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Seth Grimes was IN PERSON LIVE for WWE SummerSlam 2023 in Ford Field in Detroit MI 7/5/23, and gives a full in depth breakdown of the even from a live perspective. Venue, crowd, capacity, chants, vibes, reactions, Mom's Spaghetti, and so much more! #wweraw #wwesmackdown Like Follow & Subscribe: Twitter: https://twitter.com/Sethgrimesmedia Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SethGrimesMedia TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@sethgrimesmedia YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/unitedunderworldmedia Donate: paypal: https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/unitedunderworld contact me: Email: sethgrimesxiii@gmail.com Seth Grimes is an independent Author, Podcaster, Rapper, Host, Pundit, Journalist, Graphic Designer, Editor, Content Producer, and Hulkamaniac BROTHER! A United Underworld Media production -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The Pro Wrestling Podcast Podcast is a clip show reviewing everything going on outside the ring in the world of professional wrestling. From all the top podcasts to YouTube shows and media interviews. It's Talk Soup meets Pro Wrestling podcasts Listen each and every week as host Seth Grimes breaks down the best highlights from all of your favorite pro wrestling podcasts. Check out More Clips and Episodes: FULL AUDIO PODCAST: https://anchor.fm/prowrestlingpodcast FULL VIDEO PODCAST: https://youtube.com/playlistlist=PLbUzxHAbUelDKGzrvoe1MmQZRSw1g9Dgq VIDEO CLIPS: https://youtube.com/playlistlist=PLbUzxHAbUelDKGzrvoe1MmQZRSw1g9Dgq VIDEO SHORTS: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLbUzxHAbUelDZBqN9StgjIfSz6fg0gDIC --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/prowrestlingpodcast/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/prowrestlingpodcast/support
Seth Grimes was IN PERSON LIVE for WWE SummerSlam 2023 in Ford Field in Detroit MI 7/5/23, and gives a full in depth breakdown of the even from a live perspective. Venue, crowd, capacity, chants, vibes, reactions, Mom's Spaghetti, and so much more! #wweraw #wwesmackdown Like Follow & Subscribe: Twitter: https://twitter.com/Sethgrimesmedia Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SethGrimesMedia TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@sethgrimesmedia YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/unitedunderworldmedia Donate: paypal: https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/unitedunderworld contact me: Email: sethgrimesxiii@gmail.com Seth Grimes is an independent Author, Podcaster, Rapper, Host, Pundit, Journalist, Graphic Designer, Editor, Content Producer, and Hulkamaniac BROTHER! A United Underworld Media production -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The Pro Wrestling Podcast Podcast is a clip show reviewing everything going on outside the ring in the world of professional wrestling. From all the top podcasts to YouTube shows and media interviews. It's Talk Soup meets Pro Wrestling podcasts Listen each and every week as host Seth Grimes breaks down the best highlights from all of your favorite pro wrestling podcasts. Check out More Clips and Episodes: FULL AUDIO PODCAST: https://anchor.fm/prowrestlingpodcast FULL VIDEO PODCAST: https://youtube.com/playlistlist=PLbUzxHAbUelDKGzrvoe1MmQZRSw1g9Dgq VIDEO CLIPS: https://youtube.com/playlistlist=PLbUzxHAbUelDKGzrvoe1MmQZRSw1g9Dgq VIDEO SHORTS: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLbUzxHAbUelDZBqN9StgjIfSz6fg0gDIC --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/prowrestlingpodcast/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/prowrestlingpodcast/support
In this podcast Lance talks about his recent visit to Detroit, MI Ford World HQ and the Motor City Fox Fest show. Lance also talks about the need for story telling in our hobby and continuing the history on through podcasts and stories. Mustang fun talking about all the travels this year has brought and the YouTube videos and photos I have been able to produce from it. Listen in to this podcast if you love Ford Mustangs.Lance Foxbody FXChannel SponsorsNational Parts Depot - https://www.npdlink.com/Kenny Brown Performance - https://kennybrown.com/
Taylor Swift fans in Detroit have planned outfit ideas, friendship bracelets for weeks Taylor Swift at Ford Field: Bag policy for Eras Tour in Detroit Ford expands Escape, Maverick, Lincoln Corsair fire recall — and still doesn't have a fix 5 fun experiences to celebrate Father's Day with your Michigan dad
(2:01) - Stocks are selling off yet again to open the week. Chuck and Mike open the show talking about the sell-off, particularly how bad the Nasdaq has performed so far in 2022.(12:44) - A conversation about Goldman Sachs and how the company is predicting four rate hikes from the Fed this year.(23:36) - Diving into earnings season for Q4 of 2021. Earnings growth compared to the same period last year is predicted to be significant.(31:34) - Talking about how the major automakers in Detroit (Ford, GM, & Chrysler) are focusing more and more on electric vehicles.
On Gran Torino I used to enjoy movies, that is, before they all became preachy and “woke,” eager to push a Critical Theory Neo-Marxist narrative, and turning Christians and other demographic groups, into villains. In 2008, as the Hollywood Revolution was moving into overdrive, and as filmmaking was quickly descending into the septic tank, actor/director Clint Eastwood produced a gem of cultural iconoclasm: a movie truly worth watching, called Gran Torino. Eastwood plays the main character, Walt Kowalski, a crotchety Korean War veteran who lives in a changing suburban neighborhood in Detroit. His once-white neighborhood is being repopulated by Hmongs, who are people of a stateless Southeast Asian nationality who live in Cambodia and Vietnam, and who allied themselves with South Vietnam and the Americans during the Vietnam War. Many Hmongs were resettled as refugees in the United States following the communist takeover of Vietnam after the US withdrawal. In fact, at my baptism in 1982, I was given the washing of regeneration and renewal with seven other adults: all Hmong. There is an interesting conversation in the film between Kowalski and his neighbor Sue (the young adult Hmong woman whom he rescues from a dangerous situation). She explains to him about the Hmong, and said that “the Lutherans” resettled them in the United States. The Roman Catholic character Kowalski retorts with the memorable line: “Everybody blames the Lutherans.” Without resorting to spoilers, the theme of the movie is sin and redemption - with clear and unmistakable Christological symbolism. The persistent Roman Catholic pastor is actually a heroic figure in the movie, unlike the usual Hollywood paradigm of presenting Christians and clergy as predators or criminals. Father Janovich, who recently buried Kowalski's wife, nags Kowalski to unburden himself in confession, knowing that his soul is scarred by incidents that happened in the war. There is imagery of the baptismal font that Eastwood places into the picture at crucial moments. There is also the symbolism of the cross and of blood - though the movie is not gratuitously violent or gory (though it does have a good bit of profanity, just so you're aware). The title comes from the name of the car that Kowalski not only owns, but had assembled in his days as a Detroit Ford auto worker. It symbolizes a kind of freedom and innocence of an era that has passed. The car becomes the object of an attempted crime, later, a symbol of friendship, trust, forgiveness, and love - and once more as the physical manifestation of redemption, of returning to the state of freedom and innocence. The movie deals with racism, but not in the usual stilted, politically-correct, scoldy, cartoonish way that has become the norm, but rather in a refreshingly human and sympathetic way that allows for forgiveness and growth - one at odds with the current Social Justice Warrior approach of cancel culture, of the perpetually-offended, and the destruction of people's lives. Kowalski's character is complex and authentic: a man who is brutally honest, bearing the scars of warfare, bigoted, but one whose bigotry is overcome by human contact and his own sense of honor. He finds common ground with his Hmong neighbors over and against the hypocrisy of his own kith and kin. The movie is also filled with ethnic humor, which shows the clear distinction between the playful and even affectionate acknowledgement of ethnic and cultural realities between friends vs actual racism. This honest portrayal of normal collegial banter has been panned by contemporary viewers who are scandalized by the words used in the film. Of course, they cry that the film is “racist” - when in fact, it is the diametric opposite. This misrepresentation is because our immediate culture is afraid of normal, human interaction and is on a hair-trigger looking for forbidden thoughts at every turn, even vilifying, if not criminalizing, normal interpersonal interaction. Of course, in the real world of sanity and normalcy, friends, colleagues, and co-workers recognize our differences, and we acknowledge them with humor across the board, equally, instead of the current politically-correct paradigm of banning all such humor and replacing it with genuine, targeted, and debilitating hatred against certain “acceptable” demographic targets for genuine racism and abuse. Gran Torino cuts through all of that, and presents a normal, complex, lovable man underneath a gruff exterior while making use of clear imagery of the atonement and the sacraments to show God's transformative mercy at work. The movie is funny, touching, gritty, honest, and uplifting, but not in the usual contrived Hollywood way. The end of the film comes around to the beginning, as most great storytelling does. It is a master class for Social Justice Warriors to learn the difference between actual racism and healthy human banter and affectionate humor that naturally emerges where people are free. It is also a confession of the atonement, of redemption, of the forgiveness of sins, of love, and the peace that surpasses all understanding. If you have not seen the film, I highly recommend it. And never forget the dictum: “Everybody blames the Lutherans.”
What a week and we are just talking paranormal stuff! So much has been happening it was tough to nail down just one event but we chose the most American one we could find... The Ford Plant Museum in Detroit is increasing their ghost hunting tours as activity and Covid pick up. Talk about making lemons into lemonade. Shit, they might have made lemonade slushies even! Learn about the spooky fun happening in America's Motorcity. Get the info you need here with Werewolf Radar's This Week of Weird! This Week of Weird is the perfect end-cap to the workweek. Just the right amount of news and comedy to escort you into the weekend. Enjoy, Pingos! -------------------------------- If you laughed, loved, or lived because of this episode, consider becoming a Patron and supporting the team! You'll get access to exclusive content and other, mysterious rewards, so check it out for more info. Thanks to Chuck Coffey for our snappy little theme song, and, as always: Punch the sky, Spaceman Joe! Werewolf Radar Patreon
- Ford Reveals the All-New 2020 Explorer- Ford and VW to Announces Alliance in Detroit- Ford to Make Big Cuts in Europe- JLR Slashing Jobs in the UK- Valeo Makes Trailers Disappear- Hyundai Improves Driving for Hearing Impaired- FCA to Pay About $650 Million in Diesel Fines
- Ford Reveals the All-New 2020 Explorer - Ford and VW to Announces Alliance in Detroit - Ford to Make Big Cuts in Europe - JLR Slashing Jobs in the UK - Valeo Makes Trailers Disappear - Hyundai Improves Driving for Hearing Impaired - FCA to Pay About $650 Million in Diesel Fines
- Ford in Talks to Partner w/ VW and Mahindra- Ford Says Tariffs Cut Into Profits- Cadillac Moving Back to Detroit- Ford, Uber and Lyft Collaborate on Mobility- Hyundai Reveals i30 Fastback N- OSRAM Makes Displays Easier to Read- Drivers Need More ADAS Education
- Ford in Talks to Partner w/ VW and Mahindra - Ford Says Tariffs Cut Into Profits - Cadillac Moving Back to Detroit - Ford, Uber and Lyft Collaborate on Mobility - Hyundai Reveals i30 Fastback N - OSRAM Makes Displays Easier to Read - Drivers Need More ADAS Education
Blame it on the bollards: We’ve got bikes on the brain here today at Daily Detroit. A quick weekend trip to Columbus, Ohio, plus this feature in the Los Angeles Times about what LeBron James’ new bike commute might be like, also make us realize that we have it better than many other cities. Detroit’s bicycling infrastructure, nearly non-existent just a decade ago, is now legitimately something to brag about, with new protected bike lanes popping up on East Jefferson and Cass Avenue, more greenways planned and the MoGo bike share program in expansion mode. On today’s Daily Detroit News Byte podcast, we talk more about that expansion with Lisa Nuszkowski, MoGo’s founder and executive director, and Justin Lyons, Ferndale’s planning director. As we reported last week, MoGo plans to expand in Detroit and five inner-ring suburbs. And we can now confirm that the Livernois “Avenue of Fashion” is the next Detroit neighborhood to get bike sharing. Starting next spring, MoGo will add 30 new stations and about 150 bikes to the Avenue of Fashion and the suburbs of Berkley, Ferndale, Huntington Woods, Oak Park and Royal Oak. We also have an interview on the show with Thomas Leeper. He’s the creative force behind the website, Every Linear Mile and he’s literally chronicling every mile of street in the city of Detroit from two wheels. Here’s what else is on the show: Detroit City Council member Gabe Leland faces a new extortion lawsuit A new financial tech incubator and coworking space comes to Detroit Ford’s Corktown campus will get a pair of parking decks Detroit City FC’s new Fieldhouse gets an opening date And Ferndale’s OM Cafe is closing