Podcast appearances and mentions of Dan Phillips

  • 67PODCASTS
  • 154EPISODES
  • 1h 2mAVG DURATION
  • 1MONTHLY NEW EPISODE
  • Mar 17, 2025LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about Dan Phillips

Latest podcast episodes about Dan Phillips

Current Gen
New Trailers and 90s Gaming Commercials [Episode 263]

Current Gen

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2025 130:59


In this episode, Dan Phillips joins Tim & Kyle to talk about the latest gaming headlines, including 2 major new trailers for Silent Hill f and Death Stranding 2. We also talk about Red Dead Redemption 2, Split Fiction, AI gaming help from Microsoft, and Moon Studios going independent to publish No Rest for the Wicked. We close things out with a walk down memory lane to revisit some 90s gaming commercials.VIDEO Podcast: YouTube or SpotifyAUDIO Podcast: Apple or search for us wherever you like to listen!

Wedding Secrets Unveiled!
103. Our Thoughts on Wedding Content Creation with Host Sara Zarrella and Co-Host & Producer Dan Phillips

Wedding Secrets Unveiled!

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2025 54:15


Wedding Content Creation is a brand new addition to the wedding industry! On today's episode of Wedding Secrets Unveiled!, Host Sara Zarrella and Co-Host & Producer Dan Phillips dive into the pros and potential drawbacks of hiring a Social Media Content Creator for your wedding. Join them as they share unfiltered insights, along with tips and tricks for finding the perfect professional to document your big day from this fresh and unique perspective! Please rate, review and subscribe to this podcast wherever you're listening so you never miss an episode. Even better share it with a friend! It's a great way to show your support and let us know what you think. Thank you for listening. To get the full show notes head to https://sarazarrella.com/2025/01/wedding-content-creation-chat/ For more information check out our website at www.sarazarrella.com/podcast Join our Monthly Newsletter for tips, tricks and Freebies! https://sarazarrella.com/newsletter Would love to be friends on the gram at https://www.instagram.com/sarazarrellaphotography/

Current Gen
The Plucky Squire | Frostpunk 2 | Visions of Mana [Episode 238]

Current Gen

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2024 165:00


Dan and Tim are joined by Dan Phillips to talk Frostpunk 2, UFO 50, Visions of Mana - and Jeff reappears to talk about The Plucky Squire and Astro Bot! We also discuss Nintendo's ridiculous lawsuit against Pocket Pair and Sony's $400 million dollar catastrophe. VIDEO Podcast: YouTube or Spotify AUDIO Podcast: Apple or search for us wherever you like to listen!

Wedding Secrets Unveiled!
87. A Look Inside Dan's Wedding with Host Sara Zarrella & Co-Host and Producer Dan Phillips

Wedding Secrets Unveiled!

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2024 62:39


We have a VERY special episode of Wedding Secrets Unveiled! for you today. Our very own Dan the Man, Podcast Producer, and Wedding Photographer is now a married man! Sorry, ladies! Today Dan and Sara talk through all the aspects of Dan's recent nuptials. From why they chose to host a daytime wedding to transforming their out-of-the-box venue, Dan shares all about marrying the lovely Brittany! So sit back, relax, and be inspired to plan the wedding that truly reflects your love story! Please rate, review and subscribe to this podcast wherever you're listening so you never miss an episode. Even better share it with a friend! It's a great way to show your support and let us know what you think. Thank you for listening. To get the full show notes head to https://sarazarrella.com/2024/06/an-inside-look-at-dans-greenwich-ri-wedding/ For more information check out our website at www.sarazarrella.com/podcast Join our Monthly Newsletter for tips, tricks and Freebies! https://sarazarrella.com/newsletter Would love to be friends on the gram at https://www.instagram.com/sarazarrellaphotography/

Veterinary Vibes
The Mentorship Equation: Key Steps to thrive in Veterinary Medicine W/ Dr. Dan Phillips Eps. 15

Veterinary Vibes

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2024 59:31


Info: ⁠⁠https://linktr.ee/veterinaryvibespodcast The Mentorship Equation: Key Steps to thrive in Veterinary Medicine W/ Dr. Dan Phillips Eps. 15 Dr. Phillips email: Daniel.Phillips@Mvetpartners.com Introduction: Welcome to another insightful episode of Veterinary Vibes! Today, we're diving deep into the nuances of role utilization, mentorship dynamics, and what it takes to excel in veterinary practice. Joining us is Dr. Dan Phillips, a seasoned veterinarian with a wealth of experience to share. Key Discussion Points: Importance of Role Utilization: Dr. Phillips underscores the critical importance of role utilization within veterinary practices. By understanding each team member's strengths and effectively delegating tasks, practices can optimize efficiency and enhance overall productivity. Mentor-Mentee Relationships: Our conversation explores the dynamics of mentorship, emphasizing the reciprocal benefits for both mentors and mentees. Dr. Phillips offers insights into cultivating meaningful mentorship relationships that foster professional growth and development. Qualities of a Great Veterinarian: Reflecting on what sets exceptional veterinarians apart, we delve into the essential qualities that define greatness in the field. Dr. Phillips emphasizes the importance of empathy, communication skills, and clinical proficiency in delivering outstanding veterinary care. Navigating the Job Search: Offering guidance for veterinarians embarking on their job search, we discuss strategies for finding the right opportunities. Dr. Phillips shares tips for identifying potential red flags in job postings and evaluating whether a position aligns with one's career goals and values. Asking the Right Questions: Both employers and employees can benefit from asking insightful, open-ended questions during the hiring process. We explore the importance of going beyond "yes" or "no" queries, encouraging employers to delve into candidates' experiences and aspirations, and candidates to inquire about practice culture and opportunities for growth. Identifying Red Flags: Dr. Phillips provides pointers for recognizing potential red flags during the job search, such as unclear job descriptions or turnover rates. By asking probing questions and conducting thorough research, veterinarians can avoid potentially problematic positions and find roles that align with their career objectives. Conclusion: As we wrap up this episode of Veterinary Vibes, we extend our gratitude to Dr. Dan Phillips for sharing his expertise on role utilization, mentorship, and what it takes to thrive in veterinary practice. Join us next time as we continue to explore the multifaceted world of veterinary medicine and the pathways to success within it. Email: VeterinaryVibesPodcast@gmail.com --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/veterinary-vibes/support

Didache
Episode 125: Alistair Begg Defends His Advice: A Pastoral Reply

Didache

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2024 49:10


In September of 2023, Alistair Begg advised a Christian grandmother that she should attend the wedding of her "transexual" homosexual grandson (or granddaughter - this changes with different tellings of the story) and even give a gift in honor of it. This caused an immense controversy in evangelical circles. On January 28, in an evening service sermon (linked below), Alistair addressed the controversy and defended his advice. He largely employed the parable of the prodigal son in Luke 15 as his scriptural defense. In today's podcast, I talk with pastor Dan Phillips and he gives us a pastoral review of Alistair's defense of a Christian attending a homosexual/trans wedding. Link to Copperfield Bible Church in Houston, TX, pastored by Dan Link to Dan's books: The World Tilting Gospel God's Wisdom in Proverbs  Link to Alistair's sermon in which he defended his advice ✅

Christian Podcast Community
Episode 125: Alistair Begg Defends His Advice: A Pastoral Reply

Christian Podcast Community

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2024 49:10


In September of 2023, Alistair Begg advised a Christian grandmother that she should attend the wedding of her "transexual" homosexual grandson (or granddaughter - this changes with different tellings of the story) and even give a gift in honor of it. This caused an immense controversy in evangelical circles. On January 28, in an evening service sermon (linked below), Alistair addressed the controversy and defended his advice. He largely employed the parable of the prodigal son in Luke 15 as his scriptural defense. In today's podcast, I talk with pastor Dan Phillips and he gives us a pastoral review of Alistair's defense of a Christian attending a homosexual/trans wedding. Link to Copperfield Bible Church in Houston, TX, pastored by Dan Link to Dan's books: The World Tilting Gospel God's Wisdom in Proverbs  Link to Alistair's sermon in which he defended his advice ✅

Do Not Scratch Your Eyes
TWITTER SPACE - PART 2 BRISTOL CITY 1 - 1 WATFORD

Do Not Scratch Your Eyes

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2024 50:07


After a couple of false starts we get to speak to Kevin living in Scotland who had been to Airdrie vs St Johnstone who gives us a report Dan Phillips now at St Johnstone and is immediately given Ambassador status for Scotland and gives us a tip for a Hearts striker looking to leave who will be a free agent in the summer!! A fine start ambassador!We finally get “Badly Drawn Watford” on having gone head to head with Banksy in Bristol (Banksy bottled it) in the artist shoot out and on the football side of things thinks the squad look tired (when he wasn't in the bar!). John joins us having dropped his daughter off and tells us about trying and failing to get transfer targets from Man City and we talk about Martins and Asprilla, we give an update on the prediction league (for all the people not bothered about it!).Chris joins us from Whitechapel having had to attend college on Saturdays and asks that we should now stop calling “Giorgi” - “Dave”. Pete explains that “Dave” isn't a show of disrespect but Chris thinks that Giorgi Chakvetadze has earned the right to be called by his own name – fair play. We then decide we will blow the transfer budget into turning Ken Sema into the Bionic man!We go to the 5 word reviews before speaking to Mal about his upcoming 65th birthday and discuss what circus skills we should force Carl to learn (Fired out of a cannon seemed quite appealing!)Thank you to everyone who contributes in all the different ways - you're all brilliant!COYH!This Podcast has been created and uploaded by Do Not Scratch Your Eyes. The views in this Podcast are not necessarily the views of talkSPORT.Huge thanks to all our Patreons:Chris Giannone,RichWFC2,Steve Holliman,Paul Fiander Turner,Sean Gourley,Lee Anselmo,John Parslow,Mark von Herkomer,Neil Silverstein,Steve Brown,Dave Lavender,Kasey Brown,Nipper Harrison,Boyd Mayover,Colin Payne,Paul Riley,Gary Wood,Karl Campion,Kevin Kremen,The Big Le – Bofski,Greg Theaker,Malcolm Williams,Bryan Edwards,Peter Ryan,Luka,John Thekanady - Ambassador of Dubai!!Jack Foster,Jason Rose,Michael Abrahams,Ian Bacon,Ken Green,Nick Nieuwland,Colin SmithAnt!!!!!& PDF Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Horn Call Podcast
Holiday Bonus Episode: Allison DeMeulle and Johanna Lundy

The Horn Call Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2023 25:29


  Join me in the 2023 Holiday Bonus Episode for a chat with Allison DeMeulle, IHS Interim Executive Director, and Johanna Lundy, IHS Treasurer and member of the Advisory Council. Episode Highlights How the IHS works; overview of the past year Allison's transition to Interim Executive Director of the IHS What does the IHS Treasurer do? Overview of IHS programs (what do membership dues and other contributions help fund?) Role of social media, Social Media Coordinator position How can someone's contributions help the IHS? Revamping awards and scholarships programs New website at hornsociety.org Shout out to Dan Phillips! Fellowship and community are important Reaching out to horn players around the world Benefits to joining the IHS, how to join, how to help support the IHS: https://www.hornsociety.org/donate Student advisory council Shout out to the Advisory Council! Shout out to Mike Harcrow and the editors at Horn and More!

Wedding Secrets Unveiled!
67. What We Think of These 2023 Trends with Host Sara Zarrella and Co-host & Producer Dan Phillips

Wedding Secrets Unveiled!

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2023 27:07


We are wrapping up our mini-series on all things wedding photography, and on today's episode, Sara and Dan are discussing trends that they have seen coming and going in 2023! From photography styles to timeline tips, these two industry experts give their advice on what should stay and what should go out of style. Sara and Dan have been photographing weddings together for over 20 years, and that much experience will teach you a few things! Tune in to today's episode to see which trends are worth implementing and which are worth leaving in the past. Please rate, review and subscribe to this podcast wherever you're listening so you never miss an episode. Even better share it with a friend! It's a great way to show your support and let us know what you think. Thank you for listening. To get the full show notes head to https://sarazarrella.com/2023/09/what-we-think-of-these-2023-wedding-trends-interview-wedding-secrets-unveiled-podcast/ For more information check out our website at www.sarazarrella.com/podcast Join our Monthly Newsletter for tips, tricks and Freebies! https://sarazarrella.com/newsletter Would love to be friends on the gram at https://www.instagram.com/sarazarrellaphotography/

English Academic Vocabulary Booster
4707. 251 Academic Words Reference from "Dan Phillips: Creative houses from reclaimed stuff | TED Talk"

English Academic Vocabulary Booster

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2023 222:58


This podcast is a commentary and does not contain any copyrighted material of the reference source. We strongly recommend accessing/buying the reference source at the same time. ■Reference Source https://www.ted.com/talks/dan_phillips_creative_houses_from_reclaimed_stuff ■Post on this topic (You can get FREE learning materials!) https://englist.me/251-academic-words-reference-from-dan-phillips-creative-houses-from-reclaimed-stuff-ted-talk/ ■Youtube Video https://youtu.be/XeStdC6OWr4 (All Words) https://youtu.be/m5PHE_SET7g (Advanced Words) https://youtu.be/ij3L4YWLp0w (Quick Look) ■Top Page for Further Materials https://englist.me/ ■SNS (Please follow!)

Wedding Secrets Unveiled!
66. Rapid Fire Tips with Host Sara Zarrella and Co-host & Producer Dan Phillips

Wedding Secrets Unveiled!

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2023 40:38


After over 20 years in the wedding industry, Sara and Dan have experienced just about every wedding day situation you can imagine. (Knock on wood!) And with that much experience, you pick up a few tips and tricks along the way. Today on Wedding Secrets Unveiled!, Sara and Dan are delivering a myriad of random nuggets of wisdom just for you! This is the second episode of three in a mini-series on wedding photography. So sit back, relax, and who knows? Maybe one of these rapid-fire tips will save you from recreating one of the less-than-ideal situations Sara and Dan have experienced! Please rate, review and subscribe to this podcast wherever you're listening so you never miss an episode. Even better share it with a friend! It's a great way to show your support and let us know what you think. Thank you for listening. To get the full show notes head to https://sarazarrella.com/2023/08/rapid-fire-tips-for-your-wedding-day/ For more information check out our website at www.sarazarrella.com/podcast Join our Monthly Newsletter for tips, tricks and Freebies! https://sarazarrella.com/newsletter Would love to be friends on the gram at https://www.instagram.com/sarazarrellaphotography/

Dead Men Walking Podcast
Noah Wing: Three Books Every Young Man Should Read

Dead Men Walking Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2023 63:06


This week Greg had Noah Wing in studio. Noah is a worship leader at Christ the Word Church and creative student at New Saint Andrews College. We discussed three books every young man should read, leading worship and music, and the state of both christian and secular art. It was a fun episode. Enjoy! Noah's article in Mere OrthodoxyBooks we discussed:Noah's Books:Robison CrusoeHenry VRevival & RevivalismGreg's Books:Thoughts for Young MenHow to Exasperate You WifeGod's Wisdom in ProverbsCovenant Real Estate: "Confidence from Contract to Close" Support the showFacebook Page: Dead Men Walking PodcastInstagram: @deadmenwalkingpodcastThreads: @deadmenwalkingpodcastTwitter: @RealDMWPodcastCheck out our snarky merch HERE

Wedding Secrets Unveiled!
65. All Things Wedding Photography with Host Sara Zarrella and Co-host & Producer Dan Phillips

Wedding Secrets Unveiled!

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2023 60:54


Finally! We are giving you one jam-packed episode on all things wedding photography! As two wedding photographers for over 20 years, boiling down all of our experience and information into a single podcast episode has been a daunting task. Well, Sara and Dan are finally sitting down to answer all your questions about wedding photography in episode one of a three-part mini-series! Should you have engagement photos taken by your wedding photographer? What does photography pricing look like? What can you expect from your photographer on and after your wedding day? Sara and Dan answer all these questions and more on today's episode of Wedding Secrets Unveiled! Please rate, review and subscribe to this podcast wherever you're listening so you never miss an episode. Even better share it with a friend! It's a great way to show your support and let us know what you think. Thank you for listening. To get the full show notes head to https://sarazarrella.com/2023/08/all-things-wedding-photography/ For more information check out our website at www.sarazarrella.com/podcast Join our Monthly Newsletter for tips, tricks and Freebies! https://sarazarrella.com/newsletter Would love to be friends on the gram at https://www.instagram.com/sarazarrellaphotography/

Christian Podcast Community
[Echo Zoe Radio Replay] Dan Phillips: The World-Tilting Gospel

Christian Podcast Community

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2023 74:14


"These men who have turned the world upside down have come here also, and Jason has received them, and they are all acting against the decrees of Caesar, saying that there is another king, Jesus." - Acts 17:6b-7 ESV Dan Phillips is pastor of Copperfield Bible Church in Houston, Texas. He has a Master of Divinity from Talbot Theological Seminary. He also writes for the collaborative blog Pyromaniacs, and his own blog, Biblical Christianity. He's the author of two books, The World-Tilting Gospel, and God's Wisdom in Proverbs." I've had in mind to ask Dan for an interview for Echo Zoe Radio for quite some time. His book The World-Tilting Gospel is a wonderful read, about the most dear subject to any Christian's heart: the Gospel. For this episode, Dan and I discussed the book, and through it, the Gospel. An Outline of the Discussion The Gospel is not just about an experience, it's really about truth. That truth is grounded in a worldview, and really begins with Genesis 1:1, and not John 3:16. "Our task today is to tell people — who no longer know what sin is, no longer have the categories to understand it, no longer see themselves as sinners, and no longer have room for these categories in their non-moral universe — that Christ died for sins of which they do not think they’re guilty." - David Wells, Founder's Conference, Tulsa, OK, June 2007 Our dire situation begins in the Garden of Eden, as Adam and Eve committed the first sin by disobeying God and partaking of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil as they were commanded not to.This act changed their very nature, and their worldview. That corrupted worldview and nature persists to this very day, and every one of us (their descendants) are born into this corrupted nature and worldview. God had in mind all along to remedy the situation. Dan illustrates the true nature of our predicament through the analogy of a man in an operating room in a hospital, with teams of doctors working hard to save him. If we saw such a thing, we'd know that his situation is dire. With that mindset, we look to the cross, where the Son of God had to die in order to save us from our sin. We look to the serious nature of the remedy to truly understand the seriousness of the situation. The nature of apostasy shows that a person never truly understood the serious nature of his own sin, or of the remedy that was required to save him from it. Penal substitutionary atonement is first introduced in Genesis 3 (not Romans 3), when God made a blood sacrifice to cover the guilt of sinners (Adam and Eve). The Old Testament sacrificial system provided a daily, visual reminder of the nature of sin. As the Israelites saw the bloody sacrifices taking place at the Temple, they were to associate the blood shed with their own sins; that blood was necessary to cover the guilt of their sins. Isaiah 52:13-53:12, written 700 years before Christ, gave a detailed description of the suffering of one man for the sins of the elect. Justification and regeneration are two "towering truths" that come out of the Gospel. Justification deals with our horrible record (our guilt), and regeneration deals with our horrible nature (our . Faith has three elements to it: hearing truth, understanding that it is true, and entrusting ourselves to it. Salvation doesn't begin by making the "right decision," it begins with God raising dead sinners to life. Dan addresses three people with a faulty approach to the Gospel: Gutless Gracers, Crisis Upgraders, and Muzzy Mystics. Gutless Gracers are people who subscribe to a view called "Free Grace." It's not that they are gutless, but their view of grace is gutless. In effect, their view of grace does little to nothing. Crisis Upgraders have a view that they can "upgrade" their Christian life through some sudden experience. Keswick is a non-charismatic view that you can upgrade your standing as a Christ...

Echo Zoe Radio
[Replay] Dan Phillips: The World-Tilting Gospel

Echo Zoe Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2023 74:14


“These men who have turned the world upside down have come here also, and Jason has received them, and they are all acting against the decrees of Caesar, saying that there is another king, Jesus.” – Acts 17:6b-7 ESV Dan Phillips is pastor of Copperfield Bible Church in Houston, Texas. He has a Master of […]

Didache
Episode 97: The Inigo Montoya Series: Proverbs 22:6 – Raise Up A Child In The Way He Should Go?

Didache

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2023 34:30


Proverbs 22:6 says, “Train up a child in the way he should go and when he is old, he will not depart from it.” The way in which this is typically taught is that if you raise your child to know and fear God, he will stay on the straight and narrow for the rest of his life. Dan Phillips, however, explains that that is not the meaning of this verse - at all. **At 13:25 the chapter and verse reference is incorrect. It should be Proverbs 19:27. My sincere apologies. Copperfield Bible Church God's Wisdom In Proverbs The World Tilting Gospel ✅

Christian Podcast Community
Episode 97: The Inigo Montoya Series: Proverbs 22:6 – Raise Up A Child In The Way He Should Go?

Christian Podcast Community

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2023 34:30


Proverbs 22:6 says, “Train up a child in the way he should go and when he is old, he will not depart from it.” The way in which this is typically taught is that if you raise your child to know and fear God, he will stay on the straight and narrow for the rest of his life. Dan Phillips, however, explains that that is not the meaning of this verse - at all. **At 13:25 the chapter and verse reference is incorrect. It should be Proverbs 19:27. My sincere apologies. Copperfield Bible Church God's Wisdom In Proverbs The World Tilting Gospel ✅

Mid South Moments
NJPW Wrestle Kingdom 17

Mid South Moments

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2023 53:52


Dan Phillips (@danpffc) joins me for a run down of the biggest show of the year from Japan - Wrestle Kingdom 17. IWGP World Heavyweight Title Match Kazuchika Okada vs. Jay White (c) IWGP United States Heavyweight Title Match Kenny Omega vs. Will Ospreay (c) IWGP Junior Heavyweight Title Fatal 4 Way El Desperado vs. Master Wato vs. Hiromu Takahashi vs. Taiji Ishimori (c) Keiji Muto's Final Match In NJPW Keiji Muto, Hiroshi Tanahashi, and Shota Umino vs. Tetsuya Naito, SANADA, and BUSHI NEVER Openweight Title Match Tama Tonga vs. Karl Anderson (c) Tournament Finals for the Inaugural NJPW World Television Title Ren Narita vs. Zack Sabre Jr. IWGP Tag Team Titles Match Hirooki Goto and YOSHI-HASHI vs. FTR (c) IWGP Women's Title Match Tam Nakano vs. Kairi (c) IWGP Junior Heavyweight Tag Team Titles Match Lio Rush and YOH vs. TJP and Francesco Akira (c)

The Horn Call Podcast
2022 Holiday Bonus Episode: Alan Civil

The Horn Call Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2022 62:59


I'm excited to share another Holiday Bonus Episode of The Horn Call Podcast! This one features a lecture given by IHS Honorary Member Alan Civil at the 4th International Horn Symposium in 1972 at Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana. A few editorial notes about this archival audio: Thanks to Dan Phillips for providing the audio file! This recording is 50 years old, and while adequate, the quality is spotty in a few places. I've done what I can to clean it up, and it is pretty clear overall. Mr. Civil's personality and playing come through nicely, which is what matters. The title of the lecture is "Are Conductors Afraid of Horn Players?" The duets at the end were composed by Alan Civil, and performed by Alan Civil and Shirley Hopkins Civil.

Mid South Moments
AEW Full Gear 2022

Mid South Moments

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2022 85:15


Dan Phillips (@danpffc) is back to review AEW's final pay per view offering of 2022. Match card : • Jon Moxley (c) vs. MJF for the AEW World Championship • Chris Jericho (c) vs. Bryan Danielson vs. Claudio Castagnoli vs. Sammy Guevara for the ROH title • Toni Storm (c) vs. Jamie Hayter for the AEW Interim Women's World Championship • The Acclaimed (c) vs. Swerve in our Glory for the AEW World Tag Team titles • Death Triangle (c) vs. The Elite for the Trios Championship • Wardlow (c) vs. Samoa Joe vs. Powerhouse Hobbs for the TNT Title • Jade Cargill (c) vs. Nyla Rose for the TBS Championship • Saraya vs. Dr. Britt Baker • Junge Boy vs. Luchasaurus in a Steel Cage Match • Sting & Darby Allin vs. Jeff Jarrett & Jay Lethal

Kootenai Church: Special Sermons
The Personal Impact of Sufficiency (Selected Scriptures)

Kootenai Church: Special Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2022 47:47


We will get a grip on what the sufficiency of Scripture means, in itself, and what it means to us as believers, in personal application. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Adult Sunday School
The Personal Impact of Sufficiency (Selected Scriptures)

Kootenai Church Adult Sunday School

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2022 47:47


We will get a grip on what the sufficiency of Scripture means, in itself, and what it means to us as believers, in personal application. ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Conferences
Session 5: Charismaticism: A Different Biblical Approach

Kootenai Church Conferences

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2022 42:22


In Galatians, Paul models one excellent way to counter false teaching, whether legalism or Charismaticism: frontal, critical, hammer, and tongs. Paul unmasks the Judaizers as contrary to the Bible in general and the Gospel in particular. Elsewhere, however, the apostle deploys a different weapon from his arsenal. It is that dynamic tactic that will be our focus. | Download worksheetThe Cessationist Conference was made in cooperation with the upcoming Cessationist Film From the makers of the films Calvinist and Logic on Fire. More information at: https://linktr.ee/cessationistfilm ★ Support this podcast ★

Kootenai Church Conferences
Session 8: Round Table Discussion - Jim Osman, Justin Peters, John Samson, and Dan Phillips

Kootenai Church Conferences

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2022 58:40


A discussion about Cessationism and Continuationism. Some of the questions include:  How does one stratify error in categories, like nonessential and secondary? Isn't all error an essential issue? What is the difference or distinction between hearing the voice of God and the illuminating work of the Holy Spirit? How does the Holy Spirit move today outside of the illuminating work? And more… The Cessationist Conference was made in cooperation with the upcoming Cessationist Film From the makers of the films Calvinist and Logic on Fire. More information at: https://linktr.ee/cessationistfilm ★ Support this podcast ★

Mid South Moments
Three from........STING

Mid South Moments

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2022 49:17


Callum Barnes (@callumpbarnes) & Dan Phillips (@danpffc) join me for a look back over THE MAN CALLED STING. We get in our time machines and cover the following famous matches from his illustrious career :  vs Great Muta - NWA World TV title - NWA Power Hour - aired September 1st 1989 w/Lex Luger vs The Steiner Brothers - WCW World tag team title - WCW Superbrawl Return from the Rising Sun - May 19th 1991 vs Big Van Vader - 'King of Cable' tournament final - Starrcade 1992 -December 28th 1992  

Mid South Moments
LIVE AT NJPW ROYAL QUEST 2

Mid South Moments

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2022 68:05


We are loaded with special guests as we bring you our second 'on the road' podcast of 2022 - yes it's New Japan Pro Wrestling's Royal Quest 2 from Crystal Palace's National Sports Centre. This show featured the much anticipated IWGP Tag team title showdown between FTR & Aussie Open, plus Will Ospreay vs Shota Umino, Tetsuya Naito vs ZSJ and much more across two nights. Thanks to the following who appeared :  Callum Barnes (@callumbarnes) Matthew Roberts (@matrob90) Dan Phillips (@danpffc) And a debut cameo from Larysa Dlaboha (@larysa_d)

Mid South Moments
UWF Television Reviews - October 11th & 18th 1986

Mid South Moments

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2022 45:41


Part 1 - recorded August 18th 2022 This was a strange old show, as the video on youtube (https://youtu.be/_QnCvKEXul4) seemed to be some sort of production version with the breaks not cut out and some odd/hilarious commentary from Jim Ross.   It also featured Terry 'Bam Bam' Gordy defending the UWF Heavyweight title against 'Dr Death' Steve Williams.   This week's show is brought to you with Dan Phillips (@danpffc).   Part 2 - recorded September 2nd 2022   Stuart Roberts (@wakefieldcanary) joins me IN PERSON for a review of a UWF television show featuring a 'Country whipping' match main event of Buddy Roberts & Michael Hayes vs Terry Taylor & Ted Dibiase.  

Party of Fore: A Mistwood Golf Club Podcast
McWethy Cup and everything Mistwood with Dan Phillips

Party of Fore: A Mistwood Golf Club Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2022 72:13


Pro Emeritus Dan Phillips has been at Mistwood since the beginning, and was close friends with Jim McWethy. This is an amazing episode for so many reasons...a look back at Jim, and what he built here--along with the new format of the McWethy Cup! Ben also turned Andy and Dan loose on the coaching and teaching chatter...if you listen, you will most likely become a better golfer! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Mid South Moments
AEW All Out 2022

Mid South Moments

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2022 96:56


A full run down of the pay per view and all of the post event drama along with Dan Phillips (@danpffc) The card :  AEW World Championship: Jon Moxley (c) vs. CM Punk Interim AEW Women's Championship: Toni Storm vs. Britt Baker vs. Hikaru Shida vs. Jamie Hayter AEW World Trios Championships: The Elite vs. "Hangman" Adam Page & The Dark Order TBS Championship: Jade Cargill (c) vs. Athena AEW World Tag Team Championships: Swerve In Our Glory (c) vs. The Acclaimed Bryan Danielson vs. Chris Jericho Christian Cage vs. Jungle Boy Casino Ladder Match: Claudio Castagnoli vs. Penta El Zero Miedo vs. Rey Fenix vs. Andrade El Idolo vs. Rush vs. Wheeler Yuta vs. Dante Martin vs. TBA Ricky Starks vs. Powerhouse Hobbs Wardlow & FTR vs. Jay Lethal & Motor City Machine Guns House of Black vs. Sting, Darby Allin & Miro

Mid South Moments
Live from WWE Clash at the Castle

Mid South Moments

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2022 44:37


Dan Phillips (@danpffc), Louis Williams & Stuart Roberts (@wakefieldcanary) join me for 24 hours in the Welsh Capital and the first WWE main roster pay per view in the United Kingdom in 30 years.   There is also a cameo from the Random Wrestling Review podcast boys, and please don't play that bit in front of your gran/child as there may be a light (heavy) expletive in there!

Mid South Moments
UWF Television Review - October 4th 1986

Mid South Moments

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2022 29:12


Dan Phillips (@danpffc) returns for a show featuring the following :  - Chris Adams returns - 'Iceman' King Parsons vs Art Crews -  A feature on Terry Taylor and his TV title loss  -  Gustavo Mendoza vs the Missing Link -  The Fantastics vs Sting & Eddie Gilbert   (ps all you sharp listeners, I made a mistake in the recording and said this episode aired on October 10th 1986 when in actuality it aired on October 4th. I humbly apologise)

Mid South Moments
PWM News Update - G1 Final, Punk, Page, Omega returns

Mid South Moments

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2022 25:33


Dan Phillips (@danpffc) joins me to discuss the G1 Climax 32 final between Kazuchika Okada & Will Ospreay.  Plus we chat CM Punk's controversial promo on Dynamite AND Kenny Omega's return.

Wedding Secrets Unveiled!
38. (Mini Series) Understanding Wedding Photography Vocabulary with Dan Phillips

Wedding Secrets Unveiled!

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2022 17:00


Editing. Retouching. A photojournalistic style. As weddings photographers, Dan and Sara utilize these words on a daily basis. However, understanding the definition of these terms will help you choose the correct photographer for your big day and helps you understand what is included in their wedding packages. Check out this episode to make sure that you and your photographer are on the same page and to avoid any miscommunications! Please rate, review and subscribe to this podcast wherever you're listening so you never miss an episode. Even better share it with a friend! It a great way to show your support and let us know what you think. Thank you for listening. To get the full show notes head to https://sarazarrella.com/2022/08/understanding-wedding-photography-vocabulary/ For more information check out our website at www.sarazarrella.com/podcast Join our Monthly Newsletter for tips, tricks and Freebies! https://sarazarrella.com/newsletter Would love to be friends on the gram at https://www.instagram.com/sarazarrellaphotography/

Mid South Moments
UWF Television Review - August 16th 1986

Mid South Moments

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2022 37:18


The tension in Hyatt & Hot Stuff International continues, plus Jim Duggan challenged for the UWF Heavyweight title vs Terry 'Bam Bam' Gordy.   Review with Dan Phillips (@danpffc)

#robettLIVE
#robettLIVE Ep. 320 on TodayFM

#robettLIVE

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2022 95:18


This week our special guests are: J'adore Harris-Tavita first woman of Māori descent to be admitted into Duke University Young Bucks with Chinmay Madhusudhan from Wellington College Tall Poppy Profile with Dan Phillips, Co-Founder of Beer Hug LEARN / SHARE / REPEAT with Dave Armstrong - director of Newbrook Corporate Traveller New Zealand's General manager, Keeley Alton Tune in every Saturday @ Midday on TodayFM www.TodayFM.co.nz /// www.robett.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/robett/message

Mid South Moments
UWF Television Review - August 9th 1986

Mid South Moments

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2022 34:18


Jim Duggan vs Kamala from the Sam Houston Coliseum is featured along with a new Joel Watts creation video on Ted Dibiase & 'Dr Death' set to James Brown's 'Living in America'.   In the main event Sting teamed with John Tatum & Eddie Gilbert to take on the trio of the Fantastics and the Missing Link. Review with Dan Phillips (@danpffc)

Mid South Moments
UWF Television Review - August 2nd 1986

Mid South Moments

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2022 45:35


The Fantastics defended their UWF tag team titles vs the team of Eddie Gilbert & Sting, Koko Ware faced Kamala, 'Hollywood' John Tatum vs Brett Wayne Sawyer plus Rick Steiner in action and a fantastic piece on the ongoing Freebirds/Steve Williams & Ted Dibiase feud. Review with Dan Phillips (@danpffc)

Mid South Moments
AEW x NJPW Forbidden Door

Mid South Moments

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2022 84:58


Dan Phillips (@danpffc) joins me for a review of the joint card from the United Center in Chicago, Illinois. Match card :  Chris Jericho, Sammy Guevara (w/ Tay Conti) & Minoru Suzuki vs Eddie Kingston, Shota Umino & Wheeler Yuta ROH/IWGP tag team title match - FTR (c) vs the Great O'Khan & Jeff Cobb (c) vs Roppongi Vice AEW All Atlantic title - Clark Connors vs Pac vs Miro vs Malakai Black Bullet Club (Matt Jackson, Nick Jackson & El Phantasmo) vs Dudes with Attitude (Shingo Takagi, Sting & Darby Allin) AEW Women's World Title - Thunder Rosa (c) vs Toni Storm IWGP United States Title - Will Ospreay (c) vs Orange Cassidy Zack Sabre Jr. vs Claudio Castagnoli IWGP World Heavyweight title - Jay White (c) vs Adam Cole vs Adam Page vs Kazuchika Okada AEW Interim World Championship - Jon Moxley vs Hiroshi Tanahashi

Mid South Moments
AEW Double or Nothing 2022

Mid South Moments

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2022 59:07


Dan Phillips (@danpffc) is back with me to review AEW's Double or Nothing 2022 from the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada, featuring : Adam Page (c) vs. CM Punk for the AEW World Title  Thunder Rosa (c) vs. Serena Deeb for the AEW Women's World Title Jurassic Express (Jungle Boy and Luchasaurus) (c) vs. Team Taz (Ricky Starks and Powerhouse Hobbs) vs. Keith Lee and Swerve Strickland for the AEW World Tag Team Titles Jade Cargill (c) vs. Anna Jay for the TBS Title Samoa Joe vs. Adam Cole in the Men's Owen Hart Cup Tournament Final Britt Baker vs. Ruby Soho in the Women's Owen Hart Cup Tournament Final The Hardyz vs. The Young Bucks (Matt and Nick Jackson) Jericho Appreciation Society (Chris Jericho, Matt Menard, Angelo Parker, Daniel Garcia, and Jake Hager) vs. Eddie Kingston, Santana, Ortiz, and The Blackpool Combat Club (Bryan Danielson and Jon Moxley) in an Anarchy in the Arena match House of Black (Malakai Black, Buddy Matthews, and Brody King) vs. Death Triangle (Pac, Penta Oscuro, and Rey Fenix)  MJF vs. Wardlow 

The Horn Call Podcast
Episode 21: Mike Harcrow

The Horn Call Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2022 41:51


Episode 21 features Dr. Mike Harcrow, Professor of Horn at Messiah College, and the new editor of the IHS E-newsletter Horn and More. Episode Highlights Performing and teaching in Korea Auditioning for the Korean Symphony Orchestra “Those are all the things I love: horn, brass choir, and theory.” Playing injury Jeju Brass competition Kruspe Horns http://edkruspe.com/horn.html Horn and More E-Newsletter: Making the IHS more international “I'm a gear head!” “There's something really lovely about the Kruspe horn” Shoutout to Dan Phillips! Shoutout to Pat Hughes! Bring back the Horn Call Annual “We can take ourselves too seriously…” Dr. Mike Harcrow is a Texas native who holds music degrees from West Texas State University, the University of Miami, and the University of North Texas. For nearly fourteen years, Dr. Harcrow was an active performer and teacher in South Korea where he held faculty positions at Mokwon University in Taejon and at the Korean National University of Arts in Seoul; he was concurrently principal horn in the Korean Symphony Orchestra at the Seoul Arts Center. In the United States, he has been a member of the Amarillo Symphony Orchestra, the San Angelo Symphony Orchestra, the South Florida Symphony Orchestra, the Miami City Ballet Orchestra, and the Grant Park Symphony Orchestra, in addition to performing regularly with the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra and the Memphis Symphony Orchestra, among others. He previously taught at Texas Woman's University and Midwestern State University. He currently performs with the Gettysburg Chamber Orchestra and the Pennsylvania Regional Ballet Orchestra, and, each summer, with the Classical Music Festival in Eisenstadt, Austria, and he is a frequent guest section player with the Harrisburg and York Symphony Orchestras. Dr. Harcrow is an artist representative for Kruspe Horns as well as holding the position of contributing editor for the International Horn Society E-Newsletter. He is founder of the Covered Bridge Brass (a community-service performing ensemble), manager of the Chesapeake Brass, and he is an active composer and adjudicator. At Messiah University, in addition to his teaching and coaching responsibilities, he performs with the Faculty Brass Quintet and manages both BrassCross and The President's Brass, the university's faculty-student brass ensembles.

Mid South Moments
WrestleMania XXXVIII Roundtable Review

Mid South Moments

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2022 139:08


I'm joined by Mark Dunderdale (@dopper6), Stuart Roberts (@wakefieldcanary) & Dan Phillips (@danpffc) for a look back at the MOST STUPENDOUS TWO NIGHT WRESTLEMANIA IN HISTORY

Mid South Moments
UWF TV review- March 23rd 1986

Mid South Moments

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2022 54:00


Dan Phillips (@danpffc) is here to review the birth of the Universal Wrestling Federation.  We get a big press conference from Charlotte related to the forthcoming Crockett Cup (plus we pick who our top ten tag teams would be for such a tournament in 2022), Ted Dibiase & Steve Williams defend the tag team titles vs the Sheepherders & 'Hacksaw' Jim Duggan challenges for the North American title.

Screaming in the Cloud
The Multi-Colored Brick Road to the Cloud with Rachel Dines

Screaming in the Cloud

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2022 38:08


About RachelRachel leads product and technical marketing for Chronosphere. Previously, Rachel wore lots of marketing hats at CloudHealth (acquired by VMware), and before that, she led product marketing for cloud-integrated storage at NetApp. She also spent many years as an analyst at Forrester Research. Outside of work, Rachel tries to keep up with her young son and hyper-active dog, and when she has time, enjoys crafting and eating out at local restaurants in Boston where she's based.Links: Chronosphere: https://chronosphere.io Twitter: https://twitter.com/RachelDines Email: rachel@chronosphere.io TranscriptAnnouncer: Hello, and welcome to Screaming in the Cloud with your host, Chief Cloud Economist at The Duckbill Group, Corey Quinn. This weekly show features conversations with people doing interesting work in the world of cloud, thoughtful commentary on the state of the technical world, and ridiculous titles for which Corey refuses to apologize. This is Screaming in the Cloud.Corey: The company 0x4447 builds products to increase standardization and security in AWS organizations. They do this with automated pipelines that use well-structured projects to create secure, easy-to-maintain and fail-tolerant solutions, one of which is their VPN product built on top of the popular OpenVPN project which has no license restrictions; you are only limited by the network card in the instance. To learn more visit: snark.cloud/deployandgoCorey: Couchbase Capella Database-as-a-Service is flexible, full-featured and fully managed with built in access via key-value, SQL, and full-text search. Flexible JSON documents aligned to your applications and workloads. Build faster with blazing fast in-memory performance and automated replication and scaling while reducing cost. Capella has the best price performance of any fully managed document database. Visit couchbase.com/screaminginthecloud to try Capella today for free and be up and running in three minutes with no credit card required. Couchbase Capella: make your data sing.Corey: Welcome to Screaming in the Cloud. I'm Corey Quinn. A repeat guest joins me today, and instead of talking about where she works, instead we're going to talk about how she got there. Rachel Dines is the Head of Product and Technical Marketing at Chronosphere. Rachel, thank you for joining me.Rachel: Thanks, Corey. It's great to be here again.Corey: So, back in the early days of me getting started, well, I guess all this nonsense, I was an independent consultant working in the world of cloud cost management and you were over at CloudHealth, which was effectively the 800-pound gorilla in that space. I've gotten louder, and of course, that means noisier as well. You wound up going through the acquisition by VMware at CloudHealth, and now you're over at Chronosphere. We're going to get to all of that, but I'd rather start at the beginning, which, you know, when you're telling stories seems like a reasonable place to start. Your first job out of school, to my understanding, was as an analyst at Forrester is that correct?Rachel: It was yeah. Actually, I started as a research associate at Forrester and eventually became an analyst. But yes, it was Forrester. And when I was leaving school—you know, I studied art history and computer science, which is a great combination, makes a ton of sense—I can explain it another time—and I really wanted to go work at the equivalent of FAANG back then, which was just Google. I really wanted to go work at Google.And I did the whole song-and-dance interview there and did not get the job. Best thing that's ever happened to me because the next day a Forrester recruiter called. I didn't know what Forrester was—once again, I was right out of college—I said, “This sounds kind of interesting. I'll check it out.” Seven years later, I was a principal analyst covering, you know, cloud-to-cloud resiliency and backup to the cloud and cloud storage. And that was an amazing start to my career, that really, I'm credited a lot of the things I've learned and done since then on that start at Forrester.Corey: Well, I'll admit this: I was disturbingly far into my 30s before I started to realize what it is that Forrester and its endless brethren did. I'm almost certain you can tell that story better than I can, so what is it that Forrester does? What is its place in the ecosystem?Rachel: Forrester is one of the two or three biggest industry analyst firms. So, the people that work there—the analysts there—are basically paid to be, like, big thinkers and strategists and analysts, right? There's a reason it's called that. And so the way that we spent all of our time was, you know, talking to interesting large, typically enterprise IT, and I was in the infrastructure and operations group, so I was speaking to infrastructure, ops, precursors to DevOps—DevOps wasn't really a thing back in ye olden times, but we're speaking to them and learning their best practices and publishing reports about the technology, the people and the process that they dealt with. And so you know, over a course of a year, I would talk to hundreds of different large enterprises, the infrastructure and ops leaders at everyone from, like, American Express to Johnson & Johnson to Monsanto, learn from them, write research and reports, and also do things like inquiries and speaking engagements and that kind of stuff.So, the idea of industry analysts is that they're neutral, they're objective. You can go to them for advice, and they can tell you, you know, these are the shortlist of vendors you should consider and this is what you should look for in a solution.Corey: I love the idea of what that role is, but it took me a while as a condescending engineer to really wrap my head around it because I viewed it as oh, it's just for a cover your ass exercise so that when a big company makes a decision, they don't get yelled at later, and they said, “Well, it seemed like the right thing to do. You can't blame us.” And that is an overwhelmingly cynical perspective. But the way it was explained to me, it really was put into context—of all things—by way of using the AWS bill as a lens. There's a whole bunch of tools and scripts and whatnot on GitHub that will tell you different things about your AWS environment, and if I run them in my environment, yeah, they work super well.I run them in a client environment and the thing explodes because it's not designed to work at a scale of 10,000 instances in a single availability zone. It's not designed to do backing off so it doesn't exhaust rate limits across the board. It requires a rethinking at that scale. When you're talking about enterprise-scale, a lot of the Twitter zeitgeist, as it were, about what tools work well and what tools don't for various startups, they fail to cross over into the bowels of a regulated entity that has a bunch of other governance and management concerns that don't really apply. So, there's this idea of okay, now that we're a large, going entity with serious revenue behind this, and migrating to any of these things is a substantial lift. What is the right answer? And that is sort of how I see the role of these companies in the ecosystem playing out. Is that directionally correct?Rachel: I would definitely agree that that is directionally correct. And it was the direction that it was going when I was there at Forrester. And by the way, I've been gone from there for, I think, eight-plus years. So, you know, it's definitely evolved it this space—Corey: A lifetime in tech.Rachel: Literally feels like a lifetime. Towards the end of my time there was when we were starting to get briefings from this bookstore company—you might have heard of them—um, Amazon?Corey: Barnes and Noble.Rachel: Yes. And Barnes and Noble. Yes. So, we're starting to get briefings from Amazon, you know, about Amazon Web Services, and S3 had just been introduced. And I got really excited about Netflix and chaos engineering—this was 2012, right?—and so I did a bunch of research on chaos engineering and tried to figure out how it could apply to the enterprises.And I would, like, bring it to Capital One, and they were like, “Ya crazy.” Turns out I think I was just a little bit ahead of my time, and I'm seeing a lot more of the industry analysts now today looking at like, “Okay, well, yeah, what is Uber doing? Like, what is Netflix doing?” And figure out how that can translate to the enterprise. And it's not a one-to-one, right, just because the people and the structures and the process is so different, so the technology can't just, like, make the leap on its own. But yes, I would definitely agree with that, but it hasn't necessarily always been that way.Corey: Oh, yeah. Like, these days, we're seeing serverless adoption on some levels being driven by enterprises. I mean, Liberty Mutual is doing stuff there that is really at the avant-garde that startups are learning from. It's really neat to see that being turned on its head because you always see these big enterprises saying, “We're like a startup,” but you never see a startup saying, “We're like a big enterprise.” Because that's evocative of something that isn't generally compelling.“Well, what does that mean, exactly? You take forever to do expense reports, and then you get super finicky about it, and you have so much bureaucracy?” No, no, no, it's, “Now, that we're process bound, it's that we understand data sovereignty and things like that.” But you didn't stay there forever. You at some point decided, okay, talking to people who are working in this industry is all well and good, but time for you to go work in that industry yourself. And you went to, I believe, NetApp by way of Riverbed.Rachel: Yes, yeah. So, I left Forrester and I went over to Riverbed to work on their cloud storage solution as a product marketing. And I had an amazing six months at Riverbed, but I happened to join, unfortunately, right around the time they were being taken private, and they ended up divesting their storage product line off to NetApp. And they divested some of their other product lines to some other companies as part of the whole deal going private. So, it was a short stint at Riverbed, although I've met some people that I've stayed in touch with and are still my friends, you know, many years later.And so, yeah, ended up over at NetApp. And it wasn't necessarily what I had initially planned for, but it was a really fun opportunity to take a cloud-integrated storage product—so it was an appliance that people put in their data centers; you could send backups to it, and it shipped those backups on the back end to S3 and then to Glacier when that came out—trying to make that successful in a company that was really not overly associated with cloud. That was a really fun process and a fun journey. And now I look at NetApp and where they are today, and they've acquired Spot and they've acquired CloudCheckr, and they're, like, really going all-in in public cloud. And I like to think, like, “Hey, I was in the early days of that.” But yeah, so that was an interesting time in my life for multiple reasons.Corey: Yeah, Spot was a fascinating product, and I was surprised to see it go to NetApp. It was one of those acquisitions that didn't make a whole lot of sense to me at the time. NetApp has always been one of those companies I hold in relatively high regard. Back when I was coming up in the industry, a bit before the 2012s or so, it was routinely ranked as the number one tech employer on a whole bunch of surveys. And I don't think these were the kinds of surveys you can just buy your way to the top of.People who worked there seemed genuinely happy, the technology was fantastic, and it was, for example, the one use case in which I would run a database where its data store lived on a network file system. I kept whining at the EFS people over at AWS for years that well, EFS is great and all but it's no NetApp. Then they released NetApps on tap on FSX as a first-party service, in which case, okay, thank you. You have now solved every last reservation I have around this. Onward.And I still hold the system in high regard. But it has, on some level, seen an erosion. We're no longer in a world where I am hurling big money—or medium money by enterprise standards—off to NetApp for their filers. It instead is something that the cloud providers are providing, and last time I checked, no matter how much I spend on AWS they wouldn't let me shove a NetApp filer into us-east-1 without asking some very uncomfortable questions.Rachel: Yeah. The whole storage industry is changing really quickly, and more of the traditional on-premises storage vendors have needed to adapt or… not, you know, be very successful. I think that NetApp's done a nice job of adapting in recent years. But I'd been in storage and backup for my entire career at that point, and I was like, I need to get out. I'm done with storage. I'm done with backup. I'm done with disaster recovery. I had that time; I want to go try something totally new.And that was how I ended up leaving NetApp and joining CloudHealth. Because I'd never really done the startup thing. I done a medium-sized company at Riverbed; I'd done a pretty big company at NetApp. I've always been an entrepreneur at heart. I started my first business on the playground in second grade, and it was reselling sticks of gum. Like, I would go use my allowance to buy a big pack of gum, and then I sold the sticks individually for ten cents apiece, making a killer margin. And it was a subscription, actually. [laugh].Corey: Administrations generally—at least public schools—generally tend to turn a—have a dim view of those things, as I recall from my misspent youth.Rachel: Yeah. I was shut down pretty quickly, but it was a brilliant business model. It was—so you had to join the club to even be able to buy into getting the sticks of gum. I was, you know, all over the subscription business [laugh] back then.Corey: And area I want to explore here is you mentioned that you double-majored. One of those majors was computer science—art history was sort of set aside for the moment, it doesn't really align with either direction here—then you served as a research associate turned analyst, and then you went into product marketing, which is an interesting direction to go in. Why'd you do it?Rachel: You know, product marketing and industry analysts are there's a lot of synergy; there's a lot of things that are in common between those two. And in fact, when you see people moving back and forth from the analyst world to the vendor side, a lot of the time it is to product marketing or product management. I mean, product marketing, our whole job is to take really complex technical concepts and relate them back to business concepts and make them make sense of the broader world and tell a narrative around it. That's a lot of what an analyst is doing too. So, you know, analysts are writing, they're giving public talks, they're coming up with big ideas; that's what a great product marketer is doing also.So, for me, that shift was actually very natural. And by the way, like, when I graduated from school, I knew I was never going to code for a living. I had learned all I was going to learn and I knew it wasn't for me. Huge props, like, you know, all the people that do code for a living, I knew I couldn't do it. I wasn't cut out for it.Corey: I found somewhat similar discoveries on my own journey. I can configure things for a living, it's fun, but I still need to work with people, past a certain point. I know I've talked about this before on some of these shows, but for me, when starting out independently, I sort of assumed at some level, I was going to shut it down, and well, and then I'll go back to being an SRE or managing an ops team. And it was only somewhat recently that I had the revelation that if everything that I'm building here collapses out from under me or gets acquired or whatnot and I have to go get a real job again, I'll almost certainly be doing something in the marketing space as opposed to the engineering space. And that was an interesting adjustment to my self-image as I went through it.Because I've built everything that I've been doing up until this point, aligned at… a certain level of technical delivery and building things as an engineer, admittedly a mediocre one. And it took me a fair bit of time to get, I guess, over the idea of myself in that context of, “Wow, you're not really an engineer. Are you a tech worker?” Kind of. And I sort of find myself existing in the in-between spaces.Did you have similar reticence when you went down the marketing path or was it something that you had, I guess, a more mature view of it [laugh] than I did and said, “Yeah, I see the value immediately,” whereas I had to basically be dragged there kicking and screaming?Rachel: Well, first of all, Corey, congratulations for coming to terms with the fact that you are a marketer. I saw it in you from the minute I met you, and I think I've known you since before you were famous. That's my claim to fame is that I knew you before you were famous. But for me personally, no, I didn't actually have that stigma. But that does exist in this industry.I mean, I think people are—think they look down on marketing as kind of like ugh, you know, “The product sells itself. The product markets itself. We don't need that.” But when you're on the inside, you know you can have an amazing product and if you don't position it well and if you don't message it well, it's never going to succeed.Corey: Our consulting [sub-projects 00:14:31] are basically if you bring us in, you will turn a profit on the engaging. We are selling what basically [unintelligible 00:14:37] money. It is one of the easiest ROI calculations. And it still requires a significant amount of work on positioning even on the sales process alone. There's no such thing as an easy enterprise sale.And you're right, in fact, I think the first time we met, I was still running a DevOps team at a company and I was deploying the product that you were doing marketing for. And that was quite the experience. Honestly, it was one of the—please don't take this the wrong way at all—but you were at CloudHealth at the time and the entire point was that it was effectively positioned in such a way of, right, this winds up solving a lot of the problems that we have in the AWS bill. And looking at how some of those things were working, it was this is an annoying, obnoxious problem that I wish I could pay to make someone else's problem, just to make it go away. Well, that indirectly led to exactly where we are now.And it's really been an interesting ride, just seeing how that whole thing has evolved. How did you wind up finding yourself at CloudHealth? Because after VMware, you said it was time to go to a startup. And it's interesting because I look at where you've been now, and CloudHealth itself gets dwarfed by VMware, which is sort of the exact opposite of a startup, due to the acquisition. But CloudHealth was independent for years while you were there.Rachel: Yeah, it was. I was at CloudHealth for about three-plus years before we were acquired. You know, how did I end up there? It's… it's all hazy. I was looking at a lot of startups, I was looking for, like, you know, a Series B company, about 50 people, I wanted something in the public cloud space, but not storage—if I could get away from storage that was the dream—and I met the folks from CloudHealth, and obviously, I hadn't heard about—I didn't know about cloud cost management or cloud governance or FinOps, like, none of those were things back then, but I was I just was really attracted to the vision of the founders.The founders were, you know, Joe Kinsella and Dan Phillips and Dave Eicher, and I was like, “Hey, they've built startups before. They've got a great idea.” Joe had felt this pain when he was a customer of AWS in the early days, and so I was like—Corey: As have we all.Rachel: Right?Corey: I don't think you'll find anyone in this space who hasn't been a customer in that situation and realized just how painful and maddening the whole space is.Rachel: Exactly, yeah. And he was an early customer back in, I think, 2014, 2015. So yeah, I met the team, I really believed in their vision, and I jumped in. And it was really amazing journey, and I got to build a pretty big team over time. By the time we were acquired a couple of years later, I think we were maybe three or 400 people. And actually, fun story. We were acquired the same week my son was born, so that was an exciting experience. A lot of change happened in my life all at once.But during the time there, I got to, you know, work with some really, really cool large cloud-scale organizations. And that was during that time that I started to learn more about Kubernetes and Mesos at the time, and started on the journey that led me to where I am now. But that was one of the happiest accidents, similar to the happy accident of, like, how did I end up at Forrester? Well, I didn't get the job at Google. [laugh]. How did I end up at CloudHealth? I got connected with the founders and their story was really inspiring.Corey: Couchbase Capella Database-as-a-Service is flexible, full-featured and fully managed with built in access via key-value, SQL, and full-text search. Flexible JSON documents aligned to your applications and workloads. Build faster with blazing fast in-memory performance and automated replication and scaling while reducing cost. Capella has the best price performance of any fully managed document database. Visit couchbase.com/screaminginthecloud to try Capella today for free and be up and running in three minutes with no credit card required. Couchbase Capella: make your data sing.Corey: It's amusing to me the idea that, oh, you're at NetApp if you want to go do something that is absolutely not storage. Great. So, you go work at CloudHealth. You're like, “All right. Things are great.” Now, to take a big sip of scalding hot coffee and see just how big AWS billing data could possibly be. Yeah, oops, you're a storage company all over again.Some of our, honestly, our largest bills these days are RDS, Athena, and of course, S3 for all of the bills storage we wind up doing for our customers. And it is… it is not small. And that has become sort of an eye-opener for me just the fact that this is, on some level, a big data problem.Rachel: Yeah.Corey: And how do you wind up even understanding all the data that lives in just the outputs of the billing system? Which I feel is sort of a good setup for the next question of after the acquisition, you stayed at VMware for a while and then matriculated out to where you are now where you're the Head of Product and Technical Marketing at Chronosphere, which is in the observability space. How did you get there from cloud bills?Rachel: Yeah. So, it all makes sense when I piece it together in my mind. So, when I was at CloudHealth, one of the big, big pain points I was seeing from a lot of our customers was the growth in their monitoring bills. Like, they would be like, “Okay, thanks. You helped us, you know, with our EC2 reservations, and we did right-sizing, and you help with this. But, like, can you help with our Datadog bill? Like, can you help with our New Relic bill?”And that was becoming the next biggest line item for them. And in some cases, they were spending more on monitoring and APM and like, what we now call some things observability, they were spending more on that than they were on their public cloud, which is just bananas. So, I would see them making really kind of bizarre and sometimes they'd have to make choices that were really not the best choices. Like, “I guess we're not going to monitor the lab anymore. We're just going to uninstall the agents because we can't pay this anymore.”Corey: Going down from full observability into sampling. I remember that. The New Relic shuffle is what I believe we call it at the time. Let's be clear, they have since fixed a lot of their pricing challenges, but it was the idea of great suddenly we're doing a lot more staging environments, and they come knocking asking for more money but it's a—I don't need that level of visibility in the pre-prod environments, I guess. I hate doing it that way because then you have a divergence between pre-prod and actual prod. But it was economically just a challenge. Yeah, because again, when it comes to cloud, architecture and cost are really one and the same.Rachel: Exactly. And it's not so much that, like—sure, you know, you can fix the pricing model, but there's still the underlying issue of it's not black and white, right? My pre-prod data is not the same value as my prod data, so I shouldn't have to treat it the same way, shouldn't have to pay for it the same way. So, seeing that trend on the one hand, and then, on the other hand, 2017, 2018, I started working on the container cost allocation products at CloudHealth, and we were—you know, this was even before that, maybe 2017, we were arguing about, like, Mesos and Kubernetes and which one was going to be, and I got kind of—got very interested in that world.And so once again, as I was getting to the point where I was ready to leave CloudHealth, I was like, okay, there's two key things I'm seeing in the market. One is people need a change in their monitoring and observability; what they're doing now isn't working. And two, cloud-native is coming up, coming fast, and it's going to really disrupt this market. So, I went looking for someone that was at the intersection of the two. And that's when I met the team at Chronosphere, and just immediately hit it off with the founders in a similar way to where I hit it off with the founders that CloudHealth. At Chronosphere, the founders had felt pain—Corey: Team is so important in these things.Rachel: It's really the only thing to me. Like, you spend so much time at work. You need to love who you work with. You need to love your—not love them, but, you know, you need to work with people that you enjoy working with and people that you learn from.Corey: You don't have to love all your coworkers, and at best you can get away with just being civil with them, but it's so much nicer when you can have a productive, working relationship. And that is very far from we're going to go hang out, have beers after work because that leads to a monoculture. But the ability to really enjoy the people that you work with is so important and I wish that more folks paid attention to that.Rachel: Yeah, that's so important to me. And so I met the team, the team was fantastic, just incredibly smart and dedicated people. And then the technology, it makes sense. We like to joke that we're not just taking the box—the observability box—and writing Kubernetes in Crayon on the outside. It was built from the ground up for cloud-native, right?So, it's built for this speed, containers coming and going all the time, for the scale, just how much more metrics and observability data that containers emit, the interdependencies between all of your microservices and your containers, like, all of that stuff. When you combine it makes the older… let's call them legacy. It's crazy to call, like, some of these SaaS solutions legacy but they really are; they weren't built for cloud-native, they were built for VMs and a more traditional cloud infrastructure, and they're starting to fall over. So, that's how I got involved. It's actually, as we record, it's my one-year anniversary at Chronosphere. Which is, it's been a really wild year. We've grown a lot.Corey: Congratulations. I usually celebrate those by having a surprise meeting with my boss and someone I've never met before from HR. They don't offer your coffee. They have the manila envelope of doom in front of them and hold on, it's going to be a wild meeting. But on the plus side, you get to leave work early today.Rachel: So, good thing you run in your own business now, Corey.Corey: Yeah, it's way harder for me to wind up getting surprise-fired. I see it coming [laugh]—Rachel: [laugh].Corey: —aways away now, and it looks like an economic industry trend.Rachel: [sigh]. Oh, man. Well, anyhow.Corey: Selfishly, I have to ask. You spent a lot of time working in cloud cost, to a point where I learned an awful lot from you as I was exploring the space and learning as I went. And, on some level, for me at least, it's become an aspect of my identity, for better or worse. What was it like for you to leave and go into an orthogonal space? And sure, there's significant overlap, but it's a very different problem aimed at different buyers, and honestly, I think it is a more exciting problem that you are in now, from a business strategic perspective because there's a limited amount of what you can cut off that goes up theoretically to a hundred percent of the cloud bill. But getting better observability means you can accelerate your feature velocity and that turns into something rather significant rather quickly. But what was it like?Rachel: It's uncomfortable, for sure. And I tend to do this to myself. I get a little bit itchy the same way I wanted to get out of storage. It's not because there's anything wrong with storage; I just wanted to go try something different. I tend to, I guess, do this to myself every five years ago, I make a slightly orthogonal switch in the space that I'm in.And I think it's because I love learning something new. The jumping into something new and having the fresh eyes is so terrifying, but it's also really fun. And so it was really hard to leave cloud cost management. I mean, I got to Chronosphere and I was like, “Show me the cloud bill.” And I was like, “Do we have Reserved Instances?” Like, “Are we doing Committed Use Discounts with Google?”I just needed to know. And then that helped. Okay, I got a look at the cloud bill. I felt a little better. I made a few optimizations and then I got back to my actual job which was, you know, running product marketing for Chronosphere. And I still love to jump in and just make just a little recommendation here and there. Like, “Oh, I noticed the costs are creeping up on this. Did we consider this?”Corey: Oh, I still get a kick out of that where I was talking to an Amazonian whose side project was 110 bucks a month, and he's like, yeah, I don't think you could do much over here. It's like, “Mmm, I'll bet you a drink I can.”—Rachel: Challenge accepted.Corey: —it's like, “All right. You're on.” Cut it to 40 bucks. And he's like, “How did you do that?” It's because I know what I'm doing and this pattern repeats.And it's, are the architectural misconfigurations bounded by contacts that turn into so much. And I still maintain that I can look at the AWS bill for most environments for last month and have a pretty good idea, based upon nothing other than that, what's going on in the environment. It turns out that maybe that's a relatively crappy observability system when all is said and done, but it tells an awful lot. I can definitely see the appeal of wanting to get away from purely cost-driven or cost-side information and into things that give a lot more context into how things are behaving, how they're performing. I think there's been something of an industry rebrand away from monitoring, alerting, and trending over time to calling it observability.And I know that people are going to have angry opinions about that—and it's imperative that you not email me—but it all is getting down to the same thing of is my site up or down? Or in larger distributed systems, how down is it? And I still think we're learning an awful lot. I cringe at the early days of Nagios when that was what I was depending upon to tell me whether my site was up or not. And oh, yeah, turns out that when the Nagios server goes down, you have some other problems you need to think about. It became this iterative, piling up on and piling up on and piling up on until you can get sort of good at it.But the entire ecosystem around understanding what's going on in your application has just exploded since the last time I was really running production sites of any scale, in anger. So, it really would be a different world today.Rachel: It's changing so fast and that's part of what makes it really exciting. And the other big thing that I love about this is, like, this is a must-have. This is not table stakes. This is not optional. Like, a great observability solution is the difference between conquering a market or being overrun.If you look at what our founders—our founders at Chronosphere came from Uber, right? They ran the observability team at Uber. And they truly believe—and I believe them, too—that this was a competitive advantage for them. The fact that you could go to Uber and it's always up and it's always running and you know you're not going to have an issue, that became an advantage to them that helped them conquer new markets. We do the same thing for our customers. Corey: The entire idea around how these things are talked about in terms of downtime and the rest is just sort of ludicrous, on some level, because we take specific cases as industry truths. Like, I still remember, when Amazon was down one day when I was trying to buy a pair of underwear. And by that theory, it was—great, I hit a 404 page and a picture of a dog. Well, according to a lot of these industry truisms, then, well, one day a week for that entire rotation of underpants, I should have just been not wearing any. But no here in reality, I went back an hour later and bought underpants.Now, counterpoint: If every third time I wound up trying to check out at Amazon, I wound up hitting that error page, I would spend a lot more money at Target. There is a point at which repeated downtime comes at a cost. But one-offs for some businesses are just fine. Counterpoint with if Uber is down when you're trying to get a ride, well, that ride [unintelligible 00:28:36] may very well be lost for them and there is a definitive cost. No one's going to go back and click on an ad as well, for example, and Amazon is increasingly an advertising company.So, there's a lot of nuance to it. I think we can generally say that across the board, in most cases, downtime bad. But as far as how much that is and what form that looks like and what impact that has on your company, it really becomes situationally dependent.Rachel: I'm just going to gloss over the fact that you buy your underwear on Amazon and really not make any commentary on that. But I mean—Corey: They sell everything there. And the problem, of course, is the crappy counterfeit underwear under the Amazon Basics brand that they ripped off from the good underwear brands. But that's a whole ‘nother kettle of wax for a different podcast.Rachel: Yep. Once again, not making any commentary on your—on that. Sorry, I lost my train of thought. I work in my dining room. My husband, my dog are all just—welcome to pandemic life here.Corey: No, it's fair. They live there. We don't, as a general rule.Rachel: [laugh]. Very true. Yeah. You're not usually in my dining room, all of you but—oh, so uptime downtime, also not such a simple conversation, right? It's not like all of Amazon is down or all of DoorDash is down. It might just be one individual service or one individual region or something that is—Corey: One service in one subset of one availability zone. And this is the problem. People complain about the Amazon status page, but if every time something was down, it reflected there, you'd see a never ending sea of red, and that would absolutely erode confidence in the platform. Counterpoint when things are down for you and it's not red. It's maddening. And there's no good answer.Rachel: No. There's no good answer. There's no good answer. And the [laugh] yeah, the Amazon status page. And this is something I—bringing me back to my Forrester days, availability and resiliency in the cloud was one of the areas I focused on.And, you know, this was once again, early days of public cloud, but remember when Netflix went down on Christmas Eve, and—God, what year was this? Maybe… 2012, and that was the worst possible time they could have had downtime because so many people are with their families watching their Doctor Who Christmas Specials, which is what I was trying to watch at the time.Corey: Yeah, now you can't watch it. You have to actually talk to those people, and none of us can stand them. And oh, dear Lord, yeah—Rachel: What a nightmare.Corey: —brutal for the family dynamic. Observability is one of those things as well that unlike you know, the AWS bill, it's very easy to explain to people who are not deep in the space where it's, “Oh, great. Okay. So, you have a website. It goes well. Then you want—it gets slow, so you put it on two computers. Great. Now, it puts on five computers. Now, it's on 100 computers, half on the East Coast, half on the West Coast. Two of those computers are down. How do you tell?”And it turns in—like, they start to understand the idea of understanding what's going on in a complex system. “All right, how many people work at your company?” “2000,” “Great. Three laptops are broken. How do you figure out which ones are broken?” If you're one of the people with a broken laptop, how do you figure out whether it's your laptop or the entire system? And it lends itself really well to analogies, whereas if I'm not careful when I describe what I do, people think I can get them a better deal on underpants. No, not that kind of Amazon bill. I'm sorry.Rachel: [laugh]. Yeah, or they started to think that you're some kind of accountant or a tax advisor, but.Corey: Which I prefer, as opposed to people at neighborhood block parties thinking that I'm the computer guy because then it's, “Oh, I'm having trouble with the printer.” It's, “Great. Have you tried [laugh] throwing away and buying a new one? That's what I do.”Rachel: This is a huge problem I have in my life of everyone thinking I'm going to fix all of their computer and cloud things. And I come from a big tech family. My whole family is in tech, yet somehow I'm the one at family gatherings doing, “Did you turn it off and turn it back on again?” Like, somehow that's become my job.Corey: People get really annoyed when you say that and even more annoyed when it fixes the problem.Rachel: Usually does. So, the thread I wanted to pick back up on though before I got distracted by my husband and dog wandering around—at least my son is not in the room with us because he'd have a lot to say—is that the standard industry definition of observability—so once again, people are going to write to us, I'm sure; they can write to me, not you, Corey, about observability, it's just the latest buzzword. It's just monitoring, or you know—Corey: It's hipster monitoring.Rachel: Hipster monitoring. That's what you like to call it. I don't really care what we call it. The important thing is it gets us through three phases, right? The first is knowing that something is wrong. If you don't know what's wrong, how are you supposed to ever go fix it, right? So, you need to know that those three laptops are broken.The next thing is you need to know how bad is it? Like, if those three laptops are broken is the CEO, the COO, and the CRO, that's real bad. If it's three, you know, random peons in marketing, maybe not so bad. So, you need to triage, you need to understand roughly, like, the order of magnitude of it, and then you need to fix it. [laugh].Once you fix it, you can go back and then say, all right, what was the root cause of this? How do we make sure this doesn't happen again? So, the way you go through that cycle, you're going to use metrics, you might use logs, you might use traces, but that's not the definition of observability. Observability is all about getting through that, know, then triage, then fix it, then understand.Corey: I really want to thank you for taking the time to speak with me today. If people do want to learn more, give you their unfiltered opinions, where's the best place to find you?Rachel: Well, you can find me on Twitter, I'm @RachelDines. You can also email me, rachel@chronosphere.io. I hope I don't regret giving out that email address. That's a good way you can come and argue with me about what is observability. I will not be giving advice on cloud bills. For that, you should go to Corey. But yeah, that's a good way to get in touch.Corey: Thank you so much for your time. I really appreciate it.Rachel: Yeah, thank you.Corey: Rachel Dines, Head of Product and Technical Marketing at Chronosphere. I'm Cloud Economist Corey Quinn, and this is Screaming in the Cloud. If you've enjoyed this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice whereas if you've hated this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice, and castigate me with an angry comment telling me that I really should have followed the thread between the obvious link between art history and AWS billing, which is almost certainly a more disturbing Caravaggio.Corey: If your AWS bill keeps rising and your blood pressure is doing the same, then you need The Duckbill Group. We help companies fix their AWS bill by making it smaller and less horrifying. The Duckbill Group works for you, not AWS. We tailor recommendations to your business and we get to the point. Visit duckbillgroup.com to get started.Announcer: This has been a HumblePod production. Stay humble.

Mid South Moments
AEW Revolution 2022

Mid South Moments

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2022 118:58


Dan Phillips (@danpffc) & Mark Dunderdale (@dopper6) join me for a review of AEW's first pay per view of 2022 featuring : "Hangman" Adam Page (c) vs. Adam Cole - Singles Match for the AEW World Championship CM Punk vs. MJF - Dog Collar Match Dr. Britt Baker, D.M.D. (c) vs. Thunder Rosa - Singles Match for the AEW Women's Championship Keith Lee vs. Orange Cassidy vs. Powerhouse Hobbs vs. Ricky Starks vs. Wardlow vs. Christian Cage - Face of the Revolution Ladder Match Jurassic Express (Jungle Boy and Luchasaurus) (c) vs. reDRagon (Bobby Fish and Kyle O'Reilly) vs. The Young Bucks (Matt Jackson and Nick Jackson) - Three-Way Tag team match for the AEW World Tag Team Championship Chris Jericho vs. Eddie Kingston Jade Cargill (c) vs. Tay Conti - Singles Match for the AEW TBS Championship Jon Moxley vs. Bryan Danielson AHFO (Andrade El Ídolo, Matt Hardy, and Isiah Kassidy) vs. Darby Allin, Sting, and Sammy Guevara - Six-Man Tornado Match

Cincy Slangin': The Bearcat Basketball Podcast
3.66: Dan Phillips and Spencer Tuckerman of the Bearcats Digital Team Join the Podcast

Cincy Slangin': The Bearcat Basketball Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2022 65:38


Coomer and Hummer are joined by Dan Phillips (@designbydanielp) and Spencer Tuckerman (@spncrtckrmn) to discuss their involvement in elevating the UC athletics' digital content, the "throwback night" against Memphis, and much more!  Cincy Slangin' has merch! Go to 513Shirts.come to get you Slangin' t-shirt, hat, and beanie! https://www.513shirts.com/collections/cincy-slangin Music: "Cincinnati Hat" - Showtime Twitter: @CincySlangin Instagram: @CincySlangin Email: cincyslangin@gmail.com Website: https://cincyslangin.com   

Wedding Secrets Unveiled!
25. (Mini Series) When Should You Have 1 Photographer vs 2 Photographers On Your Wedding Day. With Host Sara Zarrella And Co-Host Dan Phillips

Wedding Secrets Unveiled!

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2022 39:19


One of the biggest decisions to make when it comes to your wedding photographer is whether you'll be hiring one or two photographers to capture your big day. Today, we're back with episode 2 of our photography mini-series on the Wedding Secrets Unveiled! Podcast. Our host, Sara Zarrella, and co-host, Dan Phillips, are discussing what you should consider when deciding on 1 photographer vs. 2 photographers for your wedding day. You might be surprised at the answer – so make sure to tune in to today's episode! Please rate, review and subscribe to this podcast wherever you're listening so you never miss an episode. Even better share it with a friend! It a great way to show your support and let us know what you think. Thank you for listening. For more information check out our website at www.sarazarrella.com/podcast Join our Monthly Newsletter for tips, tricks and Freebies! https://sarazarrella.com/newsletter Would love to be friends on the gram at https://www.instagram.com/sarazarrellaphotography/

The Horn Call Podcast
Episode 17: Daren Robbins

The Horn Call Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2021 54:19


My guest for the final episode of 2021 is Dr. Daren Robbins, Instructor of Horn at Mahidol University in Thailand, and the creator of hornexcerpts.org Daren Robbins has been on the faculty of the College of Music at Mahidol University (Bangkok, Thailand) since 2008, where he teaches horn, brass literature and pedagogy, coaches chamber music, and performs with BrassArts Bangkok, the Mahidol Faculty Woodwind quintet, and the Thailand Philharmonic Orchestra. He is also an active member of the International Horn Society where he serves as Regional Coordinator for Thailand. For ten years, he served as Editor of the IHS Online Music Sales program. Daren maintains an active and multi-faceted performance career, and has conducted solo recitals and masterclasses at universities throughout the U.S. and Asia as well as performed and presented at International Symposiums in Australia, Europe and the U.S. He is the creator of the website hornexcerpts.org, which has become the most frequently visited horn-related website on the internet. Episode Highlights Moving to Thailand, teaching at Mahidol University “Different, in a refreshing way” HornPure horn ensemble Shoutout to the American Horn Quartet! Enthusiasm for classical music Performing with the Thailand Phil and being the orchestra manager Hosting the London Symphony and Berlin Philharmonic “It's easy to get everybody to agree something needs to be changed, but it's quite difficult to get them to agree how to change it.” Orchestra librarians “It's not enough anymore to teach students how to play the Strauss Concerto.” https://www.aubreybergauer.com/about https://orchestraexcerpts.com/horn https://www.hornrep.com/  https://hornoperaproject.org/  Remember cassette tapes? Other horn excerpt websites Shoutout to IHS webmaster Dan Phillips!

Wedding Secrets Unveiled!
21. (Mini Series) Is A First Look Right For You? With Host Sara Zarrella And Co-Host & Producer Dan Phillips

Wedding Secrets Unveiled!

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2021 36:30


We're kicking off a new mini-series all about wedding photography, featuring our host Sara Zarrella and producer Dan Phillips. This week, we're diving into all things “first look” related! This mini series episode will go over the pros and cons of a first look, ideas for your first look, and our perspectives as photographers. Still deciding if a first look is right for you? Definitely tune into this week's show! Please rate, review and subscribe to this podcast wherever you're listening so you never miss an episode. Even better share it with a friend! It a great way to show your support and let us know what you think. Thank you for listening. For more information check out our website at www.sarazarrella.com/podcast Join our Monthly Newsletter for tips, tricks and Freebies! https://sarazarrella.com/newsletter Would love to be friends on the gram at https://www.instagram.com/sarazarrellaphotography/