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A routine layover at Denver International becomes a descent into nightmare when mysterious text messages lead one traveler towards the truth hiding beneath those iconic white peaks - if only they'd checked their boarding pass more carefully before it was too late.
An inside look into one of the nation's busiest airports as holiday travel ramps up. Also, Philadelphia marathon women's winner, Katie Florio chats with Dylan Dreyer, Sheinelle Jones, Craig Melvin and Al Roker about her experience. Plus, NBC News Business and Data correspondent Brian Cheung breaks down the Thanksgiving holiday by the numbers.
In this episode, Athena talks about the many conspiracy theories that have surrounded the Denver International airport for several decades. We also talk about a new law in Germany that gives pedos a slap on the wrist for being in possession of child abuse material. There is some other pedo shit going down that we will also get into.
Trav signed a contract for next season and is going to Spain. Here are all the details. Dave Wheeler joins the show to breakdown fighting in pro hockey, a story about Freddy Andersen, Big sexy got released by the Motor City Rockers, the city of Winnipeg, and the current state of Canada. New episodes every Sunday at 11am eastern! :) SHEATH | Get 20% off the best underwear on the planet with code "BIZKIT69" at https://www.sheathunderwear.comBETTER HELP | This show is sponsored by BetterHelp. Tap here for 10% off your first month for therapy https://betterhelp.com/bizkit MANSCAPED | Get 20% OFF Manscaped + Free Shipping with code "BIZKIT" at https://www.manscaped.com/bizkitPATREON ► https://www.patreon.com/slanginthebizkitINSTA ► https://instagram.com/slanginthebizkit?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y=LISTEN ON THE GO ► https://linktr.ee/SlanginTheBizkitMERCH ► https://slangin-the-bizkit.printify.me/productsTimestamps00:00 Wheeler is back, show your rack01:16 Jack Black, hit me baby one more time03:10 The olllllllll Winnipeg Handshake04:05 Is Canada going downhill?06:05 The blockbuster Trade deadline acquisition07:40 These Trav custom figurines are incredible08:50 Brucey strikes again...09:30 What are the maritimes?11:16 Trav is heading to Calgary at the Palliser Hotel and Chateau Lake Louise13:41 Muay Thai update from Trav18:03 This happens in EVERY hockey locker room19:40 Keep your hands at the side20:44 Dave Wheeler is starting stand up comedy22:32 Sheath Underwear use code "BIZKIT69" for 20% off the best underwear money can buy23:29 Wheeler is doing Ramadan27:53 The signing for next season...36:01 BetterHelp Use this link for 10% off your first month of therapy https://betterhelp.com/bizkit36:57 Big Sexy RELEASED by Motor City Rockers38:34 Matt Rempe is a BEAST39:30 John Gibson vs Petr Mrazek41:40 Freddy Andersen met Trav.... and then!43:30 Sergei Bobrovsky is SO under appreciated45:40 Manscaped use code "BIZKIT" for 20% off and free shipping46:28 Denver International airport conspiracy therories49:24 Trav sat beside a divorced and scorn woman on his flight
The Attorney Post - If you don't know your rights, you don't have any!
The Attorney Post: A Deep Dive with Everett Martinez, Assistant General Counsel at Denver International Video: https://youtu.be/BLD4NUbaIB8 Meet Everett Martinez: Everett Martinez | LinkedIn In a riveting episode of the Attorney Post, Everett Martinez, currently serving as the Assistant General Counsel at Denver International, shares insights from his enriching legal journey. Denver International isn't just another airport—it operates as a business owned by the City and County of Denver, bearing parallels to the structure of a Fortune 500 company. Everett's academic pursuit at Harvard Law School was nothing short of iconic, reminiscent of the challenges portrayed in the movie "Paper Chase", which illustrated the competitive environment, incidences like book theft, and even mental breakdowns faced by law students. But it wasn't all smooth sailing. Before opting for law, he was on the brink of pursuing psychiatry but had reservations about immersing himself in others' problems. An intriguing part of his story unfolds during his tenure at Kutesack Rock law firm. Despite being inexperienced in public finance, he was thrust into a pivotal project. The complexity? Bond transaction books described as old encyclopedia sets, which he had to decipher without much guidance. This experience underscored the importance of hands-on learning, something he emphasizes repeatedly. At Denver International, the unique structure of having an in-house real estate development company stands out, given the airport's sprawling 52 square mile expanse. Here, Everett touches upon the intricacies of public finance, delving into the process of governments issuing bonds to fund projects, a process that promises investors a rate of return. The conversation also gravitates towards the challenges faced during the COVID-19 pandemic, both in the practice of law and its impact on air travel. Everett's philosophy is clear: practical experience is indispensable. Whether it's gaining exposure in public finance or understanding the authority structure at Denver International, the crux lies in networking and befriending professionals in one's field of interest. For those eager to connect, Everett's LinkedIn profile was shared, emphasizing his willingness to assist anyone seeking legal advice, either by offering personal insights or connecting them to the right experts. Catch this enlightening episode and delve deep into the world of law, bonds, and airports, as seen through the eyes of Everett Martinez.
How was the flight, how is the airport?Rico gives a volleyball updateAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
The airport, also known as DIA or DEN, had the earnest reasons to celebrate…. It's still the largest airport in North America, and the second largest in the world by land area. In 2019 alone, DIA served over 69,015,703 passengers, the most in its history, which made it the 5th busiest airport in America with an economic impact of more than $33 billion. These factual figures best signify the importance of Colorado's premiere airport, but it's the very strange conspiracy theories surrounding it that often gets the most attention.
Ambience from Denver International airport, including rolling bags, security clearance, checkins, beeping sounds and the sounds of lots of passengers making for a very busy soundscape. Recorded by Marcel Gnauk. IMAGE: Peterquinn925, CC BY-SA 4.0 , via Wikimedia Commons
Hey everyone! Welcome to episode 5 of Through the Clouds!We have an exciting show for you this week! We start off with Ava sharing about her upcoming weekend with Delta and United, we then transition into some Q&A, aviation stories for the week, and we finish it off with some storytelling of our featured accident of the week, and our featured airport of the week.If you have a joke you would like to submit, feel free to send us an email at ttcloudspodcast@gmail.com. Be sure to leave your name and where you're from!This week we talked about Delta flight 191. Here is the link to the article.We also talked about the infamous and maybe haunted Denver International airport! To learn more about its chilling history, check it out here. We are excited to see you all right back here next week as we welcome episode 6 of the podcast. Be sure to follow us over on social media @ttcloudspodcast on Instagram and Twitter.Cya!
Joshua Brooks, an architect and planner, is the co-director of the Denver, Colo., branch of the design firm Sasaki Associates. He joined Diana Alexander at the 2022 Fall Conference to discuss how airports like Denver International become centers for development.
It's a bird, it's a plane, it's...what the hell is that? On this episode we tell stories of strange experiences involving planes, airports, and Unexplained Aerial Phenomena, with a couple dives into the dark world of conspiracy theories around Denver International AND MH370. Also: the expanded second edition of "A Strange Little Place" has been released! Get your copy now wherever fine books are sold (but really just Amazon) Story Time Codes The Ghost Plane (37:45) Crop Duster (54:14) Denver International (1:07:25) Ahead of Schedule (1:21:45) Premonition (1:26:30) Split (1:35:15) Habit Field (1:45:05) Media Mentioned: Accident Man 2: Hitman's Holiday [movie] Popeye [movie] Ghosts in the Air, by Martin Caidin [book] Music on This Episode: Main Theme: "Radio (Into the Darkness We Go)" by Podzontommusic Stories Theme: "The Future Belongs to Them Now" by Hexxagram "Radio", & "The Future Belongs to Them Now" are used with permission. All other music is composed by Rainy Days For Ghosts. Want more show AND ad-free episodes? Come find us on Patreon! We have bonus podcasts, our monthly live stream, and so much more. Click on over to Patreon.com/GhostStoryGuys to check it out! Grab yourself some Ghost Story Guys merch at our Red Bubble and TeePublic stores! Comment? Suggestion? Story you want to tell? E-mail us at ghoststoryguys@gmail.com or call The Ghost Line at 1-888-588-6920 to leave us one, or a series of questions. The Ghost Story Guys are: Brennan Storr - Host, Writer, Producer Paul Bestall - Co-Host Luke Greensmith - Researcher Sarah Kent - Support Anthony Germaine - Researcher Rachel GW - Facebook admin Rainy Days For Ghosts - Composer
Michael Girdley (@Girdley) and Bill D'Alessandro (@BillDA), talk about one cool Deal that has a dried fruits and nuts kiosk in Denver International airport and the other, an Innovative Deal, a professional tool created by firefighters. We also look at ways to scale these deals and the growth potential from a marketing perspective.-----Thanks to our sponsors!* CloudBookkeeping offers adaptable solutions to businesses that want to focus on growth with a “client service first” approach. They offer a full suite of accounting services, including sophisticated reporting, QuickBooks software solutions, and full-service payroll options.-----* Do you love Acquanon and want to see our smiling faces? Subscribe to our Youtube channel.* Do you enjoy our content? Rate our show!* Follow us on Twitter @acquanon Learnings about small business acquisitions and operations.-----Show Notes:(00:00) - Intro(00:45) - Our sponsor is Cloudbookkeeping.com(02:09) - Deal 1: A nut kiosk in the Denver airport?!(04:38) - Why is some guy in Las Vegas selling a nut kiosk in Denver?(10:48) - What are the insights when it comes to economies to scale?(13:05) - How to defend from a landlord trying to capture all the value from you?(14:35) - How do we think about potential customers & walking traffic? Is there a chance of cross-selling other products? How?(16:55) - Deal 2: A product invented by firefighters - Cool Deal Alert!(20:55) - Growth potential of the product? Let's talk about product design, marketing & distribution: Why is this deal so interesting? (25:35) - Channel risk & channel dependency. What should you consider?(28:08) - Branding & potential niches to cover?-----Links:* https://fcbb.com/retail/denver-intl-airport/semi-absentee-owner-denver-airport-dried-fruit-and-nut-kiosks-101-20919-----Past guests on Acquanon include Nick Huber, Brent Beshore, Aaron Rubin, Mike Botkin, Ari Ozick, Mitchell Baldridge, Xavier Helgelsen, Mike Loftus, Steve Divitkos, Dzmitry Miranovich, Morgan Tate and more.-----Additional episodes you might enjoy:#106 A Pet Product and Saas business for sale. Which one do we like?#105 How to Make Money in the E-Commerce Game - Bill D'Alessandro gives an e-Commerce masterclass - part 1#96 From W-2 to Business Owner - Patrick Dichter tells us how to cold reach seller and we discuss 2 Deals#92 Wait... what? You laid-off 90% of your staff?!? - Pete Erickson joined us for an exciting WarStories episode!
Michael Girdley (@Girdley) and Bill D'Alessandro (@BillDA), talk about one cool Deal that has a dried fruits and nuts kiosk in Denver International airport and the other, an Innovative Deal, a professional tool created by firefighters. We also look at ways to scale these deals and the growth potential from a marketing perspective.-----Thanks to our sponsors!* CloudBookkeeping offers adaptable solutions to businesses that want to focus on growth with a “client service first” approach. They offer a full suite of accounting services, including sophisticated reporting, QuickBooks software solutions, and full-service payroll options.-----* Do you love Acquanon and want to see our smiling faces? Subscribe to our Youtube channel.* Do you enjoy our content? Rate our show!* Follow us on Twitter @acquanon Learnings about small business acquisitions and operations.-----Show Notes:(00:00) - Intro(00:45) - Our sponsor is Cloudbookkeeping.com(02:09) - Deal 1: A nut kiosk in the Denver airport?!(04:38) - Why is some guy in Las Vegas selling a nut kiosk in Denver?(10:48) - What are the insights when it comes to economies to scale?(13:05) - How to defend from a landlord trying to capture all the value from you?(14:35) - How do we think about potential customers & walking traffic? Is there a chance of cross-selling other products? How?(16:55) - Deal 2: A product invented by firefighters - Cool Deal Alert!(20:55) - Growth potential of the product? Let's talk about product design, marketing & distribution: Why is this deal so interesting? (25:35) - Channel risk & channel dependency. What should you consider?(28:08) - Branding & potential niches to cover?-----Links:* https://fcbb.com/retail/denver-intl-airport/semi-absentee-owner-denver-airport-dried-fruit-and-nut-kiosks-101-20919-----Past guests on Acquanon include Nick Huber, Brent Beshore, Aaron Rubin, Mike Botkin, Ari Ozick, Mitchell Baldridge, Xavier Helgelsen, Mike Loftus, Steve Divitkos, Dzmitry Miranovich, Morgan Tate and more.-----Additional episodes you might enjoy:#106 A Pet Product and Saas business for sale. Which one do we like?#105 How to Make Money in the E-Commerce Game - Bill D'Alessandro gives an e-Commerce masterclass - part 1#96 From W-2 to Business Owner - Patrick Dichter tells us how to cold reach seller and we discuss 2 Deals#92 Wait... what? You laid-off 90% of your staff?!? - Pete Erickson joined us for an exciting WarStories episode!
The 16:9 PODCAST IS SPONSORED BY SCREENFEED – DIGITAL SIGNAGE CONTENT The cannabis retailing industry is interesting in a whole bunch of ways. It is a unique vertical market with an absolutely screaming need for digital signage and interactive technologies. While longtime recreational users may know their stuff, as US states and Canadian provinces have legalized, there's a whole bunch of new users coming in with needs that have more to do with sleep problems or arthritic joints. They walk into dispensaries and are confronted with products and options that are somewhat or entirely unfamiliar, so screens that promote and explain are very helpful and relevant. The dispensary business is also interesting because the industry has its own overcrowded ecosystem of payments and management systems that need to somehow be tied together. The largest player in cannabis digital signage is the Bowling Green, Kentucky firm Enlighten, which is in some 1,200 dispensaries in the United States, I had a fun conversation with Enlighten founder Jeremy Jacobs, who found his way into digital signage when the clean energy business he was running went south in the late 2000s recession. He pivoted into screens in businesses, and menu displays for restaurants led to an opportunity to branch into cannabis retail. He's a super-smart, interesting guy more signage people should know about. Enjoy. Subscribe to this podcast: iTunes * Google Play * RSS TRANSCRIPT Jeremy, thank you for joining me. Can you give me the rundown on what your company does? Jeremy Jacobs: Yeah, absolutely, Dave. Enlighten is the only real omni-channel company within the cannabis vertical particularly, and by omni-channel, we affect the customer journey throughout that entire customer journey. We have a product real quickly called AdSuite that targets people in a digital environment, whether it be mobile, Roku or even desktop computers based upon audience segmentation data we have, to know those are known cannabis consumers. And then we have our SmartHub product, which is an in-store product which is why we're here today, digital signage, kiosk related, and that product helps to upscale the customers that were brought in from the marketing from AdSuite. And this could be on menu boards, this can be on information displays, this can be on tablets, any number of things, right? Jeremy Jacobs: Yeah, so SmartHub is really unique. Even if you zoom out of the cannabis vertical and just look broadly at the digital signage industry, SmartHub is an extremely unique product that we created. It manages kiosks, it manages digital signage, all sorts of menus, feature boards, order queue systems, break room TVs, where the audience has shifted from a consumer to the actual employee. It uses extremely advanced logic and filtering with the point of sale data that it's consuming to make these things and even has an e-commerce component to it. So really the way to think about it is that SmartHub is an extremely robust merchandising platform that manages all of your consumer facing surfaces, whether that surface is a passive screen, an interactive screen, like a kiosk or even the webpage where someone would come to purchase and make an order on your website. And the cannabis industry is its own unique ecosystem, right? There's POS companies that only do cannabis business, and so on? Jeremy Jacobs: Yeah, I would say there's no true word than cannabis is its own individual ecosystem. So as a veteran, not been in the industry quite as long as you but since 2008, I've seen a lot of things and cannabis extremely unique. So it does have all of its own tech stack companies for the most part. There are a few companies, Microsoft Dynamics makes a sort of a POS system that's been modified for cannabis. But outside, I'll see a Square every now and then, but for the most part 99.99% of all point of sales systems at a digital signage company would integrate with are extremely cannabis specific and they all compete for what is roughly 8,500 retail clients across just short of 40 states, and so to talk about the uniqueness, even in more depth, not only are the stacks different in cannabis than they would be outside of that, but all the individual laws and rules that apply very literally from state to state. So you even have state variances. Why would so many companies decide, “I want to be in a space that's changing constantly and not all that big and in the grand scheme of what retail is”? Jeremy Jacobs: That's a great question. I think what your question was alluding to, there's the TAM, the total addressable market. You look at restaurants and there's literally hundreds of thousands of them, and I would argue there's barely as many POS companies in restaurants as there is inside of cannabis. And I think it's a couple of things. From an emotional standpoint, this is “the green rush” right? Any cannabis advocate that for the last hundred years that it's been illegal has felt violated by the error, has seensocial injustice from that. I believe there's an emotional component why a lot of these companies are there, a lot of these leaders are there. Second, there's a power vacuum that gets field when no one wants to go somewhere. So when you take a look at the cannabis industry, none of these major POS companies that we're referring to, none of them had any interest at all whatsoever in getting involved in cannabis. So the result of that is someone has to, and then the third prong, I think of this little fork here is that there is a green rush. The Anheuser Bushes of the world are about to be made of cannabis. There's very unique transactions, very unique audiences, and there's a lot of money to be made there. There's a lot of value and you can see companies that are in the space that make tech. If you look on the internet, Weed Maps is probably the largest one, listed on the NASDAQ billion plus dollar company, recently Dutchie has made some announcements for billion plus dollar companies as well. So fortunes are being made even though the total addressable market is small. Yeah, I've always thought that the cannabis dispensary business was a particularly interesting one for digital signage, because unlike most retail where you walk into an apparel retailer, you know what you're looking for, clothes, I need a shirt or whatever. It's pretty obvious. But if I walk into a cannabis dispensary, I'm pretty much lost. I don't know what I'm even looking at and all these different strains of flowers and buds and this and that. It is like Mars to me. But, and I suspect a lot of people walk in like that who maybe aren't recreational users, but want it to help them sleep or calm them down or whatever purpose they have for it? Jeremy Jacobs: Yeah, and so to drill into that observation you've made is really there's two kinds of consumers that very quickly develop in cannabis. There's the customer that you just described, which is a new customer, and there's a lot of those, because again, cannabis was technically illegal for about a hundred years. And so there's a huge amount of new customers that don't know anything, and so there's a massive educational vacuum there, and that's actually, Enlighten really started as we recognize that, and so we created an in-store digital out of home, a television network that runs ads for brands and things of that nature, endemic or non-endemic. We've got clients like Door Dash or Vans shoes or FX networks and their cannabis shows, but the content that's on that network is educationally driven specifically to satisfy that lack of education that you just talked about, and then on the other end of that spectrum, there are these clients that very much know what they want and precisely what they're looking for and those particular clients aren't looking for that same experience. They're looking for, digital menus that can be sorted based upon terpenes are based upon cannabinoid profiles so the highest THC value, they're looking for is express checkout kiosks, so they don't have to have an interaction. So uniqueness of the cannabis dispensary from a digital signage perspective is you have to create digital environments that satisfy both of those polar opposites. I gather when you were talking about omni-channel that it's really important or helpful to a company playing in this space to be able to serve multiple needs and to integrate with the other technologies that are part of the ecosystem. If you just did digital signage, it's a walled garden thing where you're going to get much better reception for many users, whereas you can provide multiple components, right? Jeremy Jacobs: Oh, absolutely. I've been in a lot of industries. The restaurant space was the first one. I was really into digital signage. Sysco Foods started slinging my digital menus for me, and like things 2009 and their 30 different offices and so I got to see a lot of things there. But in the first week in cannabis, eight years ago, the word integrate came up like 40 different times within an hour, and so I've never seen an industry that's so demanding of integrations. Like for example, you walk into a restaurant and any number of restaurants and you look over by the hostess stand and there's the DoorDash tablet, and there's a GrubHub tablet, and there's a Postmates tablet and there's all these tablets. And so the hostess is watching these orders come in and then they're putting them in their POS system. That would never fly in the cannabis industry, like it's a demanded integration by these people, and so if you're going to create an integration engine, you're going to want to make it have more points of influence than just a TV menu, you're going to need to provide that e-commerce plug and you're going to need to provide those kiosks. You're going to want to link up with their customer data for targeting those customers, on their mobile devices. You're exactly right, if you're going to be relevant in cannabis, your stack better be serious because they're trying to reduce that vendor set to if they could just one, nobody does all of it, but they want to reduce that number to the smallest possible. Is that in part, because it's a younger buyer audience who understands technology more and didn't grow up in kind of old style restaurants or whatever, where there were all these different systems? Jeremy Jacobs: Interesting thing you said there,t because it's a younger buyer, so that was very true eight years ago. But at this point, that is not the truth at this juncture. So just a few years ago, I think it was two and a half years ago, the fastest growing segment of users shifted from 20 year olds to middle-aged mothers and it was the fastest growing audience, and then over the last few years, what has really been the fastest growing audience has actually been elderly people. It seems like they're starting to come to grips with, “Hey, I have pains and aches and cannabis is actually the solution”, and so it's a big growing segment. But I think the answer to the question that you did ask is why is there this desire for a consolidation of a tech stack more than anything. Yeah, I was thinking more of the operators that tend to be younger. Maybe that's not the case? Jeremy Jacobs: Same thing at this point, it's not the case now, it's weird. So it was the case before, a hundred percent because who was willing to take that risk to get in the weed business, and so a hundred percent, but now I'm sitting in meetings with digital officers and marketing officers from Abercrombie and Apple, and they came from big organizations and so it's a very changing landscape. But at the end of the day, I think that some of them are young, so yes, to your answer, very good observation. Second is the ones that aren't young are professionals, and they're used to dealing with that. But thirdly, I think for both of them, the demand of tech stack is necessary because the regulations and the data that they have to send back to the state agencies and authorities and all of those sorts of things and the compliance they have to undergo is worse than any other industry ever. Like they're under so much scrutiny and you could lose your license at the drop of a hat, and so they want less to deal with so they can focus more on staying in business. Does that touch on your platform and what you do? Do you have to have a Nevada version of it and a Colorado version and I forget where else it's legal, California, obviously. But do you have to pass them out state by state or is it pretty uniform? Jeremy Jacobs: Great question. So the technology itself is the same across all the states. AdSuite is AdSuite and SmartHub is SmartHub, but there are definitely nuances. So let me give you a couple of interesting examples in the state of Pennsylvania, you're not allowed to put anything up on a screen from a digital signage perspective, unless absolutely it has been medically proven. And so it needs to come from a doctor or some position, a medical authority, and in Alaska, for example, they don't believe anything has ever been proven by a doctor or medical authority and so you can't put anything up that even closely resembles a recommendation. So there's two polar opposites. So from a content perspective, I gotta watch those things. From an advertising perspective. Some states, even though it's cannabis, won't let you show pictures of weed in the advertisements. Go figure that out. How do you advertise weed without showing weed? You can't show people consuming the product in a lot of states with advertisements. So there's another nuance, and then a third nuance is like in Pennsylvania, what I'm able to put on a digital menu is very specific and I cannot put any imagery into one thing, and I have to, I'm required to put certain testing results, similar to the way in the restaurant industry. Now everybody went digital whenever they were required to put the calorie count for these items, and that's when you saw this massive uprising in digital cause they got to replace all this stuff anyway, might as well go to the screen, and in Pennsylvania, I got to put things like that, testing results. What's the content that seems to be required across all the different dispensaries, kind of the money messages that need to be there, and the operators want to have up there? Jeremy Jacobs: Yeah, so from a TV menu perspective. We'll start with our that's the most largely adopted digital signage product ever and so the TV menu, what's necessary is the name of the products, the type of the product, the weight of the product, the price, the product, but really importantly, people want to know about cannabinoid profiles, is this high or low in THC? The psychoactive ingredient that gives you the feeling of a high, is it higher, lower in CBD, which is the non-psychoactive ingredient that really focuses a lot on pain, arthritis and inflammation and things of that nature, muscle pain. So consumers sort of demand that, operators want to provide that. And from an educational perspective, if you're talking about a different digital signage product and just more like digital signage, we're producing educational videos, the demand really is around education of what are these different terpenes, what are these different cannabinoids, these little things inside of the cannabis that creates different effect for each strain, like this one makes me sleepy, this one makes me energetic, this one's great for back pain, and so that's the demand from a regulatory standpoint of pretty much the only uniform thing that I can't really do is show anything that's cartoonish that might want to lure children into the store. There was a big problem with packaging for edibles for a while there, right? Jeremy Jacobs: It was, they've got sour patch kids on the box, and the first versions of edibles were very kid friendly because they took kids candies and made them, and now that's pretty much been regulated out. So the same thing, that same sort of concern with the packaging that you pointed out with edibles is also a concern in digital signage and even digital advertising. So if I'm targeting a mobile phone, even though I'm targeting a known cannabis consumer, just stay away from anything that might be alluring to children. So if I'm a customer of Enlighten, is it a SaaS platform that I am using?. Jeremy Jacobs: Yeah, so the two products are different. The SmartHub is the in-store signage, kiosk, kind of technology that manages all of that and talks to your POS system. That is definitely a SaaS product. As far as pricing models, there's been a lot of those in digital signage, our kiosk system is one price for your entire store and use as many as you want. Our signage model is the same as anyone else's, per node. SaaS model on our AdSuite product, though that is a SaaS product, if you will, it's a piece of software that gains you access to those audiences on our DOH network and in stores, as well as, digital Roku devices, mobile devices, desktop computers but that's driven just like any other digital advertising model would be external on a cost per impression basis. What's the footprint for your company at this point? Jeremy Jacobs: So we've reached a really interesting crossroads, very few companies in cannabis have ever got over that thousand mark. Right now, I would estimate we're in probably roughly 1200 dispensaries, somewhere thereabouts and then have several hundred other clients that are brands and so forth so our footprint reaches to about 1500 or so clients, big number and a TAM of 8,500, if you look at it that way. And this is an industry that like more and more states seem to be coming on stream, or at least there's a push to bring them on stream. So it's not like it's a finite market right now? Jeremy Jacobs: Yeah. So that's part of the growth. When we're assessing growth, there's a couple ways to look at it. One is how we can get more money out of the existing customers and that's to offer premium versions of our products, additional services that might be out there that we could focus on. But also there's just the overall growth of the entire market itself, and there's a couple of phases of that. The first phase is for the state to go medical. So now, they can be a client of ours. But typically, we find the greatest traction in the states once they go recreational because what happens is their revenue growth is astronomical. People don't appear to want to go to get a medical license nearly as easily as just walking in a dispensary. So whenever they go recreational, they buy a lot of other products from us and really focus on that retail environment and creating a magical experience for those recreational customers. So really there's two phases, medical, and then recreational. But right now you're looking at cannabis in almost 40 states at a medical level roughly 10 or so at a recreational level. I'm averaging there, the number changes. I haven't kept track of it in a minute, but to give you an idea of growth, there's about 10-12 to go to medical and then there's the vast majority or 80 plus percent that are not yet recreational. So a lot of growth in them. Are you up in Canada as well? Jeremy Jacobs: We are. So it's a lot of challenges working inside cannabis, anybody's ever nailed internationally. You have to have your own bank accounts, your incorporations, your teams up there. It's hard to import hardware products, and as a company, we do also provide the hardware. So that has its own challenges, but we do operate in Canada. We've got some systems in Puerto Rico, which is a US territory. Jamaica, we send some things too. We have some plans we're brewing up. Spain has a pretty good sized cannabis market and so we're looking internationally there because the challenge is the same. People don't understand cannabis, they need education. That's the same worldwide. It's been illegal globally, for a hundred years. How did you get into it? You mentioned that your first foray into digital signage was restaurants for Sysco, how did you end up in this? Jeremy Jacobs: So in 2008, I started a company called IconicTV, and it's had many offshoots with verticals. I've been one of those guys when I see a vertical, I'd make a very precise product. We helped build a C-store DOH network called C-store TV. We had a school product called, school menu guru. We had a lobby product called lobby Fox, it does visitor management and so one of those products we noticed early on was digital TV menus, and so in 2009, I formed a deal with Sysco foods and they have 30 offices across the country that would distribute my digital signage, digital TV menu products to their restaurant tours. And so I hired these vice presidents in each of those areas to partner with those offices as Sysco calls an opco, and so Sysco would have reps and my reps would go do ride alongs, and so they would ride along with these representatives and go in and meet these restaurant tours at work and stuff. One of them, the guy in Denver, Colorado, Ted Tilton's name? So Ted called me one day and this is right before cannabis goes legal in Colorado, which was the first state to legalize recreational cannabis, Washington and Colorado voted on it basically at the same time. But Colorado was the first actually who implemented, and he calls me, he says, Hey man, I got this idea and I said, what is it? He goes, these TV menus we're selling through Sysco. I said, yeah, he goes, what do you think about making some for marijuana? I said, what are you talking about? And he says I've got these buddies opening this dispensary called DANK, and it'll be the closest dispensary to Denver International airport and I got this feeling as soon as weed was legal in Colorado, a lot of people are going to be coming into DIA and this place is going to be really busy since it's the closest one, and he says, and I was like, what would be the difference? And he said, essentially we put up marijuana buds instead of chicken sandwiches. And I said, I'm in. I've been a big advocate of cannabis for a long time. At one point, I was even the executive director of Kentucky NORMAL, the division of the national organization for marijuana legalization. It's the Kentucky chapter. I've been a big advocate of it. I've been a self prescribed patient for many years. It was an interesting opportunity to take a couple of things I was very passionate about both cannabis and digital signage and went to do some real work on two things I care about. So we dove in. Has the profile of the operator changed? I remember talking to another person who's involved in this space and actually being out in Denver and he was saying that there's two types of operators. There's a business people who see this as a growth opportunity, and they've already had some experience in retail or in investing or whatever, and then there's growers and growers who are turning into retailers and he said the challenge with the growers as they're growers, they're not business people and they don't really understand retail, and I'm curious if in the early days you saw a lot of them stories of dispensaries that would start up and then drop off because they didn't really know what they were doing? Jeremy Jacobs: Yeah, and I'll take that example. Your friend gave you a pretty good insight there, but to expand on that, I don't even think it's just growers though. It's I think just very weed passionate people, like they're very passionate about it. Whether it's consuming it or making concentrates or growing it or whatever. So I would just call them plant passionate people versus business people, and it very much exists, and it doesn't today to the degree that it used to. In the beginning, someone that's a senior executive vice president of Abercrombie is not going to go start a dispensary, like during the first couple of years, we were all wondering if everybody opened these things, were all gonna go to jail. I'm sure everybody in America is going everybody in Denver is going to do it, just wait, and if all my friends at open dispensaries were sitting around, I would have conversations with the night and they're like, I'm just wondering if tonight, the DEA raids my house, and so nobody wanted to be under that scrutiny except plant passionate people. But as time got on and the federal government sorta started to take a position, even if the position was, “we don't have a position”, that's still a position, and so they're not taking an aggressive stance on it then you began to see real business people start to come into the environment and at this point, you have organizations like Cresco who just bought Columbia Care, and these operators have over a hundred stores and they're doing hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars in retail cannabis sales. These are not the type of marijuana dispensary that I think most people have in their mind. These people have entire floors of IT teams. They have entire floors and marketing teams. They do in-depth customer insight studies, and that influences every tiny nuance of their packaging and their store layouts. These are real operations, but I can still take you to Oregon right now and walk into the shop or Nancy and Megan who are best friends and they have tie-died things up on the wall and they're very whimsical people that are just very passionate and who also have a successful sotry. Now they're not going to sell hundreds of millions of dollars to cannabis, but they're also successfully operating. Think of it like liquor, for example, Liquor Barn exists and that's a big corporation. But, in the town I live in, everybody wants to go to Chuck's Liquors when Chuck was alive, because Chuck was just the coolest guy ever. So you went to Chuck, so they both have a place. Yeah, I've certainly seen the same thing. I remember being an Amsterdam for ISE and, you'd stick your head into one of these coffee shops, and it was just a hole in the wall and weird but out by the hotel where I was staying, there was a dispensary that looked like an Apple store, like it was very slick. Jeremy Jacobs: Interesting you say that. So there's this place called Euflora and Jamie Perino was one of the owners at the time and it's at the 16th street walking district in downtown Denver. This is the big street with the old piano outside and everybody wandering around a very touristy area and so we did the first project for them that I remember getting a call from them and they're like, “Hey, we open in 11 days and we've got this crazy idea where there'll be a touchscreen kiosk and it's sitting next to a jar of marijuana, and this kiosk has all this interactive stuff on it with everything about that strain of marijuana. We needed in our stores in 11 days. Can you guys do it?” And they said, oh yeah, and our budget is X, and I just laughed, and I said X is missing a couple of zeros, especially for 11 days, what are you talking about? And they're like, can you do it or not? And I said I can, but I shouldn't but I'm going to, and so we did, because we wanted to be part of the exposing of this whole thing. And so we took it on, and so when you would first walk on your floor, you can dig up some old video files from the news channels from eight years ago, it very much looked like an Apple store cause we had Apple iPads on every table next to a jar of marijuana and you can scroll up and down and see what the euphoric effects would be and does it make you sleepy, happy, hungry, horny, what's it going to do? And, in what genetics, where did it come from? And just all this interesting stuff, and people would come into that store fascinated, and so it was very Apple-esque. How did you end up in digital signage? Cause I was looking at your bio and you've got patents in Magneto, hydrodynamics for energy exploration, drilling and everything. How did you get here? Jeremy Jacobs: What the hell happened? Early in life I realized I didn't really like formal education. So I think I'm like nine hours from a college degree, but I dropped out and became entrepreneurial. So I became an investment broker and I worked on several different fundraising deals, most of them were driven around biodiesel. That was very active at the time when I dropped out of college, nearly two thousand, biodiesel was a thing, a lot of different technologies. And very quickly I got interested in alternative energy technologies and energy efficiency technologies, and just anything that was energy related, and technology related, and so I had an operation with about 20,000 acres of natural gas wells in Eastern Kentucky that were clean natural gas wells using advanced technologies like hydraulic fracturing. I started inventing Magneto hydrodynamic technologies that's used by Chevron and Exxon and people that. It goes down in oil wells. It's used to eliminate paraffin and that technology has now been adopted by the DoD to make airlines, to make fighter jets fly farther because the fluid systems flow better and a lot of different things, and then 2008 came, so I own a quarry, that's mine and silica for Silicon to make marker processors, and I got a bunch of natural gas, wells and magnetic technologies, and 2008 comes, 2007 comes, the housing crisis collapses, everything and natural gas went from about $14 in MCF, which was a vast majority of the revenue that we were driving to like a dollar and a half in MCF, which is the unit that you produce and sell for, it stands for thousand cubic feet, and I needed $3 to make that make sense, right? And now it's at a dollar and a half. So I went from really cash flow positive to a hundred percent cash flow negative and just a matter of months. And on top of that, when you own a bunch of quarries, nobody's buying any materials, and so I look up and literally everything I'm involved in just all of a sudden is collapsing and I don't have the payroll to make payroll for this massive bunch of employees. We had several offices in different parts across the country. And surely it was excruciatingly painful fast. Everything had to close, and so here's, here's the reality. I'm at home depressed out of my mind. I've just had to lay everyone off. I've had to shut in all these gas wells. I've had to lock the gates on all these quarries and nobody wants to talk about anything, everybody's going broke and my wife comes to me and she says, you've got to do something. We have kids we have to feed, we have bills we have to pay. You cannot sit here and be depressed, and I had seen somewhere I think it was in a mall. A friend of mine had built a TV screen, turned sideways, and it had Adobe Flash player on it, and it was playing some animated motion graphics that he controlled on a desktop PC inside this big kiosk and I thought I could do something similar to that, and so I literally grabbed a 32 inch Vizio TV out of my living room. My wife goes, where are you going with my TV? I said, I'll bring it back to you. I'll see you in a week, and she goes, you are leaving with the TV for a week? I said, yeah, and you'll get a bigger one, I promise, and I grabbed the Toshiba laptop that my field hands that would go around, they had to log what parts they use and how long they were on job sites and stuff, and I grabbed one of these old stinky laptops that smells like crude oil and hung it in a friend of mine's restaurant in Clarkson, Kentucky. It was called K's cafe and it was political season, and so I'm going to tell a story about myself here, Dave, and so I go around and build these very animated PowerPoints and I'm changing the files out via LogMeIn at the time. I didn't even have any software, digital signage software. I didn't even know about the digital signage thing. And so I'm like, I gotta sell ads on this thing, so I go to this guy that's running for sheriff, and I told a little white lie. I was like, Hey man, the other guy that's running for sheriff, he's buying in on my screens. It's in the most high traffic restaurant, and apparently legally, I've got to offer you the same opportunity at the same price. He goes, why what's he paying? And I told him, he goes, I'll take it, and so then I went to the guy that I just told a white lie and said, this other guy is buying. It was, which was actually true the second time. That's how I got started, I had to feed my kids. I had a 32-inch Vizio TV and a busted up laptop and I sold some people aspiring to be politicians, some ads and some real estate agents, and it just grew from there. I look up and I'm in hundreds of restaurants and fitness centers with the DOH network and six months later, a friend of mine says, Hey, can you use one of those silly ad TVs and make a menu on it because the price of salmon keeps fluctuating so much. I got to put these mailbox letters, and so we made, which was one of the early digital menus. I think we'd both agree, 2009-2009 was not the dawning moment of digital menus. It wasn't the precipice of it. That was very early. And so we started using those and saw opportunities to replace those little black felt directories with the letters you run out of the M, and so you flip the W upside down, it's all bow legged looking, on the little felt boards. We started making digital directories integrated with Google sheets, so you could change it easily and the rest was history, man. I dove in and needless to say, the kids are fed now. The wife is happy. She got a bigger TV. I think it's 70 inch now. So everyone's cool. That's a hell of a pivot. Jeremy Jacobs: Yeah, buddy. Necessity is the mother of invention. All right. This was terrific. I really enjoyed our conversation. Jeremy Jacobs: Yeah, man. I was going to start off this morning saying longtime listener, first time caller. I've been watching your website, your blog, your podcast for as long as I can remember. So it's been an honor to finally get to be a part of it, and I really appreciate it. Thank you for taking the time with me. Jeremy Jacobs: I thank you, Dave.
Bathed in searing cobalt blue paint and gazing at the world through glaring red eyes, the 30-foot tall horse statue known as Mustang (or Blucifer to the locals) has welcomed travelers to the American West via the Denver International airport for more than a decade. But there is a lot more to the story of this horse than its striking looks. It comes with a melancholy and deadly history all its own, which Allison and Chris discuss in depth.Not to be outdone, however, the Denver Airport itself is a conspiracy magnet and comes packed with all sorts of strange artwork that many believe to contain code about the New World Order.Credits:Graphics -- Nathaniel DicksonMusic -- Spencer MorelockAdditional Info:The Blue Mustang StatueWonderland of the Weird Video on MustangThe Chatty Gargoyle
Today's Guests: John Kirk, Director of Communications for the International Sportsmen's Expo is with us to talk about the upcoming Denver ISE Show on March 24-27th, 2022 at the Colorado Convention Center. Then Randy Caranci with e-bike of Colorado in Louisville is with us to talk about what their shop has to offer. Get by... READ MORE
On Today's episode Aaron catches up friend of the show, State Senator for District 21 Bo Biteman. Senator Biteman announces his plan to run a "Cross Over Voting" Bill into the Wyoming Senate this February. Aaron and Bo discuss the differences between a 'Cross Over Voting' and 'Run Off Election' and why how well written bills are an effective form of legislation on voting reform. They recap the COVID pandemic and how Wyoming faired in 2021. Senator Biteman shares a personal story of meeting former President Trump and the message he relayed personally from Wyoming citizens. This episode is brought to you by Fly Sheridan - book your direct fly to Denver International airport at United.com This epsidoe is brought to you by FINE Sight and Sound - check out Wyoming's premier audio and visual experts at fssavpro.com
Welcome to Denver International! Here's the capstone donated from the freemasons, some murals depicting apocalyptic futures, and be sure not to miss "Blucifer," the giant, blue horse statue with glowing red eyes. Don't go downstairs though. The New World Order would like to keep their underground highways a secret. Clearly, the air traffic on conspiracy theories here is out of control. This week's sponsors: SimpliSafe - Take advantage of SimpliSafe's early Black Friday deals and get 50% off your new home security system by visiting SIMPLISAFE.com/daisy. Helix - Helix is offering up to $200 off all mattress orders AND two free pillows for our listeners at HelixSleep.com/strange. Stamps.com - Sign up with promo code DAISY for a special offer that includes a 4-week trial, free postage, and a digital scale. No long term commitments or contracts. Just go to stamps.com, click the microphone at the top of the page, and enter code DAISY. StoryWorth - With StoryWorth I am giving those I love most a thoughtful, personal gift from the heart and preserving their memories and stories for years to come. Go to StoryWorth.com/daisy and save $10 on your first purchase.
Radio Matt & Mo flashback to this early episode of the morning examining all the weird conspiracy theories surrounding on of the largest airline hubs in the world.
Have you ever stepped foot inside D.I.A. ? The largest airport in North America with a unique runway design as well as very questionable art work that has since been removed for obvious reasons. The Denver International airport has tons of conspiracies that have been discussed since the construction was completed. We might leave you with more questions than answers.As always thanks for listening and Connect on Social Media. E-mail: 2beardedhomiespodcast@gmail.comhttps://www.facebook.com/2beardedhomiespodcasthttps://www.instagram.com/2beardedhomiespodcast/https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSjJBoAZERfRVi_aPsaxTnw
DeHuff sat down with a longtime employee out at DIA (Denver International Airport). We get the truth on the mysterious tunnels that may or may not lead to Cheyenne Mountain. Could DIA support a society in an apocalyptic situation? The artwork inside and out of the airport, that many believe is a map to finding the truth. Employees having sex in baggage carts.And the acknowledgment by the city of Denver of the supernatural presence that is at Denver International airport.
#043 UFO Briefing, Denver International, Spy Craft and Flashcard Joe --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/scattershooting/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/scattershooting/support
Travel Gluten Free Podcast Episode 139 Fun Things to Do and Gluten Free Restaurants in Steamboat Springs, Colorado Welcome to the Travel Gluten Free Podcast, where you can listen in on how to lead a gluten-free lifestyle with more fun and ease! Travel Gluten Free gives you valuable information from finding a safe restaurant to knowing what food is safe to eat when you travel; I'll be with you every step of the way on your gluten-free journey. Lead your gluten-free life, don't let being gluten-free lead your life. Enjoy Food, Enjoy Travel, and Enjoy Life with your show host, Elikqitie! In this episode, I’ll share with you how to go spring hopping and how to enjoy countless hours soaking in hot springs, which springs I liked the best, and amazing gluten-free food you can find when you’re visiting Steamboat Springs. Colorado Road Trip Planning a vacation to Colorado is easier than you think! Because Colorado is such a health-conscience state, there are many options that a member of our gluten-free community can enjoy safely. With plenty of health-food stores and dining options you’re sure not to go hungry when traveling to Colorado by car. In addition to traveling by car, the Denver airport is a major hub, so you can also fly-in and out of Denver International easily. Since there are only a few gluten-free places inside the airport, plan to get a bite to eat after landing. Hot Spring in Steamboat Springs, Colorado Old Town Hot Springs From their website, "Old Town Hot Springs has eight different pools providing different functions to the facility. All of the water originates from the all natural Heart Spring and eventually flows into the additional pools. The pools vary in temperature from 103 degrees to our 80 degree lap pool." Definitely a local's favorite, Old Town Hot Springs is part of the Steamboat Rec Facility. You can purchase a day pass and soak all day long in the springs. Enjoy the waterslide, rock climbing wall, or regular chlorinated lap pool for some water fitness. I enjoyed the size of this facility and the family-friendly atmosphere of Old Town Hot Springs. Each pool is maintained at a different temperature to find the amount of heat you are most comfortable in. Besides the large main pool with a bridge, there are several other smaller pools you can soak in that are more adult-oriented. In addition to the main hot springs, Steamboat also boasts smaller springs that are not heated over 75 degrees. You can find a list and location here on this Hot Springs guide. Strawberry Park Hot Springs Definitely my favorite of all the hot springs I've been to in Steamboat; Strawberry Park Hot Springs offers multiple large pools with varying levels of heat. In addition to the pools, they also have chairs and provide a large restroom with a changing area. You can stay overnight in one of their cabins, the caboose train, or bring your own tent for tent camping along with enjoying the hot springs. If you're on the risque side, you're in luck! Strawberry offers clothing-optional bathing after dark to enjoy bathing in your birthday suit. Eating Gluten Free in Steamboat Springs Do you like Greek food? If so, head over to Skull Creek Greek to eat falafels in a dedicated fryer and gluten-free pita bread! Also, check out Seedz Breakfast and Lunch Cafe, where most of their menu is gluten-free, and all of their menus are healthy! Grab gluten-free bread to go after eating your gluten-free pancakes for breakfast or lunch. If you’re looking for a dedicated gluten-free facility, then head on over to Inclusions Bakery and Dessert Bar for a yummy and gluten-free cinnamon roll or if you’re looking for lunch, try the pot pie or quiche. Since the owner is Celiac, they understand the importance of being gluten-free and ensuring amazingly good food for all of us in the community. For more lunch choices, grab a bite to eat at Salt and Lime, where the staff can tell you what is safe to eat as their menu isn’t labeled. Looking to take your lunch out for a picnic? Call ahead, and they can have it ready for you! Also, if you like sandwiches, check out the gluten-free offerings at Winona’s Restaurant, where you can dive into a gluten-free hoagie! The Guide to Traveling Gluten Free Are you anxious about traveling with Celiacs Disease? Does the thought of getting sick on vacation worry you to no end? Unsure of what travel options are safe and how to choose a safe restaurant away from home for you and your children? The Guide to Traveling Gluten Free will walk you through the process of planning and enjoying your next gluten-free travel adventure! Take the guesswork out of how to travel, where to go, and how to eat safely when you follow the information in my guide. Whether you are celiacs or gluten intolerant, my guide will give you handy information to delight in your next vacation experience! Learn how to take a trip safely, what questions to ask when you are at a restaurant and which online tools and apps to utilize to find safe, dedicated gluten-free restaurants and food options. Find out what stores to shop at to purchase gluten-free food, determine if a restaurant is gluten-free or celiac friendly, and when you should walk out of a restaurant. Journey with Travel Gluten Free Grab the Guide to Traveling Gluten Free Get the BEST all-natural gluten-free travel cosmetics at Lemongrass Spa! Find cool gluten-free swag in my new shop here Visit my Travel Deals page on my website Support Travel Gluten Free on Patreon Travel Gluten Free on Social Media Twitter Facebook Youtube Pinterest Instagram On the Web Spread the love of Travel Gluten Free podcast and share this episode with a friend ***Disclaimer: All content found on the Travel Gluten Free Website, including text, images, audio, or other formats were created for informational purposes only. Material contained on Travel Gluten Free website, podcast, and social media postings are not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your qualified healthcare provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. Never disregard or delay seeking professional medical advice, Travel Gluten Free website, podcast, and guests present content solely for educational and entertainment purposes, and use of this information is at your own risk.***
In this episode we go over some more conspiracy theories. We discuss theories about the Denver International airport, birds, flat earthers and more! Do you believe in any conspiracies? --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
This episode I try to make sense of all the cryptic artwork and sculptures that reside inside and outside of Denver International. Time capsules donated by the Freemasons and a runway system that resembles a swastika. Could an underground tunnel system be underneath the airport? With construction going 18 months over the target date and $2 Billion over budget, it sure seems like something fishy is going on in Denver.
Amber visits Colorado on a skiing trip, via Denver International Airport. Little does she know anything about the conspiracy theories surrounding it, or why she should. Steven Collins Fund: https://gofund.me/2cbb8e86 Email us john@mercurytheatrepodcast.com Follow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/MercuryPodcast Join the private Facebook Group https://www.facebook.com/groups/mercurytheatrepodcast Learn more about Mercury Theatre Podcast at www.mercurytheatrepodcast.com Support Mercury Theatre Podcast at www.patreon.com/MercuryTheatrePodcast Mercury Theatre Podcast Merch at https://www.redbubble.com/shop/ap/62185616 Follow our Instagram https://www.instagram.com/mercurytheatrepodcast/ (Theme) A Day at the Theater by Joe Weatherford On Hold For You by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://filmmusic.io/song/6928-on-hold-for-you License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Placid Ambient by MusicLFiles Link: https://filmmusic.io/song/6189-placid-ambient License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Dreamsphere 7 by Sascha Ende Link: https://filmmusic.io/song/458-dreamsphere-7 License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Sweet Cinematic Background by MusicLFiles Link: https://filmmusic.io/song/7078-sweet-cinematic-background License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/john-badger/message
When 16 year-old Lashaya Stine leaves her home unexpectedly in the middle of the night, her family is left with so many questions. Was she the victim of sex traffickers? Was she lured from her home by someone unknown? Will they ever see Lashaya alive again? What's really going on at Denver International airport? Is there a crazy Nazi cover-up? Are there reptilian people living in tunnels under the bustling runway? Do the famous murals cover-up a deeper meaning? Find the answers to these questions, and many more during this week's How Did We Miss That?!
This week on The Wedge and Sara Cream and Sweet Jenny Sauce the girls have a very special guest - Kez! She is a social media influencer who shared the oddity that is the Denver International Airport. This podcast is a fascinating look at the Denver International airport that went way over budget, has a blue demon horse, gargoyles and hidden tunnels. Don't miss this exciting episode that looks at the Conspiracy Theories behind this amazing place.
Episode Notes There are strange goings-on at the DIA. In today's episode, Nic tells all about the airport's involvement with Nazis, Aliens, Lizard People, Doomsday Tunnels, Santa, and more! Support Zeitguys by donating to their Tip Jar: https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/zeitguys Find out more at https://zeitguys.pinecast.co
Join Grant and Jack as they talk about their favorite conspiracy theories. From Mothman to Hitler being alive to the Denver International Airport.
Were crosswinds on December 20, 2008 in excess of the safety limit of 33 knots? If it was, that could explain why Flight 1404 veered so hard to the left before its crash at Denver International... The latest in science, culture, and history from Smithsonian Channel.
Ah, DIA...what is it about you that drives sanity and reason far from the minds of men? Just ask Greg Ericson, the conspiracy theorist who has been bewitched by this dark puzzle. He's not stopping his quest for the truth, even if he has to go through the hordes of hell to get it. Ok, sooooo maybe not "hordes," but just one man, the communications director of DIA, Steven Snyder. But make no mistake, Steve's armed with the most powerful weapon known to the conspiracy theorist. Snark. So who wins this epic battle? Why - we do, dear listeners. Enjoy this - our love letter(s) to that one maybe-not-so-strange-but-sorta- weird airport, Denver International.XO, WR
We went on a summer trip up to the Smokey Mountains. I had no expectation that I would see or do anything that related back to Disney. But of course, I was wrong. I seem to always have this lens that is on the lookout for Disney-related things. And I saw a bunch that I call out in this podcast. The Gargoyle at Denver InternationaL https://youtu.be/fKVOtx7Blfk Glass blowing: https://youtu.be/BKOaRdxFfRk Don't forget about my video series: Lost and Found in WDW http://feeds.feedburner.com/LostWdw YouTube direct link And hit me up on Twitter anytime @DisneyView --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/daves-disney-view/message
Join John and Paul as they explore the nature and mindsets of conspiracy theories. Listing four of their favourites, the moon landing hoax, Project Blue Beam, Birthers, and Denver International... Exploring the life, science, mystery, comedy, and absurdity of our journey here and Beyond Our World
We mentioned DIA in our underground bases episode but this time it is only Denver International airport. The airport is crazy. look up the murals. look up the trolling construction signs up in 2018. Look up the "4th Grader" sized gargoyles in the baggage claim. Is there anything to any of this? Our good friend Eric Bauza is here and he does the voice for so many of the cartoons I grew up with. he is a hoot. conspiracy theories, paranormal, theory, conspiracies, freemasons, illuminati, secret government,
Episode 9 KRYPTOS - Can you crack the code? / True Crime Documentaries and Podcasts Join Graham, Michaela and Sarah as they explore the mysteries of the Kryptos sculpture located at the CIA Headquarters. Can you answer trivia about the CIA? Can you crack the entire code? Join the ranks of NSA and CIA analysts if you can Chime In! Speaking of the CIA and NSA, have you read Digital Fortress by Dan Brown? What about 1984 by George Orwell? What personal liberties are you willing to give up for safety? Listeners chime in- we follow up on Denver International, the evil latitude, and the lottery curse! Michaela updates us on Making A Murderer Part 2. What do you think? Was Steven Avery framed? Anytime you discuss Steven Avery and Brandon Dassey, the subject of wrongful convictions will come up - we recommend the podcast Actual Innocence for more information about innocent people and the time they’ve spent behind bars before being exonerated! The Disappearance of Crystal Rogers - this case is from Sarah’s hometown of Bardstown. If you haven’t, check out the documentaries about the case and help ask for justice!
In this episode, first Graham, Sarah and Michaela discuss airport trivia and then move on to the conspiracy theories and interesting facts surrounding Denver International Airport. Come along while we investigate Blucifer, the apocalyptic art, and hidden secrets of Denver International! Check out our Facebook page for photos and to Chime In with your thoughts! Next, the crew discusses the healing vortexes of Sedona! Listen as we explore the spiritual energy of the red rocks.
Wild stories from the road
In Today's Podcast I talk about some recalls, the new Jeep Grand Cherokee TrackHawk and my recent attendence at the Denver International Auto Show! #TeamViper (owners, fans and a dealership) are trying to take back the ring: https://www.gofundme.com/take-back-the-ring-record Subscribe to my YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/viperforlifeacr Follow me on Twitter: https://twitter.com/CodyCarConundrm Stay up to date by visiting my new website: http://www.codyscarconundrum.com/ Sponsor this podcast to increase your customer base. Send an email to drtaffy777@gmail.com with Sponsor in the subject line
This exciting episode of The Sportsman Of Colorado Radio Show is broadcasted ‘LIVE” from the 2015 International Sportsmen’s Expo at the Denver Colorado Convention Center. We had an all star line up of guests: * Susan Reneau, Author of Colorado’s Biggest Bucks and Bulls * Quentic Smith, QRS Outdoor Specialties * Austin Parr, Discount Fishing... READ MORE