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Discover Lafayette welcomes Hans Nelsen, known on air as “Fast,” who co-hosts the morning show on Big 102.1 from 6:00 to 10:00 a.m. each weekday with CJ Clements. Pictured are CJ Clements and “Fast” (Hans Nelson), co-hosts of Big 102.1’s Morning Show Hans has been on the air in South Louisiana since 1985, starting as a USL student working the graveyard shift at a new urban contemporary station and going on to serve as on-air talent, program director, account executive, and sales manager at several top local stations. He also spent years as a stadium voice and play-by-play broadcaster, and his career has become intertwined with the story of local broadcasting in Acadiana. Hans was joined by his lifelong friend Sean Trcalek, General Manager of KATC TV-3, who was once known on radio as “Charlie Roberts.” The two reminisce about their early days as radio co-hosts and their lifelong friendship. Early Love of Music and the Magic of Radio Hans grew up in a home filled with very different kinds of music, from German organ to big show tunes, and a little boy's transistor radio became his portal to the wider world of sound. He recalls: “I grew up in a household where my dad listened to German organ music and would play it throughout the house on Sunday afternoons. We had to listen to it whether we wanted to or not. My mom was really into big show tunes. ‘I’m Gonna Wash That Man Right Out of My Hair” and “The Sound of Music.” But his own soundtrack lived on his bike: “As a little boy, I had a transistor radio that I taped to the handlebars of my bike, and I would listen to top 40 in one way or another. 1972.” He loved the Eagles, Fleetwood Mac, and pop hits like “Billy, Don’t Be a Hero.” As he got older, he says, “I really wanted to be a musician, and I wanted to be a singer, and I can’t really do any of that. I can play a little guitar, but radio was this next opportunity, though I didn’t really know you could turn it into a career. I just thought it would be something I did for fun.” Learning Radio on the Graveyard Shift Hans' first job was at an urban contemporary station, Foxy 106.3 (KFXZ). Growing up in New Iberia, he already knew some of the music: “It’s funny, you could be a rock guy, but also listen to the Gap Band and Kool and the Gang.” Even so, he had to go deeper into that catalog for a targeted audience: “This was deeper and a more targeted ethnic audience. But it was a piece of cake, because I loved music.” Being alone on the air at night was intimidating: “Well, I’d listen to so much radio. You try to imitate or emulate Casey Kasem, but I was so terrible. The fact that they let me stay past the first night…It was the middle of the night miracle.” He also remembers the mind games of that lonely studio: “You’re in a room by yourself and you can play mind games because you can either convince yourself that no one hears you, or that everyone’s listening. That one mistake, everybody’s going to hear it.” Hustling Through College Radio and 24-Hour Weekends Still in school, Hans got a weekend job at KVOL (1330 AM) and was quickly recruited by KSMB: “On my second shift, Scott Seagraves called me from KSMB and said, I’m listening to you. Do you want to come work for me?” He was “so hungry” to be on the air that he took on extraordinary hours. ““I would do six to noon on KSMB on Saturday and Sunday, and quickly added noon to six on weekends at KXKW. So, I worked 24 hours in two days and worked at a bar both nights. But I knew that I had the bug, and I turn it into a job!” That building is where he and Sean first truly connected and eventually became a morning team: “And Sean comes into that building, we end up being the morning team and here we are.” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y1XZVTbmikg Teaming Up with Sean: Voices, Characters, and Parodies Sean came in as a young newsreader, hired to do newscasts in the morning and afternoon. Their chemistry led to a two-man show that blurred the lines between straight news and wild characters. Sean explains: “It started as you and Debbie Ray and me in news. Well, when Debbie left, it was you and me doing news. And I think it was just kind of like. Why do we need a third guy? You know, I still did the newscast, but it was a two man show.” Hans recalls the “credibility issue”: “Sean's doing the ‘17 people were killed today' delivering the news and then he’s doing this crazy voice five minutes later and people knew it was the same guy. But we somehow just moved past that.” The two displayed a gift for spontaneous skits and song parodies: “We both could really rewrite song lyrics. We could make custom versions of big songs at the time. Remember Michael Johnson's ‘Give me wings, gimme wings.” It would end up, “Don’t give me legs. Breasts or thighs!” Hans says the creativity often felt effortless. “What was special about us? A special talent we both had was that there was no prep. We would sometimes do stuff and turn the microphone off. We’d look at each other thinking, that’s good. How did we just do that?” Hans Nelson (‘Fast’) and Sean Trcalek (‘Charlie Roberts’) pictured early in their broadcasting careers on the radio together. They have remained close friends over the decades. Humor, Changing Sensibilities, and Wanting Everyone to Feel Welcome Looking back at their 1980s material, Hans is candid about how much humor standards have changed: “Yeah, it was humor, but let’s just say sensibilities are different, right?” He offered a vivid analogy from pro wrestling to show how certain stereotypes were once normalized and now are not: “The character development in the 70s and 80s was the Iranian guy or the Nazi guy was the bad guy. It was what they did. You just don’t do that now, right?” Hans shared his personal compass: “I always wanted everybody to like me. I need as many listeners as I can get. They don’t have to look like me. They don’t have to vote like me. They don’t have to drive the same kind of car as me. But I want everybody to say, ‘I like listening to that guy on the radio.” Music, Memory, and Nostalgia of Radio For both Hans and Sean, music is deeply emotional and geographically specific; certain songs instantly bring them back to particular corners of their childhoods. Hans shared, “Some songs. What I’ve always been amazed by is when you hear a song and it brings you to a specific place. I mean, like a certain corner in your hometown and you’re like, why am I thinking of that when I hear Sammy John's “Chevy Van?” He offers another vivid memory: “Saturday in the Park by Chicago reminds me of standing in line at Saint Edward’s Catholic School for the cafeteria. I don’t know why.” Becoming “Fast Eddie” and Then Simply “Fast” A big turning point came when KSMB's sister station needed a music director and night disc jockey. The job came with a new name Hans disliked: “They tell me, your name is going to be Fast Eddie.” He tried to negotiate the name away, but wouldn't get the job if he didn't accept the on-air name. KSMB was too big to walk away from: Later, when he was put in charge of a new station and morning show, he pushed to shorten the name: “When we put the morning show on, it was the rude awakening with ‘Fast Eddie and Rob.' We could have done it. It just didn’t sound right. Fast is a speed, not a name, but it ended up being I can’t go anywhere and people yell it out like it’s normal. When I hear Hans, it’s heartwarming. I love being Hans, I wish I could be Hans on air.” The Power and Future of Local Broadcasting Both Hans and Sean describe themselves first and foremost as broadcasters: “What we have always had in common and still have in common is we’re broadcasters. People say, what do you do? I don’t say I’m the general manager of a TV station, or I’m a broadcaster. We’re local broadcasters and we’re passionate about it. We have been since the day we met, and to this day, we’re passionate about the impact that local radio and television can have on a market.” For Hans, that impact includes everything from playing nostalgia-filled music to public service in storms: “By impact, I mean moving people. When you play music, when you tell them what the weather’s going to be like, but also telling people where to go pick up sandbags.” Hans reminds us, “During a hurricane, we’re still the last man standing. TV stations may go down… but I have been on the air during hurricanes when I was the only voice available on the air in this market.” Sean highlights the advocacy role broadcasters have played in keeping AM radio in cars: “We are big advocates, and were successful this past year in advocating that automakers continue to be required to put AM radios in new cars. The reason to keep AM radio is that its infrastructure often remains operational when power grids fail and cell networks are overloaded or damaged, providing a core part of the Emergency Alert System (EAS). During events like hurricanes, AM stations became the primary way people received verified, real-time information, coordinated help, and connected with the outside world when phones and internet were down. They both reject the idea that streaming will wipe out local media: Hans says, “I’ll wrap that up with saying, Satellite radio and Netflix are not going to mean the end of local radio and local TV.” A Morning Show Today: Competing With Phones, Not Just Stations Hans reflects on what it's like doing a local morning show in 2020s Lafayette: “Technologically, it’s very different. Audience participation and reception is very different. We compete with many more things. I believe my biggest competitor in drive time is the telephone.” Listeners no longer call to check school closures, they get texts, but live local radio still plays a crucial role, especially in emergencies. Hans and his long-time friend CJ now host a show built on deep local roots: “We put this show together with almost a hundred years of Lafayette radio experience in one room for four hours a morning. There’s nothing that has happened here since the 60s that we don’t know about. We know where every street is. We know where the schools are. We know it. To me, it is a gift.” Big 102.1 has embraced app listening while staying “radio-first”: “On big 102.1, we've had over 1,000,000 hours of listening on our app. We’re still a radio station first. So if that many people are listening, that’s why we’re still effective… we do everything we can to stay connected to the audience, to do relevant things, provide relevant content and make it fun.” Voice of the Ragin' Cajuns From 2009 to 2017, Hans served as the stadium voice for UL Lafayette football and basketball, a role that grew out of his lifelong fandom: “I was such a fan. I was a Ragin Cajun as a kid. I wasn’t an LSU kid or a Tulane kid. It was USL.” Eventually, security protocols and family priorities pushed him to step away so he could watch games in the stands with his daughter: “Because of security protocol, she could not come in the press box. So when it was my weekend, I lost the whole Saturday and I said I would rather be in the stands with her watching the game.” His last act as stadium voice was a memorable one: “So my last duty was to introduce Billy Napier as the head coach. And I resigned that day.” Christian's Story, Organ Donation, and a Legacy of Life In one of the most moving parts of our conversation, Hans shares the story of his son Christian, who died after a workplace accident in 2013. Christian fell from a picker truck in a warehouse, and although doctors did everything they could, the injury was catastrophic. “He fell 20 feet. When you say 20 feet, you think broken ankle, maybe broken arm, but somehow, on the way down, his feet hit the forklift and flipped him. And he landed on his head.” At the hospital, after a brief brain surgery, the doctor came in and said, “Call your family.” When representatives from Louisiana Organ Procurement Agency arrived, Hans initially felt overwhelmed and resistant: “I’m like, heck no, I’m dealing with too much.” His ex-wife, Jenn, reminded him of Christian's own wishes when he got his license. “She said he would want to do it because he asked about it when he got his driver’s license.” That decision changed everything; “I realized he was going to save somebody’s life. We ended up saving four lives and it was life changing for us.” Christian's heart went to a teenage male that had been waiting for a heart for 18 months with time running out. Christian's right kidney and pancreas went to a female in her 30s. His liver went to a female in her 40s, and his left kidney went to a little boy. His corneas were donated, which gave sight to 2 people. Hans began speaking to civic groups and driver's ed classes about organ donation: “We would tell kids at Driver’s Ed like, they’re going to ask you about this when you get your license, you should know what it means. Most people can’t be an organ donor, even if they want to. You have to die a certain way.” He and Jenn started the Christian's Legacy Foundation to create awareness of the importance of organ donation and to provide support to donor families. Stories of other young donors continue to touch him deeply: “All these years later, those stories touch me in a different way. And I would not have read that story the same way had I not gone through that.” Is Broadcasting Still a Good Career? Asked if he would still recommend a career in broadcasting, Hans doesn't hesitate, though he acknowledges the landscape has changed: “I’m always going to recommend a career in broadcast. Sean explains that media sales in particular remain a strong path, even as technology and products evolve: “Your competition is different. Your products might be different. But of all we do, that’s probably changed the least.” There are fewer jobs, but better pay and more efficiency: “KATC had 100 employees not long ago. Our building was built for 120 people and we’ve got 52 now. And it’s not just because of efficiencies. Our cameras are robotic now Hans still longs to see young people with the same hunger he and Sean had: “I would love to see some young person who was like me or Sean who was willing to work 24 hours in two days when I was at KSMB. They fired the janitor, and for nine months I cleaned the building every night after I did my show, because I wanted them to see that I was willing to do anything to make it. And that’s not beneath me.” Through stories of late-night graveyard shifts, irreverent morning shows, hurricane coverage, stadium announcing, heartbreaking loss, and renewed purpose, Hans Nelson, “Fast,” reminds us why local broadcasting still matters. As he and Sean put it, they are, above all, local broadcasters, passionate about “the impact that local radio and television can have on a market” and the ways music, stories, and community can move people. You can contact Hans Nelson at Fast@big1021.com.
In this episode of FYI, ARK's Brett Winton and Charlie Roberts speak with Dmitry Shevelenko, Chief Business Officer at Perplexity, about the company's evolving role in the future of the agentic internet. They discuss how Perplexity is carving out its place in the AI ecosystem—not as just a wrapper, but as a full-stack answer engine built for research, action, and trust. Dmitry outlines how Perplexity balances product excellence, model orchestration, and subscription alignment to serve both consumers and enterprises. He also highlights the team's bold vision for Comet, their AI-native web browser, and how it fits into a future shaped by AI agents and voice interfaces.Key Points From This Episode:00:00:00 How Perplexity positions itself within the AI assistant landscape—and what makes it stand out to ARK.00:02:37 Why the analyst team prefers Perplexity for researching earnings calls, transcripts, and filings.00:03:58 Dmitry explains why only a few agentic AI systems may dominate—and why productization still matters.00:06:10 The team discusses Perplexity's potential for rapid user growth and why context portability may remain limited.00:07:51 How the agentic internet could reshape browsing—and why half of current screen time may be up for automation.00:09:33 A breakdown of Perplexity's monetization strategy, centered on consumer and enterprise subscriptions.00:12:28 Why the company avoids ad-based business models in favor of long-term trust alignment with users.00:13:17 Introducing Pro Perks: how Perplexity returns affiliate value to users instead of monetizing with ads.00:14:28 The vision of a future where your personal agent negotiates on your behalf with merchants' AI agents.00:15:43 Why link-based performance advertising is vulnerable in an agentic world—and which ad models might persist.00:18:10 Charles on building trust and resisting “sycophantic” behavior in AI agents.00:19:47 Perplexity's view that the same AI assistant can serve both personal and professional needs.00:22:12 How Comet, the new Perplexity browser, lets agents perform real-world actions—like buying books and managing LinkedIn.00:26:00 The team explores how reduced friction leads to increased curiosity and new behaviors online.00:28:15 Brett asks how browser context, data, and distribution contribute to Perplexity's strategy and the Chrome bid.00:30:08 How voice interfaces may disrupt browsing—and how Perplexity is preparing for that shift.00:32:18 Why big companies struggle with probabilistic AI outputs—and how that limits speaker adoption.00:34:06 On mobile, Perplexity aims for deeper OS integration beyond just launching a mobile browser.00:35:18 When asked about BCI, Charles emphasizes staying agile over trying to predict distant tech horizons.00:37:04 Why Perplexity focuses on augmenting human curiosity—rather than chasing AGI or superintelligence.00:38:15 Perplexity's role in debugging and breaking through AI tool limitations—rather than generating code.00:40:01 Charles responds to “just a wrapper” critiques, explaining Perplexity's orchestration layer and search infra.00:43:13 Execution velocity as a cultural differentiator—and why adaptability is key to Perplexity's growth.
En 2005, en Wisconsin, EE. UU., un joven llamado Charlie Roberts atacó una escuela causando la muerte de varias niñas. Lo que conmovió al mundo fue la respuesta de los padres de las víctimas. Ellos visitaron a la familia del agresor para consolarla y la invitaron al funeral de sus hijas. Uno de los padres declaró: “Perdonamos, porque nosotros también hemos sido perdonados”. Ese acto no fue débil, sino profundamente cristiano. Mostró que el perdón no minimiza el dolor, pero sí maximiza la gracia. En la cruz, el Señor Jesús oró por sus agresores. Por lo tanto, perdón no es olvidar lo ocurrido, sino decidir no ser esclavo del rencor. Es liberar al otro... y liberarte a ti. Tal vez tú también debes tomar esa decisión hoy. El perdón que das puede ser el inicio de la sanidad que necesitas. La Biblia dice en Efesios 4:32: “...perdonándoos unos a otros, como Dios también os perdonó a vosotros en Cristo” (RV1960).
En 2005, en Wisconsin, EE. UU., un joven llamado Charlie Roberts atacó una escuela causando la muerte de varias niñas. Lo que conmovió al mundo fue la respuesta de los padres de las víctimas. Ellos visitaron a la familia del agresor para consolarla y la invitaron al funeral de sus hijas. Uno de los padres declaró: “Perdonamos, porque nosotros también hemos sido perdonados”.Ese acto no fue débil, sino profundamente cristiano. Mostró que el perdón no minimiza el dolor, pero sí maximiza la gracia.En la cruz, el Señor Jesús oró por sus agresores. Por lo tanto, perdón no es olvidar lo ocurrido, sino decidir no ser esclavo del rencor. Es liberar al otro... y liberarte a ti.Tal vez tú también debes tomar esa decisión hoy. El perdón que das puede ser el inicio de la sanidad que necesitas. La Biblia dice en Efesios 4:32: “...perdonándoos unos a otros, como Dios también os perdonó a vosotros en Cristo” (RV1960).
Retired Criminal Investigator Charlie Roberts shares his journey from a life of crime to becoming an undercover cop. In this episode, Charlie talks about the decisions that led him down a criminal path, what motivated him to turn his life around, and how he worked as an undercover officer. He provides insight into the challenges, risks, and lessons learned from living on both sides of the law. #ExCriminal #UndercoverCop #CrimeToJustice #RedemptionStory #UndercoverLife #TrueCrime #LawEnforcement #TransformationJourney Hosted, Executive Produced & Edited By Ian Bick: https://www.instagram.com/ian_bick/?hl=en https://ianbick.com/ Connect with Charlie Roberts: https://www.linkedin.com/in/charles-roberts-jr-74938b90/ Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@ProbationOfficersPerspective Presented by Tyson 2.0 & Wooooo Energy: https://tyson20.com/ https://woooooenergy.com/ Buy Merch: https://www.ianbick.com/shop Use code lockedin at checkout to get 20% off your order Timestamps: 00:00:00 Journey from Ohio to Locked In 00:06:55 Impact of Father's Absence on Family Dynamics 00:11:06 Early Influence and First Experiences with Substances 00:16:27 Expulsion and School Struggles 00:21:47 Unlikely Friendship with a Bully 00:27:24 The Path of Influence and Choices 00:33:29 Teenage Drama and Legal Troubles 00:38:52 Arrest and Bail Story 00:44:43 Turning Life Around After Incarceration 00:49:54 Unexpected Summer in Ohio 00:56:00 Challenges with Gun Purchases and Felony Records 01:01:15 Undercover Operations: Tricks of the Trade 01:07:06 Transitioning to a Felony Probation Officer 01:12:46 Unusual Court Case and Probation Turmoil 01:18:23 Caught in a Personal and Professional Dilemma 01:24:25 Overcoming Addiction: A Personal Journey 01:29:49 Community Support and Resources Powered by: Just Media House : https://www.justmediahouse.com/ Creative direction, design, assets, support by FWRD: https://www.fwrd.co Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this episode of FYI, Brett Winton and Charlie Roberts sit down with Sean McClain, CEO and founder of Absci, and Andreas Busch, Absci's Chief Innovation Officer, to explore how AI is transforming drug discovery and development, particularly in the biologic space. Sean shares how Absci is using AI to tackle the design problem in drug discovery, unlocking new possibilities for "undruggable" targets. Andreas provides insights into the challenges of translating these advancements into real-world therapies, drawing from his deep experience in Big Pharma. Together, they discuss the role of AI in reducing the time and cost of developing new therapies and its potential to reshape the pharmaceutical landscape.Key Points From This Episode:The role of AI in addressing previously "undruggable" targets like GPCRs and ion channels.How Absci's AI-driven approach has shifted from synthetic biology to designing antibodies and biologics for drug discovery.The importance of leveraging partnerships with pharma companies like AstraZeneca and Merck to unlock novel biology.Andreas Busch's transition from Big Pharma to Absci, emphasizing how smaller biotech companies attract top talent and foster innovation.AI's role in shortening drug development timelines and reducing costs, allowing companies like Absci to develop differentiated assets faster.The blend of best-in-class and first-in-class strategies in Absci's portfolio, balancing risks in novel biology and proven therapeutic areas.How AI models are used to design antibodies with specific affinities and predict drug candidates, a first in antibody drug design.The critical role of integrating domain expertise, such as Andreas's experience in drug development, into AI-driven drug discovery.Insights on the future of AI in biology, predicting targets, epitopes, and potential breakthroughs in drug development.The importance of talent and culture in building cutting-edge biotech companies.s.
Superintendent Mark Ernst (Tooele County School District) and Charlie Roberts (Assistant Coach for Tooele High School) join Utah's First Lady, Abby Cox to talk about many of the challenges that teachers face nowadays, how social media has impacted the classroom, and the impact that Unified Sports has had on the schools throughout Tooele County. Then Superintendent Ernst talks about the inclusion that has come with the introduction of Unified Sports, bridging the differences between regular and special ed experiences in the classroom, and the lifelong friendships that are built through Unified Sports. Related Links Special Olympics Utah: https://sout.org/
@FootballChatbox and Charlie Roberts from @fpladdicts discuss the events of #gw17, in particular the array of clean sheets. They also consider the best differentials and captaincy for #gw18. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━ ✔️ Subscribe to the channel: https://bit.ly/3yg0I28 ━━━━━━━━━━━━━ All our video content is also available as audio only, on Spotify, Apple, or anywhere else you get your podcasts https://linktr.ee/FantasyFootballScout ━━━━━━━━━━━━━ ✍️ Win at FPL: Click here to sign up for a FFScout Membership - http://bit.ly/FFSYouTubeMembership ━━━━━━━━━━━━━ Follow Fantasy Football Scout:
It's another edition of LIVE from Imperial series on Talking Buffalo, this time with Patrick Moran joined by former Buffalo Bills great Stevie Johnson for a conversation recorded live at Imperial Pizza centered on the children's book he's co-authored called "Freddy J Makes his Play" as well as what Buffalo means to him alongside other topics. Book co-author and friend of podcast Charlie Roberts is also featured on the show. The guys talk about launching their second children's book in a little under a year--- the premise of this book inspired by Stevie's former Bills teammate Fred Jackson and pertaining to overcoming obstacles in becoming a fan favorite and building his legacy. They discuss the fun/grind that comes with promoting a book as well Stevie feeling like a Buffalonian, his feels towards the fan base that has given him so much, a look into the offensive additions the current team has added and of course, their takes on the food at Imperial Pizza. You can order Freddy J Makes His Play several ways, including Amazon by clicking here. Thank you again to Imperial Pizza (1035 Abbott) for hosting this live series and providing killer pizza & wings! ♦♦♦♦♦ Follow Patrick Moran/Talking Buffalo Podcast Substack: Patrick Moran's Substack Twitter: @PatMoranTweets. Facebook: Talking Buffalo Podcast YouTube: Talking Buffalo Podcast YouTube Channel Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ryan @Ryan_ms28 is your host of Scout the Gameweek, a series where we assess the previous gameweek and what we can learn ahead of the coming fixtures. Joined by Charlie Roberts(@chazaroberts) and Reidy(@FPLAddictsReidy) ✔️ Subscribe to the channel: https://bit.ly/3yg0I28 ━━━━━━━━━━━━━ All our video content is also available as audio only, on Spotify, Apple, or anywhere else you get your podcasts https://linktr.ee/FantasyFootballScout ━━━━━━━━━━━━━ ✍️ Be Better at FPL: Click here to sign up for a FFScout Membership - http://bit.ly/FFSYouTubeMembership ━━━━━━━━━━━━━ Follow Fantasy Football Scout:
Ryan @Ryan_ms28 is your host of Scout the Gameweek, a series where we assess the previous gameweek and what we can learn ahead of the coming fixtures. Joined by Charlie Roberts (@chazaroberts), Reidy (@FPLAddictsReidy) and Oliver Walker-Peel (@FPLAddicts_OWP) ━━━━━━━━━━━━ #FPL #FantasyPremierLeague #PremierLeague #gw26 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
As the year comes to an end, we would like to thank everyone who listened to the FYI — For Your Innovation podcast. In this final episode of 2022, we compiled some of our most interesting podcast episodes for you. Please enjoy this summary and tune back in when we return in 2023. 1. Space, Business, and the Business of Space with Jared Isaacman from Shift4 Payments (Ep. 127) Chief Futurist Brett Winton and Autonomous and Robotics Director of Research Sam Korus interview Shift4 Payments CEO and Chairman Jared Isaacman. Brett, Sam and Jared discussed the Polaris Dawn mission, Jared's passion for spaceflight to further human space exploration, and some of the tangible philosophies that he took from SpaceX. (Listen to the full episode) 2. The Future of Web3 Games and Digital Ownership with Polygon Studios CEO Ryan Wyatt (Ep. 146) Next Generation Internet Director of Research Frank Downing and Associate Portfolio Manager Nick Grous sit down with Polygon Studios CEO Ryan Wyatt to unpack The Future of Web3 Games and Digital Ownership. Ryan also comments more generally on the buy-in to decentralization, interoperability concerns, and his perspective on the realities of the metaverse. (Listen to the full episode) 3. Personalizing Private Wealth with Titan CEOs Joe Percoco and Clay Gardner (Ep. 151) Analysts Max Friedrich and William Summerlin talk to Titan co-Founders and co-CEOs Joe Percoco and Clay Gardner about their mission to personalize private wealth. In that episode, you'll hear how Joe and Clay met and founded their online investment platform, their mission and vision, how they remove the ‘middleman' in hedge-fund-like investing and more. (Listen to the full episode) 4. Breaking Down Biotech Innovations with Dr. Bob Langer (Ep. 156) Analyst Ali Urman and ARK advisor Dr. Charlie Roberts are joined by MIT professor, chemical engineer, scientist, inventor, and investor Dr. Bob Langer. Dr. Langer has over 1,400 granted or pending patents, has been cited 374,000 times and counting, and was a co-founder of Moderna. In the episode, Ali, Dr. Langer and Dr. Roberts discuss emerging biotechnologies, the potential of artificial intelligence (AI) in healthcare and potential time-to-market accelerators for new therapies and vaccines. (Listen to the full episode) 5. Innovation is the Ultimate Leveler with Steve Case (Ep. 164) Steve is one of America's most renowned entrepreneurs as a co-founder of America Online (AOL). Currently, Steve serves as chairman and CEO of Revolution LLC, which focuses on investing in the next generation of founders, especially in the 47 states outside of California, New York and Massachusetts. In the episode, Steve and our CEO Cathie Wood discuss why he thinks entrepreneurs are vital, the value of research toward innovation, why Steve thinks you should be optimistic for the future of America. (Listen to the full episode) “Check out the FYI – For Your Innovation Podcast ‘Best of 2022'. Because investing in innovation starts with understanding it. #FYIpodcast”
Today's guest is MIT professor, chemical engineer, scientist, inventor, and investor Dr. Bob Langer. Dr. Langer has over 1,400 granted or pending patents and has been cited 374,000 times (and counting)! As a co-founder of Moderna, he has great insights into the potential of mRNA to treat diseases of various descriptions. Joining us to pick this extraordinary mind is clinically trained entrepreneur, Dr. Charlie Roberts. In this conversation, we discuss emerging biotechnologies, the potential of artificial intelligence (AI) in this space, as well as what might be attributed to the current downturn of the market. Dr. Langer lists potential time-to-market accelerators for new therapies and vaccines and shares his advice for those looking to make an impact from an academic and/or entrepreneurial standpoint. Tune in to hear more about the innovations Dr. Langer has been involved in over the years, and what we can look forward to in the future! “I don't see much limit in terms of what messenger RNA can be used to treat.” — Dr. Bob Langer Key Points From This Episode: Dr. Bob Langer highlights his favorite patent. Dr. Langer's career achievements. Some factors impacting the current biotech market downturn. The correlation between magic and science. What mRNA is and why it's an ideal candidate for treating disease. The personalized cancer vaccines Merck and Moderna are currently developing. Under what circumstances mRNA isn't the solution. The emerging biotechnologies Dr. Langer is most excited about. The applications of organs on a chip. The potential of AI in the biotech space. Potential time-to-market accelerators for new therapies and vaccines. How to make an impact in the academic and entrepreneurial biotech spaces. The importance of understanding intellectual property. The team aspect of innovation. Dr. Langer's tales of perseverance. Strategies for enforcing IPs. Dr. Langer's delivery expertise. How he's balanced his work and family life over the years.
**It's The Relax With Rendell Show Replay On Trax FM & Rendell Radio. Rendell Featured Boogie, Dance Classics, Contemporary Soul & Easy Listening From Benita, Blackbyrds, Charlie Roberts, Dayton, Empress, Fragrance, Garcia Walker & Durrell, Larry Dixon, Players Association & Chic, Sun, THS, Wayne Gibson, Shirley Bassey & More. Catch Rendell Every Saturday From 8PM UK Time The Stations: Trax FM & Rendell Radio #traxfm #rendellradio #soul #funk #70ssoul #80ssoul #60s #boogie #disco #raregrooves #soulclassics #reggae #nusoul #relaxwithrendell Listen Live Here Via The Trax FM Player: chat.traxfm.org/player/index.html Mixcloud LIVE :mixcloud.com/live/traxfm Free Trax FM Android App: play.google.com/store/apps/det...mradio.ba.a6bcb The Trax FM Facebook Page : facebook.com/original103.3 Trax FM Live On Hear This: hearthis.at/k8bdngt4/live Tunerr: tunerr.co/radio/Trax-FM Tune In Radio : tunein.com/radio/Trax-FM-s225176 OnLine Radio Box: onlineradiobox.com/uk/trax/?cs...cs=uk.traxRadio Radio Deck: radiodeck.com/radio/5a09e2de87...7e3370db06d44dc Radio.Net: traxfmlondon.radio.net Stream Radio : streema.com/radios/Trax_FM..The_Originals Live Online Radio: liveonlineradio.net/english/tr...ax-fm-103-3.htm**
How many good movies are there about eugenics? Well... we hate to say it, but at least one. 1997's sci-fi drama, Gattica, is a beautiful and thoughtful piece that is still relevant today. But it still has it's issues. Guest R.C. (Charlie) Roberts returns to "abuse the listener" with us. Join the conversation! YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC0S0bYgLw1LhbFActubC8_A Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheseAreBadMovies/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thesearebadmovies/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/these_bad
How many good movies are there about eugenics? Well... we hate to say it, but at least one. 1997's sci-fi drama, Gattica, is a beautiful and thoughtful piece that is still relevant today. But it still has it's issues. Guest R.C. (Charlie) Roberts returns to "abuse the listener" with us.
How many good movies are there about eugenics? Well... we hate to say it, but at least one. 1997's sci-fi drama, Gattica, is a beautiful and thoughtful piece that is still relevant today. But it still has it's issues. Guest R.C. (Charlie) Roberts returns to "abuse the listener" with us.
Two man episode this week with one man missing in action. Still a big show with a couple of guests including Saints man Charlie Roberts and Carlton man James Delutis. We chat through all the COVID latest whilst also going through the Euro Final earlier this week.
Recorded 12/31/2020 On this episode Aaron and Zach interviewed Mike and Marron Bingle-Davis via zoom. Mike and Marron are two geologists based in Casper, WY. Mike has experience in uranium mining and other minerals - where Marron has experience in 'traditional' oil and gas development. Produced by Charlie Roberts
Recorded January 2nd 2021. Aaron and Zach had the wonderful oppoutunity to down with Owner/Creator of Maven Massage and Bodywork, Asia Stockwell in their new studio on 5th Street in downtown Sheridan. They learned about all the services that are offered by Maven's amazing staff and Asia's story to running a business in Sheridan. This episode is brought to you by Alphagraphics of Sheridan. Produced by Charlie Roberts (video produced by Austin Akers)
On today's episode of Go Be Wyoming, it's another Business Spotlight with Stephen Mullins of Red Bison Studio. Aaron is joined by Charlie Roberts and they both get to learn a little bit more about Stephen and his business journey into starting up Red Bison Studio! Red Bison Studio: www.redbisonstudio.com This episode is brought to you by Alphagraphics of Sheridan.
The boys are joined by special guest Charlie Roberts to dive through all the key talking points in the AFL world while also reviewing the Round 9 action. Another controversial edition of Last Man Standing while Darcy has the coaches in his sights. Times: 01:03 Charlie Roberts Intro 04:30 Debates and Discussions 10:56 Round 9 Review 17:21 Last Man Standing 21:01 Round 10 Preview 28:19 Darcy's Dive29:05 Big Calls
Charlie Roberts, Head of UK and EU, IDNow (the Wirrall, England, joins Sam Sheen and Marie Lundberg to chat about this company's eKYC technology and the use of live video verification across the Benelux region and beyond, detecting possible duress by IDNow's agents to mitigate the risk of illicit actors pressuring innocent individuals to open accounts on their behalf and why it's best not to include your emotional support alpaca when applying for an online account.
United Through Time looks at Charlie Roberts - the first Manchester United captain to lift a league title.The Darlington-born centre half-back was a footballing pioneer. His style of play on the pitch paved the way for future generations and a new tactical system in football. Off the pitch, he was a key member in the creation of the Players' Union, the predecessor to the PFA.Charlie's impact on football is perhaps greater than any of the other figures to be discussed on this podcast so far. This is his story for United Through Time, the new podcast delving into Manchester United’s long and famous history. Going in chronological order, United Through Time will focus on the most important individuals at the club since Manchester United was founded as Newton Heath in 1878.Hosted by Harry Robinson, five guests are heard on this episode as United Through Time covers far more than just football.Guest One: Ted Roberts - the grandson of Charlie Roberts.Guest Two: Paddy Barclay - the esteemed Scottish author and football journalist who acted as biographer for Sir Matt Busby, Sir Alex Ferguson and Jose Mourinho.Guest Three: Gary James - one of the definitive authorities on Manchester’s football history. His latest book 'The Emergence of Footballing Cultures in Manchester: 1840-1919' is a groundbreaking piece of work published by Manchester University Press. It's available to buy now and is a must-read.Guest Four: Richard Butler - a football journalist who started a campaign in 2015 to get greater recognition for Charlie in his hometown of Darlington.If you enjoy the episode, please take the time to leave us a review on iTunes. You can even do it while you’re listening! You can also follow us on Twitter at @UtdThroughTime or check out our website at unitedthroughtime.comMusic creditsFunkorama by Kevin MacLeodLink: [https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3788-funkorama](https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3788-funkorama)License: [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/](http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)Whimsy Groove by Kevin MacLeodLink: [https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4623-whimsy-groove](https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4623-whimsy-groove)License: [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/](http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)Piano Between by Kevin MacLeodLink: [https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4212-piano-between](https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4212-piano-between)License: [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/](http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)I Knew a Guy by Kevin MacLeodLink: [https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3895-i-knew-a-guy](https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3895-i-knew-a-guy)License: [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/](http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)Immersed by Kevin MacLeodLink: [https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3900-immersed](https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3900-immersed)License: [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/](http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)Modern Jazz Samba by Kevin MacLeodLink: [https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4063-modern-jazz-samba](https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4063-modern-jazz-samba)License: [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/](http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)Others:Leveled UpPictures of the Floating World - Waves See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
United Through Time looks at Charlie Roberts - the first Manchester United captain to lift a league title.The Darlington-born centre half-back was a footballing pioneer. His style of play on the pitch paved the way for future generations and a new tactical system in football. Off the pitch, he was a key member in the creation of the Players' Union, the predecessor to the PFA.Charlie's impact on football is perhaps greater than any of the other figures to be discussed on this podcast so far. This is his story for United Through Time, the new podcast delving into Manchester United’s long and famous history. Going in chronological order, United Through Time will focus on the most important individuals at the club since Manchester United was founded as Newton Heath in 1878.Hosted by Harry Robinson, five guests are heard on this episode as United Through Time covers far more than just football. It’s a three-part episode with each part lasting around 50 minutes.Guest One: Ted Roberts – the grandson of Charlie Roberts.Guest Two: Paddy Barclay – the esteemed Scottish author and football journalist who acted as biographer for Sir Matt Busby, Sir Alex Ferguson and Jose Mourinho.Guest Three: Gary James – one of the definitive authorities on Manchester’s football history. His latest book ‘The Emergence of Footballing Cultures in Manchester: 1840-1919’ is a groundbreaking piece of work published by Manchester University Press. It’s available to buy now and is a must-read.Guest Four: Mark Metcalf – the esteemed football history author who wrote ‘Manchester United 1907-1911, the First Halcyon Years’. You can buy it from Amazon here.Guest Five: Richard Butler – a football journalist who started a campaign in 2015 to get greater recognition for Charlie in his hometown of Darlington.If you enjoy the episode, please take the time to leave us a review on iTunes. You can even do it while you’re listening! You can also follow us on Twitter at @UtdThroughTime or check out our website at unitedthroughtime.comMusic CreditsFrom Chad Crouch: Shipping LanesLoopster by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4991-loopster License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Chill Wave by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3498-chill-wave License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Groove Grove by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3831-groove-grove License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/From ben sound:The Jazz Piano“Songs From the Vault” Fullest Self Slow Moving Landslides Recorded at WISTIA HQ in Cambridge, MA Written, arranged and performed by Dan Mills Engineered, mixed, and mastered by Dan Mills Album art by Michelle Fine See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Charlie Roberts, Lower Susquehanna Synod Director of Faith Formation and Youth Ministry, shares how his personal and communal rhythms embody the fire and water spirituality types, especially during this season. For those desiring to support mission and ministry in Lower Susquehanna Synod, donations can be made online at lss-elca.org
United Through Time looks at Charlie Roberts - the first Manchester United captain to lift a league title.The Darlington-born centre half-back was a footballing pioneer. His style of play on the pitch paved the way for future generations and a new tactical system in football. Off the pitch, he was a key member in the creation of the Players' Union, the predecessor to the PFA.Charlie's impact on football is perhaps greater than any of the other figures to be discussed on this podcast so far. This is his story for United Through Time, the new podcast delving into Manchester United’s long and famous history. Going in chronological order, United Through Time will focus on the most important individuals at the club since Manchester United was founded as Newton Heath in 1878.Hosted by Harry Robinson, five guests are heard on this episode as United Through Time covers far more than just football. It’s a three-part episode with each part lasting around 50 minutes.Guest One: Ted Roberts – the grandson of Charlie Roberts.Guest Two: Paddy Barclay – the esteemed Scottish author and football journalist who acted as biographer for Sir Matt Busby, Sir Alex Ferguson and Jose Mourinho.Guest Three: Gary James – one of the definitive authorities on Manchester’s football history. His latest book ‘The Emergence of Footballing Cultures in Manchester: 1840-1919’ is a groundbreaking piece of work published by Manchester University Press. It’s available to buy now and is a must-read.Guest Four: Mark Metcalf – the esteemed football history author who wrote ‘Manchester United 1907-1911, the First Halcyon Years’. You can buy it from Amazon here.Guest Five: Richard Butler – a football journalist who started a campaign in 2015 to get greater recognition for Charlie in his hometown of Darlington.Iff you enjoy the episode, please take the time to leave us a review on iTunes. You can even do it while you’re listening! You can also follow us on Twitter at @UtdThroughTime or check out our website at unitedthroughtime.com---Music credits“Songs From the Vault”Back and SidesFullest SelfLittle WolfRecorded at WISTIA HQ in Cambridge, MAWritten, arranged and performed by Dan MillsEngineered, mixed, and mastered by Dan MillsAlbum art by Michelle Fine“Sidecar Sessions”MerluzzoInterlaken CrossroadRecorded at Wistia HQ in Cambridge, MassachusettsWritten and arranged by Dan MillsPerformed by Dan MillsEngineered and mixed by Dan MillsMastered by Rob MurrayAlbum art by Billy WoodwardMusic from Ben soundAll ThatThe Jazz PianoOthers:Leveled upThree Kinds of SunSunrise Drive See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Welcome to the ninth episode of Terrace Talk, where we gauge the feeling from the stands by speaking to you, the Norwich City fans. This week Connor Southwell is joined by Jacob Robinson and Charlie Roberts ahead of the away trip to Molineux to take on Wolves. To get in touch with the PinkUn Podcast now and in future, send any comments and questions into the crew with an email to thepinkun@archant.co.uk or get in touch with any of the guys on social media.For all the latest Norwich City news, opinion, words, and video visit: http://www.pinkun.comALSO FIND US AT THE FOLLOWING:Subscribe: https://pinkun.com/podcastTwitter: https://twitter.com/pinkunFacebook: http://fb.me/thepinkunContact: thepinkun@archant.co.uk#NCFC #Norwich #City #NorwichCity #podcast #myNCFC #PremierLeague #EPL #Football #Soccer #EFL #SkyBet #Championship #Canaries #OTBC #pinkun #NorwichCityFC #TerraceTalk #Connor #Southwell #Wolves #Molineux #Traore #Wolverhampton #Wanderers
In this week's episode, we recap last weekends mile race from Minnesota and preview the 2019 season finale at the Meadowlands Mile. We also put in a call to Charlie Roberts to see what the Class of '79 is doing to help our injured riders.
Charlie Roberts is a member of the AMA Pro Flat Track Rookie Class of ’79 and Friends. He began racing at the age of six, won several district 17 titles, finished 3rd in the junior division in 1978, and made the main event at Louisville Downs in his first rookie expert season, and retired from racing in 1984. Now he is a member of the aptly named “AMA Pro Flat Track Rookie Class of ’79 and Friends” charity, who work tirelessly to raise funds for injured AMA Pro Flat Track riders and their families.
08.27.19 | Featuring the following guests: Chris Parrish, Rory O'Neill, Charlie Roberts, Chris Hawkins, Cory Graffunder and Geoff Aaron
In this week's episode, we preview XGames flat track events and catch up with Charlie Roberts. While he no longer is competes at the national level, you may see him on a Bultaco Astro from time to time. He is one of the founding members of Class of ’79 and Friends, a charity which has helped several injured riders in times of need. 00:24 - XGames Preview 02:02 - Charlie Roberts intro 02:53 - Where were you born? 03:50 - How did you get into motorcycles? 05:20 - Charlie tells us his favorite story of “the other Roberts” (Kenny) 06:24 - What was your first number? 07:28 - Do you have a nickname? 08:31 - What riders did you look up to as a young rider? 09:58 - Talks about the first time he met Ronnie Jones 13:00 - What is your favorite racing memory? 18:35 - Talk about what eventually led to you stepping away from racing 22:43 - Tell us the story of how the Class of ’79 and Friends charity came to be 27:27 - Talks about Tammi Richmond and her contributions to the charity 30:23 - Talks about what it meant to receive the Brintlinger Award of Excellence 31:58 - Talks about facility where the charity houses the memorabilia for auction 35:02 - Talks about plans for a nation-wide online auction for Parker Norris 37:53 - Plugs the facebook page https://www.facebook.com/amaft79/ & website http://www.amaft79.com/ 38:52 - Talks about the new sponsors helping the charity in 2018 41:26 - Talks of Parker Norris and the efforts made to support him and his family 45:50 - GRAM’s QUESTION 48:30 - RAPID FIRE QUESTIONS
Ducks fly together. Host Tommy Cassell chats with members of the Division 1 state championship baseball team from Needham High School as well as two of their coaches. The coaches just happened to be Tommy's high school classmates. After senior captain, Charlie Roberts scooped up three rubber ducky’s during his team’s trip to the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York, in May the team used them as good luck charms in his team’s dugout ever since, Joining me were three of its senior captains in Charlie Sumner, Alex Luscher and Roberts. The two coaches are head coach Matt Howard and assistant coach Alex Marlow, both graduates of Weston High School, where Tommy went to school. The group talks about winning a state championship for Needham baseball, relived some of the glory days of Weston High, discussed rubber duckies and even played a little trivia. Cassell’s Corner Each week, Tommy Cassell of the MetroWest Daily and Milford Daily News will talk with a high school sports figure from the MetroWest and Milford areas. A new episode is released every Wednesday. Follow Cassell on Twitter at @TommyCassell44 or by email at tcassell@wickedlocal.com You can subscribe via iTunes, Stitcher, Google Play or any other podcast provider. Don’t forget to rate and review. And if you aren’t a podcast listener, every episode of Cassell’s Corner is available on our websites.
An enlightened conversation with Charlie Roberts, the predestrian bridge - or tunnel - will be coming, apartments for the rest of us and new food and retail update at town center.
What could possibly happen if you tell a little white lie to the Department of Motor Vehicles about how much your car costs? Find out when host Heather Kelly talks to Utah State Tax Commission spokesperson Charlie Roberts. www.tax.utah.gov They also discuss how not paying taxes affects you personally and your community. https://www.facebook.com/MoneyMakingSense/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Riding motorcycles is dangerous. Recent fatalities as well as life threatening and life changing injuries remind us all of this. Jumping from airplanes, climbing mountains, driving race cars and thousands of other human activities create risk factors that many of us are willing to accept. Motorcycling is a juxtaposition. The joy of riding is in a special catagory that cannot be found doing almost anything else. Every person who rides or races motorcycles is also aware that it can take everything in an instant. At some level, every person who swings a leg over a motorcycle accepts the hazards in exchange for the outright joy riding provides. The recent passing of Charlotte Kainz, Kyle McGrane, Jamison Minor and Zaden Florez has been a brutal reminder of the risks/reward ratio. Many of us have said goodbye to family members and friends who passed "doing what they loved to do". Fans nationwide have experienced the sadness of having witnessed a fatality at a live racing event. How does a rider deal with the realities of racing? As a parent, should I encourage my children to persue their dreams of racing? What do we say to our 16 year old son or daughter who informs us over dinner that they want to obtain their motorcycle license and ride a motorcycle on the street? How do these losses affect the downed riders' fellow competitors going forward? From every standpoint the losses have impact whether you are a competitor, event promoter, a family member, a sanctioning body or a fan. While there may be more questions than answers, we push on in our quest for understanding. Talking Motorcycles wishes to thank Ronnie Jones and Charlie Roberts of the AMA Rookies Class of 79 for contributing as guests on this show. Thank you for listening. We continue to send our love and support to those who have lost riders and family members.
This wedding was a combination of a beautiful place and beautiful people with joy filled hearts! Congratulations Patti and Theo, I wish you all the best! Wedding vendors are: Beach Side Ceremonies & Events, Hair & Makeup by Tonia Crawford, Flowers by: Couture Florals & Event Design Catering by Signature Catering of 30A, Photography by Alena Bekutis, Video by Duncan Lindsey, DJ by Charlie Roberts, Cakes by Publix of Miramar.
This wedding was a combination of a beautiful place and beautiful people with joy filled hearts! Congratulations Patti and Theo, I wish you all the best! Be sure to download the Blind Pilot song "Three Rounds and a Sound" on iTunes. Wedding vendors are: Beach Side Ceremonies & Events, Hair & Makeup by Tonia Crawford, Flowers by: Couture Florals & Event Design Catering by Signature Catering of 30A, Photography by Alena Bekutis, Video by Duncan Lindsey, DJ by Charlie Roberts, Cakes by Publix of Miramar.
Less than a week from now on September 25th at the Ramspur Winery Santa Rosa Mile presented by Triumph, Indian will return to AMA Pro Flat Track Grand National competition with their factory effort. They have tasked "Smokin' Joe Kopp with racing the all new FTR750 for the first time. We find out how that happened and how Joe feels about the motorcycle and his chance at history! Charlie Roberts joins us with all the news from AMA Flat Track Rookies Class of 79. They are very busy helping injured riders with their life and medical expenses including Dominic Collendres. Charlie will discuss that and what they are doing at the Santa Rosa Mile as well as how you can be a part of assisting those who have become injured while entertaining us all! Talking Motorcyles is powered by Crosley Brands! Special thanks to the Harley-Davidson Motor Company, Dunlop Motorcycle Tires and Clearwater Lights!
On this podcast, Charlie and I discussed the techniques he developed on training chickens to lay eggs in their nest boxes, preventing ground eggs and how you can use ‘chicken habits’ to your advantage. Podcast:Play in new window | Download Subscribe To Podcast: | | | Transcription: Daniel: Hello Daniel OBrien here, welcome back to […] The post Nest Box Training with Charlie Roberts Episode 11 appeared first on GreenGrassEggFarming.
In this edition of Talking Motorcycles with Barry Boone we preview the legendary Springfield Mile II! Our guest lineup for this episode is epic! Charlie Roberts and Scott Parker join us to discuss the AMA Rookies Class of 79 and Friends' involvement in the Springfield Mile II event on Labor Day weekend. They have an amazing weekend of activities planned and we hear all about it. Jeff Gordon, of Speedway Engine Development Inc, will be calling in to discuss their high-profile win at the Don TilleyMemorial AMA Pro Grand National at Charlotte and his thoughts on the team's approach to the Springfield Mile II. As engine builder, Jeff works closely with Rick Howerton on the Howerton Motorsports/Villa-Esparza/Crosley Radio Kawasaki ridden by National #42 Bryan Smith. Jared Mees retains the point lead by a narrow six-point margin over Bryan Smith following his disappointing DNF at Charlotte. It was a near mirror image of the results from Harley-Davidson Flat Track at ESPN X-Games Austin. Chasing down Bryan Smith there was a shower of sparks from the tailpipe of the Las Vegas HD/Rogers Racing XR750 ending his race one lap short of completition. Now as the team approaches the Springfield Mile II and the balance of the season, what shall be his strategy? The reigning 2014 AMA Pro GNC1 champion joins us LIVE on the show! Talking Motorcycles is powered by SOZO! Special thanks to: Crosley Radio/Crosley Brands, The Harley-Davidson Motor Company, Dunlop Motorcycle Tire and Next Moto Champion!