Podcasts about cloudbreak

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Best podcasts about cloudbreak

Latest podcast episodes about cloudbreak

The Insiders' Podcast
Style Masters New Edits - Torren Martyn, Jai Glindeman & More!

The Insiders' Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2025 39:54


Episode 136 - Style Masters New Edits - Torren Martyn, Jai Glindeman & More!We are back again! Yes we talk about the results in El Salvador and how Darren predicted both men's and women's winners. Hows that Assorted Surf Picks?  But more importantly we talk about the latest new edit from Torren Martyn and Jai Glindeman. Jai has dropped Free Flow, a STAB Edit Of The Year entry and unreal film. Real waves, core surfing and unrivalled style in and out of the water. A must watch. The section from Cloudbreak is off the planet good! Then Torren, another film from about Calytpe but this time by Kelly Foote and its a master piece. Torren's surfing is so good on the eye and the film and edit is next level, check it up.We finish up with some Bell's predictions and a kook or core that will make you laugh! Enjoy, share and download. Follow us at @the_insiders_podcast - Link In Bio

Spit! - Surf Podcast
383 - Spit! November 20, 2024

Spit! - Surf Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2024 66:09


In today's show Scott returns with tales from Tavarua and cautions of Cloudbreak, David announces our next listener surf trip, and the boys celebrate Rasta's EAST winner, the return of the North Shore season, and JJF bequeathes another piece of fine art for the surf world to admire. Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

SlatorPod
#225 Smartcat's Series C, YouTube Dubs, Viva Translate Shuts Down

SlatorPod

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2024 23:15


Florian and Esther discuss the language industry news of the week, where they give their impressions from SlatorCon Silicon Valley and touch upon the findings from the 2024 ALC Industry Survey.In a significant funding update, Esther reports that Smartcat raised USD 43m in a Series C round, bringing their total funding to USD 70m. This funding will support product innovation in AI translation and multilingual content generation.Florian talks about YouTube's potential launch of AI dubbing, a feature in testing that aims to generate translated audio tracks for videos, significantly enhancing content accessibility and engagement.In Esther's M&A corner, Cloudbreak, now rebranded as Equiti, acquired its competitor Voyce and brought on a new private equity partner, Heritage Group. Meanwhile, EasyTranslate acquired World Translation, expanding its reach in the Nordic and DACH regions.The duo bid farewell to publicly traded Keywords Studios, which is delisting after being acquired by private equity firm EQT. They also note the shutdown of Viva Translate, a speech-to-speech translation company that will open-source its tools as it winds down.

The Insiders' Podcast
The Most Unique Review Of The Cloudbreak Event EVER!

The Insiders' Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2024 40:16


Episode 113 - The Most Unique Review Of The Cloudbreak Event EVER! Yes, other podcasts will be breaking down the WSL event at Cloudbreak in detail, so do we, but we focus on the important parts. Scores, post heat interviews, boards and other essential points, all picked up by the eagle eyes of Darren and Matt! Alongside this, we chat about Soli Bailey's UNBELIEVABLE edit called Conehead. If you haven't you need to cop that square in the mice pies right now! Further to this we address some pressing matters in the surf world with new habits we have seen that need opinions on. Do you wear a necklace over your wetsuit? Why, please tell us. DON'T FORGET TO CHECK OUT OUR NEW YOUTUBE CHANNEL TOO! Listen in for more and subscribe. Follow us at @the_insiders_podcast - Link In Bio

AIN'T THAT SWELL
Blitzed: Final Five LOCKED and LOADED in a Cloudbreak Classic

AIN'T THAT SWELL

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2024 68:05


All the action from the heats that mattered at the Outerknown Fiji Pro. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Stab Podcasts
Post-Fiji Drinks With Griffin Colapinto

Stab Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2024 69:09


The Cloudbreak event just ended, and Stace G is on the ground with champion Griffin Colapinto to discuss his feelings on the win and plans for the 2024 WSL Finals. Mikey and Stace break down Erin Brooks' maiden victory, the men's and women's Final 5s and more, before Buck makes his long-awaited return to the podcast. Virginia Beach residents, listen closely for your chance to win a free pair of Phantom boardshorts and a Stab Premium membership courtesy of Hurley.

Surf Splendor
526 - Jon Roseman

Surf Splendor

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2024 84:13


Quietly and immeasurably influencing the surf world, Jon Roseman's stewardship of Cloudbreak has been cosigned by Fijian tribal leaders and pro surfers alike. Today he shares stories from 30 years of swells, why his best surfing is still ahead of him, and how he hopes to convert his experiences and a newly earned MBA from Yale into sustainable success for Tavarua's future. Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

AIN'T THAT SWELL
Blitzed Fiji Preview: Slaughterhouse Five – Cloudbreak Set For Bloodbath in Race to the WSL Finals

AIN'T THAT SWELL

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2024 50:53


Fiji Pro Preview: Can Vortex and Eeeeeeewing hold their nerves and places in the top 5? Will Medina make a late charge and storm the WSL finals? Are wildcards Sierra Kerr and Erin Brooks going to shatter Pickles dreams? Will Goat rain little Goat pebbles all over the rest of the field? Smiv and Deadly discuss...See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Lineup with Dave Prodan - A Surfing Podcast
EP 203: Dave Wassel - Life as a North Shore lifeguard, Holding his peers in the highest regard, What it means to be a “waterman,” His insane wave in Fiji 2012, Upbringing, Heroes, YETI, and his stoke for Fiji being back on tour

The Lineup with Dave Prodan - A Surfing Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2024 65:06


North Shore lifeguard and former big wave charger, Dave Wassel, joins us on The Lineup podcast. He describes life as a lifeguard and being part of the North Shore Lifeguard Association. He holds his peers in high esteem, praising their dedication, commitment, and selflessness to jump into action at one of the most treacherous and deadliest waves in the world to save people's lives. He and Dave talk about the rigorous training one must endure to become a lifeguard on the North Shore, and the vetting process, not only by other lifeguards, but by the community itself. Dave Prodan recalls meeting Dave Wassel for the first time and reminisces about Wassel's insane wave in the Code Green Swell of the Volcom Fiji Pro of 2012. They reflect back on Wassel's upbringing, how he got into surfing, lifeguarding, and the heroes he looked up to along the way. Wassel tells the story about how he initially got involved with YETI, how he still has his first ever YETI cooler he's ever bought, taking pride in the lasting products and the lasting relationships he's developed from being involved with YETI over the years. Prodan and Wassel look ahead to the Corona Fiji Pro Presented By Bonsoy, breaking down the differences between the main surf spots, Restaurants and Cloudbreak. Wassel shares his stoke for the women's progression and how excited he is watching the women on tour push the limits of surfing. He rounds out the pod by giving his best advice, answering listener questions, and the Lightning Round. Be sure to follow Dave Wassel on Instagram. Catch the best surfers in the world return to Corona Fiji Pro Presented By Bonsoy, Aug 20 - 29. Watch the best moments from Lexus US Open of Surfing Presented by Pacifico. Join the conversation by following The Lineup podcast with Dave Prodan on Instagram and subscribing to our YouTube channel. Get the latest WSL rankings, news, and event info. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Empowered Patient Podcast
New Eye Drop Targets Unmet Need in Pterygium Treatment with Dr. Abu Abraham Cloudbreak Pharma

Empowered Patient Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2024 15:40


Dr. Abu Abraham, Chief Medical Officer at Cloudbreak Pharma,  discusses the disease burden and gaps in care for patients with Pterygium, also known as Surfer's eye. Pterygium is an ocular surface disorder that creates a growth on the eye's surface that can cause vision problems. The condition is more prevalent in individuals over 40, but it can also affect younger populations exposed to risk factors from spending time outside in the sun and being exposed to UV light. Cloudbreak Pharma is developing CBT-001, an investigational therapy, a multi-kinase inhibitor administered as an eye drop that aims to stop the progression of Pterygium. Abu explains, "Pterygium is a relatively common condition. It's an ocular surface disorder. It's a growth. The word Pterygium derives from the Greek pteryx, which means wedge-shaped. This growth is also a wedge shape that grows from the mucous membrane that overlies the white portion of a person's eye and grows in the direction of the cornea. The cornea itself is a curved structure that's clear, and its function is to focus light or bend light to enter the right way into the eye." "But this can affect anybody who has exposure to UV light. A person working outdoors or even doing a lot of outdoor activities in their free time has the potential to have a Pterygium grow on their eye as one of the triggers. UV light is not the only trigger. There is the potential, possibly, that there are genetic factors. I think they have been identified but may not be fully understood, as well as the genetic factors that contribute to the growth of a Pterygium." #CloudbreakPharma #Pterygium #SurfersEye #OcularDisease #OcularExternalDisease #PatientBurden CloudbreakPharma.com Download the transcript here

Empowered Patient Podcast
New Eye Drop Targets Unmet Need in Pterygium Treatment with Dr. Abu Abraham Cloudbreak Pharma TRANSCRIPT

Empowered Patient Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2024


Dr. Abu Abraham, Chief Medical Officer at Cloudbreak Pharma,  discusses the disease burden and gaps in care for patients with Pterygium, also known as Surfer's eye. Pterygium is an ocular surface disorder that creates a growth on the eye's surface that can cause vision problems. The condition is more prevalent in individuals over 40, but it can also affect younger populations exposed to risk factors from spending time outside in the sun and being exposed to UV light. Cloudbreak Pharma is developing CBT-001, an investigational therapy, a multi-kinase inhibitor administered as an eye drop that aims to stop the progression of Pterygium. Abu explains, "Pterygium is a relatively common condition. It's an ocular surface disorder. It's a growth. The word Pterygium derives from the Greek pteryx, which means wedge-shaped. This growth is also a wedge shape that grows from the mucous membrane that overlies the white portion of a person's eye and grows in the direction of the cornea. The cornea itself is a curved structure that's clear, and its function is to focus light or bend light to enter the right way into the eye." "But this can affect anybody who has exposure to UV light. A person working outdoors or even doing a lot of outdoor activities in their free time has the potential to have a Pterygium grow on their eye as one of the triggers. UV light is not the only trigger. There is the potential, possibly, that there are genetic factors. I think they have been identified but may not be fully understood, as well as the genetic factors that contribute to the growth of a Pterygium." #CloudbreakPharma #Pterygium #SurfersEye #OcularDisease #OcularExternalDisease #PatientBurden CloudbreakPharma.com Listen to the podcast here

Spit! - Surf Podcast
364 - Spit! July 3, 2024

Spit! - Surf Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2024 85:22


In today's Independence Day themed show the boys identify the greatest surfer to ever hail from Texas, calculate Italo's hyperactivity vs Cloudbreak's steadiness, track the devolution of Puerto Escondido, and Scott regales us with his story of riding a sea turtle. Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Monday M.A.S.S. with Chris Coté and Todd Richards
The Monday M.A.S.S. With Chris Cote and Todd Richards, June 17, 2024

The Monday M.A.S.S. with Chris Coté and Todd Richards

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2024 74:37


On this episode of the world's greatest action sports podcast, Chris and Todd talk about the influx of leagues, lots of league talk, Snow League, X Games League, League League, Todd rants right at the top of the show which we're sure some of you will love. The boys also talk about The Boys Season 4, Tahiti, WSL Final 5 heading to Cloudbreak, Josh and Sierra Kerr, a 48,000 surf trip, Monday MASS Japan Mint Tour, shark bracelets, the world's fastest skateboarding cat, baby's doing 900s, skate babies, vert babies, Vert Alert, X Games, and wow, you people asked a lot of questions, so we did our best to answer them all. Presented by: Sun Bum @sunbum By Spy Optics @spyoptic Bachan's Japanese BBQ Sauce @trybachans MachuPicchu Energy @machupicchu.energy Pannikin Coffee And Tea @pannikincoffeeandtea Bubs Naturals @bubsnatruals New Greens @newgreens Pedal Electric @pedal.electric Vesyl Shipping @vesylapp Mint Tours @minttours Die Cut Stickers @diecutstickersdotcom

The Lineup with Dave Prodan - A Surfing Podcast
EP 191: Jack Robinson - Signing to Team Samsung Galaxy, featuring in their new surf doc, The Next Wave, Fatherhood, The 2024 WSL CT season and the Olympic Games Paris 2024, The importance of breathwork, Working with both Arakawa and Sharp Eye Surfboards

The Lineup with Dave Prodan - A Surfing Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2024 71:59


Welcome back four-time repeater guest, Jack Robinson, to The Lineup! Dave and Jack jump into the biggest changes since his last appearance, having a baby boy, how fatherhood affects him as a competitor and otherwise, and how he manages his time now. Jack talks about working with both Arakawa and Sharp Eye surfboards and the trust built over the years to be able to switch between boards. Jack recaps his early season win at Sunset this year, and his mindset heading into the 2024 CT Season. He and Dave dive into his partnership with Samsung and his decision to join Team Samsung Galaxy. They discuss the surf documentary that Jack is featured heavily in and Samsung is producing, designed to spotlight and celebrate surfing and the surfing community on the Road to Paris 2024. They reflect on the importance of openness and being a global citizen and how that has helped him as a competitor all across the globe. They close on what's next for Jack, touching on surfing Cloudbreak later in the year and the WSL Finals, before answering instagram questions and the infamous Lightning Round. Learn more about Jack and follow him here. Watch the GWM Syndey Surf Pro Presented by Bonsoy, May 9 - 16 Catch Jack return to Teahupo'o for back-to-back titles at the SHISEIDO Tahiti Pro Presented by Outerknown, May 22 - May 31. Stay up to date with the Vissla CT Shaper Rankings. Join the conversation by following The Lineup podcast with Dave Prodan on Instagram and subscribing to our YouTube channel. Get the latest WSL rankings, news, and event info. And watch The Next Wave here presented by Samsung Galaxy on May 21 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Cold Beer Surf Club
EP 04: PARKER COFFIN - Scoring March's massive Cloudbreak swell, Life off the competitive tour, Learning from the epicenter of surfing, Growing up in the 805, Recovering from insane injuries and freak accidents, Snapt5, and Wearing helmets

Cold Beer Surf Club

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2024 91:40


Professional surfer, fellow 805 charger, and brother to our host, Parker Coffin joins the Cold Beer Surf Club. Parker and Conner reminisce on what it was like growing up in the 805 and talk about the solid crew they came up with. They get into the details of charging the massive Cloudbreak swell this year, how lucky they felt to be part of the crew that went on the trip, and being content with the possibility of dying during this once-in-a-lifetime swell. They discuss life on and off the competitive tour, Volcom House memories, and reflect on the importance of respect and what it was like as a grom to learn from the epicenter of surfing in Hawaii. They talk about what success means to them in the changing surf industry landscape, being a part of upcoming projects like Logan Dullien's Snapt5, recovering from gnarly injuries, wearing helmets, and doing whatever it takes to come home. They close off the pod with what's next for the young brothers and some advice for the groms. New episodes drop every month. Follow, subscribe, and join the Club now. Follow Conner Coffin. Follow Parker Coffin. Get the latest 805 Beer content, the gear, and of course, the beer. Join the conversation, follow the league, and stay updated on all things WSL.

The Insiders' Podcast
WSL News or Steph Gilmore News, What's Bigger?

The Insiders' Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2024 39:42


Episode 95 - WSL News or Steph Gilmore News, What's Bigger?Luckily for you loyal listeners, you do not need to pick, we bring you a wrap up of the latest WSL stop at Portugal, where Griff and Joanne finished on top of the pack. Along with this, we bring you news on Steph Gilmore and the new sticker that will be on the nose of her boards in the nest stage of her illustrious career ANDDDD if this isn't enough, we break down the epic swell that saw the worlds best free surfers go on a strike mission to Cloudbreak. With this, we chat about boards, wetsuits and our surfing fun in general too!Listen in, download and share!Follow us at @the_insiders_podcast - Link In Bio

Spit! - Surf Podcast
348 - Spit! March 13, 2024

Spit! - Surf Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2024 80:56


In today's episode revel in the day of the year at Cloudbreak and celebrate the unsung filmers who continue to evolve the medium, applaud Kelly for ditching Portugal to get super tubes, wink at Derek Hynd for opting for a surf mat, offer Noah Beschen an award, and hang on every word of Brink's design symposium in Costa Rica. Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

The Reale Deal Show
The Reale Deal Show #94- Tavi Tube Tour 2024 Guests

The Reale Deal Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2024 65:08


Jay corners all the bodyboarders on this year's 2nd week of the Tavi Tube Tour to find out a bit about them and why they jumped on this year's trip.  The island paradise of Tavarua Island Resort produced perfect surf yet again for Tavi Tube Tour 2024!  Want more info on how to join a future trip?  Click the link below:Bodyboarding Travel

AIN'T THAT SWELL
FROM THE VAULT: Thundercloud Special ft. Dave Wassel, Kala Alexander, Lewis Samuels

AIN'T THAT SWELL

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2023 38:26


A breakdown of the monumental 2012 Cloudbreak swell - aka Thundercloud - with a couple of the stars from the day, Dave Wassel and Kala Alexander, with commentary from surf scribe, Lewis Samuels.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Tank Talks
Coaching Young Founders to Become Stronger Leaders with Joe Dunn of Cloudbreak

Tank Talks

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2023 46:14


We are big fans of coaching as a way to make career (and life) progress. Having a seasoned third party helping guide you through big decisions and day-to-day processes can be an invaluable edge in business. Our guest today is Joe Dunn, Principal at Cloudbreak - Executive and Founder Leadership Coaching.We dig into some of Joe's coaching strategies when dealing with young leaders, how his coaching style sets him apart from the other CEO coaches out there, and how Joe balances emotional and rational responses when coaching founders who are struggling to find ways to drive company growth and personal development as a leader.About Joe Dunn:Joe Dunn, Principal at Cloudbreak - Executive and Founder Leadership Coaching, is a certified CTI Professional Coach known for his "Candor Coach" role with the Radical Candor team. With an impressive client roster that includes industry giants like Airbnb, Pinterest, LinkedIn, Asana, Envoy, Segment, and Plaid, Joe specializes in coaching CEOs, founders, executives, and technical leaders in the tech sector. His extensive background encompasses key early roles in three successful startups that went public and another that achieved a noteworthy $250 million sale. From humble beginnings in startup garages to a six-year stint as a product/engineering VP in a publicly traded company, Joe brings a wealth of experience spanning all stages of company growth.Joe's clients, typically founders, executives, and technical leaders, seek his guidance for personal and organizational growth. He offers expertise in various aspects of effective management, including hiring, communication, and navigating organizational change. Moreover, he helps clients uncover and transform fundamental personal patterns that drive success, making him a versatile and invaluable resource for individuals and organizations aiming to reach their next level of achievement.In this episode we discuss:(01:13) Joe's journey to becoming a leadership coach(04:37) Parallels between coaching and parenting(07:45) Coaching founders and CEOs to be better communicators(09:50) An early experience that showed Joe the importance of a good coach(13:41) Helping founders become leaders(15:49) How surfing around the world with his son helped Joe evolve as a coach(18:03) Joe's coaching style(22:06) Advice that Joe is giving in this current market to founders(26:13) Common traits amongst successful founders(28:21) How founders can empower their teams and delegate(30:42) What to do if delegating backfires(32:14) Advice to remain mindful and have a work-life balance as a founder(35:03) Perceptions of coaching in the marketplace(37:34) How Founders can maintain their overall focus on their long-term vision(40:03) Will AI replace coaches?Fast Favorites:*

AIN'T THAT SWELL
Core Lords: Laurie Towner

AIN'T THAT SWELL

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2023 105:17


Today's guest stands among the greatest surfers to ever set foot on wax, in our opinion. An absolute artisan in the juice, he's set the standard for skits cones everywhere from Off The Wall, to Shipsterns Bluff, Cloudbreak, Cape Solander and so on. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Destination On The Left
Episode 343: Bringing Seattle Weather to the Desert, with Tammy Blount-Canavan

Destination On The Left

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2023 42:49


Episode 343: Tammy Blount-Canavan's career has spanned 30+ years and two countries, including executive leadership at Tourism Vancouver, CEO of the Tacoma Regional CVB, architect and inaugural Chair of the Washington Tourism Alliance, President and CEO of the Monterey County CVB, and now President and CEO of Visit Seattle. Tammy is a Past Chair of Destinations International. Tammy has been recognized as CEO of the Year, one of the 25 Most Influential People in the Meetings Industry, twice as one of the top 25 Most Influential Women in the Industry, Leadership Supplier of the Year in the Meetings Industry, Top 100 Most Inspirational Women in the Meetings Industry, CSUMBs School of Business 2018 Community Leader of the Year, won the Global Leadership Award from Destinations International and IMEX and in 2023 is being inducted into the Smart Women in Meetings Hall of Fame. In this episode of Destination on the Left, I talk with Tammy Blount-Canavan about some of Visit Seattle's ingenious campaigns, such as rain booths in Arizona and coffee shop takeovers, which embody the unique character of Seattle. She describes how the community built a city-wide selling strategy to expand the conventions market. Tammy also shares some of the community and wider partnerships they're involved in and how they help make the tourism industry successful. What You Will Learn in this Episode: Some of the directions you can go in when you build a career in travel and tourism marketing How Visit Seattle promotes the values of their community when they're out and about at shows Some of the creative ways they share more about their communities' benefits including a rain booth in Arizona and coffee shop takeovers The challenges that COVID-19 threw in Visit Seattle's path and how they have overcome them by collaborating on a city-wide selling strategy How they make partnerships successful by talking about what they want to accomplish, how they plan to get there, and how they make sure stakeholders have complementary skills Innovative Marketing Experiences We spotlight the innovative approach to destination marketing taken by Visit Seattle this week. Rather than solely relying on traditional tactics like purchasing ads and attending trade shows, they put a unique spin on destination marketing by creating fun and memorable experiences at events that underscore their core values. Visit Seattle has a knack for adding creative twists to their campaigns; last summer, they introduced a ‘rain booth' in California and Arizona. This structure sprinkled light rain, allowing people to experience Seattle's famous ‘cozy season' amidst the summer heat. Participants could even create their own movie posters as though they were in Seattle, sparking conversations about the city's unique charm. In addition to these fresh marketing strategies, Visit Seattle capitalizes on the wealth of local celebrities and athletes who take pride in sharing the story of their city. Their ongoing “I Know a Place” campaign features local residents expressing their love for Seattle and its hidden gems. This not only highlights iconic locations but also unveils lesser-known aspects of the city. Exemplifying Core Values We also discuss how Visit Seattle shares how their core values—innovation, creativity, and inclusivity— not only shape their city but also their marketing strategies. Inclusivity, for instance, is manifested through partnerships with Seattle Bank and Interventionalist, supporting traditionally underrepresented BIPOC-owned businesses. Sponsorships enable people to experience these businesses firsthand, with Visit Seattle highlighting them in their campaigns. This demonstrates a proactive approach to diversity, actively working with these businesses to tell their stories instead of merely stating the presence of diversity. Creativity is another cornerstone of Visit Seattle's approach. The city boasts the title of the glassblowing capital of the world, second only to Italy, and hosts an annual festival named Refract, a month-long celebration of local and renowned glass artists. Along with Refract, they organize Cloudbreak, focused on music, and Museum Month, both of which showcase Seattle's vibrant arts scene. Their third core value, innovation, is encapsulated in Seattle's identity as the birthplace of global tech giants like Microsoft and Amazon, retail powerhouse Costco, and numerous other innovative ventures. This value traces back to the World's Fair six decades ago that birthed the iconic Space Needle, highlighting the city's longstanding history of groundbreaking ideas. Their commitment to these values is exemplified in events like the recent Pride Parade, reinforcing that inclusivity in Seattle goes beyond words—it is deeply rooted in the population's values. Through these unique approaches, Visit Seattle is not just selling a destination but narrating an authentic story of a community that thrives on innovation, creativity, and inclusivity. Resources: Website: https://visitseattle.org/ LinkedIn Personal: https://www.linkedin.com/in/blountcanavan/ LinkedIn Business: https://www.linkedin.com/company/visitseattle/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/visitseattle Twitter: https://twitter.com/VisitSeattle Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/visitseattle/

The Insiders' Podcast
Episode 48 - Our Most Core Guest To Date!

The Insiders' Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2023 33:16


Episode 48 - Our Most Core Guest To Date!Legend, North Shore Lifeguard, Big Wave Charger And All Round Great Human... Dave Wassel joins The Insdiers'.Matt was lucky enough to have time to chat to Dave. Discussing the recent Pipe event, along with the Da Hui Backdoor shootout and also the Eddie. Dave brings a unique angle that highlights the incredible work the lifeguards on the North Shore do, day in day out.Dave also talks us though one of the most iconic rides ever at Cloudbreak with a great Inside story on Kelly Slater too!Stay for vital Does & Donts too!Please share, download, subscribe and enjoy!Follow us at @the_insiders_podcast - Link In Bio

Dropping In to Power: Personal stories of the transformational power of surfing from women of all levels, all ages, all over.

Are you a tasty treat for a shark during your period? Finally an answer to the question that plagues every woman surfer, at least once a month! Lifeguard Jessie Kilgour has a pretty strong take on the subject, but you'll have to get to the end to find out. You'll want to, though, as Jessie brings a fresh take on everything from where she surfs, to what she surfs, and how she lives her life around the water. Anchored in the Outer Banks, manager of megalodon Real Watersports school operation, Jessie speaks kitesurfing, windsurfing, foiling, water safety, and soul surfing. Her dedication and general good juju scored her a gig in “the dream she didn't know she had,” as one of few women to serve as a surf guide at fabled Tavarua. Oh, and being mistaken for Paige Alms. We talk story about kite surfing, getting tangled and getting free, the challenges of foiling, surfing the Outer Banks, and, of course, what it was like to keep people safe while surfing, hello, Cloudbreak! We deep dive into specific surfer chick stuff too. On the lighter side: how do you manage tampon shortages on remote island surf trips? On the heavier: the pressures of whether to have kids in the upper 30s, and how a woman's life and passions are impacted by whatever choices she makes. Jessie is a soft-spoken warrior. She says a lot in the spaces between, like underplaying a back injury she manages on a daily basis, which only amplifies how committed she is as an athlete, a teacher and a water woman. And then, she tells you the truth about sharks 

Collab Trends
Heber Cardoso, CEO do Braza

Collab Trends

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2023 33:23


O entrevista da vez é Heber Cardoso, CEO do Braza, holding que consolida as empresas MSBB Money UK, MS Bank, CloudBreak e MS Tech. Formado em Administração de Empresas e Negócios Internacionais pela Park University, onde também fez pós-graduação em Gestão de Empresas, tem forte atuação em vendas e em gerenciamento de risco. Com mais de 20 anos de experiência internacional e expertise em finanças, tecnologia e no mercado de agronegócios, atuou em instituições financeiras como INTL FCStone (atual StoneX), ED&F Man Capital Markets e HedgePoint Global Markets. Braza: https://lp.braza.com.br/

Proactive - Interviews for investors
Culpeo Minerals sees its future in Chilean copper mining

Proactive - Interviews for investors

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2022 5:17


Cloudbreak Discovery PLC's (LSE:CDL) CEO Kyler Hardy speaks to Proactive during a trip to meet investors in London. The junior recently announced plans to spin off its mining activities into a new wholly-owned subsidiary called Cloudbreak Exploration. Hardy explains the reasons for Cloudbreak's focus on opportunities in lithium brine, which he says is less energy-intensive to process than hard rock, adding that the battery metal is a "key strategy" though he also likes copper and nickel. #cloudbreakdiscovery #lithium

Proactive - Interviews for investors
Cloudbreak Discovery creates exploration subsidiary

Proactive - Interviews for investors

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2022 4:22


Cloudbreak Discovery PLC chief executive Kyler Hardy speaks to Proactive following the announcement that responsibility for its mineral exploration will be transferred to a new wholly owned subsidiary Cloudbreak Exploration Inc. Cloudbreak Discovery meanwhile intends to focus on energy royalty acquisitions in the United States and acquisitions of minority interests in international energy projects. Hardy describes the change as "very accretive news for the company" that is "coming along quite nicely."

Proactive - Interviews for investors
Cloudbreak Discovery reports positive results from Foggy Mountain

Proactive - Interviews for investors

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2022 4:04


Cloudbreak Discovery PLC's (LON:CDL) chief executive Kyler Hardy speaks to Proactive following the release of assay results from a reconnaissance surface programme at its Foggy Mountain site in British Columbia. Results from seven grab samples showed grades of more than 1% copper, with one as high as 3.5%. Hardy says that Cloudbreak is likely to continue study work on the site into next year with a view to bringing a partner on board to take the project forward, in line with its typical operating model.

The Sunday Roast
S4 Ep84: Midweek Takeaway featuring Kyler Hardy, CEO of Cloudbreak Discovery (LSE:CDL)

The Sunday Roast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2022 19:28


Phil Carroll and Kevin Hornsby talk to Kyler about the new projects and progress to date. Disclaimer & Declaration of Interest The information, investment views, and recommendations in this podcast are provided for general information purposes only. Nothing in this podcast should be construed as a solicitation to buy or sell any financial product relating to any companies under discussion or to engage in or refrain from doing so or engaging in any other transaction. Any opinions or comments are made to the best of the knowledge and belief of the commentator but no responsibility is accepted for actions based on such opinions or comments. The commentators may or may not hold investments in the companies under discussion.

Boia
Boia 160

Boia

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2022 90:08


#160 Rola a pelota para o Boia numero 160. Nossa dupla de ataque, Brunão e JV é substituída pelo indivíduo competente, Steven Allain, no miolo da cancha - Júlio Adler não deixa passar nada no arco e segura o placar. Dando volume ao jogo, temos o sequestro da pauta na WSL pelo Careca diabólico, a desimportância do US Open, Stephan Figueiredo relembrando a bomba atômica em Cloudbreak, prévia do Taiti e a nova geração das meninas- caiu na área é penalidade máxima! Jackie Wilson dá o Ponta-pé inicial com (Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher & Higher - clássico dos clássicos! Jay Kay, disfarçado de Jamiroquai, manda a turma pro chuveiro com a pesadona Nights Out in the Jungle. Pode correr para o abraço! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/boia/message

The Sunday Roast
S4 Ep43: Midweek Takeaway featuring Kyler Hardy, CEO of Cloudbreak Discovery (LSE:CDL)

The Sunday Roast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2022 18:23


Phil Carroll and Kevin Hornsby talk to Kyler about the new projects and progress to date. Disclaimer & Declaration of Interest The information, investment views, and recommendations in this podcast are provided for general information purposes only. Nothing in this podcast should be construed as a solicitation to buy or sell any financial product relating to any companies under discussion or to engage in or refrain from doing so or engaging in any other transaction. Any opinions or comments are made to the best of the knowledge and belief of the commentator but no responsibility is accepted for actions based on such opinions or comments. The commentators may or may not hold investments in the companies under discussion.

The Kyle Thiermann Show
#289 My Favorite Pro Surfer & Positive Vibe Warrior - Patrick Gudauskas (Repost)

The Kyle Thiermann Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2022 135:20


Pat Gudauskas (@patrickgud) formally qualified for the Championship Tour at Sunset beach in 2009. His versatile approach served him well during his rookie season. He pulled the first-ever rodeo flip during his march to the quarterfinals in Tahiti that year. In 2012, when the Fiji event was controversially called off due to massive surf, Pat was one of only a few standouts who stuck around and caught bombs at Cloudbreak.If you dig this podcast, would you be please leave a short review on Apple Podcasts? It’s takes less than 60 seconds and makes a difference when I drop to my knees and beg hard-to-get guests to come on the show. All of my stuff is on Thiermann.substack.comConnect with me on Instagram | Twitter | YouTubeBrought to you by Santa Cruz Medicinals and RPM Training.RPM Training is a Norcal based active lifestyle brand founded on the idea that legit, purposeful functional training is the foundation of a truly full, adventurous life. I love their workout equipment and use it daily. Use the code KYLETMAN at checkout and get 10% off any order. Santa Cruz Medicinals CBD has supported this podcast from day one. Their founder actually convinced me to start the podcast! They make a range of potent CBD products and my personal favorite is the Peppermint Tincture, which I use most nights before before I go to bed. Use the code KYLE10 at checkout, and get 10% off any order. Sore muscles, be gone!Connect with me on Instagram | Twitter | YouTubeSend voice memos to: info@kyle.surf Get full access to Writing by Kyle Thiermann at thiermann.substack.com/subscribe

StartUp Health NOW Podcast
Does Teladoc’s Stock Drop Matter? Jamey Edwards on Achieving Health Moonshots in the Face of Rocky Public Markets

StartUp Health NOW Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2022 28:40


This week's episode of StartUp Health NOW is a conversation with Jamey Edwards, Chief Operating Officer at StartUp Health. Jamey has been working in the telemedicine space for more than a decade, and his last company, Cloudbreak, went public via SPAC last year. So when we saw the headlines that Teladoc's stock dropped 40% – alongside other dips in the telemedicine public market – we called him up for a dose of perspective. In this conversation with host Logan Plaster, Edwards breaks down the news from Wall Street and gives startups some health moonshot wisdom. Bottom line: stay focused on the mission because improving global health is a marathon, not a sprint. Entrepreneurs: How to get investment from StartUp Health startuphealth.com Investors: How to invest in StartUp Health Moonshots healthmoonshots.com Want more content like this? You can subscribe to the podcast as well as other health innovation updates at startuphealth.com/content. Sign up for StartUp Health Insider™ to get funding insights, news, and special updates delivered to your inbox.  

The Sunday Roast
S4 Ep22: Midweek Takeaway featuring Kyler Hardy, CEO of Cloudbreak Discovery (LSE:CDL)

The Sunday Roast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2022 26:42


Phil Carroll and Kevin Hornsby talk to Kyler about the Namibian Oil project and progress since listing one year ago. Disclaimer & Declaration of Interest The information, investment views, and recommendations in this podcast are provided for general information purposes only. Nothing in this podcast should be construed as a solicitation to buy or sell any financial product relating to any companies under discussion or to engage in or refrain from doing so or engaging in any other transaction. Any opinions or comments are made to the best of the knowledge and belief of the commentator but no responsibility is accepted for actions based on such opinions or comments. The commentators may or may not hold investments in the companies under discussion.

The Frankie Boyer Show
Don Hurzeler, Brandon Gauthier, Ph.D., UpHealth Medical Interpretation

The Frankie Boyer Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2022 39:36


Frankie Boyer is an award winning talk show host that empowers listeners to live healthy vibrant lives http://www.frankieboyer.comGuests:Don Hurzeleris author of Suddenly Retired: A Roadmap for What Comes Next. This book will only look at one small window into the aftermath of all this Covid disruption. It is personal; it is your career and your future plans, plans that may now include your immediate retirement. This book is also meant to let you know you are not alone in this journey. In fact, Don's email is SuddenlyRetired@gmail.com and he is happy to listen to your thoughts and concerns about this period of transition and to give you his thoughts or direct you to some resources to help you get to a great place in your retirement. https://www.stevebeckerpublicity.com/https://donhurzeler.com/Brandon Gauthier, Ph.D.How does Vladimir Putin compare to other despots like Hitler, Stalin and Mussolini? “Evil is not preordained,” says Brandon K. Gauthier, PhD, an expert in Russian history. How do we understand disturbing actions of world leaders who consider themselves completely rational? How do world leaders, although acting with full conviction that what are doing is right, commit enormous crimes against humanity? Dr. Gauthier explores these questions and more in his provocative new book Before Evil: Young Lenin, Hitler, Stalin, Mussolini, Mao, and Kim. https://beforeevil.com/brandon-k-gauthierUpHealth Medical InterpretationAndy Panos is President of U.S. Telehealth at UpHealth. He joins us live along with medical interpreter Guadalupe Alvarado. UpHealth provides the technology to make medical interpretation services available remotely 24x7 at hospitals and health centers across the country, allowing doctors and nurses to talk heart-to-heart. Guadalupe Alvarado is a Spanish Certified Medical Interpreter who currently has been working for the last four years for Cloudbreak, now part of UpHealth. More than 25 million people in the U.S. have trouble speaking and understanding English including immigrants and refugees; Now, there's help. It's immediate, available 24/7 and just a link away. https://uphealthinc.com/

Dig Deep – The Mining Podcast Podcast
An Update on Cloudbreak Discovery´s Base and Battery Metals Successes with Kyler Hardy

Dig Deep – The Mining Podcast Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2022 34:54


In this episode, we chat with a returning guest who appeared in Aug 2021 (Ep 161). Kyler Hardy is the CEO of Cloudbreak Discovery, a junior exploration/development company that partners with explorers and developers to advance assets. Cloudbreak has a focus on battery and base metals projects. They own equity positions and royalties in a variety of projects across multiple jurisdictions, primarily in the Americas and Africa. Kyler has a background in finance and executive management/Directorships within the resources sector. In this episode, he provides us with an update on what he has been doing and what Cloudbreak has achieved within the base and battery metals sectors. KEY TAKEAWAYS Cloudbreak discovery is a project generator for the natural resource sectors. They mainly acquire early-stage to mid-stage assets. Norseman silver has recently ended up with some significant grab samples. Including, over 30% having 1%+ copper in them. The strategic alliance with Allianz minerals, in the USA, is bearing fruit. Klondike has over six kilometres of 6.23% copper. Their large lithium projects in the US are moving forwards rapidly. During the next 12 months, they are planning to explore multiple West African and Canadian assets and buy more. Cloudbreak is currently diversifying its portfolio to include more bulk materials and battery metals. Demand for bulk materials like Bauxite, (used to make aluminium) is also likely to soar. Aluminium can be used to make lighter vehicles, which saves fuel. In the podcast, Kyler talks about other batteries and net-zero metals, and other materials that are needed to make the green revolution work. BEST MOMENTS ‘We´ve married a good corporate team and a great technical team. ´ ‘It´s been a pretty busy six months and the team is just getting going.' ‘For the US government, having lithium production in the country is a key metric.' ‘Our alliance with Allianz in the US is because we believe that the area has been underexplored for the last decade, or so.' EPISODE RESOURCES Website: https://cloudbreakdiscovery.com/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/CloudbreakPlc Dig Deep Podcast episode 161 - https://omny.fm/shows/dig-deep-the-mining-podcast/interview-with-kyler-hardy-ceo-of-cloudbreak-disco   VALUABLE RESOURCES Email: rob@mining-international.org Website: https://www.mining-international.org/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rob-tyson/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/MiningRobTyson Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DigDeepTheMiningPodcast/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theminingpodcast/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/DigDeepTheMiningPodcast/videos   ABOUT THE HOST Rob Tyson is an established recruiter in the mining and quarrying sector and decided to produce the “Dig Deep” The Mining Podcast to provide valuable and informative content around the mining industry. He has a passion and desire to promote the industry and the podcast aims to offer the mining community insight into people's experiences and careers covering any mining discipline, giving the listeners helpful advice and guidance on industry topics. Rob is the Founder and Director of Mining International Ltd, a leading global recruitment and headhunting consultancy based in the UK specializing in all areas of mining across the globe from the first world to third world countries from Africa, Europe, the Middle East, Asia, and Australia. We source, headhunt, and discover new and top talent through a targeted approach and search methodology and have a proven track record in sourcing and positioning exceptional candidates into our client's organizations in any mining discipline or level. Mining International provides a transparent, informative, and trusted consultancy service to our candidates and clients to help them develop their careers and business goals and objectives in this ever-changing marketplace. Podcast Description Rob Tyson is an established recruiter in the mining and quarrying sector and decided to produce the “Dig Deep” The Mining Podcast to provide valuable and informative content around the mining industry. He has a passion and desire to promote the industry and the podcast aims to offer the mining community an insight into people's experiences and careers covering any mining discipline, giving the listeners helpful advice and guidance on industry topics. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Sunday Roast
S3 Ep21: Midweek Takeaway with Kyler Hardy CEO of Cloudbreak Discovery (LSE:CDL)

The Sunday Roast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2022 29:34


Phil Carroll and Kevin Hornsby talk to Kyler about progress with Allied Copper, Imperial Helium, and Lithium-Brine potential in the US. Disclaimer & Declaration of Interest The information, investment views, and recommendations in this podcast are provided for general information purposes only. Nothing in this podcast should be construed as a solicitation to buy or sell any financial product relating to any companies under discussion or to engage in or refrain from doing so or engaging in any other transaction. Any opinions or comments are made to the best of the knowledge and belief of the commentator but no responsibility is accepted for actions based on such opinions or comments. The commentators may or may not hold investments in the companies under discussion.

Surf Splendor
395 - Alex Gray: Quarantined at Cloudbreak

Surf Splendor

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2022 128:22


Alex Gray spent 8 months of quarantine on Namotou and Tavarua as one of the only surfers with full access to Cloudbreak. Today he tells the story and explains his revitalized passion for surfing, health, and sharing it all with others. Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Sunday Roast
S2 Ep2: The Sunday Roast presents "12 Stocks for the 12 days of Christmas" Episode 2 - Cloudbreak Discovery #CDL

The Sunday Roast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 26, 2021 18:34


Phil Carroll and Kevin Hornsby talk to Rory Kutluoglu regarding key projects and future plans plus Rory talks about how troublesome exotic cars can be and Christmas's past with his siblings. Disclaimer & Declaration of Interest The information, investment views, and recommendations in this podcast are provided for general information purposes only. Nothing in this podcast should be construed as a solicitation to buy or sell any financial product relating to any companies under discussion or to engage in or refrain from doing so or engaging in any other transaction. Any opinions or comments are made to the best of the knowledge and belief of the commentator but no responsibility is accepted for actions based on such opinions or comments. The commentators may or may not hold investments in the companies under discussion.

The Sunday Roast
S1 Ep15: Midweek Takeaway with Rory Kutluoglu Chief Operations Officer Cloudbreak Discovery

The Sunday Roast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2021 23:21


In this episode, Phil and Kevin talk to Rory about the recent option Agreement with Allied Minerals at the Klondike prospect in Colorado. Cloudbreak Discovery Plc (LSE:CDL) Disclaimer & Declaration of Interest The information, investment views, and recommendations in this podcast are provided for general information purposes only. Nothing in this podcast should be construed as a solicitation to buy or sell any financial product relating to any companies under discussion or to engage in or refrain from doing so or engaging in any other transaction. Any opinions or comments are made to the best of the knowledge and belief of the commentator but no responsibility is accepted for actions based on such opinions or comments. The commentators may or may not hold investments in the companies under discussion.

The Sunday Roast
S1 Ep9: Midweek Takeaway with Cloudbreak Discovery CEO Kyler Hardy.

The Sunday Roast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2021 37:07


In this episode, Phil and Kevin talk to Kyler Hardy from Cloudbreak Discovery (CDL) about progress on the royalty generator projects. Other stocks mentioned (in no particular order) #HARL #MILA #VAL #BEN #SEED #CMRS #HUI #XTR Disclaimer & Declaration of Interest The information, investment views, and recommendations in this podcast are provided for general information purposes only. Nothing in this podcast should be construed as a solicitation to buy or sell any financial product relating to any companies under discussion or to engage in or refrain from doing so or engaging in any other transaction. Any opinions or comments are made to the best of the knowledge and belief of the commentator but no responsibility is accepted for actions based on such opinions or comments. The commentators may or may not hold investments in the companies under discussion.

Energy Crue
John Simmons | Business Development at Cloudbreak Enterprises on Energy Crue

Energy Crue

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2021 102:03


John Simmons | Business Development at Cloudbreak Enterprises Connect with JP John joins me at the DW studio where we jump straight into it. We begin with him flipping the script asking me about what I've been up to since we last saw each other when I started Connection Crue. We then get back to him to discuss his background and how his entrepreneurial spirit he got into the oilfield. From sourcing deals, to inhouse gyms, eventually leading him to Cloudbreak Enterprise where we discuss his passion which is when the customer has the “a-ha” moment. Great convo with John and look forward to their success in making people's work flow more efficient.Wellsite Navigator is introducing the new technology you've been asking for: Lease Road Navigation. They've already mapped over 19,000 miles of oilfield lease roads that don't appear anywhere else, and every week they are adding more! Try Wellsite Navigator for free and get a $10 Amazon Gift Card for every friend you refer! https://fbuy.io/wellsite/energycrue   Show Links Sign up for our newsletter: The RoundupSubscribe to Digital Wildcatters on YoutubeFollow Digital Wildcatters on Facebook

Surf Splendor
385 - Jon Roseman

Surf Splendor

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2021 76:39


Quietly and immeasurably influencing the surf world, Jon Roseman's stewardship of Cloudbreak has been cosigned by Fijian tribal leaders and pro surfers alike. Today he shares stories from 30 years of swells, why his best surfing is still ahead of him, and how he hopes to convert his experiences into sustainable success for Tavarua's future. Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

My Wave Podcast
A Tour of the Reef at Cloudbreak

My Wave Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2021 44:08 Transcription Available


We meet Jeremi in this episode. A NASA scientist living in California shares one of three best waves in Fiji at world renown break called Cloudbreak. This should probably be a Part 1 episode so stay tuned for more. Song "Feel the Connection" by Justice James & is used by permission.

Talking Energy Show
Episode 9 - Talking Energy Show - Guests John Simmons and Jerry Howell - Cloudbreak - EPIC Workflow

Talking Energy Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2021 32:09


Episode 9 - Talking Energy Show - Guests John Simmons and Jerry Howell of Cloudbreak Enterprises Venture Studio discuss EPIC Workflow software and more with hosts Matthew Hill and Jeremiah Smith in the Tres Management gifted space for our cool studio we hope churns out interesting informative entertaining content. More at cloudbreakenterprises.com and epicworkflow.tech Please comment and share.Visit talkingenergyshow.comLook for us on all audio podcast platforms too.Follow #talkingenergyshow #software #web #app #projectmanagment #industry #startup #venturecapital #excel #spreadsheet #venturefunding #industry #technology #socialmedia #oilandgas #drilling #privateequityfunding #data #ideas #streamline #mineralexploration #procurement #revenue #reports #returnsmanagement #socialnetworking #oil #podcast #esg #flaring #privateequity #naturalgas #cng #pipeline #infastructure #production #USA #hydrocarbons #petroleum #investement #money #roi #wallstreet #fracking #regulation #startup #workflow #engineering #drilling #completion #upstream #midstream #naturalresources #fossilfuels #bidding #proposals #costcenter #billing #accounting #business #innovation #subcontractors #vendors #safety #compliance #regulatory #crm #partnerships #tech #monotize #money #infastructure #testing #solutions #problemsolving #programming #templates

TD Ameritrade Network
UpHealth (UPH): Dive Into Digital Health Services

TD Ameritrade Network

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2021 5:38


UpHealth (UPH) is a digital health services company which recently completed a merger with Cloudbreak, another telehealth service platform. Chirinjeev Kathuria, Chairman of the Board of UpHealth, Inc. discusses the merger as well as what's next for UpHealth, as it is expected to generate over $190M in revenue. He also talks about expectations for growth in telehealth and digital health care. Tune in to find out more.

The Blue Planet Show
Titouan Galea Wing Foil Interview- Blue Planet Show Episode #12

The Blue Planet Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2021 69:41


Aloha friends, it's Robert Stehlik, welcome to another episode of the Blue Planet show.  On this show, I interview wing foil athletes, designers, and thought leaders and ask them in-depth questions about Wingfoil equipment and technique. I'm also trying to get to know my guests a little bit better, their background, how they got into water sports, what inspires them, and how they live their best life. I'm a visual learner, so I'm adding visual content that you can watch on YouTube, but you can also listen to it as a podcast on your favorite podcast app Today's interview is with the very first wing foil world champion, Titouan Galea from new Caledonia. If you're into wing foiling as much as I am, you've probably already seen the videos of him doing crazy moves on jumps, back flips on the face of the wave, big airs, riding big waves in New Caledonia and other places. Really impressive stuff. And of course also being able to pull these moves off under pressure during competition and winning the last couple of world championship events.  Titouan breaks down some of the most advanced moves for us, Step by step. We also talk about his background, how he grew up in new Caledonia and now lives in France and about his board, foils, wings and what the future holds for him. So without further ado, please welcome the talented Titouan Galea. All right. Titouan, thanks so much for making some time to be on the Blue Planet show. How are you doing today? Great, thank you for inviting me. Yeah. Awesome. So here in Hawaii, it's it's 10 o'clock in the morning and for you it's evening, right? Eight o'clock or something like that?  And you're in Montpellier France. Is that right? Yes Okay. But originally you grew up in new Caledonia. So can you tell us a little bit about, your background, how you grew up and how you got into water sports? Yeah. Born in new Caledonia and my father was doing windsurfing and kiting, yeah. Maybe around 2000. So yeah, he teach me when, so thinking like surfing when I was about like eight or nine and yeah, I've been projects learning where mainly and some other places yeah, since. Maybe I was 12. I started doing it quite often.  Studying wave kite surfing mostly. And then what else I've done? Yeah. Foiling came like maybe six years before. Maybe seven. I started with kite foiling on my own when I was about 18 years old and yeah, just one year after I moved to France and I joined the French team of kite foiling. So I've been doing lots of wind sports and yeah. Then the wing for the game. So two years ago, and now I'm doing a few other sports most of the time. Pretty much. Yeah. Awesome. Congratulations on being number one in the world right now in the rankings. That's pretty impressive. How old are you now? 24 actually, I actually had to look up new Caledonia. I've never been there, but just for people to know where it is. So this is New Calidonia and Australia and Hawaii is here. And then this is new Caledonia, right? There's a place nearby, which is very famous. Is Fiji.  exactly the same swell, like Cloudbreak receives So yeah, we have same waves as other spots, so yeah, it's really nice space. And actually it's much more like it's windier in New Calidonia then. Yeah. Most of the time it's yeah. When you're in New Cal. So what's the prevailing wind direction. So what is the prevailing wind? So yeah, Southeast is like this way, right along the coast. For the surf, is it better on the south shore? On the north shore? Both? Yeah, cause it's windy almost everyday. It's tricky. Sometimes a winter and a bit north is so we have good surf on the west coast. Now we surf manly on the west coast. All disposed comes from south is south. Yeah. From depression, south hemisphere. So all this welcomes between a New Zealand and Australia and they, most of them come from south Southwest. So it's all all the stuff sports on the west coast. And so I guess the best ways are probably in the, in, in the winter there, which is summer in the Northern hemisphere. Is that right? Yeah. That's where we get you as big as well, like June, July, but actually there's way happening. Pretty much all the alarm really it's like entireties is have good swell too in. Pretty much all year long. They receive also no swell. We're not receiving the really, we can have like very good session and increased in may. Not really, but yes, there's a main season. Yeah. June, July, August. That's where exit peak of swell is where we get the biggest swells. All right. And then, so you've been out on the water windsurfing and kiting and so on since you're you said nine years old or something like that long time before I was pretty much sailing on small boats, like I don't know, optimist and stuff where I started  when I was nine. And do you have a early childhood memory that where you just realized, oh, I love this. This is what I want to do with my life or. There's always been a passion, but when I moved to France from Nicole, for sure, I said, okay, I really like this. I'm going to try to do it like professionally and try to make it as my job. And yeah, it's nice. And so did you move to France so you can be easily compete more easily? Or what, why did you move to France? Okay. Y yeah, two levels from Nucala is such a nightmare. There's not much light. It's super expensive. I didn't have big budgets in the beginning, cause yeah, it was just starting. So I will not live in Newcastle and travel all the time from new Caledonia. It's too much money for me. So yeah. I decided to move France, much more things happening, you guys are now. Yeah. You had to show to people, where is it? There's not much people knowing where it is. It's not a not places like Hawaii is like, everyone is looking how I there's a lot of things happening in Hawaii. Lots of people are there just a few people that are like writing professionally. So you stay there all the time. To be well known by people. There's not much you can do, like it's better to move to France or Europe where there's more evidence, there's more writers. So it's better for me even to progress and have a bit of emulation. I can say this in English. Yeah. That's a Friday around you. And also, yeah, now it's a fun. And they are also based in more per year where I'm living. So that makes things easy too. Yeah. So in new Caledonia, are you a French citizen or what is yeah. Yeah. It's like a department of science. It's easy to stay here for me also. I didn't start in the beginning, but now I'm doing a source today has a pilot license. And so I'm about to finish it in a couple of months. Yeah, looking forward we'll have like much more time to do many other things. Yeah. I guess new Caledonia is pretty far away from France. It's like pretty much on the other side of the world, right? Yeah. It's 35 hours flying almost because of the connection. Terrible. And also, if you want to know, I dunno, in a state, in the USA, it's so complicated. Really. So is it traveled from where it's super expensive? Like flying from new Kalamazoo to Europe is always more than yet 2000, sometimes 3000 super expensive. Talk a little bit about flying. I know it looks like you do paragliding and glider, plane flying and so on and you're. I guess you, you said your goal is to become a pilot do you have a pilot's license this now? Or? Yeah, of course this is gliding. So I have the license. I'm also piloting small airplanes. So yeah, my goal when I will be older is to do it like as a commercial pilot, but it has always been a passion for me to start by writing when I was pretty young. And when I moved to France, I had this thing also guiding super nice. It's much better to do glider here because when it's all the time strong, so it's better to fly a lighter than a paraglider. Yeah. And then you you also like doing like the kiting on snow around, it looks like. Thing new gal never will discover this thing. So it was nice to do this was things in trends to realize the mountains, the landscape are amazing. And yeah, it's a nice way to, to visit the mountains. Yeah, that's awesome. Cool. And then now basically you're able to just be a professional wing foiler now, or Kaiden wing further through F1 through the sponsorship, that's enough for you to make a living or do you have any other jobs? No, for now I have nothing else. So moving from this before it was a different thing. We, the Federation was helping a lot too. Like it was more, more structured thing. Now we was a wing, so cause it's like everyone, one of the wing is pretty good in the wing too. So it's working great too. Okay. So let's talk a little bit about the wing foil world tour. So recently you just won both the freestyle and the racing, right? So you're number one in the world right now. How does that feel? Hey, it's nice. We had two, two Evans last year also and both had finished and spouse, a one over one he wants. So I think it's going to be a great battle against this guy again, this year. Yeah, it seems like he's your biggest competitor right now. Huh? It's like he's right behind you. Yeah. Tell us about the last contest you went to, where was it? And and how was it while were the conditions and how has traveling to, how is it to travel during the pendant? It was not a big travel. It's one hour and a half from my house now. So yeah. I know four people from outside, it was a to travel cause fem a lot. Definitely was okay. And what about the convention? It was nice. Super well, have a nice the place it's like the wind was fully off shore, so maybe it was not waves at all was like the sea. So yeah, it was very difficult to have like big gems and setbacks was really tricky and freestyle. So on that flat water and we had to racing to we're going to have a wave and I'm really looking forward to it. Cause I think that's a windfall it's much more funnier in ways that war. Yeah. The waves make it more interesting. I guess the, that event in Brazil last year. There was there was some like a small shore break, but not much in terms of like breaking away. Yeah. It was not breaking ways, but still has, like proper waves to really enjoy it. So yeah. Presumably can do something. So we're calling actually 50% of the score on the ways and 50% on a freestyle. So that was okay. But as you can see, we can there was no way at all. So it was 100% of freestyle. The wind was just blowing off shore. Yeah. How strong was the wind? Like how many knots do you think about was the wind hit during the contest with w we have five days of competition and we only had two days off and the first day was probably around 30 knots, something like this. And the second day we had 20 to 15 knots no more, but he has, the first day was quite strong, quite cold raining all day. It was quite a tricky condition. Yeah. It looks perfect in the video, of course. Yeah. Yeah. That was the second day. Was that? Yeah, 15, 25 minutes, depending on the sign. So what size wing were you using? During the freestyle and what size during the racing? And just curious, like different con equipment Thursday, I told you it was, the wind was pretty strong. So I was on my three five, and that was the last day as you can see, I was on my phone too. Cause it was like, yeah. Less wind on the first day was the racing Thursday in 30 nights. I was, I think I was in a five and a five. And and the second day we did a race after the freestyle and it was less and less. That's when I went on my, I think on my five and my six or seven after really big wins. So talk about this, on that one back flip, I guess your foil landed on the wing and left a couple of holes in it. And it was okay to just keep going. That was okay. Cause I had the pressure and the motivation was it. I was doing the final against spouse. Yeah. I was building my studying by the like small small streaks. And I came to do my backlit. Normally I do it all the time, but this time I crashed and I crashed like really bad. So I ended up into the doing with the foil. So it's got a bit like two parts of my wing and it had me a lot of pressure. I saw I pulled still a fly, so I went again, fall back asleep, and then I did my Qualtrics again. I knew I was in. Good. Yeah. Awesome. And then you, the racing, what we're using different equipment for the racing and like how was that? What kind of course was it and so on? Actually, no, really. I bring, I dunno. Yeah. I bring many boards to test and see actually, yeah, I use exactly the same for freestyling and racing was the racing. You had a bot. Off downwind where you will not use the wing at all. So you had to pen, so we could not use super small 500, 600. So yeah, so I had my hate Android coming quite soon with a fund that I use this country's guide and I'm racing to, there was really I was supposed to this done with, but I will have used maybe a 500 or 600 because it was much faster, but because we had this down with, but it's really nice that way. It's not, everyone has such small force, so it was better for everyone, I think. So how did that work? So the downwind part you had to you basically had to pump without the wing or how does that work? Yeah, it just basically grabs the wing from the front handle, which is in the leading edge and you just keep going. That's it. And then downwind leg, you're not allowed to use the wings. You have to, you just use the waves to end the foil to go down. Yeah. Yeah. It was very short, like longer, but it was like, I don't know, 200 meters maybe normal. I see. So like a super small, super fast than racing wing, like you would use for kite racing or something like that would be wouldn't work for that. Yeah. Maybe I could do it, but I don't know, take safety and don't take such a small cause it's not working like sailing a normal racing regatta. It's elimination like freestyle. So if you lose like one race, when you're over, you have no discards, nothing really. You have to perform on each race. Who's one time if you're over so better takes safety. Okay. Interesting. So basically that, that's pretty interesting. So you basically use the same equipment more or less, same foil, same board, same wing too, for the racing industry. So yeah, the last day, cause it was like very light when a, I use a bigger board. Yeah. For the freestyle. I was using a 30, 80 there's sports and yeah, for the racing, because it was super light when we were on those six or seven meters. How was he seeing a 44, 50 with 50 liters and and a big wing, like how light or how much, when do you need to get up on the foil? Like how many knots would you say? You need to get it? Maybe seven, something like this? I think around seven. Yeah. If I was still using a small book, 50 liters, it's not so small. If you go like on the sup for example, like for down winner, Like on a sup a thing you can go even lower. I want lower for sure. Maybe we have a 50 liters. That's good. Wow. That's impressive. So if the DWA came to you and said, Tetouan, you can have a contest anywhere in the world any kind of format. So what would you say this is? This is the perfect contest. What would you choose? I don't know. It's a tricky question for sure. Love to have one in proper way, like I have at home, like big waves or like Cloudbreak or even Whereas like these more, maybe more shoes one I wear or maybe someone might, I guess something like this really visa one day, for sure. I'm not sure it's going to happen anytime soon. So yeah, it would be nice maybe not such big ways, but I know not super hollow, maybe also retreats in a way, because it cannot bear from trees. But I think now, I'm trying it by now, like to perform tricks into the way, and this is very interesting. I think we've not big waves, like even less than, but I dunno where honesty. I don't mind I can go on, but this space there's many places for sure. We can do this. There's many places we can do maybe in a couple of Brazil. I don't know many places in Maui, too, in front of the beach or even lanes. I don't know many places. Yeah. So wave contest. Obviously you probably the waves are more interesting than the racing, right? Yeah. Really racing. I don't know, competing this year for the two, but there's no sense doing racing. We've already tied, fallings out, performing very good already. I think it's better to keep this sport. Yeah, like this really? This is better really. Yeah, you're doing some amazing stuff in the waves and I'm just like pulling off big jumps on the face of the wave and stuff like that. It's pretty impressive for sure. So maybe walk us through a little bit what you're doing here and what I find really interesting here, when you're doing a bottom turn, how you sh she didn't the way almost like wind surfing and yeah. Can you talk a little bit about that? Your technique? You're going to have the full story. It's fun. Yeah. It gives a video. You can see on the learning edge. I have a Sikh, which is my comment on it because I had this thing. I could not grab the phone from handle. So that's why I was keeping the wing in my hand. But I've journey. Yeah. Afterwards I saw it looks great. And it's helped me to do maybe better bottom sometimes, but also you don't see much when you go to this thing because I don't have window in mind. So I don't know. I like both, most of the time I just grabbed it from handle. I used to do this, but yet since this time I was using to see I'm doing more and more like winter. Yeah. It's really interesting. And then when you land with the foil in the whitewater, Does that actually make the landing a little bit softer? Is it actually easier to land on whitewater? Is it hard because of the turbulence? Yeah. Yeah. True. So you can jump on a, fall on the shoulder and you're going to land on flat or even on the steep part is going to be tricky, but it's going to be hard yet for your knees and everything, but yeah. Landing in the white water, it's much more softer, but afterwards also move a little bit. So like in this side of waves, it's okay. But more than this can be tricky to learn. Really. I don't know. Of course we're going to perform more and more, but more than this, for sure. It's going to be tricky to learn in a whitewater. I don't think there will be lending like big areas, like 10 feet away is for sure not going to happen. I don't know. We'll see. It goes so fast. I'm really looking forward to see what's going to happen. Five years in the sport. Really. I'm really stoked to be part of it now. It's crazy. Yeah. Is this the same way that from the, with the GoPro max? Yeah, it's exactly the same way, but just so from outside, this way you can have a, yeah. That's super cool move in. And I think there was another one that I wanted to show where you're doing like a back flip on the wave as well. Whereas that one that's funny. I think. Yeah. It's fun. Yeah. So doing all those freestyle moves on the wave and I guess that's like the whole, the next the next step right. Doing days ago. Yeah, you can go from back there and 360, but now I'm doing good this time. I was training now I learned my last post and then a good one. So for sure you can lend some front flips into the waves to probably double to build also seven 20. Yeah. Awesome. I think you've already been attempting those right? The 17, seven 20. No, really. If I attempt was not made on purpose really. I have to really, I have to try seven 20, but as a thing, if you do a pre 62 high, most of the time you go turn over rotate and they never land seven 20, but I have to try it for sure. Yeah. Th the. Let's talk a little bit about the backflip. I think the tricky part of the backflip is like when the wing, when you're kinda got the wing between you and the water, and this just looks like a really tricky spot to be in. But actually at this moment, if you have a good, Hey you okay? Yeah, really? It's all about the Pope. Really? If you both, while you get the good hate and you just like, yeah, totally good. I got to Trumbull line. If you, at the end, when you see yourself pointing towards the sea and the wing in front of you, normally you're good. Really? There's nothing can happen. It's all about the beginning. For me, I think so as long as you have enough height in this position, then you can pull out of it. But if, I guess if the water's underneath you at this point, then you basically fall onto the wing. Yeah. But it's happened to me many times for the first time. So maybe walk us through it step by step. What do you like, I guess for the pop, like you're trying to get the anchor, the full angles up as steep as you can. And the takeoff. Yay. You have to get a good spirit. Not to agree, not to cross man having a good speed. Yeah. It's like hard when you back. So you try to go hi, and you have to put your head in the back. I'm not doing really putting the, your eyes, like going back in the back. It's I think it helped for sure. And after, yeah, on this one I grew up myself, to make my myself like maybe faster. Yeah. That's pretty much it after it was a tricky part also is to position the the wind. Like it's a bit hard, like to explain to everyone the main thing you to think, as a wing, like not. Into the wind, again, the wind, as you can see on the highest spot I am is a wing is just like in the middle. Not taking much like the wind, the that's not against the wind. It's just in the middle. Yeah. And that was just the one above. Yeah. When I'm upside down exit wing. Yeah. I want to get back winded, but you also don't want the wing to pull you down towards the water, right? Yeah. And one other thing is give advisers it's much easier to learn, move some ways, for sure. Like a good key here, like coming, just cross I don't know. You didn't, you don't need nothing. Just one fit normal coming against you. It's gonna help you so much. Really? Yeah. Just have a steep ramp to launch off of. It will for sure. Okay. So yeah, no, that's awesome. And then what about, is this the one for that? I think so this is not the one, sorry. Yeah, so maybe walk us through that move. Like the Ford sort of, it looks a lot like windsurfing actually like doing a forward on windsurfing, but not the same though. I don't know. Maybe I'd done a long time ago, but I think it's totally different, but I'm doing maybe winds of sight. The decision I had paid, cause it was a waste, but I don't think, and from it this way, I saw some old guys now doing it, like more like Trump line again, like throwing themselves in a, from and me I'm more using the wing to do it. So I think I have to learn how to do it, but this one looks great. It's nice. It's just a bit tiring for your knee. So basically you, this one, you getting up, you try to go high first and then you spin sideways almost around the wing. It looks very great. Or w how do you think of, what do you think about when you're doing it? I really, I don't know. I just learned like a week ago, this thing. Yeah, you have to turn the wing, like upside down, like towards the water, like super fast and keep pushing, pulling you back normally itself. I don't know. Really. I don't have much advice really. I didn't learn a lot yet, so I don't all the time, but I have to. Yeah. It's super cool that you're pushing the limits. I think without, it's always easier to do something once you see somebody else doing it and then can figure out how they did it. But doing it for the first time is the hardest, the first point to learn it is always the hardest part, right? Yeah. Especially for the, like the guys in Maui. And they were doing back flips since mom already, but because we didn't have any advice from anyone, it was really hard to learn it, same way, but now, yeah, I get it. Many guys go now in France. So I think going to go faster and faster, I don't know for sure. Are kids now doing it too? The forage flips. Yeah. Yeah. Not so much here on the wahoo, but I know on Maui, a lot of the guys who are doing the backflips now, the younger guys, so this is pretty good too. So using a kiteboard with the wind wing. Yeah. This is not something I'll for sure. And yeah, in France sometimes when that's in, look at where we had the competition to the wind is blowing like super strong sometime. So yeah, this time I can use my cause he was like, I don't know, 40, not something. Yeah. I think I saw somewhere where your dog, like there was a longer version of it in your dog. Is that your dog chasing you on the beach? No. That's not even mine. A friend, maybe. I don't know, but yeah, that was pretty cool. So in terms of, I know the F1 wings don't have windows. Like how do you feel about windows? Do you think it's that's always a question people have, do you need a window? Or like, how do you feel about having windows in the wings? Really depends if you go in a crowd or no, I don't use to go to play so much crowded, so I'm okay. Without window. Yeah. It's the only time I told you before was when I'm using it in a way maybe. And I do like bottom turns and stuff like Windsor style. I cannot see inside the wings. So that can be a problem sometimes, but maybe it will come with some windows. I don't know. Cool. Some amazing stuff you do and the waves are really impressive. So what do you see hap like for the future? What do you think will happen? What are your goals? What do you think is possible? What do you think the future holds for wing filings? Maybe now I have a better ID, but in the beginning, like a few months after it came, I was thinking it was just a little thing, but not thing to grow at all. So I was totally wrong. Really. Now it's becoming such a big thing that companies are doing, like lots of work on it and focusing on a lot now. And also it's really nice, but how I see it, I don't know for me. Yeah, for sure. I really like going in a ways. I think it's a really good time to go in a ways and have fun in a ways. For sure. Yeah. People want to also put the freestyle now that they're doing competition. So we have, it's much easier to do freestyle and racing event weather event. So it's gonna push a freestyle again. Good thing. We, what we're going to learn in a freestyle and we can add it in a ways too. So it's going to be even more interesting. I think the wind serves are doing tricks in a way, so we'll come with this too. What else? Yeah, it was me. I want to know is just, yeah, I prefer going away. I really want to do like videos in good places bringing in good ways. Around the world. I'm really looking forward to this. Yeah. So one of the tricky parts of winging in the ways is if you get caught inside of a big set and then a big whitewater is coming at you just cause the wing has, the wing just gets torn. So pulled so hard by the waves. Have you ever like broken leashes and lost wings or blew up the wing and so on? Like how do you deal with that? Like when I went in bigger ways, I don't know why really. I had many sessions, but I never felt once in UK then. Yeah. So I was lucky. I was not like pushing too much at this time. Maybe now if I'm going back, I will do maybe go deeper for sure. But yeah, I've been in such big west, but still I've been culturally smaller ones in other places, even here in France. And yeah, I broke a few leashes for sure. He broke some time. It's a nice things though. It doesn't like to touch your arms, which is nice, but yeah it's tricky if you're on your own and there's not much people around you, you can be in trouble when I'm in a new car going in big ways. There's always boats taking care. If never something happened is always. I know friends with boats or is always going to be a solution, but yeah, if you're on your own, I know people like more shoes they go in and sometimes it publishes. And so when just go away in Madagascar or I don't know, so they have yet to swim back to the shore. So yeah, sometimes it can be tricky. It's the same way when surf and as they broke a lot of gears, the waves, it's almost the same thing. Yeah. Yeah. It is. We were just talking about what the best solution is, because it's just, yeah, it's hard when you lose your wing. Sometimes I think it's maybe even better just to let the wing go when the big set comes. And then try to turn the channel later, yeah. Depending on what size of where you were talking about the one, it was really big in your cow. I didn't put even a Wenglish. I was without really all the time. Cause it's not going to break anyway. So you'd better, like it better, doesn't have a leash that way the wing might not be broken by waiver. There's a good chance of doing won't be broken if you don't have the leash. So it's nice. Yeah, sometime first you're not going to have a bullish. There's no sense. It's super dangerous. Yeah, but then yeah, you just have to be pretty pretty sure of yourself that you're not going to lose your gear. We're also talking about that maybe you could put, they have those apple air tags or whatever like a satellite locator thing that you could maybe put on your wing. So if you lose it and it's like out in the ocean somewhere, you could find it, with, find your iPhone and look for your wing and then locate it like that. So later on you could go back with a boat and find it or something like that, I think that's I never heard about a thing where not so advanced, I think you need cell phone service to make it work probably. Yeah. Yeah, it's a second another idea, but I was wondering like you have some of your boards behind you, so if you could only have one board for all conditions, like including light, wind and so on, what would be the board you would have, maybe, can you show us your w the board you would choose if you only had one board? Our hands, really? If suddenly I have to go in that maybe I'm gonna take this one, so four, eight, four, eight. Yeah. That's the one I use in super-light with 50 liters visiting. I can go, yeah, that's super light, maybe 12, 12 knots with a normal wing, like five. So yeah, that's the one I would take. So how much do you weigh? I weighed 70. Okay. So a good volume for you and I'm sorry, what did you say about 50 liters or? Yeah, that's 50, but really that's only if I have to go like below 50 knots, I always using yeah. Around 35 liters. Normal, really? And then when you start, you put your, you put both your feet on the board already underwater and then get, let it pull you out. Yeah. Yeah. I just sit standing up on the surf board with my knee bands and the water and I have my wings up and I just go out to water. Yeah. And you just need a good Gus to get you going. And then once, once you're out, it's fine. Yeah. Yeah. No, I think, I had a lot of questions like this. A year ago, six months ago. But I think now, I see here many people using small boats and I think the same on how I were quite strong too. Now, pretty much everyone is using small boats. Yeah. It's pretty common to use smaller boards, but I still like using a board that almost floats me. I use I'm like 88 kilograms or something and I use a boy that's maybe 75. That's yeah. Okay. Around yet. Yeah. Let's look at some of the ways. And is this in new Caledonia that this video, can you see it. Yeah. That was a long time ago. Yeah, that wasn't NewCo was one of the first time I was going to the reef. That was almost two years ago. Yeah. These two years ago. More than two years ago. Yeah. It's been a while. Huh. Let me see, like there's some more recent ones. Yeah. I guess not much. So pretty soon after they moved to France, basically. Yeah. I call often in UK. Not now, this was two years ago or a bit less now. And after this year after this, as you continue, but after this, I went back, just went when it started Yeah, that was the first time I was trying to Germany a year ago. Nice. But it's really, you're the level of your whinging and the level of everybody's winging has progressed a lot in just one year. It's pretty amazing how much everybody's getting better at a really high rate. Can you give some pointers on landing big jumps? Like how do you keep the landing soft when you do a big air? If you're going like. Most of the time. Yeah. A few moments ago, I realized like it's much better to land on a tape all the time. So that's what I'm doing now. I just end up on a tailoring all the time first. And that's the only advice I can give out. Honestly, there's not much I can say about it before I was trying to learn, but it was like giving lots of pressure on me and everything, but I realized that tail was a bit easier. Yeah. And I've seen some people trying to land with the nose slightly down. So the front wing goes in down at a downward angle a little bit. So it doesn't hit as hard, but then it's hard to pull off. It's hard to pull it off because just the board gets sucked down on onto the water. Yeah. You can do this with small gems, but really once you start doing high, really, you can not do this again, really. So you on YouTube to watch videos on YouTube and YouTube. Yeah. That's the only station I filmed, but now that I'm listening, I'm more involved in this now. Next time. I have been much more of this administration and I only see him that one, but I want to go again. I'm just wanting movies now. What's your, I think like foiling in steep waves is a whole different ball game. So do you have some, maybe some tips or pointers on, like controlling the foil on, on the steep fast wave? Again, can you repeat the question? Oh, just with the foil on a steep, fast moving wave it's just tricky to keep the, to control the foil. So do you have any tips on how to, how you do that or any points? For me, it doesn't feel so tricky. Just depend on if you use the right size of a wing. I think it's okay. This is, this was writing a 500 centimeters square was pretty small, pretty good, small, thin fast wing, basically that you can use in the bigger waves. It makes sense. Yeah. And yeah, it would be cool to see you write those ways this summer. So do you have any plans to go back to new Caledonia? Anytime soon. Not yet. Sadly some now with 15 days of quarantine where there's not much light, so yeah. Maybe I'm going to travel more. Some other places it looks like on this one you are wearing a leash or you said you weren't using any least a leash. This time I was not. I was wearing. Yeah, because there was only one boat and not much people around. So the waves were not so big. So it was okay. But really when I had bigger condition, when this, and I was not using the wind and not using the leash, big base, many people, and it's all my friends. So again, I know if I release my wing somehow, because of course, if I Excel because you're going to help me another thing, if I don't have a solution, I do a mistake. I don't know. I'm jive on attack and I release the wing. And third, like far away in a, in the channel can be a problem. So when there's, when it's big and with lots of people is can help me, but there was no one out. So it was on my own. That's why I was using zoom. I'm just curious when you're coming out of the water after a good session. Are you having dinner too? So when you come out of the water with your gear what is and people come up to you on the beach what is the most common question that people ask you. Like everywhere you mean? And every spot. Yeah, just like when you think that's like the most, most common questions that you get. I had quite a few questions. Maybe the most, the question people ask me the most probably it's how do you get up on small boats? But there was like, I had many, and now less and less because people start to use these small boats too. Especially in the beginning two years ago, when I was using already at 25 ditches boats. So many people were asking me, how do you get up on such small wars? And now I'm using what gear should be grateful. These of this condition. Yeah, they're still looking at the size and Maluma my boss, but not much question about like technique and stuff, because there's not much people sending even trying to do back flips and stuff like this, just stop jumping. So yeah, yesterday I had someone else. Give me, take out, how can I jump a higher. What can I do? Yeah, of course, I'm going to give him tricks. It seems like the question I get a lot, like from people that don't know how to wing for help, they always ask like, how much is it? And they think that they can just buy the equipment and then do it. But once they have the equipment yeah. That's from people that are not already writing, but I thought you asked me what people writing me, like question, but yeah, of course, random people or even, yeah, kite surfers when Sufism will know the prices, but yeah, random people walking in the beach there. They're all asking first. What is the sport? How is it called? And yeah. How much does it cost? Is it hard to write? That's a pretty common question. I think. So this was another different event. That was just a teaser of the, okay. So I went there just to do a teaser for was crazy. The event was crazy strong again. So what what is your favorite move? Do you have a favorite or just depends on the conditions and is there like one, a favorite move that you do now? I like back flips because it seems very easy. So it's nice to do two fro like a good one when there is a good waves in front of me. It's nice when it's like couple waves too. It's to do what we saw a few times. They like to Jen facing the wave and landing again in the waves on whitewater is really great. Cause you can do it sometimes really high and give you like good sensation is same as when surfing. Like you have very good possession. People are doing tricks in the waves, but the tricks, I think the most is like big aerials. So it's the same in wind falling. Okay, cool. Yeah. It's awesome stuff. You're doing. If you let's say you're stuck inside or, like during the pandemic, a lot of people were like quarantined or they couldn't get outside. And and a lot of people get feeling lonely or anxious and depressed and so on. So when you're having a rough day and you can't get on the water, let's say what would you do to stay positive or keep a good outlook? If I have to say, if you're having a hard day, it's always easy to go in the water and have fun. And then that makes everything better. But let's say you can't go in the water. So make it a little bit harder to answer the question. What do you do? I will try to work on something. Now I have to study, I can video or do some stuff like this. So I don't know to make my days better. Probably I'm going to watch some video of not athletes from the past like a few days ago I rewatch, I don't know the name. Red bull TV on a one on one chapter. I don't remember the name, but he has, he made a good video with Jesse Richman CAHE and Robbie nation in Fiji. Yeah. I love to see those videos. It really inspired me. Yeah. Yeah. It's called chapter one. I think. Oh, cool. I have to watch that. Is that kite, a kite surfing video or skate, surfing video all around the world. And there's is a big part in Fiji, some of hers in Indonesia. So yeah. Very nice film to watch. Let's talk a little bit about your wings. Like your, the F1 wings, like how would you compare the original F1 swing to the new F1 strike? What are the differences and what do you like about it and so on. Okay. It's totally different. It's much more steeper. It goes much faster. It keeps his shape. Even if you like pull out your back hand, even strong wind. So that's totally a different way. Like it's yeah, just more rigid. And the profile remains the same with even a lot of pressure on it. And it's still like very light, very easy to use. It's really a wing and much higher too, but that's also the GDT name. And then I, like I saw during the, they have a new wing for racing too with an extra like an extra baffle in it or extra kind of almost like inflatable battens. Is that right? Yeah, I know how to pronounce it in English breeds trust. I think it's the same as the one in the middle of it's a smaller one, but it's not another wing. It's also the try, but be a size from the six meters, three strips. Okay. Let me see if I can pull that up. So yeah, you had it before it's on video, straight wing, but on the bigger sizes they have this extra extra thing here. So what is what does that do? What's the advantage of having that? Cause. So when chip is always touching the water, if you put, if you make the wind bigger, like maids may doing like super wide wingspan, so they had to put so fast on the court, and if you put a lot of code and not was trust was stretched and not going to keep a good shape. So we was three stretch is going to take, keep a good shape. I think this is a profile. The profile is much more like that better. So you get less and less flutter and stuff probably too in the trailing edge. Yeah. Also sometimes in strong winds, turning edge can flap on those ones are not at all. So yeah. Who knows maybe is he gonna use it on the smallest size later? So let's talk a little bit about the foils. Are these the foils that you're using? Yeah. Downright. Yeah. I'm using a nine 40 or is it okay? Yeah, same chamber, much smaller. I know if they're online yet. And and wood, what do you like about it? W why is it? Why does it work? You think it's a medium aspect ratio, so pretty a few brands are coming with this. Now we still have a good glide ratio. You still have a good speed, which of course the smaller, the weight, and also improving, not gonna have the same book because the aspect was a wing makes a good book too. If you have a high aspect, me, you're gonna have a better book in the lower aspect. So this is like a medium aspect wing. It looks like, right. Yeah, that's what I said. So I think And then the, as like a nice curve to it, but then the tips are slightly turned up again. Do you find that helps when you, when the wing tip breaches and helps you help? When the Winship goes to it doesn't catch much bubbles there in the main curve. It's too to have the full stable and maneuverable. Nice. And then the, is it the mass and the fuselage or one piece. Yeah, you can see it with the three screws. The connection between the mask also is two bucks. And then the tail wing. Do you ever do any shaming on the tailoring or do you just use it the way it is or whatever, but this one's already, not that not so small too. And welcome. We have already like smaller sizes tailoring. Yeah. I'm using mesh smaller than these ones, right? She is the curve tailings or is yours more flat or what kind of shape is your, the one that actually the one I'm using now it's more curl will come with stone, like this much smaller. And I think it's going to be better because you have better maneuverability and probably. Better speed too. Is there anyone that you would like to thank for supporting you over the years and in your career? Like anyone that's helped you or supported you? Probably my parents teach me how to, he teach me catcher, so he brings me into his sports and my mother taught me a lot in the beginning. Buy me some gears now. Probably a fun. Cause they took me since beginning withdrew both together. So they helped me a lot in the beginning. And your, are your parents still in yukata? Caledonia? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. My parents are living Danza, gonna stay there forever for sure. And you're gonna keep going back there. When do you think you'll ever end up living there again? Or do you like living in Europe better? I really like Europe yeah. Going on a night thing. I really like Ireland too. And was specifically for the condition. The thing is now there is a lot of people don't talk about it. Cause it's, as we talked about in the beginning, it's not a well-known place where there's a lot of sharks attack. Now there's many people eaten by sharks every year, like more than in Australia, many places. So it's going to be a problem for specifically, for people that are going a lot in the world like me. So I will see. And for sure there is good play, good places. Be some nerves. Somewhere else. I haven't been to French refugees, so I have to visit more places to see if there's somewhere else again, I can say, but now I'm not going to stay in France, for sure. Even if I really like space for all the things, but I don't have in islands. Have you been to the Canary islands or any other? I haven't been to canneries. I've been to, I was in the Caribbean this winter too, really? I think I prefer still. I think we've had, I think we have better condition where it's not not also. I have all my friends were, their thing is much easier. Yeah. I think we have very good condition too. Yeah, it looks pretty amazing. For this show about wing fighting, who else do you think I should interview? Are there any other good people or friends you have or people, that would be interesting to talk to for insights about when quilling you've been interviewing Zane bowels and who else Yeah. Yeah, penny Riker for the athletes. Yeah, and a few other people, but yeah. W who else do you think would be good to talk to men and women? You already did, honey, any record I talked to then who, I don't know. I really want to heard about advice and tips from the Spencer boys, or it would be nice if you interview them. Who else. I don't have much. Hi girls. Huh. Who is pushing in France? There's a girl who won here in in the cat. It's Olivia Kenna. Yeah, she's doing good. Who else? I don't know. Who is pushing along, talking to you there? Is there someone in their room with you? You want to say hi she wouldn't be at and say hi on the video now. Okay. Heidi. Just telling me. Okay. So Olivia piano, Jeff Jeffrey. And For sure. I would love to, to hear what Ty thinks about his fame, but I don't know. Yeah. He has time. He's pretty busy. Yeah, it's hard to get him be nasty if you can reach him. For sure. Yeah. Cool. Anything else you want to talk about? Usually like at the end of these videos, most people already left, but there's a few hardcore people that are full, crazy that they're still watching. So do you have a special message for those people that are still watching after an hour and a half to say, thank you to you. It's nice. But various people like you doing this thing for sure is going to interest. Many people are on a roll. And for me, it's nice. You're giving me a person who I'm going to hear because yeah, for sure. I really want to hear what a yeah. So I'm going to look at them for sure. Next month. All right. Thank you very much to rich and to me for this. I'm really happy. Yeah. Thank you so much for your time. It's always fun to talk about wing foiling and I just find thinking about it and hearing other people give pointers. It's so helpful, when you get on the water and try something new, if you already have to do it again Jeff real  I really wish I had advice for backflips and many for the backups for mum. I didn't try and match, but if I had only a few advice, like I did this video, you should go a lot faster and faster circles. Yeah. Loads of people are doing it and yeah, it's gonna spray many people are gonna do it soon for sure. Yeah, thanks for sharing your secrets. Now you're going to have more competition sometime. Yeah. So you have some tricks up your sleeve that you that you're working on right now. Like new tricks that nobody's seen yet. No, I have to work on it. I haven't, no, I'm not pushing much, honestly. I've been almost always following. Yeah. I didn't learn by flick even the front flips. A few perfectly, but. I came after his one who land one during the competition, the 360, it was probably bus or someone else doing it the first. So now I'm not pushing my freestyle anyway, that's I start liking more and more now, but in the beginning it was not really something I like really, for me, the wing goes in a way and that's it. But now, yeah, cause I said, cause you can do tricks in a way. It make sense for me to also learn tricks and I don't see any yet doing, she'll be only this. So I helped competition going to be more and more in a way. Okay. So one more question. So when you think about like your skills, is it how much of it is just natural talent that you have, naturally talented for the sport and how much is it practice and thinking about it, visualizing, and then just time on the water. We're practicing it. You're asking me about me. Like how much of it is your talent and how much of it is practiced on the water. Okay. That's yeah, I don't want to be like, I don't want to say I'm good. I think I'm not working much like for trick. So I think it comes from talent. Interesting. Really? I just, now sometimes people see me and can look and try to understand. Most of the time now, just on myself, I don't push much money, save myself doing many times and just do a few drinks in my session. So maybe it came from Thailand sometime the video from 11, just in one day is a backlit for me to maybe a bit more for sure. Yeah. It's also all the experience he hasn't before that. And other sports and other things. And also he was the guy who were lending his brother and defray that keeps so for sure he had good advice from them. So what Baltz Miller was saying, like a lot of times he like dreams about wing foiling, or he can't sleep at night and he's like thinking about it in his head a lot and stuff like that. Do you spend a lot of time thinking about weighing foiling or visualizing it in your head or? No, but really I'm not thinking. I'm thinking of a lot of things. It was the thing, but really I'm not really, it depends if I had a really big condition, like a superstition, of course, I'm going to dream about it, but accommodation, even doing tricks and stuff. It's nice, but it doesn't give me like such big waves, man. Yeah. All right. Thank you so much. This is really good interview. I appreciate your time. I have to get going too, but good luck with everything. I help you. Stay number one in the world. That's awesome. Just keep doing what you're doing and you're in spirit inspirational. So thank you for that. All right. Okay. Have a good night. Aloha. Bye bye. All right, friends. Thank you for watching another full episode of the blue planet show. You made it all the way to the end. You're one of those elite few people that are crazy enough to watch the whole thing and just can't get enough of it just like me. So congratulations. The show is made just for you. This show is brought to you by blue planet customers, just like you, who support our business. So if you enjoy this show, next time, you're ready to purchase some gear. Please check out blue planet surf.com and I'm sure we have great selection. Great quality, great value that we can offer to you. And if you're watching this in the summer of 2021, please check out our video contest that we're running in June and July of 2021. Submit a video and have a chance to win the $2,000 grand prize. So check out the blue planet video contest. All right. So thanks again for watching. We have more shows coming up soon, Aloha, and I'll see you on the water.

The Surf Simply Podcast
72 - The Unbearable Asymmetry Of Being

The Surf Simply Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2021 99:12


A bumper new episode of the Surf Simply podcast with Ru, Harry, Jessie, and Will talking about the creation of Surf Simply's 5 new Youtube series which just topped a million views, plus: Asher is back to talk asymmetrical surfboards, we review the best surf films of 2020, as well as guests Jon Roseman, Tavarua owner and Cloudbreak big wave legend, and Professor Sam Purkis, Head of Marine Geosciences at Miami University. 

The Transactional Real Estate Investor Show

In this episode, Blair and Jeff discuss a complicated situation trying to close a subject-to deal in Oregon, problematic due to the title company and issues with trusts. They also cover hiring a virtual assistant, getting Mojo set up to have a better performance from the VA, and the best way for them to use the scripts. Meanwhile a student has signed her first deal (small lease option rent-to-own house). Finally, what's the best way to classify a closed lease purchase buyer on Mojo? Both Blair and Jeff remind you to have a look at Cloudbreak properties. There are huge opportunities for those who want to get a property now without having to move a finger. Jump on and learn more about this. Mentioned Resources: William Bill Bronchick Lou Brown Mojo Cozy.co Cloudbreak In this episode we covered: 00:38 – Start-up 01:11 – Dealing with a title company and trusts in order to close a subject-to deal in Oregon 17:26 – Hiring a VA. Setting up Mojo for their work, record calls and using scripts 20:43 – A student's first deal signed: Small lease option rent-to-own house 24:02 – Classifying a closed lease purchase buyer on Mojo 28:10 –Cloudbreak properties; big opportunities to get properties now 29:20 – Wrap-up About Blair: Blair is the founder and creator of Dealbot, a motivated seller lead generation company. He has managed nearly $2mm in marketing spend and generated over 100,000 motivated seller leads. He also buys and sells houses himself in the Winston-Salem and Charlotte, NC markets. In the past year alone has acquired nearly $3mm in cash flowing rental properties with zero money out of his pocket. Multimedia: Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCiatKNrfIlTWIAiPU_UQfsQ Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/the-transactional-real-estate-investor-show/id1460647919 Google Play: https://play.google.com/music/listen?view=/ps/I3au2kzrhhadq3xlegyyfebg27e Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BlairHalver/ Thank you for listening!

The Wire by Firewire Surfboards
ep. #40 - Is Tristan Sullaway Pro? + Tavarua, paddling across oceans, and Kelly on Dan Mann's boards.

The Wire by Firewire Surfboards

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2019 65:52


Tristan Sullaway has been tubed at Cloudbreak, and once surfed G - Land for eight hours straight. He has stickers on his board but also graduated college. He's a lifeguard who is 6 foot 3 and maybe still growing. He rides Dan Mann's boards (and Tomo's) and actually borrowed Dan Mann's paddle board once to paddle 32 miles from Catalina Island to Manhattan Beach. He's with us today at Cafe Moto, Dan Mann's favorite Coffee shop in San Diego.