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Featured Artist) Tristan Roberson Tribute) William "Bill" Creager & Roger Creager
Kapitel 7Spike Holland wird nach Scotland Yard gerufen, gerade als er den 2. Artikel über den Grünen Bogenschützen beenden will. Dort eröffnet ihm Captain Featherstone, dass es mit der Dame, die Holland beobachtet hat, nichts weiter auf sich hat und er bitte nichts darüber schreiben soll. Im Gegenzug erfährt er, dass der Täter sehr wahrscheinlich dicke rote Narben auf der Schulter hat. Ein Resultat der in englischen Gefängnissen üblichen Prügelstrafe. Und Mr. Creager war derjenige, der die Peitsche schwang. Vorgelesen von Rainer Schuppe; aufgenommen und bearbeitet im Coworking Space Rayaworx, Santanyí, Mallorca.
Kapitel 6Valerie Howett hat eine Bitte an ihren Schatten James Featherstone: Er soll sie eine Tag unbeobachtet lassen - was er im Auftrag ihres Vaters tut. Das weiss sie allerdings nicht. Er wiederum lässt Valerie wissen, dass er weiss, dass sie bei dem Haus von Mr. Creager war, als dieser erschossen wurde. In ihre Überraschung lässt er die Information fallen, dass er Captain bei Scotland Yard ist und sie im Auftrag ihres Vaters beschützen soll. Vorgelesen von Rainer Schuppe; aufgenommen und bearbeitet im Coworking Space Rayaworx, Santanyí, Mallorca.
Kapitel 4Als Spike Holland zu Creagers Haus kommt findet er selbigen nur noch tot auf - durchbohrt von einem grünen Pfeil. Nachdem er der Polizei alles erzählt hat, was sich ereignet hat, sucht diese auch Abel Bellamy auf. Der erzählt ein wenig, wie sein Verhältnis zu Creager war. Spike ist aber überzeugt, dass das so nicht stimmt. Vorgelesen von Rainer Schuppe; aufgenommen und bearbeitet im Coworking Space Rayaworx, Santanyí, Mallorca.
Kapitel 3Während Spike mit John Wood beim Essen spricht, erscheinen Mr Howett und seine Tochter Valerie im Hotel. Spike wird von ihnen gebeten sich doch nach dem Essen kurz vorbei zu schauen. Valerie ist auf der Suche nach einer verschwundenen Dame - aber bevor sie noch fertig erzählen kann, kommt es zu einem Tumult auf dem Hotelflur. Abel Bellamy hat Mr. Creager wütend hinaus geworfen. Der wiederum möchte seine Geschichte Spike Holland erzählen. Ein turbulenter Mittag für Hrn. Holland. Vorgelesen von Rainer Schuppe; aufgenommen und bearbeitet im Coworking Space Rayaworx, Santanyí, Mallorca.
Kapitel 2Abel Bellamy, Bauunternehmer, Amerikaner, Unsympath und über Liechen gehend, beobachtet gerade einen Unfall auf einer Baustelle, als sein Sekretär ihm einen Reporter meldet. Zuerst will er ihn nicht empfange, überlegt es sich aber doch anders. Natürlich streitet er ab, irgendetwas von einem grünen Bogenschützen zu wissen. In der Hotelhalle treffen dann Spike und ein Mann namens Creager, der auch etwas von Bellamy will zusammen. Vorgelesen von Rainer Schuppe; aufgenommen und bearbeitet im Coworking Space Rayaworx, Santanyí, Mallorca.
Entrepreneur Brian Creager shares his journey from corporate VP to founder, navigating challenges like product failure and bankruptcy. He stresses the importance of strategic growth, people, process, and technology while advocating for life balance. It's an inspiring story of resilience and vision.Making It explores the lives and stories of entrepreneurs as they share their unique perspectives on their success and the path to making it.“I vowed to myself at the end of that board of directors meeting, the next time I create a seven-figure business, it's going to be for me.”— Brian CreagerGuest Bio:Brian Creager has more than 30 years' experience leading businesses through growth and scaling. He worked worldwide in engineering, product development, technology, marketing, and executive leadership. From that, he started and grew an eight-figure business that taught him everything he needed for his current business — Inners Creek. Inners Creek helps frustrated and overwhelmed leaders at the top feel less alone by providing steady, incremental guidance, and direction. Their systemized approach reduces stress, clarifies decisions, and creates space for confident leadership.Resources or websites mentioned in this episode:MiraseeBrian's website: Inners CreekFree Discovery Call with Brian: https://callbrian.vip/makingitCredits:Producer: Michi LantzEditor: Andrew ChapmanAudio Editor: Marvin del RosarioExecutive Producer: Danny InyMusic Soundscape: Chad Michael SnavelyMaking our hosts sound great: Home Brew AudioMusic credits:Track Title: The Sunniest KidsArtist Name: Rhythm ScottWriter Name: Scott RoushPublisher Name: A SOUNDSTRIPE PRODUCTIONTrack Title: Sweet Loving WaltzArtist Name: Sounds Like SanderWriter Name: S.L.J. KalmeijerPublisher Name: A SOUNDSTRIPE PRODUCTIONTrack Title: Endless DreamsArtist Name: SoundrollLicense code: PZTNAHPB24I6Q0DZPublisher Name: UppbeatSpecial effects credits:24990513_birds-chirping_by_promission used with permission of the author and under license by AudioJungle/Envato Market.To catch the great episodes coming up on Making It, please follow us on Mirasee FM's YouTube channelor your favorite podcast player. And if you enjoyed the show, please leave us a comment or a starred review. It's the best way to help us get these ideas to more people.Episode transcript: He Built a $10M Business, Lost It All, and Bounced Back (Brian Creager) coming soon.
Brett is the broker and owner of Copper Creek Real Estate based out of Oklahoma City. He has been in real estate for over 11 years. He is a driven man, a loving husband and father, and a great friend and broker to me. Brett has been there for me since I first got into real estate and I'm happy I was able to get him on the show. In this episode we discuss his journey through real estate, his mindset and dedication, and most importantly life and the beautiful things about it. Hope you all enjoy… Keep Going!
This week Curtis Creager joins us in the studio to discuss his return from the Nurburgring! Back in February Curtis joined and discussed his plans for his first time there, and now he's back with all the good stories and more tips and tricks to help you get ready for the big day. Thumbnail photo credit to Jason Tang.
Dr. Angela Creager is the Thomas Siebel Professor in the History of Science at Princeton University and a member of AMSEF's National Advisory Committee. She spoke with us about her book Life Atomic: A History of Radioisotopes in Science and Medicine.
Oral Arguments for the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
Creager Ireland v. United States
Tom, Matt, and Jordan share the wild testimonies of the miraculous power of God that causes a heart to come alive in Christ. These practical, yet supernatural stories will ignite faith, and inspire you to see God do it through you! “The testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy” (Revelation 19:10). His power declares, “The King is here to do it again.” Jesus has promised He would be with us as we go, and the same power released through Him would be released through us as his sons and daughters. 1Hope4America https://www.1hope4america.com/ Tom Crandall https://www.tomcrandall.com/
Gen Z is raised on a screen, hungry for truth, and exhausted by the lies culture has thrown at them. They need Mothers and Fathers to show them how to navigate the coming world. Jordan Creager gets real talking about his generation and what they need from leaders. 1Hope4America https://www.1hope4america.com/ Tom Crandall https://www.tomcrandall.com/
Former MDE collaborator and longtime Sam Hyde accuser Channing Creager stops by the Killstream to get questioned by Ralph & Perspicacity.⭐LOCALS - $5 a month⭐ - PROMO CODE: XMAShttps://killstream.locals.com/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Dr. Angela Creager is the Thomas Siebel Professor in the History of Science at Princeton University and a member of AMSEF's National AdvisoryvCommittee. She spoke with us about her book Life Atomic: A History of Radioisotopes in Science and Medicine.
We have the unique opportunity to sit down with Justin Creager, a Professional Natural Bodybuilder, and talk about steps to achieve the next level of performance in our life. Much of our conversation is focused on physical performance; however, many of the principles shared by Justin can be applied to many aspects of our lives. This episode is dropping at a time when many of us lose focus on our New Year's goals. Allow this episode to provide the re-energizing needed to keep pushing. Follow Justin on Instagram: @justincreager
In this episode we talk about the necessities of a band, how live shows differ from online platforms, and concerts at fast food joints! * Thanks so much for listening. If you like the podcast, please Rate it 5 Stars! Much love and good day! Follow us "The Bayou Podcast" meaning "Chasing Music and the stories that come with it!” * Follow us: Instagram: @thebayou podcast TikTok: @thebayoupodcast YouTube: The Bayou Podcast * Goal: We want to inspire musicians to reach their dreams by talking to established and new artists, showing that the goals are achievable. We partner many musicians to help spread their thoughts on the industry and of course we love the road stories that come with the job. If you know someone who could use this podcast, share it with them! The Bayou Co. owns the right to the audio files with the exception of music from the artists used at end of episodes. All the audios shared are not depleting the quality of the original and are used for educational purposes. However, if any content owners would like their audios removed, please contact us by email at Kiko@thebayouco.com Thank you! Source: Tags:" Music, motivation, musician, music industry
Are you concerned that your partner is consuming pornography and wondering…does porn lead to infidelity?In this episode, relationship expert and coach Todd Creager gives an inside look at pornography and intimate relationship. He answers this commonly asked question is pornography use a gateway to infidelity? Here's a sneak peek at what you'll hear in this episode:Are there situations where porn is okay?When is porn a problem and how does it affect relationships?When and how can porn lead to infidelity?Listen in and discover the most damaging way that pornography affects relationships.TAKE ACTION:Todd Creager, LCSW, LMFTTodd is a sex expert and therapist in Huntington Beach. He provides relationship counseling to couples throughout Orange County including Irvine, Newport Beach, Corona del Mar, Laguna Beach, Seal Beach and Long Beach. (714) 848-2288.You can find more tips and resources from Todd Creager at: https://toddcreager.com MORE HELPFUL RESOURCES:Get your FREE copy of 10 Steps Towards Healing From Infidelity here: https://toddcreager.com/infidelity-freebie/Haven't left a review yet? All you have to do is go to:https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/lets-talk-about-love-sex-infidelity/id1492757242 and we appreciate your support of this show!
Guitarist Player Dalton Ponder sits with me to talk about their new single “Hurricane” and his experiences performing. Be the lookout for their new album coming soon! https://thegulfcoastdriftersmusic.com/?fbclid=IwAR3EHHecv1QluAnppZXtfW2xKtJ4BYufLKQC0f_khbfFu9CVevbunv-9XqE Mixed and Mastered by Tom Ponce, City Sound Productions.Support the show
That cat's out of the...house? We're sharing a testimonial today. Our surprise guest has been revealed! We are talking with the amazing, Lauryn Creager. One of our very own, and a voice behind the social media you see for Instagram @LoriAlvarezAndTeamRealtors and beyond. Hear what it's like to sell a home with Lori Alvarez and Team and move out of state! Want to support Nick Alvarez, the fabulous hair stylist? Find him on @HairByNicck! Treat yourself to a fresh hair style! Are you into body building? Hold Nolan Alvarez accountable and follow him on Instagram @nolanalvarez_. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/lorialvarez/message
That cat's out of the...house? We're sharing a testimonial today. Our surprise guest has been revealed! We are talking with the amazing, Lauryn Creager. One of our very own, and a voice behind the social media you see for Instagram @LoriAlvarezAndTeamRealtors and beyond. Hear what it's like to sell a home with Lori Alvarez and Team and move out of state! Want to support Nick Alvarez, the fabulous hair stylist? Find him on @HairByNicck! Treat yourself to a fresh hair style! Are you into body building? Hold Nolan Alvarez accountable and follow him on Instagram @nolanalvarez_. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/lorialvarez/message
The worst answer you can get in sales is a "maybe." It opens the door to wasted resources and feature creep. In sales your goal should be to get to "yes" or "no." Yes means you have a sale! That's a huge win.No means your product is not right for that customer at this time. In the future your product may improve to the point they want it, or they may be in a different situation that justifies your product.Maybe leads to all sorts of ugly.It can lead to an exhausting game of back and forth tag.It can lead to jamming features into your product that may not actually help it function better. Those added features can start to add up to "feature creep" which may lead to more unexpected problems, delays, and issues you never intended.In this episode you'll also learn:
Mason Creager songwriter, singer, guitar player, and creator of The Gulf Coast Drifters. Find out about future shows on their website https://thegulfcoastdriftersmusic.com/?fbclid=IwAR3EHHecv1QluAnppZXtfW2xKtJ4BYufLKQC0f_khbfFu9CVevbunv-9XqEMixed and Mastered by Tom Ponce, City Sound Productions Support the show
National Postdoc Appreciation Week is September 21-25. In preparation for the observance, ORISE Featurecast host Michael Holtz sat down with four members of our team who shared about their own postdoc experiences. In this episode, he talked to Rachel Creager, who discusses her postdoc experience, how she got interested in a career in the STEM fields and what she does today. Give a listen!
National Postdoc Appreciation Week is September 21-25. In preparation for the observance, ORISE Featurecast host Michael Holtz sat down with four members of our team who shared about their own postdoc experiences. In this episode, he talked to Rachel Creager, who discusses her postdoc experience, how she got interested in a career in the STEM fields and what she does today. Give a listen!
In 1917, a New Jersey company began hiring young women to paint luminous marks on the faces of watches and clocks. As time went on, they began to exhibit alarming symptoms, and a struggle ensued to establish the cause. In this week's episode of the Futility Closet podcast we'll tell the story of the Radium Girls, a landmark case in labor safety. We'll also consider some resurrected yeast and puzzle over a posthumous journey. Intro: Joseph Underwood was posting phony appeals for money in 1833. The earliest known written reference to baseball appeared in England. Sources for our feature on the Radium Girls: Claudia Clark, Radium Girls : Women and Industrial Health Reform, 1910-1935, 1997. Ross M. Mullner, Deadly Glow: The Radium Dial Worker Tragedy, 1999. Robert R. Johnson, Romancing the Atom: Nuclear Infatuation From the Radium Girls to Fukushima, 2012. Dolly Setton, "The Radium Girls: The Scary but True Story of the Poison that Made People Glow in the Dark," Natural History 129:1 (December 2020/January 2021), 47-47. Robert D. LaMarsh, "The Radium Girls: The Dark Story of America's Shining Women," Professional Safety 64:2 (February 2019), 47. Angela N.H. Creager, "Radiation, Cancer, and Mutation in the Atomic Age," Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences 45:1 (February 2015), 14-48. Robert Souhami, "Claudia Clark, Radium Girls," Medical History 42:4 (1998), 529-530. Ainissa Ramirez, "A Visit With One of the Last 'Radium Girls,'" MRS Bulletin 44:11 (2019), 903-904. "Medicine: Radium Women," Time, Aug. 11, 1930. "Poison Paintbrush," Time, June 4, 1928. "Workers From Factory May Get Federal Honors," Asbury Park Press, June 27, 2021. John Williams, "Tell Us 5 Things About Your Book: Kate Moore's 'The Radium Girls,'" New York Times, April 30, 2017. Jack Brubaker, "Those 'Radium Girls' of Lancaster," [Lancaster, Pa.] Intelligencer Journal / Lancaster New Era, May 9, 2014. William Yardley, "Mae Keane, Whose Job Brought Radium to Her Lips, Dies at 107," New York Times, March 13, 2014. Fred Musante, "Residue From Industrial Past Haunts State," New York Times, June 24, 2001. Denise Grady, "A Glow in the Dark, and a Lesson in Scientific Peril," New York Times, Oct. 6, 1998. Martha Irvine, "Dark Secrets Come to Light in New History of 'Radium Girls,'" Los Angeles Times, Oct. 4, 1998. Marc Mappen, "Jerseyana," New York Times, March 10, 1991. "Radium Poisoning Finally Claims Inventor of Luminous Paint After Fight to Harness Terrific Force of Atom," Brooklyn Daily Eagle, Nov. 25, 1928. "Two of Women Radium Victims Offer Selves for Test While Alive," [Danville, Va.] Bee, May 29, 1928. "Death Agony From Radium," [Brisbane, Qld.] Daily Standard, May 15, 1928. "To Begin Two Suits Against Radium Co.," New York Times, June 24, 1925. "U.S. Starts Probe of Radium Poison Deaths in Jersey," Brooklyn Daily Eagle, June 19, 1925. Listener mail: Carolyn Wilke, "How Do We Know What Ancient People Ate? Their Dirty Dishes," Atlantic, July 24, 2021. Chris Baraniuk, "The Treasure Inside Beer Lost in a Shipwreck 120 Years Ago," BBC, June 22, 2021. Fiona Stocker, "A Beer Brewed From an Old Tasmanian Shipwreck," BBC, Dec. 7, 2018. Mary Esch, "Taste of History: Yeast From 1886 Shipwreck Makes New Brew," AP News, March 15, 2019. National Collection of Yeast Cultures. "National Collection of Yeast Cultures," Wikipedia (accessed Aug. 29, 2021). "History of Missing Linck," Missing Linck Festival (accessed Sep. 3, 2021). "Missing Linck Festival Arrives … Finally!" The Gnarly Gnome, June 4, 2021. This week's lateral thinking puzzle was contributed by listener Tim Ellis, who sent this corroborating link (warning -- this spoils the puzzle). You can listen using the player above, download this episode directly, or subscribe on Google Podcasts, on Apple Podcasts, or via the RSS feed at https://futilitycloset.libsyn.com/rss. Please consider becoming a patron of Futility Closet -- you can choose the amount you want to pledge, and we've set up some rewards to help thank you for your support. You can also make a one-time donation on the Support Us page of the Futility Closet website. Many thanks to Doug Ross for the music in this episode. If you have any questions or comments you can reach us at podcast@futilitycloset.com. Thanks for listening!
Have a question you hope to answer, a situation needing direction, a troubled heart or a heart full of gratitude? Spend alone time with God to pray and listen. Learn how to plan a prayer retreat that matches your personality and brings just what you need.
Ronnie Creager discusses skating around his driveway at age 12, getting shop sponsored by Hot Skates, Powell Peralta sending him boards through the skate shop, turning pro for Foundation, getting kicked off Foundation then getting on Blind, filming for Trilogy and more Blind videos, being apart of the first eS dream team, designing his first eS shoe, why after 20 years he parted ways with Blind, Nadia Footwear and why it went out of business so quick, his new skateboarding quiz app “Qwiz Pop” and much more!Privacy Policy and California Privacy Notice.
Cognitively demanding tasks provide important opportunities for students to develop an understanding of mathematics; however, they are challenging to launch and implement. The authors designed a secondary methods unit on launching tasks. Participants in the study were enrolled in five different methods courses. Using a noticing framework, findings suggest that by engaging in the unit, preservice teachers developed a greater understanding of the four aspects of an effective task launch. When viewing video examples, preservice teachers were able to talk about the four aspects of a task launch with increased specificity. Additionally, they began to identify ways of developing common language without reducing cognitive demand. We discuss implications of this work and offer suggestions for future teacher education research. Special Guests: Christopher W. Parrish, Mark A. Creager, and Rachel B. Snider.
Roger Creager dropped by #MomentYouMadeIt to catch up on: how his accounting background helped his music career, pandemic touring, trailblazing a genre and much more.
THE TROUBADOUR PODCAST - The Premier Red Dirt, Texas Country and Independent Music Podcast
If the name Mike Ethan Messick doesn’t ring a bell, and you are a fan of Texas Country and Red Dirt, you’ve still probably heard his music. Before the age of 20 Mike wrote The Everclear Song that Roger Creager later turned into a hit and is now a mainstay in Creager’s live shows. Mike and I met for the first time many years ago at the historic Cheatham Street Warehouse and I’ve been wanting to have him as a guest on the podcast ever since the beginning. Well, we’ve finally got it done. Here’s comes episode #91 of The Troubadour featuring Texas singer and songwriter, Mike Ethan Messick. All of Mike’s social media links, music and merch can be explored by going to his website at https://www.mikeethanmessick.com/ Hope you enjoy the episode! How YOU can support the podcast! If you’re interested in supporting the podcast and helping us FREE CARLY from the bondage of editing every episode CLICK HERE and help us hand off this part of the process to a third party! There’s another way to support the podcast AND ALSO earn some free swag in the process. CLICK HERE to check it out. You can listen to our wonderful podcast by clicking on any of the following links: The Troubadour Podcast Website, Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Spotify, Stitcher, Podbean
In this episode of the COVID-19 Digest, we revisit the airborne vs droplet transmission debate and analyze a highly publicized study on Remdesivir from the New England Journal of Medicine. Host: Elizabeth Esty, MD & Dylan Luyten, MD Research By: Tanisha Crosby-Attipoe & Nathan Novotny Sound Editing By: Stephen Bahmani Time Stamps: 0:00 - Numbers 0:58 - "Transmission Potential of SARS-CoV-2 in Viral Shedding Observed at the University of Nebraska Medical Center" 6:53 - "Compassionate Use of Remdesivir for Patients with Severe Covid-19" References: [1] Santarpia, J. L., Rivera, D. N., Herrera, V., Morwitzer, M. J., Creager, H., Santarpia, G. W., Lowe, J. J. (2020). Transmission Potential of SARS-CoV-2 in Viral Shedding Observed at the University of Nebraska Medical Center doi:10.1101/2020.03.23.20039446 [2]Grein J, Ohmagari N, Shin D, et al. Compassionate Use of Remdesivir for Patients with Severe Covid-19. New England Journal of Medicine. 2020;0(0):.doi:10.1056/NEJMoa2007016
In the third installment of our KubeCon San Diego series, Manifold co-founder Matt Creager explains his company's marketplace-as-a-service for developer tools and services, then discusses cloud workload portability, the importance of using the right tool for the job, and shares which KubeCon announcement he's found most exciting so far.
It might be winter, but it's a great time to sign up for your first track day! Curtis Creager is an instructor with Proformance Racing School at Pacific Raceways in Kent and he's on this episode to tell you all you need to know about doing your first track day, what mods really matter, and gives us great general driving and car advice. Another interesting guy you definitely should know, so we made sure we brought him on the show!
It might be winter, but it’s a great time to sign up for your first track day! Curtis Creager is an instructor with Proformance Racing School at Pacific Raceways in Kent and he’s on this episode to tell you all you need to know about doing your first track day, what mods really matter, and gives us great general driving and car advice. Another interesting guy you definitely should know, so we made sure we brought him on the show!
Fred Mortagne est le vidéaste français de skateboard le plus connu à travers le monde notamment pour la réalisation du film Menikmati de la marque éS, pour celle de la Sorry de Flip, ou encore la Bon Appétit de Cliché. Il a su développer un style unique et novateur qui continue d'influencer ses pairs. Il est aussi un photographe dont la renommée internationale a largement dépassé le cadre du skateboard. Avec French Fred, on va parler du spot d'Hotel de Ville à Lyon, de faire ses classes avec le magnétoscope du skate-shop ABS, des premières vidéos avec JB Gillet et ses potes, d'inventer le métier de vidéaste de skate, de collaborer avec 411VW, de travailler pour des marques internationales, de filmer Koston, Creager ou encore Boulala, d'exposer avec l’artiste contemporain Raphaël Zarka, et surtout de sa passion intacte du skateboard, de sa culture et de ceux qui en font. Bonne écoute ! Fred est sur Instagram https://www.instagram.com/frenchfredfoto/ https://www.instagram.com/frenchfred/ (00:01:31)La place de l'hôtel de ville en travaux (00:04:41)Le skate en CE2 (00:12:47)Regarder des vidéos de skate au Surplus d'Ainay (00:22:10)L'arrivée du vidéo magazine 411 (00:25:01)Faire des vidéos & les monter avec de la musique (00:39:20)Filmer à Paris pour une séquence dans 411 (00:50:17)Le projet avorté de la vidéo européenne Sole Tech (01:00:07)MENIKMATI, Koston, Creager & les autres (01:26:07)SORRY, la vidéo Flip (01:37:01)Les marches de Boulala (01:43:02)Retour à Lyon, travailler avec Cliché (01:48:51)Faire de nouvelles choses (01:58:20)Filmer avec JG Gillet (02:05:07)Le Gypsy Tour (02:16:01)Le vrai monde du travail (01:21:41)Les questions d'Alban --------------------- SITE http://www.bigspin.media SOUNDCLOUD https://soundcloud.com/bigspinpodcast iTUNES https://is.gd/zjMcNO YOUTUBE https://www.youtube.com/c/bigspinpodcast SPOTIFY https://is.gd/TWoeMm INSTA https://instagram.com/bigspinpodcast FACEBOOK https://facebook.com/BigSpinPodcast TWITTER https://twitter.com/BigSpinPodcast LINKEDIN https://www.linkedin.com/company/big-spin
Dr Bash and Bill Creager will be our guest. We will be having an in depth discussion about VA claims. Dr Bash explains the medical side while Bill Creager explains the legal side. Join us.
Jennifer Creager is the Senior Director of Public Policy at the Greater Omaha Chamber of Commerce.
We all know Dr Bash and his expertise in IMO/IME's. Bill Creager has the best understanding of the Regulations and How the VA applies them to a claim. Join us.
Ron Creager is a fervent believer in saying ‘Yes’ to all opportunities presented to him. Sometimes prepared, sometimes not, it is this cavalier attitude that has allowed him to wear many hats and travel the world extensively as a solo pianist, accompanist, Musical Director and performer.Creager’s talents extend to the composition of several musicals - Careful He Might Hear You, Aimee and When The Bough Breaks to name but a few. His specialty compositions have contributed to shows like Madonna and Child, in which he toured nationally with Tony’s Lamond and Sheldon.A chance meeting in Los Angeles with legendary Australian performer Toni Lamond, lead Creager in becoming her regular Musical Director and Accompanist; a role that brought him to Australia. As Arranger and Accompanist he has also worked with an array of mighty talent including Helen Reddy, Tim Draxl, Tina C, Derek Metzger, Simon Burke, Jeannie Little, Paul Capsis and Kerrie Biddell.The role as accompanist is so crucial to the singer that the two performers must merge as one in a relationship where each must navigate the song in synch. It’s a role where Creager has been lauded as one of the best.Originally from Kentucky, Creager was raised on church music giving him an extensive knowledge of the Gospel repertoire, and roles as organist and choir director for several churches.Ron was recently back in Australia and we managed a long overdue catch-up. He discusses the role of accompanist and talks us through a few of his compositions, providing us with access to the music and the awesome vocalists that have have performed the material.
Occasionally the VA tries to reduce veterans benefits. This can either be from a temportary rating that has improved, A medical mistake, or the VA just wanting to cause veterans grief. Dr Bash wil break this down and explain what a veteran must do to combat a rediction of benefits.
Crowdfunding Uncut | Kickstarter| Indiegogo | Where Entrepreneurs Get Funded
Wondering how to get product validation and calculate your costs? Today’s conversation with Brian Creager is a great place to get started. In three years, Brian went from $500 a month to $250,000 a month! Listen to this episode to hear Brian’s expert advice about how to find a product, how to tap into the market for that product, and how to discover costs and set prices. If you want to crowdfund a product and sell online, you need to listen to this episode! How do you know if your product will sell? Your first step for selling your product is to see if it will sell. But how do you know what type of product to choose? In today’s episode, Brian Creager describes product types and gives wise advice about how to choose products when you are getting started. Something truly innovative? A product similar to others out there, that does it better, faster, cheaper? Where is your best chance for success? Get answers to these questions and more in today’s podcast on product validation. Product validation: Is there a market for your product? You will want to figure out whether or not your product can sell it before you go to the time and expense of making it. But how do you know? In this episode, Brian Creager talks about the steps he takes to validate his products, how to find out the size of your potential market, and how market information influences the choices that he makes about what products to sell. You won’t want to miss Brian’s expert advice about validating your product before launching! Three things to consider before launching a product What are the necessary steps involved with launching a new product? What aspects of a new product should be evaluated before moving forward? Amazon marketing expert Brian Creager shares in this episode four steps that he takes in the process of launching a new product, and how he grades ideas on three specific aspects of the product to help with product validation. This information is invaluable for anyone seeking to market products online. Don’t miss it! Consider other experts in your field as resources, not competition Connections work. Seek out others who sell products similar to yours. Does that sound scary to you? In this episode, Brian Creager, founder and owner of The Product Hatchery, explains the valuable resource that others in your field can be when you start to see them as resources instead of competition. Listen to this podcast and discover how to connect with others in a way that helps you be more effective in the way you launch your product, and less afraid of the competition. Outline of This Episode Intro to this episode on product validation: how to find out if your product will sell. Intro to Brian Creager, how he got started selling on Amazon, and how quickly his business grew. Product validation: Is there a market for your product? What is the first step to selling on Amazon? How do I find a product that will sell on Four stages of a product launch, and three aspects to grade when deciding on a product. Thoughts about emotional attachment. How you can do cost analysis. Consider other experts in your field as resources, not competition. Brian Creager’s perspective on products that fail. One thing Brian Creager would have done differently if he could. Want to get in touch? Go to www.khierstyn.com Resources Mentioned Briancreager.com The Product Hatchery Sponsors BackerKit - use the code “uncut” to get your discount Gadget Flow
We will have Dr Bash and Bill Creager as our guest speakers. Dr Bash brings the medical expertise and Bill brings the Legal expertise and he really knows VA Law. Join us To call and speak to either of them dial 347 237 4819.
Dr Bash and Bill Creager discuss medical and legal issues of VA Claims
Have you ever been or are in the process of being reduced by the VA? Dr Bash and Bill will explain this issue and how to combat it if you have the dreaded reduction proposal. We will also discuss veterans protections according to the law. Join us for this show.
Dr Bashand Bill Creager will discuss TBI conditions and Ratings.
Listen as travel writer, Ellen Creager talks about the city of Paris as both historic inspiration for artists and as a fascinating travel destination. Recorded at the Warren Public Library – Civic Center on Thursday September 20, 2018. This podcast has been brought to you by MIWarren. To hear more podcasts like this, visit MIWarren.org.
Dr Bash and Bill Creager discuss VA rating, medical and VA Law as it pertains to Cardiac issues and others. Dr Bash brings the lightning to VA claims and Bill brings the thunder. Join us.
Senior women's golfer Megan Creager sits down with Drae and Mike to talk about her senior season. Megan discusses the current success of the team, and what role she is playing being the only senior on the team.
This was a REALLY fun episode, because I didn't know this business model existed. You can think of a product, find a manufacturer to make it for you, brand it, and sell it on Amazon without carrying a warehouse full of inventory and shipping it yourself. This was a really interesting, informative show. 6:08 May […]
Dr Craig Bash is known as the Veterans Medical Advisor. He has been assisting Veterans with IMO's/IME's for years. W will discuss the Bash Bulletings he has listed on his Veterans Medical advisor webslit. Bill Creager is one of the most knowledgeable VA claims advocate in the US. Join us.
Dr Craig Bash is a Neuroradiologist that specializes in VA issues. His expertise in his practive area is unmatched. He publishes his own Bash Bulletin on his website, www.veteransmedadvisor.com. We will be discussing another Bulletin on this show. Bill is a retired DRO, He was with the Appeals Management Center and is now advocating for veterans. He has joined the Bash team. Join us.
In this podcast, Doyle interviews Max, inquiring about his life and trying to learn as much as he can from him. At Cryptosophy, we believe that all persons are sources of hidden wisdom if only you have the patience to ask the most important questions and really listen to them. Max shared details of his religious tribulations, encountering Nietzsche, and writing his undergraduate thesis on Wittgenstein.
What is the state of invention funding as we speed ahead into the digital age and beyond? Is there a new way for funding the great ideas that could change the course of the next 100 years? My guest today is Reid Creager, an entrepreneur, writer, and student of inventions and innovators. In our conversation, we explore how crowdfunding has impacted the inventing industry, the unique advantage of crowdfunding an invention, tips for creating a new product, the inventor’s best first step, and much more! I can’t wait for you to learn from Reid’s fascinating perspective. What is the best first step for any aspiring inventor? If you find yourself considering how to begin inventing a product, what would be your first step? Do you start with testing your idea with an audience? What about drawing up plans for invention funding? According to Reid Creager, before you get too far down the road, it’s important to conduct a patent search. Too often, well-intentioned inventors get started with an idea that has already been patented. Don’t waste your time and energy unnecessarily, heed the advice of invention experts and do a patent search! Reid also mentions that it is highly recommended to have a patent attorney perform a patent search on their end to cover all of your bases. Get more helpful insights into the world of inventions from Reid on this episode! Tips for creating a new product. What does it take to bring a new and innovative product to the marketplace? What are some of the best practices that will set your product or idea up for success right out of the gate? Reid Creager wants to help prospective innovators get all the tips they need to hit the ground running. In our conversation, Reid provides several tips innovators can use as they consider testing the waters with a new invention. Does your invention fill a function or provide a service that people care about? Consult people whose opinions you can trust, don’t just rely on friends and family! What are the chances that your product will get knocked off by others? Have you counted the cost? Are you prepared for the massive expense of inventing? Reid brings up some very helpful angles for prospective investors to consider before they venture too far down the road. Listen to this episode as Reid expands on these tips and much more! The unique advantage of crowdfunding an invention. There are so many great options available in the marketplace for invention funding, but which one is the best one for inventors to consider? Reid Creager says that it really depends on the individual and their priorities. While going the route of licensing a product, partnering with angel investors, or connecting with venture capitalists are all good options, Reid is a huge fan of exploring the crowdfunding route for invention funding. The two primary benefits to crowdfunding that Reid sees are the ability to monetize the invention without a lot of money up front and the ability to get an early indication to how the public will respond to the invention. Discover more unique advantages to crowdfunding an invention on this engaging episode featuring Reid! Inventing is not for wimps! What is the biggest lesson you can learn from years of interacting with amazing innovators and inventors? Reid Creager says that his biggest takeaway from interviewing inventors over the years is that inventing is not for wimps! He says that he was surprised early on as he was getting acquainted with the history of inventors that Mark Twain owned several patents. In fact, Twain went bankrupt because he was so obsessed with inventing that it consumed all of his time and resources. Beyond securing invention funding and dealing with the jealousy and criticism of others, the biggest lesson is that inventing is demanding. You have to count the cost both resource-wise and the personal toll. Learn more from Reid’s unique perspective on inventing by listening to this episode!
Panel: Amiee Knight Charles Max Wood Joe Eames Special Guests: Matthew Creager and Peter Cho In this episode, JavaScript Jabbers speak with Matthew Ceager and Peter Cho. Matthew and Peter are part of the team at Manifold. Manifold is a marketplace for developer services. Matthew takes care of growth and relations, and Peter oversee products at Manifold. The panel discusses with Peter and Matthew what Manifold does and the benefits of a Cloud Service. Matthew gives perspective on how developers can get their cloud product on the market compared to open source. Further discussion goes into how this will help the developer to get their products or services turned into a business quicker and save time Also learn about when it is the ideal time to move to cloud services vs. running a server yourself. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Different kinds of definition of Cloud Services Anything you would rely on as a third party service What is the cloud service ecosystem - Services that connect to an application Independent market place - because it is difficult to turn a product into a business Where are people using cloud services or running their own server Spinning up a version of it is easier. Time verses doing it yourself? Experts running the services Focusing on your product instead of managing the server and such Where does the data live and who has access to that? Lock In’s? Tourist - Credentials management How do I get this setup? Command Line or register online And much more! Links: Manifold https://github.com/mattcreager @manifoldco @etcpeter @matt_creager blog.manifold.com Picks: Amiee Ryan McDermott Charles GitLab AdminLTE Joe What You Can’t Say Matt Star Trek Puppeteer Peter Player Unknown Battle Ground Sourdough by Robin Sloan
Panel: Amiee Knight Charles Max Wood Joe Eames Special Guests: Matthew Creager and Peter Cho In this episode, JavaScript Jabbers speak with Matthew Ceager and Peter Cho. Matthew and Peter are part of the team at Manifold. Manifold is a marketplace for developer services. Matthew takes care of growth and relations, and Peter oversee products at Manifold. The panel discusses with Peter and Matthew what Manifold does and the benefits of a Cloud Service. Matthew gives perspective on how developers can get their cloud product on the market compared to open source. Further discussion goes into how this will help the developer to get their products or services turned into a business quicker and save time Also learn about when it is the ideal time to move to cloud services vs. running a server yourself. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Different kinds of definition of Cloud Services Anything you would rely on as a third party service What is the cloud service ecosystem - Services that connect to an application Independent market place - because it is difficult to turn a product into a business Where are people using cloud services or running their own server Spinning up a version of it is easier. Time verses doing it yourself? Experts running the services Focusing on your product instead of managing the server and such Where does the data live and who has access to that? Lock In’s? Tourist - Credentials management How do I get this setup? Command Line or register online And much more! Links: Manifold https://github.com/mattcreager @manifoldco @etcpeter @matt_creager blog.manifold.com Picks: Amiee Ryan McDermott Charles GitLab AdminLTE Joe What You Can’t Say Matt Star Trek Puppeteer Peter Player Unknown Battle Ground Sourdough by Robin Sloan
Panel: Amiee Knight Charles Max Wood Joe Eames Special Guests: Matthew Creager and Peter Cho In this episode, JavaScript Jabbers speak with Matthew Ceager and Peter Cho. Matthew and Peter are part of the team at Manifold. Manifold is a marketplace for developer services. Matthew takes care of growth and relations, and Peter oversee products at Manifold. The panel discusses with Peter and Matthew what Manifold does and the benefits of a Cloud Service. Matthew gives perspective on how developers can get their cloud product on the market compared to open source. Further discussion goes into how this will help the developer to get their products or services turned into a business quicker and save time Also learn about when it is the ideal time to move to cloud services vs. running a server yourself. In particular, we dive pretty deep on: Different kinds of definition of Cloud Services Anything you would rely on as a third party service What is the cloud service ecosystem - Services that connect to an application Independent market place - because it is difficult to turn a product into a business Where are people using cloud services or running their own server Spinning up a version of it is easier. Time verses doing it yourself? Experts running the services Focusing on your product instead of managing the server and such Where does the data live and who has access to that? Lock In’s? Tourist - Credentials management How do I get this setup? Command Line or register online And much more! Links: Manifold https://github.com/mattcreager @manifoldco @etcpeter @matt_creager blog.manifold.com Picks: Amiee Ryan McDermott Charles GitLab AdminLTE Joe What You Can’t Say Matt Star Trek Puppeteer Peter Player Unknown Battle Ground Sourdough by Robin Sloan
MJS 029: Matt Creager On this episode, we have another My JavaScript Story, our guest is Matt Creager. Matt works for Manifold. He's here with us today to tell us his story. Stay tuned! [01:00] – Introduction to Matt Creager Matt works for an interesting company called Manifold. They sponsored the show. [01:35] – How did you get into programming? Before Matt fell in love with programming, he was in love with technology. They bought his first computer. It was a Gateway 2000 and he got access to the internet around the same time. He spent all of his time on that computer because they were moving around so much. That became the way that he stayed in touch with people. He remembers taking it apart and formatting the hard drive accidentally. His uncle has been in the IT industry since he was a kid too. Matt was always associating him with spending time with his computer programming, a role model, and stabilizer in his life. He was switching tapes. And then, his cousin decided that he was going to start scripting his character’s actions in a game that they were playing. And now, looking back, it was some combination of Lua and C++. He started taking his cousin’s scripts apart to automate his own character in the game. He was 13 or 14. The first programming book that he bought was a result of not being able to figure out how to get his character what it wants to do. It was one of the C++ bibles. And then, he became active in the forums around the scripting language. He was sharing the scripts and he started to realize that he can harvest stuff in the game and sell it for real cash. Matt never considered himself technical and never considered programming a career. He was just translating CPU and RAM for people who were shopping for computers. And then, he wanted people to measure theirs so he built tools that took the data they had in an office and turn them into reports. When the manager started using that, it became a nationwide program and suddenly, he was on the map. He was leading a team. When Blackberry started a technical interview, he realized that he has the answers to these questions. Initially, he was just a Technical Issues Manager. He had a Data Science team and that team was responsible for identifying and prioritizing issues. They were using Node 0.4, very early version of Node. And then, he discovered Angular and dived head first to the Angular community. [13:10] – BlackBerry got Matt to JavaScript Matt looked at Node because he was trying to figure out how he could do real time analytics. He wanted these dashboards that data scientists are looking at. That was the stepping stone into JavaScript. [15:30] – Hackathon On the side, a couple of local companies started to run hackathons. Matt was going to hackathons all the time. Then, he ended up of hopping from BlackBerry to becoming a full time front-end developer at a start-up. Matt was talking with one of the organizers at LA Hacks. She was telling him that the reason why people are going to these hackathons is because they want to win and they want to put that fact on their resumes. In his day, that was not hackathons were like. The prizes can act as a negative incentive. They really work hard for the prizes. Sometimes they actually end up becoming more creative as a result because they know they need to use this specific combination of API’s. [18:45] – Contributions to JavaScript community When Matt joined GoInstant, it was very early days of RTC. Web sockets are new at that point. You’re probably more familiar with Firebase. In the early days, GoInstant and Firebase are competing for the same developers. They’re working on the same problems. The tools that they are building were real time synchronization between the state you have on the client and the state you have on the server. A lot of those that they build, open-source tools, they went with GoInstant to Salesforce. But they inspired the libraries and a lot of it is probably on the same code base that you now see in libraries that pretty much does the same things with Firebase. And then, most recently, Matt and the team built Torus. They realized that if they are going to be building smaller applications, going to start to use more cloud services, more services tailored towards developers, and going to manage a lot more credential, a lot of credentials that need to be secured and shared with the teammates, they needed to take those credentials and put them on applications wherever they are running, whether that’s a Docker container or Heroku. That’s his most recent open-source project. [20:50] – What are you working on now? Manifold is their latest project. They’re trying to build a market place for developer services. It’s been 3 months. They moved from Torus to building Manifold earlier this year. The official launch hasn’t happened yet. That’s hopefully to come earlier this year – September. If it’s something that you want to try out and experiment with, there is a coupon for My JS. Give it a try before they launch a $25 credit that they can use to provision a logging instance, monitoring, or database. You can use it with any type of services that you might need to build your app. Picks Matt Creager OpenCollective.com Scaphold GraphQL Elixir Manifold.co Twitter, Github: @matt_creager Charles Max Wood AWS Lambda Zapier Heroku Udemy course for Ionic Framework
MJS 029: Matt Creager On this episode, we have another My JavaScript Story, our guest is Matt Creager. Matt works for Manifold. He's here with us today to tell us his story. Stay tuned! [01:00] – Introduction to Matt Creager Matt works for an interesting company called Manifold. They sponsored the show. [01:35] – How did you get into programming? Before Matt fell in love with programming, he was in love with technology. They bought his first computer. It was a Gateway 2000 and he got access to the internet around the same time. He spent all of his time on that computer because they were moving around so much. That became the way that he stayed in touch with people. He remembers taking it apart and formatting the hard drive accidentally. His uncle has been in the IT industry since he was a kid too. Matt was always associating him with spending time with his computer programming, a role model, and stabilizer in his life. He was switching tapes. And then, his cousin decided that he was going to start scripting his character’s actions in a game that they were playing. And now, looking back, it was some combination of Lua and C++. He started taking his cousin’s scripts apart to automate his own character in the game. He was 13 or 14. The first programming book that he bought was a result of not being able to figure out how to get his character what it wants to do. It was one of the C++ bibles. And then, he became active in the forums around the scripting language. He was sharing the scripts and he started to realize that he can harvest stuff in the game and sell it for real cash. Matt never considered himself technical and never considered programming a career. He was just translating CPU and RAM for people who were shopping for computers. And then, he wanted people to measure theirs so he built tools that took the data they had in an office and turn them into reports. When the manager started using that, it became a nationwide program and suddenly, he was on the map. He was leading a team. When Blackberry started a technical interview, he realized that he has the answers to these questions. Initially, he was just a Technical Issues Manager. He had a Data Science team and that team was responsible for identifying and prioritizing issues. They were using Node 0.4, very early version of Node. And then, he discovered Angular and dived head first to the Angular community. [13:10] – BlackBerry got Matt to JavaScript Matt looked at Node because he was trying to figure out how he could do real time analytics. He wanted these dashboards that data scientists are looking at. That was the stepping stone into JavaScript. [15:30] – Hackathon On the side, a couple of local companies started to run hackathons. Matt was going to hackathons all the time. Then, he ended up of hopping from BlackBerry to becoming a full time front-end developer at a start-up. Matt was talking with one of the organizers at LA Hacks. She was telling him that the reason why people are going to these hackathons is because they want to win and they want to put that fact on their resumes. In his day, that was not hackathons were like. The prizes can act as a negative incentive. They really work hard for the prizes. Sometimes they actually end up becoming more creative as a result because they know they need to use this specific combination of API’s. [18:45] – Contributions to JavaScript community When Matt joined GoInstant, it was very early days of RTC. Web sockets are new at that point. You’re probably more familiar with Firebase. In the early days, GoInstant and Firebase are competing for the same developers. They’re working on the same problems. The tools that they are building were real time synchronization between the state you have on the client and the state you have on the server. A lot of those that they build, open-source tools, they went with GoInstant to Salesforce. But they inspired the libraries and a lot of it is probably on the same code base that you now see in libraries that pretty much does the same things with Firebase. And then, most recently, Matt and the team built Torus. They realized that if they are going to be building smaller applications, going to start to use more cloud services, more services tailored towards developers, and going to manage a lot more credential, a lot of credentials that need to be secured and shared with the teammates, they needed to take those credentials and put them on applications wherever they are running, whether that’s a Docker container or Heroku. That’s his most recent open-source project. [20:50] – What are you working on now? Manifold is their latest project. They’re trying to build a market place for developer services. It’s been 3 months. They moved from Torus to building Manifold earlier this year. The official launch hasn’t happened yet. That’s hopefully to come earlier this year – September. If it’s something that you want to try out and experiment with, there is a coupon for My JS. Give it a try before they launch a $25 credit that they can use to provision a logging instance, monitoring, or database. You can use it with any type of services that you might need to build your app. Picks Matt Creager OpenCollective.com Scaphold GraphQL Elixir Manifold.co Twitter, Github: @matt_creager Charles Max Wood AWS Lambda Zapier Heroku Udemy course for Ionic Framework
MJS 029: Matt Creager On this episode, we have another My JavaScript Story, our guest is Matt Creager. Matt works for Manifold. He's here with us today to tell us his story. Stay tuned! [01:00] – Introduction to Matt Creager Matt works for an interesting company called Manifold. They sponsored the show. [01:35] – How did you get into programming? Before Matt fell in love with programming, he was in love with technology. They bought his first computer. It was a Gateway 2000 and he got access to the internet around the same time. He spent all of his time on that computer because they were moving around so much. That became the way that he stayed in touch with people. He remembers taking it apart and formatting the hard drive accidentally. His uncle has been in the IT industry since he was a kid too. Matt was always associating him with spending time with his computer programming, a role model, and stabilizer in his life. He was switching tapes. And then, his cousin decided that he was going to start scripting his character’s actions in a game that they were playing. And now, looking back, it was some combination of Lua and C++. He started taking his cousin’s scripts apart to automate his own character in the game. He was 13 or 14. The first programming book that he bought was a result of not being able to figure out how to get his character what it wants to do. It was one of the C++ bibles. And then, he became active in the forums around the scripting language. He was sharing the scripts and he started to realize that he can harvest stuff in the game and sell it for real cash. Matt never considered himself technical and never considered programming a career. He was just translating CPU and RAM for people who were shopping for computers. And then, he wanted people to measure theirs so he built tools that took the data they had in an office and turn them into reports. When the manager started using that, it became a nationwide program and suddenly, he was on the map. He was leading a team. When Blackberry started a technical interview, he realized that he has the answers to these questions. Initially, he was just a Technical Issues Manager. He had a Data Science team and that team was responsible for identifying and prioritizing issues. They were using Node 0.4, very early version of Node. And then, he discovered Angular and dived head first to the Angular community. [13:10] – BlackBerry got Matt to JavaScript Matt looked at Node because he was trying to figure out how he could do real time analytics. He wanted these dashboards that data scientists are looking at. That was the stepping stone into JavaScript. [15:30] – Hackathon On the side, a couple of local companies started to run hackathons. Matt was going to hackathons all the time. Then, he ended up of hopping from BlackBerry to becoming a full time front-end developer at a start-up. Matt was talking with one of the organizers at LA Hacks. She was telling him that the reason why people are going to these hackathons is because they want to win and they want to put that fact on their resumes. In his day, that was not hackathons were like. The prizes can act as a negative incentive. They really work hard for the prizes. Sometimes they actually end up becoming more creative as a result because they know they need to use this specific combination of API’s. [18:45] – Contributions to JavaScript community When Matt joined GoInstant, it was very early days of RTC. Web sockets are new at that point. You’re probably more familiar with Firebase. In the early days, GoInstant and Firebase are competing for the same developers. They’re working on the same problems. The tools that they are building were real time synchronization between the state you have on the client and the state you have on the server. A lot of those that they build, open-source tools, they went with GoInstant to Salesforce. But they inspired the libraries and a lot of it is probably on the same code base that you now see in libraries that pretty much does the same things with Firebase. And then, most recently, Matt and the team built Torus. They realized that if they are going to be building smaller applications, going to start to use more cloud services, more services tailored towards developers, and going to manage a lot more credential, a lot of credentials that need to be secured and shared with the teammates, they needed to take those credentials and put them on applications wherever they are running, whether that’s a Docker container or Heroku. That’s his most recent open-source project. [20:50] – What are you working on now? Manifold is their latest project. They’re trying to build a market place for developer services. It’s been 3 months. They moved from Torus to building Manifold earlier this year. The official launch hasn’t happened yet. That’s hopefully to come earlier this year – September. If it’s something that you want to try out and experiment with, there is a coupon for My JS. Give it a try before they launch a $25 credit that they can use to provision a logging instance, monitoring, or database. You can use it with any type of services that you might need to build your app. Picks Matt Creager OpenCollective.com Scaphold GraphQL Elixir Manifold.co Twitter, Github: @matt_creager Charles Max Wood AWS Lambda Zapier Heroku Udemy course for Ionic Framework
Fernandez-Bollack House and Celaya-Creager House 405 E. Washington St. and 441 E. Washington St. Brownsville, TX 78520
Brian Creager is a Freedom Fast Lane Tribe member who has done exactly what we hope every member will do - succeed in spades. Brian has built multiple million dollar brands and is now eager to become what he calls, “The Procter and Gamble of the Online Space.” In order to do that, he knows he's not only going to have to replicate the things he's done to become as successful as he has so far, he's going to have to truly scale things by building systems and a team that can multiply productivity and profitability. You can hear Brian's story on this episode of Freedom Fast Lane. Have you noticed that once you do something, the next logical step doesn't seem so far away? That's the power of mindset. When it comes to success in any realm of life we all have our obstacles. Many of them are mental. You may not be able to imagine building or owning a million dollar business right now - but once you are able to build a $100K business, you'll begin to think differently about the million dollar business. That's because success births a new perspective which enables you to cast your vision higher. That's what has happened to Brian Creager as he's experienced a high level of Amazon sales - and now he's shooting for a $50 million business. Find out how Brian is going to accomplish it, on this episode. The larger your business or brand gets, the more you need to get out of the way. If you've experienced any level of business success - even working for someone else - you know that it's practically impossible to continue building a business on your own. At some point, your capacity runs out. That's why as your business grows you've got to build the business in such a way that you can establish systems that others can learn, take over, and implement. If you don't you'll become the bottleneck and prevent your own business from growing. Brian Creager shares how he's planning to avoid those issues as his business grows to $50 million, on this episode of Freedom Fast Lane. When is the right time to find outside capital to scale your business? There are points in the lifecycle of every business when the things needed to grow require more capital in order to establish and implement them. But it can become a vicious cycle if the generation of the capital is dependent on the growth… and it happens in almost every business at some point. On this episode, Ryan asks Brian Creager how he's planning to build his business to $50 million and if that includes the use of outside capital. Brian's got a very wise and refreshing perspective you'll only hear on this episode. Could you build a successful business by acquiring already successful product brands? One of the things that has come across Ryan Moran's radar lately is the approach of buying successful product brands, maximizing the existing systems that make the business successful, then letting it run and purchasing another. With that in mind, he asked his guest, Brian Creager, if he's considering the acquisition of other brands in order to build out his own business empire. You'll hear how Brian is approaching the possibility of purchasing existing businesses and why he believes it's an issue of individual interest, talent, and preference, on this episode. Outline Of This Great Episode [0:25] The mental mindset that changed Brian Creager's business in big ways. [4:11] The more products you bolt onto your private label business, the more it grows. [8:00] How outsider input gave Brian better insight into how his business could increase. [12:06] Brian's plan to become the Procter and Gamble of the online space. [13:55] The things that will enable Brian to become that kind of company. [17:45] Brian's perspective about getting outside capital to grow the business. [19:55] Moving the Amazon success to outside sales channels. [22:45] The hiring process Brian is implementing to find the best team members. [28:10] The things Brian expects he will have to master to reach his $50m goal. [32:27] Brian's perspective on buying already successful brands. [33:46] How you can connect with Brian. Action Steps From This Episode FOR GETTING STARTED: You've got to start with your mindset. What you believe are your limitations are exactly what WILL BE your limitations. You've got to learn how to think bigger and believe bigger. FOR GREATER SUCCESS: Build the business in such a way that you can establish systems that others can learn, take over, and implement. Without it you'll become the bottleneck and prevent your own business from growing. Connect With Today's guest: Brian Creager Website: www.BrianCreager.com On Twitter On Facebook Connect With Freedom Fast Lane Live Website: www.FreedomFastLane.com On Youtube On Facebook On Twitter On Google Plus On LinkedIn On Instagram Subscribe to Freedom Fast Lane Subscribe to the Freedom Fast Lane Podcast with Ryan Daniel Moran
Brian Creager is a Freedom Fast Lane Tribe member who has done exactly what we hope every member will do – succeed in spades... The post Turning A Physical Product Business Into A 100 Million Dollar Empire with Brian Creager appeared first on Freedom Fast Lane.
Crowdfunding Uncut | Kickstarter| Indiegogo | Where Entrepreneurs Get Funded
Wondering how to get product validation and calculate your costs? Today’s conversation with Brian Creager is a great place to get started. In three years, Brian went from $500 a month to $250,000 a month! Listen to this episode to hear Brian’s expert advice about how to find a product, how to tap into the market for that product, and how to discover costs and set prices. If you want to crowdfund a product and sell online, you need to listen to this episode! How do you know if your product will sell? Your first step for selling your product is to see if it will sell. But how do you know what type of product to choose? In today’s episode, Brian Creager describes product types and gives wise advice about how to choose products when you are getting started. Something truly innovative? A product similar to others out there, that does it better, faster, cheaper? Where is your best chance for success? Get answers to these questions and more in today’s podcast on product validation. Product validation: Is there a market for your product? You will want to figure out whether or not your product can sell it before you go to the time and expense of making it. But how do you know? In this episode, Brian Creager talks about the steps he takes to validate his products, how to find out the size of your potential market, and how market information influences the choices that he makes about what products to sell. You won’t want to miss Brian’s expert advice about validating your product before launching! Three things to consider before launching a product What are the necessary steps involved with launching a new product? What aspects of a new product should be evaluated before moving forward? Amazon marketing expert Brian Creager shares in this episode four steps that he takes in the process of launching a new product, and how he grades ideas on three specific aspects of the product to help with product validation. This information is invaluable for anyone seeking to market products online. Don’t miss it! Consider other experts in your field as resources, not competition Connections work. Seek out others who sell products similar to yours. Does that sound scary to you? In this episode, Brian Creager, founder and owner of The Product Hatchery, explains the valuable resource that others in your field can be when you start to see them as resources instead of competition. Listen to this podcast and discover how to connect with others in a way that helps you be more effective in the way you launch your product, and less afraid of the competition. Outline of This Episode [0:19] Intro to this episode on product validation: how to find out if your product will sell. [2:17] Intro to Brian Creager, how he got started selling on Amazon, and how quickly his business grew. [05:05] Product validation: Is there a market for your product? [6:14] What is the first step to selling on Amazon? [11:00] How do I find a product that will sell on [13:43] Four stages of a product launch, and three aspects to grade when deciding on a product. [19:12] Thoughts about emotional attachment. [20:25] How you can do cost analysis. [24:01] Consider other experts in your field as resources, not competition. [27:36] Brian Creager’s perspective on products that fail. [ 30:12] One thing Brian Creager would have done differently if he could. Resources Mentioned Briancreager.com The Product Hatchery Sponsors BackerKit - use the code “uncut” to get your discount Gadget Flow
Spencer Drate The Indie Cafe & Holly Stephey Red Velvet Media talk to John Cafiero Punk rock musician, producer, director, writer, artist, manager of icons & indie record label CEO. Osaka Popstar is the pop-punk music and art project of singer/producer John Cafiero, long-time Misfits & Ramones collaborator & platinum selling film and video director. His critically acclaimed debut album, (the 2006 release entitled “Osaka Popstar & the American Legends of Punk”) features frontman Cafiero with a revolving lineup of punk-rock legends as guests in his backing band including members of the Misfits, Ramones, Black Flag, the Voidoids and more. Cafiero’s recent team up with Rasputina’s Melora Creager for a unique rendering of the Rolling Stones’ classic tale of addiction, "Mother's Little Helper" (2014). The latter finds Cafiero on backing vocals, guitars, keys and percussion with Creager on lead vocals and cello.Cafiero’s longstanding collaborations with the Misfits (from both a business and creative perspective) remain consistent with releases through the label imprint Misfits Records. Among other endeavors Cafiero edited the book “Commando: the Autobiography of Johnny Ramone” (and contributed an afterword), directed the chart-topping “Ramones Raw” DVD, manages the Estate of punk icon Dee Dee Ramone (as well as the legendary Misfits), and directed the modern day cult-classic film “Big Money Hustlas” starring the Insane Clown Posse, Rudy Ray Moore , WWE’s Mick Foley, & the Jerky Boys. Two brand new singles from Osaka Popstar (“Hopping Ghosts” and “O Holy Night”) are OUT NOW with a corresponding Ltd Ed. vinyl figure and Deluxe Glass Ornament available respectively. Two additional tracks have already been recorded for a forthcoming compilation; a new full-length album is in the works for 2015 & more.
$500,000 is the richest pay day in professional bass fishing and Anthony Gagliardi took home the winning check by claiming the FLW Forrest Wood Cup Championship in August. The 2006 FLW Angler of the Year got off to rough start this season, even being disqualified from the first FLW Tour event of the year. He [...]
$500,000 is the richest pay day in professional bass fishing and Anthony Gagliardi took home the winning check by claiming the FLW Forrest Wood Cup Championship in August. The 2006 FLW Angler of the Year got off to rough start this season, even being disqualified from the first FLW Tour event of the year. He [...]
Angela Creager‘s deeply researched and elegantly written new book is a must-read account of the history of science in twentieth-century America. Life Atomic: A History of Radioisotopes in Science and Medicine (University of Chicago Press, 2013) traces a history of radioisotopes as military and civilian objects, for experimentation and therapeutic use, from the 1930s through the late twentieth century. Creager follows the emergence of a political and economic market for radioisotopes, looking carefully at their use as controversial political instruments, as representations of the benefits of atomic energy for US citizens, and as commodities. After six chapters that trace these broader contexts of the production and circulation of radioisotopes, the second half of the book offers a set of fascinating case studies that explore representative users and uses of the technology in biochemistry, molecular biology, medicine, and ecology. Aspects of the story touch on the history of scientific and medical research using human and animal subjects, the early history of radiation therapy, and the history of ecology and environmental science. Not only is it a historiographically important and meticulously crafted work based on exhaustive research, but it's also a great set of stories. The pages of Life Atomic are full of guinea pigs, scientific vaudeville, and stories and characters from many different fields of the modern life sciences, expertly weaving them together into a compelling set of arguments. Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Angela Creager‘s deeply researched and elegantly written new book is a must-read account of the history of science in twentieth-century America. Life Atomic: A History of Radioisotopes in Science and Medicine (University of Chicago Press, 2013) traces a history of radioisotopes as military and civilian objects, for experimentation and therapeutic use, from the 1930s through the late twentieth century. Creager follows the emergence of a political and economic market for radioisotopes, looking carefully at their use as controversial political instruments, as representations of the benefits of atomic energy for US citizens, and as commodities. After six chapters that trace these broader contexts of the production and circulation of radioisotopes, the second half of the book offers a set of fascinating case studies that explore representative users and uses of the technology in biochemistry, molecular biology, medicine, and ecology. Aspects of the story touch on the history of scientific and medical research using human and animal subjects, the early history of radiation therapy, and the history of ecology and environmental science. Not only is it a historiographically important and meticulously crafted work based on exhaustive research, but it's also a great set of stories. The pages of Life Atomic are full of guinea pigs, scientific vaudeville, and stories and characters from many different fields of the modern life sciences, expertly weaving them together into a compelling set of arguments. Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Angela Creager‘s deeply researched and elegantly written new book is a must-read account of the history of science in twentieth-century America. Life Atomic: A History of Radioisotopes in Science and Medicine (University of Chicago Press, 2013) traces a history of radioisotopes as military and civilian objects, for experimentation and therapeutic use, from the 1930s through the late twentieth century. Creager follows the emergence of a political and economic market for radioisotopes, looking carefully at their use as controversial political instruments, as representations of the benefits of atomic energy for US citizens, and as commodities. After six chapters that trace these broader contexts of the production and circulation of radioisotopes, the second half of the book offers a set of fascinating case studies that explore representative users and uses of the technology in biochemistry, molecular biology, medicine, and ecology. Aspects of the story touch on the history of scientific and medical research using human and animal subjects, the early history of radiation therapy, and the history of ecology and environmental science. Not only is it a historiographically important and meticulously crafted work based on exhaustive research, but it's also a great set of stories. The pages of Life Atomic are full of guinea pigs, scientific vaudeville, and stories and characters from many different fields of the modern life sciences, expertly weaving them together into a compelling set of arguments. Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/medicine
Angela Creager‘s deeply researched and elegantly written new book is a must-read account of the history of science in twentieth-century America. Life Atomic: A History of Radioisotopes in Science and Medicine (University of Chicago Press, 2013) traces a history of radioisotopes as military and civilian objects, for experimentation and therapeutic use, from the 1930s through the late twentieth century. Creager follows the emergence of a political and economic market for radioisotopes, looking carefully at their use as controversial political instruments, as representations of the benefits of atomic energy for US citizens, and as commodities. After six chapters that trace these broader contexts of the production and circulation of radioisotopes, the second half of the book offers a set of fascinating case studies that explore representative users and uses of the technology in biochemistry, molecular biology, medicine, and ecology. Aspects of the story touch on the history of scientific and medical research using human and animal subjects, the early history of radiation therapy, and the history of ecology and environmental science. Not only is it a historiographically important and meticulously crafted work based on exhaustive research, but it’s also a great set of stories. The pages of Life Atomic are full of guinea pigs, scientific vaudeville, and stories and characters from many different fields of the modern life sciences, expertly weaving them together into a compelling set of arguments. Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Angela Creager‘s deeply researched and elegantly written new book is a must-read account of the history of science in twentieth-century America. Life Atomic: A History of Radioisotopes in Science and Medicine (University of Chicago Press, 2013) traces a history of radioisotopes as military and civilian objects, for experimentation and therapeutic use, from the 1930s through the late twentieth century. Creager follows the emergence of a political and economic market for radioisotopes, looking carefully at their use as controversial political instruments, as representations of the benefits of atomic energy for US citizens, and as commodities. After six chapters that trace these broader contexts of the production and circulation of radioisotopes, the second half of the book offers a set of fascinating case studies that explore representative users and uses of the technology in biochemistry, molecular biology, medicine, and ecology. Aspects of the story touch on the history of scientific and medical research using human and animal subjects, the early history of radiation therapy, and the history of ecology and environmental science. Not only is it a historiographically important and meticulously crafted work based on exhaustive research, but it’s also a great set of stories. The pages of Life Atomic are full of guinea pigs, scientific vaudeville, and stories and characters from many different fields of the modern life sciences, expertly weaving them together into a compelling set of arguments. Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Angela Creager‘s deeply researched and elegantly written new book is a must-read account of the history of science in twentieth-century America. Life Atomic: A History of Radioisotopes in Science and Medicine (University of Chicago Press, 2013) traces a history of radioisotopes as military and civilian objects, for experimentation and therapeutic use, from the 1930s through the late twentieth century. Creager follows the emergence of a political and economic market for radioisotopes, looking carefully at their use as controversial political instruments, as representations of the benefits of atomic energy for US citizens, and as commodities. After six chapters that trace these broader contexts of the production and circulation of radioisotopes, the second half of the book offers a set of fascinating case studies that explore representative users and uses of the technology in biochemistry, molecular biology, medicine, and ecology. Aspects of the story touch on the history of scientific and medical research using human and animal subjects, the early history of radiation therapy, and the history of ecology and environmental science. Not only is it a historiographically important and meticulously crafted work based on exhaustive research, but it’s also a great set of stories. The pages of Life Atomic are full of guinea pigs, scientific vaudeville, and stories and characters from many different fields of the modern life sciences, expertly weaving them together into a compelling set of arguments. Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Angela Creager‘s deeply researched and elegantly written new book is a must-read account of the history of science in twentieth-century America. Life Atomic: A History of Radioisotopes in Science and Medicine (University of Chicago Press, 2013) traces a history of radioisotopes as military and civilian objects, for experimentation and therapeutic... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Mark Anderson is a freelance journalist and wrote a book called . He and his friend, are both “.” I know so little about Shakespeare, and I don’t really have a horse in this race, that I’m convinced. Perhaps the other side can be represented another episode! His book is amazing. Enjoy this ep. I really did. Now hosting the Podcast under it’s awesome umbrella: DONATE folks… I’m working over here. or NOTES: (and the rest) – see this movie, Rangers. We could have talked another hour… I had to end it. Sorry. Find them. Credits: Audio leveling by Music is by Website design by : who has his own Apps are available with the bonus contest: or
Roger Creager is not known for sitting still. It seems he's always off on one adventure or another...wherever his music and his passions take him. He never strays far from his South Texas roots, which has earned him countless fans in the Lone Star state, and he's gaining fans around the world wherever he plays. We had a chance tocatch up with him at a soundcheck before a show at Nashville's Exit In to learn all about his style of music.
Wednesday Funday, Ridin' with Rosehill - Stories from the fun night of music at the Ten Man Jam Afterparty at Firehouse Saloon, and more from Mitch McBain and Blake Myers of Rosehill in this week's podcast. Ridin' with Rosehill is a weekly podcast from Mitch McBain and Blake Myers - the duo that makes up Rosehill. Rosehill is a phenomenon of the best Country Rock Music talent, determination and solidplatinum- to-come. With artist and producer, Radney Foster selecting them as his protégés and producing their album "White Lines and Stars," you know these guys are the real deal! Subscribe to get updates each week and follow the guys on Facebook too: www.facebook.com/rosehilllive