspects. I was still a little bit unsure about what my body could do, you know, I, I, and I had. Probably four more surgeries before I went to Everest for reconstruction. So I depended a lot on a sports psychologist to just help me understand why Everest was important to me, what my body was capable of. To give me some really important tools that I use still today when things get difficult in the mountains to have something to focus on and to sort of rationalize what's going on around me and break it down into manageable chunks. So that was hugely helpful. I worked with a, a climbing coach as well to get me ready. You know, it was a very tumultuous time in my life as I was preparing to climb the most difficult mountain that I had climbed to that point. I was in the middle of getting a divorce. I wasn't sure I wanted to keep working. My dog died. Like all these, just so many things happened and looking back. It felt like just a really big reset, like the universe sort of saying, like, you know, that was your life then before cancer, and this is your chance to find your life after cancer. You know, that really is a big gift. I always think that cancer, I am grateful today in the moment I was not, but today I'm grateful for cancer because it showed me so many things about priorities and what life is about and how I want to spend it. I know that there's a book worth of conversation to be had, if not more about actually climbing Mount Everest, but kind of in general, what was the experience like? Passionistas: What was the biggest challenge that you faced in, in the midst of that experience? Lisa: Yeah, so climbing a big mountain, like Everest, I'll just provide a quick sort of background as to how it even. You know, it's, those mountains are so big, right? Your, your body could not possibly function. Even if you're breathing supplemental oxygen. It's not as easy as just walking to base camp and then starting to climb. There's a whole process of a climatization. Where you start at one camp climb to the next highest camp and then return to that first camp. And then you repeat that process gradually moving up the mountain, and that allows your body to change physiologically, to build more red blood cells so that you can survive at those higher elevations. And so for me on Everest as I was going through that process, I really felt in sync with the mountain in contrast to K2, which I'm sure we'll talk about in a little bit, but I really felt like things just went smoothly. I felt like the mountain and I were working together and that we sort of [00:23:00] shared a level of respect. That, you know, ultimately ultimately allowed me to be successful, but that doesn't mean there weren't difficult moments. I recall climbing from camp three to camp four and it had been very, very windy. So, you know, hadn't slept at all the night before was lying in a very cramped tent. That was my side of the tent was actually can levered over the side of the mountain because it, you know, it was so steep. And, you know, a lot of emotional, like, is it too windy? You know, are we gonna have a chance to summit? We need to descend. And then it's a very quick decision by our team to like, we look, it looks like we have a window. We're gonna go up. I had sort of envisioned like having this moment to like get ready. And that was none of that. It was very rushed and harried and chaotic. And I, I walk out of the tent and I clip into the fixed rope with my, with my harness. and it was so incredibly windy that it kept blowing me over. And I remember these moments of just hearing the wind coming towards me from my left side, and then just lying face down on the ice to let it pass me by before I could continue. And that luckily subsided after, I don't know, a couple of hours or something. And, and then. I got to what I knew was gonna be the easiest part of that day, which is sort of a flat section that curves to the left towards a rock feature called the yellow band. And the yellow band is about 25 degrees. So it's not super steep. It's limestone. It would actually be fun to climb it at sea level, but as I'm walking towards it, I realize that I'm moving so slow and I'm actually. Like I get distracted by someone's glove, rolling down the ice. And my friend came up from behind me is like, what, you know, what do you what's going on? And I was like, I don't know. I just, I just wanna like lay down and I had run out of oxygen. So my brain and my, my muscles were not getting the oxygen that they needed to continue. I had a couple, I had a decision to make, I had a few choices in that moment. I could have turned around and gone back to camp three and said, you know, my climbs over or looked for more oxygen. I could have sat there in the snow and asked someone, probably a Sherpa to bring me more oxygen where I could have kept going. And. Those first two options just didn't feel right to me. And so I continued climbing. I will never forget. So climbing this relatively, you know, at sea level, easy section of rock and telling myself to just focus on the climber ahead of me and to never let him outta my sight, like just, he's not gonna get outta my site no matter what it takes. And I don't know how long it took me. I, you know, everything got really fuzzy at that moment. And I was still safe. I still had people around me and people knew that I didn't have oxygen, but I, that made that situation made me realize that we are so much stronger mentally than we believe or that, that we give ourselves credit for, because my body was literally like, it didn't have the gas that needed to continue. And it was just, I think my mind is pushing me, just willing myself forward to get through that situation. And the best feeling in the world. Like I hope nobody has to experience that, but I can't tell you how sweet it is to not have oxygen and have oxygen. Like, as soon as I got a fresh bottle, it was like, the world was right again. So a challenging moment. But like I said, I think mountains teach us things and you know, it taught me that I sort of have this untapped tool in my, you know, mental capacity that I really. You know, even now I feel like there's so much more potential to hone that skill of being mentally strong. Passionistas: We're Amy and Nancy Harrington and you're listening to the Passionistas Project Podcast in our interview with Lisa Thompson. To learn more about her adventures and get a copy of her book, “Finding Elevation,” visit Lisaclimbs.com. We'd like to take a moment to share a special announce. We'll be hosting the third annual Power of Passionistas Summit, this September 21st through September 23rd, 2022. The three-day virtual event is focused on authentic conversations about diversity, equity and inclusion. This unique gathering of intersectional storytellers and panelists harnesses the power of our rich community of passionate thought leaders and activists to pose solutions to the problems plaguing women today. Early bird tickets are on sale now at bit.ly/2022PowerofPassionistasTickets. We'd like to thank our sponsors — Melanie Childers, Natural Born Rebel, The Ossa Collective, Tea Drops, Aaron's Coffee Corner, Flourishing Over Fifty, Edith Espanola, Mermaid's Garden, Sara Fins Coaching, and Tara McCann Wellness. Now here's more of our interview with Lisa. That process of getting in tune with the mountain and going back and forth to the different camps. How long does that take? Lisa: It takes about a month, maybe six weeks. It just depends on weather and how fast people are moving People climbing in sort of the standard style climbing, big mountains and 8,000 meter peaks. Usually it takes about six weeks to, to two months to, to do that. So it's a long time. Passionistas: In 2017, you actually won an Emmy for something related to the Everest climb. Lisa: Right? So we, so this is totally serendipitous. So the expedition leader is named Garrett Madison He had endeavored to capture our climb in virtual reality, you know, technology has changed a lot since 2016. And so the way we did it was to strap all these GoPros sort of in a sphere and then carry that on a wand up the mountain and thereby, you know, create this 360 degree view. Of our climb. And then later some very smart people stitched that together and actually made it a virtual reality film, which is called capturing Everest. And, you know, I didn't know that was gonna happen when I signed up for that climb. There were, you know, a lot of. Sort of deals made and, and it just happened to be purchased by sports illustrated, um, and turned into this really cool documentary that later won an Emmy, not for my acting prowess, surprisingly, but for just the technology. It was the first time that anyone had captured virtual reality footage in that kind of an environment. You can find it on the sports illustrated website and on their app. And it's really, it's really fun if even if you don't have a headset, you can watch it in 360-degree video with your phone. And I will tell you, it will make you dizzy. Like even me having been there, it is very, very real to watch people, you know, climbing or walking across the ladder or climbing a steep part of, of the, the mountain. So I feel. You know, never in my life, if you've said like you could win an Emmy, I would like never thought that. So it was a really, really cool experience and cool to be able to just share that in a very tangible way, with cool technology, to people who, you know, may never endeavor to climb. But now get to have a little bit of a taste of what it's like. Passionistas: So that same year in 2017, you, um, became the first all American women to summit K2. So how did that differ from climbing Mount Everest and what unique challenges did you face on that? Lisa: Yeah. So it was 2017. I, I endeavored to go to K2 for the first time. My team actually fell apart. And so I didn't climb that mountain that year. I went back in 2018 and in 2017, the first American woman did summit. And I felt like, you know, I, I, this is still an important climb for me. It's something. I think being the first is very cool. I think not being the only is even cooler. And so it was important to me to just sort of continue showing what women could do in the mountains. So K2 is the second highest mountain in the world. It's about 800 feet shorter than Mount Everest. K2 is in Pakistan. It's on the border between China and Pakistan. Most people, like if I'm at a dinner party and you know, someone finds out that I've climbed Everest, they get super excited and they wanna know what that's like, and I'll say, yeah, but I climbed this other mountain called K2, which is actually like really, really hard. And they're like, yeah. But tell me about Everest. Did you see any dead people? So most people don't even know. You know, not even heard of K2, it's in a much more remote part of the world. For example, you know, the, the walk to Everest space camp is, you know, in a lovely valley, there are tea houses. There are commercial helicopters. There is an emergency room at Everest space camp. There is none of that. In the Karakoram mountain range in Pakistan, you are farther from any kind of definitive medical care that you'll probably ever be in your life. And that, you know, would involve a Pakistani army helicopter ride to a small hospital in a remote village. So it's, it's much more remote. The weather on K2 is also much more fickle. So it's, you know, known for just monster storms that sort of whip out of nowhere, dump a lot of snow. Cause avalanches. K2 is also steep from like the second you leave base camp. It is just unrelentingly steep and it is also known for a lot of rock fall. So you can imagine that my family was super excited to hear about me. Deciding to climb this mountain, I had just, you know, beat cancer. My father was diagnosed with cancer when I was climbing Mount Everest and, and died about a month after I got home. And so I sort of promised him that K2 would be the last, really dangerous mountain that I climbed. I was very determined to give it a go in 2018. And, and I was so fortunate that. Everything aligned, you know, the, I had a great team, the weather was decent and we were able to make it work. And, and, you know, and I mentioned earlier that I felt very in sync with Mount Everest and on K2. I felt every day like that mountain was trying to kill me, you know, in the form of rock falls in the form of other climbers dying. I just never really felt like I was in sync with that mountain. And there was a moment where again, climbing steep rock much steeper than the rock I describe on Everest. It's a section of the route called the Black Pyramid and it's at 25,000. And so in this moment I'm wearing a down suit. I'm actually breathing bottled oxygen because the climbing is so difficult and I'm attached to a rope. And that section of the mountain is sort of really like chunky, just unstable rock and there's snow and ice. And I wanted to quit. Like I wanted to just turn around. I fantasized about like reversing my direction on the rope and I thought I could be. Back at base camp in a couple of days, and I could get a helicopter to Islamabad and I could take a proper shower and like eat, you know, I'd really just let, like all the things my sports psychologist told me not to do. I just really let that real like play out. I wanted to turn around and I remember, you know, from somewhere there was a voice in my head that said, is this all you were capable of? And I realized that it was not all that I was capable of, that I was, you know, I was frustrated and I was tired and I was mad at myself, but I was capable of more. And so I kept just. Putting one hand above the other one foot above the other. And I knew that would be the hardest point in the mountain. And once I got past that, you know, the, the rocks were relented and it was more snow, which is my comfort zone, but there were many, many moments where I wanted to quit. So then what did that moment feel like when you finally reached the. So I remember climbing. So a couple days after that scene that I described with the Black Pyramid and we attempted the summit and, you know, the night before the summit, you're sort of, you're laying, I was laying in a tent with two other men in the middle position wearing my down suit boots. Like you don't really sleep. You just sort of lay there for a few hours, like waiting and breathing bottle oxygen. I had this sort of like checklist in my mind of like making sure that I had food in the right places, on my, down, in my down suit that I had like turned on my GPS device, like going through all those sort of pre-flight checklist things. And then we, we left for the summit and it's dark out and I knew the climbing initially would not be. The steepest part. I knew it would be a little bit chill for a bit, and then it was gonna get steeper. And I had, you know, that sort of pre-flight checklist. I had put new batteries in my headlamp. And as I'm climbing, I realize that the batteries are about are dying. They're dimmer than everyone else is. And I say, I'm fine. I have a, I have a spare set. It's close to my body. So they're not frozen. I stop, you know, with thick gloves, like fumble around, finally get the batteries in there. Good. Keep climbing, catch up with my team. And it happens again. And I don't have a spare and I can't expect anybody else to give me their spare. They're sort of, you know, they're sort of ethic and climbing that. You need to be self-sufficient up there. You can't rely on anybody else. And so I remember screaming at the guy in front of me, Rob Smith, a fantastic guy from Ireland, and he gave me his spare batteries. You know, it's very delicate exchange, right? If you can imagine we're in these thick gloves, we're on the side of a mountain, it's dark. And I just remember him like pushing that battery into the palm of my glove. And I remember thinking if you dropped this, that's it. The reason it was, I mean, obviously it was important to see, but we were about to cross, what's called the bottleneck traverse on K2, which is, you know, it's actually flat, but it's about, it's less than one boot width. And so you're walking and there's like two miles of air beneath you. And so you cannot make a mistake there. You obviously cannot have compromised vision there. And so literally without Rob's help, I would not have. I wouldn't have made it. And that moment, you know, several hours later, I got to the summit and I remember it was it's light out now and I'm climbing by myself and it's, it's very, um, unconsolidated snow. So I'm sort of take one step and, you know, I'm, I'm putting my boot print in other people's path. So there's a little sort of steps there and sometimes they would just break and you would just slide down and, you know, it's just incredibly frustrating and you exert a lot of energy. But I looked up and I saw where the snow met the horizon. I saw bright colors and I thought, that's it. Like those are other peoples standing there at the summit. And more than anything, I wanted to cry in that moment. But I was like, do not cry. Like you you're not there yet. And just to sort of bring things full circle I had, after my father died, I had, you know, carried his ashes to like every mountain. Sprinkle them on the top. And it was a very, you know, just peaceful sort of full circle moment to spread the last of his ashes on the summative K2, which is, you know, he never in his life could have imagined traveling to Pakistan. So it was fun to just sort of, not only to have him with me, but to be able to share that with him as well was really special. Passionistas: What is the coming down like physically and emotionally? Lisa: So, I'm glad you asked that question, Amy, because most people and I was very, very conscious of writing about this in my book because the summit is halfway like it is literally halfway and more mountaineering accidents occur on the dissent. Then then climbing up and that's because you're tired. Many people push beyond what they're capable of. You're you know, just logistically you're facing away from the mountain. Oftentimes gravity is not working in your favor. And so the dissent to me is very. Harrowing like it's I very consciously at the top of, at any big mountain do not celebrate because it is, you're not done. There is still a lot more work to do. And on K2 in particular, you know, we talked a little bit about like that moment on Everest, where I felt like I was sort of stepping into my own strength and on K2, I'm [00:41:00] descending, very steep ice face and. There are ropes there. And one rope is meant for climbers coming up. There are still some climbers ascending, and the other rope is meant for climbers who are descending. Another climber had, uh, started to ascend the rope that I was about to use to go down. And I scream at him. You know, he's very, he's far down the slope. He can't hear me. He's just sort of laying there. And I sort of looked, my friend Garrett was next to me and he recommended that I descend. Using not the most secure technique, a, a technique arm wrapping where you wrap the rope around your arm and you, um, you're connected to that rope with a safety carabiner. It's locked, but you lean forward and just walk face first down the mountain. And I had done it many times, but, but I, it just didn't feel right. To do it then. And I didn't even, I don't even know where this voice came from, but I just told him no, like I'm not, that's not how I'm gonna do that this today. And so I, you know, set up my repel device, which takes longer, is much safer, but you know, takes longer repel down to this man who's laying face first and the ice, not, he wasn't response, he was alive. I could, you know, he was alive. He did survive by the way, just before I get too far in the story. But he wasn't responsive to my, you know, yelling at him, trying to get him to move. And so I had to execute this very, very delicate sequence of moving my gear, you know, establishing a safe anchor, moving my gear around him on what I know, because I, you know, study this mountain intimately is. The place on that mountain where most people have died and thankfully it went well and he survived and, you know, I was able to continue, but that was a moment that, to me, that just underscores that [00:43:00] the dissent is so in some ways more important than the ascent in terms of difficulty. And that, that moment looking back, or I said to my friend, Garrett, like, that's not how I'm gonna do this today. I really felt like was pivotal in terms of me, sort of, this is a man that I've climbed with for years. I've always trusted him. He knows my capability. And so for me to just, you know, take a different tact, I think was, you know, just more of me, like stepping into my own voice and strength in the mountains, which is a good feeling. Passionistas: Can you compare for us the fear that you faced being diagnosed with cancer versus the fear you faced on a mountain like that? Lisa: Knowing how dangerous it is and if those are different and if you have the same or different tools to deal with both. Yeah, that's an awesome question. They feel to me like somatically, they feel very different. I feel like different kinds of fear. When I was diagnosed with cancer, I felt completely unprepared to deal with that scenario. It was not anything that I ever thought I would have to encounter or deal with in my life. And I felt out of control. I felt like, you know, my body was, had turned against me initially. I, you know, before I had a team of people to support me, I felt alone. And without like a path or a, you know, a guide to get me through this situation. And luckily that changed and I found incredible healthcare. It felt much scarier to be diagnosed with cancer in the mountains. I feel like, you know, I have, I understand what I can control and I have the skills to get myself through it. And I think fear for sure in the mountains. I, I believe that a little bit of fear is a good thing because I think that it keeps you focused. It keeps me alert to what's going on around me. If the weather's changing, if the route is changing, if. You know, someone climbing above me that doesn't look super safe, that little bit of fear sharpens my awareness too much fear. I think in the mountains and in fighting cancer can be stifling. And I think it can actually, you know, sort of stop you from progressing. But that's a, a really important question because they, for me are very different flavors of fear. Passionistas: So what's the next big challenge for you? Lisa: Yeah. So we talked about it a little bit in the beginning. I don't endeavor. I don't have any desire to climb anything more challenging than K2 in my life, but I do wanna keep climbing and it's become more important to me to give back to the communities, particularly in Nepal and in Pakistan, where I have just learned so much about myself and gotten so much from them personally. So I wanna, I wanna start to give back to those communities and in particular to the women who, who live in those communities. So along with some female mountaineering friends of mine, we were setting up a philanthropic climb for this fall to a mountain called Cholatse which is in, uh, Nepal. It's about 6,800 meters. It will not be the hardest mountain we've ever climbed. But the point is that we just wanna show that anything is possible when women support one another in the mountains. And so to us, that means. That our team will be fully comprised of women. I don't know if that's ever happened before. I think there've been some all women's climbs that maybe had support from men, but, and not that we don't like men, but like we just wanna show that women can do everything in the mountains that a man can do. And so we're building that team. We're super lucky to have a great, uh, Nepalese uh, climbing leader. Pasang Lama. She's helping us create a team of all women to, to cook, to carry loads, to plan, to do everything. And we just think it's an incredible sort of opportunity to raise some money for at least one, depending on how, how fundraising goes maybe more, but we want to. We're soliciting input for Nepalese women who have some educational related goal in their life. So if they wanna learn a trade, if they wanna open a tea house, um, if they weren't wanna learn about economics, like we want to be able, we wanna be the catalyst that helps that woman learn those skills so that she can better not just her life. But I think, you know, that sort of has this trickle-down effect and has the potential to positively impact generations. So. I'm, you know, just beyond excited to be a part of this team and we'll see where it goes. We'd love to do it, you know, multiple years, but we're all, you know, just we're dedicated and excited to, to climb with a purpose now. Passionistas: So what inspired you to write your book "Finding Elevation"? Lisa: I had always wanted to write, which I studied engineering in college, you know? I felt like I was very far away from that as, as an adult, but as a kid, I had a desire to write. And in my twenties, I tried out different topics. You know, none of them just sort of seemed to fit. And then when I was diagnosed with cancer, I really relied on journaling to, to get me through that and to be this, you know, sort of outlet for everything that I was feeling. And. Probably two years of journaling, I sort of realized that there were a lot of things that I had encountered that seemed to translate to other people. You know, that if I could share what I had learned, the hard way with another woman that maybe, you know, she would have an easier path than I did. And so it became really important for me to share. Um, and, and, you know, at the time I thought this will just be about cancer. And then as I continued to climb and I continued to learn more about myself and what I'm capable of and how to overcome obstacles, how to find your voice. Most of that through K2, it, it just really turned into a much bigger project than just journaling. . What was the thing you learned about yourself from writing the book that maybe surprised you the. I think I learned a lot about my childhood when I was writing. Um, I, and I, you know, I spent a year studying memoir at the university of Washington, and I remember like my, there was nothing about my childhood in, in an early draft. And my instructor was like, you can't leave that out. Like that's a part of, and I was like, yeah, but it wasn't, you know, it wasn't super, like, it's kind of painful for me. I really don't wanna put it in here. Um, and of course it, you know, needs to be a more balanced story, et cetera, etcetera. And so by me sort of digging through that, I realized, you know, this sort of these traits that I have today and where they came from. And there was a lot of therapy in there as well. And it made me realize that, you know, something that. Because I said, my parents, you know, were not very reliable. They weren't always around. And, and that made me a very independent person. Um, there's certainly some downsides to that, but I think there's, I think there's always a silver lining. There's always some positive. Outcome, even of bad situations. And we often just have to look a little bit harder, like, you know, dig a little bit deeper to find them. But those I think are, you know, the real nuggets and like where, where we really learn why we are the way we are. Passionistas: Thanks for listening to our interview with Lisa Thompson, to learn more about her adventures and get a copy of her book, finding elevation, visit LisaClimbs.com Please visit ThePassionistasProject.com to learn more about our podcast and subscription box filled with products made by women owned businesses and female artisans to inspire you to follow your Passions. Double your first box when you sign up for a one year subscription. Remember to sign up for our mailing list, to get more information about the Power of Passionistas Summit at bit.ly/2022PowerofPassionistasTickets. And be sure to subscribe to the Passionistas Project Podcast, so you don't miss any of our upcoming inspiring guests. Until next time stay well and stay passionate.
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Welcome back to The Nerd Expansion! Today's guest is Dr. Stephen Harvey and his nerd love is Ancient Egypt. Woah. It's awesome.Stephen Harvey is an archaeologist and historian of ancient Egypt, and has had a career as a university professor, museum curator, and freelance consultant and lecturer on archaeological tours. He received his BA in Archaeological Studies at Yale in 1987 and his PhD. in Egyptian Archaeology from the University of Pennsylvania in 1998. Steve has participated in archaeological projects in the US, Egypt, Turkey, and Syria, and since 1988 has been actively involved with excavations at Abydos in southern Egypt, most prominently as Director of the Ahmose and Tetisheri Project at Abydos, exploring the last-known royal pyramids of Egypt. HIs discoveries at Abydos include the earliest known scenes of Egyptian horse and chariot warfare, and the identification of the last known Egyptian queen's pyramid. He has been interviewed for and consulted on many international television documentaries, including the series “Scanning the Nile/Mystères du Nil,” (France, 2020); several episodes of “Unearthed” (Windfall Films, 2018-2021); “Mysteries at the Museum” (Travel Channel, 2018); “Building Pharaoh's Chariot” (NOVA, PBS 2013); “Egypt: Engineering an Empire” (History Channel); and “Egypt's Golden Empire” (PBS), and “Lost Treasures of Egypt” (National Geographic), in addition to national and local news programs in the US.“Legend of the Pyramid Kings.” Season 3 Episode 2 of “Lost Treasures of Egypt,” National Geographic Channel (2021):https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VkZnEoHEg4o&list=PLAFqvZkNguNu7j9We-gJhNSgdThV2LHVS“Building Pharaoh's Chariot,” for NOVA (PBS). (2012)https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Loti-WBK_k“Egypt: Engineering an Empire,” The History Channel (2006).https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9cdUxZuarL0&t=4340s There are other recent films available for purchase from the "Unearthed" series" on Discovery Science channel:“Unearthed” Season 9 Episode 7, “Egypt's Cult Kings.” (2021)https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=48BNh_gZ7aM“Unearthed” Season 7 Episode 3 “Secrets of the Black Pyramid.” (2020)https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GkKMK_r6Ikw“Unearthed” Season 3, Episode 9, “Mystery of the Cursed Pyramid,” (2019)https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ppxtYdsvMuwHosted By: Nick Bowan & Sasha WeissTheme song written by Korrie YamaokaPerformed by Sasha Weiss & Korrie Yamaoka
What is The Alaska Trangle? Have you heard of the Alaska Black Pyramid? In this episode, I'm talking about them.
Buried in the wilderness of Alaska is said to be a black pyramid and it is said to be the biggest and oldest on earth. More mysterious is that it appears to be “on” and generating some kind of power. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Does a gigantic black pyramid lie beneath the surface in Alaska? Seismic data and firsthand accounts of its existence point to the conspiracy being true. If it is real, what is it for, and who put it there? Join as we discuss the Alaska Triangle and the Legend of the Black Pyramid. Please support ThreadWeird Apparel Company & The Weird Threads Podcast by shopping www.threadweird.com Join our Telegram Channel for a censorship-free environment: https://t.me/threadweirdbunker Follow ThreadWeird on Rumble to see ALL UNCENSORED EPISODES: https://rumble.com/search/channel?q=ThreadWeird DISCLAIMER: The views and opinions expressed by any employee of, and/or contributor to, ThreadWeird.com and it's related social media pages are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of any organization mentioned within. Any content provided by our bloggers, authors, and or speakers are of their opinion and are not intended to malign any religion, ethnic group, club, organization, company, individual or anyone or anything. In short: Our content is our thoughts and opinions put into writing, spoken words, and imagery. We're an entertainment and lifestyle brand. CALM DOWN. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/weirdthreadspodcast/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/weirdthreadspodcast/support
Remember when we were on the radio and had weird local commercials. Well... Brad has the Rona this week so Classics is what we have got for you. Enjoy and if Brad lives we will be back next week. Listeners requested that we discuss the mysteries surrounding Nome, Alaska, so that's what we do for this episode of the Sofa King Podcast. This small town of 3,800 people is believed to be a hub of missing people, UFO sightings, and alien abductions. An abduction horror film called The Fourth Kind is set on Nome and plays with the truth of the missing people of the small town. How much of the alleged mysteries of Nome are true and how much are fiction? We dig deep to find some truth. Yes, there is an abnormal percentage of missing people, so we explore the reasons for the disappearances. We also look at the misinformation about Nome that came from Universal pictures due to a viral public relations campaign (including fake news releases) as well as what the FBI's official report on the missing people says. The Sofa Kings also discuss a supposed Black Pyramid patrolled by men in black just outside of the city, a missing Inuit village called Angikuni, and the alien abduction phenomenon in general.
A Conversation with Sunyatta AmenPlants aren't always just pretty things to look at on Instagram. Behind them are real human stories, including stories of oppression. To help me tackle some of the tough topics, I spoke to Sunyatta Amen, a fifth-generation master herbalist & natural lifestyle expert. She grew up steeped in ethnobotany behind the counter of the ‘Black Pyramid' herb shops & vegan juice bars founded by her father in Harlem. She has had a lifelong drive to create beautiful, safe spaces in gentrified communities and decolonize wellness for all.She is the founder of CALABASH Tea, a multi-award-winning wellness brand designed to reconnect modern people with food and drink as medicine. She creates healing tea blends that are quite delicious if I do say so myself. She offers spice blends and herbal tonics--all available through her online shop, calabashtea.com.In this episode, we discuss what it means to decolonize wellness, Sunyatta's favorite coffee replacement, why sea moss is a hot ingredient and how to use it, and how she uses tea as a healing agent for herself and her community. Calabash Tea: https://www.calabashtea.com/ Blue Velvet tea from Calabash: https://www.calabashtea.com/store/bluevelvet?rq=blue%20velvet Sea moss from Calabash: https://www.calabashtea.com/store/seamoss?rq=sea%20moss Read more at https://www.plantoutloud.com/sunyatta-amen This episode is sponsored by Stewart & Claire. Use the code PLANTOUTLOUD to receive 15% off at checkout.
Welcome to your one-stop-shop, for all things Doom! As always, The Doom Saloon features Doom Metal, Stoner Rock, Sludge, Desert Rock, and Psychedelic! We have...
Forced to confront the neurotic shoe cobbler within the Moonlight Cloak: Alice, Hannibal, and Thelonius find themselves fleeing from the flesh-crafting abomination, after Norbert Tinkledink was stabbed by a Shard of The Black Pyramid. Cascadia Citrinefall only needs this monster to slay the group so that she can remain in the city and unleash her terrifying plans! Can the group melt their former ally down? Or will they get trampled by the footsie aberration?
@shmdt_mnml @hiddenmusicology instagram.com/hidden_dj_bar facebook.com/hiddendjbar hiddendjbar.ru
The Aeon Cutter came under attack, and its current status is unknown as our Twilight Knights escaped to an outer rim planet. John - Gamemaster Craig - Krak Tolpa - Quarren Sentinel Erin - Red - Miraluka Seeker Holly - Avasia - Pureblood Sith Warrior Jack - Jash Ulann - Chiss Guardian Jeremy - Ilyana - Dathomirian Mystic Mara - Niriz - Droid Consular William - Korrsarath - Pureblood Sith Mystic ----- Thanks to all of our supporters at patreon.com/fsfilms for making this possible! Especially our $25+ Donors: Antitonic Drevian Alexander Kat Waterflame Rowan Parker Samantha Bates
The Aeon Cutter came under attack, and its current status is unknown as our Twilight Knights escaped to an outer rim planet. John - Gamemaster Craig - Krak Tolpa - Quarren Sentinel Erin - Red - Miraluka Seeker Holly - Avasia - Pureblood Sith Warrior Jack - Jash Ulann - Chiss Guardian Jeremy - Ilyana - Dathomirian Mystic Mara - Niriz - Droid Consular William - Korrsarath - Pureblood Sith Mystic Thanks to all of our supporters at patreon.com/fsfilms for making this possible! Especially our $25+ Donors: Antitonic Drevian Alexander Kat Waterflame Rowan Parker Samantha Bates
The Aeon Cutter came under attack, and its current status is unknown as our Twilight Knights escaped to an outer rim planet. John - GamemasterCraig - Krak Tolpa - Quarren SentinelErin - Red - Miraluka SeekerHolly - Avasia - Pureblood Sith WarriorJack - Jash Ulann - Chiss GuardianJeremy - Ilyana - Dathomirian MysticMara - Niriz - Droid ConsularWilliam - Korrsarath - Pureblood Sith Mystic ----- Thanks to all of our supporters at patreon.com/fsfilms for making this possible! Especially our $25+ Donors: AntitonicDrevian AlexanderKat WaterflameRowan ParkerSamantha Bates
Linda Moulton Howe. Webcast. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/comoycuando/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/comoycuando/support
Welcome to Episode 52 - Sharper than Commissar Yarrick's Power Klaw! Matt and Cameron discuss the Age of Sigmar novel "Black Pyramid" as well as share their custom Imperial Guard regiment ideas! Also on the show:- Six armies for one game or one army for six games? GW online store reopens Future AoS RTS game Catachan Colonel Plus more! Timestamps:- Hobby talk - 07:44 News - 44:29 Black Pyramid - 01:10:31 Imperial Guard Regiments - 02:20:00 Episode recorded on the 3rd May 2020. Links:- Support us via Ko-fi - https://www.ko-fi.com/realmandruin Follow us on Twitter - @RealmandRuin Follow us on Instagram - realmandruin Our Website - www.realmandruin.com Join our Discord - https://discord.gg/xMrZdP3 Friends of the show Alchemists Workshops - https://alchemistsworkshops.com/ Breaks music produced by Jake Lionheart (Twitter - @JakeLionheart) Follow Matt on Twitter - @NinjaBadger7 Follow Cameron on Twitter - @nighttwitten
This week, the girls do things a little differently and, instead of covering the usual murderous plot, Jess goes Full-Metal-Jacket and covers the lesser-known, Alaskan Triangle as part of the Alaskan two-part series. This three sided polygon of mystical fuckery makes the Bermuda triangle look like a Disney-cruise vacation. Sit back, pour a glass, and find hogzilla so you can domesticate him and feed him dead bodies.
Welcome to the Art Meets Culture Podcast!!! We're joined by Stuart Worsell who is a 29-year-old artist from Kent, UK. We talk about sneakers, working with Chris Brown and his Black Pyramid brand and his legacy as an artist. From an early age, he has been fascinated with bright and bold colours, creating predominantly from the imagination which usually leads to new and very different results. Over time he honed this style of raw imaginary creativeness with experiments using mixed media which resulted in the signature art that exists today. Stuart has formed a following which can recognise the work he produces immediately and has a long line of commissions. Currently working on future projects he strives to leave his bright and unique mark on the industry.
The labors of Rhogar continue this week as the Black Pyramid pushes the young paladins resolve and faith to its limits. Join Matt Dennis (https://twitter.com/TommyGTNP), Flo Dennis (https://twitter.com/SofiaGTNP) and James Bunkell (https://twitter.com/RhogarGTNP) as they descend with a joke and a laugh into a dark and twisted world created by DM and host Adam Cookson (https://twitter.com/TreasonNo) For backstory, artwork and bonus details see our website: https://gunpowdertreasonnoplot.wordpress.com/ Member of the Necropodicon Network: https://www.necropodicon.com/ We’re one of the Top 60 D&D (Dungeons and Dragons) Podcasts in the world! Check out the full list here Music and Sound by Syrinscape. https://store.syrinscape.com/what-is-syrinscape/?att Because Epic games need Epic game sounds
Babalon Rising is an occult podcast with a focus on sexuality, art, and liberation! This special episode rhea goes over a spell from their personal journals. Contact: email | insta | tumblr | youtube --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rhea77/message
Today we take our first steps inside the Black Pyramid. All you need to know for this one is; things get dark. Thought what else could you expect when the Outer Gods come calling. Join Matt Dennis (https://twitter.com/TommyGTNP), Flo Dennis (https://twitter.com/SofiaGTNP) and James Bunkell (https://twitter.com/RhogarGTNP) as they descend with a joke and a laugh into a dark and twisted world created by DM and host Adam Cookson (https://twitter.com/TreasonNo) For backstory, artwork and bonus details see our website: https://gunpowdertreasonnoplot.wordpress.com/ Member of the Necropodicon Network: https://www.necropodicon.com/ We’re one of the Top 60 D&D (Dungeons and Dragons) Podcasts in the world! Check out the full list here Music and Sound by Syrinscape. https://store.syrinscape.com/what-is-syrinscape/?att Because Epic games need Epic game sounds
In this episode Bazz discusses Chris Brown, singer and dancer in a different light as a entrepreneur and fashion designer. The Grammy winner launched and serves as a designer for his fashion company & brand Black Pyramid line since 2012. Joining partners Pink Dolphin founder, Cena Barhaghi and Neima Khalia to build an iconic brand. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ends-media-llc/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ends-media-llc/support
Welcome to Episode 43 - No Gitz under the mistletoe here! Matt and Cameron review all the Warhammer goodness of 2019 and what 2020 might bring! Also on the show:- Which model/character has the best hat? Your 2019 Warhammer highlights! Our plans for 2020 Plus more! Timestamps:- Hobby talk - 09:47 2019 Review - 23:21 2020 Predictions/Plans - 01:54:25 Episode recorded on the 14th December 2019. Links: Support us via Ko-fi - https://www.ko-fi.com/realmandruin Follow us on Twitter - @RealmandRuin Follow us on Instagram - realmandruin Our Website - www.realmandruin.com Join our Discord - https://discord.gg/xMrZdP3 Friends of the show Alchemists Workshops - https://alchemistsworkshops.com/ Follow Matt on Twitter - @NinjaBadger7 Follow Cameron on Twitter - @night_twitten
Today's guest has had tremendous adventures in ecommerce – from managing Jack Threads' 16-million person list to earning $38mm in 10 weeks selling hover boards – and today he's going to share it all with us.The first twenty minutes of this episode are possibly the most value-packed show we've ever recorded.You'll hear:The exact exit intent strategy they're using with Privy and KlaviyoWhy a Repeat Nurture Series could be your most overlooked flowHow kicking subscribers off their list is driving revenueWhy best subject line could be "a deal to good to pass up"The case for plain textHow to ensure your emails land in the inboxUsing Google Trends to find seven-figure product ideasJosh writes, "My career has taken an interesting path over the past 16 years, from accounting to digital marketing, I have seen it all. After 7 years into my career, I finally realized I was not enjoying my day to day life as a public accountant and was given an opportunity to become the Controller to one of the clients. This was my first introduction to e-commerce and marketing. After 6 months into my Controller position, I was able to skim the surface into marketing and quickly became hooked! From this point, I began my transition out of accounting and solely into digital marketing. I was given opportunities from a variety of well-known streetwear brands such as Jack Threads and Black Pyramid and multiple freelance projects, which really allowed me to hone my craft and accelerate each brands revenue. I am currently the Digital Marketing Director at Amerex Group."Links MentionedAmerex GroupPrivyKlaviyoNosto@jbehr919Never miss an episodeSubscribe wherever you get your podcastsJoin Kurt's newsletterHelp the showAsk a question in The Unofficial Shopify Podcast Facebook GroupLeave an honest review on iTunes. Your ratings & reviews help, and I read each one.Subscribe wherever you get your podcastsWhat's Kurt up to?See our recent work at EthercycleTake a ride with Kurt on YouTubeApply to work with Kurt to grow your store.SponsorsTry Bold Product Upsell free for 90 daysSave 20% on Turbo, a blazing fast Shopify themeImprove your shop's search engine ranking with Venntov SEO Meta ManagerOutsource your Shopify customer service with Simplr
With the Black Pyramid game cancelled, the Crew chatted about the new looks Chris Brown showed us this past week. FRESH STARTMusic by Joakim Karud http://youtube.com/joakimkarud
Is reincarnation real? Is John Lear a quack job or does he know some next level stuff? We talk about the "black pyramid" John claims to be on the moon that is snatching up and reincarnating souls.
"Holy shit, Greg Ginn's a Deadhead!" We're headed on a long strange trip into the Black Pyramid with special guest John Kiefer. Deadheads unite! YOU DON’T KNOW MOJACK is a podcast dedicated to exploring the entire SST catalogue, in order, from start to finish. During the podcast we will discuss all the releases that are part of our core DNA, as well as many lesser-known releases that deserve a second chance, or releases that we are discovering for the very first time (we actually don’t know Mojack!). First and foremost we are fans, and acknowledge that we are not perfect and don’t know everything – sometimes the discussion is more about a time, place, feeling, personal experience or random tangents, and less about the facts (but we will try to get to the facts too). Facebook: www.facebook.com/mojackpod/ Twitter: @mojackpod Instagram: www.instagram.com/mojackpod/ Blog: www.mojackpod.com/ Tumblr: www.tumblr.com/blog/mojackpod Theme Song: Shockflesh
On this epsiode of the Black Pyramid podcast we have special guest Fiji dropping by discussing where he is from, how he became one of Dallas's premier party goers, girls and much more!
The Crew talks about replying to haters on social media, new Black Pyramid gear, Tour Merchandise site, trusting Chris' career decisions, and CHRIS FOLLOWED US ON INSTAGRAM!! FRESH START Music by Joakim Karud http://youtube.com/joakimkarud
Our adventurers continue their battle to the death with Lucidia'Grawl, neither side relenting. While the group fights to make sure the mad Ettin is destroyed, as Grawl funnels more and more dark energy into his poor sister. The sorrowful fate of Lucidia is soon to be determined! Will the group be able to withstand the darkness of the Shadowfell, intensified by the Shard of the Black Pyramid?
Our adventurers have begun their confrontation with Lucidia'Grawl, the Ettin who was corrupted by a Shard of the Black Pyramid. Early in their quest, the group encountered the two headed giant at Stoneraven Keep, where the siblings escaped into the Shadowfell. Now the battle has begun with one of their most hated foes! What chance does the team have?
The Podcast Crew discusses Chris Brown's upcoming performance at the TidalxBrooklyn Benefit, Black Pyramid's newest collection, and the NFL protest aftermath. FRESH STARTMusic by Joakim Karud http://youtube.com/joakimkarud
TB Vanguard discusses new music by Chris Brown, Black Pyramid Sample sale in Paris, Chroyalty and streaming. FRESH START Music by Joakim Karud http://youtube.com/joakimkarud
Let's learn about North Kovacistani customsOur Guests+Dan Sandberg+Wayne SnyderShow Notes after the jumpGuest NotesDan SandbergAtom Switch, Inc.Infinitas DM on Kickstarter now! (Adam screwed up the order of the terms "DM" and "Infinitas")https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/atomswitch/infinitas-dm?ref=nav_searchWayne SnyderMetal Gods of Ur-Hadad zineMore independent gaming projects than I can rememberShow NotesDrinkTrois Pistoles, Unibroue, Chambly, QuebecCurmudgeon Old Ale, Founders Brewery, Grand Rapids, MIOld Rasputin Imperial Russian Stout, North Coast Brewing, Fort Bragg, CAFat Tire, New Belgium Brewery, Fort Collins, COJackhammer Old Ale, Arbor Brewing Company, Ann Arbor, MI (Adam managed to pawn off the rest of his Jackhammer on his ACKS group this past Sunday)SpinDisenchanterYidhra, "Hexed"Black PyramidBlind GuardianGrave DiggerJag PanzerFrederico Durand (?)BiosphereBlue Snaggletooth, "Beyond Thule"Electric WizardDead Games Society's GaryCon Podcast Panel PodcastReadLord of the Rings appendicesCA Smith, The End of the StoryNeuromancer, William GibsonThe Troll King Trilogy, John VornholtPlaying At The World, Jon PetersonPeril on the Purple Planet Boxed SetRunWayne has taken over the reins of the Metal Gods of Ur-Hadad campaignDan was playing D&D 4eApes Victorious is on its way from Goblinoid GamesAdam has been running Torchbearer and will run it as part of the "DSR Actually Plays" series of livestreams on 4/10/16 & 4/24/16RuneQuest 6Thanks for joining us for this episode of Drink Spin Run. If you like what you've heard, share us with your friends, leave us an iTunes review or send us an email at dsr@kickassistan.net. You can also support us at http://www.patreon.com/DSRCast. Our theme music was generously provided by the band Blue Snaggletooth (http://bluesnaggletooth.bandcamp.com). Once again, thanks for listening, you gorgeous listeners.
BBH Broadcast 6 - 05.11.2012 Featuring: The Darker Hues, Bow Thayer and Perfect Trainwreck, Audrey Can't Die, Birch Hill Dam, GOZU, Black Pyramid, Livver, Lunglust, Los Bungalitos, OC45, Old Edison, Cask Mouse, OldJack, Nemes, Thunderpants Johnson's Hillbilly Orchestra, Ghost Box Orchestra, The Acro-Brats, Reverend JJ & The Casual Sinners, Minibosses Available on iTunes
In today's episode SLUG writer Nate Perkins chats with the owners of Black Pyramid Recordings, we hear new music from Craft Lake City performing artist Stephen Chai & The No Nation Orchestra, check out upcoming events for the week, hear the latest from The Chevalier and check our voicemail box that you should be calling. 858-233-9324! … read more The post Episode #4 – Black Pyramid Recording, Stephen Chai & The No Nation Orchestra, The Chevalier, Voicemails first appeared on SLUG Magazine.