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First of all, the Tailgate Guys BBQ Podcast wishes all a Merry Christmas and Happy New Year! We are grateful to all our listeners, sponsors and marketing partners who dialed up the show in 2024 and we finish off Season 6 with a Hall of Fame featured guest. Mike Wozniak and Quau BBQ out of Brimfield, Ill., is one of the many great inductees in the inaugural KCBS Hall of Fame class coming up in January. On Episode 288 of the show, we talk it over with Mike about his competition career, which ran from 2001-2021 and included 76 Grand Championships. Mike discusses what competition cooking was like in the early days and the ways it differs from today. Also stopping by as we close out the year is Richard Fergola of Fergolicious BBQ. “Fergie” is sure to be one of the hottest free agents in BBQ with the recent announcement that Proud Souls Barbecue & Provisions is closing at the end of the month. He's been marketing director at Proud Souls the last two years and has a wealth of knowledge about the industry. We talk to him about what's next, including his tell-all competition classes. We also take a trip just down the road from our home base to check in with Skyler Spartan from The Grill Guys of Missouri. The specialty BBQ store in Republic, Mo., has some dandy holiday specials going on and Skyler fills us in. Stop in and see The Grill Guys for all your open-fire shopping needs whether it's grills, smokers, seasonings, sauces or accessories. Remember, you can find us on your favorite #podcast platform by searching Tailgate Guys BBQ - where all 288 editions are archived. We'll return in a few weeks to kick off Season 7. Thanks to all our sponsors and marketing partners for making Season 6 of the show possible: Blues Hog #blueshognation Royal Oak Charcoal #TeamRoyalOak2024 #charcoalofchampions The Butcher Shoppe #alwayshandpicked Proud Souls BBQ Kansas City #proudsoulsbbqkc #kingdomofq The Grill Guys of Missouri #grillguys417 Smoke 'n Magic BBQ #SmokenMagic Vietti Marketing Group Marty "Real Sign Man" Prather #pizza Have a great BBQ holiday season! #SmokeEmIfYouGotEm
Coach Olson recaps the Red Storm wins over Knoxville and Rockridge, plus previews the matchups against Brimfield on Wednesday, then Farmington and Seymour at the United Holiday Tournament.
On today's show, we're chatting with Sierra, who started her secondhand clothing business, Tailored Thrift, while she was a sophomore in college. She wanted to bring a curated selection of vintage and secondhand to her college town – and what started as popups and markets turned into a brick-and-mortar store. I loved hearing about how Sierra worked on her business, almost as a research project tackled alongside getting her fashion merchandising degree. She found that in her college town there was a large group of people who wanted to shop sustainable, but didn't feel like digging through the racks to thrift their clothing. We also shared stories of vintage shopping on travels – from Brimfield Market to the UK – and wild times at summer vintage markets in the Midwest. I loved getting to hear from Sierra's experience as a college student entrepreneur, and I know you will, too – so, let's dive right into it! DISCUSSED IN THE EPISODE: [4:44] Sierra wanted to be a fashion designer, starting in middle school, and she often upcycled her own pieces from the thrift store. [7:36] Sierra worked on her business, almost as a research project tackled alongside getting her fashion merchandising degree. [12:22] Getting started as a vintage business as a college sophomore. [15:51] Sierra's first forays into vintage markets, and what she learned from doing them all over the Midwest. [24:34] On her college campus, Sierra found lots of people who wanted to shop sustainably, but needed to figure out how. [29:13] How Tailored Thrift has appealed to the young shoppers in her college town. [32:08] Vintage sourcing from Brimfield to the UK [36:36] The 250 pound antique cash register that Sierra's mom got her for Christmas for the store. [38:57] Some of the fashion merchandising research Sierra put to use in her store. [43:51] Her love of vintage watches. EPISODE MENTIONS: Tailored Thrift Instagram - @_tailored_thrifts My Brimfield Market Vlog Adams Antique Fair in London We Are - pre-loved fashion in London Peach Tree Revival LET'S CONNECT:
Send a message to the showIn remembrance of Holly, on the 31st anniversary of her disappearance.Holly's abduction and murder remain unresolved. .. .. .. Thirty years ago today, 10-year-old Holly Piirainen was enjoying a lazy summer day with her family at their vacation cottage in Sturbridge, Massachusetts. What should have been an innocent visit with a litter of puppies nearby turned into a decades-long nightmare for her family.Holly disappeared. The only trace of her was one red sneaker. She would be found two and a half months later in the nearby town of Brimfield, in the next county over.As we revisit the details of Holly's case, there are a great many mysteries still. I speak to journalist and former editor of Grafton News, Holly's hometown paper, Rich Price about his journey into the intricate details of her disappearance, the potential suspects in her abduction and murder, and his relationship with the Piirainen family members. In our exploration of Holly's case, we take a moment to appreciate the distinctive beauty of Massachusetts and New England. I share details about local landmarks in the areas relative to Holly's case.Please share any information you have, overheard, or may have remembered,Your help is needed to solve her caseCall 413-505-5993or the State Police Unresolved Cases Unit at 855-627-6583OR text the word SOLVE to 274637Reach the Hampden District Attorney in Springfield, Mass at HampdenDA.comListen: Holly's Been Takena podcast about Holly Piirainen's disappearance and murder, by Rich PriceSite developed by investigators to help solve Holly's case:HelpHolly.comVisit CrimeoftheTruestKind.comCrime of the Truest KindCreated, written, and hosted by Anngelle Wood Support the Show.Follow Instagram | Facebook | X | TikTok | Threads | YouTube For show notes & source information at CrimeoftheTruestKind.comThis podcast has minimal profanity but from time to time you get one or some curse words. This isn't for kids.Become a patron: Patreon.com/crimeofthetruestkindMusic included in episodes from Joe "onlyone" Kowalski, Dug McCormack's Math Ghosts. and Shredding by Andrew King
Support this podcast and get the full Episode on Pattern: www.patreon.com/cantnotpodcast In conversation with David of @Winning.and.Losing on David's favourite designers from the turn of the century such as Callot Soeurs, Lucy Lady Duff Gordon, Frederick Worth and Mariano Fortuny and his wife Henriette Negrin, dating methods for antique clothing, selling at Brimfield, old dying methods, going to auctions and so much more!
Pre-Loved Podcast is a weekly vintage fashion interview show, with guests you'll want to go thrifting with! For more Pre-Loved Podcast, subscribe to our Patreon!On today's show, we're chatting with David, the founder of Honeymoon Antiques and new owner of the Sturbridge Show. David's business Honeymoon Antiques has been a New York City fashion and design staple since1997. And he has some really fun stories to share with us about his year's in the industry and how the vintage scene has changed. In 2022, David purchased the storied Sturbridge Show, which happens three times each year in Sturbridge, Massachusetts, the Monday before Brimfield. Sturbridge Show is a unique offeirng of antique & vintage clothing, textiles, quilts, workwear, and jewelry spanning the Victorian era to the 1990s. This fall, David brought the Sturbridge Show to New York City for the first time, and it's returning for it's spring city show this weekend – if you're listening to this live – March 14th-16th. We had a blast with all of David's stories in this one, so let's get right into it! DISCUSSED IN THE EPISODE: [4:50] David's decision to open his first store in New York in the 1990s. [12:36] What the East Village vintage clothing scene was like in the 90s. [19:13] David's transition into becoming the promoter of the Sturbridge Show. [ 24:39] About the Sturbridge Show and Brimfield Antique Market in Massachusetts. [30:18] The Sturbridge Show comes to NYC! [37:26] When the people you buy clothing from bring you magic and good luck! EPISODE MENTIONS: Honeymoon Antiques The Sturbridge Show Sturbridge Show dates Beads of Paradise in NYC Retro101 / Cherry Bomb Vintage in St. Louis Retro 101 on Pre-Loved Podcast New York Magazine excerpt from 1999 Margiela Couture 2024 show Brimfield Antiques Show Maria Niforos Susan Simon Antique Textiles Jane Lury's Labors of Love Orlando Vintage Mitchell Palm Springs Style4Vintage Buzz Vintage Tea Street Vintage Superette Vintage Birds and Skyline 22 Print Studio Metropolis Vintage in Albany Eveliina Vintage Anastasia's Star Closet Western Gifts No Kill Magazine Story All the NYC Vintage Dealers @clawmoney LET'S CONNECT:
Holly Kristen Piirainen, kidnapped and murdered 30 Years, and the case remains unsolved. Today's case takes us back to the summer of August 5th, 1993, in Sturbridge, Mass. 10-year-old Holly Piiranian is on a family vacation visiting her grandmother when she was abducted in the middle of the day. Holly Kristen Piirainen was a 10-year-old American murder victim from Grafton, Massachusetts. She was a typical young girl with blonde hair and blue eyes. She went with her brother to visit some puppies walking down South Shore Drive in Sturbridge to the intersection of Allen Road Her brother returned to the cottage, but Holly had disappeared. All that was found was a shoe of hers by the side of the road. Months later on October 23rd, her remains were found by hunters in a wooded area in the nearby town of Brimfield. Anyone with information about Holly's murder is asked to e-mail Thomas.w.sullivan3@massmail.state.ma.us or call the Hampden County State Police Detective Unit at 413-505-5993. People are also welcome to text information to “CRIMES” (274637) with the subject line “SOLVE Holly Piirainen.” A $40,000 reward is being offered for information leading directly to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons responsible. Sources: ABC News GO, Masslive.com, WCLB, Telegram & Gazette, Boston Globe https://youtu.be/67wf8hvLPyw?si=UMqZFNHZ285hKICO https://youtu.be/RU3S0coGffc?si=j7xpajn2HQq9acdc https://youtu.be/UvSc1HMGd38?si=-jaWRGdO4ogN5tVt https://youtu.be/kZfmw0a9_yU?si=3ydh9U9O9wkg6E2J https://youtu.be/RJlkuouLLrY?si=DXUulL7RB3YZZGwT https://thisweekinworcester.com/holly-piiaranens-family-still-looks-for-clues-26-years-after-her-disappearance-death/ https://www.telegram.com/news/20180802/25-years-after-holly-piirainen-slaying-family-continues-to-push-for-resolution https://www.masslive.com/news/2018/08/25th_anniversary_of_holly_piir.html https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2018/10/21/family-holly-piirainen-hosts-tip-campaign-anniversary-her-disappearance/DnhH2V8bunjWOd9basLxlI/story.html Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Best Of BPR 9/06: Boosting BIPOC Entrepreneurs & Snagging Deals At Brimfield Market
Thirty years ago today, 10-year-old Holly Piirainen was enjoying a lazy summer day with her family at their vacation cottage in Sturbridge, Massachusetts. What should have been an innocent visit with a litter of puppies nearby turned into a decades-long nightmare for her family. Holly disappeared. The only trace of her was one red sneaker. She would be found two and a half months later in the nearby town of Brimfield, in the next county over. As we revisit the details of Holly's case, there are a great many mysteries still. I speak to journalist and former editor of Grafton News, Holly's hometown paper, Rich Price about his journey into the intricate details of her disappearance, the potential suspects in her abduction and murder, and his relationship with the Piirainen family members. In our exploration of Holly's case, we take a moment to appreciate the distinctive beauty of Massachusetts and New England. I share details about local landmarks in the areas relative to Holly's case.Please share any information you have, overheard, or may have remembered: Call: 413-426-3507. Your call will go directly to Trooper Tom Sullivan, the Hampden County District Attorney's homicide investigator assigned to the Holly Piirainen case. Online: Fill out this online form there that will go directly to Trooper Tom Sullivan.Mail: Send a letter, anonymous or not, to PO Box 15327, Springfield, MA 01115All information will go to Trooper Tom Sullivan.Listen: Holly's Been Takena podcast about Holly Piirainen's disappearance and murder, by Rich PriceThe site was developed by investigators to help solve Holly's case: HelpHolly.com Visit CrimeoftheTruestKind.comCrime of the Truest KindCreated, written, and hosted by Anngelle Wood more updates comingSupport the showFor show notes and source information, please visit CrimeoftheTruestKind.com Music included in this episode by Joe "onlyone" Kowalski and Andrew King
Full episode here - https://www.patreon.com/drewheifetz?f....Erik comes to us as one of the most highly requested guests of all time and for good reason. There must be something in the water in Idaho because he is my third guest this year from "the gem state" and boy does he ever find those gems. Erik specializes true vintage and is sure good at hunting down. He recently lost over 40k in stock in a freak truck fire after Brimfield this year but I dont think that is slowing him down. Enjoy!Shop Vintage Here with code vtgnstuff for 30% offMens - https://www.fasinfrankvintage.com...Download the Gemsearch https://gem.app or on the App Store or Google Playhttps://apps.apple.com/us/app/gem-search-and-shop-vintage/id1459900557https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=app.gem&hl=en&pli=1Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/drewheifetz/ shop vintage resource books here -https://www.amazon.com/shop/fasinfrank#idaho #Levis #denimSupport the show
Pre-Loved Podcast is a weekly vintage fashion interview show, with guests you'll want to go thrifting with! For more Pre-Loved Podcast, subscribe to our Patreon! Today's show is with Tammy and Kay, founders of Assassin Vintage in St. Louis. They met over 12 years ago while working for Anthropologie, and became fast friends over a shared love of vintage clothing and music. Eventually, the duo decided to start a vintage business together, which began as an Etsy shop and doing local markets. They opened their brick-and-mortar shop on Cherokee Street in November of 2021, and now they do vintage markets all over the country including: Threadbare Show, Brimfield, The Sturbridge Show, Manhattan Vintage Show, and Randolph Street Market to name just a few. We chat about all this and more on today's show! It's a really fun one, so let's just dive right in! DISCUSSED IN THE EPISODE: [5:55] When Kay moved to St. Louis in the 90s, she went thrifting every weekend, and built up a collection fit to sell. [11:16] After Tammy helped Kay with a few vintage shows, the duo decided it would be a good fit to go into business together! [14:50] On their vintage specialities, and how to make your brand uniquely stand out. [17:32] Chatting about how it used to be so much easier to find vintage from the 30s and 40s, and their best buy from this era. [19:13] How to know you and your business partner are a good fit, compatible to share the responsibilities of running the business. [23:57] Opening their brick-and-mortar location, after 2+ years of looking for the perfect spot, and how it has changed their operation. [29:13] On visible mends [35:00] The vintage markets Tammy and Kay have done all across the country [43:21] Personal style stories behind the vintage pieces they cherish! EPISODE MENTIONS: @assassin_vintage May's Night Market Katie May on Pre-Loved Podcast Golden Gems EstateSales.net EstateSales.net on Pre-Loved Podcast Randolph Street Market in Chicago Threadbare Show Brimfield Antique Market Sturbridge Vintage Show Manhattan Vintage Show The New England Shakeup Ameripolitan Music Awards @kristipinkhamstyling @shopfromthepast @denny623 @keiser.925 LET'S CONNECT:
A practical guide to the Brimfield Antique and Flea Market in Massachusetts. Danna gives a full report of her visit in May 2022.
Chevy (Chevarooney on Twich) welcomes The Man They Call Dave and Producer Joe to the Brewcast to taste and discuss three beers from Tree House Brewing Company. Tree House Brewing Company is located in Charlton, Massachusetts. It is considered to be amongst the best breweries in the United States, including public beer-rating sites like Untappd and Beer Advocate, as well as sites including Forbes, the Boston Globe, and Thrillist. Founded in 2011, the brewery was originally located in Brimfield, Massachusetts, then moved on to Monson, Massachusetts in 2013, before a multimillion dollar project landed them at their current site in 2017. Tree House is a non-distributing brewery—it is only available to buy on site—but given its popularity, lines at the brewery can run an hour or more on certain days. Charlton MA/Deerfield MA/Sandwich MA/Woodstock CT Restless- Weizenbock Expertly crafted, restless is rich, traditional, and delicious. To make it we combine wheat, a complex assortment of German speciality malts, and noble hops before fermenting it at the hands of a traditional top-fermenting Weiss yeast. It is then refermented in the can to produce a velvety texture that would otherwise be impossible to achieve. Combing the best elements of a traditional doppelbock and weissbier, it carries rich malt complexity and character with notes of brown bread, molten toffee, dark fruit, and mild yeasty phenols. *Pairs with chicken & dumplings or banana bread* All I Want for Christmas is Juice- DIPA All I Want For Christmas Is Juice is an American Double IPA brewed with a fruit-forward blend of American hops along with authentic Japanese sobacha tea paired with vanilla chamomile tea. Sobacha tea is made from roasted buckwheat grown in Hokkaido Japan without pesticides or chemicals. Pouring a hazy orange color in the glass, it carries notes of orange jam, guava soft candy, a hint of vanilla chamomile, and a pervasive and pleasant nutty undertone from the Sobacha Tea addition. *Pairs with rich cheeses or carrot cake* Jolly Juice Following on the wonderfully successful Jingle Juice, Jolly Juice is also brewed utilizing an intriguing ingredient paired with an onslaught of hops. By steeping dried Osmanthus flower in the wort during every phase of the process, we are able to extract incredible stone fruit-like character from this marvelous and mysterious ingredient. The resulting beer is highly enjoyable for its unique nature with floral stone fruit notes, ripe peach, and mild acidity that results from the use of this rare ingredient. #treehousebrewingcompany #beer #beerreview #podcast #WorkingFansPodcast Contact us at: Twitter-@FansWorking Instagram-workingfanswrestling_pod Facebook-Working Fan's Podcast Email- workingfanswrestlingpod@gmail.com Website- Workingfanspodcast.com, what-the-buzz.com Subscribe, rate, and review us here: Apple Podcasts- https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/working-fans-podcast/id1482321716?uo=4 Spotify- https://open.spotify.com/show/6DmVnxHWcURUj8akmwDD9v Google Podcasts- https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy9kZDA1MTQ0L3BvZGNhc3QvcnNz YouTube- https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCe4jz_jqytm48skZ0CT6gJg Wherever you can Like, Rate, Review, Subscribe, and tell a friend or two!! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/workingfanpod/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/workingfanpod/support
Welcome to Episode 40 of the Quilter on Fire Podcast! My guests today are the 2 quilting friends behind the business Brimfield Awakening. Their website is gorgeous and their patterns are fresh and colourful and it is all about a unique vintage style of English Paper Piecing. Wait until you check out their Instagram feed. You just can't stop scrolling. Kim Martucci and Nisha Bouri teamed up to build their company after finding a little treasure in a pile of old textiles at their local antique market. That precious find led to some research and a quilting adventure in business.Listen to the podcast trailer: https://youtu.be/W6cPh1cdgZ0Enter the weekly giveaway: https://kingsumo.com/g/xt2wnz/qof-episode-40-giveawayGo to the Brimfield Awakening website: https://brimfieldawakening.com/
Enjoyable and informative conversation with one of England's national treasures, John Hegley. Bio photo by Polly Hancock More about John Hegley Born in Newington Green,Islington, North London. Now in neighbouring borough of Hackney with partner, artist mel Brimfield. Educated in Luton and Bristol schools drawings, verse and small amount of baroque dance.and the University of Bradford - Sociology/European Literature and the Historyof Ideas. Sustained exploration of father's French roots.First work in writing and performance with Interaction Community arts, London, 1978whose interactive ethos and techniques continue informing work.John Peel sessions with The Popticians, Radio1, 1983/4. Host of Border TVpoetry series, Word of Mouth, 1989. Perrier Comedy Award nominee, the same year.Three Series of Hearing with Hegley, Radio 4 - 1996-2000. BBC Online poet in residence 1999.2010 - working with Company Paradiso in 'Warning, May Contain Nuts' alongside BBC Radios Sussexand Berkshire, challenging stigmas around mental illness. 2012 - Keats House poet in residence.2019 - Arts Council of England funded project working with four fellow poets, taking childrento art galleries to delve into, and respond to art works. ('Putting You in the Picture"Twelve books - most recently New and Selected Potatoes, with Bloodaxe books.Workshops in prisons, hospitals, schools.Touring and festival presentations with music,
This show - originally heard on thehoundnyc.com - documents my recent trip first-ever trip to the MASSIVE Brimfield Antique Flea Market in Brimfield, Massachusetts. AND stay tuned for some bonus content at the end... See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Holly Kristen Piirainen (January 19, 1983 – August 5, 1993) was a 10-year-old American murder victim from Grafton, Massachusetts. She and her brother had been visiting their grandparents in Sturbridge, Massachusetts when Holly was murdered.[1] Piirainen and her brother had gone to a neighbor's house to see puppies. Her brother had returned to the cottage where the grandparents lived, but Piirainen did not. One of Piirainen's shoes was found by the side of a road.[1] Searching for Piirainen took two months. On October 23, 1993, Piirainen's remains were found by hunters in Brimfield, Massachusetts. The killer still has not been found.[1] Since Piirainen's death, the Holly Piirainen Scholarship Fund was established in her memory by her family. There was also a chilling connection between the abduction and murder of Holly Piirainen and Molly Bish. Molly was the 16 year old lifeguard who was abducted and murdered just 20 minutes away from Holly.
Don has Dr. David Jackson, Northeast Replanting Strategist for the North American Missions Board, John Brownlee, Executive Director for the Massachusetts Baptist Association, and Jim Fontaine, pastor of Friendship Baptist Church in Brimfield, MA to discuss Pastors Dinner Event.
To support the podcast and get bonus perks click here -https://www.patreon.com/drewheifetz?f...Shop vintage clothing here Mens - https://www.fasinfrankvintage.comGet on my mailing list for all future programs.https://frankiecollective.us8.list-ma...Purchase compostable mailers and vintage resource books here https://www.amazon.com/shop/fasinfran...shop Vintage Here -Mens - https://www.fasinfrankvintage.comwomens - https://www.frankiecollective.comhttps://www.instagram.com/drewheifetz...https://www.instagram.com/hellerscafe...INTRO BY @realdirtrich
Candace is a master of color and textures! How do I know? Well, she's a costumer in the movie industry, a Brimfield Antique Market expert, and a very talented furniture artist living in an art loft building. Doesn't this all just sounds dreamy? Hit PLAY to hear more about Candace and her adventures! Facebook. - https://www.facebook.com/brassyknobs Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/brassyknobs/ SUBSCRIBE TO THE #IRISJOURNAL - https://theturquoiseirisjournal.com
There are unscrupulous folks in every field. Even in historical photography. Imagine going to the effort of learning historical photographic methods, buying appropriate materials all to dupe a buyer. It's unfortunately true. When I heard my guest at a conference, my mouth fell open in disbelief. Spotting the fakes requires sharp eyes and a knowledge of historic images. I've seen some at Brimfield, the huge antique market in Massachusetts. In this age of electronic purchases and auctions it really is buyer beware. If you love early images like I do you might want to join the Daguerreian Society. It's a group of individuals passionate about daguerreotypes and nineteenth century photography. This year they've gone virtual with a program of outstanding lectures by experts in the field. Related Episodes:Episode 60: Finding Pictures of Your Civil War Ancestor Links:Mike Medhurst & Co.Daguerreian SocietySign up for my newsletter.Watch my YouTube Channel.Like the Photo Detective Facebook Page so you get notified of my Facebook Live videos.Need help organizing your photos? Check out the Essential Photo Organizing Video Course.Need help identifying family photos? Check out the Identifying Family Photographs Online Course.Have a photo you need help identifying? Sign up for photo consultation.About My Guest:Mike Medhurst has been actively buying and selling antique photography for more than 30 years. He is currently the President of the Daguerreian Society and an avid collector.Graduating with a B.S. from Wheaton College in Wheaton, Illinois, he was soon dealing in historic photography, documents and autographs of the 19th century. Mike later completed his M.S. from Southern Illinois University and by the early 1990's the business had become more keenly focused on 19th century photography.Mike buys and sells images at numerous national Civil War and photography shows each year. His business entity, Medhurst & Co., has the largest inventory of daguerreotypes, ambrotypes and tintypes in the Midwest and is well known for selling high quality images of every variety. These can be found on his website mikemedhurst.com.Many of the top collectors of 19th century photography count Mike as a valuable resource to supply them with outstanding material. Images acquired though him can often be seen on display at noted museums such as The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Chicago Art Institute, Nelson-Atkins and the Library of Congress. In addition, he is a source for many of the nation's top private and public collections.Mike's appraisal services were a major part of a multi-million dollar purchase made by the National Park Service.About Maureen Taylor:Maureen is a frequent keynote speaker on photo identification, photograph preservation, and family history at historical and genealogical societies, museums, conferences, libraries, and other organizations across the U.S., London and Canada. She's the author of several books and hundreds of articles and her television appearances include The View and The Today Show (where she researched and presented a complete family tree for host Meredith Vieira). She's been featured in The Wall Street Journal, Better Homes and Gardens, The Boston Globe, Martha Stewart Living, Germany's top newspaper Der Spiegel, American Spirit, and The New York Times. Maureen was recently a spokesperson and photograph expert for MyHeritage.com, an internationally known family history website and also writes guidebooks, scholarly articles and online columns for such media as Smithsonian.com. Learn more at Maureentaylor.comDid you enjoy this episode? Please leave a review on Apple Podcasts.
Katie Poirier is a mother of three, 11-year-old twin boys, and her youngest son, who is 5. She grew up in Brimfield, Mass, and still resides there today. After high school, she attended Worcester State College where she received degrees in Elementary Education and Psychology. Katie loves to stay busy and is constantly seeking challenges to improve her abilities. Katie trades stocks and options, using specific technical analysis. The stock market and real estate investing supplement each other well, and she is very passionate about both. What You Will Learn: Katie’s discovery of the stock market as a wealth-building strategy and journey into stocks trading How Katie first learned and then studied the fundamentals of trading The framework of Katie’s trading strategy How Katie stays on top of the changing trends, skills, and technologies needed to excel in the world of trading How Katie used trading as a springboard into real estate investing The personality traits you need to be successful in the stock market Why personal development is even more important than developing fundamental trading skills for successful stock market investing How Katie balances her responsibilities at home with her trading career The top resources you need to start delving into stock market investing Resources: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/katiepoirier2/ Book Recommendation: The Slight Edge
We welcome Joe Weigel to our podcast today. He is a firefighter for Brimfield township and former CrossFit Games competitor, as well as a husband, father, and one of the most driven people we know. Bourbon: Old Grand-Dad 114 -https://www.theoldswhiskeys.com/home beFIT: After missing out on the 2010 CrossFit games Joe got to work and qualified for the National CrossFit Games finishing 15th in 2011. In 2012 he and his future wife qualified in the team competition finishing 2nd. To help put on muscle Joe used to drink a gallon of whole milk each day beNOBLE: Best advice to avoid fires- don't mess with gasoline and fires! Currently studying history in order to teach others the importance of our civil liberties and foundation of our American republic The historicity of the resurrection of Jesus was a main driver in his love to learn history Being skeptical by nature, the pursuit of truth is at the core of what Joe loves to research A very impactful book in Joes life was The Resurrection of the Son of God by N.T Wright --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Martin Willis speaks with Mike Lord & Justin Nash who decided that they were not going to let one of the country’s largest antiques shows not happen during the virus, so they created an online event to rival the experience …
Brian Foguth was a 23 year old working the graveyard shift at the Duke and Duchess convenience store and gas station in Brimfield, Ohio on the night of November 28, 1994 when at just after 2 am, a masked gunman entered the empty store and ordered Brian to empty the cash register before leading him into the back room and subsequently killing him. The robbery was captured on the store's surveillance camera's and some of the killer's DNA was left behind, but over 25 years later, the case remains unsolved. Sources for this episode: https://unsolvedmysteries.fandom.com/wiki/Brian_Foguth https://casetext.com/case/jarrell-v-englefield-inc https://www.newspapers.com/clippings/#user=8299442 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/joe-shwartz2/message
Local Brimfield man, Todd Disotell had his Big Foot statue stolen from him! Luckily it was safely found in Worcester by police. Todd joins VB to tell his story and why he has this Big Foot statue in the first place! Hear this fun, entertaining conversation, here.
Welcome to the Rural Revival podcast. I'm your host Danna Larson. We're in Brimfield, Illinois (pop. 933) this week on the podcast with Mikaela Endress and Kami Stahl of Kamaela's Kreamery. Mikaela is a student and Kami is a farmer, and together these two best friends have a pop up ice cream shop in a vintage trailer called Little Dipper, and can be found hitting up fun locations across Illinois all summer long. Kami and Mikaela are sharing about how this all started as a dream when they were four years old and riding their bikes to the local ice cream store.You will love everything about this story, and how much fun these girls - and their customers - are having with this business. And while Kamaela's Kreamery may be closed for the winter and Little Dipper tucked away on the farm, they've got some great things coming when they open again in the spring. They will definitely be on our road trip route next summer, and we hope you put them on yours as well!Check out more on the blog.SHOW NOTES:Cinnamon Tree FarmIllinois Central CollegeIllinois State UniversityNo Roots BootsRock Island TrailInstagram: @kamaelaskreameryFacebook: @kamaelaskreamery
Today’s case takes us back to the summer of August 5th, 1993, Sturbridge Mass.10-year-old Holly Piiranian is on a family vacation visiting her grandmother when she was abducted in the middle of the day. Holly Kristen Piirainen was a 10-year-old American murder victim from Grafton, Massachusetts. She was a typical young girl with blonde hair and blue eyes. She went with her brother to visit some puppies walking down South Shore Drive in Sturbridge to the intersection of Allen Road Her brother returned to the cottage but Holly had disappeared. All that was found was a shoe of hers by the side of the road. Months later on October 23rd, her remains were found by hunters in a wooded area in the nearby town of Brimfield.Anyone with information about Holly’s murder is asked to e-mail Thomas.w.sullivan3@massmail.state.ma.us or call the Hampden County State Police Detective Unit at 413-505-5993. People are also welcome to text information to “CRIMES” (274637) with the subject line “SOLVE Holly Piirainen.” A $40,000 reward is being offered for information leading directly to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons responsible.Sources: ABC News GO, Masslive.com, WCLB, Telegram & Gazette, Boston Globehttps://thisweekinworcester.com/holly-piiaranens-family-still-looks-for-clues-26-years-after-her-disappearance-death/https://www.telegram.com/news/20180802/25-years-after-holly-piirainen-slaying-family-continues-to-push-for-resolutionhttps://www.masslive.com/news/2018/08/25th_anniversary_of_holly_piir.htmlhttps://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2018/10/21/family-holly-piirainen-hosts-tip-campaign-anniversary-her-disappearance/DnhH2V8bunjWOd9basLxlI/story.html
Our past is for sale. Our parent's stuff and previous generations as well. You can find the most amazing things at flea markets. That's what New Englander's call these outdoor sales. I regularly visit two of these. In the summer months, the Providence Flea occupies a small space on the waterfront. If it's there. I am too. It's a mix of antique and collectible vendors as well as artist spaces. One of my favorite people to chat with is Peter Dumas of Picture This Antiques. He specializes in old cameras. I'll let him tell his story. Oh...and the glass plate camera he mentions...well.. I couldn't leave it there. It now sits on a shelf in my office along with other cameras he's sold me. In addition to the Flea I make at least one visit to the Brimfield Antique Market. It's held three times a year but for some reason my tradition is to go in July. Yes. In the 90 degrees sweltering heat and humidity. Think 100K people and vendors spread out on 12 fields. I've walked miles looking at stuff learning history as I go. And picked up some wonderful photos too. Here's some of the things I've seen. My favorite is the last one. You really can find anything at Brimfield. Do you know what it is? I do, but let's see if you can guess. **About My Guest: ** Peter Dumas is the owner of Picture This Antiques. A chance sale of a vintage camera led him to create a business that's related to historic cameras. Links Picture This Antiques Brimfield Antique Fair Watch my YouTube Channel. Like the Facebook Page so you get notified of my Facebook Live videos at https://www.facebook.com/MaureenPhotoDetective/. Sign up for my newsletter. Need help organizing your photos? Check out the Essential Photo Organizing Video Course. Need help identifying family photos? Check out the Identifying Family Photographs online course. Have a photo you need help identifying? Sign up for photo consultation. **About Maureen Taylor: ** Maureen is a frequent keynote speaker on photo identification, photograph preservation, and family history at historical and genealogical societies, museums, conferences, libraries, and other organizations across the U.S., London and Canada. She's the author of several books and hundreds of articles and her television appearances include The View and The Today Show (where she researched and presented a complete family tree for host Meredith Vieira). She's been featured in The Wall Street Journal, Better Homes and Gardens, The Boston Globe, Martha Stewart Living, Germany's top newspaper Der Spiegel, American Spirit, and The New York Times. Maureen was recently a spokesperson and photograph expert for MyHeritage.com, an internationally known family history website and also writes guidebooks, scholarly articles and online columns for such media as Smithsonian.com. Learn more at Maureentaylor.com Did you enjoy this episode? Please leave a review on Apple Podcasts.
This week we’re joined by Ashley Troy of The Trunk n’ Disorderly and Emily Briggs of Bloom and Barter. We’re talking about Brimfield Antique Fair, America’s oldest outdoor antiques flea market. Ashley and Emily are known at Brimfield for their curated collection of vintage and handmade items. Find them under the striped tent in Central Park and make sure to ask them "what's the best you can do?"
NOPEC “Community Spotlight” podcast with Brimfield Township Trustee Sue Fields. Trustee Fields explains how NOPEC has helped Brimfield Township!
Madie met OMF when they visited the Jimmy Fund Clinic earlier this summer.In 2016, Madie went to the doctor after having a fever and chills. It was there that her tumor was discovered. Madie was in treatment for a year but relapsed in February 2018 after being off treatment for about a year. She's received 7 cycles of IV chemotherapy thus far, a total of 12 cycles altogether, and had some radiation in May 2018.Madie's hobbies include doing makeup, photography, sports, reading and blogging. In the future, Madie wants to become a travel nurse or oncologist.She is currently writing a blog on Instagram to help other kids going through cancer or hard times find support. She loves sharing her experiences in the goal of helping others. Madie is supported by her loving family, including her mom, Deanna, step-dad, Chad, brother, Brodie, 7, and sister, Mackenzie, 19.
This week, Laura and Sara are joined by Bob Goins, owner of Classes on Clark. Bob teaches guitar to people of all ages, and is currently located in the beautiful space above Brimfield at 5219 N. Clark. During this episode, Bob even plays a lovely rendition of “Take Me Out to the Ballgame” to demonstrate fingerstyle guitar for our listeners! To view show notes for this episode, please click here.
Dennis McCurdy is an author, fire walker, and a pusher (the good kind). He's been my mentor since 2013 when I joined Toastmasters. He's a great, positive man to be around. The very first interview for RSWC, I don't even use the correct name of the show! We drive down Rt 20 from Sturbridge thru Brimfield into Palmer, MA, then back again. Dennis is full of ideas and stories. Some successful stories. Some learning stories. Everyone who knows Dennis learns something about themselves and ways they come away encouraged to do more with themselves. Find out more about Dennis at www.find-away.com. Get his Find A Way and 52 Ways to Find A Way at his website.
Today Ken welcomes writer, actor Steve Bannos (Freaks & Geeks) to the show. Ken and Steve discuss their mutual collecting bug, Flea Markets, Brimfield, Boston in the 80s, stand up comedy, Chicago, Mark of the Devil Barf Bags, The Combat Zone, TV Wheel, Judd Apatow, Night After Night with Alan Havey, The Higgins Boys and Gruber, Greek fry cooks, Gyros, Paul Feig, "The Ranch", Freaks & Geeks, the missing Missing Bus script, 7 Minutes in Heaven, rigging spin the bottle, Meet the Applegates, working in the art department, Zapped II, Linda Blair, carrying the cross on Madonna's Like a Prayer, Mary Lambert, 80s coke sets, Dana Gould, horror hosts, Svenghouli, Channel 32, growing up a make up geek, Planet of the Apes, when Mr. Rogers hulked out, Rebecca Staab, Doomed! The Roger Corman Fantastic Four movie, regrettable roles, keeping your shirt on, Ghostbusters, Garfield Goose, Wacky Races, Fraiser Thomas, Looney Toons, a TV education, Night Flight, Marvel Monsters, Tremors, being haunted by the Exorcist without having seen it, writing tag lines for movies, Percy Rodriguez, making the poster, a 70s set Ghost Rider movie, structured family TV time, watching TV during dinner, stealing from Vaudeville, reality TV writers, how it's painful sometimes to watch comedies, and loving James Franco.
This week, we hear some stories and interviews from our archives. We find out what a Reveal/APM Reports investigation tells us about police de-escalation training in New England, and visit police in New Hampshire who are reaching out to children who've been traumatized by witnessing crime. We also explore the work of Marsden Hartley, whose art defined the rocky coast, the looming hills, and the working men of Maine. Plus we visit New England's biggest flea market, where the people are as fascinating as the stuff on display. A lobster made from horseshoes at the Brimfield Antiques Flea Market. Photo by Ziwei Zhang De-Escalation Many of the high-profile police shootings of the last few years across the U.S. have a disturbing common thread: they happen within a few minutes, or even a few seconds, after police arrive on the scene. Several states require “de-escalation” training for their police officers. It’s meant to avoid situations where deadly force is viewed as the only resort. Officer Jennifer Lazarchic at a police training session in March 2016. Photo by Courtney Perry for MPR News In New England, three of our six states have such mandates: Maine, Massachusetts, and Connecticut. Still, training requirements, and how well they are carried out, vary from state to state. Below: An interactive map from APM Reports. A recent episode of Reveal from the Center for Investigative Reporting worked with APM Reports to examine de-escalation state by state. Our guest is APM Reports correspondent Curtis Gilbert, author of the report “Not Trained to Not Kill.” We dig into the details and learn how New England states measure up. Types of police calls the Manchester ACERT team responded to July 2016 through March 2017. Graphic by Sara Plourde for NHPR When police respond to a domestic violence call or a drug overdose, children are often on the scene when officers arrive. Manchester, New Hampshire police found that in 2015, 400 children had been on-scene during such calls. Research shows that children exposed to trauma are more likely to be violent — and victims of violence — later in life. So Manchester police officers are trying something new: returning to the scene of such crises to see if they can help. The first-of-its-kind program is called ACERT: Adverse Childhood Experiences Response Team. New Hampshire Public Radio’s Emily Corwin reports. Marsden Hartley’s Maine Mt. Katahdin in Maine, Autumn -2 by Marsden Hartley, 1939-40, Metropolitan Museum of Art Portrait of Marsden Hartley by Carl Van Vechten, U.S. Library of Congress In the permanent collection of the Wadsworth Atheneum, the nation's oldest art museum in downtown Hartford, Connecticut, is a painting by Marsden Hartley called “Down East Young Blades,” depicting three colorful figures standing on a pier. Massive, strapping, working men with comically broad shoulders are pictured with the images of their trade: lobsters, fish, and logs. Hartley's career, stretching from the early years of the 20th century to his death in 1943, celebrated the vast and wild scenery of New England; specifically, his home state of Maine. The exhibition “Marsden Hartley's Maine” will be featured at the Colby College Museum of Art in Waterville, Maine July 8 through November 12, 2017. (“Downeast Young Blades” is on loan from the Wadsworth for the exhibition). Our guest Donna Cassidy, Professor of Art and American and New England Studies at the University of Southern Maine, co-authored the exhibition book about the artist's relationship with the Pine Tree State. Fiddlers and Peddlers Of the 530 refugees who arrived in the New Haven metro area last year, more than 270 were children. Many have just finished their first year in school in the United States. WNPR's Diane Orson reports on an arts program that's partnered with the region's resettlement agency to create a special after-school violin class for the young refugees. A piece of “folk art” made from a carousel horse and a mannequin. Photo by Ziwei Zhang In the 1954 film Brigadoon, the protagonists discover a magical village that only appears for one day every hundred years. Brimfield, Massachusetts is kind of like that. The town only has about 3,500 permanent residents. But for a week in each of May, July, and September, the town transforms into a bustling tent city known as the Brimfield Antique Flea Market. The market dates back to the 1950s and today boasts over 250,000 visitors, stretching half a mile down Route 20. The next show will run July 11 to July 16. At a market like this, the stuff comes with stories, and NEXT producer Andrea Muraskin found plenty on her visit last September. Be sure to check out the slideshow below. About NEXT NEXT is produced at WNPR. Host: John Dankosky Producer: Andrea Muraskin Executive Producer: Catie Talarski Digital Content Manager/Editor: Heather Brandon Contributors to this episode: Emily Corwin, Alexandra Oshinskie, and Diane Orson Music: Todd Merrell, Lightning on a Blue Sky by Twin Musicom, New England by Goodnight Blue Moon, “Family and Genus” by Shakey Graves, “The Mountain” by the Heartless Bastards, “A Hard Day’s Night” by the Beatles Get all the NEXT episodes. We appreciate your feedback! Send praise, critique, suggestions, questions, story leads, and pictures of your own flea market finds to next@wnpr.org.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Shopping for vintage items is something that is so fun! You never know what your will find when you go to a thrift store. It’s truly a treasure hunt. Vintage things can be found so many places, including consignment stores, thrift stores, garage sales, estate sales, antique auctions, flea markets, and antique shops. One place Anita recommends you shop is at THE ROUND TOP ANTIQUE SHOW also known as ANTIQUE WEEK. It actually lasts 2 to 3 weeks. Get the scoop HERE. Other venues mentioned were BRIMFIELD and the ROSE BOWL ANTIQUE FLEA MARKET. Use this website to find an antique auction near you HERE. Shop Olde Orange CA vintage shops with Kelly HERE. Our featured blogger today is Lory from DESIGNTHUSIASM. Go check out her gorgeous style! Anita mentioned her shop CEDAR HILL FARMHOUSE that you can find HERE. Get your own Decorating Tips and Tricks mug HERE. Have a moment to subscribe rate & review our podcast? Awesome – thx! Do it HERE. Subscribing means you’ll never miss an episode. Rating & reviewing let’s know how we are doing. And you can call us @ 323 480-4408 we’d love to hear from you! You can suggest a topic for us to cover or ask a question. XOXO, Anita, Yvonne, and Kelly The post Episode 34: How to Shop For Vintage appeared first on Decorating Tips and Tricks.
In the 1950s, the automobile was king. A new federal highway system and dreams of “urban renewal” took hold. But many of those highways are now broken and in need of repair. This hour, we look into what's behind the rebuild of one important New England interstate, and we remember the communities we lost during the urban renewal era, including one city's Little Italy. Later this hour, we discuss the important issues heading into this election for three New England states. And at New England’s biggest flea market, NEXT producer Andrea Muraskin finds that the people are as fascinating as the stuff on display. Getting There We've been closely watching proposals to build new high speed rail through the region. New routes could drastically reduce travel times between Boston and New York and points south. The Federal Railroad Administration has been considering three plans with a variety of old and new pathways for the trains. A decision on a preferred route is expected sometime this fall. A map of a portion of the National Railroad Administration’s plan for the Northeast Corridor shows a proposed line (in purple) that would run through the city center of Old Lyme, Connecticut. (Credit: Federal Railroad Administration) Emails obtained by a group opposing a route through the coastal town of Old Lyme, Connecticut seem to show that the FRA has had a preferred route for a while… and yes, it's the one that goes through that town. We speak with New London Day reporter Kimberly Drelich, who has has been covering the story. In New England, Interstate 84 is well known and, well, hated. One of the reasons for that hatred is a short stretch that cuts right through the heart of Hartford, Connecticut. When I-84 was built, it caused two big problems. First, it meant that all the interstate traffic was bottle-necked onto a twisting, turning, elevated roadway, with a series of complicated on and off ramps infusing new traffic into the mix, commuters, delivery trucks — locals just trying to get across town. The I-84 Viaduct cuts right through downtown Hartford. Credit Ryan Caron King/WNPR The second problem is a common one. When highways were built right through cities in the middle of the 20th Century, they destroyed neighborhoods, and physically separated communities. For an example of what this looks like, read Ryan Caron King’s story about a historic home that was spared the wrecking ball, but not the highway noise. But how to fix the problem? We speak with Norm Garrick, a professor of civil engineering at the University of Connecticut, and author of a recent Citylab article about Rochester, New York's attempt to fix a 1950s planning disaster. We also learn the story of Portland, Maine’s Little Italy. It was one of many neighborhoods across America that was demolished as a result of urban renewal. The federal program introduced after World War II aimed to clear cities of so-called slums and blighted areas, making way for improved infrastructure and commercial development. Producer Georgia Moodie has our story. CT/RI/VT Elections Roundtable Remember those days when we used to talk about issues during a political campaign? Yeah, us neither. That’s why we wanted to sit down with smart political observers from around New England to talk about the big issues facing their states this year. From WNPR in Connecticut, Colin McEnroe from The Colin McEnroe Show and The Wheelhouse joins us. From Rhode Island Public Radio’s Political Roundtable, Maureen Moakley chimes in, and so does Vermont Public Radio capital bureau reporter Peter Hirschfeld. Brimfield A lobster made from horseshoes at the Brimfield Antiques Flea Market (Credit: Ziwei Zhang) In the 1954 film Brigadoon, the protagonists discover a magical village that only appears for one day every hundred years. Brimfield, Massachusetts is kind of like that. The town only has about 3,500 permanent residents. But for a week in each of May, July, and September, the town transforms into a bustling tent city known as the Brimfield Antique Flea Market. The market dates back to the 1950s and today boasts over 250,000 visitors, stretching half a mile down Route 20. At a market like this, the stuff comes with stories, and NEXT producer Andrea Muraskin found plenty on her visit over the weekend. About NEXT NEXT is produced at WNPR. Host: John Dankosky Producer: Andrea Muraskin Executive Producer: Catie Talarski Digital Content Manager/Editor: Heather Brandon Contributors to this episode: Jill Kaufman, Shannon Dooling, and Jennifer Mitchell Music: Todd Merrell, Lightning on a Blue Sky by Twin Musicom, New England by Goodnight Blue Moon Get all the NEXT episodes. We appreciate your feedback! Send praise, critique, suggestions, questions, story leads, and pictures of your own flea market finds to next@wnpr.org.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Main Show is back in black with guest Fred Coleman in studio in a cowboy hat with hosts Sean, Paul, and Bob along for the ride. We talk living in Detroit, and the cover band vs DJ war. Plus! We brought down the chief of Brimfield. This weeks episode is sponsored by: Amazon | Basement Comedy Show
A chat with app developer, Ryan Servant, who offers the Brimfield Flea Finder free to the antique show attendees, listen in to all the brilliant benefits of use, including finding pieces, the facilities/food and more.…
Thank you for downloading episode five. A simple multitrack from Consider The Source's late night unannounced acoustic set at the Disc Jam festival in Brimfield, MA. Featuring Jeff Mann on drums and percussion, Gabriel Marin various stringed instruments, and John Ferrara on other various stringed instruments.
Martin joins Cari Cucksey of HGTV’s Cash & Cari for a fun sit-down at the Brimfield Antique show. Check out: http://www.repurposeshop.com…
An interview with the Eggheads of Brimfield, IL!