Podcasts about Coach Carter

2005 film directed by Thomas Carter

  • 365PODCASTS
  • 433EPISODES
  • 54mAVG DURATION
  • 1EPISODE EVERY OTHER WEEK
  • Jun 21, 2026LATEST
Coach Carter

POPULARITY

20192020202120222023202420252026


Best podcasts about Coach Carter

Latest podcast episodes about Coach Carter

Underdog Hoops
Episode 244 Rewind Basketball Interview w/Coach Carter Part 2

Underdog Hoops

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2026 30:48


Welcome to Underdog Hoops! Our channel is your go-to destination for basketball development and coaching, offering you that underdog edge to elevate your game, whether you're a player or a coach. Unlock the full potential of your basketball journey with Underdog Hoops University. Gain access to my coaching materials for a 14 day free trial & $8.99 a month or $88.99 a year . Visit www.underdoghoops.com/join-university to get started today! Explore our trusted affiliates: Hoops Geek Play Creator: https://app.thehoopsgeek.com/?ref=underdoghoops Practice Planner Live: https://www.practiceplannerlive.com/backoffice?referralCode=underdoghoops Connect with us on social media: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Underdoghoops Instagram: http://instagram.com/underdoghoops Subscribe for $0.99 Threads: https://www.threads.net/@underdoghoops TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@underdoghoops X: https://x.com/UnderdogH Join us every Sunday at 8 am PST for our insightful podcast episodes: https://spotifyanchor-web.app.link/e/vdH5gjF8Cyb Don't miss out on our weekly content releases: Tune in every Wednesday at 8 am PST for our latest YouTube videos: https://www.youtube.com/@underdoghoopsStay updated with our blog posts dropping every Monday, Thursday, and Saturday at 8 am PST. www.underdoghoops.com/blog Sign up for our newsletter to receive exclusive updates and content: https://bit.ly/underdoghoopsnewsletter Looking for more resources? Check out our Season Stat Book and Season Practice Planner for effective planning and progress tracking. https://underdoghoops.com/shop

Underdog Hoops
Episode 243 Rewind Basketball Interview w/Coach Carter

Underdog Hoops

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2026 27:59


Welcome to Underdog Hoops! Our channel is your go-to destination for basketball development and coaching, offering you that underdog edge to elevate your game, whether you're a player or a coach. Unlock the full potential of your basketball journey with Underdog Hoops University. Gain access to my coaching materials for a 14 day free trial & $8.99 a month or $88.99 a year . Visit www.underdoghoops.com/join-university to get started today! Explore our trusted affiliates: Hoops Geek Play Creator: https://app.thehoopsgeek.com/?ref=underdoghoops Practice Planner Live: https://www.practiceplannerlive.com/backoffice?referralCode=underdoghoops Connect with us on social media: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Underdoghoops Instagram: http://instagram.com/underdoghoops Subscribe for $0.99 Threads: https://www.threads.net/@underdoghoops TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@underdoghoops X: https://x.com/UnderdogH Join us every Sunday at 8 am PST for our insightful podcast episodes: https://spotifyanchor-web.app.link/e/vdH5gjF8Cyb Don't miss out on our weekly content releases: Tune in every Wednesday at 8 am PST for our latest YouTube videos: https://www.youtube.com/@underdoghoopsStay updated with our blog posts dropping every Monday, Thursday, and Saturday at 8 am PST. www.underdoghoops.com/blog Sign up for our newsletter to receive exclusive updates and content: https://bit.ly/underdoghoopsnewsletter Looking for more resources? Check out our Season Stat Book and Season Practice Planner for effective planning and progress tracking. https://underdoghoops.com/shop

All Out Film
Das Große Sportfilmspecial!

All Out Film

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2026 82:13


Heute mit Tobi und Henry.Passend zur WM (und durch diverse Terminliche Probleme) haben wir uns entschieden euch heute ein Special zu Sportfilmen zu geben. Mit dabei ist der Fußballjournalist und Excel Mensch Henry Einck. Gönnt euch!Timestamps:00:00:00: Intro00:02:57: Die WM, Fußball und der Hype um Großveranstaltungen00:12:44: Was macht (gute) Sportfilme aus?00:19:29: Cash Grab (GOAT, Space Jam)00:26:32: Ich will so sein wie die da! (Creed, Challengers, Heated Rivalry)00:32:30: Kopf aus/ an (Ted Lasso, Cars, The Longest Yard, Dodgeball)00:40:53: Underdogs und Comebacks (Rocky, Karate Kid, The Blind Side)00:50:23: Mehr als nur Sport (Million Dollar Baby, Peanutbutter Falcon, Coach Carter)00:54:10: Extase und Spektakel (Pumping Iron, Rush, F1, I am Zlatan)00:59:21: Trend: Die Eskalation (I Tonya, Marty Supreme, The Iron Claw)01:00:50: Fazit01:06:55: Das Quiz rund um Sport auf IMDB01:19:11: Outro

The Connor Happer Show
Crossover (Thu 6/4 - Seg 1)

The Connor Happer Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2026 24:27


Connor has a new tool, Matt has laundry problems, keeping score in a household, Ty Crane from Coach Carter, America's Funniest Home Videos history, we guess Stibbs job, and more

THE LONG BLUE LEADERSHIP PODCAST
Answering the Bell - Lt. Col. (Ret.) Mark Clifford '97

THE LONG BLUE LEADERSHIP PODCAST

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2026 46:45


SUMMARY In this episode of Long Blue Leadership, U.S. Air Force Academy boxing coach Lt. Col. (Ret.) Mark Clifford '97 shares how the sport shaped his approach to leadership, service and mentoring the next generation of cadets. A strong conversation on resilience and growth.   SHARE THIS EPISODE LINKEDIN  |  FACEBOOK   COACH CLIFFORD'S TOP 10 LEADERSHIP TAKEAWAYS Leadership is about others, not you. Elevate the people around you—when your team wins, you win. Iron sharpens iron. Seek (and create) hard reps, tougher opponents, and uncomfortable situations to build real capability. Look for “dogs,” not resumes. Prioritize competitiveness, resilience, and willingness to get hit and keep going over pedigree. Turn on the hot water. Know when it's time to flip the switch from relaxed and joking to locked-in, all-business execution. Take the punch, then execute. Composure after getting hit—physically or metaphorically—is the true test of a leader. Accountability and care must coexist. You can deeply care for people and still enforce standards, discipline, and consequences. Bloom where you're planted. Be the best where you are before chasing the next opportunity; stop leading with the exit plan. Don't lead only with rank. Some of the strongest leaders on his team lead through work ethic, example, and quiet influence. Use mentors; don't go it alone. Pick up the phone, ask for help, and learn from those who've led through similar moments. Family and support systems are force multipliers. A stable, supportive home front enables you to show up fully for the mission.   CHAPTERS 00:00:00 – Intro: “Sometimes leadership means the mission stopped being about you” + Mark's accolades 00:01:40 – From hoops to the ring: leaving basketball, discovering boxing, and Coach Weichers' influence 00:03:55 – Finding “dogs”: how Mark recruits scrappy, resilient cadets and builds national champions 00:07:57 – Growing up competitive: family, academics-first father and rivalry with his brother 00:11:09 – Leadership from the ring: iron sharpening iron and elevating everyone on the team 00:14:30 – Warrior mindset: teaching cadets to take a punch, stay composed and execute a plan 00:19:00 – Riding the emotional highs and lows: coaching, winning, losing and not burning out 00:21:08 – Accountability with heart: tough call in Korea, stripes, and good order and discipline 00:24:36 – Competing together: peer squadron commanders, shared struggle and mutual support 00:28:05 – When you want to quit: advice Col. Clifford got, what he tells cadets now and “bloom where you're planted” 00:32:16 – Quiet leaders and culture: cadets who lead through work ethic and example 00:37:23 – Daily leadership reps: mental prep, PE classes, influence in the athletic department 00:43:11 – Talk to young Col. Clifford: trust the process, shake off negativity and the power of family support   ABOUT BIO Lt. Col. (Ret.) Mark Clifford, a 1997 graduate of the United States Air Force Academy and former National Collegiate Boxing Association champion, is in his second season as head coach of the Air Force boxing program after leading the women's team to its first NCBA national title in his debut season, highlighted by a program-record four individual champions and a sweep of the men's and women's NCBA Western Regional titles. A former team captain and three-time NCBA All-American as a cadet, Col. Clifford also served two stints as an assistant coach, contributing to four national team championships and 21 individual national champions. He retired from the Air Force as a lieutenant colonel after 20 years of service, including assignments as director of fuel operations for Air Force One, commander roles in Hawaii and South Korea, combat tours supporting Operations Iraqi Freedom and Enduring Freedom, and work on the Joint Staff at the Pentagon. Following his military career, Col. Clifford held leadership positions at Grand Canyon University and the DREAM Foundation, focusing on sports management education and mentorship opportunities for students. He earned a master's degree from the University of Maryland Global Campus and a doctorate from the University of New Mexico.   CONNECT WITH MARK LINKEDIN  |  FALCON ATHLETICS   CONNECT WITH THE LONG BLUE LINE PODCAST NETWORK TEAM Ted Robertson | Producer and Editor:  Ted.Robertson@USAFA.org Send your feedback or nominate a guest: socialmedia@usafa.org   Ryan Hall | Director:  Ryan.Hall@USAFA.org  Bryan Grossman | Copy Editor:  Bryan.Grossman@USAFA.org Wyatt Hornsby | Executive Producer:  Wyatt.Hornsby@USAFA.org     ALL PAST LBL EPISODES  |  ALL LBLPN PRODUCTIONS AVAILABLE AT USAFA.ORG/LONGBLUELEADERSHIP AND ON ALL MAJOR PODCAST PLATFORMS     FULL TRANSCRIPT OUR SPEAKERS: Guest, Coach Mark Clifford '97  |  Host, Lt. Col. Naviere Walkewicz '99   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 0:00 Sometimes leadership means realizing the mission stopped being about you a long time ago. I'm Naviere Walkewicz, Class of '99. Long Blue Leadership starts now. Mark Clifford, welcome to Long Blue Leadership.   Col. Mark Clifford 0:14 Thanks for having me. Col. Naviere Walkewicz 0:15 Absolutely, you know, we could jump right in, but before I do, I have to just talk about this. I had to write this down to make sure I didn't miss it. Boxing team captain, obviously; three-time Wing Open champ; three-time regional champ, three-time National Collegiate Boxing Association All-American, and the national champion of the NCBA your senior year.   Col. Mark Clifford 0:33 Yes, ma'am.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 0:34 I mean, that's just, and that's just as a cadet. Then you went on to serve 20 years in the Air Force as a logistics readiness officer, you know, you're commanding and you're leading squadrons. In addition to that, on the higher education side, assistant dean at Grand Canyon University in sports business.   Col. Mark Clifford 0:49 Yes, yeah, ran the sport management program when I first got there, probably a year after I got there, just to get my feet wet with higher ed, and then was elevated to the assistant dean of the College of Business. And so it was, it was fun, it was amazing, it was very different from what you're used to in the military, because I tried to come in with a little bit of military mindset, but it's a civilian institution, so you know, just a little bit different, just bringing myself there and seeing what happened.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 1:13 Well, you know, I guess what it shows is that you're not afraid to jump in and do, you know, something new. And I think that's — we'll probably discover that in the conversation today. So, maybe where we can start is the fact that you are back at USAFA as the boxing coach. You're here now running and leading the program that shaped you.   Col. Mark Clifford 1:31 Yes.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 1:32 Let's talk about that.   Col. Mark Clifford 1:33 Yes, let's talk about — I mean, I love the program. You know, I came into the Academy, went to the Prep School, on a five-year plan, like some of us that need a little extra help, little extra year, you know. I took my time and really understand that came in, I'm such a competitor. I was playing basketball at the Prep School, came in my freshman year, hoping to be on the basketball team, worked really hard, did all things the coaches asked me to do, still sat the bench, and so, like a lot of cadets, like every cadet, even our women now have to take boxing class, you know, as a mandatory class.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 2:04 When did that start? What year? Do you remember?   Col. Mark Clifford 2:07 I want to say 2017 is when the women started. It's always been instituted for our men. So my freshman year I did really well in the class, to the point where I had to box our assistant coach at the time, Ray Carter, for my GR, my test.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 2:22 Did you get an A? Col. Mark Clifford 2:23 I got an A. But it hurt. Col. Naviere Walkewicz 2:26 For him? Col. Mark Clifford 2:27 Heck no! He was the one punching me. He busted me up pretty good, but I still got the A in the class, and coaches — the same system I use today — is trying to find cadets in boxing class that are competitors that are looking to do more than just be either a cadet or on the team that they're on or ride a bench. I got tired of riding the bench behind a couple of folks until sophomore year, coach came and said, “Hey, you still interested in boxing?” I quit basketball, went to boxing and the rest is history.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 2:58 You didn't look back at all.   Col. Mark Clifford 2:59 No, you know it's hard to look back because it's shaped — I think we all kind of think back to our cadet years. I know I do sometimes, and kind of reminisce about, “What if?” I remember walking across the street one time, and my brother was ahead of me in '90s — Class of '96 — on the football team, and I was walking across the street as a freshman to basketball practice and ran across Coach Fisher DeBerry. “Hey, Clifford, will you come play football with me?” And so, you always think about opportunities that kind of cross your path, and I think about what would have happened if I would have done something different. I don't know if this story would be as successful as it is, based off of what I've learned in boxing and where I am today. And so, I'm very thankful for the program. I'm thankful for Coach Eddie Weichers, who shaped me, was a father figure for us when we were here. And you know, it's tough being a cadet, so you got to have allies and friends and people and mentors, and he was definitely one for me.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 3:55 Well, I'd love to know, you know — he saw you in class and discovered that talent. How are you finding potential nowadays in the cadets for the program? Because you just happened to have the women who defended a national champion, won it. So, two years now have been the NCBA national champs. Col. Mark Clifford 4:15 I think it's a couple of things I look for. One is, how scrappy are you? I think it was easy at Grand Canyon University to find, you know, the era of COVID, and the resiliency wasn't quite the same as what I remembered when I was here as assistant coach, and as a captain and as a major, as well. The cadets are different, the mentality is different, and so kind of make it simple, I'm looking for dogs, I'm looking for cadets that a) are excited to fight, are not afraid to box, aren't afraid to get hit, love the intensity of the sport, and I can shape that, and you know, the potential piece of that is, can they throw a pretty good punch, and can they take a punch, and they're not, you know, they're not jumping out of the ring with that. That kind of translates into what we're looking for with all of our officers and all officer candidates, is making sure that they can stay there and take a punch, collect themselves, and then go back and execute, right? And so that's what I'm looking for, and I've tried to find those in classes, and you know, a lot of times it's a lot of the athletes.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 5:21 Right.   Col. Mark Clifford 5:22 Because they're recruited here for other reasons, well, and other…   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 5:24 Other sports.   Col. Mark Clifford 5:25 Other sports, or whatever, and they want to be competitive, and as a freshman and a sophomore. It's tough, because you got juniors and seniors who have experience on the team. They're out there performing, and you're sitting on the bench, well, you know, I get you in the sport where you don't have to sit the bench.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 5:43 That's right.   Col. Mark Clifford 5:44 It's top person wins. Col. Naviere Walkewicz 5:45 So when I think about the team that you formulate and you grow, and they continue to hone in our craft, is it always the athletes that you kind of, that maybe have been benchwarmers, or have you found the diamonds in the rough that maybe have never fought in their lives, and never — that kind of surprise you, that have risen to the top?   Col. Mark Clifford 6:04 You know, there are a lot of diamonds in the rough, there are a lot of, but back to what, there's a lot of cadets that come here that aren't necessarily on a divisional, we're lucky because we have 25% of our population at the Academy are divisional athletes. But there are so many other young cadets that are just as competitive, just as athletic, and looking for something else, and how do you give them something, right? And when they get to come to the Wing Open and see their classmates in the center of Clune Arena, and that thing is filled with all the rest of the Cadet Wing.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 6:37 Yes, and grads and the community.   Col. Mark Clifford 6:39 And the community. They put the floor seats right there, you can sit ringside, it's an amazing thing. How do I be a part of it? And my philosophy is simple: If you enter the Wing Open and you win, then you're the person that represents this for regions and nationals. There's no favoritism, because I quote, unquote, recruited Naviere as a freshman. Now she's a senior, well, the senior gets her butt whooped, I'm taking a freshman. And so it's a very fair system, and so you find those diamonds in the rough. I'll give you one — two-time national champ. She's our team captain this year, Elise Bell. I don't think she's ever fought in her life.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 7:16 Wow.   Col. Mark Clifford 7:16 When I walked in the gym last year, my first year, I just noticed her work ethic. How do you just pour into something like that and refine that in the gym to become a national champ. And last year — I just love to tell her story, because last year I believe in regionals and nationals, every first round she lost 5-0 to the judges. She was losing, and she won every bout.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 7:42 Interesting.   Col. Mark Clifford 7:43 So it's just — you find those, and I'm hoping to find more of those cadets that just have that same energy, that resilience, that toughness and courage, really, and willingness to do what we ask you to do.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 7:58 So, were you like that growing up? Were you someone that had this mindset of, you know, a work ethic and, you know, scrappy, you know, before even getting into boxing? Were you like that as a kid?   Col. Mark Clifford 8:09 I was just a competitor, and that's my father, that's my mother, that's my grandmother, my father's side, who was very — everything had to be put into place. My father was born in 1929 in Washington, D.C., went to Howard University, ROTC post-Tuskegee, and entered the Air Force through ROTC in 1949.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 8:41 Wow.   Col. Mark Clifford 8:42 So his thing was academics, always. Col. Naviere Walkewicz 8:45 Yes.   Col. Mark Clifford 8:45 But I had a brother who was a year ahead of me, and it was academics for both of us. But how do you best the guy that's right next to you? Like, it was always just — my brother's name is Larry. That's what Larry and I always did, whether it was girls or sports, school, right? Yeah, it was always   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 9:02 You drove each other. Col. Mark Clifford 9:03 We drove each other, and it's just — it was amazing. You don't realize that until you're older, and so you go, “Yeah, that's what that did.” And so I think I was always just, 1) I was always a competitor, like I wasn't always the best, but I'd like to try to strive to be, and so that was just kind of how I was shaped.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 9:22 So was your dad very excited when you — you were recruited to the Academy, is that correct?   Col. Mark Clifford 9:28 My dad kind of wanted me to go — more so than maybe I wanted to go.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 9:34 When did you realize, like — because obviously you were on the five-year plan, right? So I think you had a couple of times to make a decision, like, “I'm good,” but you stayed. So when was it that it really connected with you that this is where I want to be, and I want to stay. Col. Mark Clifford 9:47 Probably after my sophomore year.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 9:50 OK.   Col. Mark Clifford 9:50 Yeah, because my first three years, like, I wanted to play basketball so bad. I was trying to recruit myself. This is when you had to go send out your videotape. You know what I'm saying. You're there with me.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 10:01 Yes, yes, paper. Email's not the thing back then. All paper.   Col. Mark Clifford 10:05 All paper. I'm trying to send videotapes out. Spring break at the Prep School, I think I went to Cal Riverside and tried to meet with the coach and drop off my tape. That's how bad I wanted to play basketball, right, and then I found success in boxing, and it was, I think, why go anywhere else? You start to realize, you get over, like, you're gonna have a job when you graduate. I don't have to look for a job, I don't have to go out there and struggle. I'm gonna get what I want to do out of the military, and it's gonna be a five-year thing for me, and then I'm out, right? And so I think that's what it was. I think it was my sophomore year, and I was going, my grades are terrible. I could say that now. It was — but no one's ever asked me for my GPA. I still was able to get a doctorate. Like, there's things that happen in your life that you'll still be able to achieve success, even though you weren't as great at it before. And so, yeah, I think it was just the realization of, “I could do this.”   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 11:09 So in that journey of, you know, wanting to play basketball so bad, finding a space and a place that really you started to hone in on yourself in boxing, and then, you know, went into the Air Force, you were leading. What have you found out about yourself in a leadership perspective through those different situations, whether you ended up not playing basketball or something that went really well for you, like national champ?   Col. Mark Clifford 11:35 I think just overall leadership was the ability for me to impact others to be successful, and I think that's what I took out of boxing, because it is an individual sport, but it's very team-oriented. We don't put banners on the wall that say “national champion” without a team mentality to make sure that our teammate, left and right of us, are also excelling. And so, in a small sport like boxing, at a time where I boxed, there was 12 weight classes, but you're boxing the guy above a weight and below a weight, because you're trying to make that person better, iron sharpens iron.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 12:10 Right.   Col. Mark Clifford 12:10 I also had, I was a 172-, 175-pounder boxing the heavyweight, because in my mind was no one's gonna hit me as hard as this guy is gonna hit me.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 12:19 That's right.   Col. Mark Clifford 12:20 And so if I can stand and get and last with this guy, I can last with anybody in college boxing. And that flowed for me into the military of — and part of my philosophy was how do I elevate everybody else, because I realized here at the Academy it's not about us, right? We're in the people business to make sure people around us are elevated, have the things that they need, resources they need to make sure that they're doing the job the best of their ability. Because then the unit does better as a team. The wing does better as a team. It's not about us individually. And so I think for me being able to translate that out of boxing into my Air Force career was part of what shaped me as a leader to make myself successful.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 13:02 Did you find yourself seeing if anyone could take a punch from you in your Air Force uniform, or how did you do that?   Col. Mark Clifford 13:10 Well, you know, I punch my words when I know you can't put your hands on people.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 13:16 Of course.   Col. Mark Clifford 13:19 You know, back in the early days, you know, I think the chief excused me from a meeting, and the meeting was back behind the fuel watershed. I can't remember…   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 13:32 Fair enough.   Col. Mark Clifford 13:33 Some wall-to-wall training that was going on with other individuals, but hey, chief said it was good. Roger that chief.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 13:40 That's hilarious.   Col. Mark Clifford 13:41 Yeah, no, you know, you don't put your hands on people. I used to have to tell people, “Don't let my smile fool you,” you know. I like to have a good time, I enjoy myself, I enjoy the people that I'm around. Also, I know our job is very serious, and I was very serious about our job. And so, part of my leadership philosophy was always — my dad's thing was the Golden Rule, you know, treat people the way that you want to be treated. And I always — there's some things here at the Academy that I didn't love, so I took away from, “I'm not going to be that type of person,” into accountability, holding people accountable, myself included. And so even at the Academy, as a knucklehead cadet, I did goofy stuff. I'd be the first one to say, yeah, I take my lumps, march my tours, take my Form 10, do what you need to do, but just survive the place and learn from it, and it shapes you out as a leader.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 14:31 Absolutely. You know, I'm curious, because I think about — you just said, “I like to have fun,” and you know, “but don't let my smile fool you.” You know, when you think about boxing and the mentality you have to have to literally stand across from somebody and hit someone, or take a punch, or you know, be hit back. How do you train that kind of mindset? Because I have to think it parallels a lot with the fact that we are developing warfighters. You know, how do you train that?   Col. Mark Clifford 14:57 Yeah, you know, that's kind of the bottom line of the boxing class. It's not about finding championship boxers. The boxing class is about exactly what you just outlined. It's how do you, as an individual, put a strategy and plan together knowing that you have an adversary across the ring that's going to hurt you. Like, the object of the game is to punch you. Pros is more so to hurt you. College boxing, amateurs, more to score more points than you. Bottom line, they'll hurt you, and that mentality of how do you compose yourself? Do the things that we asked you to do: a) defend yourself, b) have an offensive plan, even if you're losing, how do you compose yourself? Right, part of that warrior spirit is making sure that we always have that mindset of how we're going to achieve and beat our adversaries, and I think that's the bottom line of the boxing class. It's just, how do we do that? So, the mindset is exactly that, is you know you're gonna get punched, but can you punch that person when they punch you? Can you put some other things in place that I gave you tools — that I gave you, head movement, defensive movement — to take those punches away, right? From a strategic standpoint, and then be offensive, and then score your points.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 16:11 Right.   Col. Mark Clifford 16:11 And so that's the mentality we try to have boxers to make sure that this is a sport where you're gonna get hit. Once you get past that hurdle, it's good, right? It's how you work on all these other skill sets that make you better than your opponent. And if the other person's just as skilled as you are, what's the edge that we get? And I think that's part of our mental preparation that we do as well as our physical preparation.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 16:34 So I think about you shaping that for the team, both the men and women. How was that shaped for you? Was that your coach at the time, Eddie Weichers? Was that Wiechers? Was that someone in your family? Who were those mentors in your life?   Col. Mark Clifford 16:45 For me, it was Eddie Weichers and Ray Carter. Ray Carter was an enlisted assistant coach, and he was four-time, I think, All-Air Force heavyweight champ. Those two were instrumental for me, especially during my career times, before my time as a boxer, because I would work hard, work out a lot with Coach Carter, because the same mentality helped with a heavyweight. If this big joker can hit me, I can take the punch… He's also going to teach me some things. I mean, Coach Weichers was the same. It was the mental piece that his thing was knowing to turn on the hot water, and it was because I would have a good time, enjoy practice, have fun with the guys, but when you step in that ring, turn the hot water on, it's all about business. So, then, when you step out, turn it back on to cold, go back to goofing off and doing things that you do, but you get in there, it's all about business. And so, how do you train your mind to go, like, man, “I gotta go to war right now?” And it was, you know, I had a preparation before I got to the ring, and some things that I did that helped me mentally prepare before I jumped in there, but…   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 17:52 What did you do?   Col. Mark Clifford 17:53 You know, again, it was the Walkman CD Walkman, the CD Walkman. And I couldn't jump around too much because it was Skip. Yeah, the CB was skip had the little baby headphones had my little do rag on and I would just zone out on some music, I would zone out on music until it was time for me to get up and do my physical warm up with some jumping some rope shadow boxing and maybe little hand mitts with the coach before I jumped in the ring, but OK, yeah, it was a, you know, I couldn't jump around too much. Col. Naviere Walkewicz 18:25 It would skip, that's true. Now they just have — they don't have to have anything connected, just put in their ears.   Col. Mark Clifford 18:30 I'm jealous about it, to be honest.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 18:35 So I imagine when you're coaching, and I'm saying I imagine because I've not coached ever to this level. I coach my son's little league basketball team, but which is a whole different level of coaching, but what I find curious is, have you ever found yourself in the feeling of, because you know how it felt when you win, when you lose, and when you watch your cadets going through that, how does that affect you as a coach? Col. Mark Clifford 19:01 Yes, I'm learning to not, I'm learning to not ride the emotion like they do, but I definitely did my first year, I think, as an assistant coach. So, I was assistant coach with Coach Wishers five years total as active duty officer, and that was different because I was on the sideline, he was the main guy, I was a support guy, but when you're the head guy, you're the one that gives the kids advice, giving them the strategy, and then really I felt it at nationals, especially when we started to win in with our women, we our first female won in the first half of the day, a freshman, I don't know if she was expected to win. She didn't expect to win, but in our hearts, in our minds, we knew. And then this is the motion, because I know how hard they work and what it takes to get your hand raised, because I came up short my first two years when I'm the guy standing with my hands down, the other guy's hand is raised, and then getting my hand raised my senior year was the most amazing feeling. I rode that same emotion when we lost, when we won, and I was worn out and tired. So I'm trying to train myself not to try to ride that emotion, but it's hard, like you know. I want to be in there with them, and I feel the same things that they feel, because I went through that same process they went through. And so it's interesting dynamic because I'm trying to peel myself away from mine. I just haven't detached yet. I think I'm still emotionally and mentally driven by what happens with our cadets, and it's a weird feeling. Col. Naviere Walkewicz 20:36 I imagine as a leader that's probably a common challenge you have because you care so deeply about your team, like family, that you do get emotional, right, and that might even be one of the sharpest knives in your, in your kit. It's just, you know, how you employ it, I guess.   Col. Mark Clifford 20:52 Yeah, you know, that reminds me of a really tough situation when I was a commander in Korea. Back to, had to hold somebody accountable with that person. Part of the discipline action was taking a strike, right, blah blah blah, the things that happened for something negative, right, but he's such a good person, and it was a first, first mistake, but it was a big one, and what that led to was a person dropping rank, but then hitting higher tenure, and couldn't test for the next strike, and so I really struggled with that, and had really tough conversations with not only the group chief, but my commander, right, and my chief, my first sergeant. Is this really the right thing for this individual? I think ultimately for good organ discipline. Yes, I think emotionally because it was a small unit. We were in Korea, his, he had his wife there, I had my family there, right? So they became friends, close, right, close enough, because such a small group, and that's the type of organization that I like to have, because I think if it's you, almost play that disappointment role or daddy role, or whatever, however you want to characterize it, that leadership style, but it was, man, you really got to depend on your brother or sister, you let that person down, and you let us all down. Yes, and so that's part of my leadership style, especially in Korea. I took over for a commander that was let go and fired, and so there was a whole cultural change I had to do, so that was when the “don't let the smile full you” happened, right? And you just had to make sure that you held people accountable. That was one of the tough ones where emotionally you're going, "Man, am I making the right call?” Organizationally, absolutely. Personally, for that individual, it was tough. It was tough. Col. Naviere Walkewicz 22:36 How did those moments stretch you as a leader? I find that fascinating, because you do. You have such a warm and, you know, fun personality about you. I mean, I think when you think about command and the decisions you've had to make at different times, both in the ring, out of the ring, in uniform, et cetera. How did you grow as a leader?   Col. Mark Clifford 22:53 I think we all grow every day. I think, for me, I lean a lot on my mentors. I'm not afraid to ask for help, right? I learned that early in my career, that it took me a while, because I was in the way, but it took me a while to understand that I can pick up the phone and ask somebody for help, and they're going to help you, because, as an organization, our Air Force, our Space Force is all about making sure people are successful. We don't set people up for failure. Why? Because if one individual fails, yeah. So I think for me making those tough calls was was challenging, because because of my leadership style. I think it was, I want people to get along, I want our team to be meet the standard of excellence, if not exceeded. I want us to be always on that front edge, because I'm a competitor. Yes, I want to be the best, but also that comes with accountability and tough decisions. And I think when you have to be in the moment, make some of those tough decisions, that's you just have to go back and reflect. You have to lean on people that do the same thing. I had a great group of fellow squadron commanders at my first command in Hawaii, that's a really terrible basis to go to, that's why I stayed there for 20, that's why I stayed there for 20. The plan was five. Oh, yes, yeah, 20 happened because I had some great people around me, and I, and the bases weren't bad either, and so my family loved it, and we saw some rough assignments, but it ended up being great, but I can lean on my fellow squadron commanders if I had some enough time. But it was just a bitch session, or if it was a leadership lesson. Most of us were about the same year group, age group. I think one or two of the commanders was a year or two ahead of me, but it was just — we weren't competing with each other. We were making sure we were all competing together and being successful together. Col. Naviere Walkewicz 24:53 I think about that theme of being a competitor, and I remember you telling me about your brother and your dad. So, has there been a continued, you know, competition, and how you guys have done in your, in your careers and in life, or have you leaned back to your dad, like, “Hey, Dad, so how do you go about this?”   Col. Mark Clifford 25:09 No, you know, we unfortunately lost my dad a couple years ago.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 25:13 Oh, I'm sorry. Col. Mark Clifford 25:13 No, it's OK; 94 years of an amazing life. I found some old pictures of him and Chappie James, which is pretty — talk about history and legacy. But no, I think my brother — I found out — so, my brother left after his sophomore year. He hadn't finished the Academy. He stuck around here another year, so my sophomore year, and I really came to find out, although we competed against each other our entire lives, he was my No. 1 fan, and I didn't even know it. It was like — he would tell me stories of, I think, my first Wing Open, maybe my second Wing Open — my first Wing Open sophomore year, that he, for the first time, said some cuss words next to my dad because they were in the stands, because he was cheering for me, and it was just funny to hear, like, we're grown-ups, but you can't cuss in front of my dad. You don't say those things. He was like, “Oh no, Dad's gonna get me.” But no, I think since then it's been a really supportive relationship, and like anything that I do, he'll call me as soon as we're competing anywhere as a coach now, ask how we did, how the cadets did, he said he's proud of me, I'm proud of him too, and he's doing real estate in Southern California with his wife and his family. So it was weird to see that, or hear that from him, because it was always like…   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 26:31 Yeah, you were always like mmmm mmmm. Looking over your shoulders. Col. Mark Clifford 26:35 Yeah, like who's going to get who? But it was awesome. It was kind of cool.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 26:38 I love that, and I'm just thinking, you know, I'm sorry to hear of your dad passing, but I'm sure throughout those years you had many calls to him about, you know, some of those decisions you had to make in uniform, and I'm sure he was extremely proud of you making it a career.   Col. Mark Clifford 26:51 Yeah, yeah, I think he also was surprised I lasted as long as I did, just because I was so against it early on in my career. But no, I've been super proud, and it was always good to come home and just kind of share some stories with him, and he would reflect back on his stories, and he was a fighter pilot, and so just some of his fighter-pilot stories, and you know, the things that shaped me — talk about moments in your career and moments that shaped his career. It was just — it's just cool to have somebody like that in a different era that can share the different challenges, but also the same.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 27:31 That's a good point. Yeah.   Col. Mark Clifford 27:32 I think that's what's interesting with the military, like, and coming back to the Academy is a perfect example. Like, there's challenges that we have, they're kind of the same that we've had, probably 15 years ago when I was here.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 27:45 Like a cycle.   Col. Mark Clifford 27:46 It's a cycle. Yeah. So it's like now you have new leaders, how do they work through these different challenges differently than we did before? Not that we need to repeat history, but at the same time, you know what I'm saying, it just becomes a cyclical thing, that was how do we work. Col. Naviere Walkewicz 28:03 How do we navigate that? Yeah. Col. Mark Clifford 28:05 The same stuff, yeah. Col. Naviere Walkewicz 28:06 I want to go back to something you said, and I think it probably plays into some of the cadets that you work with, and or help to coach. You talked about how you weren't sure you wanted to go to the Academy, and staying, you know. The idea of quitting is where I'm really kind of going. What advice have you received to help you not quit, or to kind of push through when you wanted to quit? And have you seen that with cadets, and how are you navigating that?   Col. Mark Clifford 28:29 Yes, and yes. I think the best advice I received when I was thinking about quitting was, “Just really ask yourself why, what's the purpose, and then where you're going to go, like what's the plan?” And that's what was one of my dad's themes was, especially when I got out, was looking to navigate civilian jobs, right, but you don't leave something unless you got something else in your other hand. And so I was like, “How do you really focus in on being the best at where you're at, right, before you even think about stepping somewhere else?” And I had to reflect on that, especially as a cadet, was I really being the best at where I was as a freshman? Sophomore, I could tell you no, because I wanted so many other things, and it wasn't had anything to do with the Academy, had nothing to do with the Academy, but you know…   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 29:21 You were focused on basketball…   Col. Mark Clifford 29:23 Focused on other things until I could really be the best at all the things, and it's a balance here at the Academy — academically, militarily, athletically. I wanted to be the best athletically. How do I go win a national championship as the boxer? And so I found out that you've got to prioritize, which is… Right? We all had to do that. We all have to do that in our lives today. And so my priority was boxing, because I wanted to be great at athletics; academics, because I knew I can't get out of this place unless academics met the standard.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 30:01 And you couldn't box here…   Col. Mark Clifford 30:03 And I couldn't do that without the academics. My dad saying, like, “You don't do anything else unless your academics are where they need to be.” And lastly — it was OK for me militarily. I can make the military stuff work. It wasn't my party. Maybe I should have bowed a little bit more. So I share that with our cadets. Is how do you balance those things that want to make you successful? The one thing I tell the cadets now is, because I've been in the civilian world, it's tough. Like, if you leave here, you got to navigate A, go get a degree, and then B, trying to find a job which meets your standard and the standard of living that you want to have, it's going to be difficult. It's not — and so it's still a cadet's choice. Yes, and we've talked to them about, like, all right, make sure you put things in place to make yourself successful. But I try to give them same advice. I said, “There's no other place outside of the three military academies where you're going to go through a really tough time, you're going to have really awesome friends, you're gonna have a great experience, and, oh, by the way, you have a job, and you graduate — with free medical and dental, like that stuff's not cheap. Yeah, so I, you know, I think I share those things with the cadets, especially when they talk about leaving. And then I like to share — I try not to go back to, “Oh, back in my day” with that.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 31:19 Because our day was a long time ago.   Col. Mark Clifford 31:21 Now you didn't have to say it out loud. I think we know that, but it's true, you know, it's there are still some challenges out there, but they have to navigate the waters, and there's some things that they do differently now at the Academy that we did when we were at the Academy, but this is a really cool place. It's a great place to be from. It's a great place to put on a resume when you decide to get out of the military after your obligation. It's a great place because they're gonna give you a job and occupation. You get to fly jets if that's what you want to do. There's so many opportunities here that the cadets have.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 31:59 Yes.   Col. Mark Clifford 31:59 And I just overload them with that, because I think it is an amazing place. And the reason why I come back to it, because I think so highly of what it's done for me and shaped me. How can I do that for others and mentor others to make sure that they have a similar experience, but a successful one, no matter what their story is.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 31:17 Can you share an example of a cadet that surprised you from a leadership perspective, because of their work with you and their time in the ring.   Col. Mark Clifford 32:25 Well, it's hard. So I'm only in my second year. I've got a couple of seniors this year. Elise Bell is one of them. Her fiancé, Kamari Jackson, is a cadet I met when I was here. He was starting his junior year, he's coming off a neck injury, and I challenged him because he's hanging around the gym. I didn't know why. Now I know why. I thought it was boxing, it wasn't. It was Elise, but I'm good with that, you know. I would whisper in Elise's ear, try to get him back, because he was really good as a freshman. Then got hurt, but he's another young man that's just took leadership by the horn. Came in back this year, I challenged him to be at a certain weight. He said, “Coach, I'm coming back, I want to win it. I made weight.” I didn't think he was going to make the weight his first semester, fall semester. He was a squadron commander, plate is full but still made it down. Was one of those — he wasn't our team captain, but he was a team captain.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 33:26 Yes.   Col. Mark Clifford 33:27 It was just one of those…   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 33:28 …leading without rank or title.   Col. Mark Clifford 33:30 You didn't need it, yeah, but he just had that. He has an aura. I wouldn't say he surprised me. I just think it was just one of those success stories where you're going, man. I love to have a team like this that just — and we do. They lead in their own way. We've got some quiet ones; I've got some vocal ones. I've got ones — our senior this year, our heavyweight, the one that won the Wing Open, he did it with his work ethic. Elise Bell, she leads with her work ethic. There are different ways of leading in the gym, and I try to harness that, and then elevate those that are doing it, making sure the team sees what they're doing. There's a young lady, she's very quiet, prior enlisted two-time national champ now. She's won three Wing Opens, she's gonna probably get her fourth as a senior, she's gonna be our team captain this year, because she's quiet, but it brings out her show, forces her to use her voice a little bit more, because she does it quietly with her work ethic in the corner. But you all see her because she's always in the ring and she's always working. So, I wouldn't say they surprised me just yet. I haven't had so many surprises just yet, but I've had some that has solidified my resolve in why I came back because they understand where they're going, they're learning what leadership is, because you don't always have to vocally stand on the pedestal and be the person on top to be a leader, and I love that piece of this.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 34:56 So, I'm sure maybe this is a silly question, but obviously you have been assistant coach in the past. What made you come back as head coach?   Col. Mark Clifford 35:03 It's a silly question, Naviere. These cadets — no, this place is special. I love the Athletic Department. I mean, back to what it's done for me: I had the opportunity to come back as a young captain, working in the athletic department, was able to get a doctorate degree out of this place, was able to come back again and be around the cadets to learn more from Coach Eddie Weichers. And I think all of those parts and pieces helped develop me, because it put me in positions where I was able to grab jobs and be in positions to be successful. I had no business picking up a squadron command the second time I was here, but I was able to pick up the squadron command, because I had people pulling for me, pushing for me, and that's what you go back to, like you said before, what helped shape you, and that it's just the people around here that help shape me. And how do I come back and give back to an institution, to a department that really shaped me as an individual? And that's what I'm doing. I think I come back because it's — I want to see the cadets who struggled like me, and I find them in class too, that are debating whether they want to be or not, looking for something else to be a part of, and I always invite them to be part of the boxing family, because I know what boxing did for me and others who went through this program that were competitive, that couldn't make another team, or wasn't on a different team that wanted to show their skill that wanted to balance something from the academic side, because that is so stressful. Punching something is very stress relieving. There's something about it — especially if I can punch something in the face in front of other people and not get in trouble — I was doing it. And so I think being able to come back and give that opportunity to other cadets and then watch them flourish with it and grow with it, I think is why I'm back. And so I'm thankful for the athletic department. I'm thankful for the Academy. So, how do I pay it forward in my way, paying it forward? This is my way of paying it forward.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 37:02 I love that. Well, I want to ask you something that we ask our guests on this, because it's really about how you continue to hone your skills as a leader through all the journeys, right? In uniform, out of uniform, in the private sector, higher education, etc. What is something you do every day to be better as a leader?   Col. Mark Clifford 37:23 Well, you know, I think is internally, “How do I have an impact,” as a head coach in the athletic department, and I'm not an NCAA sport like some of our other coaches. How do I impact people around me in my sphere of influence? It's very different now when you're an officer, when you're a commander, you have entire unit that you have impact on. Mine are smaller. One, it's internally with my team, is how do I lead and impact my team, and so I want to make sure that I'm always prepared to support our cadets through practice, having a plan for them so they know when they walk in the door what we're supposed to do. Because I think that's important from a discipline standpoint of knowing and understanding what I have to do when I get to the gym, and what my end goal is. And I always come in for that mentally prepared, and then mentally preparing them for the rest of the season, because we have a long season. And then I always think about my series of influence. I'm in the athletic department on the physical education side. How do I make sure I am prepared for the other cadets in classes that aren't on the team? Make sure they have a positive experience in PE class, but also I make sure they know that I'm a grad. I make sure that they know I'm a high-level guy, because I think there's value in that when they can always ask questions that are driven towards operational air force, not necessarily about this particular class. So I make sure I'm prepared for those cadets, and then how do I then allow myself to be available for the rest of the department, not only the physical education department, but our athletic directors, and making sure that I'm a resource. I've been here before, right? I understand something. I may not have all the answers, but I'm willing to help the support. I'm always preparing myself daily for the cadets and the staff and the folks around me that my sphere of influence has, at least the best part of me every time I can work. And so I think daily for me it's a mental preparation, but also, you know, prepping for the day of the day of, from a leadership perspective, because my leadership role is very different now than what it was when you're active duty, when you're sitting at Grand Canyon University as a dean or assistant dean, right? Your influence is very different.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 39:40 So mentally you prepare yourself. What does that look like as far as like activity, right? So, are you taking care of yourself physically, so that you have the capacity to do more? Are you — I'm just curious, like, what does that look like when you say you're preparing yourself? Col. Mark Clifford 39:56 I do a couple of things. I think in the morning when I get up, I have a cup of coffee, and we typically — my wife and I typically watch the news together. It is thinking about the impacts of what happens in our world, how that impacts our Academy. I don't think — there's very little ripple effect that gets to the cadet, but also understanding why what's happening in our world is important to a cadet. I always try to prepare myself for those conversations, just in case they come up, and they have come up in classes sometimes. But I just give my perspective more so. Physically, I hit the gym, I work in a gym, so my wife says I have no excuse, at least you better be in a gym using equipment. I physically do that, and then I try to make sure I walk through our gym and put pieces together, equipment together, and make sure the equipment's in place and ready for our cadets, and sometimes I box and stuff. I gotta stay sharp.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 41:01 I was gonna ask, you know, how that you did with what was his name, the assistant coach at the time, Ray…   Col. Mark Clifford 41:06 Ray Carter.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 41:07 Yes, are you ever across in the ring with someone; with a cadet?   Col. Mark Clifford 41:12 My first year, I did. My last year, I let the young captains and majors do that. I realized that my mind will say do something — move out the way. I don't move out the way as quick as I used to, but I think I do.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 41:27 Then you feel that you didn't. Col. Mark Clifford 41:12 Exactly. I didn't. Never let the cadets know they got you.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 41:33 That's funny. All right, I want to ask you one more question. What's something, if you could have a conversation with young Mark as a cadet today, what would you tell yourself?   Col. Mark Clifford 41:44 I think the one thing I would tell myself is, trust the process, be the best that you can be, where you are, and where you're playing it, and do that to the best of your ability, and then shake off the negativity and the nonsense. I had some great friends here, but also some friends that didn't want to be here either, and so you feed off that negativity. I think that got into who I was, especially as a young cadet, because some of that negativity that probably kept me from being my best in certain areas, especially academically, especially militarily, because I think if I were able to do that, maybe my outcome probably would have been on the same trajectory, but also it would have been more positive experience,   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 42:27 Less painful for sure.   Col. Mark Clifford 42:29 Yeah, not chasing other things, trying to get your tape out, go recruit somewhere else. You're happy where you are, you're doing the best that you can, and it's going to be challenging, tough. And understand that you're going to take some losses, that's what this place is about. It's not always going to be a win, because in life, it's not always a win. And if you can bounce back from a loss, at some point it took me two years, in that third year, I bounced back in the loss to get that W, life becomes very, very easy. Yeah, you kind of figured out, so that's what I tell myself to prepare myself a little better. Col. Naviere Walkewicz 43:05 No, that's excellent. What's something that we didn't talk about today that you would really like to make sure that we share?   Col. Mark Clifford 43:11 I think we kind of talked about it, family, my family, my wife's been my rock for almost 30 years, we're on 29 this year, we're going on 30. We've got two boys that say they don't want to be in the military, I don't want to move. My oldest son is not in the military, he's moved three times since he graduated college two years ago. And then the youngest one, who didn't want to do it, would join officer training school in July.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 43:34 Congratulations!   Col. Mark Clifford 43:35 Yeah, super-proud. He's taking an eight-week route, not the five-year route. So, I don't know if he's smarter, I don't know how to play that one, but you know, I can't say enough about making sure that your family supports what you do. I could not have been as successful or do the things that I was able to do in the Air Force without my wife Elise and my two boys, Caleb and Jaden, without their support, because there were some tough times when you're deployed and you're gone and you just need that rock to make sure that the household is good, so you focus on your job while you're gone and be home in your home, and she made sure that we did that when we had opportunities, and she also, no matter where we went, made sure it was a home, and so I'm thankful for that, because the boys always had home versus places that we had to move to, right, and like you said, we have some good ones, thankfully. Col. Naviere Walkewicz 44:29 Well, it sounds like you also have translated that, bringing that that Elise has brought to your family, to your boxing family. I mean, I think when cadets are there, they're home away, this is home away from home, right? And maybe not all of them have father figures or leaders in their lives, and it sounds like you kind of taken that mantle, placed it right there.   Col. Mark Clifford 44:47 I tried, I tried. You know, we talked about this before we started, but I'm gonna push them hard. Make sure that they exceed that level of physicality and mentality that they think they can, because they will exceed it and be able to perform when it's time to perform. And I love it.   Col. Naviere Walkewicz 45:07 Well, Mark, this has been amazing — Coach Clifford, I mean. What you're doing at the program, I mean, you started with you, right, embedded in you, and now you're taking it to the next level. What I learned today in your leadership lessons are those things that you've battled with in the ring, you're bringing out in life, whether in uniform, out of uniform, and you're not only sharing it with those that have been directly on your team, but those that may join your team. You know, we just talked about those basic cadets. So, what I really appreciate about you is you're willing to be there in that with them, celebrating their wins and helping them navigate those losses. So, thanks for being an incredible leader, and thanks for being on Long Blue Leadership. Thank you for investing your time, and for joining us here on Long Blue Leadership. I encourage you to share this episode with others who are on their own leadership journey. You can find this and all our conversations wherever you get your podcasts, or at longblueleadership.org. Until next time, I'm Naviere Walkewicz.   KEYWORDS Leadership development, servant leadership, transformational leadership, competitive mindset, resilience, mental toughness, accountability, team culture, coaching and mentoring, leading by example, emotional intelligence, authenticity, character development, warrior ethos, growth mindset, discipline, perseverance, decision-making, ethical leadership, influencing without authority, role modeling, performance under pressure, purpose-driven leadership, mentorship, building trust, developing potential, talent identification, culture change, officer development, military leadership, sports leadership, motivation, intrinsic motivation, ownership, responsibility, humility, continuous improvement, self-reflection, family support, work-life integration, peer influence, values-based leadership, strategic thinking, adaptability, handling failure, bouncing back from setbacks, high standards, excellence, preparation, focus, commitment, dedication.     The Long Blue Line Podcast Network is presented by the U.S. Air Force Academy Association & Foundation      

I Had Trials Once...
Holloway's Coach Carter Shouts, INCREDIBLE Ravel Morrison & Huddersfield Promotion! | Alex Smithies

I Had Trials Once...

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2026 81:15


We're back with another episode of I Had Trials Once and this time we're joined by former Huddersfield, QPR, Cardiff & Leicester goalkeeper Alex Smithies! Alex sits down with Gaz & Jord as he discusses his football career from playing for his boyhood club Huddersfield to training with Vardy & Maddison at Leicester. The lads start the pod talking about Alex's life post football with his career in finance and helping players manager their money and not fall into the same traps we often see in the media. They then talk in depth about his early career at Huddersfield, how he became a number one keeper at just 18 years old, signing his first big contract and scoring the winning penalty in a play-off final. The trio then chat about Alex's surprise move to QPR, Ian Holloway's bizarre coach carter training tactics, how he knew Eberechi Eze was a superstar from an early age and what made Ravel Morrison so good. Alex then speaks about his dream move to Cardiff with Neil Warnock and why he was gutted he never made his Premier League debut at the club as well as what it's like as a keeper when it comes to dropping clangers and how you can only get away with one. Alex continues with his decision to become a third choice goalkeeper at Leicester City in the Premier League, relationship with Jamie Vardy and why James Maddison wanted him to shout abuse at him in training sessions. Finally, he talks about how he recently fell out of love with football before ending the pod on the toughest player he's ever come up against.

Underdog Hoops
Episode 228 Basketball Coaching Interview w/ Coach Carter Part 2

Underdog Hoops

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2026 30:48


Welcome to Underdog Hoops! Our channel is your go-to destination for basketball development and coaching, offering you that underdog edge to elevate your game, whether you're a player or a coach. Unlock the full potential of your basketball journey with Underdog Hoops University. Gain access to my coaching materials for a 14 day free trial & $14.99 a month or $119.99 a year . Visit www.underdoghoops.com/join-university to get started today! Explore our trusted affiliates: Hoops Geek Play Creator: https://app.thehoopsgeek.com/?ref=underdoghoops Practice Planner Live: https://www.practiceplannerlive.com/backoffice?referralCode=underdoghoops SeasonCast Live Streaming: Get 10% off using our link https://seasoncast.com/broadcaster/referral?referral_id=underdoghoops Connect with us on social media: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Underdoghoops Instagram: http://instagram.com/underdoghoops Subscribe for $0.99 Threads: https://www.threads.net/@underdoghoops TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@underdoghoops X: https://x.com/UnderdogH Join us every Sunday at 8 am PST for our insightful podcast episodes: https://spotifyanchor-web.app.link/e/vdH5gjF8Cyb Don't miss out on our weekly content releases: Tune in every Wednesday at 8 am PST for our latest YouTube videos: https://www.youtube.com/@underdoghoopsStay updated with our blog posts dropping every Monday, Thursday, and Saturday at 8 am PST. www.underdoghoops.com/blog Sign up for our newsletter to receive exclusive updates and content: https://bit.ly/underdoghoopsnewsletter Looking for more resources? Check out our Season Stat Book and Season Practice Planner for effective planning and progress tracking. https://underdoghoops.com/shop

Elevate Construction
Ep.1549 - Reactors vs Preventors

Elevate Construction

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2026 11:33


In this episode, Jason delivers a powerful message about mindset: reactors vs. preventers. Using lessons from Coach Carter, construction leadership, and even Antarctic exploration, Jason breaks down the dangerous "victim mentality" that shows up in project management blaming design, blaming time, blaming trades, blaming the owner instead of building systems that prevent failure in the first place. He challenges superintendents, project managers, and leaders to stop glorifying job recoveries and crisis fixes and instead build disciplined systems that eliminate the need for them. What you'll learn in this episode: Why reacting is not leadership. How CPM culture reinforces victim behavior. Why prevention is more valuable than heroic recovery. The difference between fixers and builders. How preparation creates control and accountability. Why disciplined pre-construction and weekly planning matter. True builders don't brag about saving a broken project.They build systems so it never breaks in the first place. If you like the Elevate Construction podcast, please subscribe for free and you'll never miss an episode.  And if you really like the Elevate Construction podcast, I'd appreciate you telling a friend (Maybe even two

Underdog Hoops
Episode 227 Rewind Basketball Coaching Interview w/ Coach Carter Part 1

Underdog Hoops

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2026 27:59


Welcome to Underdog Hoops! Our channel is your go-to destination for basketball development and coaching, offering you that underdog edge to elevate your game, whether you're a player or a coach. Unlock the full potential of your basketball journey with Underdog Hoops University. Gain access to my coaching materials for a 14 day free trial & $14.99 a month or $119.99 a year . Visit www.underdoghoops.com/join-university to get started today! Explore our trusted affiliates: Hoops Geek Play Creator: https://app.thehoopsgeek.com/?ref=underdoghoops Practice Planner Live: https://www.practiceplannerlive.com/backoffice?referralCode=underdoghoops SeasonCast Live Streaming: Get 10% off using our link https://seasoncast.com/broadcaster/referral?referral_id=underdoghoops Connect with us on social media: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Underdoghoops Instagram: http://instagram.com/underdoghoops Subscribe for $0.99 Threads: https://www.threads.net/@underdoghoops TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@underdoghoops X: https://x.com/UnderdogH Join us every Sunday at 8 am PST for our insightful podcast episodes: https://spotifyanchor-web.app.link/e/vdH5gjF8Cyb Don't miss out on our weekly content releases: Tune in every Wednesday at 8 am PST for our latest YouTube videos: https://www.youtube.com/@underdoghoopsStay updated with our blog posts dropping every Monday, Thursday, and Saturday at 8 am PST. www.underdoghoops.com/blog Sign up for our newsletter to receive exclusive updates and content: https://bit.ly/underdoghoopsnewsletter Looking for more resources? Check out our Season Stat Book and Season Practice Planner for effective planning and progress tracking. https://underdoghoops.com/shop

» Jolwin.nl
Rake klappen met Dwayne Johnson in het filmhuis

» Jolwin.nl

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2026 3:06


FILM – We stappen in de ring (The Smashing Machine), begeven ons op het basketbalveld (Coach Carter) en gaan in Libanon opzoek naar een ontvoerde dochter (Stolen Girl). Daarover gaan de filmtips in de twintigste podcast…Continue Reading "Rake klappen met Dwayne Johnson in het filmhuis"

First Team
HE GOT GAME, COACH CARTER, SPACE JAM : QUEL EST LE MEILLEUR FILM DE BASKET ? TIER LIST

First Team

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2026 130:33


He Got Game, Coach Carter, Space Jam, Love & Basketball, White Men Can't Jump… Pour cette première édition de notre série spéciale « Les 10 ans de First Team », on s'attaque à une question incontournable : quel est le meilleur film de basket de tous les temps ? Dans cette vidéo, on réalise une tier list de tous les films de basket en les classant selon leur impact culturel, leur crédibilité basket et leurs scènes cultes en compagnie d'un invité : Yann Solo de la chaîne @12Parsecs ! Débats, désaccords et choix assumés rythment cette discussion qui mêle culture basket et souvenirs de fans. Dis-nous en commentaire quel film mérite selon toi la première place ! Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

Underdog Hoops
Episode 218 Rewind Basketball Coaching Interview w/Coach Carter Part 2

Underdog Hoops

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2025 30:48


Welcome to Underdog Hoops! Our channel is your go-to destination for basketball development and coaching, offering you that underdog edge to elevate your game, whether you're a player or a coach. Unlock the full potential of your basketball journey with Underdog Hoops University. Gain access to my coaching materials for a 14 day free trial & $14.99 a month or $119.99 a year . Visit www.underdoghoops.com/join-university to get started today! Explore our trusted affiliates: Hoops Geek Play Creator: https://app.thehoopsgeek.com/?ref=underdoghoops Practice Planner Live: https://www.practiceplannerlive.com/backoffice?referralCode=underdoghoops SeasonCast Live Streaming: Get 10% off using our link https://seasoncast.com/broadcaster/referral?referral_id=underdoghoops Connect with us on social media: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Underdoghoops Instagram: http://instagram.com/underdoghoops Subscribe for $0.99 Threads: https://www.threads.net/@underdoghoops TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@underdoghoops X: https://x.com/UnderdogH Join us every Sunday at 8 am PST for our insightful podcast episodes: https://spotifyanchor-web.app.link/e/vdH5gjF8Cyb Don't miss out on our weekly content releases: Tune in every Wednesday at 8 am PST for our latest YouTube videos: https://www.youtube.com/@underdoghoopsStay updated with our blog posts dropping every Monday, Thursday, and Saturday at 8 am PST. www.underdoghoops.com/blog Sign up for our newsletter to receive exclusive updates and content: https://bit.ly/underdoghoopsnewsletter Looking for more resources? Check out our Season Stat Book and Season Practice Planner for effective planning and progress tracking. https://underdoghoops.com/shop

Underdog Hoops
Episode 217 Rewind Basketball Coaching Interview w/Coach Carter Part 1

Underdog Hoops

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2025 27:59


Welcome to Underdog Hoops! Our channel is your go-to destination for basketball development and coaching, offering you that underdog edge to elevate your game, whether you're a player or a coach. Unlock the full potential of your basketball journey with Underdog Hoops University. Gain access to my coaching materials for a 14 day free trial & $14.99 a month or $119.99 a year . Visit www.underdoghoops.com/join-university to get started today! Explore our trusted affiliates: Hoops Geek Play Creator: https://app.thehoopsgeek.com/?ref=underdoghoops Practice Planner Live: https://www.practiceplannerlive.com/backoffice?referralCode=underdoghoops SeasonCast Live Streaming: Get 10% off using our link https://seasoncast.com/broadcaster/referral?referral_id=underdoghoops Connect with us on social media: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Underdoghoops Instagram: http://instagram.com/underdoghoops Subscribe for $0.99 Threads: https://www.threads.net/@underdoghoops TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@underdoghoops X: https://x.com/UnderdogH Join us every Sunday at 8 am PST for our insightful podcast episodes: https://spotifyanchor-web.app.link/e/vdH5gjF8Cyb Don't miss out on our weekly content releases: Tune in every Wednesday at 8 am PST for our latest YouTube videos: https://www.youtube.com/@underdoghoopsStay updated with our blog posts dropping every Monday, Thursday, and Saturday at 8 am PST. www.underdoghoops.com/blog Sign up for our newsletter to receive exclusive updates and content: https://bit.ly/underdoghoopsnewsletter Looking for more resources? Check out our Season Stat Book and Season Practice Planner for effective planning and progress tracking. https://underdoghoops.com/shop

Mush Hour
Mush & Ruben - Coach Carter

Mush Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2025 40:16


I denne episoden går Mush og Ruben rett i kjernen av fotballens mest diskuterte rolle: treneren. Gutta bryter ned hva som faktisk skiller en god trener fra en dårlig én – både på banen, i garderoben og i møte med spillerne. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Silver Screen & Roll: for Los Angeles Lakers fans
FULL: Lakers win ugly; Starters still don't look right; Austin's shot diet; Timo Cruz

Silver Screen & Roll: for Los Angeles Lakers fans

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2025 69:18


Anthony and Raj break down a relatively ugly win in which the Lakers showed very clearly they didn't respect the Jazz. They guys discuss the starters continuing to start slow, the Lakers' point differential continuing to hover far lower than their competition and some of the reasons why that has been the case. They celebrate what they saw from Maxi Kleber then share their concern for Austin Reaves' shot diet. Also, Coach Carter was brought up. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Rock Video Rental
Coach Carter [2005]: Episode 365

Rock Video Rental

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2025 44:08


SportstemberCoach Carter [2005]: Episode 365Sportstember comes to a close this year with a basketball feature. Samuel L. Jackson brings another great performance with a more serious approach to the role of Coach Carter and trying to teach young boys not just how to play basketball but also how to become young men with brighter futures.#CoachCarter #SportsMovie #MovieReview

Step by Stapp Podcast
Podcast Town 114 : Coach Carter

Step by Stapp Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2025 56:50


To celebrate the beginning of football season, Chris surprises Rob by bringing his old high school football coach on as a special guest for the episode.

Podcast Town
Podcast Town 114 : Coach Carter

Podcast Town

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2025 56:50


To celebrate the beginning of football season, Chris surprises Rob by bringing his old high school football coach on as a special guest for the episode.

Mentors on the Mic
Becoming... Emmy and Artios winning Casting Director Jessica Daniels

Mentors on the Mic

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2025 53:38


Jessica Daniels is an Emmy and Artios Award-winning casting director for film and television, with credits including Will Trent, Dying for Sex, The 40-Year-Old Version, The Miseducation of Cameron Post, and 30 Rock. A New York native and former VP of Casting at Walt Disney Television Studios, she has spent over two decades championing talent. Jessica is passionate about storytelling and sees casting as an essential mechanism for shaping culture.In this episode, we talk about:• Introduction to Entertainment: Jessica Daniels began her career in the entertainment industry at Backstage Magazine, where she wrote and edited casting notices and conducted interviews.• Interest in Casting: Her interest in casting was piqued after creating a top 20 list of film casting directors, which led her to pursue a career in casting.• Career Path: Jessica transitioned from editorial work to becoming a casting assistant, eventually working on notable projects like "Garden State" and "The Carrie Diaries” (the latter she thought of as a breakthrough series for her).• Casting Philosophy: She emphasizes the importance of matching energies and representation in casting, often advocating for actors she believes in.• Challenges and Insights: Jessica discusses the fast-paced nature of casting, the importance of being prepared for pitch meetings, and the balance between casting known actors and discovering new talent.• Current Work: She is currently working on two feature films and preparing for the next season of "Will Trent."• Advice for Filmmakers: Jessica advises filmmakers to make roles appealing to actors and to consider hiring a casting director to open up the world of possibilities for their projects.• The High of Casting: When a difficult deal closes or she finds the right person for a role.• Auditions: The benefits of submitting early and whether it's a necessity.• Lightning round: How to Deal, Garden State, Royal Pains, 30 Rock, Coach Carter, Will Trent, Elekra, Ice Princess, Single Drunk FemaleGuest:⁠⁠⁠IMDb⁠⁠ ⁠⁠Linkedin InstagramHost:Instagram:⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@MentorsontheMic⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@MichelleSimoneMiller⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Twitter:⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@MentorsontheMic⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@MichelleSimoneM⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Facebook page:⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ https://www.facebook.com/mentorsonthemic⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Website:⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ www.michellesimonemiller.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ and⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ www.mentorsonthemic.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Youtube:⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.youtube.com/user/24mmichelle⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠If you like this episode, check out:⁠⁠Becoming Casting Director Erica Hart ("THAT DAMN MICHAEL CHE," "GODFATHER OF HARLEM," "THE BOLD TYPE")⁠⁠Close Up with Casting Director Tara Rubin (Aladdin, BOOP, Death Becomes Her, Six, The Outsiders)Close Up with Casting Director Paul Schnee (Barden/Schnee casting: "Pitch Perfect," "Sisters," "Palm Royale," "Winter's Bone")

Church At The Bridge Sermon Podcasts
Week 3: Life In The Beyond

Church At The Bridge Sermon Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2025 43:44


What if the thing holding you back isn't your past, your pain, or your failures but your belief that you're not meant for more? Inspired by Coach Carter's powerful story and the bold prayer of Jabez, this message challenges the labels we wear and the limits we place on our own lives. Through biblical insight, practical examples, and personal reflection, we unpack how to break free from fear, step into your God-given purpose, and live beyond what you've ever imagined. You don't need perfect faith, just the courage to believe again. It's time to trade your labels for God's glory.

Underdog Hoops
Episode 196 Rewind Episode Basketball Coaching Interview w/ Coach Carter

Underdog Hoops

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2025 30:48


Welcome to Underdog Hoops! Our channel is your go-to destination for basketball development and coaching, offering you that underdog edge to elevate your game, whether you're a player or a coach. Unlock the full potential of your basketball journey with Underdog Hoops University. Gain access to my coaching materials for a 14 day free trial & $14.99 a month or $119.99 a year . Visit www.underdoghoops.com/join-university to get started today! Explore our trusted affiliates: Hoops Geek Play Creator: https://app.thehoopsgeek.com/?ref=underdoghoops Practice Planner Live: https://www.practiceplannerlive.com/backoffice?referralCode=underdoghoops SeasonCast Live Streaming: Get 10% off using our link https://seasoncast.com/broadcaster/referral?referral_id=underdoghoops Connect with us on social media: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Underdoghoops Instagram: http://instagram.com/underdoghoops Subscribe for $0.99 Threads: https://www.threads.net/@underdoghoops TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@underdoghoops X: https://x.com/UnderdogH Join us every Sunday at 8 am PST for our insightful podcast episodes: https://spotifyanchor-web.app.link/e/vdH5gjF8Cyb Don't miss out on our weekly content releases: Tune in every Wednesday at 8 am PST for our latest YouTube videos: https://www.youtube.com/@underdoghoopsStay updated with our blog posts dropping every Monday, Thursday, and Saturday at 8 am PST. www.underdoghoops.com/blog Sign up for our newsletter to receive exclusive updates and content: https://bit.ly/underdoghoopsnewsletter Looking for more resources? Check out our Season Stat Book and Season Practice Planner for effective planning and progress tracking. https://underdoghoops.com/shop

Underdog Hoops
Episode 195 Rewind Episode Basketball Coaching Interview w/ Coach Carter

Underdog Hoops

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2025 27:59


Welcome to Underdog Hoops! Our channel is your go-to destination for basketball development and coaching, offering you that underdog edge to elevate your game, whether you're a player or a coach. Unlock the full potential of your basketball journey with Underdog Hoops University. Gain access to my coaching materials for a 14 day free trial & $14.99 a month or $119.99 a year . Visit www.underdoghoops.com/join-university to get started today! Explore our trusted affiliates: Hoops Geek Play Creator: https://app.thehoopsgeek.com/?ref=underdoghoops Practice Planner Live: https://www.practiceplannerlive.com/backoffice?referralCode=underdoghoops SeasonCast Live Streaming: Get 10% off using our link https://seasoncast.com/broadcaster/referral?referral_id=underdoghoops Connect with us on social media: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Underdoghoops Instagram: http://instagram.com/underdoghoops Subscribe for $0.99 Threads: https://www.threads.net/@underdoghoops TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@underdoghoops X: https://x.com/UnderdogH Join us every Sunday at 8 am PST for our insightful podcast episodes: https://spotifyanchor-web.app.link/e/vdH5gjF8Cyb Don't miss out on our weekly content releases: Tune in every Wednesday at 8 am PST for our latest YouTube videos: https://www.youtube.com/@underdoghoopsStay updated with our blog posts dropping every Monday, Thursday, and Saturday at 8 am PST. www.underdoghoops.com/blog Sign up for our newsletter to receive exclusive updates and content: https://bit.ly/underdoghoopsnewsletter Looking for more resources? Check out our Season Stat Book and Season Practice Planner for effective planning and progress tracking. https://underdoghoops.com/shop

Two guys, a girl and a movie podcast
Two guys, a girl and a movie podcast - ep 103 - Coach Carter

Two guys, a girl and a movie podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2025 61:18


Time for a listener pick, it's been a while. This week we are doing the 2005 Samuel L Jackson biographical sports drama 'Coach Carter'.

Very Bold Radio Podcast w/ Steve Teel
Very Bold Radio 7-5-25 with Coach Tim Carter

Very Bold Radio Podcast w/ Steve Teel

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2025 46:43


Coach Tim Carter joins host Steve Teel on this edition of Very Bold Radio! Coach Carter has the most wins in UTSA basketball history. Visit the Website! https://verybold.com/ Be inspired every Saturday by difference-makers on Very Bold Radio & Podcast!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Trouble With The Script
"Coach Carter" with Ben Cruz and JR Hickey

Trouble With The Script

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2025 76:35


We're back to sports movies on this episode of BSS, as Ben Cruz & JR Hickey return to join Kyle Bandujo in talking tactical basketball, punishment running, Johnny Sins, and everything else in "Coach Carter."Follow Ben, JR, and Kyle on X & BlueSky. Come see BSS LIVE at The Sports Podcast Festival on August 23rd in Raleigh!Buy "Movies With Balls: The Greatest Sports Films of All Time, Analyzed, Mapped, and Illustrated" here or wherever books are sold.You can support Big Screen Sports, get schedule updates, and pick movies to be covered in upcoming episodes by joining our Patreon at https://www.patreon.com/bigscreensports.Big Screen Sports is hosted/edited by Kyle Bandujo, and produced & supported by Aaron Figureoa, Mike Schubert, Steve Rogers, Kevin Frost, Mike D, Ryan Yager, Mike Dries, Chris Mycoskie, John Craig, Sam Smith, Zach Rich, Classic Stadium Fire, Dan McFall, Kevin Enkelmann, Mac Lindsey, Curt Ritchie, Robert Dove, Andrew Teagul Benjamin Baumann, Jeff Estes, Anthony Scafone, Taylor Logan, Shawn Hoffman, Peter Roble, Jamie Bryan, Brad Brown, Don Jenver, and Chris Raczynski.Art for Big Screen Sports was created by Riki Prosper.

Sonics Forever
Play-In Chaos, First-Round Forecasts & PNW Hoops Vibes

Sonics Forever

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2025 13:58


In this episode of "3 Things," Danny Ball breaks down the 2025 NBA Play-In Tournament and first-round matchups with bold picks, spicy takes, and a few Coach Carter references for good measure. We kick things off with the state of the basketball scene in the Pacific Northwest, followed by a quick recap of the regular season, then we fly through every first round series — East to West. This episode is sponsored by our friends, the Swinomish Casino & Lodge, with all odds powered by their brand-new BetRivers Sportsbook. Please gamble responsibly. For help you can call the National Problem Gambling Helpline at 1-800-GAMBLER or visit 1800gamblerchat.org. For in-state resources contact Washington Problem Gambling Helpline at 1-800-547-6133 or visit their website at evergreencpg.org.

SicEm365 Radio
Going Home to Baylor Was an Opportunity I Couldn't Pass Up | Caden Powell

SicEm365 Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2025 9:17


Caden Powell Baylor Basketball Transfer joins 365 Sports to discuss his thoughts on his decision to transfer to Baylor, his thoughts on what the Baylor staff told him to close the deal, his thoughts on the physicality that he brings to his game, what Coach Carter told him in their conversations and more. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Connor Happer Show
Crossover (Mon 4/7 - Seg 1)

The Connor Happer Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2025 33:40


The guys celebrate Matt's birthday, the value of sports cups and collectibles, break down the Barstool Universe, the tallest person we've ever met, the history of 7-footers at Purdue, Matt Painter's personal life, the magic of Coach Carter, what kids are doing with flags now, we realize a large number of people watched "The Big Bang Theory", & Frank Caliendo texts the show.

Successful Working Parents
Coach Carter rewatch, with Ryan Rucker

Successful Working Parents

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2025 49:34


Today we are breaking down the parenting lessons and family dynamics in the 2005 hit movie Coach Carter. I'm joined by Ryan Rucker, host of the courtside forever podcast and father of 2.We talk about the importance of instilling discipline in our kids, the value of putting in the work, how relevant the struggles of inner city youth are 20 years later, what kind of party these kids crashed, and much more.EPISODE LINKS:www.ryanrucker.comSHOW LINKS:contact: ⁠⁠successfulworkingparents@gmail.com⁠⁠Linktree: linktr.ee/successfulworkingparentsMusical credit:Hippie Beatnix (ID 1913) by Lobo Loco CC-by-nc-nd

PREP Athletics Basketball Podcast
What D1 Programs Really Want: Coach Craig Carter of South Kent School on Basketball IQ & Decision Making

PREP Athletics Basketball Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2025 52:47 Transcription Available


In this week's episode of the PREP Athletics Podcast, I sit down with Craig Carter, the new head coach at South Kent School who took over for Raphael Chalias last August. Coach Carter shares his journey from the playgrounds of Brooklyn to playing at Rutgers and coaching at the D1 level for both men's and women's programs. He offers valuable insights on basketball development, the recruiting landscape in today's environment, and how he's transforming the South Kent program with his “Trust and Believe” philosophy.

Lounging with Lo
March Madness - Coach Carter and Space Jam

Lounging with Lo

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2025 15:24


In this episode, I talk about Coach Carter and Space Jam (1996) in honor of March Madness.

ADHD-DVD
Hoosiers

ADHD-DVD

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2025 83:12


This week, we kick off a March-long salute to the dearly departed king of American screen acting as Hackmonth begins with a classic of the inspirational sports genre, the story of a man who moves to Hicktown, Indiana and whips a bunch of farm boys into state champions. It's 1986's Hoosiers, directed by David Anspaugh and starring Gene Hackman, Barbara Hershey and Dennis Hopper. While the circumstances surrounding this theme month are unquestionably sad, it's still a treat to watch one of the all-time great screen presences cook in some of his most acclaimed roles, and there's no question he's outstanding in this one. The three adult leads are all terrific in fact, lifting the movie above its genre-trappings. Is the movie enormously overrated by sports-inclined boomers? Yes, definitely, but that doesn't mean it's not a cozy comfort watch at the same time. Plus: Neither Hayl or J Mo actually watched this year's Oscars, but that doesn't stop us from having opinions on them! And Justin's back with another theatrical field report, this time having made it out to the cinema to see Osgood Perkins' Vancouver-shot Stephen King adaptation The Monkey. If you'd like to watch the movie before listening along to our conversation, Hoosiers is available on MGM+ at the moment north of the border, but... I dunno, check it out from the library, that's what I did. Other works discussed in this episode include Conclave, Nickel Boys, Megalopolis, Emilia Perez, A Real Pain, Challengers, Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes, Behind Enemy Lines, Hustle, Blue Chips, Coach Carter, Friday Night Lights, Glory Road, Rudy and The Way Back. We'll be back next week as Hackmonth continues with a 1995 naval thriller starring king Gene alongside Denzel Washington in Tony Scott's Crimson Tide, which is available to stream on Disney+. The week after that it's Francis Ford Coppola's The Conversation, and we close out the month with Wes Anderson's The Royal Tenenbaums heading in to the pod-canon. Until then, we'll see you at the movies!!

W2M Network
Triple Feature: Above the Rim/Coach Carter/He Got Game

W2M Network

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2025 76:23


Jason Teasley and Mark Radulich review movies currently on streaming services: Above the Rim/Coach Carter/He Got Game Movie Review! First up is Above the Rim (1994). Then we move on to Coach Carter (2005). Finally we review He Got Game (1998).Above the Rim is a 1994 American sports drama film co-written and directed by Jeff Pollack in his directorial debut. The screenplay was written by Barry Michael Cooper, adapted from a story by Benny Medina.The film stars Duane Martin, Tupac Shakur, Marlon Wayans, and Leon. Considered the conclusion to Cooper's "Harlem Trilogy" (the preceding films being New Jack City (1991) and Sugar Hill (1994), the film tells the story about a promising New York City high school basketball star, and his relationships with a drug dealer and a former basketball star, now employed as a security guard at the high school he was a promising young star for the past years.The film was shot in Harlem, with various scenes filmed at the Manhattan Center for Science and Mathematics in East Harlem. Some of the basketball scenes were filmed at Samuel J. Tilden High School in Brooklyn, New York.Coach Carter is a 2005 American biographical sports drama film starring Samuel L. Jackson and directed by Thomas Carter. It is based on the true story of Richmond High School basketball coach Ken Carter, who made headlines in 1999 for suspending his undefeated high school basketball team due to poor academic results. The screenplay was co-written by John Gatins and Mark Schwahn. The cast features Rob Brown, Channing Tatum (in his film debut), Debbi Morgan, Robert Ri'chard, and the singer Ashanti.The film was a co-production between MTV Films and Tollin/Robbins Productions. It was commercially distributed by Paramount Pictures for theatrical release and home video rental. The film explores professional ethics, academics, and athletics. The sports action in the film was coordinated by Mark Ellis. On January 11, the film's soundtrack was released by Capitol Records, and the film's score was composed and orchestrated by musician Trevor Rabin.Coach Carter was released in the United States on January 14, 2005, and earned $77 million. It received a varied reception from critics.He Got Game is a 1998 American sports drama film written, produced and directed by Spike Lee and starring Denzel Washington and Ray Allen. The film revolves around Jake Shuttlesworth (Denzel Washington), father of the top-ranked basketball prospect in the country, Jesus Shuttlesworth (Ray Allen). Jake, in prison for killing his wife, is released on parole for a week by the state's governor to persuade his son to play for the governor's alma mater in exchange for a reduced prison sentence.Disclaimer: The following may contain offensive language, adult humor, and/or content that some viewers may find offensive – The views and opinions expressed by any one speaker does not explicitly or necessarily reflect or represent those of Mark Radulich or W2M Network.Mark Radulich and his wacky podcast on all the things:https://linktr.ee/markkind76alsohttps://www.teepublic.com/user/radulich-in-broadcasting-networkFB Messenger: Mark Radulich LCSWTiktok: @markradulichtwitter: @MarkRadulichInstagram: markkind76RIBN Album Playlist: https://suno.com/playlist/91d704c9-d1ea-45a0-9ffe-5069497bad59

Movie Mount Rushmore
Classic Movie Review Podcast (Season 1, Episode 1)

Movie Mount Rushmore

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2025 37:16


The return of a classic! And we don't just mean the movies! We're proud to bring you the return of the "Throwback Thursday Show", now rebranded simply as our Classic Movie Review show It's been a staple of The Silver Screen Dudes since we started, and now we are happy to be bringing you this as a monthly podcast What's the premise of this movie podcast? We review movies each month that are hitting a decade landmark (10 years, 20 years, 30 years old etc). We deliberate, score and question how well they have aged and if they are still worth a watch This month we discuss and review Ex Machina, Kingsman: the Secret Service, Coach Carter and Alone in the Dark ►Love movie content? Then subscribe to our channel https://www.youtube.com/@TheSilverScreenDudes?sub_confirmation=1

The Contrarians
TUFtwenty - Episode 2 - Team Challenges

The Contrarians

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2025 55:52


The team challenges kick off as our journey of The Ultimate Fighter continues. What does sawing a utility log into pieces then reassembling it have to do with fighting? We put our minds together and try our damndest to figure it out.In this episode, we meet our host, Willa Ford, we have a heated discussion about asparagus, and we learn that no one trains harder than UFC fighters (and that's a fact).We also dip into some Strange Brew and, most importantly, find out if Coach Carter is still #1 at the box office. Want more from the hosts? - Alex and Julio discuss the freshest and most rotten movies on the Tomatometer in every episode of The Contrarians.- STEVE! has opinions all over Bluesky.- Joe talks about all sorts of wrestling related stuff on THE LATE NIGHT GRIN.

Sunday Sports Club
Fashion and basketball with guest Coach Sydney Carter

Sunday Sports Club

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2025 38:42


On this bonus episode of Sunday Sports Club sponsored by TJ Maxx, Allison sits down with Coach Sydney Carter, the assistant coach of women's basketball at the University of Texas, a former college basketball and WNBA star, AND a fashion icon. They get into the importance of style and self-expression in every facet of their lives as women. Tune into this episode to hear Coach Carter's takes on game day fits, the WNBA, and what the future of basketball looks like. Sponsorship: Thanks to TJ Maxx for sponsoring today's episode. TJ Maxx is a brand that encourages all women to boldly embrace and express their most authentic, multidimensional selves. Find your new favorite look at www.tjmaxx.com.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Pop Capsule Podcast
Episode 201 - Chronically Political

Pop Capsule Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2025 68:14


This week is all about people to the rescue! We've got 2005's Coach Carter and Supernanny coming to save the day. We also talk about Schitt's Creek's debut (simply the best) and the 2015 Critic's Choice Awards. Plus strange commercials and a test to see what movies Kevin Costner has been in? We've got everything this week.

Arroe Collins
Friday Night Lights Meets Erin Brockovich Gary E Parker Releases The Playbook

Arroe Collins

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2024 8:21


An inspiring novel by Gary E. Parker, brings to life an enthralling story of perseverance, leadership, and breaking barriers in the world of high school sports. In a Friday Night Lights meets Erin Brockovich drama, “The Playbook” follows the journey of Chelsea Deal, a determined and innovative coach who challenges the status quo by leading a high school football team in a male-dominated sport. Through her leadership, Chelsea not only transforms her team but also redefines what it means to be a leader in a challenging environment. Author Gary E. Parker masterfully weaves a narrative that captures the essence of high school sports while tackling complex themes such as gender equality, racial dynamics, and social change. With a backdrop reminiscent of beloved classics like “Friday Night Lights” and “Coach Carter,” this book is not just about football; it's about the life lessons learned on and off the field.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/arroe-collins-unplugged-totally-uncut--994165/support.

Underdog Hoops
Episode 161 Basketball Coaching Interview w/ Coach Carter Part 2

Underdog Hoops

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2024 30:48


Welcome to Underdog Hoops! Our channel is your go-to destination for basketball development and coaching, offering you that underdog edge to elevate your game, whether you're a player or a coach. Unlock the full potential of your basketball journey with Underdog Hoops University. Gain access to my coaching materials for a 14 day free trial & $9.99 a month after that. Visit www.underdoghoops.com/product/university to get started today! Explore our trusted affiliates: Hoops Geek Play Creator: https://app.thehoopsgeek.com/?ref=underdoghoops Practice Planner Live: https://www.practiceplannerlive.com/backoffice?referralCode=underdoghoops SeasonCast Live Streaming: Get 10% off using our link https://seasoncast.com/broadcaster/referral?referral_id=underdoghoops Connect with us on social media: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Underdoghoops Instagram: http://instagram.com/underdoghoops Subscribe for $0.99 Threads: https://www.threads.net/@underdoghoops TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@underdoghoops X: https://x.com/UnderdogH Join us every Sunday at 8 am PST for our insightful podcast episodes: https://spotifyanchor-web.app.link/e/vdH5gjF8Cyb Don't miss out on our weekly content releases: Tune in every Wednesday at 8 am PST for our latest YouTube videos: https://www.youtube.com/@underdoghoops Stay updated with our blog posts dropping every Monday, Thursday, and Saturday at 8 am PST. www.underdoghoops.com/blog Sign up for our newsletter to receive exclusive updates and content: https://bit.ly/underdoghoopsnewsletter Looking for more resources? Check out our Season Stat Book and Season Practice Planner for effective planning and progress tracking. https://underdoghoops.etsy.com --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/underdoghoopspodcast/support

Underdog Hoops
Episode 160 Basketball Coaching Interview w/ Coach Carter Part 1

Underdog Hoops

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2024 27:59


Welcome to Underdog Hoops! Our channel is your go-to destination for basketball development and coaching, offering you that underdog edge to elevate your game, whether you're a player or a coach. Unlock the full potential of your basketball journey with Underdog Hoops University. Gain access to my coaching materials for a 14 day free trial & $9.99 a month after that. Visit www.underdoghoops.com/product/university to get started today! Explore our trusted affiliates: Hoops Geek Play Creator: https://app.thehoopsgeek.com/?ref=underdoghoops Practice Planner Live: https://www.practiceplannerlive.com/backoffice?referralCode=underdoghoops SeasonCast Live Streaming: Get 10% off using our link https://seasoncast.com/broadcaster/referral?referral_id=underdoghoops Connect with us on social media: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Underdoghoops Instagram: http://instagram.com/underdoghoops Subscribe for $0.99 Threads: https://www.threads.net/@underdoghoops TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@underdoghoops X: https://x.com/UnderdogH Join us every Sunday at 8 am PST for our insightful podcast episodes: https://spotifyanchor-web.app.link/e/vdH5gjF8Cyb Don't miss out on our weekly content releases: Tune in every Wednesday at 8 am PST for our latest YouTube videos: https://www.youtube.com/@underdoghoops Stay updated with our blog posts dropping every Monday, Thursday, and Saturday at 8 am PST. www.underdoghoops.com/blog Sign up for our newsletter to receive exclusive updates and content: https://bit.ly/underdoghoopsnewsletter Looking for more resources? Check out our Season Stat Book and Season Practice Planner for effective planning and progress tracking. https://underdoghoops.etsy.com --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/underdoghoopspodcast/support

Movin' the Chains
Orangeburg-Wilkinson Bruins: From 2-8 to Playoff Contenders - Coach Chris Carter Talks 2024 Turnaround

Movin' the Chains

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2024 22:11


In Hindsight
124: Coach Carter

In Hindsight

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2024 96:25


In this week's episode, we dissect Coach Carter, a film released on January 13, 2005, starring Samuel L. Jackson, Rob Brown, Debbi Morgan, Robert Ri'chard, and Ashanti. Join us as we discuss contracts, lockouts, GPA requirements, social work, deepest fears, and more! Notable Mentions + References in This Episode: Coach Carter Documentary Pt. 1 Coach Carter Documentary Pt. 2 Coach Ken Carter Interview Coach Carter - First Practice Scene Aksent - This One  Ciara - Roll Wit U Twista - Hope ft. Faith Evans  Insecure Susie Q (Episode 002) Alleycats Strike (Episode 025) Stepsister from planet weird (Episode 028) Connect with us: Instagram: @in_hindsight_pod Twitter: @in_hindsightpod  Want us to dissect one of your favorite childhood movies? Send us a DM or email us at inhindsightpod@gmail.com. Thanks for listening!

Married Game Podcast
Taking Things To The Next Level

Married Game Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2024 42:38


In today's episode, Keith and Coach Carter talk about what it takes to be as efficient and successful with your body, which in turn, takes an effect on your life overall. Being accountable, staying on the path to success, and how to do it is in this conversation. Let's listen in! Follow Coach Carter at instagram.com/cartermontgomery_ and theascensionfitness.fit/home

YHH Hockey Podcasts
USHL Fall Classic MiniPod - Ohio State Assistant Coach Carter Krier

YHH Hockey Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2024 32:04


Moorhead native Carter Krier has been piloting his coaching rocket ship since graduating high school.  After one season of mentoring and coaching the goaltenders in the East Grand Forks youth program, he went behind the bench with the Fargo Force, guiding the Force's goaltenders. His work culminated last season with an Anderson Cup and Clark Cup, and his netminder Hampton Slukynsky was named the league's Goaltender of the Year.  Now, Krier is charting his collegiate coaching path, becoming an assistant coach at THE Ohio State University and working with the Buckeyes' goalies while also recruiting.  Over the next 30 minutes, we reminisce about his past as a YHH writer, mention a few of his own mentors, and check in on what's in store for the Buckeyes this season.  Hope you enjoy. 

The Film Stage Show
Bonus Ep. - Box Office Bonanza (January 14, 2005)

The Film Stage Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2024 97:40


Welcome to a new episode from The Film Stage! It's not The Film Stage Show. It's not The B-Side! It's something else! It's a Box Office Bonanza from The Film Stage! Here we talk about random box office weekends and where they fit into our lives. The movies, the memories! This episode features Dan Mecca, Conor O'Donnell, Mitchell Beaupre, Jordan Raup, and Ross Bratin. The box office weekend in question is January 14th, 2005. The number one movie in the country was the Samuel L. Jackson basketball picture Coach Carter. The number five movie was the superhero dud Elektra. There's also the little-seen indie A Love Song for Bobby Long. The Flight of the Phoenix remake was still on the board. Racing Stripes was about to hold really well for a few weeks. Way down is Blade: Trinity, in its sixth week. We discuss those reports of troubles between Wesley Snipes and Ryan Reynolds on set. Made all the more interesting with Deadpool & Wolverine out in the world. There's also some earnest chatter about the television show Suits. Perhaps most interesting this weekend is White Noise. It's surprising box office success - despite its January release date and bad reviews - changed the January month strategy for Hollywood studios. We also talk a little about the Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes, Bad Boys: Ride or Die, and an earnest discussion about Jon Watts and if he is, in fact, a real human being. Enjoy this episode and suggest other interesting box office weekends to cover in the future!

Coaching Youth Hoops
Ep 138 Learning The Full-Court Matchup Man-to-Man Press ( Part 2)

Coaching Youth Hoops

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2024 40:00


https://coachingyouthhoops.com/waitlist https://coachingyouthhoops.com/clinic Welcome to another episode of "Coaching Youth Hoops," I'm your host Coach Bill Flitter, alongside my fellow basketball enthusiast, Coach Carter. Today, we're diving deep into a unique full-court matchup man-to-man press. We'll break down how pressing can elevate the defense for youth teams from the 3rd through 8th grade. Regardless of your team's personnel, you can harness the power of the man-to-man press to force your opponents into playing your game, and make them sweat every possession. We'll unravel the intricacies of being unpredictable and how to make the opposing team play to your beat. We'll explore how defensive formation, with an alignment that quarters the court, can pressure the opposing team into turnovers and thus, scoring opportunities. Given the unpredictable nature of the game, discipline within our defensive rotations emerges as a cornerstone of success, and we'll tackle how teaching these principles can be a game-changer. We'll examine the blend of zone and man-to-man defense in our press, looking at trapping strategies and how good ball pressure can be just as good as a win. So to all you coaches out there looking to step up your team's defensive game, you're in for a treat. Get ready to pressure, push, and pave the way to victory — right here on "Coaching Youth Hoops. Follow Coach Carter here: https://twitter.com/coachburgundy Go here for more videos on the man-to-man press: https://twitter.com/CoachBurgundy/status/176916251456511208 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Coaching Youth Hoops
Ep 137 Learning The Full-Court Matchup Man-to-Man Press ( Part 1)

Coaching Youth Hoops

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2024 39:20


https://coachingyouthhoops.com/waitlist https://coachingyouthhoops.com/clinic Welcome to another episode of "Coaching Youth Hoops," I'm your host Coach Bill Flitter, alongside my fellow basketball enthusiast, Coach Carter. Today, we're diving deep into a unique full-court matchup man-to-man press. We'll break down how pressing can elevate the defense for youth teams from the 3rd through 8th grade. Regardless of your team's personnel, you can harness the power of the man-to-man press to force your opponents into playing your game, and make them sweat every possession. We'll unravel the intricacies of being unpredictable and how to make the opposing team play to your beat. We'll explore how defensive formation, with an alignment that quarters the court, can pressure the opposing team into turnovers and thus, scoring opportunities. Given the unpredictable nature of the game, discipline within our defensive rotations emerges as a cornerstone of success, and we'll tackle how teaching these principles can be a game-changer. We'll examine the blend of zone and man-to-man defense in our press, looking at trapping strategies and how good ball pressure can be just as good as a win. So to all you coaches out there looking to step up your team's defensive game, you're in for a treat. Get ready to pressure, push, and pave the way to victory — right here on "Coaching Youth Hoops. Follow Coach Carter here: https://twitter.com/coachburgundy Go here for more videos on the man-to-man press: https://twitter.com/CoachBurgundy/status/176916251456511208 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Scriptnotes Podcast
633 - Reviving a Dormant Project

Scriptnotes Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2024 51:50


John welcomes back John Gatins (Flight, Coach Carter) to talk about reviving a dormant project and actually getting it made – like he just did with his new film Little Wing. They look at how films die, what brings them back to life, and go deep into the mechanics of sports movies. We also follow up on flu tests, the Tiffany problem and pet names before answering listener questions on professionalism, mid-credit scenes, and work ethic. In our bonus segment for premium members, John Gatins talks abut transitioning into a writing team and reveals his process of negotiating credits. Links: Little Wing – On Paramount+ March 13th John Gatins on Wikipedia and IMDb Little Wing by Susan Orlean for the New Yorker LUCIRA by Pfizer COVID-19 & Flu Home Test Merlin Bird ID The Facts of Life – Attempted Spin-offs Get a Scriptnotes T-shirt! Check out the Inneresting Newsletter Gift a Scriptnotes Subscription or treat yourself to a premium subscription! Craig Mazin on Threads and Instagram John August on Threads, Instagram and Twitter John on Mastodon Outro by Alee Karim (send us yours!) Scriptnotes is produced by Drew Marquardt and edited by Matthew Chilelli. Email us at ask@johnaugust.com You can download the episode here.