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It was 108 years ago this week when the United States declared war on Germany for what became World War I. Thousands of Philadelphians ultimately lost their lives. So for the last decade, researcher Chris Gibbons has worked to identify the dead in one hard-hit community – the alumni of storied Roman Catholic High School. Host Trenae Nuri talks with Gibbons about these young men who fought and died in a now largely forgotten war and why he's so tenacious in pursuing this unique search. Want some more Philly stories? Sign up for our daily newsletter, Hey Philly. We're also on Instagram: @citycastphilly. Have a question or comment? Call or text us at 215-259-8170. Learn more about the sponsors of this episode: Live Supply Interested in advertising with City Cast? Find more info here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Digital Health Talks - Changemakers Focused on Fixing Healthcare
In this insightful conversation, Shahid Shah interviews Holly Miller, CEO of Colette Health, about their award-winning virtual care platform. Miller discusses how Colette Health's virtual observation and nursing solutions help hospitals address critical staffing shortages while improving patient safety and clinical outcomes. As the inaugural winner of KLAS's "Best in Class for Virtual Sitting and Nursing," Colette Health demonstrates how technology can amplify rather than replace the human connection in healthcare delivery. It is followed by a thought-provoking conversation with Dr. Chris Gibbons, founder of Graystone Group, about meaningful healthcare innovation. Drawing from his 15 years leading digital health transformation initiatives, Dr. Gibbons shares insights on identifying authentic problems, developing transformative solutions, and addressing the emerging "caregiver cliff" crisis. As healthcare increasingly moves from hospitals to homes, Gibbons emphasizes the need for technology that serves real patient needs rather than solutions seeking problems.Holly Miller, CEO, Collette HealthChris Gibbons, MD, MPH, Founder & CEO, The Greystone Group, IncShahid Shah, Chairman of the Board, Netspective Foundation
Digital Health Talks Special Edition from HIMSS25 with Holly Miller, CEO at Colette Health and Dr. Chris Gibbons founder and CEO of The Greystone Group In this insightful conversation, Shahid Shah interviews Holly Miller, CEO of Colette Health, about their award-winning virtual care platform. Miller discusses how Colette Health's virtual observation and nursing solutions help hospitals address critical staffing shortages while improving patient safety and clinical outcomes. As the inaugural winner of KLAS's "Best in Class for Virtual Sitting and Nursing," Colette Health demonstrates how technology can amplify rather than replace the human connection in healthcare delivery. It is followed by a thought-provoking conversation with Dr. Chris Gibbons, founder of Graystone Group, about meaningful healthcare innovation. Drawing from his 15 years leading digital health transformation initiatives, Dr. Gibbons shares insights on identifying authentic problems, developing transformative solutions, and addressing the emerging "caregiver cliff" crisis. As healthcare increasingly moves from hospitals to homes, Gibbons emphasizes the need for technology that serves real patient needs rather than solutions seeking problems. https://www.collettehealth.com/ https://www.thegreystonegroup.com/ Find all of our network podcasts on your favorite podcast platforms and be sure to subscribe and like us. Learn more at www.healthcarenowradio.com/listen/
Chris Gibbons, Everest Watcher reacts to the possible finding of Irvines foot – a young British climber who went missing on Everest 100 years ago. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In the October 2024 replay features four episodes on approaches to clinical diagnosis of parkinsonism. The episode starts off with Dr. Colin Hoy discuss the concept of prodromal Parkinson disease and the ethical considerations surrounding its diagnosis. The episode leads into a conversation with Dr. Chris Gibbons discussing skin biopsies to detect phosphorylated α-synuclein. In the third episode Drs. Michiko K. Bruno and Lawrence Golbe about a practical diagnostic algorithm for atypical parkinsonian disorders Drs. Michiko K. Bruno and Lawrence Golbe discuss a practical diagnostic algorithm for atypical parkinsonian disorders. The episode concludes with Dr. Eduardo De Pablo-Fernández talking about the strengths of DAT imaging in diagnosing patients with Parkinsonian disorders. Previous Podcasts: The Ethical Landscape of Prodromal Parkinson Disease Skin Biopsy Detection of Phosphorylated α-Synuclein General Neurologist's Practical Diagnostic Algorithm for Atypical Parkinsonian Disorders Interpreting DAT Imaging Results in the Clinical Context Article Links: The Ethical Landscape of Prodromal Parkinson Disease Skin Biopsy Detection of Phosphorylated α-Synuclein in Patients With Synucleinopathies A General Neurologist's Practical Diagnostic Algorithm for Atypical Parkinsonian Disorders Neuropathologic Validation and Diagnostic Accuracy of Presynaptic Dopaminergic Imaging in the Diagnosis of Parkinsonism Disclosures can be found at Neurology.org.
After more than a decade of persecution, Julian Assange has returned home to Australia a free man. He almost didn't make it. The FBI and the Pentagon considered every available means—legal and otherwise—to prevent Julian from winning his freedom. Chip Gibbons and Kevin Gosztola return to The Real News to discuss the inside story of Julian's fight for freedom, and the monsters who tried to crush him.Studio Production: Cameron GranadinoPost-Production: Alina NehlichHelp us continue producing Rattling the Bars by following us and becoming a monthly sustainer.Sign up for our newsletterLike us on FacebookFollow us on TwitterDonate to support this podcast
Dr. Jeff Ratliff and Dr. Chris Gibbons discuss the use of skin biopsies to detect phosphorylated α-synuclein in individuals with synucleinopathies. Reference: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/article-abstract/2816441
Welcome to nohacks.show, a weekly podcast where smart people talk to you about better online experiences!In this episode, we dive deep into the world of experimentation and optimization with Chris Gibbons, Chief Experience Officer at Creative CX. Chris brings over two decades of expertise in UX and experimentation, and he shares insightful stories and experiences from his illustrious career.This conversation unfolds around the concept of an "experimentation therapist," a term coined unexpectedly by one of Chris's clients. Chris explains how this unique role involves addressing the human elements and challenges within organizational structures to foster a culture of effective experimentation. He discusses the psychological and interpersonal skills necessary to navigate and reshape the way companies approach experimentation and optimization.Chris also sheds light on the common obstacles businesses face in digital optimization and how shifting focus from solutions to identifying core problems can dramatically enhance the outcomes of experimentation practices. Episode links:Experimentation EliteChris Gibbins' LinkedInCreative CX---Tune in for an enlightening conversation and don't forget to rate and review the episode!nohacks.showYouTubeLinkedInEpisode intro/outro music by Josh Silverbauer (LinkedIn, Analyrical YouTube) and Jacon Packer (LinkedIn, Quantable Analytics)
Dr. Jeff Ratliff talks with Dr. Chris Gibbons about the use of skin biopsies to detect phosphorylated α-synuclein in individuals with synucleinopathies such as Parkinson disease, multiple system atrophy, dementia with Lewy bodies, and pure autonomic failure. Read the related article in JAMA. Disclosures can be found at Neurology.org.
Dive into the dynamic intersection of equity and innovation in healthcare with Chris Gibbons at HealthIMPACT Live. As an Equity and Innovation Adviser, Chris navigates this critical juncture daily. Join the conversation on AI ethics, patient welfare, and the evolving landscape, shaping the future of patient-centric digital medicine. Find all of our network podcasts on your favorite podcast platforms and be sure to subscribe and like us. Learn more at www.healthcarenowradio.com/listen/
Digital Health Talks - Changemakers Focused on Fixing Healthcare
See what is happening now at www.healthimpactlive.com YouTube Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a4a3xDvGQFUOriginally Published: Nov 28, 2023 Dive into the dynamic intersection of equity and innovation in healthcare with Chris Gibbons at HealthIMPACT Live. As an Equity and Innovation Adviser, Chris navigates this critical juncture daily. Join the conversation on AI ethics, patient welfare, and the evolving landscape, shaping the future of patient-centric digital medicine.Insights on the balance between equity and innovation in healthcareExplore strategies to ensure responsible and ethical implementation of artificial intelligence in healthcareNavigate the critical intersection where equity and innovation meetUncover actionable insights for creating a more equitable and innovative healthcare system Chris Gibbons, MD, MPH Founder & CEO, The Greystone GroupJanae Sharp, Founder, The Sharp Index
Chris Gibbons, creator of the economic gardening concept, explains how he pioneered the idea in Littleton, Colorado in the 1980s to help local companies create jobs after major layoffs. Economic gardening focuses on providing research and insights to growing stage two companies, not basic business assistance. Gibbons discusses the sales window concept they use to efficiently find the best prospects, and their move into leveraging AI like ChatGPT. He also shares his passion for helping communities and people prosper through economic development. Like this show? Please leave us a review here (https://econdevshow.com/rate-this-podcast/) — even one sentence helps! Special Guest: Chris Gibbons.
episode #170 w/ Chris Gibbons from PSP and All 3 Points podcast - Union horrendous loss in Montreal - back post defending and assignments - Olivier Mbaizo - double VAR circus - first rough Apple broadcast - Joe Bendik vs. Andre Blake - trying to avoid being emotional Eagles fans - Alianza/CCL Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Brandon and Ashley talk with Chris Gibbons about the West Broadway Corridor Plan and First Ave.
Tom and Jenny partially celebrate Jenny’s birthday and partially talk about season 5, episode 5 of A Haunting, “Dark Dreams,” in which a guy named Chris Gibbons and his family move into a historic old house in Grand Rapids, Michigan and start to experience nightmares and paranormal phenomena. Audio version: Video version: Please support us on … Continue reading A Haunting Mondays: Dark Dreams (S05 E05) PLUS Jenny’s Birthday Celebration!
Episode #158 w/ Chris Gibbons of Philly Soccer Page and the All 3 Points podcast - Richard Odada signing - this is the best Union team ever - 2020 comps - 6-0 thrashing of Houston - Jack McGlynn and finding attacking/defensive balance - Michael Uhre is Sebastien Le Toux 2.0 and has figured it out - Mbaizo winning back his starting job - Kevin has two minor gripes Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A recent post on the local Facebook group, Gardner, MA-What's Going On? Ask the question, ‘What does Gardner MA need to do to make it a destination city? The term ‘destination city' has entered our modern lexicon only recently. Generally, it refers to a community that may contain any number of positive economic and cultural characteristics that make it attractive to both local residents and visitors from far and wide. To be a destination city these days means your community is a place people want to visit, transact business in and maybe even dream of living in. But what makes for a destination city? How do they develop? Why would we want to be a destination city? I'm writing to you right now from the HULA co-working center along the banks of Lake Champlain in Burlington, VT. This section of town along with the entirety of the city contains countless features, developed over the last 40 years that make this community a true destination. Learn about Burlington's transformation under CEDO director Bruce Seifer on SMG's ‘Are We Here Yet?' Podcast. I'm here for a conference and each time I come back to Burlington I'm struck by several key factors that make this a dynamic environment. Work with what you got. Burlington has some incredible natural assets. No less than a stunning view of the Adirondack Mountains across the 6th largest lake in the United States. But how can our city compete with that? You ask? There are countless examples. Closer to home, who amongst us would have said 30 years ago, ‘Let's hang out at the mills and learn about industry,' and spend all day in museums, art centers and restaurants in downtown Lowell, MA? Burlington spent considerable attention on integrating its natural, economic and human assets. 40 years on, it shows. Who are the People in your neighborhood? Much of what works in a destination city happens because local leadership is constantly ensuring that citizens are heard, and neighborhood responsive solutions are sought and executed in the marketplace. Neighborhood Planning Committees, robust public comment mechanisms and a high percentage of engaged citizens. These are just three precepts of a community that is actively developing itself according to the needs and desires of its people. People responsive communities attract and retain, you guessed it, people. How would you rate your community on this measure? Resiliency: We can't give up. Entrepreneurs know this. Developers know this. The inertia to remain the same is profound. So is the need by those who benefit from the status quo to keep things as they are. Leadership and citizens including a majority of a community's business community have to be in the game for the long term. They must be working together from the same gameplan. They must believe together in the same fundamental precepts; the what, where, why and how of their city's development plan. And like that entrepreneur or developer, they cannot give up until the job is complete. Find one great example of resiliency in our interview with Melinda Moulton, Main St. Landing January 2022. It starts with the right fundamentals. Larry Bird, the legend of the Boston Celtics, was a firm believer that one can only achieve great things if one is obsessive over their fundamentals. This insistence showed in the consistent results of play he had over his career. Cities only become destinations when the underlying economy is sound. In our current world, communities must cultivate home-grown primary employers first before they can support those trendy, ‘downtown' businesses that citizens generally think of when they are dreaming of destination cities. And in our current economy this means a focus on encouraging the growth of businesses across industries that focus on innovation. Specifically, in the business of constantly creating the next generation of their product or service or entirely different products and services as part of their normal long-term life cycle. Products become commodified and are sent overseas for production. No matter, the company has the next gen model underway to be locally produced. Take this fundamental precept, ensure your community generates diversity of firms across a wide spectrum of employee size, industry and property needs and you will soon find yourself attracting yet more innovators from beyond your borders as well. This dynamism can play out over the long-term and reaps benefits for generations. Programs such as the National Center for Economic Gardening have lead the way in this realm. Without a sound underlying economy, you don't create a destination city, your create a tourist trap. Find out more about this approach from Chris Gibbons on SMG's ‘Are We Here Yet?' podcast March 2021. There is more we could discuss but for now, perhaps the most important part to embrace is to know that, countless cities have had to re-invent themselves. Millions of hard-working enterprising citizens throughout the world right now are experiencing similar challenges. There is massive amounts of data; scenarios in great detail on what has worked and what has not in the past. So, we're not alone. We need to embrace the need for change. We need to embrace our unity with those also on this journey. We need to start believing in a brighter future by first believing in ourselves.
Joined this week by Chris Gibbons of #thechris100 fame. Chris gets his first experience with the almighty WSX, a true treat for any wrestling fan. We get a couple moments of Cartel busting out a fish. We get the biggest match in WSX history. We do a lot. FOLLOW: @fighthaskins and @wdkwpn on Twitter
In this episode of Pathways to Rural Prosperity, Chris Gibbons, founder of Economic Gardening, joins Don in a conversation about the role of market intelligence research as part of a robust entrepreneurial ecosystem. Chris shares the history of this historic and possibly oldest entrepreneurship movement as well as some fun stores of how Economic Gardening is making a difference with growth entrepreneurs.
Episode #132 w/ Chris Gibbons -reviewing the Red Bull and Nashville games -DOGSO blame placement -Jim Curtin getting it 100% right after the red card -Daniel Gazdag as a striker -on-ball identity, or lack thereof -the principles of transition defense -why the Union are the Baltimore Ravens -Bob Huggins basketball comparisons Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Pawley talks with Chris Gibbons. He's a detective with the Cleveland Police Department assigned to the Employee Assistance Unit. In addition, he's in recovery and uses his experience to help officers in trouble with Substance Use Disorders.This episode brought to you by Glenbeigh Hospitalwww.glenbeigh.com
Chris Gibbons has spent 35 years in the trenches implementing economic development programs that are meaningful and based in scientific data. The concept of Economic Gardening is based in data-driven work that within many municipal organizations is still considered radical. Base your efforts in entrepreneurial support; focus on marketable, fast-growing and innovative firms delivering high demand, low supply products and services. The work blends a focus on stage 2 companies and entrepreneurial support informed by the science of complex adaptive systems (Santa Fe Institute). In their own words “Adding sophisticated, corporate level tools to these foundational principles and then working out the root problems that prevented companies from growing, Economic Gardening started producing amazing results. The job base in Littleton grew from 15,000 to 30,000 without recruiting a single company.” Find the National Center for Economic Gardening We enjoyed a great conversation with founder Chris Gibbons on the work of economic gardening, where the institute is going and how our communities benefit when they focus on the right combination of business fundamentals and a look from within for the time, talent and treasure to transform our communities.
Episode #5 explores what we've become, where we are, and how we stop missing out on all the cool stuff from an economic development and planning standpoint. Engage: next city council meeting: https://www.gardner-ma.gov/calendar.aspx?CID=14,22,26 Mentioned in podcast: National Center for Economic Gardening: https://www.nationalcentereg.org Chris Gibbons' Free PDF on Economic Gardening: https://economicgardening.org/economic-gardening-book/
Join Mark Boyes-Smith and Chris Gibbons as they discuss the role of design systems in helping designers and engineers work better together.
Almost exactly one year ago, we chose Chuck Marohn’s 2013 interview with Chris Gibbons as one of the Strong Towns podcast’s eleven “greatest hits.” Why this episode from among several hundred choices? Not only because it’s a compelling listen, but because Gibbons’s approach to economic development — Economic Gardening — has become such a core concept for us. It’s like we said last year: [Economic Gardening is] an approach to growing a city’s job base and economic prosperity that doesn’t involve a dollar of subsidy to a large, outside corporation—and produces better results than those subsidy programs, too. Economic Gardening predates the Strong Towns movement by 20 years, but you can think of it as the economic-development analogue to our Neighborhoods First approach to public infrastructure: a program that seeks to make small, high-returning investments instead of big silver-bullet gambles, by capitalizing on a community’s existing assets and latent potential. Or like Strong Towns founder Chuck Marohn said in this new interview with Gibbons: “I tell everyone I can, if you’re not pursuing an Economic Gardening strategy, you’re missing out.” The approach too many communities take to economic development is what Phil Burgess refers to as economic hunting — or recruiting companies from other towns. As we’ve written about extensively, this often involves a race-to-the-bottom strategy that pits one city against another to see which can offer the biggest tax incentives. As Gibbons describes in this podcast, it's a strategy that also doesn’t necessarily create genuinely new jobs. An economic gardening approach, on the other hand, focuses on growing local companies. It’s hard to argue with the results, including a 9:1 return on every dollar of funding in Florida, the country’s first statewide Economic Gardening network. In this episode of the Strong Towns podcast, Marohn and Gibbons explore how cities can grow an economy using a truly entrepreneurial approach. They discuss the difference between an entrepreneur and an investor, the two systems at work in every company (mechanical and biological), the importance of human temperament as a consideration when building teams, and why every town and city needs to get on the “innovation train.” They also game out several scenarios familiar to towns and cities looking to build their economies. Chris Gibbons is the founder of the National Center for Economic Gardening (NCEG), and the former Director of Business/Industry Affairs for the City of Little, Colorado. He’s also the author of Economic Gardening, an ebook you can get free from NCEG. If your town or city is not pursuing an Economic Gardening strategy, you're missing out. We hope this conversation with Chris Gibbons will help till the soil for change where you live. Additional Show Notes Chris Gibbons (Twitter) National Center for Economic Gardening How Does Your (Economic) Garden Grow? - October 2013/April 2019 (One of our podcast “greatest hits”) Select Strong Towns articles related to Economic Gardening Five Low Cost Ideas to Make Your City Wealthier, by Charles Marohn Cities as Platforms of Productivity, by Andrew Price How to Encourage Entrepreneurship in Your Town, by Rachel Quednau Dunkin Our Future, by Charles Marohn
Challenging norms and creating new visions of health and care delivery https://outcomesrocket.health/chrisgibbons/2020/03/
If you’re looking for an example of the Strong Towns mindset applied to local economic development, you couldn’t do much better than Economic Gardening. It’s an approach to growing a city’s job base and economic prosperity that doesn’t involve a dollar of subsidy to a large, outside corporation—and produces better results than those subsidy programs, too. Economic Gardening predates the Strong Towns movement by 20 years, but you can think of it as the economic-development analogue to our Neighborhoods First approach to public infrastructure: a program that seeks to make small, high-returning investments instead of big silver-bullet gambles, by capitalizing on a community’s existing assets and latent potential. The approach has its origins in the Denver suburb of Littleton, Colorado, in 1988. Martin Marietta, a predecessor of Lockheed Martin, was Littleton’s dominant employer in the 1980s. The company was in the war business—it’s a major military contractor. As the Cold War wound to an end, the U.S. found itself, as a country, divesting from the war business, and in 1988, Martin Marietta laid off thousands of its Colorado employees. Littleton’s City Council tasked economic developer Chris Gibbons with a challenge: find local businesses that already exist that want to grow. Figure out what these startups’ needs are and how we can help them. Provide them with technical support, access to databases and analytical tools that can help them find customers, resources to help them manage the challenges of rapid growth. We’re going to grow our own jobs locally, instead of trying to import them from outside. Gibbons’s efforts were phenomenally successful, and sparked a whole alternative movement in economic development: Economic Gardening. Numerous cities and states now have Economic Gardening programs, and Gibbons and the Edward Lowe Foundation continue to develop and promote the concept through the National Center for Economic Gardening. In 2013, we had Chris Gibbons on the Strong Towns Podcast as a guest to explain what economic gardening is, what kinds of companies it can benefit, and the many successes the approach has enjoyed. It’s one of our most popular podcast episodes of all time, and so we’re featuring it as the final entry in our Strong Towns Podcast Greatest Hits series. Yes, we said “final.” Next week—Monday, April 22nd—Charles Marohn will be back from hiatus with a brand new episode of the Strong Towns Podcast. And we’ll keep rolling out new episodes on Mondays after that, so keep us in your iTunes feed or wherever you get your podcasts, and keep doing what you can to build strong towns.
KYW Newsradio's Greg Orlandini, along with Mike Servedio from the Philly Soccer Page talk the business of soccer jerseys with Chris Gibbons from the All Three Points podcast.
HOT91.9FM — Listen to your daily business report with Chris Gibbons. Chris is one of South Africa’s best-known journalists as well as a sought-after public speaker, conference facilitator and media trainer.
HOT91.9FM — Listen to your daily business report with Chris Gibbons. Chris is one of South Africa’s best-known journalists as well as a sought-after public speaker, conference facilitator and media trainer.
HOT91.9FM — Listen to your daily business report with Chris Gibbons. Chris is one of South Africa’s best-known journalists as well as a sought-after public speaker, conference facilitator and media trainer.
HOT91.9FM — Listen to your daily business report with Chris Gibbons. Chris is one of South Africa’s best-known journalists as well as a sought-after public speaker, conference facilitator and media trainer.
HOT91.9FM — Listen to your daily business report with Chris Gibbons. Chris is one of South Africa’s best-known journalists as well as a sought-after public speaker, conference facilitator and media trainer.
HOT91.9FM — Listen to your daily business report with Chris Gibbons. Chris is one of South Africa’s best-known journalists as well as a sought-after public speaker, conference facilitator and media trainer.
HOT91.9FM — Listen to your daily business report with Chris Gibbons. Chris is one of South Africa’s best-known journalists as well as a sought-after public speaker, conference facilitator and media trainer.
HOT91.9FM — Listen to your daily business report with Chris Gibbons. Chris is one of South Africa’s best-known journalists as well as a sought-after public speaker, conference facilitator and media trainer.
HOT91.9FM — Listen to your daily business report with Chris Gibbons. Chris is one of South Africa’s best-known journalists as well as a sought-after public speaker, conference facilitator and media trainer.
HOT91.9FM — Listen to your daily business report with Chris Gibbons. Chris is one of South Africa’s best-known journalists as well as a sought-after public speaker, conference facilitator and media trainer.
HOT91.9FM — Listen to your daily business report with Chris Gibbons. Chris is one of South Africa’s best-known journalists as well as a sought-after public speaker, conference facilitator and media trainer.
HOT91.9FM — Listen to your daily business report with Chris Gibbons. Chris is one of South Africa’s best-known journalists as well as a sought-after public speaker, conference facilitator and media trainer.
HOT91.9FM — Listen to your daily business report with Chris Gibbons. Chris is one of South Africa’s best-known journalists as well as a sought-after public speaker, conference facilitator and media trainer.
In this episode Talking with Tech's Lucas Steuber, Rachel Madel, and the long-list Chris Bugaj sit down and discuss international development in AAC before welcoming Chris Gibbons of SmartBox to the show. Chris shares beautifully about his many years of experience in the industry, the transition from intervention to the lab to the market, changes over time to the funding model - both good and bad - as well as Grid 3 and some thoughts on what's to come. For more information about Chris and SmartBox, be sure to visit their site and - if you get a chance - catch him presenting at many related conferences such as ASHA, ATIA, ISAAC, and pretty much everywhere else. Thanks for listening! As always, contact us at tech@speechscience.org with any feedback and make sure to subscribe and share with your friends! If you'd like to support our work, we always appreciate any gesture via Patreon. *Disclosure, Lucas Steuber and Chris Gibbons have worked together before on minor projects through their shared venture GiveLanguage, but neither party received financial compensation.
This week I catch up with Chris Gibbons to discuss his USBC OC experience and if he thinks the current scores will hold up. We also talk about why some teams in the Midwest seem to excel at the OC. We discuss his final frame where he just missed taking […]
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Another Live show for What's the Score?! While our contestants all come away with some great prizes, our panelists battle each other in our Name 5 Panelist showdown. Michael Cyr, Grant Coppersmith and Chris Gibbons give their best attempt win the panelist showdown but are more focused on insulting each other based on the team they each support. Needless to say, this is one of the more interesting shows in WTS history. If you'd like to ever join the madness and play a game, feel free to email the show at wtssportsquiz@gmail.com or visit the show on Facebook and Twitter and let us know that way!
Another Live show for What's the Score?! While our contestants all come away with some great prizes, our panelists battle each other in our Name 5 Panelist showdown. Michael Cyr, Grant Coppersmith and Chris Gibbons give their best attempt win the panelist showdown but are more focused on insulting each other based on the team they each support. Needless to say, this is one of the more interesting shows in WTS history. If you'd like to ever join the madness and play a game, feel free to email the show at wtssportsquiz@gmail.com or visit the show on Facebook and Twitter and let us know that way!
Special guest Chris Gibbons talks about Economic Gardening, the early days of success and failure in Littleton, CO, the nationwide movement today and how to get involved. This is a far reaching conversation that demonstrates why the smart money in local economic development is in Economic Gardening.
Drs. Ted Burns and Chris Gibbons discuss the article Treatment-induced diabetic neuropathy: a reversible painful autonomic neuropathy in Ann Neurol. 2010 Apr;67(4):534-41 by Gibbons CH, Freeman R.
Drs. Ted Burns and Chris Gibbons discuss the article Treatment-induced diabetic neuropathy: a reversible painful autonomic neuropathy in Ann Neurol. 2010 Apr;67(4):534-41 by Gibbons CH, Freeman R.