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What the Riff?!?
1977 - May: The Sex Pistols “Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols”

What the Riff?!?

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2021 38:53


We've profiled albums from bands which were a mess in real life before, but it would be hard to identify a more "bad boy" oriented group than the Sex Pistols.  We'll also not be profiling any other Sex Pistols studio album…because Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols is their sole studio album.  The Sex Pistols put out a number of singles ahead of the album, so while the full album was released in October of 1977, their single "God Save the Queen" was released in May of 1977.  The Sex Pistols defined Punk Rock in a way that would influence the entire genre for decades.Members of the group were Glen Matlock on bass, Steve Jones on guitar, Paul Cook on drums and Johnny Rotten (who got the nickname for his bad teeth) on lead vocals.  Sid Vicious would come in on bass after Matlock split with the group.  The members didn't get along with each other, didn't get along with the media, the public, or pretty much anyone.  They had already had an obscenity-laden interview on television in December 1976 which kept the tabloids busy for days afterward, and "God Save the Queen" continued their infamous image with its broadside against conformity and the crown.The popularity of the Sex Pistols was a reflection of the underlying resentment towards the tough times in England during the late 70s.  Their enduring popularity is a reflection of the punk movement the Sex Pistols helped to found in this short-lived group and album. God Save the QueenAlso known as "No Future," with lyrics like "God Save the Queen, she ain't no human being," it is not surprising that the BBC refused to play the song.  Despite this, it went to number 2 on the charts in the UK.  The Sex Pistols leased a boat just before the Queen's Jubilee (25-year anniversary) and played off it past Westminster Abbey and Parliament.  They were arrested as they exited the boat.SubmissionThis deeper cut takes a different pace than your normal punk song, but plays on words.  "I'm on a submarine mission for you baby."  Not as submissive as it appears at first, is it?  Their manager wanted them to do a bondage-type song, but the band never was known to take instructions very well, and so created this pun on the word as a result.Pretty VacantThis third single was one of the first songs written by the group.  The track is a rant about appearances masking a lack of substance.  "I'm so pretty, you're so pretty...pretty vacant...and we don't care."  The music of the Sex Pistols remains loud, and uses simple power chords.Anarchy in the UKThe Sex Pistol's first single released is iconic.  "Don't know what I want, but I know how to get it.  I want to destroy the passerby."   ENTERTAINMENT TRACK:The theme from the television series “The Brady Bunch”We apologize for the abrupt change!  "The Brady Bunch Hour" variety show had its last airing in May 1977. STAFF PICKS:Calling Dr. Love  by KissBrian's staff pick starts us with more cowbell!  Gene Simmons takes lead vocals on a song inspired by a short from "The Three Stooges," entitled "Men in Black," where they were calling various Doctors.  Katey Sagal (from Married...With Children) is a backing vocalist on this song. Heard It In a Love Song by The Marshall Tucker BandBruce brings us the highest charting single from Spartanburg, South Carolina's own.  The Marshall Tucker Band got their name from a door key to the warehouse whey had rented for rehearsal, which had the name "Marshall Tucker" inscribed on it.  Later they found out that the key belonged to a blind piano tuner who had tuned a piano in the rented space just before their arrival.Lonely Boy   by Andrew GoldRob's staff pick was on the charts for about two months, and tells a story about a family raising a boy who is the center of their world until his little sister comes along.  Linda Ronstadt contributes to the vocals in this track.  Andrew Gold had a close association with Ronstadt.Couldn't Get It Right  by Climax Blues BandWayne gets his groove on with a two-hit wonder from an English band.  The band wrote the song "from absolutely nowhere" after their label couldn't find a standout song for the single from their album.  The lyrics were inspired by the band searching for the "Holiday Inn" sign for their motel after a show on their tour in America.  INSTRUMENTAL TRACK:Cruise Control by the Dixie DregsWe finish off this week with a long instrumental from the prog rock band the Dixie Dregs.  This is likely their most famous song, and is covered by a lot of bands.

Talkin' Toros
Talkin' Toros - Ep 46: Has Zach Arrived? Plus Lauri's Return, Progress, and Harden to the Nets

Talkin' Toros

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2021 55:49


Lu, AB and Myles chat about whether Zach LaVine has "arrived." Plus the return of Lauri and the current progress of the Bulls. Couldn't get through this one without covering the Harden trade too.

MoneyBall Medicine
Tempus's Joel Dudley on Building a New Infrastructure for Precision Medicine

MoneyBall Medicine

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2021 52:11


What if there were a single company that could connect hospital electronic health record systems to a massive genomic testing and analytics platform? It would be a little like Amazon Web Services (AWS) for healthcare—an enabling platform for anyone who wants to deploy precision medicine at scale. That's exactly what Joel Dudley says he's now helping to build at Tempus.When Harry last spoke with Dudley in January 2019, he was a tenured professor of genetics and genomics at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Medical Center and director of the Institute for Next Generation Healthcare. But later that same year, Dudley was lured away to Tempus, founded in 2015 by Eric Lefkofsky, the billionaire co-founder of Groupon. Tempus is building an advanced genomic testing platform to document the specific gene variants present in patients with cancer (and soon other diseases) in order to match them up with the right drugs or clinical trials and help physicians make faster, better treatment decisions. In this week's show, Harry gets Dudley to say more about Tempus's business—and explain why it was an opportunity he couldn’t turn down.You can find more details about this episode, as well as the entire run of MoneyBall Medicine's 50+ episodes, at https://glorikian.com/moneyball-medicine-podcast/Please rate and review MoneyBall Medicine on Apple Podcasts! Here's how to do that from an iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch:• Launch the “Podcasts” app on your device. If you can’t find this app, swipe all the way to the left on your home screen until you’re on the Search page. Tap the search field at the top and type in “Podcasts.” Apple’s Podcasts app should show up in the search results.• Tap the Podcasts app icon, and after it opens, tap the Search field at the top, or the little magnifying glass icon in the lower right corner.• Type MoneyBall Medicine into the search field and press the Search button.• In the search results, click on the MoneyBall Medicine logo.• On the next page, scroll down until you see the Ratings & Reviews section. Below that, you’ll see five purple stars.• Tap the stars to rate the show.• Scroll down a little farther. You’ll see a purple link saying “Write a Review.”• On the next screen, you’ll see the stars again. You can tap them to leave a rating if you haven’t already.• In the Title field, type a summary for your review.• In the Review field, type your review.• When you’re finished, click Send.• That’s it, you’re done. Thanks!TRANSCRIPTHarry Glorikian: The last time I had Joel Dudley on the show in January 2019, he didn’t sound like a guy who was looking for a new job. At the time, he was a professor of genetics and genomics at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, and the director of the Institute for Next Generation Healthcare. He was publishing breakthrough papers on the use of advanced statistics to find unexpected biomarkers for diseases like Alzheimer’s.  And he had a long to-do list of ways he wanted to push his fellow physicians to become more data-driven.But lo and behold, later in 2019 Dudley was lured away from Mount Sinai by Eric Lefkofsky, the billionaire co-founder of Groupon. Lefkosky had started a new company called Tempus, with the goal of creating an advanced genomic testing platform to help oncologists and other physicians make faster, better treatment decisions for their patients. Lefkofsky showed Dudley what the company was doing to document the specific gene variants present in each cancer patient, in order to match them up with the right drugs or clinical trials. And it didn’t take him long to talk Dudley into joining as chief scientific officer.  In our interview, I got Joel to say more about why joining Tempus was an opportunity he couldn’t resist.One cool piece of news that came out right after we talked is that Tempus isn’t just a provider of testing and genomic analysis—it’s now a hardware company too. This year the company plans to release a portable, voice-driven gadget called Tempus One that will allow doctors to interact with Tempus’s genomic reports through natural language inquiries. It’s like Siri or Alexa, but specialized for oncology. I’ll have to get Joel to come back to tell us more about that. But for now, here’s our conversation from early January.Harry Glorikian: Joel, welcome back to the show.Joel Dudley: Thanks for having me back.Harry Glorikian: So, you know, as we were just talking before I hit the record button. It feels like when we last did this, it was almost a lifetime ago. Especially the last few years, it  feels like, every day feels like a month, almost, trying to keep track of everything. But, you know, you were doing something very different the last time we talked to you. You were at Mount Sinai and and now you're, you know, at Tempus. And so let's start there. Like, why the switch and. What are you doing?Joel Dudley: Yeah, I think, like many people, I didn't expect to be at Tempus. I've been here about a little over a year and a half now at Tempus, and I was approached by Eric Lefkofsky, the founder of Tempus, when I was at Mount Sinai. And things were going great at Mount Sinai. I was fully tenured. I had tons of grant funding, cool projects, even startups spinning out of the lab. So I definitely wasn't looking for a job at all. And and I hadn't really heard of Tempus at the time. And I just knew they were kind of out there. And I somewhat heard of him and he approached me about a job. And I'm like, yeah, I'm not looking, you know, and I know Guardent. I know people at all the sort of big precision, Freenome, and precision medicine companies. I mean, I thought, well, if I was going to go, why would go to Tempus. You know, and like, I just, I know everybody else in these other companies. So he's like, just come to Chicago, you know, talk to me and see what's going on.Joel Dudley: And then I looked at the website and I'm like, how the heck is this company worth three billion dollars, you know. $8 billion valuation now. And I'm like, I was being, to be honest, a bit arrogant because I'm thinking I know everybody in this field and I don't know what these guys are doing. Which is a little arrogant, to say that. But it's like sort of like, how could a precision medicine company get to $3 billion without me knowing about it. So at that point, it was almost curiosity at that point that brought me into their headquarters, obviously back when we could fly and travel. And I went I went in there. I'm like, well, I've got some collaborators at Northwestern anyway I've got to meet with. And yeah, I'll just go I'll go see what this tech dude wants. And I was even telling my wife before I left, I'm like, all these tech guys, they, always have the worst health care ideas, like, they have the worst health care ideas. Joel Dudley: So so I'm like I'm like, you know, but that being said, I went and visited Eric at headquarters, Tempus headquarters. I was completely blown away, completely blown away. It was a company like nothing I had ever seen before. And I can get into some specifics on why Tempus was different. But at a high level, it was really the first time. So my background, I'm very much a systems guy. Right. I like to understand everything from multiple systems perspective. Right. And in the molecular world, that means I'm a systems biology guy. I want proteomics. I want genomics. I want the whole thing. So when I look at other companies that were doing targeted DNA panels, I'm like, well, what fun is that? You know? And I know there's a good reason why people do that because of reimbursement and and all that kind of stuff. But it's like, what am I going to learn from DNA? You know, nothing. So that was my bias. And Tempus was the first precision medicine company operating at scale I saw that was totally committed to a multi-scale multimodal data philosophy, which I had never seen before, and was totally committed to this concept that I think you and I get excited about, which is a diagnostics company that was first and foremost a data company, first and foremost. Now, there's a lot of diagnostic companies that paid lip service to being data companies. But when it came down to it, there were all about volumes and margins of their tests. Right. Tempus was the first one that was authentically and seriously and in a big way committed to being a data company first.Joel Dudley: So I was totally blown away and and at first, you know, said there's no way I'm leaving my great job here in Mount Sinai. And I kept thinking about it and I kept thinking about it and I thought, holy cow, these guys are successful. This is going to be massive. I mean, this is going to be bigger than anything I could do at any single academic institution. This is going to be world changing. So anyway, that was a lengthy explanation of why I joined Tempus. It just wouldn't get out of my brain.Harry Glorikian: Well, it's interesting because I remember when you told me, I was like, what? Huh? Like, I was adding up what you were adding up, like all the different things you're doing. And I'm like, he went there? I'm like, I almost was thinking, can I buy stock? If he's going there, I should buy stock. So you know, Eric, before he did, you know, Tempus, obviously, did Groupon and, you know, he's financially successful, I could probably say. But what was his motivation?Joel Dudley: Yeah, he the origin story of Tempus is that Eric's wife had gotten breast cancer and someone of great means, of course, was able to get, have her seen by all the best, literally all the top the top 10 cancer, breast cancer doctors in the country. And what he noticed, being, if you get to know him, he's a very rational, logical guy know, very data driven guy. He noticed very quickly that, you know, first of all, none of the doctors agreed. That data wasn't informing her care, you know, and got a real personal look at sort of the dysfunction, I guess, or let's say missed opportunities to use data in health care that we see we, you and I see. And he decided to do something about it. There's a lot of really admirable things about his personal involvement in Tempus that drew me there. One is he's all in. I mean, he's all in, all in. A thousand percent of his attention is focused on the company. He's got a venture capital firm. He's got Groupon still is in existence and is in, and he is in in a huge way. He's you know, I think every time I've been to that office, I think he's the first one there in the morning. You know, it's just like, in some ways he's sort of like the general that rides the first horse in the battle on this thing. And not only did he not only was in a big way financially, he put a huge amount of his own money into into the endeavor, but his personal investment is, he's fanatical about Tempus.Harry Glorikian: Well, I'm convinced that when you want to change the world, if you're not fanatical, then it's not going to happen. You have to believe it more than anybody else believes it to make it come true.Harry Glorikian: Yeah. One of my favorite stories. I'll just share a quick note and I'll switch was I remember one time we were having a discussion. I can't remember what it was about. A flow cell, after I joined. A flow cell failing or something like that on the sequencer, and Eric I think had asked for which flow cells failed and I had walked by his office attempts and the bitmap images of the flow cells were up on his computer and he was staring at them intently. I have no idea if he even knew what he was looking at. I mean, he does now for sure. But the point was, the point was it was just shocking to me because I'm like, here's the CEO, billionaire CEO of this company, and he's looking at the pixel by pixel at these flow cell images, trying to figure out why they failed. And I thought that was unbelievable. You know, no, no detail is too small.Harry Glorikian: No, you know, I think, you know, you have to be passionate, get involved and want them, you know, I mean, at some point you're at scale and you have to sort of start trusting the people around you. But in the beginning, you know, I think you have to fully be committed. And everybody has to be going with you. Yeah. So and I totally agree on the whole data driven part. I mean, I have given so many talks, especially with a good friend of mine, Jennifer Carter, who was the former CEO of N of 1, where, you know, there's a bunch of doctors where the genomic data is saying one thing and they decide to do another, which boggles my mind why you would do that, because most of the time it doesn't work. But so you guys are at the forefront of genomic data. And I'm sort of imparting words of saying, you're trying to get faster, real time patient care decisions and help physicians make better decisions. Is that, am I summarizing the business?Joel Dudley: Yeah, yeah, that's it. In at a high level, it's obviously to deploy precision medicine at scale. So one of the things we say we're doing a Tempus is building all the boring, boring plumbing that nobody wants to build to actually deliver precision medicine at scale, which includes....So we ingest clinical records for the patients, because we contextualize the reports of the clinical data that we get from the individual patient. So but we work with everything from community, rural community hospitals to sophisticated academic medical centers. So we have this, part of our machine is, we have this interface that can take everything from a direct pull from a Cerner cloud instance all the way to literally people shipping paper to Tempus. But but, you know, basically we've built we built that data abstraction API, if you will, that can take eithr paper or cloud. And it was expensive. It required a lot of people and it cleans up the data. But somebody had to do that, like someone had to build that, the boring plumbing to do that. And and we did it.Harry Glorikian: Well, Flatiron I think, you know, what I've heard is Flatiron has a bunch of people in the back end, like putting things in context right, yesterday versus tomorrow versus, you know, trying to get context, which NLP not very good at. And I got to imagine that Foundation might be doing some of the same sort of stuff. No, not as much?Joel Dudley: Not as much on the clinical data. They're very much focused on the molecular data. The difference, though, between Flatiron and Tempus, though, is that Flatiron bought the EHR which the data was being collected. And so they own that. We take everything, like I said from manila folders to Cerner, to Epic to... Like that was the challenge, that's what makes TEmpus totally different in that we didn't own that that EHR. So it was a bigger challenge. But we also have humans that check all the data because as you mentioned, NLP is imperfect. But the real business, though, if I could make a point, though, is is developing smart diagnostics. Because, the principle being, you know, we all want to bring AI, let's say, to health care. One way to do that is to bring AI into the EHR, which doesn't seem like it's going to happen anytime soon. Like we have a hard time. You know, we barely can get logistic regression to run inside Epic. I don't know. I don't think we're going to, I shouldn't pick on Epic alone. But, you know, it doesn't seem like very sophisticated AI is coming to the EHR anytime soon. Plus, there's sort of a small number of players you have to deal with, you know, to have control over that environment. So that's challenging. You could try to bring the doctors to AI, which doesn't work very well. A lot of companies have failed because they say, oh, we have this beautiful AI machine, this beautiful interface that the doctors would just leave their, you know, standard workflows and just come over to our obviously better system. That feels like 99 percent of the time, right, because doctors don't want to change, physicians don't want to change their workflows. So the idea behind Tempus was more, physicians interact with lab tests all day long. So one step at bringing AI or a Trojan Horse, if you will, is to make the lab test themselves smarter. So a real simple example is, our cancer testing is, e because we pull the clinical data on that patient and the sequencing data, here's a real simple example of something that Tempus can do with a smart test that other people can't, which is if they have a DNA mutation that suggests the patient should go on a certain drug, but we know from their actual clinical records that they tried that drug and failed it, we will dynamically change the report to not put them, not suggest that drug or gray it out or whatever, depending on the version of the report. That's like a brain dead simple example, but most companies can't do that because they're not able to rapidly pull in and structure the patient's clinical data and contextualize the molecular data or the test result with that specific patient's information. So that's the Tempus approach there.Harry Glorikian: Well, not not to not to digress, but I've always said in my talks, I believe that if anything breaks or will break health care, it's the EMR systems being completely, you know, I mean, they're just they're just not where they need to be considering how fast where we want to go to the next level of health care. Right. If we were a tech company, it would have been rewritten, you know, 15 times by now to get us to where we need to go.Joel Dudley: Totally, totally.Harry Glorikian: But you're looking at DNA, you're looking at RNA, you're looking and you're looking at a whole host of 'omics to help drive a positive outcome. I mean, are there concrete examples that you might give in how this is being used and why, you know, why Tempus is compared to everybody else where it is, I would say?Joel Dudley: Yeah, absolutely. So you know what? One of the things that we think about when we get a sample in the door is how much sort of multi-scale data can we generate on the sample without going completely, without being totally insane. Right. So it's like I mean I mean, still being sustainable, let's say. So I'll give you. So what happens today when let's say, by the way, we're expanding outside of cancer, but focusing on cancer for the meantime, when a tumor section comes in to our current lab. So not only do we get sort of the the deep targeted DNA sequencing, we also get normal blood as part of that so we can do tumor normal. A lot of companies don't even do tumor normal. But then, and this is one of the things that really caught my attention, was, we generate full transcriptome on every patient that comes in the door. I mean, that's nuts. I mean, that was nuts that they just decided to as a default on every patient. That's like that's like $800 in extra cost that's not going to be reimbursed. And and even clinicians can barely wrap their heads around RNA today. I mean, it's a super hard time with RNA. I mean, do they like DNA because like the variant's there, or it's not, and the drug gets prescribed or not. But RNA is this analog probabilistic sort of dynamic measure. It gives you all kinds of different types of interpretation that's difficult. But the fact that they committed to that from day one was nuts.Joel Dudley: So then we also have our own pathology lab. So we actually digitize the section and stain and digitize all the tumor sections. We have high quality imaging. And then we pull in the structured clinical data, of course. And then we have an organoid lab actually inside Tempus. So we try to build a patient specific organoid from every every patient we can and bank that for future screen. So we have a huge number of organoids where we have not only the organoid stored and the ability to really expand that but then the patient's actual, you know, in vivo clinical data, molecular data. And you could start to do things like, hey, where you know, if we if we see this pathway in the organoid, it means we're going to see this pathway in the real patient and all that kind of stuff.Joel Dudley: So another interesting thing about Tempus is, we have this new business unit called Algos. And this is something that sounds really obvious when you pointed out and you wonder why nobody else did it. But we go to market with the broadest possible assay. So in a traditional, like, biomarker discovery, you would say, I want to try to find a biomarker of people who respond well to radiotherapy or something like that, prostate radiotherapy or something like that. So I'm going to start with the, people would start with their full transcriptome and then maybe, let's say you find a 10 gene signature that predicts who's going to respond well to radiation therapy. Then the the typical diagnostic company would say, OK, now let's shrink, let's take this 10 signature, let's implement it at Nanostring or PCR or some kind of care platform and and then go to market with that. And Tempus says, well, screw it. Let's go to market with the full transcriptome as our default assay, because then that allows us to digitally layer signatures on top of it. And by default, everybody. So we measure transcriptome now. And maybe five years from now, we find a new signature for drug response. We don't have to remeasure everybody. We just run it digitally, you know, on top of the signature.Harry Glorikian: You know, that was one of the I remember when we were talking about this years ago, I was like, that's what you would want to do. That's why you'd want the data. Right. So you want all of this data so that as time goes on, you don't have to go back and get it again. You've got it. And you just look at it. It's almost like I think about it like topology. I mean, at some point you take the first scan and you start layering things on top to get a better idea of what what is there over time, because, hell, the technology, you know, your insight becomes better over time. Some new piece of information comes in, and you go, oh, let me go back and look at this again. So you guys do that. And then the recommendation is a targeted therapy. I mean, I haven't seen any of the reports, so I'm sort of guessing along here.Joel Dudley: Yeah, we've got we've got a great report that summarizes the patient's clinical history and all the stuff you sort of expect. And then it offers various recommendations also about, of course, clinical trials. So the other thing we have is a huge clinical trial network, which I haven't mentioned yet. A national clinical trial network where we can spin up trials and match patients to trials. That's owned and operated by Tempus. But we can, so it takes the DNA information and RNA information and synthesizes recommendations. And it's going to be up to the doctor. Of course, you know, some doctors like to look at the DNA. Some people like to see where does the DNA and the RNA corroborate each other? You know, is there a PI3 kinase mutation plus activation or deactivations of a PI3 kinase pathway or something like that, and so we present all that information and a pretty, pretty digestible way.Harry Glorikian: So, two questions. A, does the patient ever get something to look at? And B, have you done any stats on success, right, of recommendations and so forth?Joel Dudley: Yeah, we've publishd some papers. We had a paper in Nature Biotech and a couple of, a couple of others that sort of show the value of this additional information and continue to publish, you know, papers. But we've been primarily on the cancer side, primarily physician facing. And, you know, physicians can, of course, give their reports to the patient's physician facing in other disease areas like neuropsych, which we've gotten into. We do have a patient facing digital app that is being tested right now to go more directly to patients, but not yet, and COVID as well. We have a patient facing up. So but that actually will be a bigger part of all the disease areas.Harry Glorikian: You have agreements with tons of institutions coming in. I mean, you and I were at one point sort of throwing this idea of having enough data where you're at that escape velocity of, it sort of stops making sense to go someplace else because the Encyclopedia Britannica is in one place. So where are you guys on that journey?Joel Dudley: Yeah, I think we're, you know, it depends. You could argue it, but I think we're basically approaching escape velocity at this point, where if you look at the trajectory of our data and I don't have the exact numbers handy, but it's a, it's a steep it's a steep line in terms of the number of samples we sequence. I think it's close to 200,000 samples last year or something like that. But but but our RNA, for example, our RNA database alone, I mean, the Cancer Genome Atlas looks like a little baby toy dataset compared to the Tempus's internal dataset. And that's, of course, a massive, I don't know if it's a multibillion dollar, but it's a massive Internet effort among academics. It's a great effort by the way, I'm not knocking the Cancer Genome Atlas, but but by comparison Tempus is able to eclipse that, you know, like you wouldn't believe. And then also have very much richer clinical data associated with those samples and have continuous updates of that data where something like the Cancer Genome Atlas is like this frozen thing that gets updated by an academic consortia every year. So even when we look at the cancer Genome Atlas, which again, I think was a worthwhile investment, and remains a worthwhile investment. But if you just compare those, the growth trajectories and the density and quality of that data side by side, Tempus is just a rocket ship compared to that data sets like that, which used to be like, you know, even Big Pharma would rely on the Cancer Genome Atlas is their sort of discovery data set. But now you'd be kind of insane not to use Tempus, it's just so much bigger.Harry Glorikian: So so that brings me to that next question. Right. So we've got we've got these patient samples. We've got clinical data. You make a recommendation, you can actually recommend a clinical trial. But now the next step comes to me and says, well, but if I have all all those pieces of information, shouldn't I be also looking at drug discovery?Joel Dudley: Yeah. So quick on the trial site. It's worth it. I'd like to point out 'cause we're really proud of this. So we have this thing called the Time Trial Network. It's a national network of I think it's 2,000 oncologists around the country on a common rate sheet, a common IRB. And the whole idea was when we match a patient, instead of a drug company going to, say, an AMC like Dana Farber or something, which, of course is a great institution, and saying, hey, we want to run our X, Y, Z drug trial with you, and all the patients will have to either fly here or drive here every couple of months, if you don't have all the patients here locally, we created this national network. And the idea was rapid site activation of trials. So if a pharma is looking for a certain type of pancreatic cancer patient subset and we match that patient in Tulsa, Oklahoma, or nearby or something like that, just picking a random city, that instead of that person driving into the AMC, an academic medical center that has the trial, or CRO, we spent a trial as close as possible to where that patient lives at one of our partners, whether it's a community hospital or something like that. At the end of the year, don't quote me on this, I think we had, we went from like a patient match to first dose in patient and something like less than 10 days or something like that, because we rapidly activate a single patient trial site.Harry Glorikian: Wow, that's cool.Joel Dudley: It's pretty cool. So it's sort of like a whole ecosystem. Right. So it's not only are we sequencing the patient and finding who are eligible, we can we also have the trial site integrated into our platform.Harry Glorikian: So it it's interesting, you always wonder, like how much how aware our patients that some of these things are. Out there when they need it, right, as opposed to the way that you and I both know the way the system runs, which is, oh, come here so that we can make the dollars as opposed to what what's really going to be the best for the patient?Joel Dudley: Yeah, yeah, absolutely. And you had asked me a second question that I totally forgot now because I distracted.Harry Glorikian: The drug discovery side of it, making that connection at some point of...Joel Dudley: Yes, it's super valuable data for drug discovery. And that is part of the value proposition of Tempus, of course, to our pharma partners who want to develop therapeutics. So part of Tempus's business is to partner with pharmaceutical companies and assist them in their discovery or biomarker efforts through Tempus's data and platforms. And we have some backend platform technologies for investment targeting our data. We have a platform called Lens for interrogating our data that is produced. Pretty interesting. And then, you know, we have a business called Alpha, which is about spinning out joint ventures around therapeutic discovery from from Tempus's data.Harry Glorikian: Ok, so that's how you if you identify something, you're willing to sort of spin it out at that point and see it come to life.Joel Dudley: Yeah. Yeah. So it's partnering with pharma or partnering with, you know, a joint venture that we're involved in around the data, but per se we don't do the drug discovery internally on the data.Harry Glorikian: You and I love the data and love the AI and machine learning. What gets you super excited? Where do you see the biggest applications of the A.I. and machine learning? Where do you see the biggest opportunities?Joel Dudley: And in no particular order, so a lot of interesting things can be done with machine learning when you have not necessarily orthogonal but multiskale data on the same samples. Right. So I'll give you a concrete example is, we have we have a large histo genomics, we call it program that our AI data science team is working on, where, of course, if we have rich RNA sequencing and rich DNA sequencing plus digital pathology on slides and samples, we can start doing things like calling PDL1 status directly from an H&E stain via deep learning instead of actually sequencing a patient. Because sequencing is great. But but imagine if you could call it the critical markers for a trial via an H&D stain and deep learning, you know, in rural Louisiana, or something like that, where people don't want to pay for sequencing or you just want to be much more capital efficient. So once we once we start collecting all these different dimensions of data, we can start predicting, you know, across all these different dimensions. Right. So what in the rich sequencing data can we predict from images, for example, which is really interesting, because then that cost, you know, nothing practically. But the key up front, you have to collect those those cohesive, coherent data sets of multiple dimensions to train. Once you've trained, it's super valuable.Harry Glorikian: It's interesting because I was having a conversation earlier today about spatial resolution of single cell, but but actually looking at the genomics inside the cell, the expression patterns and looking at that based on geography, let's call it that, for so everybody understands it, but very cool how you could see individual cells lighting up versus, you know, the other cells around them, which would give you an indication of what's being activated, how it's influencing the cells around it, et cetera.Joel Dudley: Yeah, absolutely. And that's an area we're exploring within Tempus, of course, is related to the histo-genomics I mentioned is if we start with a single cell and spatial transcriptomics on tumor cells plus rich imaging, at some point we're going to build up a data set that will give us deep molecular insights from the images alone, once we've built up the single cell and spatial transcriptomics that accompany those those images. So that's one, it's a really useful practical application of AI. Another one that's interesting for us is just getting additional insights out of existing data, which is something I've always enjoyed. But a concrete examples is, we have a big partnership with Geisinger where we've developed a deep learning model that runs on ECG traces. ECG traces are collected for elective surgeries, for physicals. And we're not the only ones necessarily exploring this, but a lot of people are using deep learning models to see if the, because an ECG trace, you could consider an image, basically. Right. And so people are using it episodically to see, like, is there something, that subtle pattern that's not being detected in the episode of care, but we're actually trying to predict things that will happen in the future. And we published some papers on this. But so we're taking a single ECG trace and we're saying, are there hidden signals basically in this ECG trace that will predict if someone is going to get future a-fib, future stroke future, you know, coronary syndrome? And we have a very large data set with Geisinger that we've done in partnership. And we've it's just amazing, like the one year, three year future events you can predict from a single snapshot of an ECG. There you go. Myocardia.Harry Glorikian: Yeah, I like I have my little monitor here, and I, I, I tend to do it every day just just to get some longitudinal data.Joel Dudley: Yeah. Yeah. Alivecor is a great is a great device. Yeah. So a couple of really interesting applications of that. One is, you know, from a population health standpoint, just going through all of the ECGs that have been collected and you can triage people into high risk low risk groups and manage them. But it's also interesting for clinical trials, because if you can predict things in the future from an ECG trace, say, for, like an anticoagulation trial, you can enrich that trial population for events and things like that from a fairly cheap standard device. So I'm interested in, you know, the ability of ML and AI to get additional, squeeze, additional information and utility out of these sort of everyday things that are measured routinely.Harry Glorikian: Yeah, and I think that, I mean, you know, whenever I've seen it, we've always gone from a complicated measurement to figuring out easier modalities to sort of identify that information from. We just didn't have the, maybe the power per se to get it in the first place. So, okay, you guys are in oncology now, you're moving out to cardiology and I think infectious disease and do I dare say neurology, depression and things like that. So why? Like, why wouldn't you just go deep and, you know, crush the space in that one area? Why?Joel Dudley: Yeah, it's interesting. I feel like we are doing fairly well in oncology. But this goes back to why I joined Tempus, which is, I always joke that this is like four different companies. And, you know, it's like it's like Flatiron plus Foundation plus, you know, we don't like to compare ourselves these companies, but like this is early on when I was, because we're actually not like those companies, which I'll explain in a second, but I was like, on the outside, it sounds sort of crazy to say, well, we're like six companies in one. But the difference was, it was built that way from the ground up in an integrated platform, a vertically integrated platform. And that's what makes it powerful. It requires a lot of capital to do that up front. But the vision was pretty interesting. So they built this sort of vertically integrated, very powerful machine to tackle cancer in this like multi-modal, comprehensive way. But they were smart in that they built it in a fairly abstract way so that it could be repurposed for for other diseases. And from day one, that was always the intention. And to me, that was amazing because I'm thinking, well, geez, a company that just tackles cancer alone with this approach is a massive company, you know,, putting on my venture adviser hat. You know, it's like, well, jeez, this is huge because this is like this company plus that company, plus that company all wrapped into one nice, seamless package. That's huge. And then I thought, well, if they replicate this success they're having clearly going to have in cancer in just one other major disease area that is an unprecedented precision medicine company in history. You know, no company would have done what Tempus has done in cancer and a whole other disease area in terms of ushering in this like very large scale multimodal approach, with clinical tests in the market and things like that. So I was like this, I got to join this. This is nuts.Harry Glorikian: Well, it's interesting that you say that, right? I keep trying to explain to people and I guess one of the examples that I've been using lately is something like Ant Financial, right. Where how they started in one area and were able to broaden, based on some very simple capabilities. And now it's 10,000 people managing 1.2 Billion customers. Yeah, you don't do that because of a personal touch. You have to have automation to tackle that. And and I know that you guys have like your robotic systems for sequencing. And I have to believe that that thing doesn't, I always tell people it doesn't care what it ingests. Right. Analytics on the back end may need to be adjusted accordingly. But, you know, that's the power of this data approach as opposed to the way we've done it historically.Joel Dudley: Absolutely. And the way I would describe it, I'm not sure everybody loves this analogy, but I think it's a very accurate analogy, which is, what I saw, and we're doing this, so we built this very sophisticated, vertically integrated infrastructure that connects sequencers to clinical and back, plus data abstraction and clinical data structuring. And so we built that machine and sort of dogfooded it ourselves on cancer and and other things that we continue to sort of dogfood it and use it our use ourselves. But eventually the goal of Tempus is to open this platform up to other people, so the way I what I saw early on was that while Tempus has the chance to become the AWS of precision medicine, basically. We're building all this boring plumbing or connecting hospitals. We're building this, like I mentioned, this API of data abstraction that can connect everything from cloud based EHRs to paper, you know, and everything in between. So at some point we want to open, and we are actually beginning some partnerships where we're opening up Tempus's platform, because if we've invested a billion dollars in that plumbing, then the beauty is, you know, you should is a startup. You don't have to do that now, just like AWS. You know, it's like now three guys in a in a garage to get out their credit card and start Stripe or Shopify or whatever the next big company is. And that was always been the aspiration of Tempus, not only to build this for ourselves, but to build it as an enabling platform for other people who would want to deploy precision medicine at scale, which is, we're actually executing on that vision in a serious way. It was more of an aspiration, I think, when I joined. But now we're full on executing.Harry Glorikian: It's interesting. I mean, I remember you saying that to me, I want to say, last JPMorgan, when we were actually able to travel and sit down with each other. I mean, I talk to other people and I mention Tempus and some people go, who? And other people are who are very knowledgeable are like, well, I don't see what the big deal is. And so it almost seems like. Do you think people know what's there that they can take advantage of?Joel Dudley: I don't think people fully appreciate it. And of course, there's a bunch of things I can't even talk about that are even more exciting that are being cooked up. But you'll be hearing about them soon. I think we'll make a few JP Morgan announcements, but it's sort of the M.O. Actually, one of the things that attracted me to Tempus was our CEO is very much a show don't tell kind of guy, to the point where even some people get frustrated because.. Nobody gets frustrated. But it's like, hey, we're doing all these amazing things and nobody knows about them yet. But but he's 100 percent right in that people will know when we're actually doing, once we're doing the stuff, right. You know, and and that was impressive to me because we're obviously in an area that's overhyped, you know, precision medicine, AI in medicine. And there's a gazillion companies out there doing proof by press release, you know, on all their vaporware. And Tempus is doing real, real stuff that's saving patients lives. And, you know, and they're being very disciplined about it and not overhyping it and just putting in the work. And then in the long run, people will know. I think it's going to be all one of those things, like who's Temples? To, like, Oh, my God, I had no idea, where did this come from.Harry Glorikian: Yeah, and I think your biggest challenge is going to be the last mile, right? I mean, it's like Internet connectivity, right? Well, it's on the street, but how do you get it into the house? And the biggest complaint I always hear from everybody is getting this implemented at an institution is not trivial.Harry Glorikian: I would argue that's what Tempus is mainly solving is that last mile problem. In fact, you know, I don't know how many institutions are connected inti Tempus, but it's well over 100 for sure. And that's a KPI that we're tracking. How much how many institutions we have last mile connectivity into. And that's been just growing up. That was a huge KPI for us the last last year. And it continues to be. But I would argue that's the problem solving, is that last mile, because we are in clinic, in EHRs, have bidirectional data feeds and decision support and a large number of institutions, it's just people don't realize it.Harry Glorikian: Let me ask you to I don't even know if you're still doing this. You were part of the Institute for Next Generation Health Care. I don't know if you're still.Joel Dudley: No, no, no. Not anymore. Harry Glorikian: OK, well, so I'm trying to get you to put your next generation hat on here for a second. And if you're looking at everything that's going on and where this is going, like where do you see the next big leaps coming? Where do you see the next changes coming in how we're going to make a difference for patients and hopefully bring down cost? And how is the technology that you guys are working on where you see it going sort of driving that next level of outcome for patients?Joel Dudley: What I always like we always like to say at Tempus is we don't know, because it's actually it's a very Tempus-y thing, to be humble that way, because we don't know. Like. Well, we all we know is that, you know, we have to build this data set and we need to build these pipes and we need to, like because that will enable whatever the thing is that hits is the next big thing, I mean, clearly, like in cancer and other areas, we've got some clear value propositions and starting in cardio and neuropsych. But I'm convinced if Eric was on this podcast, the first thing he would say is, I don't know. We don't know. We do know that it's going to require huge amounts of data and we're going to, so we're going to collect that data and then hope we figure it out or someone we work with figures out what the next big thing is. But if I put on my my personal hat, I guess I've always been interested in prevention. It's not an area we work in at Tempus a lot, we work with a lot of late stage disease, obviously when you start in cancer, you're starting in some pretty heavy disease area, right. And life and death. But we are getting into cardiology and we're looking at endocrinology, diabetes. We have a big diabetes effort that will be announced soon. And so I think when the stuff we're doing in cancer or when the approaches we're building at Tempus can start to be applied to prevention, I think will be really interesting in terms of moving the needle. And then, you know, in post COVID, we'll see what happens with telemedicine. But right now, we primarily interface with the, and again, I'm speaking personally. I'm not divulging any any strategic roadmap or anything here. But I would imagine at some point if telemedicine continues to go the way it's going, there's no reason a purely virtual telemedicine company could plug into temper's in the same way an academic medical center does. Right. So which I think would would be enabling.Harry Glorikian: Well, I would I would hope that that would be, I mean, if you think about the CVS-Aetna deal, I know that CVS, last year, you guys announced a deal with CVS, if I remember correctly.Joel Dudley: Correct.Joel Dudley: And so I think now that telemedicine has become much more. You know the way to do things, wy would you want somebody going to the ivory tower when you could plug them in through the system and interact with them there? And I mean, there's a huge cost savings. And and from a I mean, time standpoint, it's just more efficient.Joel Dudley: Yeah, yeah, and we spoke with a institution which I don't think I can name at this point, but they had mentioned that during covid they had even spun up a tele-oncology practice, which was surprising to me because oncology is just one of the things where you think what's so complicated, you know, you can't spin up a tele-oncology service. But in fact, they had and and they did extremely well over COVD. And then when you start to think about oncology, well, it's like, OK, I mean, you've got to see your doctor. But then they're saying, well, go get your labs at Quest. Go get your infusion at the infusion clinic, you know. You know, it's not it's not like you have to stay in the doctor's office. And I started thinking about it. I'm like, OK, tele-oncology can work. So, you know, whether we'll see broad, you know, expansion of tele-oncology probably after people see the profits AMC made, or AMC but another health system. But so so yeah. So it could be even in oncology, we see totally virtual services, you know, plugging into something like Tempus.Harry Glorikian: That would be interesting. I always think, like, I'm getting older. So the faster that we move into this new world, the happier that will be. I'll have a better experience, right?Joel Dudley: Absolutely.Harry Glorikian: So knowing the two of us, we could probably talk about this for hours. Right? Especially on the data side. You know, I think I think you're right. There's an under appreciation for where, once you have the data, what the different things you can do with it over time. It's more looked at from the science as opposed to the data side of things.Joel Dudley: Yeah, yeah. And I think a lot of people who practice data science and machine learning know this, that it's just, huge amounts of data of high quality data just trump any, you know, sophisticated machine learning methods. What I mean is like choosing between like the latest greatest deep learning or whatever method, versus just having a simpler method with huge amounts of high quality, the high quality part being important, data -- I would take huge amounts of high quality data any day because that's way more enabling than whatever sexy machine learning method is. And it's usually the case that once you have vast amounts of high quality dfairly straightforward statistical modeling methods will yield just amazing insights that come as a virtue of the scale and the quality of that data. And I think that's the lesson I learned at Tempus is that data just trumps all from that perspective. Then I think it's important to point out, because there's a lot of tool-only companies in the field like, "oh, I got, trust me, this deep learning methd is better than that deep learning method. Or It's got this little extra thing. Or this topological method is better than deep learning." I's like, who cares when once you have the volume of data that we have?Harry Glorikian: Yeah. The only place where I would not differ, but say, I think when you've got multiple high quality data sets, then you need a little bit of help making sense of it all, because the human brain was not designed to look at multiple pieces of data coming together and see patterns that it might not normally be able to sort of visualize.Joel Dudley: No, that's absolutely true. And that's the and probably being oversimplifying that, because that's my career, has been multi scale data. It's like machine learning and stuff like that. So I feel like I should, yeah, that's a good point. But huge amounts of high quality data and this multimodal, you know, we always say multimodal, the multimodal aspect is really important because we want different high dimensional measures on the same sample or same individual, if you will. And obviously, longitudinal as a dimension is a very powerful dimension as well.Harry Glorikian: Yep. Yep. No, well, this is something like, you know, I, I talk to people about and Joel, not to sort of build you up, but I mean, there's not many people that have the biological and the data background in one. We haven't I don't I don't believe we've graduated enough of them yet. We're moving in that direction, but not not enough of them yet. So it was great to have you on the show. I'm hoping that we'll actually get together sooner physically rather than later. But I have a feeling we're in this for another four or five more months. Before this thing starts dying down.Joel Dudley: Yeah, probably, when we'll travel back, but it's wild. I was thinking, like I said, I maybe mentioned this last time. I've been at Tempus only like a year and a half and we've added five dollars billion of valuation in that time. But what's really cool about that is not that we're worth $8 billion in valuation because valuations are, you know, whatever, but is that there's a sense within Tempus that we are still a small, scrappy startup just getting started. So like that that's my favorite part about that number, is not that, because I think a lot of companies, if they had an $8 billion valuation they'd be like, "We made we made it. This is great." But Tempus is like, "just completely ignore that. We are just getting started." It doesn't matter to anything we do day to day.Harry Glorikian: Well, I remember when when I was at Applied Biosystems, you know, the valuation was going off the chart because we were doing the genome. Couldn't install machines fast enough. And I remember talking to some of the senior people and saying, okay, well, what are we going to do next? And I remember the gentleman who was taller, way taller than me looking down at me and said, have you seen our stock price like we are? We're killing it. We're performing admirably. And I remember going home and telling my wife, like, I think it's time to sell some stock. Because that is not the right mindset for success.Joel Dudley: Not the right mindset, no. Yeah, it's it's it's very refreshing, you know, that it's that attitude is just, you know, across the board at Tempus, everybody is like, we're just getting started. We're just getting started, heads down, keep cranking. And we really, you know, obviously comes from leadership, but we really block out any distraction that would come from from that type of valuation or whatever, you know. So it's really fantastic leadership on the part of Tempus.Harry Glorikian: Well, one of these days, I hope to to meet Eric, he sounds like an interesting character. But you know, stay stay safe, stay healthy, and, you know, obviously, you and I will constantly continue the conversation in the background, but is great to have you back on the show. And you know what, honestly, huge change from Mount Sinai, I never thought you would leave that place, considering.Joel Dudley: I never thought either. But I enjoy it. It's been, like I said, as I've been recruiting people, I said, you've got to, like I don't care how good your job is now. You've got to get out now. There's like there's this wave where, everybody's going to be riding in the next decade, when I talk to someone like me. You're so well positioned to do it. And you're going to, if you don't get out and just try, you're going to kick yourself in five to 10 years and say, I saw this coming. I saw this big thing coming and I didn't get out.Harry Glorikian: Well, I've been saying, you know, since we since we were doing the genome. I remember telling all my friends, I'm like, "Biology, man biology and where the data is going is where it's going to be." And people were like, "Well, tell me specifically where to put my money." I'm like, look, I'm not, I can't tell you right now specifically. I'm just telling you that that whole area is going to explode. And I think it's just going to, I mean, now we're at a point where it's, the curve is ridiculous. Gene editing stocks. What's happening in the space. I mean. COVID has pulled stuff forward in a way that I could never have imagined.Joel Dudley: Yeah, me either. Yeah. Yeah, it's a huge catalyst. I agree, though. It's amazing. Good good time to to be in the field for sure.Harry Glorikian: Oh, best job in the world. I always tell people.Joel Dudley: Yeah, yeah. Science fiction is a cool business.Harry Glorikian: Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. You got to have a little bit of both. Otherwise it gets boring.Joel Dudley: Yeah, exactly. Awesome man.Harry Glorikian: All right. Good to talk and we'll stay in touch.Joel Dudley: All right. Sounds good. Take care man. Good to see you.Harry Glorikian: All right.Harry Glorikian: That’s it for this week’s show.  We’ve made more than 50 episodes of MoneyBall Medicine, and you can find all of them at glorikian dot com forward-slash podcast. You can follow me on Twitter at hglorikian. If you like the show, please do us a favor and leave a rating and review at Apple Podcasts.  Thanks, and we’ll be back soon with our next interview.

#NoFilter With Zack Peter
RHONJ Trailer is Here, Tom Girardi Claims He's "Incompetent," & Braunwyn in the Hot Seat

#NoFilter With Zack Peter

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2021 50:21


Mani of Mixing with Mani joins #NoFilter with Zack Peter to breakdown the biggest headlines this week.  We gab about:  RHOSLC comes to an end  Braunwyn's hubby Sean has a new girlfriend (uh oh) RHONJ trailer is here  Tom Girardi is incompetent?  Keep up with Mani @mixingwithmani  Get access to our 'Reality TV Tea' Private Facebook Group: https://bit.ly/3h0nykD Want to try some hangover-free wine? Give Dry Farm Wines a try! www.DryFarmWines.com/zack  Like the show? Subscribe at: https://apple.co/2DxTKe6 and listen every Wednesday. Don’t forget to leave us a nice review, because you love us! Keep up the latest show happenings at @nofilterwithzack Couldn't get enough of us? Follow Zack @justplainzack on Twitter and Instagram & justplainzack.com  Keep up with Zack on YouTube at www.youtube.com/justplainzack

Keys For Kids Ministries

Bible Reading: Matthew 15:14; Philippians 3:17-21"I can hardly see anything!" exclaimed Maya as snow swirled around the car. "Everything is so white!""Yes," said Mom. "It's hard to even see the lines on the road!"Vivian pointed ahead. "Look, Dad! There's a truck up ahead of us. Couldn't we make better time if we stayed close behind it?" "It looks like other people have the same idea," Dad said as two cars passed them and sped up to follow more closely behind the truck. "They're going too fast," added Dad. "We'll just go slowly until we find a place to stop."Soon they saw the same truck again--in a ditch. "Look!" said Maya. "That truck drove right off the road, and those two cars followed it!""The blind leading the blind," Dad murmured. "Hopefully the snow will let up soon. If not, we'll try to find a motel and wait until tomorrow to move on." Before long the snow did let up, and everyone breathed a sigh of relief. "I'm glad you didn't follow that truck like I suggested," said Vivian. "But what did you mean about the blind leading the blind?""Jesus once told His disciples that if the blind lead the blind, they both fall into the ditch," Dad explained. "That's what happened back there. The driver of the truck obviously couldn't see any better than the drivers of the cars. They just followed him anyway, and he led them off the road.""Well, I'm sure Jesus wasn't talking about trucks or cars," said Vivian."No," said Dad. "Jesus was talking about spiritual blindness. He was teaching that we need to trust and follow Him.""At school, a lot of kids seem to follow singers, athletes, movie stars--people like that," said Maya. "Is that bad?""It depends," said Dad. "It's fine to admire someone's ability to sing or play a sport, but only Jesus can open our eyes to spiritual truth. We need to trust Him as our Savior and follow His example. Other Christians can help us understand what it means to follow Jesus by modeling it in their own lives. But imitating the sinful ways of someone who's following their own desires instead of Jesus will not lead us anywhere we want to go." Karen R. LocklearHow About You?Who do you admire and want to be like? People who display the love of Jesus and encourage others in their faith? Or someone who tells you it's okay to disrespect someone you don't like, to be dishonest, or to do some other sinful thing? Don't follow such people. They are blind to the wisdom and knowledge of God. Look to those who know and love Jesus as examples of how we must all imitate Him.Today's Key Verse:We do not want you to become lazy, but to imitate those who through faith and patience inherit what has been promised. (NIV) (Hebrews 6:12)Today's Key Thought:Follow Jesus

Josephine Electric and Phantom Electric Ghost
Sexed Up Unruly Scenes & MEMES

Josephine Electric and Phantom Electric Ghost

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2021 51:22


Josie is in 2 that Type "A" Scene: "Sexed Up Unruly Scenes & Memes" More SEX more Expansive Sound.... https://soundcloud.com/phantom_electric_ghost/sets/sexed-up-unruly-scenes-memes "Couldn't contain myself anyway... anyhow...Down is DOWN " PEG Support good health with this awesome supplement from MyVitalC https://www.myvitalc.com/ref/133/ Get satisfied... You can always DO yourself.... Why don't you visit: https://gvibe.com/?ref=sayemcn0zym? Don't forget to support PEG --- You can become a supporter for $.99 per month or $12 per year Click the supporter links on Anchor.fm https://anchor.fm/josephine-electric/support Check out this awesome Ultra Sonic Humidifier from EverlastingComfort.com https://www.everlastingcomfort.net/discount/expansive_sound_experiments Get Social Media promotion here: https://flamingsocialmedia.com?flamingsocialmedia=7973 Use Promo code "GITTENS" to get 10% off. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/josephine-electric/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/josephine-electric/support

Louise – BFF.fm
Louise Episode 91 - everything at once

Louise – BFF.fm

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2021 120:00


Good Morning, This is Louise. Episode 91 - everything at once featuring the voices of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Sonya Renee Taylor, and Bell Hooks with music by Bbymutha, Ojerime, Fana Hues, Liv.e, A14rmcali, Ambré, Chelsea Reject, ilham, Jyoti & Georgia Anne Muldrow, Nina Tech, Ari Lennox, God Colony, TT The Artist, and Orchestre Super Borgou de Parakouprogrammed and produced by @small_ernst Namo Guan Shi Yin Pusa Thank you for listening

#NoFilter With Zack Peter
Kameron Westcott Unfiltered: RHOD Season 5 & Cast Friendships, & More

#NoFilter With Zack Peter

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2021 34:58


Kameron Westcott of the Real Housewives of Dallas joins #NoFilter with Zack Peter to dish on Season 5 drama and more.  We gab about:  Her expanding dog food line: SparkleDog (is it all pink?)  Her friendship (and new podcast) with Kary Brittingham  Where she stands with LeeAnne Locken  Thoughts on RHOD Newbie Tiffany Moon  Misconceptions about her from fans  Her struggle with achalasia  Why she almost quit Housewives  What's come later on this season of RHOD  Keep up with Kameron at @kameronwestcott and check out SparkleDog and Kam & Kary Do Dallas. Catch the Real Housewives of Dallas on Bravo TV, Tuesdays at 9/8c.  Get access to our 'Reality TV Tea' Private Facebook Group: https://bit.ly/3h0nykD Want to try some hangover-free wine? Give Dry Farm Wines a try! www.DryFarmWines.com/zack  Like the show? Subscribe at: https://apple.co/2DxTKe6 and listen every Wednesday. Don’t forget to leave us a nice review, because you love us! Keep up the latest show happenings at @nofilterwithzack Couldn't get enough of us? Follow Zack @justplainzack on Twitter and Instagram & justplainzack.com  Keep up with Zack on YouTube at www.youtube.com/justplainzack

Creature of Habit
Politics

Creature of Habit

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2021 41:57


Couldn't help it. How I feel about what's going on. Looking forward to the angry IG messages and the unsubscriptions.

Food For Your Soul
131 Q&A on Fighting Sin

Food For Your Soul

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2021 15:00


Link for the spiritual gifts and passions survey--https---www.treasuringgod.com-spiritual-gifts-and-passions-survey--1- Why did God put passages in the Bible that are so hard to understand--2- Is our alertness similar to what Jesus asked of his disciples when he said, -Couldn't you watch for one hour---3- Are women also prohibited from looking lustfully--4- What's the difference between righteousness and holiness--5- What role does avoidance of TV and movies have on holiness--6- How to discover your spiritual gift--7- Should you pursue closeness with God even while he is chastising you for sin--8- Are all the gifts listed in Scripture-

Starfleet Underground

It's the Season Finale Su'Kal faces his fear. Are the DOT bots Battlebots? We'll take back the ship, and get an another theory on why Owo can hold her breath so long, Osyraa forgets about the Quarantine shield, Burnham and Book ride the Turbolift like you've never seen before. (Something's bigger on the inside.) Special Guest - Tyler Pilkinton from orangeriverproductions.com -Brought to you by Section 31- 00:00 Episode 53 01:00 Kids warning - Don't become Hobbit 01:30 Though there's a fetish 01:45 Tribbles not to hump legs 02:30 Trade up? 03:15 Guest provided by Section 31 04:00 youtube.com/c/theanim8orkid 06:00 Can you get me a bike? 06:45 Guinan coming to Star Trek: Picard 07:45 BioTrekkie with the Admiral 10:15 Star Trek: Discovery Season 4 is in production 11:00 Heather was right! 12:00 Star Trek: Discovery S3E13 - "That Hope is You, Part 2" 14:00 Big long teaser, and that hanging cliff 14:30 Seeing Gray 16:00 Adira's Holo-look 17:00 Osyraa's bad attitude 18:10 DOT bot battle bots? MegaDotBot? Need more DotBots! 19:30 -Censored by Section 31- 20:00 Vance hangs up 23:20 Stamets not happy 24:30 Act I: Coded Messages 25:30 Communication by Metaphor 26:20 Channeling Kirk and the No-Win Scenario 27:00 Shit-Eating Grin 27:45 Orion Cardiology - Pure Evil Green 28:30 Does Osyraa have to choke a bitch? 29:45 Honestly a Bad Person 30:30 Country Saying 31:40 Wanting is not the same as doing 32:30 Su'Kal coming to terms 33:40 Most Epic Temper Tantrum Ever 34:00 Superhero bitch vs. That Bitch 34:40 What about that Quarantine Shield? 35:30 3189 version of Pulp Fiction 36:20 Coded message for Tilly 37:10 Owo can hold her breath because... 37:50 The DOTS - We needed MORE!! 40:00 Cannon fodder 40:40 DOT PRIME!? 41:30 Act II: Facing Fears 42:30 Turbolift Scene Trigger 43:30 Doors in Monster's Inc? 44:00 This is not a T.A.R.D.I.S! 44:30 Seems to be bigger on the inside 44:45 It was a great fight scene 46:00 Suspending Disbelief 46:45 Polyploid 47:20 Tied to subspace - Rub one out? 48:30 No complaints on the action 48:45 Space bending? 49:25 Sarcasm 49:45 If Georgiou vs Osyraa? 50:17 - Censored by Section 31 - 50:50 Guardian of Forever Callback 52:00 Act III: Kicking Ass and Taking Names 53:00 Don't make fun of his pussy 53:40 Flat Earth vs Cats 54:00 SPLAT 55:00 Since you're in that position anyway... 55:30 Osyraa vs Burnham 56:00 Programmable Matter Wall 56:15 Burnham spits 57:30 Burnham never quits 58:00 Reboot 58:30 Is Owo done? 59:15 Bridge Crew Rules 59:45 Screw Delta Shift 1:00:00 Tilly and her crew 1:00:30 Supporting Bot 1:01:20 Time to eject the core 1:01:40 And Book does the jump? 1:02:10 Couldn't they just jump away? 1:04:00 What is it with cats, anyway? 1:04:40 ...But Still! Wrong Show! 1:05:10 Drop it on my mark 1:05:45 Act IV: Let's Fly 1:07:00 The best phrase! 1:08:30 Next season? 1:08:44 Heather: I Told You So! 1:09:00 Saru to Su'Kal - Even in fear, you can still step forward 1:09:30 Fears of the 2nd Burn 1:10:40 Gray's gonna be ok too 1:11:10 Completely Gay. So what? 1:12:30 Don't ask about the salad 1:13:00 Advantages of Kelpian Holodecks 1:14:00 Heather was right! 1:14:15 Insurrection was a good movie 1:14:30 Core ejection 1:15:45 Another cliffhanger? 1:16:00 What if it were a bad ending? 1:16:30 DOT Bots vs the Spore Drive 1:17:15 Returning home 1:17:45 Burnham's Promotion 1:18:00 Doing it Burnham's way 1:19:00 New uniforms 1:19:40 Do you want to know more? 1:20:00 Sonequa 1:21:20 Next season? 1:22:00 Gene's Quote 1:22:30 Themes 1:23:15 Thanks to Tyler! 1:23:50 orangeriverproductions.com and youtube.com/c/theanim8orkid 1:24:15 Spinning camera thing Thanks for listening! Email: thecollective@starfleetunderground.com Website: starfleetunderground.com Twitter: twitter.com/StarfleetUnderG Instagram: instagram.com/starfleetunderground Facebook: facebook.com/starfleetunderground YouTube: www.youtube.com/Qtsy16 Explicit

#NoFilter With Zack Peter
Tom & Erika Girardi Update + Jeffree Star Speaks Out Re: Kanye West Affair Rumors

#NoFilter With Zack Peter

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2021 34:05


What in the Jeffree Star is happening? The news got all sorts of strange this week... This week on #NoFilter with Zack Peter:  RHONJ Trailer is coming this Wednesday  RHOC and RHOSLC are coming to an end  KUWTK wraps final season (+predictions)  Did Jeffree Star (??) and Kayne West hook-up?  Is Kim Kardashian dating Van Jones?  And what does it mean that Tom Girardi and Erika Jayne now have a court-appointed trustee??  PS: Did you see Erika's latest Instagram?! WTF? Get access to our 'Reality TV Tea' Private Facebook Group: https://bit.ly/3h0nykD Want to try some hangover-free wine? Give Dry Farm Wines a try! www.DryFarmWines.com/zack  Like the show? Subscribe at: https://apple.co/2DxTKe6 and listen every Wednesday. Don’t forget to leave us a nice review, because you love us! Keep up the latest show happenings at @nofilterwithzack Couldn't get enough of us? Follow Zack @justplainzack on Twitter and Instagram & justplainzack.com  Keep up with Zack on YouTube at www.youtube.com/justplainzack

Your Kickstarter Sucks
Episode 183: Even Sharper Image

Your Kickstarter Sucks

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2021 80:29


2020 was one hell of a year...emphasis on the HELL part! Still, I'd love to relive it for some reason with a half-assed board game. And if that gets boring, maybe I'll head over to the gaming PC to boot up some warmed over shit from circa-1999 Newgrounds Flash barf. Even though neither of those things sounds that good to do, I'm still going to do them. If you want to stop me, you're going to have to tone up your butt muscles, slap on your Billionaire Suit, and hit the Prayers App. Cat Toilet. Couldn't work in the last one but getting 5 in there is not too shabby. Get in here you old dogs, it's time for YKS! Music for YKS is courtesy of Howell Dawdy, Craig Dickman, and Mark Brendle. Additional research by Zeke Golvin. YKS is edited by Producer Dan. Exec Producer PBostrom.YKS is sponsored by NordVPN. If there's a faster, more convenient VPN service, they sure haven't told me about it yet. Use promo code YKS at NordVPN.com/yks for a steal of a deal on your next Netflix-juking, Chrome-extending, data-shredding VPN subscription.Oh boy, and after all that, there's still YKS Premium comin' out every Friday. This week on the program we have our friend Chris James joining us to talk about our new Stitcher Premium show Good Morning, Good Morning, pitch some new prank calls, and run through the Jokeblogger Top 10. Now that's what I call a Premium Experience! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Sports Gambling w/ Moneyline Monaco
Colts & Rams CASH! NFL Wild Card Sunday: Browns +6 @ Steelers & Bears +10 at Saints

Sports Gambling w/ Moneyline Monaco

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2021 11:51


What a NFL Playoff Wild Card Saturday start!! Colts +7 CASHES and Rams WIN OUTRIGHT let’s goooo!! Couldn’t have been more off the Bucs / Washington UNDER I should’ve taken the large amount of points. *Ravens & Titans is broken down on Friday’s Pod if you want the detailed gambling numbers MY PICKS: Browns +6 (leaning UNDER in Pitt/Browns)  - Cleveland is 5-2 straight up in its last seven games. - Pittsburgh is 1-4 ATS in its last five games.  The Browns finished the regular season with the third-best rushing attack in the NFL, averaging 148.4 yards per game on the ground. Cleveland also finished in the top five in yards per carry (4.8) and rushing touchdowns (21) Browns are stout against the run, finishing eighth and allowing only 108.8 yards per game. Pittsburgh was dead-last in both rushing yards (84.4 per game) and yards per carry (3.6) this season MY PICKS: Bears +10 (on emotion) - New Orleans is 7-1-1 against the spread (ATS) in its last nine games - The total has hit the under in six of New Orleans' last nine games. Saints have lost each of their last 2 playoff games  Saints are 5th in PPG vs Bears 22nd Saints are 1st in interceptions, 8th in sacks, 5th in points against  Trubisky numbers: completed 67 percent of his passes for 2,055 yards (6.9 YPA) with 16 touchdowns and eight interceptions Last 6 games Montgomery has averaged 99.7 rushing yards per game and 7 rushing TD’s 

Music Ninja Radio - BFF.fm
Music Ninja Radio #206: Best of '20 (R&B/Soul/Funk/Jazz)

Music Ninja Radio - BFF.fm

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2021 120:00


Enjoying the show? Please support BFF.FM with a donation. Playlist 0′00″ First Responders by Terrace Martin, Robert Glasper, 9th Wonder & Kamasi Washington on Dinner Party (EMPIRE) 9′36″ Smile #6 (see page 198 and 158) by Slauson Malone on Vergangenheitsbewältigung (Crater Speak) (Grand Closing) 13′07″ ALL THESE INSTRUMENTS by Nick Hakim on WILL THIS MAKE ME GOOD (ATO) 16′53″ Haircut by HOMESHAKE on Haircut (Self Released) 20′07″ Thats No Fun by Steve Lacy on The Lo-Fis (L-M) 22′45″ With a Smile by Gabriel Garzón-Montano on Agüita (Jagjaguwar) 29′55″ sweet thing by Dijon on sweet thing - Single (Warner) 32′48″ Lessons From My Mistakes…But I Lost Your Number by (Liv).e on Couldn't Wait To Tell You... (AWAL) 35′13″ Rectifiya by KeiyaA on Forever, Ya Girl (Forever Recordings) 39′04″ Hey Lover by Adrian Younge, Ali Shaheed Muhammad & Roy Ayers on Roy Ayers JID002 (Jazz Is Dead) 41′37″ Ne Me Quitte Pas (Don't Leave Me) by Orion Sun on Hold Space For Me (Mom+Pop) 47′46″ What Do You Do by Aaron Taylor on ICARUS (Edenic) 49′36″ Nightrider (feat. Freddie Gibbs) by Tom Misch & Yussef Dayes on What Kinda Music (Beyond the Groove) 54′30″ Dragonball Durag by Thundercat on It Is What It Is (Brainfeeder) 57′18″ Baba Ayoola by KOKOROKO on Baba Ayoola (Brownswood) 61′12″ Time (You and I) by Khruangbin on Mordechai (Dead Oceans) 69′27″ Bittersweet (Full Length) by Lianne La Havas on Lianne La Havas (Nonesuch) 74′04″ One Time by Otis Junior & Dr. Dundiff on Rising With It (Jakarta) 77′24″ Getting Closer by Yellow Days on A Day in a Yellow Beat (Sony Music Entertainment UK ) 81′49″ Good Mood by Steve Arrington on Down to the Lowest Terms: The Soul Sessions (Stones Throw) 84′39″ Lady Bug by Ian Isiah on AUNTIE (Juliet) 90′20″ elevator girl (feat. Ivy Sole) by Shura on elevator girl (feat. Ivy Sole) - Single (Secretly Canadian) 93′16″ It's a Moot Point by Melanie Faye on It's a Moot Point - Single (Self Released) 97′03″ Free Mind by Tems on For Broken Ears (Leading Vibe LTD) 101′02″ Cuando by Ambar Lucid on Garden of Lucid (Ambar Lucid) 104′01″ Baby Girl by Chloe x Halle on Ungodly Hour (Columbia) 107′32″ Shades of You by Moses Boyd & Poppy Ajudha on Dark Matter (Exodus) 115′30″ Monsters by SAULT on UNTITLED (Black Is) (Forever Living Originals) 119′02″ Know My Rights (feat. Lil Baby) by 6LACK on 6pc Hot EP (Interscope) 120′09″ Been Away by Brent Faiyaz on Fuck the World (Lost Kids) 124′36″ Can I by Kehlani on It Was Good Until It Wasn't (Atlantic) Check out the full archives on the website.

Grueter Golf Presents: Low Expectations
Look Like a Golfer with Safari Liz Breed

Grueter Golf Presents: Low Expectations

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 8, 2021 76:38


Couldn’t have asked for a better guest to kick off 2021 than Liz Breed, golf professional and certified cool chick. A proud Waynesboro, PA native and Kentucky golf alum, Liz turned pro in 2014 and played on the Canadian & Symetra Tours, winning the 2017 Colorado Open. Liz is a blast, and this conversation could have gone on for many more hours, but we limited it to: Tapping into her knowledge as a certified club fitter and demystifying the club fitting experience + her advice on where to get a set of clubsBeing the only girl on her high school golf team, why she loved her time at Kentucky as an athlete, and turning proThe challenges of host housing on the developmental tours (including police activity, home brewing, and Russian dolls galore)Her commitment to making golf a truly welcoming sportCommon themes, as usual, include lack of funding for women's golf & how golf's conservative image is holding it back (...and making it look pretty sinister sometimes).Follow Liz on Instagram @safariiliiz! (Did we mention she's really cool?)Visit www.GrueterGolf.com to learn more about Grueter Golf & cop some excellent merch, and be sure to subscribe to our mailing list to keep up with all things GG. Check us out on Instagram, Twitter, TikTok, etc. @GrueterGolf. And reach out to us directly at any time at founders@gruetergolf.com. We love our listeners!

SpeakBeasty: A Fantastic Beasts Podcast by MuggleNet.com
Bonus Episode: Happy 5th Birthday to Us!

SpeakBeasty: A Fantastic Beasts Podcast by MuggleNet.com

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 8, 2021 48:10


Happy 5th birthday to us! Couldn't make it to our birthday party on Facebook Live? No worries, we're bringing the party to you! 

SILENCE!
Episode 82: SILENCE! #288

SILENCE!

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 8, 2021 104:30


BILLY THE KID DID WHAT HE DID AND HE DIED Boy did you see that? That was something wasn’t it? It sure was something. What do you mean what was it? I have no idea. I just know it was something. Yes sir, it sure was. Something, that is. Couldn’t say for sure exactly what, but let me tell you I know that it was *something*. I know what it wasn’t though. It sure wasn’t a BLURB. New Year, New SILENCE! New Year, New Podcast! New Year same old sad sacks of mince Gary Lactus & The Beast Must Die! It’s a packed episode, designed to fill the howling voids of uncertainty in your brains. First up SILENCE! Cos I’m Watching The Telly! wherein the Beast talks up the myriad pleasures of the Doom Patrol TV show. Then the pair have a good old natter about Feels Good Man, the strange and depressing descent of Pepe The Frog. Take a hop, skip, slip and plunge into the Reviewniverse. Happy talky talky happy talk, talk about things you like to read….The Far Side, Calvin & Hobbes, Midnight Men, Howard Chaykin Bingo, Pirate Corp$, 2000AD Xmas special, Judge Dredd: Book Of The Dead, World Judges and a lot (not much) more I’m tired. Go away please. Just kidding, I kiss. @frasergeesin @thebeastmustdie silencepodcast@gmail.com You can support us using Patreon if you like.

5...4...3...2...fun!!

sent $$$ this week to Crisis Club Gallery and freak art space in Oakland.instagram.com/crisisclubgallery / gofund.me/64ecd372“Project goal: Create a gallery that showcases bay area artists that are often overlooked (whether we be too political/raunchy/unmarketable to be shown in more traditional spaces) and provide a storefront where the community can sell their wares; to create a space that can have showings for rotating artists and, when it’s covid safe, hold events for the community to organize and engage with each other directly whether it be through classes, readings, mutual aid meetings, etc.”DOWNLOAD RECORDINGsubscribe to the podcast here: http://feeds.feedburner.com/5432fun(intro by omar)tony peachka “Gossip Girl” goodbye tonyplutoness “DON’T I KNOW YOU” MOVIE MUSICremambran “cast about” peace child musicTOY “3.” Live at curry nightPlexi “Rafters and Walls” B R A I N B O P STable Sugar “Dog D-Log” Collected AcknowledgementsZiplock “On Time” ZiplockBuffaloBuffaloBuffaloBuffaloBuffaloBuffaloBuffalo “Twinklemeister” the acoustic demoEliot Eidelman “California Rain” Handheld Recordings, Vol. 2: Awakenin’!yukon “kalli (demo)” 5ESnowy “The Rest Of Your Life” The Rest Of Your LifeJenny Genius “Slow Going” First Demo!cop graveyard “theme from ‘can’t go straight’” can’t go straightSooner “Notes from Underground” Stranger EPIt Lo “Ramp Logistics” It LoWolfgang Strutz “Solar Mirror” Tea PleaseMagic Mist “Tentacle Finger” Flare Path / Tentacle FingerGray Witch “Heaven on Earth” DevotionalsTaylor Kohl “Release” L.T.D.what gives “day off” what givesBat Boy “Giantess” Couldn’t Keep Up EPReal Tree “Tall Black Trees” Whatever Makes Being Together Feel GoodFrankie valet “Concert pad” Stop apologizing

Wellness and The Word - bible study, biblical meditation, holistic health, biblical mentor, Christian women

Today I have the absolute pleasure of chatting with Erin Todd, from the Intuitive Eating for Christian Women Podcast, and hearing her testimony from disordered eating and perfectionism to finding freedom in Jesus. Her motto is follow Jesus, not diets. YES SISTER! Couldn't agree more.  Erin was a slave to skinny until Jesus set her free. Now she teaches women how to make peace with food and their bodies. She is passionate about helping women heal from the wounds of diet culture and discover, as she has, that their weight is not their worth.  I know you're really going to enjoy this conversation! You can connect with Erin here:  Blog: https://erinltodd.com/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ginger_in_progress/Podcast website: https://intuitiveeatingforchristianwomen.com/Podcast Instagram:  https://www.instagram.com/intuitive.eating.podcast/

Couldn't Help But Wonder: A Sex and the City Podcast with Jamie Lee and Rose Surnow

Hit up the hot trapeze place in your area, because this week, Rose and Jamie are covering SATC season six, episode eight, “The Catch.” Did Harry seeing Charlotte in her wedding dress doom their ceremony? Why can’t Miranda bring herself to give Debbie and her candles a chance? And is there a single greater rivalry in the whole show’s run than Samantha and the clothing she gets stuck in? Listen and find out!Listen to Couldn’t Help But Wonder Ad-Free on Forever Dog Plus:http://foreverdogpodcasts.com/plusFOLLOW COULDN'T HELP BUT WONDER:https://www.instagram.com/chbwpodhttps://twitter.com/CHBWpodCOULDN'T HELP BUT WONDER IS A FOREVER DOG PODCAST:https://foreverdogpodcasts.com/podcasts/couldnt-help-but-wonder

Creepin’ It Reel Horrorcast
Winter Horrorland: 30 Days of Night (2007)

Creepin’ It Reel Horrorcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2021 98:27


Boy, it’s cold out! And dark too! This week the Creepin’ crew bundles up and hunkers down for vampires and frozen towns with 30 DAYS OF NIGHT. Moving from heart throb to leading man, Josh Hartnett gets into hero mode to protect his sleepy Alaskan town from an invading horse of junkie vampires - with less than stellar results. What happens when the vacationing townsfolk come home? Couldn’t Eben become like Blade? And why the hell didn’t those vampires ever get full? --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/creepinitreel/support

FriDudes - Getting Real.  Pursuing Truth.

Yes! You are in. We forge ahead with Stronger. Weight loss plans all over the ads and for obvious reasons. Most of us weigh our heaviest this time of year. Here is your play of the day.Whether you want to weigh less or more. Eat better or less. Drink less. Whatever goal that can make you healthier. I bet if you try Dr. Leman's recommendation, you would be 10X more likely to succeed. Now, I know that would be extremely embarrassing for most of us. So, take my earlier advice, share it with a few trusted confidants that will be sure to encourage you long after January. For those that believe in God, fact check. Did God put you on this earth to punish your body? I think we can call that a rhetorical question. So, how are you doing taking care of that body God gave you? For you that are Deeper, you know the importance of nutrition in Daniel. God gave us perfect foods. Just like everything else, we humans twist and process everything to the point it hurts us. If you are overweight or an addict, of course God still loves you. Don't let this turn into a negative. We are into fact checks here. You and I have something that we can do stronger to honor our God and this life and body that has been gifted to us.Now, for those that do search Dr. Leman, you may say to yourself, he probably could follow his own advice on the health side. Couldn't we all? I love to encourage others yet I have plenty to work on. Dr. Leman is flawed, just like you and me yet he still has great advice. We all would do better actually following some of our own advice to others. For those married, Dr. Leman did write one of my favorite books, that confession, I have to keep working on. It is called 'Sheet Music', if you are married and looking for some more heat, check that one out. So those looking for a stronger body, here is what has worked for me. Way less sugar and carbs during the week. More protein and vegetables. Strong vegetables, green is good: broccoli, spinach, brussel sprouts, etc. I move my body at at least 4 times per week for 30 minutes. Walks are good. I don't kill myself on runs. I strive to keep my heart rate in zone 2. According to science, that is your fat burn zone. What is zone 2? 180 minus your age. If you don't have a smart watch to tell you your heart rate, Zone 2 is comforable. You would be able to have a conversation in Zone 2. Of course, we are going to lift it to God. All things are possible in Christ which strengthens me. Phil 4:13. I believe that verse can apply to being healthier and/or getting through the darkest times in your life. Ask God, do you want me to be healthier? If so, with whom should I share this? Who are the best people to help encourage me?Truth, this is exactly what I did in January 2020. I set a weight loss and maintenance goal and I not only achieved it but maintained it throughout the year including through the holidays. Fasting was new to me in 2020. Casey, aka Jogging Jesus, gets credit for encouraging that. There are clear spiritual and health benefits to it. I was so amazed that I wrote a post called "Fasting: That Sounds Weird" published on 8/31/2020. You can find that in our Blog at FriDudes.com. I strongly encourage you to check it out. I was shocked on how little I really need to function. Oh and if you would like to hear more of Dr. Leman, check out "Starting Off the New Year Right" 1/1/21. Focus on the Family...

Eric Smax
My Private Collection of SADE Remixes

Eric Smax

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2021 109:15


Some of my favorites Remixes of SADE.... Enjoy my private DJ Mix of her Songs! TRACKLISTING SADE REMIXES by Eric Smax 01) Couldn’t Love You More (Spiritchasers Special Edit) 02) Why Can’t We Live Together (Don_Cerati's Color Blind Remix) 03) Hang On To Your Love (Unknown ReEdit) 04) Somebody Already Broke My Heart (Olej Edit) 05) Sweetest Taboo (SamBRNS Edit) 06) Kiss Of Life (Sohl's Classic Mix) 07) Paradise (Pete Le Freq Refreq) 08) No Ordinary Love (Millok Private Remake) 09) Nothing Can Come Between Us (Pete Le Freq Refreq) 10) Love Is Stronger Than Pride (Conan Liquid Crates Motel Mix) 11) Give It Up (Tony Johns Rework) 12) Stronger Than Pride (Eli's No Ideas Original Mix) 13) I Never Thought I’d See The Day (Kiko Navarro Rework) 14) Shelter Me (Morphable Rework) 15) Pearls (Timo Jahns Remix) 16) Forever Sade (12 Vinyl on Dream Raw Mix) 17) Your Love Is King (DJ Prince Bootleg Remix) 18) Smooth Operator (Leon DeeJay Aegean Sunset Mix) 19) Like A Tattoo (Conan Liquid Crates Motel Remix)

IMMANUEL Kenosha
Why Jesus Had To Die : (1-3-21)

IMMANUEL Kenosha

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2021 53:22


Many people have grown up learning or hearing the phrase, “Jesus died for your sins.” But why did Jesus have to die for our sins? Why was the death of Jesus the option that God went with? Couldn’t God have figured it out another way? The truth is: Jesus’ life and death was the only way to make people right with God.

#NoFilter With Zack Peter
Tom & Erika Girardi: Deep Dive Into the Scandal... Did he buy her spot on RHOBH??

#NoFilter With Zack Peter

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2021 69:02


Everything we know about the Tom Girardi and Erika Jayne scandal, broken down on #NoFilter with Zack Peter: What’s their backstory? Who’s the heck is Tricia A. Bigalow? Who’s suing who? And, why? What is the Boeing lawsuit? What happened to all the money?? The Nicaraguan plant workers, and Ghost Hunters, and Farmers... Oh, My! Wait, Did Tom screw over his clients to get Erika on RHOBH? What did Erika know? What’s she spilling on the show next season? Can Erika go to jail? How does this compare to the Giudice scandal? Get access to our 'Reality TV Tea' Private Facebook Group: https://bit.ly/3h0nykD Want to try some hangover-free wine? Give Dry Farm Wines a try! www.DryFarmWines.com/zack  Like the show? Subscribe at: https://apple.co/2DxTKe6 and listen every Wednesday. Don’t forget to leave us a nice review, because you love us! Keep up the latest show happenings at @nofilterwithzack Couldn't get enough of us? Follow Zack @justplainzack on Twitter and Instagram & justplainzack.com  Keep up with Zack on YouTube at www.youtube.com/justplainzack Disclaimer: The allegations discussed were made by former clients of Tom Girardi and Girardi Keese. Everyone is innocent until proven guilty. The findings presented here are all public knowledge and available online. Nothing in this episode is intended to incriminate, slander or defame any person, company, or organization. Many of it is merely speculation or conclusions draw from public record, presented for entertainment purposes.

10,000
New Year's Day Riff... Start With One Step

10,000 "No" s with Matthew Del Negro

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2021 4:46


Couldn't help myself. No fancy opening music. No fancy closing music. Just little old me... and a mic. If you're out walking the dog, or running to the store for milk and you could use a 5 min pep talk to kick off your 2021... I'm your man. Enter at your own risk.Oh. And Happy New Year. How good does it feel to be out of 2020?It is not the critic who counts. If you’ve been knocked down... get up, dust yourself off, and get back in the arena. If you want to give back, share this with someone who could use it and leave a 5-star review on Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen, so more people find this show and benefit from these conversations.10,000 NOs: THE BOOKJOIN THE 10,000 NOs TRIBEFOLLOW MATT ON SOCIALONE ON ONE MENTORSHIP See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Leaving Laodicea
484 - Some Questions I Want to Ask Joseph

Leaving Laodicea

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2021 39:08


One of the most important things we can do to combat the coming apostasy, as we have shared before, is to develop an intimate relationship with both God and His Word. In essence, to have an experience with Him through His Word.  And we do this by slowing down and asking questions of the text, just like we would if we experienced it, first-person. As if we were actually there. Today, being close to Christmas, we will briefly look at the birth account of Jesus through Luke’s eyes and see if some questions arise when we read Luke’s words. Maybe some questions we would want to ask Joseph about the trip to Bethlehem. And why is that so important? To begin with, the first step in learning how to experience God through His Word is to slow down and take your time. In essence, give God time to speak to you. Remember the points we discussed earlier? •  Take your time. After all, this ain’t no race, and the prize doesn’t go to the one who finished first. The winner is the one who hears from God. •  Therefore, you must wait for God to speak to you wherever you are reading. Slow down and take your time. Remove the yoke of bondage you have placed on yourself with your agenda or Bible reading plan that is more important than experiencing God in His Word. •  Again, slow down and take your time. •  Wherever you are at in His Word, read the passage over and over again, out loud. Emphasize each word or phrase. Let your ears hear what your lips are reading. Use dramatic effect in your voice if necessary. Become the characters. Feel what they feel. And think what they must have been thinking. •  Then ask the obvious questions or wait for questions to arise. They will if you don’t rush your time with Him. And when they do, watch what happens. As an example, today we will look at Luke 2:1-21 and see if we can experience God in this account of Jesus’ birth by waiting for our questions to arise. There Are Some Questions I Would Like to Ask Joseph Can you think of any questions you would ask Joseph if he were sitting with you at a small cafe telling you the story you have heard every Christmas? What would you ask him? How far along was Mary? Was she in much pain during the trip? And how many days did it take? Where did you sleep at night? Why did you take her with you in the first place? Couldn’t you have made the trip faster alone and returned quicker if she stayed with her parents in Nazareth? Did her birth pains come on suddenly, like a surprise, totally unexpected? Or did you have some warning her time was coming close? Where did she give birth? Was it in a barn or stable? Or maybe in a cave where animals sheltered at night? Was it in an open field? Where did His birth take place? How did you feel when the shepherds came to visit you that night? Did you immediately believe their story? Or did it take some time for it to sink in? After the birth of Jesus, why did you not return to Nazareth? Why did you stay in Bethlehem? And what did you do to support your new family in Bethlehem? And the list of questions could go on. The point is, none of these are specifically answered in Matthew’s or Luke’s account of Jesus’ birth. But they are questions we would ask of Joseph, nonetheless. And by asking these questions, the Scriptures become more alive to us as we begin to experience God, through His Word, like never before. The following message is a continuation of Step One on How to Be a Small-Time Pastor. The following message is a continuation of Step One on How to Be a Small-Time Pastor. To https://leavinglaodicea.com/pdf/123120-Slides.pdf (download) the https://leavinglaodicea.com/pdf/123120-Slides.pdf (slides) to this message, click...

Two Whites And A Blue - Finance and Lifestyle For Millenials

Pals. Joey and Mike rip on this 366th day of 2020 - some year end talk, what to focus on in 2021 and some other nonsense to close the year. Thanks for your support this year, it means a lot and we're looking forward to continuing to grow in 2021. Couldn't have made it this far without ya. This show releasing on a little bit of a diff schedule, next release will be Monday Jan 11 2021, until then, enjoy the show and Happy New Year. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/2-whites-and-a-blue/message

Mission impossible podcast
Tha Greatest Missions IV (july 2020-December 2020)

Mission impossible podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 2020 29:54


Tha greatest moments from mission impossible from July 2020 to December 2020 00 Couldn’t even crip walk without having a asthma attack G\S Anton knight 4 The faded truth about a hot girl from Jersey G\S angie ma the host of faded truth 9 god given talent G\S Image 15 hit with a trash can and staples to the nuts G\S Fresco 22 You think working out save your life ? G/S Reece from HArt of gold

Spoil The Beans
Episode 186: Terminator 2: Judgement Day with Sam Lopez

Spoil The Beans

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 2020 93:27


Two Terminators in a row! Who are we James Cameron?...Couldn't let my girl go into 2021 without seeing the greatest action movie of all time. Enjoy ringing in the new year with Arnold's big dong. Happy New Year Bean Brigade we love you!

Mark Bell's Power Project
EP. 460 - It's NOT 2020's Fault, It's YOURS!

Mark Bell's Power Project

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2020 72:02


Many people are complaining they couldn't do "XYZ" because 2020 was such a bad year. Couldn't do this, couldn't do that, therefore you didn't achieve any goals. NOTHING is going to change in 2021, what will your excuse be then? Subscribe to the NEW Power Project Newsletter: https://bit.ly/2JvmXMb Subscribe to the Podcast on on Platforms! ➢ https://lnk.to/PowerProjectPodcast Special perks for our listeners below! ➢LMNT Electrolytes: https://drinklmnt.com/powerproject Purchase 3 boxes and receive one free, plus free shipping! No code required! ➢Freeze Sleeve: https://freezesleeve.com/ Use Code "POWER25" for 25% off plus FREE Shipping on all domestic orders! ➢Piedmontese Beef: https://www.piedmontese.com/ Use Code "POWERPROJECT" at checkout for 25% off your order plus FREE 2-Day Shipping on orders of $99 ➢Sling Shot: https://markbellslingshot.com/ Enter Discount code, "POWERPROJECT" at checkout and receive 15% off all Sling Shots Follow Mark Bell's Power Project Podcast ➢ Insta: https://www.instagram.com/markbellspowerproject ➢ https://www.facebook.com/markbellspowerproject ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/mbpowerproject ➢ LinkedIn:https://www.linkedin.com/in/powerproject/ ➢ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/markbellspowerproject ➢TikTok: http://bit.ly/pptiktok FOLLOW Mark Bell ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marksmellybell ➢ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MarkBellSuperTraining ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/marksmellybell ➢ Snapchat: marksmellybell ➢Mark Bell's Daily Workouts, Nutrition and More: https://www.markbell.com/ Follow Nsima Inyang ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nsimainyang/ Podcast Produced by Andrew Zaragoza ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/iamandrewz #PowerProject #Podcast #MarkBell

Marketer of the Day with Robert Plank: Get Daily Insights from the Top Internet Marketers & Entrepreneurs Around the World

Struggling to make sales in your business? Couldn’t get clients with the current tools and strategies you are using? Then it is time to capitalize and invest on a method that has proven to work. Grow your very own wildly profitable, client getting Facebook Group, build thriving communities, and generate millions in your business. Revolutionize how you market yourself online. In this episode, we are joined by Landon Steward to give us a glimpse on how to build a client getting Facebook group to scale up your business, build a community of clients, and generate valuable income. Join us as Landon takes us behind the scenes of creating the client getting Facebook Group and discover some strategies they are implementing that’s working in the market now which you can adapt in your own business Visit Landon Stewart's Facebook Group Clients and Community

The Stacking Benjamins Show
Winning In The Long Run with Sanjay Rawal (SB RWD 119)

The Stacking Benjamins Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2020 65:51


Welcome to Day four of our countdown! You didn't think we would stop did you? Today in our New Years countdown featuring our quirkiest interviews, we're turning back the clock to our time with documentary filmmaker Sanjay Rawal. You can read our original show notes below: Establishing your BEST financial habits means realizing that it isn’t about being great today or tomorrow; it’s about doing the right things over and over again for the long run. Today we talk to the creator of a documentary specifically about a long run. 3100, Run and Become is the story of an ultramarathon that covers (shocker) 3100 miles. Better yet? It’s run around a single New York City block. Sanjay Rawal will take us through the event, his making of the film, and we’ll talk about topics that have everything to do with finance. 1) Finding what you love; 2) Chasing a dream; 3) Knowing your weaknesses; 4) Finding your state of “Flow”; and more. The cool part for us? We get to talk finance in a way that you’ve probably never heard it talked about before. During our headlines segment, another deceased celebrity’s estate is an arm wrestling match for the heirs. Sigh. We’ll tell you who’s fighting for the cash and discuss what YOU should do to foolproof your estate plan from your greedy family. Then, in our second headline, credit card reward programs are everywhere… but just like ice cream brands, they’re not all created equal. We’ll talk pros and cons of credit card rewards during our second piece. As if that’s not enough, we keep bringing it! During our Haven Life Line segment, we’ll answer a question from Jason. He’s wants to retire in his 40s. If Jason rolls his Roth 401k into a Roth IRA, will he be able to withdraw the cash without the tax penalty? Does the 5 year conversion rule still apply? Then, in our letter segment David is just starting to pay attention to his financial situation. He wants to know what the advantage would be of using a financial advisor or buying funds that have high expense ratios over doing it himself. Couldn’t he just do it on his own and save extra cash? We’ll surprise Jason with an answer he doesn’t expect, and hopefully surprise you, too. And don’t you worry, we’ll still have time for some of Doug’s very special Benjamin Franklin themed trivia.

Quirky Voices Presents
QUARALOGUES - 3 -DRUNK HELEN CHRISTMAS / MERMAIDS TALE / IN THIS TOGETHER / PORTALS / BIG FC / CHRISTMAS IS A FEELING

Quirky Voices Presents

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2020 59:52


Helloooooo and mmeeeeryyyyy christmasss to all that celebrate! I do hop you are well and good, and if not, FIGHT ONNN XXX With feels of good health and happiness from Quirky Voices....SO EXCITED TO SHARE THE GUEST VA'S AND WRITERS TODAY!I am truly excited to bring to you a new performer here n there and a couple of writers you might recognise to this episode, and some you have been lucky enough to meet already - all, are FANTASTICAL and AMAZINGGGGG, TALENTED HUMANS, and you can find all the links they gave me to their wares HERE ON MY QUIRKY WEBSITE. The writers and performers on this episode are:DRUNK Helen Christmas by Matthew Mclean Performed by Sarah GoldingA MERMAID'S TALE by Sarah Golding Performed by Angelique LazarusALL N THIS TOGETHER written and performed by Diane Alexander A MEESAGE FROM THE BIG FC by Sarah Golding Performed by Karim KronfliCHRISTMAS IS A FEELING YES SORRY I GET MY UKE OUT Performed by Sarah Golding Please do feel free to contact the talent herein, or enjoy their shows by any means possible, and feel free to say you enjoyed their works = it doesn't take long, and I know will go a long way in lifting these brilliant creatives, all of whom I admire and am inspired by SO MUCH!Couldn't resist asking Matthew Mcleanfor some Drunk Helen for these Quaralogues - hope you enjoyed that for fans of A Scottish Podcast, and dooo check out THE PODCAST HOST - A BRILLIANT HOW TO PODVCAST INTERNET RESOURCE with courses and more - here! qDiane Alexander joins us once again as guest writer and performer, and was on my ANYONE F'COFFEE season this summer (and nominated for an AUDIOVERSE AWARD! hUZZAHS!) Angelique is back with a monologue for herself and feel free to employ her forthwith!And my lovely audio pal Karim makes THE BEST FATHER CHRISTMAS - doesn'T HE? Thanks so much to all of these folks - I enjoyed writing for them tooooo PLEASE DO pass on this podcast so it gets ears on it / in it / listening from all over the world. If you feel so inspired to create as a result of listening - creating a monologue or poem in response, or a review, that would be AMAZING and we would LOVE to hear from you! Might even perform them on a future ep! Ping all doooo to quirkyvoices@gmail.comI can only give these contributors so much - If you feel so inclined to help me make more of this kind of project, feel free to join my lovely amazing supportive band of PATREON SUPPORTERS HERE - I also have a ko-fi account here. For as little as a dollar a month you will help me get more funds to pay more folks to make more groovy Quirky....(and I oft share eps early, ping new original scripts and give discounts on courses and more!)I do mention before a few of the performances, to take care if your mental health needs more support right now - if you would like to read the transcripts of the monologues themselves please click here and go to the bottom of the page. THANK U SO MUCH TOAngelique Lazarus, mATTHRE mClEAN, Diane Alexander AND Karim Kronfli for their time and AWESOME talent. Happy Listening from my new tier 4 house.... AND A VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS! Hope tis fun filled and hyggelig Sarah GoldingQuirky VoicesSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/QuirkyVoices)

#NoFilter With Zack Peter
Margaret Josephs Unfiltered: RHONJ Season 11, Quarantine Business Advice, & Friendship with Danielle Staub

#NoFilter With Zack Peter

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2020 35:36


Real Housewives of New Jersey star Margaret Josephs joins #NoFilter with Zack Peter to discuss season 10 of the hit Bravo TV show, tease what's to come in Season 11, and offer up some advice to fellow hustlers.  We gab about:  Her new book (coming 2021)  The challenges of running a business like Macbeth Collection (especially in 2020)  Has she had any communication with Danielle Staub or Marty??  Her thoughts on Siggy Flicker  Clarifies relationships with her kids  Why she forgave Teresa so easily after the pony-pull  What does she think about Teresa Giudice's new boyfriend?  Is she open to Caroline Manzo returning RHONJ?  Keep up with Margaret @therealmargaretjosephs and listen to Caviar Dreams, Tuna Fish Budget  Get access to our 'Reality TV Tea' Private Facebook Group: https://bit.ly/3h0nykD Want to try some hangover-free wine? Give Dry Farm Wines a try! www.DryFarmWines.com/zack  Like the show? Subscribe at: https://apple.co/2DxTKe6 and listen every Wednesday. Don’t forget to leave us a nice review, because you love us! Keep up the latest show happenings at @nofilterwithzack Couldn't get enough of us? Follow Zack @justplainzack on Twitter and Instagram & justplainzack.com  Keep up with Zack on YouTube at www.youtube.com/justplainzack

Couldn't Help But Wonder: A Sex and the City Podcast with Jamie Lee and Rose Surnow

Pull out your finest skinny jeans and crawl into Bed, because this week, Rose and Jamie are covering SATC season six, episode seven, “The Post-It Always Sticks Twice.” Why can’t Samantha handle Smith using the “g” word? Why don’t Billy and his bros see that Berger was a dick to Carrie? And why was it so hard to score some weed in New York in the early 2000s? Listeners, listen and find out!Production note! We will be off for one week for the holidays. The next CHBW will appear on 01/05/21!THIS EPISODE SPONSORED BY BETTERHELPFor 10% off, visit https://www.betterhelp.com/wonderTHIS EPISODE IS SPONSORED BY HELLOFRESH! Visit HelloFresh.com/90wonder and use code 90WONDER to get $90 off, including free shipping, on your first box.Listen to Couldn’t Help But Wonder Ad-Free on Forever Dog Plus:http://foreverdogpodcasts.com/plusFOLLOW COULDN'T HELP BUT WONDER:https://www.instagram.com/chbwpodhttps://twitter.com/CHBWpodCOULDN'T HELP BUT WONDER IS A FOREVER DOG PODCAST:https://foreverdogpodcasts.com/podcasts/couldnt-help-but-wonder

KNGI Network Podcast Master Feed
BumbleKast Q&A – For December 21st, 2020

KNGI Network Podcast Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2020 44:54


The last BumbleKast of 2020 has a lot of A's for your Q's! Support the show on Patreon and Ko-Fi! Shop the BumbleStore! Show Information Your hosts: Ian "BumbleKing" Flynn - Head writer of Sonic the Hedgehog comics for IDW Publishing and Mega Man for Archie Comics, Narrative Director for Rivals of Aether, writing for Archie, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, and more Kyle "KyleJCrb" Crouse - Founder & Administrator of the KNGI Network, host of the Nitro Game Injection video game music podcast Subscribe and listen on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher and Google Play RSS Feed for podcast apps and readers Check out BumbleKing Comics and the KNGI Network Like BumbleKing Comics & KNGI on Facebook Follow @BumbleKast, @IanFlynnBKC & @KyleJCrb on Twitter Get some BumbleGear at the BumbleStore Original music in this episode composed by Ken "coda" Snyder, used with permission – Check out his music on Bandcamp Special Thanks to our friends at Noise Channel! Pay what you want for the theme song and more great music as part of their charity compilation Noisechan & Nugget: Adventures in Chiptunes Want to have your product promoted on the show? Check out the Patreon site to find out how! Want to ask us a question? Ask at: Twitter at @BumbleKast Email bumblekast [at] yahoo [dot] com YouTube comments Patrons can post on Patreon – https://patreon.com/bumblekast Priority Q&A AwesomeCakester Ian; Looking back on how you had to introduce a new Sonic world in the IDW comic, having to basically make a spiritual follow up to Sonic Forces for a different media. I think a lot of us don't really think about how difficult that was. Dealing with people that were unhappy with Sonic Forces, the sudden end to the Archie run and losing tons of characters that fans loved for so long, the Freedom Fighters, couldn't have been a walk in the park. What were some of the challenges that you had to face when starting the run of the IDW comics? Digamma What's the lead time between when a story is written (as in the script, pre-planning obviously stretches back far longer) to when it's published on IDW Sonic? (to simplify things let's go by original intended release dates for delayed issues) I remember back in the Archie days you mentioned it was 6 months, but that was Archie and this is IDW, different publishers, plus I've heard that art wise IDW has different lead times/deadlines than Archie. Also, is the lead time different between main book issues vs miniseries issues vs Annual stories? AWF Question for Ian and Kyle: You are now a chatacter in a Fallout game. What kind of chatacter are you? What kind of skills do you have? Are you a team player, or do you go in solo? Would you join a faction like the Brotherhood of Steel, or are you all about that raider lyfe? Scruffymatt Hey there gents. I was wondering what your plans are for this holiday season? How will you be adapting this year in lieu of being unable to do a lot of your usual holiday traditions? N'Oni Lo there, got a question! Whenever we're able to do the whole Convention thing again, Will the Bumblekast ever have a fan table at one? Also, would you take any suggestions on conventions to go to? Scurvy Piratehog To Ian: Hey Ian! love what you have done on Bad guys, but after issue 2...it got me thinking. Couldn't Eggman put EM Shielding on all his robots to prevent the Zeti from controlling them? I feel that kind of tech gives him an actual real fighting chance against them since they can control tech. Also while we are at it, considering Neo was in the first arc, and teh Deadly Six hijacked the metal Virus, is it too much to ask to have a big story arc where Eggmen gets to keep being the main villain through it? He's Sonic's arch-enemy after all and I miss having some real Sonic VS Eggman stories where he gets to be the full on main villain. To Kyle: Out of curiosity...

BumbleKing Comics Presents: BumbleKast
BumbleKast Q&A – For December 21st, 2020

BumbleKing Comics Presents: BumbleKast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2020 44:54


The last BumbleKast of 2020 has a lot of A's for your Q's! Support the show on Patreon and Ko-Fi! Shop the BumbleStore! Show Information Your hosts: Ian "BumbleKing" Flynn - Head writer of Sonic the Hedgehog comics for IDW Publishing and Mega Man for Archie Comics, Narrative Director for Rivals of Aether, writing for Archie, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, and more Kyle "KyleJCrb" Crouse - Founder & Administrator of the KNGI Network, host of the Nitro Game Injection video game music podcast Subscribe and listen on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher and Google Play RSS Feed for podcast apps and readers Check out BumbleKing Comics and the KNGI Network Like BumbleKing Comics & KNGI on Facebook Follow @BumbleKast, @IanFlynnBKC & @KyleJCrb on Twitter Get some BumbleGear at the BumbleStore Original music in this episode composed by Ken "coda" Snyder, used with permission – Check out his music on Bandcamp Special Thanks to our friends at Noise Channel! Pay what you want for the theme song and more great music as part of their charity compilation Noisechan & Nugget: Adventures in Chiptunes Want to have your product promoted on the show? Check out the Patreon site to find out how! Want to ask us a question? Ask at: Twitter at @BumbleKast Email bumblekast [at] yahoo [dot] com YouTube comments Patrons can post on Patreon – https://patreon.com/bumblekast Priority Q&A AwesomeCakester Ian; Looking back on how you had to introduce a new Sonic world in the IDW comic, having to basically make a spiritual follow up to Sonic Forces for a different media. I think a lot of us don't really think about how difficult that was. Dealing with people that were unhappy with Sonic Forces, the sudden end to the Archie run and losing tons of characters that fans loved for so long, the Freedom Fighters, couldn't have been a walk in the park. What were some of the challenges that you had to face when starting the run of the IDW comics? Digamma What's the lead time between when a story is written (as in the script, pre-planning obviously stretches back far longer) to when it's published on IDW Sonic? (to simplify things let's go by original intended release dates for delayed issues) I remember back in the Archie days you mentioned it was 6 months, but that was Archie and this is IDW, different publishers, plus I've heard that art wise IDW has different lead times/deadlines than Archie. Also, is the lead time different between main book issues vs miniseries issues vs Annual stories? AWF Question for Ian and Kyle: You are now a chatacter in a Fallout game. What kind of chatacter are you? What kind of skills do you have? Are you a team player, or do you go in solo? Would you join a faction like the Brotherhood of Steel, or are you all about that raider lyfe? Scruffymatt Hey there gents. I was wondering what your plans are for this holiday season? How will you be adapting this year in lieu of being unable to do a lot of your usual holiday traditions? N'Oni Lo there, got a question! Whenever we're able to do the whole Convention thing again, Will the Bumblekast ever have a fan table at one? Also, would you take any suggestions on conventions to go to? Scurvy Piratehog To Ian: Hey Ian! love what you have done on Bad guys, but after issue 2...it got me thinking. Couldn't Eggman put EM Shielding on all his robots to prevent the Zeti from controlling them? I feel that kind of tech gives him an actual real fighting chance against them since they can control tech. Also while we are at it, considering Neo was in the first arc, and teh Deadly Six hijacked the metal Virus, is it too much to ask to have a big story arc where Eggmen gets to keep being the main villain through it? He's Sonic's arch-enemy after all and I miss having some real Sonic VS Eggman stories where he gets to be the full on main villain. To Kyle: Out of curiosity...

#NoFilter With Zack Peter
Erika Jayne Leaks Tom's Cheating Texts, Tom & Ariana Sued, & Andy Cohen Gets Dragged by RHOP Fans

#NoFilter With Zack Peter

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2020 35:02


Erika Jayne is ready to mention it all! This week on #NoFilter with Zack Peter:  RHOBH: Erika posts screenshots of Tom's alleged affair with CA judge Tricia A. Bigelow  RHOP Reunion Pt 2: Andy gets DRAGGED for bias and gas-lighting  Jamal speaks out about cheating on Gizelle  Pump Rules: Tom Sandoval and Ariana Madix getting sued over Fancy AF Cocktails book  Get access to our 'Reality TV Tea' Private Facebook Group: https://bit.ly/3h0nykD Want to try some hangover-free wine? Give Dry Farm Wines a try! www.DryFarmWines.com/zack  Like the show? Subscribe at: https://apple.co/2DxTKe6 and listen every Wednesday. Don’t forget to leave us a nice review, because you love us! Keep up the latest show happenings at @nofilterwithzack Couldn't get enough of us? Follow Zack @justplainzack on Twitter and Instagram & justplainzack.com  Keep up with Zack on YouTube at www.youtube.com/justplainzack

HEART TO HANDS PODCAST
Episode 9 : Surprise Guest

HEART TO HANDS PODCAST

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2020 52:50


We are back , finally Episode 9 !!! Couldn't have wished of a better guest to resume H2H podcast ! Today was a great opportunity ,to share artistique insights on inspiration, creative process and more ! As I said this is a surprise ! I can only divulge the website :) https://www.elleaimeceramics.com

CrossLife Church
Why Shepherds?

CrossLife Church

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2020 18:54


Couldn’t angels have done a more magnificent job than the shepherds witnessing the birth of Jesus and spreading the news? Why shepherds? God has three reasons, and they will help you celebrate Christmas. The post Why Shepherds? appeared first on CrossLife Church.

CrossLife Church
Why Shepherds?

CrossLife Church

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2020 18:54


Couldn’t angels have done a more magnificent job than the shepherds witnessing the birth of Jesus and spreading the news? Why shepherds? God has three reasons, and they will help you celebrate Christmas. The post Why Shepherds? appeared first on CrossLife Church.

Space: What The F**k, Dude?!
Story Time 101 (Like college, but dumber): Not Trusting Pornhub A Bit And Also China Just Scored Humanity Some Sick New Moon Rocks

Space: What The F**k, Dude?!

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2020 40:34


Happy holidays, you johns! Hell yeah dude. 2020 sucks but you can still like chill to some holiday tunes and listen to podcasts. Couldn't do that 20 years ago NOW COULD YOU? lolThis week gets a tiny smidge deep thinking about who we are, why we're here, and what we should do. But don't worry then it shifts into sex sounds and CAN SOMEONE GET ELTON JOHN A F*CKING PIANO!?!? You gotta listen to get that one. Also China just scored us the first soil from the moon since 1976 and they did it quick. Here's the article link. Thanks for listening kids.https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/16/science/china-moon-mission-rocks.html?searchResultPosition=3My stuff: Insta: @dannypalmernycEmail: dannypalmernyc Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/thedannypalmershow)

#NoFilter With Zack Peter
Real Housewives 2020 Rankings with @FacesByBravo

#NoFilter With Zack Peter

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2020 55:07


Steve, the face behind @FacesByBravo, joins #NoFilter with Zack Peter to a breakdown of the Housewives seasons we got in 2020.  Best and Worst Seasons  Housewife MVP of the Year Who we need to put a wrap on in 2021  What you almost didn't get to see from Salt Lake City  The Real Housewives of Potomac Reunion (THE BINDER!!)  Keep up with Steve at @FaceByBravo  Get access to our 'Reality TV Tea' Private Facebook Group: https://bit.ly/3h0nykD Want to try some hangover-free wine? Give Dry Farm Wines a try! www.DryFarmWines.com/zack  Like the show? Subscribe at: https://apple.co/2DxTKe6 and listen every Wednesday. Don’t forget to leave us a nice review, because you love us! Keep up the latest show happenings at @nofilterwithzack Couldn't get enough of us? Follow Zack @justplainzack on Twitter and Instagram & justplainzack.com  Keep up with Zack on YouTube at www.youtube.com/justplainzack

#NoFilter With Zack Peter
Is Erika Jayne's Divorce a Sham? Plus Jax & Brittany Shop Reality Show

#NoFilter With Zack Peter

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2020 32:20


2020 is not over yet and the tea keeps spilling... This week on #NoFilter with Zack Peter:  RHOP Reunion airs - Gizelle's in the hot seat  RHOC Elizabeth Vargas claps back at the cast  RHOBH Erika Jayne's divorce drama continues to unfold  Kardashians sign a deal with Hulu for 2021 Jax Taylor and Brittany Cartwright shop reality show ideas post-Vanderpump Rules  Get access to our 'Reality TV Tea' Private Facebook Group: https://bit.ly/3h0nykD Want to try some hangover-free wine? Give Dry Farm Wines a try! www.DryFarmWines.com/zack  Like the show? Subscribe at: https://apple.co/2DxTKe6 and listen every Wednesday. Don’t forget to leave us a nice review, because you love us! Keep up the latest show happenings at @nofilterwithzack Couldn't get enough of us? Follow Zack @justplainzack on Twitter and Instagram & justplainzack.com  Keep up with Zack on YouTube at www.youtube.com/justplainzack

Transformative Principal
Build Relationships Around Shared Beliefs with Tom Mahoney Transformative Principal 369

Transformative Principal

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2020 38:55


Tom Mahoney currently serves as the Superintendent of Oregon Community Unit School District located in Northern Illinois.  As an educator, Tom has served as a secondary math teacher, coach, building administrator, and Assistant Superintendent. His experiences as a teacher, serving a diverse student population, continue to guide his advocacy for equity and whole child education in his administrative roles.  Lead, Grow, Serve. “I take me with me wherever I go,” he says. “So if I’m not making me better, things aren’t going to get better.” Stephen Covey - 7 Habits of Highly Effective People. Leadership is a great opportunity to help others. My job on earth is not to find happiness but to serve others and that leads to happiness. How do we define priorities for the crises we face. People are constantly reactive. Constantly in crisis. First take care of yourself, don’t worry about the “urgent”. Invite that person out of that place. Nobody is staying in crisis because they want to be there. They just don’t know how to get out of it. Acknowledging that if you don’t take care of yourself, nobody else will do it. Build relationships around shared beliefs. Are you open to… Invite, then be ready to solve the problem. Self-care The Helper - put the person who always says yes to be part of that. Disgruntled - things never go well. I was the only common denominator in every situation I take me with me wherever I go. People who feel guilty for saying no. Help them build boundaries. I thought interest in topics were innate. Didn’t know you could choose curiosity. Couldn’t read, couldn’t sit still. They invested in me, and held me accountable to a higher standard. I realized that learning was a choice. Things I was afraid of, I became excited about. It’s not how you start, it’s how you finish. Self-direction and whole child education. I don’t weight any four areas higher than others. What I found was that kids were graduating and they couldn’t survive. Educate students to be lifelong learners who are productive and responsible citizens. Nothing is more frightening to me than the child who is good at school. They can take control of their own learning. They have all the skill New staff members: Mission driven, Fail, be responsible for the culture you create. Created opportunity for teachers to the how to be a transformative principal? Future self, tomorrow I will… Do something intentionally daily or weekly to make myself as good as I can be. Sponsors TeachFX Innovative school leaders across the country have started tracking online student participation using TeachFX because it’s one of the most powerful ways to improve student outcomes during COVID — especially for English Learners and students of color. Learn more about TeachFX and get a special offer at TeachFX.com John Catt Today’s Transformative Principal sponsor, John Catt Educational, amplifies world-class voices on timeless topics, with a list of authors recognized globally for their fresh perspectives and proven strategies to drive success in modern schools and classrooms. John Catt’s mission is to support high-quality teaching and learning by ensuring every educator has access to professional development materials that are research-based, practical, and focused on the key topics proven essential in today’s and tomorrow’s schools. Learn more about professional development publications that are easy to implement for your entire faculty, and are both quickly digestible and rigorous, by visiting https://us.johncattbookshop.com/. Learn more about some of the newest titles: Michaela: The Power of Culture by Katharine Birbalsingh Teaching WalkThrus: Visual Step-by-Step Guides to Essential Teaching Techniques by Tom Sherrington and Oliver Caviglioli Putting Staff First: A blueprint for revitalising our schools by John Tomsett and Jonny Uttley The Teaching Delusion: Why Teaching In Our Schools Isn’t Good Enough (And How We Can Make It Better) by Bruce Robertson Stop Talking About Wellbeing: A pragmatic approach to teacher workload by Kat Howard John Catt is also proud publisher of the new book from Transformative Principal host Jethro Jones: SchoolX: How principals can design a transformative school experience for students, teachers, parents – and themselves Visit this page to learn more about bulk orders and how to bring John Catt’s research-based materials to your school: https://us.johncattbookshop.com/pages/agents-and-distributors

Target Practice Podcast
#89 - Q&A #3

Target Practice Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2020 92:36


This is one of our favorite podcasts to do because nothings off the table per the usual but also we develop some of these questions in the moment and we have no idea what the other one is up to. What is the FWOD this week?? Diet Coke?? Couldn't be??  

Coaching & Cocktails
Episode 52: OCB Queen City Showdown 2020 Show Review

Coaching & Cocktails

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2020 50:43


Just back North Carolina (cough cough contagion) and our final team event of the year, the OCB Queen City Showdown. In episode 52, Brandi and Tina sit down to discuss the weekend's highs, lows and well....you'll have to listen to get the lowdown.Couldn't be more proud of the four Center Stage Athletics & Team CSFP athletes who rocked the stage and ended the weirdest competition year ever, thank you 2020, with a BANG! Check out our website for final placements! https://www.centerstageathleticscoaching.com/prep-services/competition-results/Listen to Coaching & Cocktails podcast anywhere you stream your favorites: Apple Podcast, Google Podcast, Stitcher, Spotify, iTunes, and more.Follow us on social media:Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/coachingncocktails/Discussion Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/170062690920751/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/coachingncocktailspodcastTwitter: https://twitter.com/coachncocktailsWeb: https://www.centerstageathleticscoaching.com/coaching-cocktails-podcast/Email: coachingncocktails@gmail.com

David Boles: Human Meme
On Caring Less

David Boles: Human Meme

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2020 10:59


Careless. Could care less. Couldn't care less. Caring is important, but too often too many of us focus on happiness and not caring, and that's when the monsters among us act to strike down our smiles in a walk-by grin sniping. 

Warpath Universe.EXE
WPU.EXE, Episode five: Brought to you by the word "so"

Warpath Universe.EXE

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2020 66:25


Festivus is upon us once again! So this special, limited edition, platinum membership-only, uber-rare episode has NOTHING to do with the holidays.BUT! we have:- Comprehensive coverage of Mantic's Open Day- Hairbrained ideas for Star Saga and Warpath- Comprehensive discussion with Sam Yates on all things Marauders in WarpathIntrigued? Have a listen. Couldn't care less? Uh, listen anyway?PS- Don't forget! The Last Hurrah is now out in paper and digital form. Get it and thank me later.