Podcast appearances and mentions of brian hunt

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Best podcasts about brian hunt

Latest podcast episodes about brian hunt

Brew Ha Ha Podcast
Oliver’s Market guests plus Moonlight Brewing’s We Love LA

Brew Ha Ha Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2025 41:13


Wade Johnson and Justin Bowman from Oliver's Markets and Erin Latham from Moonlight Brewing Co. join Steve Jaxon and Herlinda Heras on Brew Ha Ha. Wade Johnson is the head of the gourmet cheese department at Oliver's Market. Justin Bowman is the beer and spirits manager at Oliver's Market in Cotati. Erin Latham is here from Moonlight Brewing Co. She has brought their We Love LA beer to taste and to describe the fund raising campaign. Erin was also on BHH last year on August 15, along with Brian Hunt, to promote the 32nd Anniversary party. Last week we talked to Andy Link of Common Space Brewery in Los Angeles. They are leading the We Love LA effort. Moonlight's We Love LA Beer Moonlight's We Love LA beer is an American style lager that will be released this Saturday at their taproom. They have a roster of bands and other performers plus food trucks. 3350 Coffee Lane. A portion of the proceeds from the beer sales goes to the United Way Los Angeles. They are also accepting direct donations. Russian River Brewing Co. is open in Santa Rosa on 4th St. and at their big Windsor location. Visit their website for up-to-date hours, menus, beers and more. Wade Johnson takes care of cheeses at all the Oliver's stores. He has brought three cheeses to taste today. They are a California-made Gouda, an Irish cheddar and Point Reyes Farmstead Bay Blue. He started at Oliver's in 2010 and “grew up behind the cheese counter.” Visit our sponsor Pizzaleah in Windsor for the finest pizza menu and the most authentic flavors around!

Outsource Accelerator Podcast with Derek Gallimore
OA 526: Building & Running Global Teams - With Brian Hunt of Kore BPO

Outsource Accelerator Podcast with Derek Gallimore

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2025 40:39


Outsourcing podcast Get the full show notes for this outsourcing podcast here: outsourceaccelerator.cm/526   Kore BPO In this week's episode of the Outsource Accelerator Podcast, Derek is joined by Brian Hunt, CEO of Kore BPO. Kore BPO offers customized outsourcing solutions that are perfect for small businesses.  They talk about Brian's experience in different outsourcing locations, the mechanics and changes in the outsourcing industry, and their opinions on how AI can be integrated in the future.  References: LinkedIn:  https://www.linkedin.com/in/bhuntkore1/ Website: https://korebpo.com/               https://korerpo.com/ Start Outsourcing Outsource Accelerator can help you transform your business with outsourcing. Get in touch now, or use one of the resources below.   Business Process Outsourcing Get a Free Quote - Connect with 3 verified outsourcing experts & see how outsourcing can transform your business Book a Discovery Call - See how Outsource Accelerator can help you enhance your company's innovation and growth with outsourcing The Top 40 BPOs - We have compiled this review of the most notable 40 Business Process Outsourcing companies in the Philippines Outsourcing Calculator - This tool provides you with invaluable insight into the potential savings outsourcing can do for your business Outsourcing Salary Guide - Access the comprehensive guide to payroll salary compensation, benefits, and allowances in the Philippines Outsourcing Accelerator Podcast - Subscribe and listen to the world's leading outsourcing podcast, hosted by Derek Gallimore Payoneer - The leading global B2B payment solution for the outsourcing industry   About Outsource Accelerator Outsource Accelerator is the world's leading outsourcing marketplace and advisory. We offer the full spectrum of services, from light advisory and vendor brokerage, though to full implementation and fully-managed solutions. We service companies of all sectors, and all sizes, spanning all departmental verticals. Outsource Accelerator's unique approach to outsourcing enables our clients to build the best teams, access the most flexible solutions, and generate the best results possible. Our unrivaled sector knowledge and market reach mean that you get the best terms and results possible, at the best ALL-IN market-leading price - guaranteed.

The Mutual Audio Network
Quiet Please Recreations- Three Sides To A Story(092424)

The Mutual Audio Network

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2024 27:25


This is a missing episode. The original audio is not known to exist anywhere, so instead we have a re-creation produced in 2018. They say there are two sides to every story. This story goes one further and has three sides, and three narrators to tell it: Clyde, Victor and Frances. They agree on the basic events, but each sees the details and motivations a little different. Victor is wealthy. Victor is crippled, stuck in his wheelchair. Frances is Victor's wife, who longs to be rich but finds Victor tight with his money. Clyde is their hired help. The three of them are on a collision course. Features Paul Knierim, Brian Hunt and Virginia Hargrove. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Tuesday Terror
Quiet Please Recreations- Three Sides To A Story

Tuesday Terror

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2024 27:25


This is a missing episode. The original audio is not known to exist anywhere, so instead we have a re-creation produced in 2018. They say there are two sides to every story. This story goes one further and has three sides, and three narrators to tell it: Clyde, Victor and Frances. They agree on the basic events, but each sees the details and motivations a little different. Victor is wealthy. Victor is crippled, stuck in his wheelchair. Frances is Victor's wife, who longs to be rich but finds Victor tight with his money. Clyde is their hired help. The three of them are on a collision course. Features Paul Knierim, Brian Hunt and Virginia Hargrove. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Brew Ha Ha Podcast
Moonlight Brewing 32nd Anniversary

Brew Ha Ha Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2024 32:18


The Moonlight Sonata is indeed in three movements. Brian Hunt and Erin Latham-Ponneck are on Brew Ha Ha with Steve Jaxon and Herlinda Heras, for the Moonlight Brewing 32nd Anniversary. Brian has been on Brew Ha Ha many times, the most recent was this episode in October of 2023. On Saturday, August 24, from noon to 10 pm, Moonlight Brewing Co. will celebrate its 32nd anniversary, with music from The Sam Chase and the Untraditional, and others. There will be food trucks, attractions and activities for everyone including children, in addition to lots of delicious beer. In addition to all that, they will have a kids zone with a jumpy house and a magician. 32 Years of Moonlight Brewing Moonlight Brewing is now the oldest brewery in the county. Brian tells about getting “the beer guy”, Dr. Michael Lewis as an advisor when he changed majors to fermentation science at UC Davis. Then he went to work for Schlitz in Milwaukee. At that time, they were not invested in making great beer there. So Brian got away from that scene, with the lesson that people won't be attracted to crappy beer. He came back from Milwaukee in 1981 and worked for a series of breweries before starting his own brewery 32 years ago in 1992. Brian is Erin's stepdad. At first, he “poached” her away from her job to hire her for the bookkeeping. That led to more, as we will hear. Russian River Brewing Co. is open in Santa Rosa on 4th St. and at their big Windsor location. Visit their website for up-to-date hours, menus, beers and more. In the meantime, they taste the beer called Sulla Luna, a Czech-inspired amber lager that Brian originally made with Birrificio Italiano. He met them in Milano at a beer convention and when they visited here, they brewed this collaboration. Several months into the job she learned that there were actual offices above the brewery. So she moved into a proper room with a desk. Erin's official title is Chaos Management Specialist and Adult In Charge. See our sponsor Victory House at Poppy Bank Epicenter online, for their latest viewing and menu options. Brian has some interesting opinions about hops, especially that beer can be flavored with plants other than hops. Listen to him tell the history of hop use in beer in Europe.

Sports With Friends
465. The Bronx Zoo '90 Executive Producer Brian Hunt

Sports With Friends

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2024 52:23


This is the second episode about the Peacock docuseries “Bronx Zoo '90.” The documentary is the story of the 1990 New York Yankees, a last-place team in a most tumultuous year. One of the series' executive producers Brian Hunt is the President of Believe Studios. He joins the podcast to discuss how the original 8-part series written by Joel Sherman for the New York Post was picked up by the streaming service Peacock and turned into the docuseries. In 1990, Yankees owner George Steinbrenner was banned for life (he would be reinstated years later). Mel Hall brought cougars into the Yankee clubhouse and dated a teenager (He's currently serving a 45-year prison sentence after being found guilty of two counts of sexual assault against minors.). Andy Hawkins threw a no-hitter but lost the game. The team was rock bottom, but that team is considered the starting point of rebuilding the Yankees into the dynasty that won three championships in four seasons in the late 90s. Hunt is President of Believe Studios, and Head of Development at Believe Entertainment Group, an Academy Award and Emmy Award-winning, New York City-based entertainment company. Hunt leads the company's studio division, developing and producing high-profile content for Digital (video + podcasts), TV, and Film. In this episode, Hunt explains how he and his team figured out that the 1990 Yankees were a story worth telling. He also went to the high school where Mel Hall dated that 15-year-old girl and she took him to the prom. This episode is sponsored by/brought to you by BetterHelp. Give online therapy a try at betterhelp.com/SWF and get on your way to being your best self.

Los conciertos de Radio 3
Los conciertos de Radio 3 - Ruto Neón - 13/06/24

Los conciertos de Radio 3

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2024 29:31


El dúo de neopsicodelia Ruto Neón está compuesto por el cantante y compositor Bruno Laencina y el percusionista Jose Antonio García. El dúo lanzó su primer EP en 2020, producido por Brian Hunt. Ese año reciben el premio a Mejor Canción en el festival de artes Rendibú, premio a Mejor Debut en los Premios de la Música Murciana y una nominación a mejor disco, además de ganar diferentes certámenes como el CreaMurcia PopRock. Durante los últimos años la banda ha actuado en diferentes festivales como el Cooltural Fest, el WarmUp, el Fan Futura Fest o La Mar de Músicas, además de diferentes salas de conciertos. En 2023 presentan su primer trabajo en castellano, 'Reset', compuesto por ocho canciones producidas de nuevo por Brian Hunt. Este año el dúo ha publicado su sencillo 'Eres mi BB', una canción disco pop que la banda ha presentado junto a un videoclip lleno de humor que junto a su comunicación en redes, denota una nueva propuesta divertida, colorida y desenfadada.Escuchar audio

Untold Stories
Thriving in Chaos: Brian Hunt's Guide to Hyperscalability, Crypto and Wealth Creation

Untold Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2024 26:23


Shownotes: "Thriving in Chaos: Brian Hunt's Guide to Hyperscalability and Wealth Creation in 2024"Episode Summary:In this episode, Charlie Shrem sits down with Brian Hunt, Managing Partner of InvestorPlace, a MarketWise company, to discuss how to thrive in the chaotic financial landscape of 2024. Brian shares his expertise on hyperscalability, Metcalfe's Law, and the strategies that can help investors turn chaos into opportunity.Key Takeaways:Introduction to Hyperscalability:Definition and significance in creating rapid wealth.Historical context of business models evolving from capital-intensive to scalable.Metcalfe's Law and Network Effects:Explanation of Metcalfe's Law and its impact on network-based businesses.Case studies of companies like Facebook, Uber, and Amazon leveraging network effects for exponential growth.Investment Strategies in Uncertain Times:Importance of agility and adaptability in a chaotic market.How to identify and capitalize on hyperscalable businesses during economic turbulence.Future Trends and Sectors:Emerging technologies and sectors with potential for hyperscalable growth.Predictions for the next wave of high-growth investments.Personal Insights and Experiences:Brian's journey and lessons learned in the investment world.Practical advice for investors looking to navigate and succeed in the current economic environment.Timestamps:[00:00] Introduction and Welcome[02:30] Brian Hunt's Background and Credentials[07:45] Understanding Hyperscalability[15:10] Metcalfe's Law Explained[22:40] Case Studies of Hyperscalable Businesses[32:20] Strategies for Investing in Chaotic Times[40:55] Future Trends and Opportunities[50:30] Brian's Personal Insights and Advice[58:00] Closing Thoughts and TakeawaysResources Mentioned:Brian Hunt's Papers on Hyperscalability and Metcalfe's LawInvestorPlace Website: InvestorPlaceConnect with Brian Hunt on LinkedInCall to Action:Subscribe to our podcast for more insightful episodes.Visit InvestorPlace for the latest financial research and recommendations.Follow us on social media for updates and exclusive content.Join the Conversation:Twitter: @CharlieShremInstagram: [@CharlieShrem](https://instagram.comShownotes: "Thriving in Chaos: Brian Hunt's Guide to Hyperscalability and Wealth Creation in 2024"Episode Summary:Join Charlie Shrem as he sits down with Brian Hunt, CEO of InvestorPlace and Alta, to delve into strategies for thriving amidst financial chaos in 2024. Brian unpacks the concepts of hyperscalability and Metcalfe's Law, sharing invaluable insights on identifying high-growth investment opportunities and turning market turbulence into profitable ventures.Key Takeaways:Understanding Hyperscalability:Definition and importance in wealth creation.Evolution from traditional business models to scalable tech-driven enterprises.Metcalfe's Law and Network Effects:Explanation of how Metcalfe's Law underpins network-based business success.Examples from companies like Facebook, Uber, and Amazon.Investment Strategies During Market Turbulence:Emphasizing agility and adaptability.Identifying hyperscalable businesses amid economic uncertainty.Future Trends and Opportunities:Sectors poised for hyperscalable growth.Predictions for the next wave of high-potential investments.Brian Hunt's Personal Insights:His professional journey and key lessons learned.Practical advice for investors navigating today's economic landscape.Timestamps:[00:00] Introduction and Welcome[02:30] Brian Hunt's Background and Credentials[07:45] Understanding Hyperscalability[15:10] Metcalfe's Law Explained[22:40] Case Studies of Hyperscalable Businesses[32:20] Strategies for Investing in Chaotic Times[40:55] Future Trends and Opportunities[50:30] Brian's Personal Insights and Advice[58:00] Closing Thoughts and TakeawaysResources Mentioned:Brian Hunt's Papers on Hyperscalability and Metcalfe's LawInvestorPlace Website: InvestorPlaceConnect with Brian Hunt on LinkedInCall to Action:Subscribe to our podcast for more insightful episodes.Visit InvestorPlace for the latest financial research and recommendations.Follow us on social media for updates and exclusive content.Join the Conversation:Twitter: @CharlieShremInstagram: @CharlieShremAbout Our Guest:Brian Hunt is the CEO of InvestorPlace and Alta, where he leads a team dedicated to providing independent financial research and advice. With over two decades of experience, Brian is an authority on hyperscalability and network effects, helping investors achieve exponential returns by navigating market chaos and leveraging cutting-edge investment strategies.

Reality Life with Kate Casey
Ep. - 985 - BRONX ZOO '90: CRIME, CHAOS, AND BASEBALL

Reality Life with Kate Casey

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2024 32:39


Brian Hunt, Executive Producer of Bronx Zoo '90: Crime, Chaos and Baseball, the astonishing true story of the 1990 New York Yankees, chronicling the team at a crossroads in their storied history. The season went on record as one of the worst and was made even more infamous by the drama that ensued off the field. Based on a series of articles from New York Post columnist Joel Sherman, the docuseries covers team owner George Steinbrenner's removal from baseball for trying to buy information on Dave Winfield from a notorious gambler. Adding to the chaos, beloved team captain Don Mattingly was caught in a contentious contract dispute, a top free agent signee went missing, rookie Deion Sanders wavered between two sports and a controversial outfielder pursued a relationship with a local high school girl. Despite it all, the 1990 Yankees laid the groundwork for one of the greatest dynasties in sports history. Reality Life with Kate Casey Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/katecasey Twitter: https://twitter.com/katecasey Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/katecaseyca Tik Tok: http://www.tiktok.com/itskatecasey Cameo: https://cameo.com/katecasey Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/113157919338245 Amazon.com: www.amazon.com/shop/katecasey See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Los conciertos de Radio 3
Los conciertos de Radio 3 - Club del Río - 18/04/24

Los conciertos de Radio 3

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2024 30:39


Club del río nace en 2013 en Madrid. Cuentan con 5 álbumes de estudio y este año lanzan su 6º disco 'Todo alrededor', producido por Brian Hunt, y con el que celebran 10 años de la banda transitando hacia un sonido más eléctrico y experimental. Está compuesto por 9 temas y trata de hacer una mención especial a todo lo que les ha rodeado durante estos años, de forma sustancial y onírica, las fatigas y alegrías. Con su vocación de "club" siempre han disfrutado de colaborar y mezclar su arte con infinidad de artistas entre los que destacan colaboraciones con: Xoel López, Tomasito, El Canijo de Jerez, Victor Iniesta, Leo El Cigüeña, Faneka, Manuel Machado, Joe la Reina, Luis Fercán, María de la Flor, Niño de Elche, Ede, Kinfolks y Tibory Boxy Sox. El Club sigue vivo y este nuevo álbum quiere dar cuenta de ello. 'Todo alrededor' viene así con un sonido nuevo, alejado un poco de los tópicos de esta banda que no elude por ello su pasado y su mochila, la cual carga con entera dicha para girar este trabajo allá donde quiera llegar.Escuchar audio

Abierto hasta las 2
Abierto hasta las 2 - Club del Río 'Todo Alrededor' - 14/04/24

Abierto hasta las 2

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2024 55:16


Hoy estamos de celebración. La de una banda de amigos que en su 10º aniversario han querido hacer una mención especial a todo lo que les rodea de manera sustancial y onírica en “Todo Alrededor”.  Club del Río da las gracias en su sexto álbum a todo el colectivo humano que les ha ayudado a pesar de las complejidades de este oficio. Entre ellos su productor, Brian Hunt, que les hace una pregunta vital antes de que interpreten en nuestro escenario “Mística Voraz”, La sombra”, “Problema Vivo”. Recordamos anécdotas de rodaje con Adrián Cores responsable de los videoclips, conectamos con Rodrigo “Rorro” de Radio Relativa que a través de su perfil sonoro nos muestra la esencia clubera de los madrileños. La cantante y compositora Ede se muestra agradecida por habérselos cruzado en el camino cuando ella era fan del grupo. A esta celebración se suman familiares y amigos como María de La Flor, la profesora Elena, Lucía, Georgia, Noor y Dalia, Jacobo de la Viña, etc que comparten vivencias memorables. Escuchar audio

En un mundo feliz
En un mundo feliz - 08/04/24

En un mundo feliz

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2024 59:43


- El grupo madrileño "Club del Río", cumplen 10 años de actividad musical y lo celebran con un nuevo disco: "Todo Alrededor". Siguen apostando por trabajar con independencia y para la ocasión han contado con Brian Hunt en la producción de este nuevo trabajo que repasa varias inquietudes generacionales y que han hecho de "Club del Río" una de las bandas más originales de los últimos años. Hablamos con dos de los miembros de la banda; con Esteban Bergia y con Álvaro Ayuso y disfrutamos con este nuevo trabajo. - "El Parque Nacional de Doñana", es reserva de la Biosfera y Patrimonio de la Humanidad. Este humedal es uno de los más importantes de Europa y cuenta con una gran biodiversidad. Recientemente un equipo del CSIC, tras revisar más de 70 estudios científicos denuncia que la sobreexplotación del acuífero de Doñana está causando gravísimos daños al parque. Para conocer mejor el presente del humedal y sus problemas, hablamos con dos científicos del CSIC; con Carolina Guardiola, geóloga y con Andy Green, investigador de la Estación Biológica de Doñaña y experto en Ecología de Humedales. Urge que las diferentes administraciones de las que depende el parque, tomen medidas más eficaces para asegurar la buena salud de este tesoro natural y su viabilidad futura.Escuchar audio

Paul Hickey's Data Driven Daily Tips
Top Budget Kaboom! Sports Cards To Buy In 2024

Paul Hickey's Data Driven Daily Tips

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2024 85:36


On today's show we talk about...My Sleeper Kaboom! Sports Cards To Buy In 2024, My Top Go Where They Ain't Sports Cards To Buy Now, Mosaic Farmer Joe's Card Show Strategies, Lefty McKee's Path to Profits with Jalen Williams and talk directly to members of our NoOffseason.com Family - Audience Features from Brian Hunt, Buckeye Dill and of course answering your Questions

Más que palabras
Más que palabras 2023-2024 (17/12/2023)

Más que palabras

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2023 235:20


DIA DEL JERSEI FEO DE NAVIDAD: LANAS LADY MERINO EN IRUÑA. HISTORIA DE EL CAMINANTE, BRIAN HUNT . AVANTE TODA: LA MARINA MERCANTE AMENAZADA EN EL MAR ROJO CON JAVIER SANCHEZ-BEASKOETXEA.SOBRE EL TERRENO: XABIER BAÑUELOS: RESTOS DE ROMANOS EN EUSKAL HERRIA. IÑAKI ZUGARRONDO, AUTOR DE 'VASCONUM'.MALPENSANDO CON JOSE ANTONIO PEREZ. YAGO ALVAREZ BARBA, AUTOR DE 'PESCAR EL SALMON'.DALE QUE LIBRAS: CONSEJOS PARA CONDUCIR EN INVIERNO. MARIO GARCIA, PORTAVOZ DEL RAC VASCO-NAVARRO.VICTOR AMAT LIBRO 'AUTOESTIMA PUNK. 5 AÑOS SIN RENOVAR EL CONSEJO GENERAL DEL PODER JUDICIAL. JUAN FLAHN VIOLET JESSOP...

DWMOD
Alright Bet! 11-16-23 Pt.1

DWMOD

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2023 54:44


As Usual, Andy St. Clair and i are here to give you some free money on this weeks NCAA and NFL football action! then you can head over to YouTube for pt. 2 and the #Big6Pick with guest picker Brian Hunt! He's here to talk game shows, being an author, winning a Telly award, and even being a Radio DJ in Denver. He'll jump in for this weeks games including NCAA = Washington/Oregon St. - K State/Kansas - Colorado/Washington St. NFL =Bengals/Ravens - Eagles/Chiefs - Vikings/Broncos

Brew Ha Ha Podcast
Boney Fingers from Moonlight Brewing plus Local Brewing SF

Brew Ha Ha Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2023 22:04


Brian Hunt from Moonlight Brewing and Regan Long from Local Brewing Co. of San Francisco join Steve Jaxon and Herlinda Heras on Brew Ha Ha. They are both on the show today to talk about events that are happening this Saturday, October 14. Moonlight Brewing Co. has been around since 1992 and they are having a launch party on Saturday October 14 for a new beer called Boney Fingers. Brews on the Bay Brews on the Bay is also happening on October 14. It's a beer festival happening on the USS Jeremiah O'Brien, a decommissioned naval ship in San Francisco harbor. Get tickets at eventbrite, at this link. Local Brewing Co. of SF will be at Brews on the Bay this Saturday, Oct. 14. Brews on the Bay is focused on serving and promoting breweries based in San Francisco and in the Bay Area. Follow the links for tickets and list of participating breweries. Boney Fingers They taste some Boney Fingers, which is very dark, but is only 6.7% alcohol. Brian points out that it tastes like black coffee. The color comes from roasting the grains. The proceeds from Brews on the Bay go to support the Jeremiah O'Brian. See our sponsor Victory House at Poppy Bank Epicenter online, for their latest viewing and menu options. They pour a Local Brewing SF beer called “69 Pils” which they started brewing during the pandemic. They used Australian Enigma hops, which are rarely used. Herlinda notices that it makes a strongly flavored beer even if the beer is light. Regan calls it, “nice and subdued.” It has a lower ABV at 5.1%. They won a medal at the North American Beer Awards a few years ago for this beer. Brian notices that this combination of hops provides a dry warmth and it is a delightful change from beers that tend to taste the same. They also taste Loud and Clear, their version of an IPA. They wanted it to be light bodied and not be bitter. Russian River Brewing Co. is open in Santa Rosa on 4th St. and at their big Windsor location. Visit their website for up-to-date hours, menus, beers and more.

Steal This Beer
Episode 433 - Brian Hunt, Moonlight Brewing

Steal This Beer

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2023


Episode 433 - Brian Hunt, Moonlight Brewing Happy Monday, Thieves! We're chatting today with Brian Hunt of Santa Rosa, California's Moonlight Brewing. Brian is an industry veteran who has worked at some of the most storied breweries in the country (Schlitz!) and founded his lager-centric Moonlight Brewing in Santa Rosa in 1992. The company has gone through several partnerships over the last decade but is now back in the hands of Brian and his most recent partner, Patrick Rue, founder of The Bruery. Tune in and let us know what you think!***As always, you can email your questions, complaints, whimpers, or whines to us at stealthisbeerpodcast@gmail.com. We read everything we get and we'll try to respond as quickly as we can. If not online, then on air. And THANKS! You can subscribe to STB on iTunes and PLEASE LEAVE US A REVIEW!!! Co-hosts: Augie Carton & John Holl Producer: Justin Kennedy Engineer: Brian Casse Music: "Abstract Concepts - What Up in the Streets" by Black Ant.

Brew Ha Ha Podcast
Maryensztadt Brewery

Brew Ha Ha Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2023 22:47


Marcin & Artur visit Anchor Brewing in San Francisco. Since there is no new Brew Ha Ha show today, for this podcast episode we offer again this fun and revealing episode recorded last January 19, with Herlinda Heras' two guests from Maryensztadt Brewery in Poland, Marcin and Artur. Enjoy! Marcin Malecki and Artur Napuripski of Maryensztadt Brewery in Poland are our guests today on Brew Ha Ha with Harry Duke and Herlinda Heras. Artur is the sales manager as well as a beer sommelier and brewery historian, and Marcin is the brewery's owner. Herlinda Heras has been a beer judge at the Polish national beer competition for the last few years, along with Artur. Herlinda invited them to California for a visit and for a collaboration at Anchor Brewing and a visit to some famous Sonoma County craft breweries. Marcin tells about their visit to Brew Ha Ha sponsor Russian River Brewing Co. and how impressed he was with their Windsor location. They also visited Brian Hunt at Moonlight Brewing. Grodzisz is a smoked wheat beer, which is a unique Polish style. It uses 100% oak-smoked malt. Herlinda finds it refreshing. Artur describes it as a unique style and says the malt is hard to find. Polish brewers stopped making it in 1993 but they revived it recently. Beechwood smoke has a different flavor, like ham or cheese. This oak smoke is more like a campfire and is more subtle. Visit our sponsor Victory House at Poppy Bank Epicenter online, for their latest viewing and menu options. Craft Brewing in Poland The craft brewing industry is young in Poland. They began about ten years ago with an American IPA. The brewery's name Maryensztadt is a small neighborhood in the heart of Warsaw, part of the old town. They wanted the brewery to be there, but they could not produce alcohol there. So they established the brewery in a small town very close to Warsaw. They try to make the brewery as “green” as possible, or sustainable, using as little energy and water as possible and recycling water. When they visited Russian River Brewing Co., they thought they would like to be that big in ten more years. Russian River Brewing Co. is open in Santa Rosa on 4th St. and at their big Windsor location. Click the logo to visit their website for up-to-date hours, menus, beers and more info. Russian River Brewing Co. is open in Santa Rosa on 4th St. and at their big Windsor location. Click the logo to visit their website for up-to-date hours, menus, beers and more info. Marcin, Herlinda & Artur. Marcin has always been interested in beer and was a consultant brewer before opening the brewery. Artur has been interested in beer since long before the craft beer revolution. He eventually became a beer judge and got a beer and cider judging certificate. He is studying for his mead certification too. Poland has a long tradition of making mead, and even the certifying body, JCP, does not know all about it. Poland is also a huge producer of apples, but not cider apples. There is a small but promising cider revolution going on, but the problem is getting the right apples. There is also a thriving hops production in Poland. Herlinda told Mark Carpenter, former Brew Ha Ha co-host, about Polish beer so he went there on a vacation and met Artur. Anchor Beer was the first good American beer to be available in Poland after the fall of Communism, and many people still remember its arrival and importance at the time. As Marcin says, "...your craft revolution is really great!"

Backyard Ecology
Gardening with Sedges - Mt. Cuba Center Carex Trial

Backyard Ecology

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2023 59:06


Did you know there is a group of native plants which can be highly adaptable, can serve multiple functions in our gardens, and perhaps even be a backbone component to our home landscapes, but which has historically been overlooked for those purposes? This group of native plants is the sedges, or more specifically, members of the genus Carex. In this episode of the Backyard Ecology podcast, we talk with Sam Hoadley about sedges and their use in the home garden and landscape. Sam is the Manager of Horticultural Research at Mt. Cuba Center in Delaware. Recently, Mt. Cuba Center released their Carex trial report. This report evaluated 70 species and cultivars of Carex over 4 years for garden and landscape use in the Mid-Atlantic Region. During our conversation, Sam and I talk about how Mt. Cuba Center's trials are conducted, the importance of sedges / Carex species, how they can be used in the garden or home landscape, and many other topics. Sedges may not produce the colorful, flashy flowers that we often think about and are drawn to when we are picking native plants to use in our home landscapes or pollinator and wildlife gardens, but they are definitely worth considering. Not only do they have their own innate beauty, but they can also serve so many different functions in the garden and landscape – including filling in so called “problem areas” or serving as a potential lawn alternative. We have lots of exciting opportunities planned with Backyard Ecology over the next several months. If you want to keep up with everything going on in the Backyard Ecology world, then please subscribe to our emails. You can do so at www.backyardecology.net/subscribe. And when you sign up for our emails, you'll be sent a link to download a free, e-book that explains why our familiar garden zones, aren't important when it comes to gardening with native plants. That's just our way of saying thank you for your interest in Backyard Ecology. Episode Resources: Sam's email: shoadley@mtcubacenter.org Carex Trial Report: https://mtcubacenter.org/trials/carex-for-the-mid-atlantic-region/ Past Trial Reports: https://mtcubacenter.org/research/trial-garden/ Mt. Cuba Center webpage: https://mtcubacenter.org/ Mt. Cuba Center Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/MtCubaCenter/ Backyard Ecology Links: Website: https://backyardecology.net YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/backyardecology Blog: https://www.backyardecology.net/blog/ Patreon page: https://www.patreon.com/backyardecology Make a one-time donation: https://www.paypal.com/biz/fund?id=K7F3HJLJT9F8N Subscribe to Backyard Ecology emails: https://www.backyardecology.net/subscribe/ Episode image: Pennsylvania sedge (Carex pensylvanica) Photo credit: Brian Hunt, cc-by

Brew Ha Ha Podcast
Mercedes Hernandez of SOCO Market at Freshtival

Brew Ha Ha Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2023 24:49


Herlinda, Sayre & Mercedes Mercedes Hernandez founder of the SOCO Market and Sayre Piotrkowski from HenHouse, are our guests on Brew Ha Ha with Harry Duke and Herlinda Heras. The Freshtival is this Saturday, May 6 at Somo Village in Rohnert Park. Get tickets here, they are going fast! As the show begins they open a Moonlight Death and Taxes that is only a few days old. Brian Hunt from Moonlight and Vinny Cilurzo from Russian River were the pioneers of quality and freshness. Today the billboard outside Santa Rosa says Welcome to Fresh Beer Country. The Importance of Freshness Sayre talks about what they call second-half beer quality. The HenHouse company mission is to improve beer quality for the end consumer and to create wealth for our community. Freshness is the one quality metric that the consumer has access to. You can see if a beer is kept cold and you can see its date of production. These two factors are vital. Russian River Brewing Co. is open in Santa Rosa on 4th St. and at their big Windsor location. Click the logo to visit their website for up-to-date hours, menus, beers and more info. The best place to get the freshest beer is this Saturday May 6 at Somo Village in Rohnert Park. The event is sponsored by the Bay Area Brewers Guild. Brian Hunt says, "Fresh beer is like live music. Stale beer is like listening from the parking lot." THE SOCO MARKET Mercedes Hernandez describes how the SOCO Market started during the pandemic. Many Sonoma County businesses didn't have a physical location so she invited eleven local makers to exhibit and sell together. It grew to over 60 vendors and then the city of Santa Rosa invited them to a market space in Old Courthouse Square that can have as many as 90. They have a market every month from April to August. Visit our sponsor Victory House at Poppy Bank Epicenter online, for their latest viewing and menu options. The SOCO Market with its panorama of jewelry, plants and clothing vendors lends a fun and colorful atmosphere for the Freshtival. The Art of Freshness Gallery will be showing artists who have created label art for local brewers. The first beer tasted was The Art of Freshness, which is the name of a beer and the theme of the festival. They also taste Matiné Idol. For the rest, go to the Freshtival! Today's tastings on BHH.

Música de Contrabando
MÚSICA DE CONTRABANDO T32C086 Ruto Neón estrena "Reset" y Bruno Laencina persigue sueños en un álbum imprescindible (24/02/2023)

Música de Contrabando

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2023 121:12


En Música de Contrabando, revista diaria de música en Onda Regional de Murcia (orm.es; 23,00h a 01,00h). Paul McCartney y Ringo Starr han grabado con los Rolling Stones. «Las sesiones de grabación han tenido lugar en Los Ángeles, en las últimas semanas y, aunque no está claro qué pistas formarán parte del corte final o si McCartney y Starr terminarían en la misma canción, la producción del álbum se acerca a la fase de mezcla», explica Variety.. Guns N' Roses ha anunciado una gira mundial para el verano y otoño de 2023, encabezando estadios, festivales y arenas en todo el mundo. Dos fechas en España, Madrid y Vigo, están incluidas en la parte europea. Peter Murphy reaparecerá esta primavera por primera vez desde que la gira de reunión de Bauhaus , cuando se una a la gira «Celebrating David Bowie» . Suede participaron en un concierto especial grabado en vivo desde los legendarios estudios Maida Vale de la BBC para el Radio 2's Piano Room Month. Tocaron una interesante versión de «Because The Night».Black Country, New Road han publicado un vídeo («Live At Bush Hall«) que recopila algunos de los mejores momentos vividos a lo largo de los tres directos que la banda británica ofreció el pasado mes de diciembre en la Bush Hall londinense. Dirigido por Greg Barnes y con audio mezclado por el ilustre John Parish, el material aterriza integrado única y exclusivamente por material nuevo de la formación británica.Blood Red Shoes acaban de anunciar fechas en salas de Madrid, Vigo y Barcelona el próximo septiembre de 2023 para presentar su nuevo álbum “Ghosts On Tape”. Everything But The Girl presentan un nuevo avance de Fuse, Caution to the Wind conjuga los elementos que han convertido al dúo inglés en toda una leyenda de la música electrónica. Gruff Rhys fusiona el soul y su particular estilo en "i want my old life back", nuevo adelanto de su banda sonora para "the almond and the seahorse".Rumba de mi estado de alarma es el nuevo adelanto de Florent y Yo, el proyecto en solitario de Florent, guitarrista de Los Planetas. Surfin´Bichos vuelve para presentar "Máquina que no para", primer single del que será nuevo álbum del combo albaceteño..Los Marcianos presentan «Los Latidos», junto a Muro María. Mireya, Caray! lanza su segundo single, “Drama Queen”. Tras su debut, “Gentil desconocido”, el dúo de pop murciano vuelve a la carga con otro sencillo, del que promete ser uno de los mejores estrenos de 2023.Shame ha presentado la nueva pista/video 'Adderall', el último sencillo extraído de su próximo tercer disco anticipado, Food for Worms, que saldrá este viernes a través de Dead Oceans. ‘Gonna Go' sigue al álbum más reciente de Serpentwithfeet, el ampliamente elogiado DEACON de 2021. El ganador de un grammy y cofundador de The Roots Black Thought y Els Michels Affair siguen fusionando soul y hip hop (y suman otros 2 minutos de romanticismo) en "that girl", nuevo adelanto de Glorious game, su disco colaborativo. Con el apoyo de una gran guitarra acústica que rasguea dinámicamente, empujando y tirando del volumen en frases que van y vienen como olas, Kate Harquail abre su corazón en “Sweaters”, The Lemon Twigs anuncian erything harmony, su nuevo disco, haciendo perfecto honor a su título con "any time of day". En Attendant Ana se centran en la melodía en "wonder", nuevo adelanto de rítmica intimidad pop incluido en Principia.Entrevista: Ruto Neón estrena "Reset", primer álbum además de su primer trabajo plenamente en castellano- Producido por Brian Hunt , y envuelto en una atmósfera de neopsicodelia cargada de sintetizadores y guitarras fuzzy características de la banda, Bruno Laencina Moñino Bruno Laencina , con el que charlamos , experimenta con sonidos loFi o Disco persigue sueños en un album impresindible. Ruto don't worry

Missing Maura Murray
366 // Cieha Taylor, Ta'Niyah Leonard, Calvin Johnny Hunt

Missing Maura Murray

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2023 43:30


In this episode Crawlspace Media's Tim Pilleri, Lance Reenstierna and Jennifer Amell speak with Katrina Overstreet and Brian Hunt about the disappearances of their siblings (Cieha Taylor and Calvin Johnny Hunt) and Katrina's cousin Ta'Niyah Leonard. Cieha Taylor went missing on February 6th, 2020 from Plant City, Florida under suspicious circumstances. Cieha's sister Katrina is searching for answers in her sister's case. Katrina and Cieha's cousin Ta'Niyah Leonard went missing on October 19th, 2002 from Bartow, Florida. Ta'Niyah was 11 months old at the time. Calvin Johnny Hunt went missing on May 29th, 2018 from Ten Mile, Tennessee. Brian is searching for answers for his brother Johnny's case. GoFundMe: https://www.gofundme.com/f/to-get-a-new-sign Follow their FB page: https://www.facebook.com/findingcieha/ Please donate to the family GoFundMe if you can: https://www.gofundme.com/f/ma2tz3-justice-for-johnny The family Fb page: https://www.facebook.com/calvinjohnhunt Check out our Missing subscription service where we have a bonus show and ad-free episodes! https://missing.supportingcast.fm/ For more information on Morgan & Morgan go to https://www.ForThePeople.com/MISSING. Sources: https://charleyproject.org/case/taniyah-monique-leonard https://www.wtsp.com/article/news/special-reports/the-missing/taniyah-leonard-the-missing/67-2e6741d9-33e5-4a54-a680-fecbb16d39db https://www.oxygen.com/crime-news/cieha-taylor-missing-family-searches-after-car-found-on-florida-tracks https://charleyproject.org/case/calvin-johnny-hunt Follow Missing: TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@missingcsm YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/missingcsm IG: https://www.instagram.com/MissingCSM/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/MissingCSM FB: https://www.facebook.com/MissingCSM Check out our entire network at http://crawlspace-media.com/ Follow Private Investigations For the Missing and please donate if you can: https://investigationsforthemissing.org/ http://piftm.org/donate https://twitter.com/PIFortheMissing https://www.facebook.com/PIFortheMissing/ https://www.instagram.com/investigationsforthemissing/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Brew Ha Ha Podcast
Maryensztadt Brewery of Warsaw, Poland

Brew Ha Ha Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2023 22:47


Marcin & Artur visit Anchor Brewing in San Francisco. Marcin Malecki and Artur Napuripski of Maryensztadt Brewery in Poland are our guests today on Brew Ha Ha with Harry Duke and Herlinda Heras. Artur is the sales manager as well as a beer sommelier and brewery historian, and Marcin is the brewery's owner. Herlinda Heras has been a beer judge at the Polish national beer competition for the last few years, along with Artur. Herlinda invited them to California for a visit and for a collaboration at Anchor Brewing and a visit to some famous Sonoma County craft breweries. Marcin tells about their visit to Brew Ha Ha sponsor Russian River Brewing Co. and how impressed he was with their Windsor location. They also visited Brian Hunt at Moonlight Brewing. Grodzisz is a smoked wheat beer, which is a unique Polish style. It uses 100% oak-smoked malt. Herlinda finds it refreshing. Artur describes it as a unique style and says the malt is hard to find. Polish brewers stopped making it in 1993 but they revived it recently. Beechwood smoke has a different flavor, like ham or cheese. This oak smoke is more like a campfire and is more subtle. Visit our sponsor Victory House at Poppy Bank Epicenter online, for their latest viewing and menu options. Craft Brewing in Poland The craft brewing industry is young in Poland. They began about ten years ago with an American IPA. The brewery's name Maryensztadt is a small neighborhood in the heart of Warsaw, part of the old town. They wanted the brewery to be there, but they could not produce alcohol there. So they established the brewery in a small town very close to Warsaw. They try to make the brewery as “green” as possible, or sustainable, using as little energy and water as possible and recycling water. When they visited Russian River Brewing Co., they thought they would like to be that big in ten more years. Russian River Brewing Co. is open in Santa Rosa on 4th St. and at their big Windsor location. Click the logo to visit their website for up-to-date hours, menus, beers and more info. Marcin, Herlinda & Artur. Marcin has always been interested in beer and was a consultant brewer before opening the brewery. Artur has been interested in beer since long before the craft beer revolution. He eventually became a beer judge and got a beer and cider judging certificate. He is studying for his mead certification too. Poland has a long tradition of making mead, and even the certifying body, JCP, does not know all about it. Poland is also a huge producer of apples, but not cider apples. There is a small but promising cider revolution going on, but the problem is getting the right apples. There is also a thriving hops production in Poland. Herlinda told Mark Carpenter, former Brew Ha Ha co-host, about Polish beer so he went there on a vacation and met Artur. Anchor Beer was the first good American beer to be available in Poland after the fall of Communism, and many people still remember its arrival and importance at the time. As Marcin says, "...your craft revolution is really great!"

Weigh In with Gina
Spill the Tea - Fall 2022: Week 10

Weigh In with Gina

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2022 60:31


This is the live recording of the Spill the Tea session with Director of Operations Anna and Special Guests Joanna & Brian Hunt. In this episode, Gina, Anna, Joanna & Brian chat about following the LIVY method together as a couple and about Week 10 of the program.If you are in the Fall 2022 group, you can check out the full video here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ginalivyfall2022 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Brew Ha Ha Podcast
Tyler Laverty, Vinnie Cilurzo, Brian Hunt

Brew Ha Ha Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2022 35:50


Tyler Laverty, Vinnie Cilurzo and Brian Hunt are all guests today on Brew Ha Ha with Harry Duke and Herlinda Heras. Tyler Laverty is brewmaster at Third Street Aleworks. Vinnie Cilurzo is brewmaster and a co-founder of Russian River Brewing Company. Brian Hunt is the founder, co-owner and brewmaster at Moonlight Brewing Company. This is a powerful bunch of beer guys AND they all just won medals at the Great American Beer Festival. They can't resist joking about playing fast and loose with the “official” brew descriptions of the BJCP, which are online here. Listen to these beer heavyweights, check out the BJCP descriptions they're referencing, taste some of the beer, and then see what you think. That's the scientific method as applied to this show. This kind of audience involvement shows the power of radio and beer together. Taste and see. And tell your friends! Visit our sponsor Victory House online for their latest viewing and menu options. Brian Hunt describes the Moonlight beer called Wee Nibble that won a medal. His brewmaster Zach Greenwood wanted to make a Petit Saison which ended up winning. Vinnie Cilurzo describes the beer that won a medal for Russian River Brewing Co. called Intinction. Tyler Laverty describes the challenging business environment and the recent changes at Third Street Aleworks. They have had to close the restaurant and now they have popups providing food. Bayou On The Bay has taken up residency and he brought a Cajun Birria style taco, and the Cajun Cali Burrito, from their menu. Russian River Brewing Co. is open in Santa Rosa on 4th St. and at their big Windsor location. Visit their website for up-to-date hours, menus, beers and more info.

Weaver: Beyond the Numbers
Ep 1068: Risk Management...Can You Plan For Everything?

Weaver: Beyond the Numbers

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2022 25:37


Brian Hunt is a Texas native whose career focus includes insurance and risk management. Today, Hunt is a VP at USI, the seventh largest insurance broker in the country, where he specializes in construction and real estate.“It's not my job to tell you what you want to hear. It's my job to tell you what you need to hear,” said Hunt. Insurance used to be transactional: the client would go to dinner with the broker, and the policy would be decided for a year. Now it's more of a partnership and risk is considered on a holistic level. Hunt believes that approach is primarily due to natural disasters and global events.“You need to have a risk advisor who's thinking outside of the box a little bit, someone who is considering a global or regional conflict somewhere and how that's going to impact [your business],” said Nowak. The pandemic taught us a lot about how linked and connected our globe is. When it comes to insurance, that means understanding all the relationships or events that could impact your business. “Awareness is more important than anything else,” said Hunt. “With modern technology and tracking, we have more data than ever before.”Using that data and knowledge, insurers can quantify the risk of some aspects of the business. Of course, this starts with transparency between the insurer and the company. “You need to think about your risk but specifically what is your plan if the worst-case situation occurs,” said Hunt. It comes down to knowing all the links in the chain and identifying the weakest links.Further, Hunt describes how the advent of “Big Data” has led to new parametric-based insurance. These new solutions are now available to transfer risks (e.g., weather) that in the past were not covered by traditional insurance. In addition, event-based options are now available to help provide additional risk strategies from macro-level events. Subscribe to the Location Cubed podcast on Apple Podcasts and Spotify for the next episode of this series.Learn about upcoming real estate webinars and subscribe to Weaver's event invite list.©2022

Leading Local Insights
Planning & Executing CTV Campaigns with Brian Hunt, Sinclair Broadcasting

Leading Local Insights

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2022 26:22


CTV has exploded over the past few years nearly doubling the local revenue it pulled in nationwide since 2019. In this podcast, our guest Brian Hunt, head of OTT and CTV Advertising for Sinclair discusses the planning and execution of CTV campaigns. He shares the strategy and inception of Sinclair's major CTV platforms and gives us his insight into the planning and execution of CTV campaigns. The discussion also covers the advantages and disadvantages of managed service vs self-service campaigns.  Hosting the discussion is Nicole Ovadia, BIA's Vice President of Forecasting & Analysis, and Mitch Oscar, Director of Advanced Advertising Strategies at USIM. 

Brew Ha Ha Podcast
Kevin Lovett from Wolf House Brewing

Brew Ha Ha Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2022 27:21


Kevin Lovett from Wolf House Brewing is our in-studio guest today on Brew Ha Ha with Harry Duke and Herlinda Heras. Kevin was master brewer for Cloverdale Ale Co when he bought Wolf House in October 2019. He was going to open two places at once. He is inspired by Jack London, who was a Glen Ellen resident. Some other beers are also named after Jack London stories. The beer they are drinking is called Burning Daylight, which is the title of a Jack London short story. Dutch Courage is another one. We hear about how they managed to open the brewery and restaurant and then finally the music venue. This achievement has fulfilled his original goals. The Freshtival is coming up this Saturday, June 25, 2022. Check out the Freshtival page at the Hen House site for all the info. Lots of food, beer and music, including some gluten free choices, something for everybody. No beer will be older than seven days. Get tickets on Eventbrite. Kevin has brewed a special Hazy beer for the Freshtival that is flavored with some familiar and some new hops. Kevin's dad Michael Lovett was a co-founder with Don Barkley of the iconic Mendocino Brewing Co., makers of the renowned Red Tail Ale, which everyone misses. They worked at New Albion under Jack McCauliffe, the first new brewery to open after Prohibition and an originator in what became a movement. When New Albion closed, Don and Michael got the equipment to use for Mendocino Brewing. Kevin worked at his father's brewery when he was growing up and then he worked for others including Napa Smith and Brian Hunt's Moonlight Brewing. He became very good at building breweries and is grateful for the mentoring and the opportunities he found in brewing. Russian River Brewing Co. is open in Santa Rosa on 4th St. and at their big Windsor location. Visit their website for up-to-date hours, menus, beers and more info. The Wolf House Brewing taproom is located at 131 E. 1st Street in Cloverdale. There are locals and others who come from pretty far away because “the word is getting out.” Burning Daylight is his Pilsner. He thinks it's the best beer he has made. They also have a beer called Therapy Session. Pilsners are hard to make and he credits Brian Hunt for teaching him about Lagers and Pilsners and he always has each strain of yeast available. They have a 9-barrel system so he brews 3 times a month or so. They plan to raise their capacity so they can get into more places. Kevin and his sister and brother-in-law, a chef, are partners in the brewery. They have a full menu including something called a Cloverdale Twinkie, which is a jumbo Jalapeño pepper stuffed with cream cheese, wrapped in bacon and deep fried. Wolf House Brewing has a pedigree behind it due to Kevin Lovett's personal history and experience. He grew up at the Hopland brewery taphouse. His first job was bussing tables in about 1995 so he got to be a part of it before it all changed. When he came back in 2005 it was an empty lot and now Ron Lindenbusch has turned it into a destination again. Wolf House and Hopland Tap would be a good two-fer for a day trip. They have a lot of live music, including lots of kinds of Rock (the old joke, “Music? We got both kinds! Country AND Western!”) Kevin Lovett will pour his Hazy beer at the Freshtival but he won't give it a name until he tastes it.

Brew Ha Ha Podcast
Moonlight Brewing Co-Owners Brian Hunt and Patrick Rue

Brew Ha Ha Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2022 25:07


Moonlight Brewing co-owners Brian Hunt and Patrick Rue join Harry Duke and Herlinda Heras on Brew Ha Ha today. Brian is the founder of Moonlight Brewing and Patrick Rue is now a co-owner. Patrick is the former owner of “Bruery” in Orange County which he sold. After opening a Moonlight Czech Pils Reality Czech, we hear their stories. Patrick started brewing in 1992 and just kept at it. He started in a barn near the airport then to Graton 10 years later then to Coffey Lane and has been there since then. It's walking distance for lucky residents of Santa Rosa. Lagunitas bought 50% of Moonlight, then Heineken bought Lagunitas. Now Moonlight is back local with Patrick Rue. Brian gets to tell the story of looking for just the right partner for a long time. Patrick has been a fan of Moonlight since drinking Death and Taxes in college. He admires that they have a steady identity and do not have to chase trends. Patrick opened a Brewery in Southern California and he ditched law school to operate it then sold it to some investors. He tried his hand at wine, his winery is called Erosion. They also brew beer and they make ice cream too. Russian River Brewing Co. is open in Santa Rosa on 4th St. and at their big Windsor location. Visit their website for up-to-date hours, menus, beers and more. Patrick and Brian served together in the California Craft Brewers Association which is how they got to know each other. Brian had a great reputation that inspired Patrick. For a lot of people, including Harry and Patrick, Death and Taxes was popular when they were students. The Importance of Death and Taxes Death and Taxes is Moonlight Brewing's signature brew. Brian was working for a brewery in Napa and he thought of a beer that he wanted which didn't exist. Today we are used to a lot of choices but back then, he had to make it. It's something that works well in hot weather. It is the epitome of the San Francisco style black lager. He made up that term, because his friends in Europe are used to naming beer styles after cities. Even if that's not a habit in America, it makes sense to him. It is designed for when it's 90 degress outside. “To me a hop is an accent, it's not a reason to exist…” Get tickets for the Freshtival 2022 on eventbrite dot com. The Freshtival is back on June 25, 2022, at Sonoma Mountain Village. Come for 160 different beers from over 80 breweries from Portland to San Diego. All of the beer poured in this event will be less than 7 days old. For details visit Hen house brewing dot com slash freshtival Patrick explains how he likes to try to bring unusual flavors into beer, which is unlike what Moonlight does. He likes to use ingredients, yeast strains and spices that don't usually appear in beer. They have plans to let some Moonlight beer mature in oak barrels for 6 to 12 months. Reality Czech is a style from Pilsen, in western Czechia. They also have Dim Lights, a gently smoked lager. It took some trial and error to get the perfect smoked malts. Patrick's brand Erosion wine takes some Muscat Canelli (a cool climate aromatic wine) and flavors it with hops, three different ways.

Drink Beer, Think Beer With John Holl
Ep. 137 Brian Hunt and Patrick Rue of Moonlight Brewing

Drink Beer, Think Beer With John Holl

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2022 45:08


Last week, word got out that Patrick Rue, the founder of The Bruery in Orange County California, and more recently the founder and operator of Erosion Wines in Napa had acquired a 50 percent stake in Moonlight Brewery, a beloved northern California brewery founded 30 years ago by Brian Hunt.  Moonlight is known for its beers like Death & Taxes and Reality Czech and had been half owned by Lagunitas via Heineken for the past six years.  I first learned of the news via Beer by BART, a great site run by Gail Ann Williams and Steve Shapiro. If you're not already following them on social media, rectify that quickly.  A subsequent press release release from the brewery noted that “Patrick will serve in an advisory capacity and will direct an oak barrel-aging beer program that enhances the integrity and heritage of Moonlight.”  It continued by saying that under the Heineken co-ownership Moonlight "packaging shifted from exclusively draft to additionally offering beers in cans, and both production and distribution have grown all while keeping sales limited to Northern California.  The new ownership strengthens Moonlight's dedication to remaining locally owned. This will allow for patient growth, greater availability of its coveted beers to its fans and wholesale partners, while maintaining the deliciousness and highest quality for which Moonlight is so well known.” Press release aside, in this episode we hear from the owners directly.  This Episode is sponsored by:Cigar City Brewing Co.Check out Fancy Papers from Cigar City Brewing. With aromas of freshly cut grass and tangerine along with white wine grape and bread-like aromas, this Hazy IPA has flavors of guava, melon, and lime leaf. Brewed with Strata, Sabro, and Idaho 7 hops to draw in lovers of fruit-forward Hazy IPAs, get some today where you buy beer and learn more at cigar city brewing. com Learn more at Cigar City Brewing.com  For more Drink Beer, Think Beer or to check out Beer Edge follow us on Twitter @thebeeredge and visit All About Beer. Host: John Holl Guests: Brian Hunt and Patrick Rue of Moonlight Brewing Sponsors: Cigar City Brewing, The Craft Brewery Cookbook,  All About Beer and The Beer Edge Tags: Beer, Ownership, California, Collaboration, Innovation, Wine

Brew Ha Ha Podcast
Seismic Brewing Co. and Tremor

Brew Ha Ha Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2022 26:52


We have two guest brewers from Seismic Brewing Co. on Brew Ha Ha today, Anthony Ayez aka Turbo and Christian Toran, brewing engineer. They are celebrating Seismic's 5th anniversary this year. Tremor is their sister brewery, all organic and all locally sourced. They have won several important awards lately for their Tremor California Light Lager. It won 2021 Gold medal at Great American Beer fest and a silver the year before. It also just won at the World Beer Cup in Minneapolis. This international award only happens every other year and it is the biggest award in the business. Seismic grew up developing recipes in their owner's garage, and now they run a sustainable brewery in Santa Rosa. They have world-class water re-use practices. They have been located in the Barlow in Sebastopol for the last three years. May 20-22 they are throwing a birthday party called Megafest. Seismic has grown to 7,700 barrels last year and already 2,400 barrels this year, by May. Tremor California Light Lager, the brand that won the gold, “... is our OG brand for the Tremor family.” Their wastewater treatment and other sustainable practices are world-class. Reclaimed water is cleaner than drinking water standards. The Megathrust is a higher alcohol IPA that was not as widely known. Now it is finally being put in cans. This is their first 16-ounce can. Herlinda mentions that canning saved a lot of breweries. Seismic does have a big canning system. Their owner is Christopher Jackson and the Jackson family is dedicated to sustainability and best ecological practices. He will be on this show next week to talk about that and more. Herlinda also has some news, since Seismic has recently purchased Golden State Cider. Tremor uses 100% Organic Admiral Pilsner malt from Admiral Malting in Alameda, California. They developed their processes and recipes together. They are mimicking classic styles with their own twist on them that are truly delicious. Seismic's purchase of Golden State Cider is nice news in the business. They are neighbors in the Barlow and the companies share such similar core values so it is “a match made in heaven.” Herlinda also mentions that Brian Hunt of Moonlight Brewing has managed to “get out from underneath Heineken.” She can't talk about many details yet but they will be on the show when they can. Seismic Brewing Co. is located in the Barlow in Sebastopol: Mondays through Thursdays 3pm-9pm, Fridays 2pm-10pm, Saturdays 11am-10pm, Sundays 11am-8pm. Megafest runs from May 20-22, a big party with music celebrating their 5th anniversary. Several of the bands that will be playing are actually made up of musicians who work in local breweries.

Fatal Conceits Podcast
Joel Bowman and Eric Fry on the (New) Made In America

Fatal Conceits Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2022 55:55


“Wall Street focuses on earnings or quarterly earnings per share, adjusted earnings, adjusted EBITDA. All this garbage. And it's garbage because it's all adjusted and it's all in the hands of the wizards called CFOs, chief financial officers, and their departments. It's wizardry, it's not accounting.”~ Eric Fry, editor of Fry's Investment Report and The SpeculatorTRANSCRIPT:Joel Bowman:Welcome to another episode of the Fatal Conceits podcast, a show about money, markets, mobs and manias. I'm your host, Joel Bowman, bringing you today's episode from down here in Buenos Aires in Argentina. Before we get into today's show, a quick reminder to long time listeners and newcomers alike, if you like what you hear during these conversations don't forget to head over to our Substack page, which is at bonnerprivateresearch.substack.com. There you can find hundreds of irreverent articles on everything from high finance to lowly politics and plenty more besides. You'll also see special reports, webinars with Bill's private network of analysts and writers from around the world, and of course plenty more Fatal Conceits podcasts just like this one. On that note, I'm joined by a long time friend and also a dear friend of the Bonner Private Research family today, Mr. Eric Fry. Thanks for joining us. Eric Fry:Hello Joel, welcome to be here. Joel Bowman:Yeah. Whereabouts are you by the way? I know you're in California but you kind of dash up and down the coast there. Eric Fry:I am at the moment near the Russian River. Joel Bowman:Russian River. The other Russian River. Eric Fry:Takes on new meaning. Russian River so named because it was founded in a way by Russians, Russian fur traders back in the late 1700s. Joel Bowman:Oh I didn't know that. Eric Fry:They came as far south as this area from Alaska to hunt sea otters. Joel Bowman:And this I'm imagining is what, 100 years or more before it became better known for its delicious grape varietals that now populate the hillsides? Eric Fry:Yes. Although, interestingly, in the local graveyard here there are a number of Russian orthodox graves and they date back over 100 years. So there's still a small Russian influence here. Fort Ross is close by and at the outbreak of the Ukrainian invasion, one particular Russian lawmaker demanded that we return Fort Ross to the Russians, which I thought was interesting. Fort Ross is not really a fort, it's just a little place on the pacific. Joel Bowman:Well, I guess in a pinch you need all the forts and frontlines you can get maybe. Eric Fry:The only thing that Fort Ross has now is access to abalone beds. That's about it. Joel Bowman:Oh, okay. Well, I was going to... I hope I'm not betraying any confidence here but I did want to let our dear listeners know that on a private conversation you and I had a couple of weeks ago when we were teeing this up, I don't know if you remember this but I put three questions to you. One was do you listen to podcasts, the second was do you have any interest whatsoever in the world of ever being on a podcast, and then the third was would you like pretty please to appear on the Fatal Conceits podcast. To which you promptly replied no, no, and yes. So just to underscore my gratitude. Eric Fry:Actually it was no, no and I guess so. Joel Bowman:No, no, and okay if I have to. Yeah, exactly. So Eric... Go ahead. Eric Fry:My wife is an avid podcast aficionado, so she'll listen to it. Joel Bowman:Oh okay. Well, that'll be one of the three of us who will listen to it then, so that's good. So just for readers and I guess listeners now who I think many of whom would be familiar with your work over the years, particularly the last couple of decades, do you want to just set the scene a little bit, a bit of a Fry origin story, how first of all you came to the investment world up in Wall Street, and then in particular how you got to know Bill and to come and work on The Daily Reckoning and all that? Eric Fry:We'll make this very brief because as you well know, my least favorite topic is me. So we're going to rip through this. Went to UCLA, worked in restaurants for a long time, managed the Hard Rock Café in West Hollywood for a while. Eventually self published a financial newsletter and that little seed germinated and became a much larger venture, morphed into full on financial research and institutional research. I moved to New York, produced institutional research there, and that is... So I work with an individual named Jim Grant, who I absolutely idolize, brilliant financial mind, writer. And Bill Bonner was and is a reader of Jim Grant's, and Bill discovered me as it were toiling with Grant. And so he and I began... He hired me, began collaborating on The Daily Reckoning, and have been producing some form of institutional or individual investment research ever since. Including now. Joel Bowman:Right, so I'm just thinking back to those Halcion days at the beginning of the turn of the millennium. And I think it was a few years, maybe 2003, 2004 when you came over to work with Bill. Is that about right? Eric Fry:It was 2001. Joel Bowman:2001, okay. So I wanted to get into this because it was just after Bill had released his then novel idea of this kind of trade of the decade, which of course you'll recall, and I think many of our readers will recall too. If for nothing else that it was a very contrarian play at the time, the trade, a simple pear trade of course was buy gold, sell US equities. Gold had been in an infamous... Pardon the traffic outside my office window here, this is a little South American capital ambiance sound for our listeners. But gold had been in a bear market for a couple of decades, stocks were high flying and nothing but blue sky ahead of them. Part of your role over that first decade, and you and I wrote together for a good portion of that, was both tracking that, analyzing that, and also explaining a lot of the underlying philosophy behind that to our readers, both at The Daily Reckoning and The Rude Awakening. I'm wondering if the idea of a contrarian mindset for you as an investor, I won't ask about it as an individual, but as an investor is a kind of comfortable place for you to hang out intellectually or if it's something that you have to cultivate actively and consciously? Eric Fry:No, it's quite comfortable, but I'll go back first to the trade of the decade from 2001. So it became my trade of the decade by proxy since Bill had already introduced it before I started working with him. But it was a theme that I had already been pursuing and highlighting since '98, '99, 2000 when I was producing the previous institutional research. And I had made recommendations from that era that were gold focused and then more broadly commodity focused that produced some pretty brilliant results during a fairly dead decade. I mean, it was literally a lost decade for stocks. The S&P 500 produced a total return of zero during the early 2000s, the first decade of the 2000s. Whereas gold itself went up about 400% and many, many gold and commodity related stocks produced 1000%+ returns. So those investment ideas came out of a contrarian perspective per se. I don't really like the word contrarian because it's kind of a loaded word. I mean, a contrarian is sort of like... it feels synonymous with like a curmudgeon, like hates the world and hates whatever's working. It's sort of like you're an Aussie and you're younger than I am, so you probably aren't as familiar with The Addams Family, the TV series sitcom from the '60s, but Morticia Addams used to walk around the house cutting the heads off of roses. That was how she kept the house in proper form. So a contrarian feels kind of like that to a lot of people. So I'm not that kind of contrarian. It's rather, really looking for opportunities that provide the best risk/reward setup. And a lot of times, so where you have... We call them asymmetrical trades or imbalanced trades. Situations where the upside is significant, downside probably pretty limited. So oftentimes you're going to find those kind of trades in areas where most people aren't looking, or most people don't want to look. And if you go back to the era when I joined Bill, we were... That was the very first infamous tech stock boom, and it had just busted. The dot com era of the late 2000s. But the tech stock mindset was still all the rage. Everybody wanted to buy these beaten down tech stocks but they just kept getting hammered and hammered and hammered even more, where the real trade you wanted to be in was not that, not then. You wanted to be in other sectors, not just commodities but some of the insurance plays. There were different sectors of the economy that produced some great stocks. So coming, fast forward to the present, I guess about four years ago was making a number of recommendations in renewable energy, in particular in solar. And the way I discussion these ideas now is I apologize for them. I say I'm sorry for them. [Ed. Note: Learn more about Fry's Investment Report right here]Joel Bowman:Apologize in advance and get out ahead of the trends, right? Eric Fry:Yes, I apologize in advance. I'm sorry I'm recommending this. In the case of solar, so talk about solar today is a very different idea. When I was recommending solar stocks four or five years ago, I literally introduced them by saying this has been probably one of the worst industries to ever emerge in the history of capitalism. It has done nothing but impoverish investors for decades. So there's no automatic reason why the current moment should be different, except that it was different. The economics were changing, the demand structure was changing. Demand was ramping up at an exponential rate while prices were falling. So you didn't necessarily want to buy a solar panel producer but you did want to buy a company like nPhase, which I recommended and has gone up over 1000%. So different moments call for different sort of contrarian views but it's really not contrarian as much as it is just trying to find the opportunity that is mostly ignored. Joel Bowman:Right. And I guess that kind of brings us, you mentioned these big cycles, and I want to just put something of a neologism on the menu for our listeners. It was, I think, probably about four years ago, correct me if I'm wrong here, but about four years ago when you and your publisher CEO Brian Hunt coined the term technochasm, or maybe that was a little more recently. But I remember this kind of represented, because I remember in that first decade everything as you said, it was all about quote unquote "boring opportunities" over in the ag sector and the barbarous relic of big gold and whatnot. To see you developing this theory or identifying this big sort of primary trend with Brian was very interesting because it was almost as if the cycle had come sort of full turn and you had identified at maybe a point of maximum pessimism for growth stocks, a beginning of a very rewarding time for your readers. Eric Fry:Right. The technochasm idea is 100% Brian Hunt's, he came up with the term and the structure behind the phenomenon. And it's really, simply stated it is both economic... it's socioeconomic, it's both sociological and it is economic. So the idea being that folks on the right side of technology innovation and development will prosper, those on the wrong side will not. Both from an investment standpoint and from a sociological standpoint from your own lifestyle standpoint. So that is a great big theme that persists to this day, and dictates a large number of winners and losers. So there are entire industries that are on the wrong side of technochasm and are essentially on life support. They may look fairly robust and they behave in a “robusty” way. Joel Bowman:Another neologism. Eric Fry:Yes. Unless they adapt they'll perish. On the other side are the innovators. Unlike a lot of tech stock investors, I'm an investor in technology stocks of certain types when the time is right. I'm not a tech stock investor. But a lot of tech stock investors will buy the story, they'll buy the innovative, cool idea without paying much attention to the size of the total addressable market, the competition, see the likelihood that this new technology itself is uniquely vulnerable to obsolescence. So once you dive into any powerful trend like that one, there's a lot of digging to do to get to the true diamonds, the companies that really have some, as Warren Buffett would put it, a true competitive moat, or at least a good shot at it. And are operating in industries that have a very long runway of growth and then have a very large addressable market. So it's pretty easy to find things you don't like. It's much harder to find companies that really have a shot, to find the next Amazon, the next Netflix or whatever. Joel Bowman:Right. And so I guess this goes to you mentioned a few of the things you look for, investible moats or imminent obsolescence would be a couple of the high vis indicators one way or another. Maybe are there any other processes that you go through when screening for individual companies, like I'm just interested in the process that takes you from identifying this big primary trend which may carry out for a decade or even longer, and then getting to the point where you say okay, here is a ticker symbol, here is a price that I'm comfortable with, here's when I'm going to pull the trigger at and here's my short medium term strategy. Eric Fry:Okay, well a couple questions are buried in that question. The first one is more on a podcast like this or at conferences or whatever, individual investors, all individuals want something to hang their hat on. What's a thing that you do that I can also do? It took me a very, very, very long time to get to a helpful answer but I have one. Part of it is that if you are aware of complexity, and financial markets are complex. You're not solving for just a single variable, you're solving for multiple variables. And some of those variables are sociological, just the mood of the market. It's not just raw numbers. Obviously there's an art aspect of this. But if you're aware of a lot of variables and you're aware of complexity it's hard to pull back and say okay, how do I make it less complex? What's the thing that really matters here? There are two things that really matter for any investment. One, are sales rising? That's one. Two, are insiders buying or selling? So I could not know anything about a balance sheet except... I could know zero about a balance sheet. I could know nothing about an income statement except the top line, which is revenue. The very first number you see. And knowing that, and then looking up where you have to look up the data, are insiders buying or selling, I have a pretty good idea at the extremes, something that a company that's compelling and I have a pretty good idea of a company that's not compelling. So there is no... Wall Street focuses on earnings or quarterly earnings per share, adjusted earnings, adjusted EBITDA. All this garbage. And it's garbage because it's all adjusted and it's all in the hands of the wizards called CFOs, chief financial officers, and their departments. It's wizardry, it's not accounting. So if you like wizards then watch Harry Potter, but if you want to make some money on the market, pay attention to revenue, sales. So there is no such thing, does not exist. Never in the history of the planet has a company produced long-term growth and rewards for its shareholder by shrinking its revenues. Sporadically you can have trades in anything, but the long-term success stories are success stories of revenue up, revenue up, revenue up. So that's the first one. It may seem so obvious that it's kind of moronic, but it's not because many companies, especially in firm companies, will report rising earnings sometimes while their revenues are falling because they're squeezing costs or they paid back debt or whatever. But it's the earnings that matter. Then insider buying and selling. That's a soft metric, it's not something you can really super hard rely on but you can rely on the extremes. If you have fairly heavy insider buying that means something. If you have fairly heavy insider selling that means something. In the middle, not so much. But again, if you want the best opportunities, look at what insiders are buying and when revenues are going up. Period. That means they know something big's coming out of their market, they know, they have an edge. And they're not going to be loading up on their stock if they think they don't have an edge. [Ed. Note: Learn more Eric Fry's The Speculator research service, right here]Joel Bowman:Right. We had Chris Mayer on this show, a good mutual friend of ours obviously, and he's very big on the behavior and the psychology of the insiders. Presuming of course that they have some finger to the wind with regards to their own particular market. And obviously it's kind of do what I do, not what I say with regards to what they put in their own money. Eric Fry:Again, I'm talking about just two things that any investor can look at to start the process. Obviously there are many, many nuances to this analysis, and ultimately earnings matter, profit margins matter, all those things matter. No question about it. But if I only look at those two things, I'm rarely going to go way wrong. One of the more interesting ones from the short side, I have done and still do a lot of short selling, is if you find situations where insiders are not buying. Maybe they're not selling but they're not buying and the company is borrowing money to buy back stock, that's a sell. That company is a sell. It happens all the time. It's like okay, so if the stock isn't good enough for them to buy with personal money, they're going to keep a liability on a shareholder and buy the stock on their behalf, stock they themselves won't touch. So that's fascinating. Joel Bowman:Yeah, and I guess if you were tracking particular companies and you were looking at habits or trends of buying and you saw habitual monthly, quarterly, whatever insiders loading up and then all of a sudden radio silence, that would probably be a bit of a red flag there as well. So to back up to this idea of the technochasms and just to bring listeners more fully into it, you went out to Atherton, which is maybe not many people know, routinely ranked as the richest zip code in the States. And just to get back to that sociological data point that you mentioned before, that particular zip code is located near some very not well off zip codes within a nine iron from the 20, 30 million dollar houses. Do you want to just sort of contextualize that a little bit, because while I think people kind of intuitively understand like oh okay, yes, if you're Elon Musk and you have a few billion lying around for Twitter or to invest in Tesla or start these things up, that's one thing, but it's a bigger wedge societally as well that I think people, even non-investors would do well to be aware of. Eric Fry:Yeah, so not far from Atherton is a town called East Palo Alto, and it's very poor. There are a lot of... It isn't a classic... East Palo Alto is... Well, parts of it... There are homeless encampments everywhere, and there are homeless encampments in Palo Alto, but it is not... that's not what it's about essentially, it's just a poor place. Especially alongside places like Atherton. So in one of the elementary schools in Southeast Palo Alto, more than half the kids are homeless. They actually go home to a trailer or a tent or whatever. Not only is it right next door to Atherton, but while we were there filming and talking to people, you can look a mile away is Facebook headquarters. It's right there. And in fact, to their credit the Zuckerbergs are building an elementary school in East Palo Alto. So there's that. But it's just this incredible juxtaposition of really extreme wealth. The wealthiest zip code in the United States, next to one of the poorest zip codes in the United States. The wealth that's in Atherton and obviously up and down Silicon Valley is technology wealth, it's tech wealth, they're on the right side of the technochasm. And the people on the other side, that's folks who isn't necessarily made any wrong decisions, it's just that's where they are. They clean houses or they work in some service industry of some type. Maybe they're running a successful gardening operation, business, but it's not a business that can grow exponentially through the benefit of technology. So the message is not like hey, don't be poor, be rich. The message was to the extent that you have an opportunity, be aware that technology can grow your wealth exponentially and the opposite can't. Joel Bowman:Yeah, and it does seem obviously and probably at no other time in history quite like the last 5, maybe 10 years, that that divide is increasing exponentially as the effects of being on the right side of technochasm extrapolate. Eric Fry:Yeah, the chasm is widening at an exponential rate. That word exponential is overused but it's mathematically accurate in this case. Joel Bowman:In this case, yeah. So I guess one of the questions that a lot of people are thinking about after Q1, and this kind of goes back to mapping on shorter performances for not just individual stocks but certain sectors of the market are grouped together, call them growth stocks. I know that growth and value stocks maybe sort of overused and particular equities maybe flip between one and another. But when we're looking at this big macro trend that you've identified, I guess a lot of people, they look at Q1 and they say goodness, I don't know what the NASDAQ's down year to date at the moment, something like 10%. It was obviously during March, during the March lows, more than double that down. And then of course you've got individual stocks, Netflix and Facebook that were completely routed on individual days even. I read in a recent article, a quote that I thought was very interesting from you, and this has just got to do with the various headwinds that are in the face of continued growth stocks, continued growth at the moment, and I'll just read this out to you and get your reaction, it's, "The truth is that the amount of innovation and wealth creation that's about to take place cannot be stopped," you write, "not by rising government debt, politics, border walls, inflation or rising interest rates." There's some pretty strong headwinds, but you expect, I guess, this chasm to keep widening and this trend to keep playing out. Is this a temporary pullback in your view, then? Eric Fry:Well, that comment applies only to the capitalistic phenomenon of innovation and wealth creation. It does not apply to stock price trajectory. It does not apply to where the stock market is heading. So if you are more, I guess, a student of history than I am, and as you well know there is often a wide disconnect between the pace of innovation and the success, the mantra of success, that those innovations deliver to their investors. So coming into this year we had a stock market at all time highs, based upon every single applicable valuation metric that anyone has ever used to measure stock market values. It was the highest valuation of all time, based on anything you want to talk about. So you don't hit the most extreme value ever, have it come off 20% and go, "Gee, how come these great innovations aren't producing big stock price gains for us?" It's because it already happened. You already got it. So let the pony take a breather. Feed it some hay. Just hang out and watch it for a bit. Joel Bowman:Right. Eric Fry:Stocks don't go straight up. And we saw the overall market fall 20 but we saw many individual names fall 50%, 60%, 70%. So that's a good start in terms of cleansing the air and creating a foundation for a new phase of growth in the stock market, as a broad comment. But even then, some of the stocks, it's so remarkable, even after surrendering 80% of their value, they're still trading at whatever. 100 times sales? Something that was unimaginable. Some of these numbers were unimaginable. Let alone they were at 1000 times sales, whatever they were at. So investors need to keep in mind that yeah, you don't get paid every single day. You're trying to find the best mega trend opportunities. Things that have powerful trends, big restful market, long live, and you're trying to buy stocks in those trends as well as you can. It's always going to be imperfect. And if you do that you're going to make a lot of money but maybe not tomorrow and maybe not next week. Joel Bowman:It reminds me again of... to bring up a mutual friend, Chris Mayer again, one of his more... I think his most recent book, 100 Baggers: Stocks That Have Returned 100-1 Gains and How To Find Them. He goes through the last 50 years of these mega successful stocks that have just made pot loads for investors, and it's, as you said, not a straight line. Many of these, including household names like Amazon, like Apple, have been cut in half or worse multiple times along the journey. So yeah, give the pony some hay and check in again next quarter. Eric Fry:I used to do, every once and a while in speeches, I had this little gag, I'd say, "Okay, so who wants to be a billionaire? Here's how you do it, here's how you become a billionaire. You find a stock that falls 20% every four years." It's some number, I can't remember exactly, but it's roughly like this. Falls 35% every six years and every 14 years produces a gain of zero. I mean, it goes 14 years fans or produces a gain of zero. So who wants to do that? And of course it sounds miserable. But the stock is Berkshire Hathaway. Joel Bowman:Yeah. Eric Fry:Berkshire Hathaway, I can't remember, 12, 13, 14 years producing a zero return. It had multiple 20, 30, 40% setbacks during its history.Joel Bowman:Yeah I feel like those guys did all right out of this whole sort of investing game. And that's interesting, it brings us to where I kind of wanted to get to talking about old school investing and old school tried and tested ideas. It does seem you've been writing a little bit more recently about another idea that dovetails with something that we're working on over at Bonner Private Research, and that is our trade of the decade, generally long old school energy, short the US dollar. And with all of the geopolitical backdrop, the inflationary backdrop, the fed being in the headline every other week, this is something that you've written quite a bit about lately and this strikes me as it's a little bit of a return to a cycle that has been unloved during the big run-up of EVs and whatnot and now people are cycling back to very unsexy, old oil. What was the catalyst that drove you back into the arms of the hydrocarbon sector? Eric Fry:I don't know if Bill stole my idea or if we both came up with it at the same time. I started writing about buying oil stocks in November, and to my point earlier in this podcast I had the lead sentence or paragraph for that first recommendation was I realize most folks don't want to buy an oil stock, I get it. I don't even want to recommend an oil stock. But I have to. Joel Bowman:Imagine how I feel... Eric Fry:So I recommended oil stocks. Those trades obviously have done really, really well. And I'm still in the process of recommending additional ones. To the point is it the trade of a decade, I don't know. What I know about... there's two or three things about the oil market that are fascinating and immovable. One is that it takes a very long time to bring new production online. Anywhere from if you've already got an existing shell operation, it attaches somewhere and you're just drilling a new platform, okay you can get that thing running in less than a year. But talking about discovery to production is 10 years best case, and it can be much longer. So it is the ultimate inelastic market. You can't just produce new oil if demand is there. So for a decade now, global oil companies have been under investing in new production. There's a company called Rystad that tracks it and I think the peak investment was $800 billion in exploration and production, or exploration investment globally in 2014. That number fell to 300 billion. 800 to 300. Anecdotally we know that's true from comments on dozens of conference calls from oil stock CEOs and CFOs. They are afraid to invest large sums in new production. So that's a multiyear trend that it's coming home to roost now. Our current global supply is constricted due to underinvestment for many, many years now. At the same time, the EV story, while absolutely authentic and powerful and real is widely misunderstood. Yes, EVs will take a larger share every single year from internal combustion vehicles. And yes, solar, wind, et cetera, coupled with energy storage will take a larger share of the power generation market. But, and it's a gigantic but, those activities are oil intensive. Joel Bowman:Yeah. I've got a quote from you here in another column that you had. You write renewable energy is not oil free energy. I just kind of underlined there. And I think that's a dynamic that a lot of people miss when they're talking about solar, wind, EV, they fail to incorporate all of the very highly oil intensive processes that are involved in either manufacturing the blades for the solar panels or the mining process or the distribution process or the storage. These are high energy intensive processes, and we're not powering them by sunshine and wind at present. So we have to go through that to get there. Eric Fry:There are very few exceptions to that. The other, and probably an even more important point, this is two points. The second one is that while the EVs share of the global auto market is going to be growing year by year by year, the pie itself is growing. So the number of vehicles of any kind is going to be growing year after year after year. So that means that in absolute terms, the number of internal combustion vehicles on the road won't peak until at least 10 years from now. Obviously those are estimates, but the estimates run anywhere from 10 years out to 20 years out. It could be 2040 before internal combustion vehicle crude oil consumption peaks. No matter what EVs do. So you don't get there overnight.I mean, I think even under the most radical, aggressive assumptions about EV adoption, you're still looking at peak oil six, seven years out. I don't even think that's plausible, but okay, it's an estimate. But even if that's true, that suggests automobiles. Joel Bowman:Well, that certainly bodes well for our trade of the decade, which is doing quite well early on but-Eric Fry:That's a trade of the decade because to some great extent the supply is not entirely baked in the cake. I mean, US oil companies will try to ramp up production, everyone will try. But it's pretty much baked in the cake. In very, very round numbers the US is not capable of ramping more than a million or two barrels a day over the near term. But we're talking about a demand that would exceed that. Not in the US but globally, globally demand is probably already exceeding supply by a million or two million barrels a day, and no one else is growing production. Unless there's some addition coming out of OPEC, but I don't know where it's going to come from and we still aren't back to pre-COVID levels of demand from aviation, from trucking. In Asia, a lot of the Asian economies are still well below pre-COVID levels of crude oil consumption. So if you just return to that and then add in incremental growth, demand could be anywhere from three to six million barrels a day above supply. And that's off of a 100 million barrel a day base, so that's about what the world consumes. It could easily go to 105, 106 with supply sitting there at 101. Obviously that situation can't persist forever because you can't buy barrels that you don't have, so prices go up. Joel Bowman:Interesting that you mention 2014 as the high water mark for global investment in exploration. Obviously just happens to be... I'm sure listeners are recognizing the coincidence that that just happens to be the last peak in price of oil. It was 80 bucks, or whatever it was in 2014. So just attract sentiment and then you have whatever we've had, six, eight years of under-investment and under-capitalization in that industry, which is part of that whole thesis. What do you make of-Eric Fry:I thought it was because that's when Bitcoin launched. I figured they stopped investing in oil and gas and just bought Bitcoin then. Joel Bowman:Yeah, well Bitcoin is a highly oil intensive mining operation that needs to be supported. So I'm wondering just obviously the kind of other piece of this puzzle, which is a geopolitical piece but where we have and you've written also extensively about oil companies pulling out of Russia. At present it's not so much a big deal I think as your friend Brian Hunt said a few people in Moscow can't watch Squid Games and Netflix makes their exit, but it is a big deal when the western mages are beating a hasty exit and leaving not just decades' worth of capital intensive work and infrastructure and labor and intellectual property and whatnot behind, but also billions, tens, hundreds of billions, who knows, of oil that they won't be drilling anytime in the near future and oil that may very well not but available, at least not without significant strings attached to either the United States or various countries across the European continent who are heavily reliant on gas or oil to keep the lights on and to have their homes heated. So how much do you think that plays into... I mean, obviously a lot's been made of the quote unquote "Putin price hike" and blaming all of the inflationary pressures in the US on big bad Vlad across the way, but how much of it actually do you think does play in and how much of it, as you mentioned before, do you think was already baked in the cake, both as far as under-investment-Eric Fry:It's funny, we hadn't even mentioned Russia in the context of the oil trade of the decade.Joel Bowman:Oh yeah, that. Eric Fry:That's because when both Bill and I, apparently, conceived this idea, Russia wasn't yet the pariah it has become. So Russia definitely matters, it matters a lot to the equation. I think we, as I wrote, I think the oil market was already poised for a move to $100 a barrel and I was writing it when it was 60 a barrel. It was already poised for that move without anything happening in Ukraine or Russia. So now, maybe floor is higher, but the issue is twofold. One is that yeah, Russian oil will still come to market. Somebody will buy it at some discounted price. But those supply chains need to shift. And we've learned a little bit about what that looks like, how messy it could be and how much time it takes for supply chains to shift. So I don't know if China and India, for example, can sop up all the Russian oil that they... in lieu of buying it from somewhere else. But when you're talking about western benchmark prices, meaning Brent Crude in London and West Texas Intermediate here, WTI crude, those oil prices I'm talking about. And those prices are going to go higher because of a supply chain shift and also because of scarcity. So there's something called a Urals blend. That's Russian oil. And it used to be, meaning early this year, a spread between Urals oil and Brent oil was about a buck a barrel, like nothing. And now that spread is -25 to -30 dollars a barrel. That's how much cheaper Russian oil than world oil. So that tells you right there what's happening on the ground. There is a buyer's strike. So that's the first problem. The second problem is more serious. When western technology departs, a lot of industries struggle. So when Venezuela said, "We don't need you anymore," Venezuela's production plummeted. It didn't have the new technology, didn't have the parts, didn't have this, didn't have that. And Russia is also very reliant on western technology and western supplies to maintain both the production and the health of their fields. Joel Bowman:Human capital experts on the ground, all those companies that have since high tailed it out of there are leaving long shadows. Eric Fry:Right. And Russian production was already in decline. I mean, they were operating on aging fields in a lot of places so without the means to invest in sustaining and rejuvenating production, I think could fall fairly precipitously. Joel Bowman:And this kind of gets to this idea, I mean from another angle but this bifurcation of the global economy, whether we're talking about obviously energy is largely a catalyzing agent here, but even when we talk about financial sanctions and so forth, where it almost feels like, and I've seen a few other commentators, I'm not the first to make this point, but it does seem like there is this kind of resurgence of Cold War geopolitical bifurcation where you've referred to it, something of a similar trend, I think, as this trend toward deglobalization, where we have economies that were once open for business, open to lowering trades, lowering tariffs rather, and being more internationally cooperative, now sort of retreat back to their corner and deglobalize, essentially. What do you make of the potential ways that individuals, let's say in the United States and the west, are going to see that manifest itself in maybe just their everyday lives? And then we could talk about the markets maybe after that. Eric Fry:Yeah. Well, so I'll say this first in case Bill tries to steal this idea also. I've been writing about bubbles for almost two years. The new made in America brand and I also gave a little acronym, MNIC, it was Made in America or Not Made in China. And I have been suggesting this would become a powerful investment mega trend. I believe that as adamantly today as I did a year and a half ago. And we're seeing develop and mature and fan out across every industry. And now, with this Russian invasion and this instantaneous boycott of an entire superpower, that that just reinforces the idea of trade will deglobalize. There's going to be a messy divorce coming. For you old-timers in the crowd it will be as bad as Richard Burton and Liz Taylor. Joel Bowman:Oh, don't say it. Eric Fry:For the younger people in the crowd, let me see, give me somebody... Who had a messy divorce recently? Joel Bowman:Yeah, I'm going to be of zero help to you there. Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie, that's as far back as I can go. Eric Fry:Kanye and Kim or something.Joel Bowman:Kanye and Kim, oh my god. Wait, are you breaking news to me right now, have they split? Eric Fry:Are they still married? Joel Bowman:Oh I have no idea. Eric Fry:Kim is with Pete Davidson, you know from Saturday Night Live. I can't keep up with these youngsters, Joel, you know that. Joel Bowman:Maybe they had a Will and Jada type arrangement where it was no exclusive or something. Maybe that's a cancelable statement, we're going to get booted off the air or slapped in the face online. Eric Fry:Anyway, so the de-globalization is something that will affect all industries. I'll give you one perfect example. So Intel, the giant American chip company, has announced a few months ago it was going to begin with an initial investment of $40 billion to build new fabs, new semiconductor foundries in Arizona, here in the US, and in Europe. And investors have been very, very nonplussed by this idea. They did all this major investment, becoming a manufacturer and blah blah blah, and why don't you just do it the way Nvidia does it? Why don't you just design the chips and outsource to Taiwan Semiconductor? It's like, huh. Taiwan Semiconductor. What is it about that name, I wonder? Joel Bowman:As a former resident of Taiwan I can...Eric Fry:Yeah. So even if, and I do assume that Taiwan will remain independent for quite some time, but even if it does, what Ukraine has showed us is that you can never be too sure. So it takes a long time to design chips into new technology. How enthusiastic are various technology companies going to be about oh yeah, we're using this chip from Nvidia that's manufactured in Taiwan. That should be fine, right? Maybe. Maybe not. So not so shockingly, about two weeks ago Nvidia said, "Huh, you know what, maybe we're going to contract with Intel to build some of our chips." For the first time ever. Build them here, or build them in the US or build them in Europe. So it isn't that the supply chain itself will automatically rupture, it's just now everyone knows about the threat. Everyone knows the risk. You can't say fool me twice. I think the pressure will be overwhelming on CEOs, nervous CEOs to de-globalize. Because if they don't, and the supply chain breaks down, even in an innocent way. If just a tsunami or something, it disrupts production somewhere. All right, well you should have known Mr. CEO that you can't build a business this way anymore, it's not how it works. So I think the pressure is pretty overwhelming to bring it home or as you said not made in China. I think it's going to be coming back to South America, North America, Europe, primarily. Joel Bowman:Yeah. It does kind of-Eric Fry:That's an opportunity. A very big one with legs. Joel Bowman:Yeah. It does kind of seem like the conversation before and after everybody knew that there was a gun at the wedding, let's say. It's the kind of thing you can't... Wanted to mention really quickly, and I'll put these links in the show notes for people who want to follow on with your work and they can go over to our Substack page again at bonnerprivateresearch.substack.com, and have a look for Fry's Investment Report, and The Speculator. And again, we'll have links to both of those in there where Eric fleshes out all of the trends, theories, macro analysis, et cetera that we've spoken about here and then in speculator drills into it a lot more with some more technical trading for those of you who are more advanced investors. But there's plenty of info over there. And Eric, I'm hoping that we get to catch up sometime in the near future now that we're returning to something like normalcy. Maybe we can hang out in the Russian River sometime soon. Eric Fry:Sounds good, sounds good. Joel Bowman:Okay, thanks Eric, great to talk to you mate. Cheers. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit bonnerprivateresearch.substack.com/subscribe

WVU Marketing Communications Today
The Promise of Connected TV Advertising is Here

WVU Marketing Communications Today

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2022 31:28


  In this episode, Brian Hunt explains, in the clearest possible terms, the total scoop on CTV for marketers. We learned its benefits and drawbacks, the differences between CTV, OTT and linear television, and why CTV is an essential medium for us to be experimenting with today. Career hint: Data science majors can write their own tickets in this field! Join us for the details of how television is becoming more digital, targetable and measurable as a marketing communications channel. About our Guest: Media industry veteran Brian Hunt is Head of OTT and CTV Advertising Sales for Sinclair Broadcast Group. In this role, Hunt is responsible for the monetization of multiple premium connected TV and over-the-top digital video services for the company, including CompulseOTT, a data-driven ad platform and the fastest-growing digital product in Sinclair's history. His responsibilities also include oversight of Sinclair's rapidly growing local broadcast inventory and national platforms for NewsON, featuring over 300 local broadcast stations, as well as STIRR, Sinclair's direct-to-consumer advertising-supported OTT service. Hunt also oversees the OTT and CTV ad sales for Bally Sports regional sports networks and The Tennis Channel. Prior to his role at Sinclair, Hunt was Corporate Vice President of TEGNA's Premion OTT Division as its first employee. During Hunt's tenure at Premion, he oversaw Sales, Publisher Relationships, Contracts, Operations and Strategy. Prior to TEGNA, Hunt held a variety of leadership positions in the industry. He was the Senior Vice President of Viamedia, a cable ad sales representation firm where he established and renewed key partnerships including Centurylink, Google Fiber, Verizon Fios, Time Warner and others. Hunt spent over 15 years at NBCUniversal as Senior Vice President of Affiliate Sales & Marketing in the Cable Distribution Group and other key NBCU positions. Hunt has a BS in Finance from Southern Illinois University, M.B.A. from Fontbonne College in St. Louis, MO and an Executive Management Degree from Harvard Business School. Hunt lives in the New York City suburbs with his wife and three children. WVU Marketing Communications Today: Horizons is presented by the West Virginia University Reed College of Media, which offers renowned online master's degree programs in Marketing Communications.  

HOA - It's A True Story Podcast
EPISODE #64: Managing Parking Rules, Guest: Brian Hunt

HOA - It's A True Story Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2022 37:46


Regan Brown and Bill Mann of the G.B. Group, Inc. sit down with Brian Hunt, President of Professional Parking Enforcement to discuss parking enforcement in HOAs, how they differ from commercial properties, and what managers need to know about establishing rules. 

Brew Ha Ha Podcast
Hen House Big Chicken plus SF Beer Week

Brew Ha Ha Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2022 27:22


Colin McDonald, brewmaster and co-founder of Hen House Brewing is in the studio with Herlinda Heras and Harry Duke on Brew Ha Ha today. They have Hen House's special brew Big Chicken to taste. This year Hen House has Big Chicken in cans in the tasting rooms in Petaluma and Santa Rosa, and kegs for all their other bars and restaurants. This is their big celebration beer. Hen House has some distribution in Portland. Their Portland distributor is driving up tomorrow with kegs freshly filled to deliver there. This beer has a following of people who are eager to tap these kegs as soon as they can. This is their 10th anniversary and 10th batch of Big Chicken. It is everything they learned about making hoppy beer during the year. The recipe changes every year as they learn new stuff. They are also doing some new beers with unique yeasts. They use some genetically modified yeast from Berkeley Labs, UC Berkeley's yeast lab, which produces custom strains. They bring an enzyme that releases more of the inherent flavors in the beer. There are different types of hops in this year's recipe, but with a “super tropical fermentation character” on it. Colin calls it “the best batch ever.” It is intense, fun and exciting. Herlinda says it is “extremely drinkable.” Big Chicken will be available in cans at the tasting rooms until this weekend and may or may not make it into next week. They want people to experience it as super fresh. They were still a nano-brewery when they made the first Big Chicken. Colin describes the brewing process as imperfect, and tells something he learned from Brian Hunt of Moonlight Brewing, who said that if you don't have to dump some beer out every year, “your standards just aren't high enough.” Brew Ha Ha is sponsored by the Santa Rosa branch of Yoga Six located in Coddingtown Center. YogaSix has special signup promotions special workshops and Beer Yoga, so check out their website or their local studio's facebook page. Call them at 707 527 6454 or visit their website at yogasix.com/santa-rosa Hen House is opening in Fairfax. They took over the old Iron Springs location. Alex their chef is focussed on using local ingredients like the abundant locally harvested oysters and they are also making some food-centric beers. Brew Ha Ha "Brews News with Herlinda" is sponsored by Russian River Brewing Co. Gail Williams joins calls in to the studio to speak with Herlinda Heras, Harry Duke and Colin, about SF Beer Week. Gail describes how Omicron hit just as all the event programmers were in their important planning stages. Despite the difficulties, they are putting on the show and all the information you need is on that website, SF Beer Week dot org. If you go to sfbeerweek.org, you can see what activities are available all over the Bay Area, including shipping options for beer delivery from lots of great craft breweries. Colin will be doing a live beer chat about a collaboration they are involved in called Prime 5. Gail describes the great array of events and games located all around the area, which are all listed on the SF Beer week website. "Whatever you want to do, you'll find something really fun," says Gail.

Untold Stories
The Own Anything Revolution with Brian Hunt

Untold Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2021 45:46


My guest today is my friend Brian Hunt, CEO of InvestorPlace. InvestorPlace is one of America's largest, longest-standing independent financial research firms. Started over 40 years ago by a business visionary named Tom Phillips, they publish detailed research and recommendations for self-directed investors, financial advisors and money managers. InvestorPlace.com publishes insightful articles on every corner of the market — from mutual funds and ETFs to options and active stock trading. Brian began his career in Oil and Natural gas by working over 7 years at Longfellow Drilling Incorporated. He eventually made his way to Stansberry Research, an independent financial research firm, delivering unbiased investment intelligence to self-directed investors seeking an edge in a wide variety of sectors and market conditions, where he was their editorial director. Brian next challenge was leading Katusa Research, an independent research firm founded by professional investor Marin Katusa focused on natural resource stock investments, as a Partner and Head of the Editorial Board. Brian is currently the CEO of InvestorPlace. Our discussion covers a variety of topics ranging wealth creation, investing, success, tokenization, and much more. We begin our discussion by talking about Proof-of-Brain and the importance of learning skills and acquiring knowledge to compound your wealth generating opportunities. Our conversation takes a slight turn where we begin discussing portfolio construction and advice for new investors. Brian gives excellent advice about how to approach markets and investing. A very interesting conversation topic was when we discussed the technological megatrends that will shape society for the decades to come. Our discussion transitions to tokenization and the future applications of crypto. We dive deep into the disruptive possibilities of the "Own Anything Revolution." We also touch on the topic of smart cities, tokenized bonds, regulating the regulators, and much more. We finish our conversation by discussing the qualities of a good leader and the importance of humility in success and leadership. Please enjoy my conversation with Brian Hunt. --- ParaSwap: If you want to make a swap at the best price across the DeFi market, check out https://untoldstories.link/paraswap. ParaSwap's state-of-the-art algorithm beats the market price across all major DEXs and brings you the most optimized swaps with the best prices, and lowest slippage. -- This podcast is powered by Blockworks. For exclusive content and events that provide insights into the crypto and blockchain space, visit them at https://blockworks.co

Leading Local Insights
Targeting Local Viewers in OTT

Leading Local Insights

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2021 27:01


One of the fastest growing local ad platforms is premium video programming delivered Over-The-Top (OTT). National networks and local TV groups have developed direct-to-consumer OTT services that are ad-supported and have enjoyed successful growth since the start of the pandemic. According to BIA's estimates, the local OTT ad market is over a billion dollars already and fast growing. However, it is a complicated ecosystem particularly for local businesses to navigate. In this podcast, BIA's Managing Director, Rick Ducey, talks with Brian Hunt who is the Head of CompulseOTT and Sinclair OTT/CTV. They discuss how to navigate the OTT opportunity and solutions that are simplifying how to successfully target local viewers in OTT.

Disco grande
Disco Grande - Fiesta casera de los 50 años del programa - 07/05/21

Disco grande

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2021 119:02


En el estudio Música 4 con una hora de más. Una forma de celebrar los 50 años de programa que se cumplieron el pasado 27 de marzo. Por este orden estuvieron en el escenario, instrumentos en mano, Wide Valley, Happy Losers, Alice Wonder y Rufus t Firefly. Wide Valley van a sacar en breve con la etiqueta Great Canyon su primer disco que bebe del folk rock y del country rock americano. Ha producido Brian Hunt y con instrumentos para la ocasión sin electrificar estuvieron Juanjo, Owl C y St Woods y los dos últimos (Rick y Manu) en llegar. Tocaron dos canciones de las conocidas porque ya han sonado del álbum que viene y otras dos inéditas, entre ellas la que dará título ("Blurry times") al disco Happy Losers son los responsables de la sintonía actual del programa (y la tocaron a traición cuando ya les había despedido) y representados en Toni, Sergio y Pepe rescataron canciones de tres de sus discos ("Apple taste", "Bubbles" y "Harry, Bardo, Doc & Barry"). Ya son 25 años de vida y aunque asoman la cabeza apenas de vez en cuando no hay que perder la esperanza de que vuelvan tras su último trabajo que fue un EP ("Travelling band") en 2018. Alice Wonder está a punto de sacar nuevo disco ("Que se joda todo lo demás") en donde se demostrará el crecimiento con respecto a "Firekid" y más atrás de cuando hacía versiones de sus músicos admirados (de Nina Simone a Adele, de Bon Iver a Damien Rice). Sale el 14 y un día antes hace concierto (entradas en su web) en streaming con piano de cola y todo. Guitarra en mano tocó tres canciones y hablamos entre otras cosas de su familia artística e ilustre (padre, madre y Carla, su hermana, que sí que ejerce de colaboradora). Victor vino asimismo con guitarra y dejó un repertorio absolutamente ecléctico en donde cabían un tema de aquel "Nueve" de cuando hizo la primera visita al programa, una versión de Rosendo de quien dijo que influyó en dedicarse a esto de la música y sorprendentemente una pieza llamada "Lafayette" que formará parte del álbum próximo a salir y que ha terminado de mezclar Kennie Takahasi (¿será pariente del de la Yellow Magic Orchestra?) y que seguirá la senda de los exitosos "Magnolia" y "Loto". Escuchar audio

Crossroads Grace Podcast
He Is Risen (Easter At Crossroads)

Crossroads Grace Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2021 27:04


Música de Contrabando
MÚSICA DE CONTRABANDO T30C090 Esta semana arranca el recuperado Festival de Jazz de Murcia, que tuvo que suspenderse el año pasado (03/03/2021)

Música de Contrabando

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2021 121:22


En Música de Contrabando, revista diaria de música en Onda Regional de Murcia, estrenamos nuevo formato con la incorporación de Terminal Pop, y aumentamos la duración a dos horas (orm.es; 00'00h) para que puedas disfrutar de toda la actualidad musical de la jornada. Primero fue Glastonbury.y ahora es el Primavera Sound, el festival que acaba de confirmar que pospone su edición 2021 a 2022 a causa de la pandemia (Gorillaz). Derby Motoreta's Burrito Kachimba anuncia la gira de “Hilo Negro”, su próximo disco. “Everybody Here Wants You” es el título escogido para la película sobre la vida de Jeff Buckley.James anuncian el lanzamiento de su nuevo álbum, All The Colours Of You. Su décimo sexto álbum de estudio verá la luz el 4 de junio y será el primer álbum de la banda publicado a través del nuevo sello Virgin Music. La Prohibidapresenta ‘En acústico’, que incluye una nueva lectura de "Determinista' de Parade. Arde Bogotá estrena 'MIllennial' , que sale para anunciar la preventa de 'La Noche', previsto para el 7 de mayo. Kali Uchis presenta una obra apropiadamente escapista del dream-pop latino. Deap Vally han publicaron Digital dream, su nuevo ep colaborativo y lo celebran con vídeo para "look away (feat Jennylee)". "Diamond Brand" es la colaboración entre Terry vs. Tori y David Alonso (Baywaves), que sale el viernes. El trío australiano Mansionair combina los sintetizadores etéreos y la épica del arena rock en "MORE", primer himno de su segundo album. Flock of Dimes (Jenn Wasner de Wye Oak) estrena "price of blue", vibrante nuevo adelanto de Head of roses, su nuevo disco. Ruto Neón presenta ‘Done’, la canción que cerrará su primer EP, que ha coproducido Brian Hunt. Miss Caffeina está de vuelta con "Punto Muerto" junto a Ana Torroja. Chico Blanco produce "1000 razones", la canción que completa el Ep "Amor de Temporada" de Colectivo Da Silva.THE YELLOW MELODIES presentan la segunda parte de su trilogía ‘Sunshine Pop’, una colección de cinco canciones brillantes y luminosas, cuatro propias y una versión del “Drive” de THE CARS, y estrenamos un avance de la tercera entrega. Nuevo tema de Flavio, producido por Pablo Rouss y compuesto junto a Roy Borland y Raúl Gómez. Esta semana arranca el recuperado Festival de Jazz de Murcia, que tuvo que suspenderse el año pasado. Hablamos con Jota Jazzazza, su director, acerca de esta nueva edición del festival (Raynald Colom Eli Degibri, Hetty Kate, Patxi Valverde).

Música de Contrabando
MÚSICA DE CONTRABANDO T30C087 "Mi gran virtud", primera de las tres Sesiones Salvajes de Nunatak (25/02/2021)

Música de Contrabando

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2021 123:00


En Música de Contrabando, revista diaria de música en Onda Regional de Murcia, estrenamos nuevo formato con la incorporación de Terminal Pop, y aumentamos la duración a dos horas (orm.es; 00'00h) para que puedas disfrutar de toda la actualidad musical de la jornada. El artista multidisciplinar estadounidense y miembro de The Roots Questlove dirigirá el documental sobre el músico, icono del funk y líder de Sly And The Family Stone, Sly Stone, mientras que, el rapero Common será el productor ejecutivo.Justo antes de su muerte, Jim Morrison redactó una lista que reflejaba sus pensamientos mediante un recopilatorio de poemas, letras y demás. Ahora, medio siglo después , esta obra verá finalmente la luz. Será el 8 de junio el día en el que salga al mercado «The Collected Work Of Jim Morrison: Poetry, Journals, Transcripts And Lyrics«, un ejemplar compuesto por 584 páginas en el que se muestra numeroso material inédito del cantante de The Doors. Organizado por Producciones Baltimore (WARM Up, Low), Muelle12 ofrecerá una amplia programación cultural con todo tipo de artes escénicas que se alargará hasta el mes de octubre: Conciertos, gastronomía, eventos de sostenibilidad e innovación... Secondserán los encargados de abrir el ciclo, que es también una puerta a la esperanza. Bilbao contará a partir de marzo con un nuevo ciclo de conciertos llamado BBK ON STAGE! (Maika Makovski). El Teatro Victoria Eugenia de San Sebastián acogerá el 20 de mayo un concierto de homenaje a Rafael Berrio, fallecido en marzo de 2020. C.Tangana, que estrena disco este mismo viernes, llevará a cabo su primer trabajo como actor de la mano del cineasta Isaki Lacuesta (“Entre dos aguas”) en su nueva película “Un año, una noche”, adaptación de la novela “Paz, amor y death metal” (2018) de Ramón González sobre el atentado en la sala Bataclán. Dinosaur Jr. regresan con Sweep It Into Space, su nuevo álbum que se publicará en abril vía Jagjaguwar, y un nuevo single, “I Ran Away.” Sweep It Into Space es su primer LP desde 2016. Chapter music anuncia Turn my dial - m square recordings and more 1981-1984, reedición de los australianos Tangle shoelaces, contemporáneos de the go-betweens no solamente en la época, lugar e influencias. Varry BravaA lanza LOCO en directo en LA RIVIERA de Madrid. 1986' es el título del nuevo single de La Habitación Roja. En él, la banda canta a la vida y anima a los jóvenes a ser ellos mismos, luchando con las inseguridades propias de la adolescencia. "Fiesta sorpresa” es el primer adelanto del próximo álbum de Espanto, con evocación mediterránea, gracia rumbera y aires bossa-nova. No Future: A "New Adventures In Pop" Compilation • Unit 1 es un doble recopilatorio que el sello Elefant lanza conmemorando la referencia número 50 de la colección (Putochinomaricón). CORIZONAS se reúne de nuevo para alumbrar su epifanía definitiva: Corizonas III y publica "Nubes negras". Os habéis convertido en leyenda' es el segundo sencillo de Jorge Bayle González. Arde Bogotá, nominados a Artista Revelación en los Premios Odeón, revelan el título de su primer album, LA NOCHE" , que saldrá el 7 de Mayo.68 , el ruidoso dúo de Atlanta, estrenan "bad bite", energético nuevo adelanto de eléctricos riffs de "Give one take one", su nuevo disco. Gustaf, las hijas bastardas de Courtney Barnett , ficharon por Royal Mountain Records, disquera de Alvvays, U.S Girls y Mac De Marco con la que han editado sus dos primeros sencillos bajo la atenta mirada de Chris Coady, productor conocido por su labor al frente de obras de Beach House, Future Islands y TV On The Radio. Matthew E. White y Jonnie Hollie estrenan "i'm not tripping/composition 8", alucinógeno nuevo adelanto de Broken mirror, a selfie reflection, su disco colaborativo. Chad Vangaalen estrena "nightwaves", nuevo tema de World's most stressed out gardener. El cantautor Carter Tanton anunciasu autotitulado disco de debut con el delicado folk protesta de "steep angles", su primer adelanto. Tras la salida de Nunatak y las Flores Salvajes, en enero de 2020, con un lanzamiento truncado por la pandemia que impidió la gira presentación de su cuarto álbum, Nunatak presenta ahora las Sesiones Salvajes, una deconstrucción de tres de sus temas con la reinterpretación de los mismos, bajo el prisma de tres reconocidos productores, y con la voz de tres colaboradores de lujo. "Mi gran virtud", producida por Brian Hunt y con la colaboración deVíctor Cabezuelo, es la primera de las tres Sesiones Salvajes de Nunatak. Adrián White y Gonzalo Ruiz nos descubren la primera sesión

Crossroads Grace Podcast
2 Chairs And A Couch

Crossroads Grace Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2021 37:10


Sermon by Brian Hunt.

The Goat Cave
The Goat Cave - EP 069: Brian Hunt, CBR

The Goat Cave

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2020 144:05


Todays guest is a filmmaker who got his start in BMX, and created CBR, an All Canadian BMX video. He was also heavily involved in filming and editing local contests like the "Want" BMX series. Nowadays he owns his own production company based in Collingwood and is involved in some big projects. Brain Hunt everyone!Support the show (https://paypal.me/HVXGOAT?locale.x=en_US)

Blue Collar Business School
Fire Pole to Barber Pole - Brian Hunt

Blue Collar Business School

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2020 81:28


Brian Hunt never set out to be a business owner. Instead, he set a goal to improve the quality of life for himself and his two sons. As a result, his barbershop has become a positive influence for a community impacted by racial, political, and cultural divides.

Floor Masters podcast
FM33-Be More Than Just An Installer

Floor Masters podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2020 39:40


In today's episode Anthony talks with Brian Hunt of Hunttoolco.com about being more than just an installer. Brian is a  retired tile installer that has transitioned into producing amazing products that help continue to enhance the tile industry. As installers we should always be looking toward the next level of our careers whether that's in sales, training, etc. At some point in our careers our bodies will no longer allow us to be installers so we have to prepare for that time. Brian has produced numerous products and continues to products products that are beneficial to installers. Have you thought ways to expend your reach in the tile industry? If not, maybe now is a good time to start. The industry is constantly changing and when knows, you could be the next change. Grab your gloves, a notepad, and step into The Masters Class!

Random Hero Podcast
Q Deep Dive With Special Guest, Brian Hunt

Random Hero Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2020 57:15


The Heroes team up with special guest Brian Hunt to get the word out about the 17th letter of the alphabet that the Main Stream Media is trying to shine a bad light on. This episode goes deep! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Brew Ha Ha Podcast
Today’s beer market with Tara Nurin

Brew Ha Ha Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2020 13:12


Today's beer market is the subject of today's Brew Ha Ha with Steve Jaxon. He and Herlinda Heras talk with Tara Nurin, Forbes magazine correspondent who writes about the beverage and spirits markets. Her June 30 article in Forbes magazine is called "Alcohol Sales Are Not Spiking or Even Stabilizing, Here's Why the Misconception Matters. She says she has heard reports in the media saying that alcohol sales are supposedly booming during the Coronavirus crisis, but she knows well, that is not the case, which her article explains in great detail. People have been buying more from liquor stores, but overall sales are down. So much revenue comes from public sales in restaurants and lots of other public locations, which have been closed. The retail sales increase does not make up for the losses. Alcohol sales have only spiked in to-go sales, like everything from supermarkets to liquor stores and convenience stores. Breweries that were only selling draft were in the most trouble, and those that were able to start canning or who had recently added canning lines, had an easier time. Our guest two weeks ago, Brian Hunt of Moonlight Brewing Co., is an example. It is especially hard for restaurants that were closed, then some were allowed to open but now are closing again. This puts strain on management, finance and personnel. Herlinda also reports that the National Brewers Association had to lay off some staff. Russian River Brewing Company is open in its Windsor and Santa Rosa locations. Check the website for up-to-the-minute opening hours, menus and Coronavirus precautionary rules. Gabe Jackson from The Beverage People is also in today. The Beverage People, since 1980, has provided the Sonoma County community with everything anyone needs to make beer and wine at home, as well as many other kinds of fermented beverages and foods, such as cider, cheese, olives, kombucha and more. Gabe Jackson was also a guest on Brew Ha Ha was last summer, on July 18, 2019. The Beverage People also holds classes; they are not active right now, but they hope to resume them soon. Gabe assures us that they can still give personal advice about anything to their customers.

Brew Ha Ha Podcast
Moonlight Brewing founder Brian Hunt

Brew Ha Ha Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2020 17:23


Brian Hunt, founder of Moonlight Brewing Co is back on Brew Ha Ha with Steve Jaxon. Herlinda Heras in also in the studio today. Steve asks how Brian is surviving the Coronavirus challenges and he says it has pushed them to put more beer in cans and less in kegs, because kegs to to restaurants which are all closed and so beer drinking has shifted to cans. He opened Moonlight Brewing in 1992 producing beer on a small scale, putting it in kegs and distributing it around the Bay Area. In 2002 he moved near Graton then in about 2012 moved to Coffey Ln in Santa Rosa. They make different styles of beer. They are drinking a Moonlight Brewing Reality Check, which is a Pilsner. They only started canning since December 2019. They have bought a canning line. Previously they used a mobile canning line. Now their canning line comes from the Codi Canning Company in Colorado. Andrew Ferguson, from Codi Canning, is on the phone with Steve Jaxon. Codi Canning is offering free canning services to brewers who are stuck with inventory in tanks in the brewery and who can't put it into kegs because the restaurant business has dropped out and nobody is taking kegs right now. They have extra equipment and he saw the need to get the beer out of tanks and into something that would be sellable so the breweries can have some chance to sell their beer instead of having to dump it. Here is an article in Food & Wine online magazine about Codi Canning's initiative. Moonlight Brewing was producing maybe as much as 95% draft beer before they got the canning equipment. Now they are "basically zero percent draft beer" and it's almost all in cans. They are doing take-out and shipping but the real news for the business is that they are selling beer to places like Oliver's (the gourmet markets) and any other place you can buy good beer in cans. Selling beer in cans to the public instead of in kegs to restaurant distributors means finding the buyers in different places, in different ways. So Herlinda notes that since the canning line installation, she has never seen so much of Brian Hunt on Moonlight Brewing's Instagram page. Herlinda takes a moment to mourn the recent passing of Roseanne Finkel, who with her husband Charles Finkel, ran The Pike Brewing Company in Seattle., which was originally called the Pike Place Brewery in 1989. They were the first large scale importer of many important beers from Belgium, Germany and England, thirty years ago when there was no other way to get that kind of beer here. For this reason they were hugely influential. "It was a beer desert before them," says Brian. Brian explains that it is important to have beer from the small producers who are the only ones who can produce beer made with that kind of care. The large industrial brewers are working on economies of scale so they are not able to take the same kind of care with the beer.

Radio Patio
Episodio 38 - Brian Hunt

Radio Patio

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2020 44:17


Brian Hunt ha descubierto en estas semanas de confinamiento que se puede encontrar cierto disfrute en la cocina o en pasear a un perro con el que no haces muy buenas migas. Este músico y productor nos invita a su piso en Madrid, en el que disfrutaremos de un té inglés con el reconfortante sonido de una televisión en el fondo. Notas del episodio: https://www.santiaraujo.com/radio-patio

Drumless
Episodio 15 - La anécdota

Drumless

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2020 44:25


EPISODIO 15.EPISODIO PATROCINADO POR:CBM CLASES DE BATERÍA MADRID https://clasesdebateriamadrid.com .En este episodio hablamos de:Lo mal que decimos paradiddles, de hablar mal inglés, de salir del cuarto, de mi gata Mara q es una influencer, de clases gratuitas en The Collective, de lo que cobran por clases, de lo que cobra Weckl, del podcast de Colaiuta, de la web abierta de Russ Miller, de Fede Paulovich, del podcast anterior, de Danny Carey y de Tool, de Dream Theatre, de Mike Portnoy y de sus excentricidades, del agua de Madrid, del disco que ha grabado Simone junto a Juan Diego Gosálvez de Max Secreta, Quiéreme siempre, producido por Brian Hunt.De pagar el local...cuánto habría que pagar, y de los problemas que va a generar… de la anécdota de Colaiuta...LIBRO RECOMENDADO.The Foundational Series by Rich Stitzel.The Primary Series by Rich Stitzel.https://www.drummantra.com/drummantra-booksTOP TRI.Simone: John Robinson: https://youtu.be/w0iuGhQRy0g .Tony Williams:https://youtu.be/gh0fQOybq0U . Adam Deitch: https://youtu.be/2n1BSd1w96o .Iñigo:Ricardo Merlini: https://www.instagram.com/riccardo.merlini/ .Jojo Mayer: https://www.instagram.com/jojomayernerve/ .Miguel Ferreira:https://www.instagram.com/miguelferreiradrummer/.y de muchas cosas más!Síguenos en: FB: https://www.facebook.com/Drumless-el-Podcast-101614758071997 .INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/drumlesspodcast/ .TELEGRAM: https://t.me/drumlesspodcast .SIMONE:https://www.simonefolcarelli.com .

Mormon Stories - LDS
1267: The Excommunication of John Dehlin Pt. 4 - Stake President Bryan King (6/29/2014)

Mormon Stories - LDS

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2020 83:30


February 2020 marks the 5 year anniversary of my excommunication from the Mormon church. In a desire to protect myself against the possibility of slander or misinformation from the church or its apologists (as was experienced by former church members such as Fawn Brodie, Simon Southerton, and Kate Kelly during their disciplinary councils), I recorded all of the interviews I had with my bishops (James Stephenson and Brian Hunt) and stake presidents (Mark Jensen and Bryan King) leading up to my disciplinary council/excommunication. As I have been opposed to Mormon Disciplinary Councils from my childhood on, it was always my intention to publish these interviews as a matter of public record - but I decided to hold off on publishing them for several years. In light of the recent changes made to the Mormon church's disciplinary council process, and on the 5th anniversary of my excommunication, I am publishing them now.

Mormon Stories - LDS
1266: The Excommunication of John Dehlin Pt. 3 - Bishop Brian Hunt (1/26/2014)

Mormon Stories - LDS

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2020 69:24


February 2020 marks the 5 year anniversary of my excommunication from the Mormon church. In a desire to protect myself against the possibility of slander or misinformation from the church or its apologists (as was experienced by former church members such as Fawn Brodie, Simon Southerton, and Kate Kelly during their disciplinary councils), I recorded all of the interviews I had with my bishops (James Stephenson and Brian Hunt) and stake presidents (Mark Jensen and Bryan King) leading up to my disciplinary council/excommunication. As I have been opposed to Mormon Disciplinary Councils from my childhood on, it was always my intention to publish these interviews as a matter of public record - but I decided to hold off on publishing them for several years. In light of the recent changes made to the Mormon church's disciplinary council process, and on the 5th anniversary of my excommunication, I am publishing them now.

Mormon Stories - LDS
1269: The Excommunication of John Dehlin Pt. 6 - Stake President Bryan King (1/14/2015)

Mormon Stories - LDS

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2020 36:41


February 2020 marks the 5 year anniversary of my excommunication from the Mormon church. In a desire to protect myself against the possibility of slander or misinformation from the church or its apologists (as was experienced by former church members such as Fawn Brodie, Simon Southerton, and Kate Kelly during their disciplinary councils), I recorded all of the interviews I had with my bishops (James Stephenson and Brian Hunt) and stake presidents (Mark Jensen and Bryan King) leading up to my disciplinary council/excommunication. As I have been opposed to Mormon Disciplinary Councils from my childhood on, it was always my intention to publish these interviews as a matter of public record - but I decided to hold off on publishing them for several years. In light of the recent changes made to the Mormon church's disciplinary council process, and on the 5th anniversary of my excommunication, I am publishing them now.

Mormon Stories - LDS
1268: The Excommunication of John Dehlin Pt. 5 - Stake President Bryan King (8/7/2014)

Mormon Stories - LDS

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2020 102:31


February 2020 marks the 5 year anniversary of my excommunication from the Mormon church. In a desire to protect myself against the possibility of slander or misinformation from the church or its apologists (as was experienced by former church members such as Fawn Brodie, Simon Southerton, and Kate Kelly during their disciplinary councils), I recorded all of the interviews I had with my bishops (James Stephenson and Brian Hunt) and stake presidents (Mark Jensen and Bryan King) leading up to my disciplinary council/excommunication. As I have been opposed to Mormon Disciplinary Councils from my childhood on, it was always my intention to publish these interviews as a matter of public record - but I decided to hold off on publishing them for several years. In light of the recent changes made to the Mormon church's disciplinary council process, and on the 5th anniversary of my excommunication, I am publishing them now.

Mormon Stories - LDS
1264: The Excommunication of John Dehlin Pt. 1 - Bishop James Stephenson (5/1/2012)

Mormon Stories - LDS

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2020 50:15


February 2020 marks the 5 year anniversary of my excommunication from the Mormon church. In a desire to protect myself against the possibility of slander or misinformation from the church or its apologists (as was experienced by former church members such as Fawn Brodie, Simon Southerton, and Kate Kelly during their disciplinary councils), I recorded all of the interviews I had with my bishops (James Stephenson and Brian Hunt) and stake presidents (Mark Jensen and Bryan King) leading up to my disciplinary council/excommunication. As I have been opposed to Mormon Disciplinary Councils from my childhood on, it was always my intention to publish these interviews as a matter of public record - but I decided to hold off on publishing them for several years. In light of the recent changes made to the Mormon church's disciplinary council process, and on the 5th anniversary of my excommunication, I am publishing them now.

Mormon Stories - LDS
1265: The Excommunication of John Dehlin Pt. 2 - Stake President Mark Jensen (5/23/2012)

Mormon Stories - LDS

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2020 109:56


February 2020 marks the 5 year anniversary of my excommunication from the Mormon church. In a desire to protect myself against the possibility of slander or misinformation from the church or its apologists (as was experienced by former church members such as Fawn Brodie, Simon Southerton, and Kate Kelly during their disciplinary councils), I recorded all of the interviews I had with my bishops (James Stephenson and Brian Hunt) and stake presidents (Mark Jensen and Bryan King) leading up to my disciplinary council/excommunication. As I have been opposed to Mormon Disciplinary Councils from my childhood on, it was always my intention to publish these interviews as a matter of public record - but I decided to hold off on publishing them for several years. In light of the recent changes made to the Mormon church's disciplinary council process, and on the 5th anniversary of my excommunication, I am publishing them now.

A Southern Sleuth
Missing: Calvin Johnny Hunt Part 2/A Brother's Pain/ Season 2 Ep 3

A Southern Sleuth

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2020 45:06


Part 2 of our interview with Brian Hunt. Brian's brother Johnny has been missing since May 29, 2018. http://www.asouthernsleuthpodcast.com

Crossroads Grace Podcast

A sermon by Brian Hunt.

Matt McCall's Moneyline
Bitcoin vs. Gold – Matt and InvestorPlace CEO Tell you the answer

Matt McCall's Moneyline

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2019 24:48


Matt sits down with CEO of InvestorPlace, Brian Hunt, this week. They debate what asset class is better, bitcoin or gold? Find out the answer, it may surprise you. Then they dive into what it takes to find early stage hypergrowth companies that have the ability to go up 10X or even more. This is a cannot miss episode with two guys that have a passion for stocks like nobody else in the business.

Brew Ha Ha Podcast
Brian Hunt founder of Moonlight Brewing Co.

Brew Ha Ha Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2019 25:35


Due to the Kincade Fire in Sonoma County, there is no live Brew Ha Ha show on KSRO today. For this podcast episode, here is a repeat of our July, 2018 visit with Brian Hunt, founder of Moonlight Brewing Co. Please consider making a donation to the Red Cross which has done so much to help Sonoma County again during the fires this year.) Brian Hunt, Moonlight Brewing founder and brewmaster and Shannon Thomas, tasting room and social media manager, are in today with Herlinda Heras and Steve Jaxon. Mark Carpenter is away this week. Brian Hunt started Moonlight Brewing in 1992. He jokes that he needed to support his beer habit and he actually stared home brewing in his bedroom when he was in high school. He had some German friends who helped him too. He graduated from UC Davis brew school in 1980, where Michael Lewis was his brewing instructor. There were 43 brewing companies in the United States then. There are more than that number now in just Sonoma County. He worked for a while at Schlitz in Milwaukee. The guy who had bought Schlitz said, “It don’t matter what I put in the can as long as it has Schlitz on the label.” He was only interested in money and he was fired. Then they hired a brew master and they decided to make good beer again. But the brand was in decline and when they closed Milwaukee Stroh’s bought them. Then Pabst bought them. Moonlight Brewing will celebrate their 26th anniversary at an event in September 2018. They are the closest brewery to Coffey Park in Santa Rosa, which burned in the October 2017 fires. They have a new taproom that holds almost 50 people. They built a bar out of reclaimed redwood, furniture from Bergamot Alley and old school chairs, making a very comfortable place. Moonlight Brewing is known for a beer they produce called Death and Taxes. They are snacking on some popcorn called Hippie Dust, which has Nutritional Yeast on it, which is tasty and very nutritious. Herlinda Heras tells about how spent grain from brewing is being used by bakers, such as one in Forestville, and that bread is available on Saturdays. They have a taproom open Thursday and Friday at 4 and Saturday and Sunday at 1. It’s the third location that they have had. They also make Bloody Mary popcorn and Maple Syrup popcorn. Their beer called Death and Taxes is one of the first beers he made at Moonlight. It’s a San Francisco style black lager. He has found that in Europe, people are used to there being local versions of beer named for cities or regions, while here, people act surprised at the idea. Shannon says everyone remembers where they were when they first taste Death and Taxes. Brian says that because it’s clean and crisp, it’s great for California. Brian describes the Lagunitas Beer Circus in London from his point of view. He gets to serve beer to people who like beer, but there are trapeze artists, burlesque, bikes, and a crazy goofy atmosphere. “See things you can’t unsee” is their slogan. As for his hop philosophy, he also likes to make beer without hops. He says hops are just a spice, but that you can put other things in beer to flavor it. He just really loves a drinkable beer.

Brew Ha Ha Podcast
Don Barkley and Kevin Lovett

Brew Ha Ha Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2019 20:50


Brew Ha Ha with Steve Jaxon today features Don Barkley and Kevin Lovett. Mark Carpenter and Herlinda Heras are both traveling. Don was last on Brew Ha Ha back in March of this year. Don Barkley tells the story of how he was there the day that Kevin was born, on the 4th of July. Kevin's dad Michael and Don Barkley have been friends for a long time. They worked together at the New Albion Brewery then they moved to Hopland at the same time to start the Mendocino Brewing Co. and the Hopland Brewery and Kevin Lovett was born soon after that. Kevin was one of Don's first employees at the Napa Smith Brewery, where he worked for about five years. Then he got an offer from Brian Hunt who owns and operates Moonlight Brewing Co., which also happens to be where Don's son works. Kevin says, "I got to work for two of the godfathers in this industry, Don and Brian." Then after Moonlight, Kevin was the head brewer at Stumptown for two years, then became the Master Brewer at Cloverdale Ale Company. He has now bought the brewery, just three weeks ago, and is going to reopen it at the beginning of the year, as the Wolf House Brewery. He is opening two spots at the same time, one in Glen Ellen, the Jack London Historical Village, on the south side, right up against the Jack London Park. Both places will be a full brew pub, but their main production facility will be in Cloverdale. Glen Ellen is known as a wine town but there are few breweries and no tasting rooms, except for Cloverdale. We get a phone call from Herlinda Heras who is visiting Belgium, where it is 2:29 AM the next day. She began the trip in Amsterdam. Everywhere she goes there are separate containers for recycling glass and plastic. She also visited two breweries in windmills. Kevin's business partner and bro-in-law is a chef who also runs a food truck called Got Balls Meatball Factory. that specializes in meatballs and he will manage the food provisions there.  The Glen Ellen location is being rebuilt from scratch, including all the local permits. Herlinda describes a Belgian monastery where the beer that the brothers produce was for a while the number one rated beer on RateBeer.com. When crowds of beer lovers showed up there, the monks were unhappy with the interruption to their life, which includes a vow not to earn more money than they need to run their monastery. Herlinda describes going to some Trappist breweries there. Herlinda is touring breweries on Bon Beer Voyage Beer Tours. They have rooms on flat-bottomed canal barges that go through the canals in the Netherlands and Belgium. They visited Antwerp, which is gorgeous. She will also attend the Smithsonian ceremony on November 8 in Washington DC, for the opening of the Beer History Museum, where some famous American brewers like New Albion, Anchor Brewing Sierra Nevada and Dogfish Head will be inducted. Fritz Maytag and Ken Grossman will be there. Herlinda wonders why Dogfish Head is in such company.

Relatively Certain
Taming chaos with physics and AI

Relatively Certain

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2019 15:23


In many situations, chaos makes it nearly impossible to predict what will happen next. Nowhere is this more apparent than in weather forecasts, which are notorious for their unreliability. But the clever application of artificial intelligence can help reign in some chaotic systems, making them more predictable than ever before.In this episode of Relatively Certain, Dina sits down with Michelle Girvan, a physics professor at the University of Maryland (UMD), to talk about how artificial intelligence can help predict chaotic behavior, as well as how combining machine learning with conventional physics models might yield even better predictions and insights into both methods.Girvan collaborated with several colleagues at UMD on these chaos-taming projects, including physics professor Edward Ott, mathematics professor Brian Hunt, physics postdoctoral researcher Zhixin Lu, physics graduate students Jaideep Pathak and Sarthak Chandra, and physics undergraduate students Alexander Wikner and Rebeckah Fusol.This episode of Relatively Certain was produced by Dina Genkina, Chris Cesare and Emily Edwards. It features music by Dave Depper, David Hilowitz, Blue Dot Sessions and Scanglobe. "Lorenz Attractor" is used courtesy of Michelle Wilber. Prints are available for purchase at FineArtAmerica.com. Relatively Certain is a production of the Joint Quantum Institute, a research partnership between the University of Maryland and the National Institute of Standards and Technology, and you can find it on iTunes, Google Play or Soundcloud.

Mechanical Music Radio
Two Clowns and an Organ (12/03/19)

Mechanical Music Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2019 60:43


On this week's Tuesday Night Live... -Using Alexa from 2019, to power a Mills Violano from 1919. - Celebrating 50 years of Decca Records with their Mechanical Music releases. - Two clowns duet on a hand turned organ and a clarinet. - Also, exclusive tracks from Norman Hobb’s Mortier, Brian Hunt’s Gosling and a Nichole Frere Musical Box from a private collection.

The Better Band Podcast
Even Flow (S1.Ep2)

The Better Band Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2019 37:13


Even Flow (S1.Ep2)  Branden talks to Brian Hunt about the TEN track "Even Flow," Weird Al, and tattoos... Sign up to be a guest for an upcoming Season 1 episode: https://goo.gl/forms/R9kGpJ1n8hmCUo4w1  Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ListenUpReno / Twitter: https://twitter.com/ListenUpReno / Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/listenupreno  The Better Band Podcast is produced by ListenUpReno.Com & Branden Palomo, and published using a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 License. Please visit CreativeCommons.Org, or email BetterBandPod@gmail.com for more details. (Music played is owned by their respective copyright owners and publishers, and is for review purposes only, under fair use.) 

Brew Ha Ha Podcast
Moonlight Brewing and Comet Corn

Brew Ha Ha Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2018 23:33


Brian Hunt from Moonlight Brewing joins Steve Jaxon, Mark Carpenter and Herlinda Heras today. Also with us are Sherry and Jeff Soleski makers of Comet Corn. Steve introduces Mark Carpenter who was for a long time the brewmaster for Anchor Brewing. He describes the history of Anchor Steam Beer, whose name comes from a nickname for the beer which was on draught and highly carbonated. Herlinda Heras introduces Sherry and Jeff Soleski, makers of Comet Corn including the famous Hippie Dust flavor that you see at all the taprooms and music festivals. Jeff tells about why and how they started back in 2002. They agree you could pair a porter or a stout with the Maple Syrup flavored popcorn. Mark Carpenter introduces Brian Hunt who worked for Schlitz in Milwaukee before starting Moonlight Brewing. Stroh's then bought Schlitz. Steve remembers their label that said it was "fire brewed" even if as Brian says, all beer actually is. Brian worked there for a year and a half. Mark says that the Schlitz brewery in Milwaukee was a fabulous old all-copper brewery. Brian says the Schlitz brewery was built in 1846 and looked its age. It was built in Milwaukee cream brick. Milwaukee was known as "The Cream City" because of the cream-colored bricks made from local clay that gave it that color. Brian Hunt graduated from UC Davis in 1980 and then went to work for Schlitz. Mark tells about the great history of old breweries in the US. You can usually spot the old breweries in many cities. For instance in San Francisco at 10th and Folsom there is one. Brian says you could smell the beer being made all over the city. You could also smell the chocolate from the Ambrosia chocolate factory. Mark says that he was always impressed with what Brian was doing, starting his nano-brewery in 1992 in a barn behind his house. Brian says that Death and Taxes is their most famous beer but there are others. Herlinda tells about Legal Tender, a beer made without hops, and says that Brian is known for doing that. "Hops is just a spice," says Brian. Steve says he thought it was hops, but Brian replies that it's Malt that's the soul of beer and goes on to describe all the components. Brian describes a New Year's beer called Toast that tastes like toast, for toasting. It will only be available on draught.

ERA Magazine
#304 Marem Ladson, joven promesa folk-rock

ERA Magazine

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2018 24:13


Bienvenidos a ERA Magazine, el podcast de la música independiente española. En el capítulo de hoy, tenemos el placer de contar con una de las artistas más prometedoras de nuestro país, Marem Ladson. Buenos días. Antes de comenzar comentar dos cositas rápidas. En primer lugar, los servicios de diseño web de ERA Magazine. Si visitas eramagazine.fm/web verás las tres opciones que te ofrecemos, con tienda online y sin tienda online, a unos precios muy asequibles. Y, sobre todo, te enseñamos a manejar tu propia web. Y en segundo lugar, la nueva opción que ha creado iVoox para apoyar a los creadores de podcast. Si visitas el perfil de ERA Magazine verás un pequeño botón que pone “Apoyo” y desde 1,49 euros al mes podrás ayudar a que sigamos descubriendo más propuestas emergentes. Sé un mecenas de ERA Magazine. Llevamos algún tiempo oyendo hablar de Marem Ladson, incluso habiendo editado solo un single. Lo que habíamos escuchado prometía mucho y su disco de debut no nos ha defraudado. Esta gallega hija de un jugador de baloncesto americano, ha sido una trotamundos que ha acabado en Madrid para, entre otras cosas, dar luz a un proyecto musical de folk y rock que poco a poco encuentra su propia personalidad. Con tan solo 20 años, su álbum homónimo, editado por Mont Ventoux, adquiere un protagonismo que no queremos perdernos. Así que rápidamente embarcamos rumbo al centro de la capital. Vivencias personales # Marem, bienvenida al podcast de ERA Magazine. En primer lugar, ¿cuéntanos tu historia? # Y musicalmente, ¿qué se van a encontrar los oyentes de este podcast que te escuchen por primera vez? # Turno de la primera canción de las cuatro que venís a presentar, “Shade of Blue”. ¿Qué me dices de ella? # Pese a que tu música la emparejan con el folk americano, también tienes canciones más cercanas al pop. Cuando compones, ¿cuándo la canción toma una u otra dirección? # Y la producción de Brian Hunt y Juan Diego Gosálvez, ¿qué le ha aportado a tus canciones? # La segunda canción, “Everything I’ve Ever Lost (Is Coming Back)”. # Y en cuanto a letras, vivencias personales, amor… ¿Cómo y cuándo te gusta escribirlas? # ¿Cuánto ha influido en tu música, que de pequeña hayas viajado mucho y hayas vivido en Estados Unidos, por ejemplo? ¿Hubiera sido igual si siempre hubieses estado en España? # Escuchamos ahora la tercera, “West”. # ¿Tienes previsto para este otoño tocar mucho? # La última canción que escucharemos, “My corazón”. Con esta canción nos despedimos por hoy. También recuerda, que si quieres ayudar a este podcast, y seguir disfrutando de la música de muchos más grupos, visita el perfil de ERA Magazine en iVoox.com, dale al botón “Apoyo” y desde 1,49 euros al mes podrás ayudar a que sigamos descubriendo más propuestas emergentes. Sé un mecenas de ERA Magazine. Porque recuerda: a la gente le encanta la música indie, pero todavía no lo sabe. Adiós. Marem Ladson Marem Ladson (Mont Ventoux, 2018)Más informaciónFacebook | Twitter | Instagram La entrada #304 Marem Ladson, joven promesa folk-rock se publicó primero en ERA Magazine.

ERA Magazine
#292 Rufus T. Firefly, una continuación sorprendente

ERA Magazine

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2018 34:34


Bienvenidos a ERA Magazine, el podcast de la música independiente española. En el capítulo de hoy, uno de los grupos más laureados en los últimos años de la música indie española: Rufus T. Firefly. Buenos días. Antes de comenzar comentar dos cositas rápidas. En primer lugar, los servicios de diseño web de ERA Magazine. Si visitas eramagazine.fm/web verás las tres opciones que te ofrecemos, con tienda online y sin tienda online, a unos precios muy asequibles. Sobre todo, te enseñamos a manejar tu propia web. En segundo lugar, la nueva opción que ha creado iVoox para apoyar a los creadores de podcast. Si visitas el perfil de ERA Magazine verás un pequeño botón que pone “Apoyo” y desde 1,49 euros al mes podrás ayudar a que sigamos descubriendo más propuestas emergentes. Sé un mecenas de ERA Magazine. Rufus T. Firefly dan un paso más en su carrera. Si en Magnolia, las hordas indies les auparon al olimpo de la música de nuestro país, con Loto parecen haber afinado más si cabe esa combinación de pop, rock y psicodelia. Aquí encontramos referencias explícitas a la cultura popular tanto clásica, The Beatles, como contemporáneas, “Stranger Things”, “Black Mirror”, “Final Fantasy”. El espacio psicodélico # Víctor, bienvenido al podcast de ERA Magazine. Primero de todo, cuéntame la historia de Loto, cuándo lo piensas como una segunda parte de Magnolia y por qué decides hacerlo. # Musicalmente, ¿para ti, qué diferencias tiene con respecto a Magnolia? # Vamos a comprobar lo que nos cuentas con la primera canción que presentas “Druyan & Sagan”. # Magnolia os consolidó como grupo por excelencia del indie nacional, ahora “Loto” refuerza esa teoría. ¿Estáis en el mejor momento creativo, tanto tú como el resto de la banda? ¿Cuál es el límite? # Háblame de la figura de Manuel Cabezalí en la producción de los discos de Rufus T. Firefly. # La segunda canción, “Loto”. # En este disco la nómina de colaboradores se ha ampliado, ¿no? Brian Hunt, Martí Perarnau, Julián Maeso, Lyndon Parish… ¿Qué aportan al conjunto final estas colaboraciones? # Turno de las letras, ¿se hacen a la vez que Magnolia, después? Sí que hay es referencias a series, películas, videojuegos, grupos… # Escuchamos ahora la tercera, “Un breve e insignificante momento en la breve y insignificante historia de la humanidad”. # ¿Y cómo se presenta el otoño, muchas actuaciones? # La última canción que escucharemos, “Final Fantasy”. Visita el perfil de ERA Magazine en iVoox.com, dale al botón “Apoyo” y desde 1,49 euros al mes podrás ayudar a que sigamos descubriendo más propuestas emergentes. Sé un mecenas de ERA Magazine. Porque a la gente le encanta la música indie, pero todavía no lo sabe. Adiós. Rufus T. Firefly Loto (Lago Naranja Records, 2018) www.rufustf.comFacebook | Twitter | YouTube | Bandcamp | Instagram La entrada #292 Rufus T. Firefly, una continuación sorprendente se publicó primero en ERA Magazine.

ERA Magazine
#272 Solo Astra, de la psicodelia al pop urbano

ERA Magazine

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2018 24:21


Bienvenidos a ERA Magazine, el podcast de la música independiente española. En el capítulo de hoy, la música urbana y el pop se juntan en Solo Astra y su nuevo EP Delivery Boy. Comenzamos. Buenos días. Antes de comenzar comentar dos cositas rápidas. En primer lugar, los servicios de diseño web de ERA Magazine. Si visitas eramagazine.fm/web verás las tres opciones que te ofrecemos, con tienda online y sin tienda online, a unos precios muy asequibles. Y, sobre todo, te enseñamos a manejar tu propia web. En segundo lugar, la nueva opción que ha creado iVoox para apoyar a los creadores de podcast. Si visitas el perfil de ERA Magazine verás una pequeño botón que pone “Apoyo” y desde 1,49 euros al mes podrás ayudar a que sigamos descubriendo más propuestas emergentes. Sé un mecenas de ERA Magazine. Con tu apoyo llegaremos mucho más lejos. El cuarteto canario-madrileño Solo Astra acaba de editar para Subterfuge un EP que ha virado musicalmente desde su primer Exofase, de un rock psicodélico a un pop más urbano. En plena actividad, en octubre prometen disco entero y sorpresa con un artista de trap. Vamos, que no paran quietos ni de investigar en la creación de canciones ni de girar. Van a por todas. De momento, este Delivery Boy está contando con el beneplácito de crítica y público. Nos fuimos hasta las oficinas de Subterfuge para hablar con ellos. Comida musical urbana # Luis, bienvenido al podcast de ERA Magazine. Cuéntame la historia de Solo Astra y cómo llegáis hasta este EP y a Subterfuge, claro. # Y musicalmente, ¿qué nos vamos a encontrar en las canciones que vamos a escuchar hoy en el podcast? # Vamos a comprobarlo con la primera canción que habéis elegido, “Flying Pizza”, ¿qué me cuentas de ella? # Vuestra música es una mezcla de pop y de música urbana. ¿Por dónde empezáis las canciones y cómo y cuándo os gusta ir incorporando el resto de los elementos? # ¿Qué tal la experiencia de grabar en el estudio de Brian Hunt? ¿Él os ayudó o no fue necesario, teníais más o menos cerradas las canciones? # La segunda canción, “Japanese Food”. # ¿Por qué hacer los cinco temas con alusiones a la comida? # ¿Y con el autotune por bandera, no? # Escuchamos ahora la tercera, “Nudel”. # ¿Cómo os planteáis el directo, algo en agosto y septiembre o ya más de cara al otoño? # Háblame de la portada, del artista Joe Gamble, ¿cómo surgió? # La última canción que escucharemos, “Pollo loco (6 Secret Herbs and Spices)”.

Brew Ha Ha Podcast
Brian Hunt of Moonlight Brewing

Brew Ha Ha Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2018 25:35


Brian Hunt, Moonlight Brewing founder and brewmaster and Shannon Thomas, tasting room and social media manager, are in today with Herlinda Heras and Steve Jaxon. Mark Carpenter is away this week. Brian Hunt started Moonlight Brewing in 1992. He jokes that he needed to support his beer habit and he actually stared home brewing in his bedroom when he was in high school. He had some German friends who helped him too. He graduated from UC Davis brew school in 1980, where Michael Lewis was his brewing instructor. There were 43 brewing companies in the United States then. There are more than that number now in just Sonoma County. He worked for a while at Schlitz in Milwaukee. The guy who had bought Schlitz said, “It don’t matter what I put in the can as long as it has Schlitz on the label.” He was only interested in money and he was fired. Then they hired a brew master and they decided to make good beer again. But the brand was in decline and when they closed Milwaukee Stroh’s bought them. Then Pabst bought them. Moonlight Brewing will celebrate their 26th anniversary at an event in September. They are the closest brewery to Coffey Park in Santa Rosa, which burned in the October 2017 fires. They have a new taproom that holds almost 50 people. They built a bar out of reclaimed redwood, furniture from Bergamot Alley and old school chairs, making a very comfortable place. Moonlight Brewing is known for a beer they produce called Death and Taxes. They are snacking on some popcorn called Hippie Dust, which has Nutritional Yeast on it, which is tasty and very nutritious. Herlinda Heras tells about how spent grain from brewing is being used by bakers, such as one in Forestville, and that bread is available on Saturdays. They have a taproom open Thursday and Friday at 4 and Saturday and Sunday at 1. It’s the third location that they have had. They also make Bloody Mary popcorn and Maple Syrup popcorn. Their beer called Death and Taxes is one of the first beers he made at Moonlight. It’s a San Francisco style black lager. He has found that in Europe, people are used to there being local versions of beer named for cities or regions, while here, people act surprised at the idea. Shannon says everyone remembers where they were when they first taste Death and Taxes. Brian says that because it’s clean and crisp, it’s great for California. Brian describes the Lagunitas Beer Circus in London from his point of view. He gets to serve beer to people who like beer, but there are trapeze artists, burlesque, bikes, and a crazy goofy atmosphere. “See things you can’t unsee” is their slogan. As for his hop philosophy, he also likes to make beer without hops. He says it’s just a spice, but that you can put other things in it to flavor it. He just really loves a drinkable beer.

TheOutliersInn's podcast
Episode 28 - Business Process Tangles

TheOutliersInn's podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2018 35:40


Topic:  Join Ben and Joe with their special guest Brian Hunt as they discuss business process tangles and how to un-tangle them. Hosts: Joseph Paris, Founder of the OpEx Society & The XONITEK Group of Companies Benjamin Taylor,  Managing Partner of RedQuadrant, and Chief Executive of the Public Service Transformation Academy. Guest: Brian Hunt About Brian:  As organisations grow organically or as a result of acquisition, their business processes can become tangled, causing inconsistency, delay and error. Brian can help untangle these processes into clearly documented, simplified and lean business processes that show what people do, why they do it, how they do it and who they do it for. He creates To Be/Target Operating Models, perform gap analysis and agree action plans to prevent future tangles Brian's experience includes Lean Six Sigma, Toyota Production, BABOK, Process Architecture (TOGAF 9 and Zachman) and Quality Management Systems (ISO9001 and Business Excellence Model). Speaker (on Business Process Tangles, another view on Lean Process Management) at Business Analysis Conference Europe 2015. https://uk.linkedin.com/in/brianhuntwww.businessprocessagility.com www.businessprocesstangles.com

ERA Magazine
#211 ‘7 minutos al día’, capítulo 18

ERA Magazine

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2018 35:23


Bienvenidos a ERA Magazine, el podcast de la música independiente española. En el programa de hoy, tenemos el capítulo 18 de nuestro especial 7 minutos al día de la revista online Muzikalia. Buenos días a todos los amantes de la música indie. Antes de comenzar comentar los servicios de diseño web de ERA Magazine. Si visitar eramagazine.fm/web verás las tres opciones de web que te ofrecemos, con tienda online y sin tienda online, a unos precios muy asequibles. Sobre todo, y lo más importante, aprenderás a gestionar tu propio sitio en internet. Garantizamos tu formación. Vamos, da el siguiente paso, no te conformes sólo con tener un Bandcamp o un perfil de Facebook. ¿O es que no te acuerdas de lo que pasó a MySpace? ¿No sería mejor controlar tú mismo la información de tu grupo o discográfica? Hoy, escuchando algunos de las entradas de 7 minutos al día, he tratado de encontrar solo mujeres, pero me ha sido imposible. Se queja, por ejemplo, Irantzu Varela, de la que hubo una entrevista recientemente, de que en el Azkena Rock no hay más que hombres, con pocas mujeres artistas. No sé si es problema de los festivales, de los periodistas o de quién, pero justo estos últimas semanas he ido a conciertos de muy buenas artistas: Mursego, Anari, Los Punsetes, Núria Graham y Joana Serrat. Mujeres artistas hay, habrá que encontrarlas entonces. Brigitte Laverne es una de ellas. Una de esas indiscutibles, ya seleccionada con premios y viajes a París y Japón que tiene un pop electrónico que algunos juntan a New Order. Yo, por ser española, la asemejo a Linda Mirada, aunque bastante más oscura. Eso sí, entre la producción y cantar en inglés, lo que diría un españolito como yo es: “Si es que parece de fuera”. La verdad es que sus canciones de su último disco, “Wasted”, de este año son muy a tener en cuenta aquí o en el resto del mundo. Escuchamos de su último elepe, la canción “Can’t take it no more”. Y ahora vamos a por una pareja de hermanos de Figueres que se llaman North State. Más pop electrónico, pero esta vez con esa oscuridad que tienen The XX y Portishead. Estarán también en el Primavera Sound así que los podéis escuchar dentro de la lista de Spotify con otros grupos nacionales que tenemos. Escuchamos ahora la canción que se llama “Late Night Calls”. Me gustaban mucho de 7 minutos al día Mueveloreina y Apartamentos Acapulco, pero de algunos de ellos ya tendréis referencias en algún programa de ERA Magazine. Así que pasamos ahora a Poolshake, un grupo murciano que tienen más pinta por su imagen, letras y música de haber pasado por Londres y llegar a la región a uno de esos resorticos llenos de alemanes e ingleses, pero no de murcianos. Cantan en inglés, producidos por Brian Hunt, que parece inglés pero es de Torrelavega, y su dreampop necesita un elepe, ya que todos los singles hasta ahora son muy buenos. Por ello han sido escogidos Mejor Grupo Debutante en los Premios de la Música de la Región de Murcia. Escuchamos una de las canciones que será parte de su proximo single: “Pale trees”. Del electro, al pop y ahora un poco de rock, pero también soñador. Se llaman Bolga, vienen de Catalunya y yo los pondría más en el post-rock que no en el shoegaze a pesar de la interpretación de su cantante María Pipla que se ha incorporado recientemente al grupo. Publicaran su EP Altares este año, con ese rock y guitarras a plenos pulmón. Además, cantan en castellano, un plus. Escuchamos “Microcospio”. En este grupo hay una chica pero no lo hemos cogido por eso. Se llaman Vermú y son de Albacete. Se les puede emparejar por su forma de rock y folk con el propio Nacho Vegas. Toma ya. Esto es empezar fuerte. Merecen la pena su EP de debut que ahora están presentando. Escucharemos de él “Los páramos cerrados” y veremos cómo se sitúan en el futuro. Vamos ahora a Asturias, pero no para ver algo parecido a Nacho Vegas, sino la electrónica experimental de Octuvre, que ha girado con Kokoschka y Pablo Und Destruktion y, sólo por eso, ya merece nuestra atención. Más oscuro aún que Brignitte Laverne o North State. La letra de la canción que vamos a escuchar dice “Somos residuos, desechos nucleares sin reacción”. Algo perfecto para alegrar el día. Escuchamos “Residuos” de Octuvre. Con esta canción nos despedimos por hoy. También recordad, que si quieres ayudar a este podcast, y seguir disfrutando de la música de muchos más grupos, haz tus compras de Amazon a través del enlace eramagazine.fm/amazon. A ti no te cuesta nada y ERA Magazine se lleva una pequeña comisión con la que podremos difundir más propuestas emergentes. Porque recuerda: a la gente le encanta la música indie, pero todavía no lo sabe. Adiós.

Bienvenido a los 90
Programa 325 - Emisión desde 'El invernadero' con Brian Hunt

Bienvenido a los 90

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2018 114:15


"Lo mejor se está cociendo en El Invernadero" Son palabras de Carlos Galan de Subterfuge, que de música entiende un rato. Salimos de la emisora para visitar El Invernadero, el estudio de grabación propiedad de Brian Hunt puesto en marcha 5 años en el barrio de Tetuán. Brian nos abre las puertas de su casa y nos cuanta algunas anécdotas y recuerdos de la grabación de los discos de Joe la Reina , Mow, Solo Astra, Antu Saltor, Baywaves, Russian Red, Jack Bisonte, St.Woods, She rose from the dead y Ganges.

Bienvenido a los 90
Programa 325 - Emisión desde 'El invernadero' con Brian Hunt

Bienvenido a los 90

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2018 114:15


"Lo mejor se está cociendo en El Invernadero" Son palabras de Carlos Galan de Subterfuge, que de música entiende un rato. Salimos de la emisora para visitar El Invernadero, el estudio de grabación propiedad de Brian Hunt puesto en marcha 5 años en el barrio de Tetuán. Brian nos abre las puertas de su casa y nos cuanta algunas anécdotas y recuerdos de la grabación de los discos de Joe la Reina , Mow, Solo Astra, Antu Saltor, Baywaves, Russian Red, Jack Bisonte, St.Woods, She rose from the dead y Ganges.

Vanderbloemen Leadership Podcast
The Key To A Seamless Pastoral Transition with Pastor Brian Hunt

Vanderbloemen Leadership Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2017 27:37


In today's episode of the Vanderbloemen Leadership Podcast, William talks with Brian Hunt, Lead Pastor of Crossroads Grace Community Church in Manteca, California. Tweet your takeaways using the hashtag #Vandercast, and join our Facebook group for exclusive behind-the-scenes content and giveaways. www.facebook.com/groups/vandercast/

El hombre que se enamoró de la Luna
Penny Necklace #Luna306

El hombre que se enamoró de la Luna

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2017 37:08


La Luz es el nuevo disco de Penny Necklace, un trabajo que supone un giro hacia un proyecto totalmente personal de Odette, su cantante, que arriesga (y gana). Un disco conceptual que ha contado con el apoyo en la producción de Victor Cabezuelo (Rufus T.Firefly), la masterización de Manuel Cabezalí (Havalina) y grabado en los estudios de Brian Hunt. Canciones muy recomendables con la mágica voz de Odette que aquí nos ofrece tres temas con guitarra y voz. La Luz es el nuevo disco de Penny Necklace, un trabajo que supone un giro hacia un proyecto totalmente personal de Odette, su cantante, que arriesga (y gana). Un disco conceptual que ha contado con el apoyo en la producción de Victor Cabezuelo (Rufus T.Firefly), la masterización de Manuel Cabezalí (Havalina) y grabado en los estudios de Brian Hunt. Canciones muy recomendables con la mágica voz de Odette que aquí nos ofrece tres temas con guitarra y voz.

ERA Magazine
#69 ‘Ok Computer revisited’, por Bienvenidos a los 90

ERA Magazine

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2017 26:32


Bienvenidos a ERA Magazine, el podcast diario de la música independiente española. En el capítulo de hoy, un proyecto de crowdfunding: el OK Computer de Radiohead con versiones de artistas españoles. Buenos días a todos los amantes de la música indie. Antes de comenzar comentar que hoy no tenemos el capítulo 3 de 7 minutos al día, ya que el tema de hoy necesitaba un hueco en nuestra parrilla de programación. Así que los 3 próximos viernes estarán dedicados a esa sección de la revista online Muzikalia que tanto os gusta. Si queréis aparecer en ella, ya sabéis, 7minutos@muzikalia.com. Y más cosas: Nos vamos de vacaciones coincidiendo con el puente del 15 de agosto, fiesta en toda España. Así que el podcast de ERA Magazine regresa el próximo lunes 21 de agosto. Desde el programa Bienvenido a los 90 de la madrileña Radio Utopía han querido lanzar un proyecto muy atractivo. Hacer un disco con versiones del mítico disco OK Computer de Radiohead, 20 años después de su lanzamiento. Así que, Roberto Martínez, el director del programa nos cuenta cómo apoyar esta iniciativa de crowdfunding, a través de la plataforma Verkami. # Roberto, bienvenido al podcast de ERA Magazine. En primer lugar, cuéntanos cómo nace esta idea de hacer un disco con versiones del OK Computer y por qué hacerlo a través de crowdfunding y, sobre todo, las recompensas para los mecenas, claro. # Vamos a comprobar esta propuesta musical con el primer tema, “Airbag”, la versión de David Van Bylen. Cuéntanos algo de la canción y del artista que la interpreta. # ¿Y cómo convenciste a los grupos para que participaran? ¿Te costó mucho? # Vemos que la grabación ya está hecha, ¿esto también habrá llevado un coste que supongo ha sido asumida por vosotros o por los propios grupos? # La segunda canción que escucharemos es “Climbing Up The walls”, del grupo Craneón, ¿qué me cuentas de ella? # Vamos a ponernos en los dos casos, primero en el peor, que no se consigue el dinero. ¿Qué harás? Supongo que dejarlo sin editar, ¿no? Y si se consigue, una satisfacción personal enorme, ¿no? # Háblanos ahora de tu programa de radio, Bienvenido a los 90, que se creó en 2012. ¿Cómo surgió la idea y por qué? # Escuchamos ahora la tercera canción, “No surprises”, de Brian Hunt, cuéntanos algo de ella. # Y por tu programa, también han pasado mucha gente importante de la música de los noventa. ¿Cuentas con muchos colaboradores y muchos apoyos? # Y terminamos ya con la última canción, “Lucky”, de Prozack, pero antes es tu turno de decir algo sobre ella. # Muchas gracias, Roberto, por estar en el podcast de ERA Magazine, en las notas del programa dejaremos los enlaces pertinentes para que todos apoyéis esta iniciativa tan buena, que todavía os queda tiempo. Y mucha suerte. Con esta canción nos despedimos por hoy. Recordad que si nos escucháis a través de iTunes, iVoox o Spreaker, una valoración de 5 estrellas o un me gusta ayudará a dar a conocer este podcast. Recuerda, a la gente le encanta la música indie, pero todavía no lo sabe. Adiós. Contacto Bienvenido a los 90: Crowdfunding en Verkami / Web / Facebook / Twitter

Bienvenido a los 90
Programa 256 - Árida + 61 Garage

Bienvenido a los 90

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2016 94:39


Emitido el 22/12/2016 en www.radioutopia.es Penúltimo programa de este 2016 que hemos dividido en 3 bloques: 1-Una cuidada selección de bandas nacionales que no están incluidas en ninguna lista pero que os van a encantar: No Dogs, Dani Cabezas, Venus No Es, Brian Hunt, Santiago Talavera, Veronica Underluxe y Prozack. 2-61 Garage se acercan hasta la emisora para presentarnos un adelanto de "V", su nuevo LP que verá la luz en Marzo'17. Escuchamos "V" y "Echo". 3-Árida, la banda madrileña formada por Sara y Javi nos presentan su nuevo retoño llamado "Despertar" y que contiene 10 trallazos de AUPA!!

Bienvenido a los 90
Programa 256 - Árida + 61 Garage

Bienvenido a los 90

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2016 94:39


Emitido el 22/12/2016 en www.radioutopia.es Penúltimo programa de este 2016 que hemos dividido en 3 bloques: 1-Una cuidada selección de bandas nacionales que no están incluidas en ninguna lista pero que os van a encantar: No Dogs, Dani Cabezas, Venus No Es, Brian Hunt, Santiago Talavera, Veronica Underluxe y Prozack. 2-61 Garage se acercan hasta la emisora para presentarnos un adelanto de "V", su nuevo LP que verá la luz en Marzo'17. Escuchamos "V" y "Echo". 3-Árida, la banda madrileña formada por Sara y Javi nos presentan su nuevo retoño llamado "Despertar" y que contiene 10 trallazos de AUPA!!

Bienvenido a los 90
Programa 228 - Brian Hunt "Love/Unlove"

Bienvenido a los 90

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2016 81:36


Emitido el 09/06/2016 en www.radioutopia.es Arrancamos el programa con los nuevo de Beck, "Wow" y recordando que en los 90 Beck tenía una versión de "Jack-Ass" llamada "Burro" donde hacía una adaptación al castellano. Después nos metemos en el universo paralelo del Zeporock Festival y entrevistamos a una de las bandas de su cartel, 61 Garage. Siempre he dicho que si "Bienvenido a los 90" fuera una banda de música intentaría ser como 61 Garage. Iván nos da datos sobre el nuevo trabajo que saldrá cerca de navidades y nos regala una joyita, un tema totalmente inédito. En la segunda parte del programa recuperamos a un viejo amigo, Brian Hunt nos presenta "Love/Unlove" una colección de canciones con un único nexo: la calidad. Para mi Brian es el Bowie español, por su versatilidad en las canciones, por el aura un tanto misteriosa que todo artista que se precie debe tener y porque sabe como deben sonar las cosas. Ya tengo ganas de escuchar lo próximo.

Bienvenido a los 90
Programa 228 - Brian Hunt "Love/Unlove"

Bienvenido a los 90

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2016 81:36


Emitido el 09/06/2016 en www.radioutopia.es Arrancamos el programa con los nuevo de Beck, "Wow" y recordando que en los 90 Beck tenía una versión de "Jack-Ass" llamada "Burro" donde hacía una adaptación al castellano. Después nos metemos en el universo paralelo del Zeporock Festival y entrevistamos a una de las bandas de su cartel, 61 Garage. Siempre he dicho que si "Bienvenido a los 90" fuera una banda de música intentaría ser como 61 Garage. Iván nos da datos sobre el nuevo trabajo que saldrá cerca de navidades y nos regala una joyita, un tema totalmente inédito. En la segunda parte del programa recuperamos a un viejo amigo, Brian Hunt nos presenta "Love/Unlove" una colección de canciones con un único nexo: la calidad. Para mi Brian es el Bowie español, por su versatilidad en las canciones, por el aura un tanto misteriosa que todo artista que se precie debe tener y porque sabe como deben sonar las cosas. Ya tengo ganas de escuchar lo próximo.

Stamp Show Here Today - Postage stamp news, collecting and information
Episode 73 - Special Guest Brian Hunt and the Stamp Market

Stamp Show Here Today - Postage stamp news, collecting and information

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2016 46:05


Hey Listeners, welcome to Stamp Show Here Today, Episode 73! In this episode we have special guest Brian Hunt from Hunt and Company Stamps joining us to discuss a comparison of Venetian glass to stamp collecting and exhibiting, a continuation of our CSAC discussion, Caj's corrections, a discussion on the stamp market, stamp databases for business purposes, and auction issues. 

Mastering Business Analysis
MBA029: Business Process Improvement – Keep it Simple – Interview with Brian Hunt

Mastering Business Analysis

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2015 31:56


In this episode, Business Process Consultant Brian Hunt shares with us his approach to starting a business process improvement initiative and some simple tools you can use to get started. After listening to this episode, you will understand: How to start a business improvement initiative The right people to talk to to discover improvement opportunities Simple […] The post MBA029: Business Process Improvement – Keep it Simple – Interview with Brian Hunt appeared first on Mastering Business Analysis.

Inside Wheaton
Wellness, Exercise, and Nutrition: A Biblical

Inside Wheaton

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2015 20:56


Inside Wheaton
Wellness, Exercise, and Nutrition: A Biblical Worldview

Inside Wheaton

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2015 20:40


Stansberry Radio - Edgy Source for Investing, Finance & Economics

Today, I'm going to do something very special. Something I just never do. I'm going to unlock one of our Premium shows and let you in on our biggest secrets.I've not asked the boss if I can do this. You see, he's in the Bahamas right now at our annual Spring Editors Conference, and I thought, well, what the heck.Sometimes it's better to ask for forgiveness than permission... So here it goes... I hope you enjoy this as he may have me take it down as soon as he hears about it.Oh, and one more thing, I figured as long as I'm going for it, I might as well go all the way.I'm going to unlock and give you the secrets of our Black Label Shows for FREE.The real secret of this show is, for those of you who are crazy enough to put up with our antics, is that this is where we actually deliver the best and the most amount of value.Back in February, while fishing in the Bahamas on Porter's boat, Brian Hunt, our Editor in Chief, stepped in and offered up his "essentials to finance." The show starts with Brian sharing his financial checklist... as well as what his No. 1 checkbox for life is!He then turns the table, asking Porter the important questions he thought you would ask if you were aboard.Porter shares details about a large short position that he took on a company that just sold a bunch of convertible bonds... It's a warning sign that every investor should recognize.We can't share the name... but you will get the idea.And... What is one of the most capital-efficient companies Porter has ever come across?... Here is your chance to get the inside scoop.So sit back, grab a drink, and listen to some great fishing stories and probably our best Black Label Show yet!Enjoy.