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Today we begin a new sermon series on Elisha and a Faith That Carries On! Elish is the "next man up" after the heavenly homegoing of his friend and mentor Elijah who is asked for help by a widow in desperate straights. You can watch this message on the Authentic Life Fellowship Facebook YouTube channel. If you "Like" us, you will receive a notification each time we go live on Sunday mornings at 9 & 10 AM CDT. A copy of Pastor Jimmy's teaching notes is available upon request. Email him at authenticlifefellowship@gmail.com."
Taking a deep dive into the worlds of celebrities and their anything-but-normal lives. Billie Elish and her masturbation habits, Jelly Roll's wife and her hall pass, a YouTuber falls from the sky, Jon Bon Jovi is a rock star, and a new singer's massive cleavage helps her Instagram views.
Hosts Gil Bash and Gregg Masters MPH welcome Yael Elish, CEO & FOUNDER of Stuff That Works. Yael is a passionate entrepreneur with expertise in crowdsourcing and consumer-facing products, Yael was on the Waze founding team, where she drove the overall product strategy that led the company from User One to one of the world's most notable crowdsourcing endeavours. She also co-founded eSnips and NetSnippet, and was part of the senior management team that took Commtouch to its successful NASDAQ IPO in 2000. The three discuss the origins of WAZE and dive into her latest project Stuff That Works. For more information on Yeal's work, go to www.stuffthatworks.health and follow on twitter via @StuffThatWorks1 To stream our Station live 24/7 visit www.HealthcareNOWRadio.com or ask your Smart Device to “….Play Healthcare NOW Radio”. Find all of our network podcasts on your favorite podcast platforms and be sure to subscribe and like us. Learn more at www.healthcarenowradio.com/listen
Billie Eilish didn't mean to come out at all last month in Elle Magazine but shes out and proud. Bad Baby reveled that shes prego on Friday. Nick Cannon loves going to Disneyland.Make sure to also keep up to date with ALL our podcasts we do below that have new episodes every week:The Thought ShowerLet's Get WeirdCrisis on Infinite Podcasts
Today lesin na from de woman wen do good give Elish house and God come give am pikin wen e tink say e no go get for life again. De message of Hope dey tell us say God get resin why e make me and you and why we still dey here.
Chasing the next big marketing strategy can be exciting, but true success comes from relentless execution of one single strategy. Tune into this episode and join Eilish Burt from the Six Figure Business Map as she gets mentored by Jai Long on a private coaching call and he helps her with this simple marketing principle. Learn how to create an impact in your business and find out what tips Eilish has for growing her business and how you can do the same. Say hi to Elish on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/eilishburtphotography/ Elish Burt's website: https://www.eilishburtphotography.com/ ------- All Jai Long's Details: Jai Long's Website: https://jailong.co/ Join the Six-Figure Business Map: https://sixfigurebusinessmap.com/Next enrollment opens on the 13th Feb 2023 Say hi To Jai Long on Instagram: @Jailong.co Leave a review on the apple podcast app with the link below: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/creative-business-make-your-break-podcast/id1479145264 Wedding Photography Summit - https://weddingphotographysummit.com/ YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5nLrLzaJWItTgoNhe-y1sw Episode Sponsor: Pepperstorm (copywriting and SEO) : https://jailong.co/pepperstormSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
According to the Babylonians, Nibiru was a heavenly body associated with the deity Marduk. The name means "crossing location" or "site of transitiongod Marduk" in Akkadian. The name is derived from Akkadian and means "crossing location" or "transitional place." In the majority of Babylonian writings, it is connected with Jupiter. Tablet Tablet 5 of the Enuma Elish may refer to the pole star, which at the time was either Thuban or Kochab (Ursa Minor). The name "Nibiru" is taken from 5,000-year-old Sumerian cuneiform tablets and inscriptions. The name "Nibiru" translates to "planet of the crossing," and its cuneiform symbol was often a cross or different winged discs. Sumerians lived in the rich land between the Euphrates and the Tigris rivers, which is now southern Iraq. Because it is juxtaposed with the term itebbiru, which means "who used to cross," Landsberger and Kinnier Wilson believe it refers to a fixed place in the sky. In Landsberger and Kinnier Wilson's reconstruction of Tablet V of the En ma Elish, the term ni-bi-ri (variants: ni-bi-ru and ni-bi-a-na) is interpreted as "pole star." "Applied to Marduk, there is little question that in the late times Neberu was a planet, whether Jupiter or Mercury," the writers add in the footnotes, but "polar star" is used in the cited translation of Tablet V.
Golan Rise is a director and screenwriter. We talk to Golan about his poignant documentary Elish's Notebooks
Heinz Kaegi lives his passion as an international speaker, executive visionary, and bestselling author. researched the laws of leadership and developed the globally unique LEX Leadershift Excellence™ Program. His book Wanted: Leader has been translated into English and will soon be available in its 3rd extended edition. He has designed and conducted over 1000 development processes on 3 continents in 3 languages over the last 3 decades. His ability to develop leaders and executive teams is unique as regularly quoted by his clients. With no further ado, Let's welcome Heinz Kaegi! [00:00 - 05:25] Opening Segment Heinz is a speaker and best-selling author who specializes in conducting 1000s of future design processes for top executives and their management teams He is designed to help leaders shift from a "hands-on" approach to one that is "deep and immersive" [05:25 - 11:07] Seven Laws of Leadership Revealed The foundation is where there is no purpose; Where there is no vision, There will be no passion If there is no focus, there will be no freedom; If there is no commitment, there will be no achievement; When there is no team, there is no success; If there is no mentorship there will be no leadership in the organization; Where there is no hard work, there will be no excellence. [11:07 - 17:01] Challenges Are Great Because They Make Us Grow Beyond Challenges are great because they make us grow beyond our current limitations. The key to success is to find a challenge that is meaningful to you and that you can commit to. To be successful, you need to have a deep understanding of yourself and what you are here for. One way to achieve this is by undertaking a level one challenge. [17:02 - 23:00] In-Person Events for Leaders Heinz shares that there is something deeper than just vision when it comes to becoming a true visionary. He found out that the vision needs a foundation, and this is done through developing a bond of leadership with others. There are in-person events coming up in Salt Lake City and Florida in the next few years, and those who cannot attend can connect to the author online. [23:01 - 24:49] Closing Segment The importance of setting a purpose and vision for an organization's growth The importance of leadership in this process The seven laws of scaling outlined by Heinz Reach out to Heinz Kaegi! Links Below ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Tweetable Quotes: “You can leave footsteps along your trail. That means you discover within yourself your own power that makes you move forward. What is it you want to change or improve? And what are your motives to do that? Because only if wholeheartedly you are in this topic, whatever it might be. You will be crowned by success based on resonance If you have a shallow feeling about some topics, you are not going to end up crowned by success.” - Heinz Kaegi Connect with Heinz Kaegi by following him on Facebook, Instagram, Youtube, and Linkedin visit his websitewww.heinzkaegi.com to know more. Connect with me: I love helping others place money outside of traditional investments that both diversify a strategy and provide solid predictable returns. Facebook LinkedIn Like, subscribe and leave us a review on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, or whatever platform you listen on. Thank you for tuning in! Email me → sam@brickeninvestmentgroup.com Want to read the full show notes of the episode? Check it out below: Sam Wilson 00:40 Heinz Kaeigi is the mentor of leaders. He's a speaker and a best selling author. He has designed and conducted over 1000 future design processes for top executives and their management teams. Heinz Welcome to the show. Heinz Kaegi 00:53 Thanks for having me. My pleasure Sam Wilson 00:56 he pleasure is absolutely mine. Thank you for taking the time to come on today. You're calling in I think you said from Switzerland here. I guess it's evening for you, Heinz Kaegi 01:04 too, then yes, this evening. Evening. Sam Wilson 01:08 Well, I appreciate you taking the time out of your evening here to chat with us. Heinz. There are three questions I ask every guest who comes on this show in 90 seconds or less. Can you tell me where did you start? Where are you now and how did you get there? Heinz Kaegi 01:21 I started eight at the end of my C suite career.I jumped from the cliffs into my self and Gloria ship. And they trusted angels that they delivered a wink Southaven way down to the beach in Florida, which they did ,Ray it now after three decades old touch it and movie inspiring and challenging 100,000 1000s of executives L three called Zealots. That is where I am right now. And we have Elish, several books, we have done 1000s of workshops to moving leakers from hard work to current work. And the way this will lead towards sound is we will be creating an economy of heart. Yes. That it Forgive me if I come across as offensive when I ask this question, but it really is truly inquiry more than anything. That's a fairly ethereal concept in its own right. Or it's okay, we're going to move from hard work to heart work. What does that mean? Practically? Or tactically speaking? Okay, practically, hands on. Here it is what it's all about. Please, I have been doing research, I was eager to find out are there on this planet, any leadership loss? Because the word itself is already so misunderstood. And so to say that it's more serious, in many cases, okay, so seven laws of leadership. The first one, the foundation is where there is no purpose, there will be no power. If it gives me an hour, I think if you dozens, hundreds 1000s. of proofs of the pudding. The second about is whether it's an omission, there will be no passion. I mean, the look around you, the lack of reaching competence, in corporate in the corporate setting is huge. Because those managers, they just watched the whole day, the reality channel, and they forget about tuning in with the future channel. And that's why tomorrow, they they do the same thing as yesterday, just that they expect different results, it's not gonna work. So if that is hands on units, then we go to the third lab, where there is no pocus, there will be no real. That fourth one at SEC keep one again, is where there's no commitment, there will be no achievement. on that level, San, for one full week, day and night, we work with the leaders on 12 levels of commitment. Now this is no longer surface stuff. This is not theory. This is really dive deep. It's an immersive process. So we're at the end of this week, those leaders who have the privilege to attend they have 100% clarity about commitment and commitment is all aggregated forced. So while the cascade of an organization which leads to an attitude of the people that do the work, we have to do and damage not to the benefit of the clients nor to the corporation nor to the bottom line. It's the opposite. So with This process that we do, it's called Lex for unsets. Legs stands for leader, Chef Excellence for alias for those leaders. So by doing it the other way around with commitment that comes from within the employee is the CO creators, then it's no longer we have to. It's there, we want to write. So that produces that at the bottom line, thanks to a happy top line, which are human beings. Number five, where does low team there was no success. Many years ago, the development of all those models are this paramount. That was their tip sack. I said, Oh, success. That's the tall only to find out this years later, there is some more that is missing. What do you do with your life, when you have a cheat, there is a success. If you look at very old books from two centuries ago, or Henry Ford, and all those wonderful people, they got into a thick towards, let's say, the altar of their lives. It was only about how can they pass it on it meaning the wisdom of success to be fulfilled, ultimately. So the sixth level is Where is Long mentorship? There will be no leadership in our organization. And number seven, the top one is where there is no hard work, there will be no excellence. Those are the seven, eight right now working on number eight. Just between you, I mean, you the audience, me Sam Wilson 06:54 what what do please tell what is number eight. Heinz Kaegi 06:58 This is a secret that I'm gonna share when the time is right, which is soon. Very good. I loved I'm sorry. That's in the context of my next book. Right? Sam Wilson 07:13 Okay, fantastic. I'm looking forward to that. You've got a book coming out here soon called The Seven Laws of Leadership, which I think is is really the breakdown of the seven steps seven Yes. Things you just told me. When? When does that book get released? Heinz Kaegi 07:30 A child annuities in the first corner all 23? So probably February, March, Sam Wilson 07:36 yes, February, March 23. Okay, and I'm assuming that's gonna go through all the major major channels so we can look for it. Look for a sign. And we'll make sure of course, we put, if there's a if there's a link or anything where we can put in on a on a get notified list. Certainly, we'll make sure we include that there in the show notes. But I want to dig really get back into a lot of the things that you just mentioned here. And I guess before we do, though, how did you build this like this is you said, you've finished your C suite career and you're like, Ah, this is what I want to do with the rest of my life for the foreseeable future. But how did you develop these seven Laws of Leadership? Was that something that you developed on your corporate career was this just extensive study? How did you get here, Heinz Kaegi 08:21 most of it through hands on experience, look, along my long executive career, I have produced many tops, and many flops. The tops were outstanding probate, ego, and the flops. They were my teachers to grow beyond. So I was actually focusing all my career on two questions, mainly, one was what makes a difference between a group of people seemingly working together, and a peak performance to an irresistible peak performance and a second, what makes a difference between me as a manager and me as a leader, those two guides archetype, how to bring them together to form a team spirit within Solon, the way I communicate, I convey messages, I inspire and challenge my people is no longer based on their actual performance. It is now weights by their potential, which requests me to lead from the future. And that is that has just described through these laws of leadership. Sam Wilson 09:44 Do you in your experience, feel like leadership and or developing this skill set I'll even call it is something you can develop. I mean, is this something that maybe somebody doesn't have the natural typical things we see? In the in the leaders that you're like, Oh, hey, that's a natural born leader is there is this something we can build in people, Heinz Kaegi 10:06 I say, out of experience that leaders are not born leaders grow out of the mass thanks to challenge that life offers to them saw, everybody has some parts of the quality of the essence of leadership, within based on the fact that we are warm, turns all around your story of a winner. Because when it comes to the conception of a human being, there are so many birds, billions of birds, and if you made the race a that speaks already about some aspects of leadership, which then through light, you are exposed to challenges. And that makes you crawl into your own personal essence of leadership, if you choose to do so. So challenges are great, because they make us grow beyond. Sam Wilson 11:11 Absolutely, absolutely. So let's let's dial really down into the practical steps of what it is that you're doing, and maybe how you're doing it, can you can you can you give us some some color as to as to what that is? Heinz Kaegi 11:27 Yeah, this is based on practical experiences, long time. And through an immersive process. This is not surface stuff. So actually, if you, as a leader said, You were attending one of my master classes, and let's imagine we would start on the foundational level, which is key, when there is no purpose there will be no power, they n $4.03 days plus the sweet maths, you spend lots of time with yourself with questions that I'm asking the dive questions, which puts you in a reflex that say, inner reflection to come out with answers. So you will discover you recognize what is inside. And it's mainly about two things on that foundational level, fundamental level, it is about recognizing who you are, that is not inventing yourself, and it's three cognizing. Okay, three cognizing, who you are, and what you are here for what makes you take, what do you stand up for in life? What is your, the vision that you want to fulfill, and this has nothing to do with becoming a copy machine for many other people. This is about discovering your own fingerprint, so that you can leave footsteps along your trail. That means you discover within yourself your all power that makes you move forward, what is it you want to change? Or improve? And what are you allowed this to do that? Because only if wholeheartedly, you are in this topic, whatever it might be? Will you be crowned by success based on resonance. If you have a shallow feeling about subtopics, you're not going to be ending up crowned by success is that the average out of elects concept. The leg stands for leadership, excellence for life. And that is an experience. So you, you get up to challenges that I'm going to offer to you in order to have the seeds that we plant grow from within. And like at the at the end at the seeming end of such a long many years process, you will be receiving a challenge from me that represents a once in a lifetime chance to grow beyond. Like for me, I've offered this challenge to myself at the end of Lex sell the seventh level chip, where the principle is once you reach the top to your top executive, keep climbing. And so for me this was I have offered myself the challenge to learn as how to conduct a symphonic orchestra. This is an impossibility because if you look at the petitions, this thick book with all the instruments on who's older no What's up, this is like a Chinese town or a village when you want to read it. So again, this is impossible, even though I wanted to, to become a conductor, as a teenager, since my dad has chosen Hanes for to learn something solid, and thereafter, let's check out whether the conservatory is so your pass. So I will, I have held true to that vision. So I have found ways to attend an orchestra session to get introduced. And then to get up to that challenge, which is way out of the corporate zone. And it learns, it teaches you how to lead beyond words. Sam Wilson 15:47 That's a really cool, really cool, Next Level challenge that you have set for yourself. And I think you and I talked about this before we aired or started started recording this, you actually get to fulfill that hear it from before this show will actually even go live here in the middle of October. Yes, that is absolutely cool. I love that. And I think it's really interesting that you said, you're gonna spend two to three months just working on the purpose, the level one, like the bottom, the baseline thing, why did you start there, Heinz Kaegi 16:26 because I have seen and experienced another path before him. That didn't work. Me as the visionary Sam, of course, exploring and he started with Vision Quest process for leaders. And lastly, they came back after the vision quest stage role, early warning, both fire late evening or in the light that came back, sparking the eyes, great leisure and streams and everything. Six months down the road, most of those regions have transformed into illusions. So I said heights. I mean, this was a great process. And still, there's something missing. So what makes leaders become true? visionaries. In the sense of a true visionary is actually the best real realist because he or she gets the son on the path. So I found out there is something deeper than just the vision. The vision needs a foundation, a solid foundation, which is the purpose of your life. Who are you? And what you stand for. Sam Wilson 17:43 That's it. And those are questions, I would argue and you probably agree or disagree. I don't know, maybe not. Those are questions that few are willing to take the time to answer. Heinz Kaegi 17:55 Yes. Yes. And Sam Wilson 17:59 even even if you came to me today in Heinz, and you said Hey, Sam, answer for me. What is the purpose of your life? I'd be like, Well, I mean, I've got some canned answers some things maybe that are surface that I could probably spit back, be it spiritual, albeit more Earth focused answers, and it's like, but they're probably not as introspective as potentially where you prefer people to go. Heinz Kaegi 18:23 Yes. To the point, Sam. Absolutely. Congratulations. This is why I'm here to inspire and challenge you. You all to be calm. Cool, you are deep down inside. Sam Wilson 18:41 Is this your version of retirement Heinz? Because it sounds like this is what you do for fun, or fulfillment or both? Heinz Kaegi 18:49 Absolutely. I was asked a number of years ago. Hi, it's how long do you want to continue doing this passage sailing? Then I said oh, what do you think? Why should I stop doing what I love so much? Sam Wilson 19:05 I would argue probably shouldn't I mean maybe the maybe the fruity drink on the beach. Isn't isn't for you must sound like this probably is. Heinz Kaegi 19:16 The beach boy within me has found together with my dear Regina My wife has found a beautiful sopped on the beach on the island of Cyprus. And we are there since 20 years and from time to time we are in Switzerland as well. Plus, I do have a home's font in the US, as I have shared with him already sad. So I love these contrasts. And they love what they do. That's why I do what I love. Sam Wilson 19:47 That is awesome. Tell me about your in person events. I know that something that you guys have some of those coming up here in Salt Lake City, and then maybe even potentially here in Florida. So tell me, tell me about those and how we can learn more about those events. Heinz Kaegi 20:04 Yes, in 2023, in April, we'll be doing in person events in Salt Lake City, plus probably the one in Florida, and the same again in the month of August for those who could not attend in April. And I say this, because we do on purpose, we do not be events, it's a very intimate setting, maximum 25 leaders, because as we already said, this is an immersive process, that is not really for everyone, you need to be willing to face things that life wants you to see Melk to bring out. And then there are seems like lack of self value, even at the top executive level that come that comes that come through and you come across your your paths, and many more things, this is an in depth process with fantastic results, we have so many testimonials, that would anytime approved that every minute, is is worse, to invest in early on development becomes developing the body of leadership in an organization means always, this is developing the power of the corporation. Because to the same extent that we shift our way, leading people, we shape the future of the corporation. So the easiest for you to find out about those events is you connect with me on the Heinz care.com. On kaegi leadership.com, you shall have the the links sound available. Plus there is a landing page. And you can connect as well, to check what I'm saying when I stand on stage. You can watch my latest TED talk about reaching beyond about leading from the future and without leaving Elena's of ideas as its gracious for your children and the next generation. I love it Sam Wilson 22:35 that that is absolutely fantastic. And I think that's in the reason I think this is relevant, obviously to this show, is that there are so many of us who are either leaders currently or aspiring leaders or will be leaders as our organizations grow and thrive. And more people come on board and getting I think the foundation set right early. Yeah, is paramount to again, it's the the old proverb of building a house on the sand or building it on the rock. It's like okay, you it's better to start with the rock, I don't think to help stay unfair to Well, I if I'm not mistaken. So even though I are on the Florida beach recording this right now. And I think there's a lot of stuff built on the sand here. But regardless, that's not the point just happen to think of that, as I'm sitting here talking kind of funny. But yeah, I think that that's absolutely important. And that's how that's why this is valuable, really, I think to this show that he's listened into our listeners just just because of the importance of leadership and getting these things set right out of the gate as our organizations grow. So thank you for taking the time to really break down I think even just your seven laws, I mean, even just listening to those put got my head to thinking no purpose, no power, no vision, and you went through all those, I won't rehash them. But those are those are really, really powerful. And I look forward to getting a copy of your book here when it comes out early next year. And of course, it will also include here in the show notes, the links to all of your websites where our listeners can find you as well. So Heinz, thank you for taking the time to come on the show today. And really just share with us your life story and your purpose and vision for what it is that you're doing right now. I think it's absolutely inspiring. So thank you for your time. Heinz Kaegi 24:23 Thank you very much for having me
Stevie Was introduced to Elish Le on his travels in New York. Elish helps people attain physical, mental, and spiritual wellbeing through strength training, meditation, breath-work and more. Elish has over 6000 hours of meditation practice drawing inspiration from many of the ancient Zen masters and worked with teachers including Shinzen Young, Henry Shukman Roshi and Valeria Forstman Roshi. Elish has also explored the world of psychedelics, with 400 trips across many different psychedelic medicines. The topics covered in this podcast were Elish's upbringing with Vietnamese parents who were refugees from the Vietnam war, how he believes he took on the stress and trauma from their lives, the moments when Elish tried to take his own life, how Psychedelics shattered his life but how 300 trips enabled him to see the world differently What 'Samadhi' and 'Enlightenment' are, how being stuck in a traditional view of the world can cause suffering and how he changed this. Enjoy a meditation at the end of the podcast which was recorded live by Elish. This podcast is definitely an experience, enter with an open mind!
On this episode, Cibeline & Steev cover California Livin', Edibles vs. Weed, top L.A. yummy grub spots. Our picks of the 3 big city stops in California, Billie Ellish & her story at 14 yrs old, David Letterman vs Johnny Carson. The Italian Lifestyle in Italy leads us to "The House of Gucci" film review. Theme song "Harborside" by Mark Femino Recorded by Mike Nash at Voice Motel, Somerville MA
We've transformed over 500+ lives! ✓ Reduce bloat and lose inflammation ✓ Tackle Gut & Hormones from the CORE ✓ SIBO, IBS, IBD, Amenorrhea, Hypothyroidism, PCOS, Celiac, Chronic Constipation, GERD, Coming off PPIs/Linzess/Metamucil, Laxative Abuse, and more! -------------------------------- → FREE 15 min Discovery Call: https://calendly.com/coreperform/coreperform → About Our CorePerform Services: https://coreperform.com/services → Submit your questions for next week here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/359139741759181 -------------------------------- On This Week's Episode! All about the Gut-Brain Axis Best probiotic strains for IBS pain A gut centered guided meditation and more! & More! -------------------------------- Ready to Join Our Fam and Change Your Life? Click Here→ DOWNLOAD OUR SERVICES https://coreperform.kartra.com/page/menu -------------------------------- FREE Weekly Gut Health Training What protocols, treatments, and solutions do we use to transform the lives of 500+ people? How have we helped hundreds resolve SIBO, IBS, H Pylori, Parasites, and more? Want free recipes to get started? Have a quick question? Tired of feeling alone in your journey? Click Here→ JOIN OUR FACEBOOK GROUP -------------------------------- MEET OUR FAM Dasha - @dashafitness Nick - @power_maurer Courtney - @fitandfabulousnutrition ---------------- GIVEAWAY! Leave a rating + review on iTunes for a chance to win up to $200 in VIP prizes! Winners are announced monthly on the CP Corner. → Simply leave a review, and send a screenshot to the CorePerform Instagram or Facebook Page
In this week's podcast, Guerin Emig, Eli Lederman and Eric Bailey recap the OU Caravan stop in Tulsa on April 28 and preview the three-game Bedlam softball series hosted by the Sooners. Also discussed: Head football coach Brent Venables a lot of fun at the OU Caravan hosted by Tulsa's Cain's Ballroom. Head men's basketball coach Porter Moser talks about needing to rebuild the OU roster once again but did not seemed upbeat about the challenge. Great chemistry between the two basketball coaches, Moser and women's coach Jennie Baranczyk Great reception from fans for athletic director Joe Castiglione at the OU Caravan as well It's not just about what will happen with the Sooners move from the Big 12 to the SEC with Texas, but also when that move will happen. BYU, UCF, Houston and Cincinnati's moves will likely be in 2023 The latest on the transfer portal for men's basketball and football. Like NIL, the portal is good for players Previewing the three-game Bedlam softball series that begins Thursday, May 5 in Norman. Which unknown player will step up for the Sooners this year? Will the Bedlam softball series continue when OU moves to the SEC? Where will those games be hosted? Worried about the weather for the three-game series in Norman? Here's Tulsa World meteorologist Kirsten Lang's forecast. Join us Aug. 2 as we honor the best in area high school sports at the annual All-World Awards banquet, presented by Bill Knight Automotive. Get your tickets here. Related content: Guerin Emig: Brent Venables picks no SEC fights in Tulsa, does state of Sooners' future: 'So the stakes get a little higher. Good. We're bringing our chips' 'Moving on': Porter Moser and OU surprised by Umoja Gibson's exit, ready to continue building for 2022-23 Energetic Brent Venables enjoys 'fist-bump' moment with Sooner fans at Cain's Ballroom Oklahoma's 'motivated' following first season under Jennie Baranczyk Guerin Emig: Joe Castiglione among dignitaries worried about NIL's misuse, college sports' sustainability as result A look at OU, OSU, TU and ORU men's basketball transfers announced during the 2022 offseason A look at OU, OSU and TU football transfers announced during the 2022 offseason Guerin Emig: OU will eventually leave Big 12, but Bedlam softball must be here to stay Rylie Boone's patience, perseverance pays off with special season for Sooners Thursday's Bedlam softball opener moves to ESPN 'We'll see': Elish's return to the pitcher's circle in the air ahead of crucial Bedlam series at OU Sports Columnist Guerin Emig: Email | Twitter | Follow his stories Sports Writer Eli Lederman: Email | Twitter | Follow his stories Sports Writer Eric Bailey: Email | Twitter | Follow his stories Support the show: https://tulsaworld.com/ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
En este nuevo episodio @cinecohector nos contó sobre la posibilidad de que Ana de armas sea Spiderwoman, @erickwaffle nos trae la noticia sobre Bad Bunny y el personaje que interpretará para Marvel y @jonasbain nos trajo un pequeño review del documental sobre Jimmy Saville de Netflix, divagamos entre el final de Moonknight, el contrato prenupcial de Jennifer López y Ben affleck, la renuncia como director de FAST X de Justin lin, la polémica de Chris Pratt y hasta de la aparición de billie Elish en los simpsons....
In this week's episode Jessica Morrey sits down with Cowgirl softball star Miranda Elish. They discuss her journey to OSU, mental health and her love of animals. Josh Holliday recaps the Bedlam series win and looks ahead to WVUSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
CorePerform Dietitian and gut health coach Courtney interviews her client, Elish Le to chat about his own personal struggles with undiagnosed digestive issues, inflammation, and severe skin reactions. Courtney and Elish dive deep to talk about the science behind the CorePerform protocol to explain how and why the CorePerform Protocol is different and more successful than traditional elimination diets and cookie-cutter nutrition programs. -------------------------------- We've transformed over 500+ lives! ✓ Reduce bloat and lose inflammation ✓ Tackle Gut & Hormones from the CORE ✓ SIBO, IBS, IBD, Amenorrhea, Hypothyroidism, PCOS, Celiac, Chronic Constipation, GERD, Coming off PPIs/Linzess/Metamucil, Laxative Abuse, and more! -------------------------------- → FREE 15 min Discovery Call: https://calendly.com/coreperform/coreperform → About Our CorePerform Services: https://coreperform.com/services → Submit your questions for next week here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/359139741759181 -------------------------------- Ready to Join Our Fam and Change Your Life? Click Here→ DOWNLOAD OUR SERVICES https://coreperform.kartra.com/page/menu -------------------------------- FREE Weekly Gut Health Training What protocols, treatments, and solutions do we use to transform the lives of 500+ people? How have we helped hundreds resolve SIBO, IBS, H Pylori, Parasites, and more? Want free recipes to get started? Have a quick question? Tired of feeling alone in your journey? Click Here→ JOIN OUR FACEBOOK GROUP -------------------------------- MEET OUR FAM Dasha - @dashafitness Nick - @power_maurer Courtney - @fitandfabulousnutrition Kyler - @kylerjacksonofficial ---------------- GIVEAWAY! Leave a rating + review on iTunes for a chance to win up to $200 in VIP prizes! Winners are announced monthly on the CP Corner. → Simply leave a review, and send a screenshot to the CorePerform Instagram or Facebook Page
Este episodio está centrado en el mito de la creación bíblico de Génesis 1. Empezamos estableciendo quién es el autor de este relato. Para establecer la autoría del relato, hacemos un resumen rápido de la hipótesis documentaria. Luego realizamos una comparación con el segundo mito de la creación bíblico que se encuentra en Génesis 2, estableciendo sus diferencias, tanto de contenido como de estilo. Hacemos un resumen del mito de creación babilónico relatado en el Enûma Elish, estableciendo además que parte de este mito está basado en el mito de la batalla contra el caos (Chaoskampf), que es un mito recurrente en todas las culturas indoeuropeas, mito que simboliza el paso del matriarcado prehistórico al patriarcado de la edad de bronce. Constatamos que si bien en la biblia no existe el relato de este mito, existen referencias a él. Luego hacemos la comparación entre Génesis 1:1 - Génesis 2:4a con Enûma Elish y constatamos que el mito bíblico de la tradición sacerdotal es un plagio del mito babilónico. Y brindamos además una explicación de las causas por las que un sacerdote judío, tuvo que plagiar la cosmogonía de un pueblo pagano.
Today I talked about Travis Scott and Billie Eilish! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/kregg-bedford/support
Today on the DJV Download: The divorce between Kim Kardashian and the artist formerly known as Kanye West gets uglier. Is the job market bouncing back? We discuss. Where are the happiest places on Earth? We discuss that, too. Kylie Jenner and Travis Scott welcomed their second child over the weekend, while Billie Eilish reminded everyone that artists are in control of their shows when she stopped her performance to help a fan in need. All this and so much more. Follow us @DJVShow on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. More information on DJVShow.com.
Punto de Vista - Billie Elish y la pornografía 14 de enero de 2022
Punto de Vista - Billie Elish y la pornografía 14 de enero de 2022
Christa Elisha is a prophetess and has a word from the Father for this season we are in now! This video was filmed at the Reawaken America Tour in Dallas Texas on 12.13.21To see Christa's website go to ChristaElisha.comTo see Christa's viral video from last year click here… https://fb.watch/9T6kmptMYl/-------------------------------------------► Sign Up For Our Newsletter! -https://bit.ly/flyovernewsletter► MEET US IN PERSON!! Text EVENTS to 40509 to learn more► Watch ALL our content in FULL on Rumble! https://bit.ly/FlyoverRumble► Support Flyover Directly - https://www.flyoverconservatives.com/donate► Flyover Conservatives Gold and Silver Buyer of Choice - https://flyovergold.com► Use Promo Code “ Flyover” when checking out at www.MyPillow.com
Daf Yummy Épisode 375. Rosh Hashana 31 : Les deux tours. Pour Elish Magnich. by Myriam Ackermann Sommer
On this week's spectacular edition of the Z Report LIVE, we have an amazing show for you. We have the World premiere of a NEW single from Sruli Broncher ft. Elish and Grayman titled Bo Nohav, the Z Report debut of a new single from #TYH Thank You Hashem featuring Shlomo Katz released this past motzei shabbos in honor of the yahrtzeit of the Aish Kodesh titled Aish Kodesh, the US debut of a new single from Nehorai Arieli and Avi Podolinski titled Modeh Ani and the broadcast debut of a new single from singer and songwriter Yosef Daniel Villarreal titled Glorious Friend. Bentzi and Shmuel Marcus of Eig8th Day phoned in to talk to us about the release of their latest hit album "LUCKY." Find out how the duo went about writing these unique hits, the meaning behind some of these songs and whats next for the famed group. We also have NEW music from 8th Day and more, PLUS all of your concert information.
Dan is probably most well known to music theatre fans as the book writer of 13 (coming soon to Netflix). But he's also a lyricist, YA novelist, and an accomplished musician. And he's here for an amazingly deep, 2-LP collection from the First Lady of Song. Topics include: discovering Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart's words, working with JRB and Doug Cohen, knowing what you're good at, and yes I forgot about The Boys from Syracuse I'm sorry I'm sorry I'm sorry please don't @ me. Dan Elish Dot Com American Theater Group presents The Evolution of (Henry) Mann; music and lyrics by Douglas J. Cohen, book and lyrics by Dan Elish; October 14-24, 2021 Featured recordings: Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Rodgers & Hart Song Book - Ella Fitzgerald (1956) • Once Upon a Summertime - Blossom Dearie (1958) • The Evolution of Mann - Original Off-Broadway Cast Recording (2018) DO YOU LIKE MOVIE MUSICALS? DO YOU LIKE SONDHEIM? Then you will love our PATREON podcast The Original Cast at the Movies because 2021 is all about Sondheim Movie Musicals!! This month it's CAMP with Robbie Rozelle and Michael Finke! Patreon • Twitter • Facebook • Email
In this edition of In The Circle, Eric Lopez, and Victor Anderson react to Miranda Elish committing to Oklahoma State and the Big 12 officially expanding. Also, in the episode, we preview The Summit League for the 2022 season. Eric talks with South Dakota State Head Coach Krista Wood about their incredible run in 2021 and how she thinks they handle high expectations heading into next season. Eric also talks with North Dakota State Head Coach Darren Mueller about the Bison's outlook in 2022, The Summit League expanding, and more. Finally, Eric and Victor discuss Montana Fouts's appearance on SEC Nation Football pregame show with Cole Cubulic.
In this edition of In The Circle, Eric Lopez, and Victor Anderson react to Miranda Elish committing to Oklahoma State and the Big 12 officially expanding. Also, in the episode, we preview The Summit League for the 2022 season. Eric talks with South Dakota State Head Coach Krista Wood about their incredible run in 2021 and how she thinks they handle high expectations heading into next season. Eric also talks with North Dakota State Head Coach Darren Mueller about the Bison's outlook in 2022, The Summit League expanding, and more. Finally, Eric and Victor discuss Montana Fouts's appearance on SEC Nation Football pregame show with Cole Cubulic.
A festa do pijama da Billie Eilish e a festa do peão da Dua Lipa. O Plano de dominação mundial de Grimes. O que não servir para Shawn Mendes e Taylor Swift. O nuggets do BTS e a versão de Lua de Cristal da Celine Dion. Tudo isso no seu resumão do pop A-POP-CALIPSE TNT com Didi Effe e Fernanda Soares.
This week we look at Tiamat, the primordial sea goddess of the Enuma Elish. She battles Marduk and is defeated, and the firmaments of the world are created through her body. She is generally considered to be a monster or sea dragon that embodies primordial chaos. We relate her story to the myths of the Hittite Illuyanka, the Greek Python, and the Biblical Leviathan.
Taking a company from $1 million to $100 million is no easy feat — especially when you have competition and copy cats coming at you from all angles. But Peak Design has fought off all those knock-offs — including a pretty blatant rip-off from AmazonBasics — and it has done it with humor and panache, which has only endeared the company more to its loyal customer base. Those customers are what took Peak Design from a simple camera utility bag company and turned it into a popular everyday bag and accessories outfitter for photography enthusiasts. Peak Design leaned into the idea of having a close relationship with its customers from the very beginning, by letting their customers have a say in their product line by way of crowdfunding and Kickstarter campaigns. And that, according to Elish Patel, the VP of Growth and Digital at Peak Design, has made all the difference. On this episode of Up Next in Commerce, Elish explains how building that loyal customer base has helped the company stave off the blatant and more subtle competitors. And Elish talks about how Peak Design is using unique marketing and content strategies to take people from browsing to buying. Enjoy this episode! Main Takeaways:It Speaks For Itself: Although Peak Design went toe-to-toe with Amazon after it knocked off a Peak Design product, more often than not, Peak Design lets its products speak for themselves against the competition. If your products are truly superior in quality and the value they offer, consumers will recognize that and make the investment. And when they buy the better product and see its superiority, they become more loyal to that brand long-term.Products Over People?: Hiring good talent is important, but you don’t want to prioritize growing your headcount over maintaining a laser focus on creating a good product. When you scale up your headcount, it’s easy to be distracted by the new focus on managing a large team and therefore your product design and development process can suffer. By relying on third parties and vendors or partners to do work you could otherwise hire internally, you are left with a core team who can focus on the part of your business that is truly important.More Than An Impression: With your marketing and content, the goal should be to achieve more than an impression or a like. Especially with a smaller or niche brand, being a part of the conversation your consumers are having on places like Reddit and TikTok is worth more than getting an influencer to post a picture with one of your products.For an in-depth look at this episode, check out the full transcript below. Quotes have been edited for clarity and length.---Up Next in Commerce is brought to you by Salesforce Commerce Cloud. Respond quickly to changing customer needs with flexible Ecommerce connected to marketing, sales, and service. Deliver intelligent commerce experiences your customers can trust, across every channel. Together, we’re ready for what’s next in commerce. Learn more at salesforce.com/commerce---Transcript:Stephanie:Welcome everyone to Up Next in Commerce. I'm your host, Stephanie Postles, CEO at Mission.org. Today on the show, we have Elish, Patel who currently serves as the VP of Digital and Growth Strategy at Peak Design. Elish, welcome.Elish:Thank you. Nice to be here.Stephanie:Yeah. I'm really excited to catch you before you journey into the redwoods to get some content for your company. I was hoping we can just dive right into Peak Design because your story is super fascinating. Right before this, you were talking about how when you came in, it was a sub $1 million company. Now it's at almost 100 million?Elish:We definitely had a positive in that we did somewhere around 70 last year and we're hoping to grow to that the hundred soon. So yeah, we're coming right up against it.Stephanie:Okay. I mean, that's an amazing story. That's why I was like, "We need to start there. I don't want to run out of time." Can you tell me a bit about what is Peak Design and how long have you been there, and a little bit about that journey?Elish:Yeah. I've been with Peak Design for about six and a half years. I met Peter Dering, our founder and CEO in a bar in Berkeley after a concert. We just sort of hit it off. So it was one of those-Stephanie:What concert?Elish:It was an Alt-J concert at the Berkeley Greek. It was one of those classic Silicon Valley chance meetings. I was doing marketing consulting in the Bay Area at the time and he needed a little bit of help on the digital side. A little bit about Peak design. Peter Dering had this idea of a camera accessory basically to hold your camera on the outside of your body, usually on a backpack shop or your belt while you're doing some more strenuous activities, whether you're hiking, biking, stuff like that, so you could get to your camera easily instead of it being tucked inside your bag and you would miss that shot, as we say.Elish:He got lucky, if you will, the universe aligned in that was the early days in 2010 of Kickstarter. He was just going to find someone to make it and try to get it into stores. But someone was like, "Hey, why don't you do a Kickstarter?" Put it on Kickstarter. Some people found it, wrote a story on it. I think it was in Gadget or something like that, and it blew up. He did 300-something thousand dollars on Kickstarter that year. It was something the third biggest Kickstarter. Again, early days of Kickstarter. There's now crazy ones.Elish:That was the birth of Peak Design. From there, it deepened into the Kickstarter and photography product world. We became one of the first companies to do a second Kickstarter. That's how we started just launching products on Kickstarter. What we found with that is Kickstarter just has this base who became our evangelists. We created this really one-on-one relationship with our customers and do have a say in the design of our products. They feel invested in our brand. We continue to do that. In fact, we've done 10 Kickstarters to this point. We've raised over $37 million on the platform, fully crowdfunded, which means we've never taken investors, and we get to make decisions like being a part of 1% for the Planet. We founded a climate neutral nonprofit to help companies to offset their carbon. We basically chart our own path and that allows us also to make the best things. We don't cut corners on any of our products.Stephanie:Yeah, that's amazing. We haven't had too many companies on the show that went the Kickstarter route. I think I can only think of one or two. What were some of the lessons maybe when you launched the first time to the second to the 20th time, that maybe things that you started adjusting over time?Elish:Some of the biggest things we adjusted were... they came with just the changes in the world of marketing, with the rise of social media in the last few campaigns, the influencer became so much more part of our campaign, especially the last two YouTube. There was Facebook, then there was Instagram and then YouTube has been around for a long time. But then we layered on YouTube specific influencers and that's it's whole other own community, especially in the photography world. And then relearning that YouTube in and of itself is a great search engine place where you can put evergreen content. There's one piece of influencer content that I have up on YouTube that I placed two years ago that still brings in five grand a month.Stephanie:Wow. Okay. What's this content?Elish:Well, we sponsored a video for basically someone who... and we were pretty adamant to make sure that if you're going to review our product, then you want to leave a positive review. We're not just forcing you to do that. We give them the product. They love it. They're like, "I love this. I want to talk about it." Usually for the bigger influencers, they're like, "Oh, I love this product. I want to put it up." It usually costs 30 grand. We did that and it got up on YouTube. I don't want to say the name just to blow up his spot or not. But put up there, did a great review of it, talked about the pluses and minuses, linked to the campaign below in the comment. That video, which because it did so well, they keep on their page and still draws traffic when you're... especially the campaign was for our Peak Design tripod, our travel tripod.Elish:When you type into YouTube "tripod" especially who people who are searching for like "how to use a tripod, this and that," it's one of the top things that comes up. People will go watch that video and like, "Oh, this is a cool tripod." They'll click the link and it still brings in a lot of traffic and a lot of revenue.Stephanie:That's really cool. Are you still using Kickstarter today?Elish:We just did our last Kickstarter in December. We did it for our new mobile line of products. We went from photography thinking that this iPhone is literally the best camera that everyone carries around on a daily basis. So we wanted to create a line of products for that. We did that in December and that was our last one. Are we going to continue to do Kickstarters? Probably, but we've done 10 of them and it's got to end someday, maybe. I don't know. We'll see.Stephanie:Why? That's what I'm wondering. I'm like, "Man, it sounds like it's going so well." I haven't heard of enough brands probably utilizing that, but it does feel like maybe that market is pretty saturated and it just seems like there's a lot on there when you go in and start looking through products that are launching and what you can find. It just feels like a lot more than maybe when you guys started out.Elish:Well, it's also, we were a part of this cohort that proved the model and then now it's easier than ever to go and make and design a product in China, Vietnam, wherever you're producing. In fact, there's full factory cities where you show up with an idea and they'll help you make it. That also feeds into the system. It's a problem with knockoffs in our brand as well. People are copying our stuff. You can just go there and that's the other part that saturated Kickstarter and Indiegogo, are these half thought out brandless products. It's easy to get lost in the fray there as well.Stephanie:Yeah. Let's talk a little bit about knockoff that you just mentioned, because right before the interview, I was watching a very fun video that you guys put together because of Amazon knocking off your bag, and I was hoping you can touch on the inspiration behind that and how you think to approach companies who are knocking off your products.Elish:Yeah. It's a funny story, obviously. The backstory is that we make this bag called the Everyday Sling. Literally that's the name. We have a TM on the term everyday sling, and we do sell on Amazon. Before the pandemic, we had a large amount of our direct revenue on Amazon. And the rumors are true that Amazon will see a successful product on their platform and say, "Oh, we can make some money on that and create an Amazon basic version of it." What they did in this case was copy our bags, stitch for stitch, it looks exactly the same, even down to the point a design element is just this little hyper lawn patch where we put our logo. They kept that patch the exact same shape and the exact same location on the bag and wrote Amazon instead of Peak Design on it.Elish:We've seen knockoffs before, but we were like, "This is egregious, this is crazy." I guess internally I'm lucky enough, we've never been a brand that does the patent trolling thing or anything like that. We build our own moat as far as around our design process. It actually is extremely expensive to make our products because of how functional and quality they are. And that's part of our own moat as well, built into the brand. But because this looks so much like it, we were like, "This is insane." It's actually far cheaper, low quality product. Our bag one for $100, they put it on there for $20. And they called it the Amazon Basic's Everyday Sling. They didn't even change the name, which was insane. They called it [crosstalk].Stephanie:[crosstalk] already good name, might as well just [inaudible] that too.Elish:Exactly. I work with our marketing team, we're all jokes here. Adam Saraceno, our head of marketing has gotten really adept at writing our scripts or videos. He wrote the script for this video and just came up with the idea and we've got an in house video team and we were recording it and we had this plan, we're going to make that video, put it on YouTube, we'll send it on email. We put it up, we sent it out and it caught fire on some forums. It started making its rounds. Before we knew it, we had something like a half a million views. And then that took off even more. I think the video has over 4 million views at this point. But the idea was like, "Are we going to sue Amazon? We're a fly to them. What can we do? We can trust that our customers can laugh at this along with us, and we can poke a little fun at them. That's all we can do."Elish:That's what we did and point out. If you watched the video, we sort of point out that you have a choice when you buy stuff. You can buy our stuff where we're blue sign verified. We're now fair trade. We pay our factories workers far above the local wages in their local... we produce in Vietnam. We're very honest about that. We offset all of our carbon and we lifetime warranty everything. It's going to last you forever, if it doesn't, we'll replace it. Amazon, you get what you pay for. But that's our message. It's easy to get frustrated, but I think it's probably better for your brand just looking at the long-term. Just stick to your guns, trust your brand, trust your product.Stephanie:Yeah. I think that's what I loved about the video, because it was so masterfully done and it's always a good reminder of why, like you said, frustration, anger probably won't connect with many people because sometimes... I mean, I think anyways, people want to see funny stuff, happy stuff. And the video was perfect where it's like, "Oh, if you don't care about all the bells and whistles, all the stuff you just named [crosstalk]." It was just so well done, especially when they were drawing it out, drawing out the product and being like, "Oh, do we want something that's actually good quality, now take that out and take that out." It was just really well done, and I'm not surprised it took off. What else helps get it in front of people to really help spread it?Elish:I mean, it was mostly word of mouth. We definitely put a few advertising dollars behind it. When it took off, we amplified it, just cause it was resonating with so many people, and I think that's important. Especially in digital marketing, you're testing content all the time, you're like, "Is this working? Is that working?" This was obviously working. I didn't need to test it against anything else. Yeah, we put some ad dollars behind it on Facebook to get it out there as well. But after we had about a half a million views on it.Stephanie:I also saw you tagging Jeff Bezos and Amazon support team and all these other people. I'm like, "Oh, that's good." But also, once again, the way you were doing it was just funny. I can't remember the Twitter copy of what you guys were saying, but it was very funny.Elish:That was Joe Callander on our team and he was like... I remember him messaging Adam and I going like, "Hey, I'm writing these tweets back to these people. I'm putting this. It's a little edgy. Is that okay?" We're just like, "Dude, gloves off, man. Go for it." He really went for it and I think it turned out really well. I like a lot of the YouTube comments because there are definitely some people in there... YouTube has got the worst trolls, I think. YouTube, there's definitely a few people like, "Why am I going to spend 100. I'll just get this $20 one." And he would just write something like, "We'd love that for you."Stephanie:Oh, that's great.Elish:"Go for it."Stephanie:It kind of reminds me of morning Brew. I don't know if you've ever seen them respond to people. Or Wendy's Twitter channel where they reply to people and have it out with them. I'm like, "I love it because they stay so close to their brand and their voice and keep it funny." Hats off to your team for knowing how to keep it on brand and keep it engaging for people. When Amazon came out with the knockoff product, and I think you said you've had other companies as well knock off your product, what kind of result did you see on sale? Did you see a direct impact when they came out of like, "Oh shoot, our daily revenue just went down in half and now we need to figure out how to claw our way back in front of our customers."Elish:Luckily, the Amazon thing made buy our bag more. I'm sure it lifted their sales as well because we just got so much hoopla, and it got a lot of press attention. Pete, our CEO was doing the rounds on a bunch of the media channels. On the other ones, we really didn't notice. If anything, it riled up our customer base because they would see it and be like, "This is just like my Peak Design bag and this is just like this." Their claws would come out and they'd go after it. That's definitely... I attribute that to our Kickstarter base and how we formed as a company of like we created this place where people thought they were part of the brand, and so they'll step out the defend it as well.Stephanie:Oftentimes I don't see brands maybe highlighting all their differences. That's why I loved your video when you're like, "Here's the five or six things that we do that you'll never find with an Amazon Basic." Did you guys maybe change your strategy or how you were messaging that? Because maybe before you weren't as upfront about like, "Here's why you should buy with us."Elish:I'm glad you brought that up. We definitely started steering away from it because early on in our brand, we certainly did that. When we started making camera straps, we were like, "This is how the other people work. This is how ours works." Then we were just like, "Maybe the product can just stand on its own." And it did because the functionality of our product was so different for so long. But again, that was a unique scenario where our product was absolutely different than the competitors. Now the competitor is copying our product. So now we're forced to be like, "They copied it, but not very well." It's almost like we need to inform our consumer of the pitfalls of trying to buy something that's similar to ours, but probably fails on quality and functionality. They're getting duped by getting these cheaper made knockoffs.Stephanie:Yep. Yeah. Yeah. That's definitely important to come back to the roots of... you have to defend your ground and you might lose sight of that for a bit, but it's interesting to hear how it comes full circle with like, "Okay, lean back into our differences."Stephanie:The one thing I wanted to circle back to was going through what it looked like when you joined the company, when it was sub 1 million and then where it's at now, close to 100, and talking about... I know we were just talking about earlier, how you're going to go into the redwood forest, you're going to be creating your own content and thinking through your marketing tech stack, and I want to hear what that evolution has looked like, because I think you mentioned the team didn't scale up with that revenue as much as maybe other companies would have done. I just want to hear it behind the scenes of what that looked like.Elish:Yeah. Credit to Pete, our CEO, and he's been extremely protective of our company culture. We're a pretty tight knit group of people, we're close, I think 38, maybe close to 40 people. When I joined, we were 10 people and it was just me and one other marketing person. As I mentioned, a lot of that was to keep culture tight, but also, we try to prioritize what we need to do and not do too much more than that. One of our mission value statements is to prioritize happiness over growth. When you start adding too many people, sometimes you end up literally looking for work for them to do, and then you're managing all those people. Then the business becomes about managing people, which is a part of a brand, but more or less so than the product.Elish:We are definitely a product focused company and it's about letting the marketing stand on the quality of the product. What we've done to enable that is rely on creating a really good network of third parties. Our shipping is third party, our warehouses are third party. We have some in-house customer service, but we have a little bit of outsourced customer service as well. For marketing, we really rely both on my strategy and executional knowledge, but we amplify that with an external digital agency. What that allows us to do is remain really nimble. During the pandemic, we didn't have to lay off anybody. We didn't make any pay cuts. We've been profitable since day one because we haven't had to push scaling because of not having investors as well that say, "We need you to make this much profit in the next five years."Elish:That's been really stressful for sure, in some instances of hyper growth because we have been growing really quickly, but again, what it came down to, it was like, "What's important in this moment? Okay, we're launching this new product, let's put all eyes there, let's make the right content, get it in the right place." I think we're going through another little phase of growing pains where we now have a very large assortment of skews and we're feeling the pinch of trying to maintain the attention on them across the board and then also making sure that we're supporting our retail and wholesale accounts. Half our business is from places like BNH and REI and we're distributed around the world. They need tons of content as well. They need our help on making sure the brand is represented correctly.Elish:It's becoming a lot of work. We've been scaling on our design and creative side, but there's starting to be a pinch on the more technical stuff. We're trying to think through, does that mean a bigger agency? Do I need to start hiring more internal people? I think it's going to be a combination of the both. I think it's going to be a skeleton crew internally that is really good at handling or wearing a lot of different hats, but then managing some external help as well to make sure that it amplifies our abilities.Stephanie:Yeah. What's the best way to structure it when you're working with agencies to make sure that you can scale yourself? Like you said, you're one of the people who are... "here's the vision and go." How do you make sure that it scales in a way that is not totally going off course?Elish:Oh man. That's a really good question. And I can't honestly say I've figured it out. I'm really not sure. I got to be honest about that. I'm going through it right now, and I think... to be quite honest, I think I haven't been able to... there's only so many hours in a day [inaudible] that require attention and it's really hard to separate or to combine strategy, deep thinking and execution. You have to turn one off to do the other. I think that's been a hard lesson that I've learned over the last year and a half, which is I do need time to just sit and write and think while I'm not executing. I'm really thinking about making sure I separate those roles for sure.Stephanie:It's definitely a hard question and a good thing to figure out, but you have time, there's no rush.Elish:Yeah.Stephanie:What does new customer acquisition look like? How are you guys approaching finding new customers and maybe keeping your current ones?Elish:There's the classics, which we definitely continue to double down on, which is... it's funny PR is an age old thing, but it's still so important and making sure that you stay just in the conversation. For me, when I'm thinking about going for... we've been so getting into the gear reviews and top 10 lists, and I'll never trust the best 10 lists ever again after being in there initially, because it's not like-Stephanie:It's how much did you pay to get that spot.Elish:Oh, yeah. Or who do you know exactly. It's not like someone went looking for the best stuff and like, 'This is what I found." No, all that stuff was definitely put in there. But to me, it's about the conversations you're starting around your brand and industry as well. When it comes to our mobile product or trying to stir up the conversation of like, "What else do you do with your phone? How do you use it in your daily life? Is having just the skin on it that doesn't do anything useful?" Because we are using it elsewhere, in our car, on our desktop, we've made a function on our bike and how it works. Do you have to jus pound people with your product or can you talk to them about it and start the conversation?Elish:There's the whole... We started digital marketing in paper, Facebook, social media advertising, Instagram. TikTok obviously, Reddit, but man, that whole industry, I think, is going through an upheaval currently, obviously with the change in privacy data that Facebook and Google and everybody is facing, and is making everybody rethink about how they're stacking that in their marketing funnel. I think it's a good thing. I think people are starting to think about the intentions and nature of their message in their advertising again, as opposed to, "Oh, if we change this button to red instead of blue, that's going to..." what intention... is that excepted to drive conversion?Elish:I think people have been overthinking the data part for a really long time instead of trusting your marketing instincts/knowing that, or just not really paying attention to the marginal benefit of spending a week trying to figure out what color button needs to be... what else could you have done with that?Stephanie:What are you guys doing? Because, I mean, I think it's such a scary world for a lot of brands who have relied on that pixel tracking, and everything they've been used to, it feels you have to move quick, make decisions in an unknown world where you're like, "I don't really know how they should operate." How are you guys thinking about it moving forward?Elish:Well, you can still track the classics, which are engagement. Then layering in other strategies of making sure you're getting first party data: your email capture and the campaigns you're doing with that. Before we could track everything, we were still trusting things like how many people were seeing it impressions and the quality of someone's audience and so on, on an influencer campaign. But also again, being a part of the conversation in places like Reddit, TikTok and making sure that that is a constant stream of content as opposed to these big advertising things where people are just blind to them now. I don't remember the last ad... I definitely learn about people or a brand, and I'm like, "Oh, that's interesting," but it's pretty rare that I click, and we've seen that on Facebook's ROI and every number across the board has tanked over the last few years. You used to put an ad, it could have anything in it and you'd get a 10 X ROI. Now we struggle to get three.Stephanie:What channels and platforms are you trying out now? Because to me, TikTok sounds like the perfect area. I get so many photography tips on there. I don't know if you've seen all those videos.Elish:Absolutely.Stephanie:That seems like a perfect channel. If you can keep that content going though. But what are you guys betting on?Elish:Yeah. We're exploring TikTok. I don't know if we're betting big there, because our demographic is a little bit older. I do have a theory that there's a very active demographic in... we're in the 25 to 40 range. I think people 25 to 40 are still actually really active on TikTok. They're just not-Stephanie:I am. I'm flapped out in the middle. I'm on it.Elish:But they're consumers, they're not posters, they're not commenters, which is fine. I think that is going to be somewhere we'll probably spend a lot of energy. We're definitely doubling down on content pieces on YouTube and places again, where we can talk directly to the population. Email's still a really big thing in customizing that consumer journey on how we reach them on that. So when they reach our website, where are they seeing? Where are they looking? Where are we sending them? Those are big. Then I'm obviously looking at Reddit. Reddit has had a pretty big limelight over the last few months, just with the game stuff. But otherwise I'm open to suggestions. So send them my way.Stephanie:I mean, I haven't heard too many people talk about Reddit. Are you just thinking about going after Reddit influencers in a way who are talking about what kind of bags to use, or how are you thinking about that?Elish:Yeah, I think we're going to look at it from the social media manager perspective. Someone who's going to go in there and just start conversing. We do have... especially with the gear focused product line, people are like, "Oh, what do you use for your Canon camera? What do you use for your Nikon camera?" Then just inserting ourselves on an organic level there. I don't know about Reddit influencers yet, but certainly something to consider. But I want to keep that as organic as possible to start out withStephanie:Yeah. It always seems hard to scale those efforts when you want to go about it in an organic way, but then thinking, "Okay, one person can only comment and keep up with so many threads and then if they also have to do Facebook and Instagram and everywhere else, it seems hard unless you continually to hire more people."Elish:Yeah. The scaling part is hard. I'll be interested to see if there's ever a good agency that can figure out how to represent your brand Well.Stephanie:Let me know, because we have not found it and we've tried many. I keep trying and trying, I'm like, "One day we're going to find something perfect."Elish:Same.Stephanie:I also think there's something to the frictionless way of shopping on a lot of these platforms. I even think about TikTok. I'm the quiet consumer who's looking through all the stuff, enjoying it, but then I will go and open up a Chrome browser to find that product. I'm the worst kind of consumer. You have no attribution on me. You don't even know where I came from. But I think there's something there where because that platform still feels like there's a little bit of friction from that video. Sometimes it flips so quickly, you don't have time to click. Is there even something to click? It seems like there's a lot of room for growth around making it easy for the customer to buy.Elish:There's been a movement to do the specific app to app based experience. Allbirds did a really good job of it. I just downloaded the Nike app, just being like, "Oh, I need a new pair of shoes," and I saw on their website. I was on my phone and then they were like, "Get the Nike app." I downloaded it and I was... this at the airport, and I bought a pair of sneakers right there because I was like, "Those are cool because they..." I mean, this definitely works with someone with a much larger skew count, but they served me a product that they thought I would like. I don't know how they figured that out. But they figured it out somehow. Maybe they just have really good products. I was like, "That's cool." They had everything built in Apple Pay, all that stuff, made it super easy. It was kind of scary, it was one of those situations where I hit buy, and before I knew it, it was paid for and was shipping to... I was like, "Wait, did I mean to do that?" And I-Stephanie:"My finger just went there and it just happened, and now I have shoes coming."Elish:Exactly. I thought that was a really cool and something... We've done a lot of work on our mobile experience, but we have a lot of work to do. I think people have... most websites they go to have a big thing to figure out for the mobile experience.Stephanie:That's something I've thought about for a while now, because previously at SaaS I worked before, many people talked about going to an app free world, and apps were a thing of the past. I even noticed that in my own history, it's like, you get a phone early on, you get a billion apps, you run out of storage, you chill out a bit and you're like, "I don't need all these apps anymore. I don't want to try everything." Then storage gets easier. So then you're like, "Well, maybe I'll try a few more." But now I'm back in the stage where I'm like, "I'm good with just a couple of things. I don't want everything there." How do you see it? I mean, I think you mentioned Allbirds did this too. What do you see that future looking like and how should brands maybe try it out there?Elish:I think, to your point, we're trying to figure it out again. I liked that app experience for a couple of reasons, which was, when you become a fanatic or just really into a brand, you're okay having that because what Nike and Allbirds are also doing well is serving up really good content on those apps. I'm inclined to go into the Nike app because they've got something cool to send me, put me in, even if I'm not buying something, I'll go look and read about it. That's a big play. Earlier as the experiences on the other platforms. Shopping in feed on Instagram and stuff, which is becoming a much better utilized thing. I think we probably need to utilize a bit better as well.Elish:There's features in there, especially in influencer campaigns when you're able to link your account to other people's Instagram accounts so that they can tag your product feed. That's interesting to me and disseminating it in that way.Stephanie:Yeah, that's definitely an interesting world to think about. I also think if you bring in your tribe and a community and create an experience that you can't get elsewhere, then maybe I would open up the app. If it wasn't just product focused, like you said, if there's content there, if there's something that's going to draw me in and keep me engaged. But it does feel hard sometimes to keep me engaged on an app, unless I get that dopamine hit, open it up and get something new. That's a high bar to have, having something new every time.Elish:Definitely a high bar to have. Then I think Casper, I don't think they have an app, but I've been in the market for a mattress. Man, I sound like a real materialistic consumer these days, but-Stephanie:Probably get so many ads coming your way. They're going to hear you. They got the voice recognition and they're going to be [inaudible] you.Elish:I'm in the middle of trying to buy a mattress and they executed on the text game really well. We do text marketing and it works really well in getting people past the last decision point. They're like, "I don't know if I want this size or that size." I don't know if you've talked to a lot of people, but text is great. People are like, "I don't think people want to receive text messages." Surprise, surprise. They actually do. They don't care.Stephanie:If [inaudible] something they want. That's what I've heard, is texts can be great if you're not just pushing products all day. If it turns into a conversation and maybe giving them some kind of value, instead of just like, "10% off, 10% off, it's a sale happening." It needs to feel personal and give value.Elish:It does. But it's a balance. If you give them enough value and then when you need it, you can send that 10% off text. It still works and that's worked really swimmingly for us. But I think the stakes are the same, if not lower, maybe they're about the same of sending an email. Just like with anything, don't overdo any piece of marketing, you annoy people. But I don't think it's any less or more annoying than any other piece of marketing I get from people as long as it's not overdone. In Casper, if you go to their website, they just really did the text acquisition, the opt-in process really well. The 10% off if you sign up for the email and they figured out a good way to do it for text as well, "Oh, you want to get this coupon straight away?" Let us text you." I thought that was cool, a way of just activating someone very quickly.Stephanie:Yeah. Are there any other brands that you watch where you pulled some tricks from, and you're like, "I love watching Nike. I love watching Casper, and then actually trying that out within our own company?"Elish:Good question. I think I've listed the ones that I've noticed recently, and definitely Allbirds did a good job. I had a good post-purchase experience recently. I'll just give you the outline of what that was, where I needed to return something. Well, first of all, obviously, there's the way of tracking and making sure that you get in contact with what you bought and where it's coming and when it's coming. There's lots of good apps for that. We use one called Shipup. And then I needed to return something and, I'm forgetting the name of the service, but now they've set up places, you can just return something. Instead of shipping it back, you just drop off at the local location. It's usually a business. It's a win-win. You bring someone into your business, you can return it there. It was seamless. I remember in the store, the person... I think I was just in some random boutique dress store and I was returning a blender for Amazon.Stephanie:Oh, that's cool.Elish:I'm making those things up, but it was that sort of distinct, that sort of contrast of what I was doing. I remember then scanning the product and then I got a notification of my refund directly on my phone in that second. I was like, "That's awesome. Now I know when I buy from this person and I need to return, it's going to be seamless. I'm not going to worry about where my money is, where the product's going." It made me want to buy from them again. It was great.Stephanie:That's a good experience. I think that's such an important reminder too, about lifetime value of a customer. It's not always about those quick hits. Like you said, if I were to have an experience like that, I would buy many more things much more quickly, if I'm like, "Oh yeah, I can just go right next door and this boutique will take any of my returns for all my blenders that I buy."Elish:Yeah, exactly.Stephanie:That's awesome. What experimental things do you plan on doing over this next year or two that you're most excited about, but you don't know if it's going to work, or maybe that your team's even telling you like, "No, Elish, this is a bad idea."Elish:Really good question. I'd have to go into my notes. I ideate on this stuff for a while. But we tried some podcast stuff last year when money was a little bit more free flowing for us. We are a travel bag brand, so that's definitely taken a hit for us. And that was exciting at the time. We had a piece on Conan O'Brien show and I was like, "Oh, Brian said Peak Design. That was pretty cool." As far as I can tell, CPMs for podcasts are still relatively low compared to other things. I think that's great. I think there are some expansion in still are our email practices on how we're collecting emails and moving outside of that. What you mentioned just now, what we talked about, the being able to shop our product in social posts that aren't even our own, there are some technologies, video technologies out there where you're shopping in video when it's placed on someone else's website. I think that's really cool.Elish:Then partnering with our distributors more on how they're representing our brand and getting that more up-to-date message out quicker with them. Reddit, we mentioned. Forums.Stephanie:Well, I think it'll be interesting with all the pent up demand of people wanting to travel and get there.Elish:I hope so.Stephanie:It'll be fun to probably see a very different peak than maybe what you've seen over the past year or so, and you all just have to be ready for it, I guess.Elish:Yeah, exactly.Stephanie:Cool. All right. Well, let's jump over to the lightning round. The lightning round is brought to you by Salesforce Commerce Cloud. This is where I ask a question and you have a minute or less to answer.Elish:Okay.Stephanie:Are you read?Elish:I'm ready.Stephanie:You're adjusting your seat like, "Ooh, I got to get ready for this."Elish:Yeah. Ready.Stephanie:All right. First up, a few people know that I like to...Elish:Few people know that I like to play poker.Stephanie:Are you good at it?Elish:I was a professional for a year. Right after grad school, I was looking for a job and I played live poker for a year.Stephanie:Awesome. What one thing do you not understand that you wish you did?Elish:Oh, man. So many things. Probably... sorry, I have a minute or less. Is that right?Stephanie:Yeah.Elish:Give me a bell if I... Just topic of the times right now is definitely the Bitcoin market and different types and where, give me a glass ball of where that's going because I want in. Every time I think I've figured it out, I learn something new and I don't. Yeah, I'd love to understand the future of the economics of how that's going to work.Stephanie:If you were in the Austin area, I would tell you to come to our little crypto dinner that we do, where we go deep into futures and investing in that. It's a very interesting space. It's around here.Elish:Okay. I'll come visit it sometime, for sure.Stephanie:Yeah, that sounds good. A time when I made a powerful choice was when what?Elish:Oh man. I've quit a lot of jobs and taking that chance on myself. I did that when my last corporate job, if you will, I worked for American Express and I said, "I'm just going to go figure it out," and I've never looked back. I know that's a common story, especially in our worlds, but that was the most freeing choice I've ever made, is just I will never work for a large corporation where I can't be in control of my destiny.Stephanie:I love that and I agree. I think it's still always a good reminder though, because it's easy to get pulled in. A good reminder to be able to have that freedom to do what you want. If you were to have a podcast, what would it be about and who would your first guest be?Elish:I think it would be something about just the hilarity of the world, how it intersects... just how we all take ourselves so seriously, but then trying to basically pull back the layers of the onion on that, and then looking at how it's affected us as people when it comes to our depression, our nutrition, and how we live our lives. It's basically all of the loose things that you could think about for the millennial generation and make fun of it, but in a serious enough way to be like, "It's going to be okay, man." I think we all get so caught up in like, "How am I changing the world? What are we doing?" I think the message I'd like to tell most people is like, "This is..." the message of the movie Soul. Did you see Soul?Stephanie:Yeah. So good.Elish:It's like, "Oh man, I'm trying to do something big." "Actually you're doing the big thing. This is it."Stephanie:I like that. Who would your guests be then?Elish:I would get a combination of some... I think, going back to Conan O'Brien, I love Conan. He is one of the funniest people out there. I think he went through this crazy arc where he was supposed to take Jay Leno's spot and then they took it away from him. He got pretty angry about it and now he's still doing his own thing, and I'd love to talk to him about... people have talked to him about that, but where he thought he saw yourself going and now where he is now and if he's okay with it, and just what perspective that it gives him.Stephanie:Yeah. Well, I love that. That's a good one. All right. And the last one, what one thing will have the biggest impact on ecommerce in the next year?Elish:The climate and how we think about people and consumption. Fast fashion is going out of fashion. Absolutely. I hope anyway. But I actually don't know that because I don't know if I'm just in a bubble or I'm just in a bubble of people that care.Stephanie:No, I think I agree with that. There's such a big shift now to sustainability and how companies are creating things and paying their employees and all that. Yeah, I agree. That was a good forcing function this past year, too, to think differently about all that. Elish, it's been such a fun interview. Thanks for coming on the show. Where can people find out more about you and Peak Design.Elish:Peakdesign.com. I just had a contact button up, but you can go to elishpatel.com and email me if you have any questions.Stephanie:Amazing. Well, thanks so much for joining us. It's been a blast.Elish:Thank you.
.. "Curiosity is our natural ground state. That which is in wonder, but seeking no answers "Elish Le is a fascinating guy walking the walk of life. Based in Brooklyn, NY, Elish guides people looking to enhance their well-being by focussing on their direct experience. Using physicality, meditation techniques, sound, silence and plant medicines, Elish utilizes a wide range of tools that have helped illuminate his own journey to offer up new possibilities and perspectives for his clients. DJ & I met Elish in Peru during the 2019 Primal Movers retreat in the Sacred Valley. In this episode we talk about that experience, stories we hold close to us, ones we imagine and ways we can all find solace and authenticity in the nature of experience itself. If you are interested in listening to someone who approaches the challenges of life with equanimity and curiosity, you´ll love this conversation. Why the rush to work everything out? What about experiencing what is right before you? What might happen? Are we willing to take that risk?For those interested in joining the next Emptiness Project retreat (hopefully later in 2021 and/or 2022 in the US, Peru & Europe) we hope to have Elish along as a facilitator sharing his wisdom, humor and calming presence. Enjoy the episode and make sure to follow us on IG for updates on new projects. Thanks for your support and if you could leave a review and share the podcast with your friends that would be a huge help. Stay safe and share your experiences.Follow Elish on InstagramFollow DJ on InstagramIntro music: Akira The DonOutro music: Epidemic SoundListen and support the Primal Movers Podcast on the usual platformsPrimal Movers YouTube channel - Video episodesSupport the show (https://www.paypal.me/TomMountjoy)Support the show (https://www.paypal.me/TomMountjoy)
In 2021, as the digital advertising world evolves, your marketing mix needs to evolve as well. With Facebook ads dipping in profitability and competition increasing across the board, it’s important to be really specific about where customers are and meet them there.In this episode, Elish Patel of Peak Design shares the fascinating mix of marketing strategies that work for their company selling high-end camera accessories. He emphasizes diversification of marketing channels and high-quality video as key ways to win in 2021. Enjoy!KEY TAKEAWAYS FROM THIS EPISODESMS campaigns are incredibly powerful.Diversify your marketing channels!Not everything you do is meant to scale.When you’re starting a business, don’t worry if you’re going to scale or not.If you have funds to invest, go deep in creating video content.In buying Email newsletter placements, you’re catching someone in a much more engaged state.TODAY’S GUESTElish Patel is the VP of digital and growth at Peak Design. He handles all of their paid advertising, growth strategy, and anything that concerns their direct business and growing their user base.Peak Design is a product design company focused on carry solutions. They make tools for doing. Their carry solutions help creatives, commuters, and adventurers keep their gear accessible, organized, and protected.Connect and learn more about Elish and Peak Design here:Website: https://www.peakdesign.comLinkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/elishpatel/If you want to learn more about the eCommerce Growth Plan for your brand, click here:https://mindfulmarketing.co/products/full-growth-planIf you've been paying attention and your brand is ready to GROW, apply now to be the one new brand we take on this month!https://mindfulmarketing.co/applyWant to join a network of founders and executives who know your unique challenges in scaling your E-com brand from 7 to 8 figures? Apply to join our Ecom Executives Mastermind here: https://Mindfulmarketing.co/mastermind
Hoy en "Now Music Rocker News", noticias sobre: -Reaparición de uno de los integrantes de Queen -Alice Cooper opina sobre declaración de Gene Simons -Billie Elish es reconocida por ícono de la música -Ramstein sorprende a sus fans. "Recuerda que puedes escuchar todos estos podcast completamente en vivo desde www.nowmusicradio.com "Verdaderos Yesterhits" todos los martes y jueves en punto de las 9 de la noche (Hora del centro de México) con la mejor información, noticias, especiales, entrevistas y entretenimiento de los 90s y 00s.
Ret. NAVY LCDR Rod Elish - Descendant of Vlad the Impaler aka DRACULA drops wisdom about The Legacy of Dracula and how he treated the locals and his family.
Elish Yako, chrétien chaldéen, homme d’affaires franco-irakien, secrétaire général de l’Association d’entraide des minorités d’Orient (AEMO)
On this super packed edition of In The Circle, Eric Lopez talks with UCLA's Head Coach Kelly Inouye-Perez about the high expectations this season and getting Rachel Garcia and Bubba Nickles. Inouye-Perez talks about Maya Brady's growth as a player and the traits she has from her mother, Maureen Brady, an All-American pitcher at Fresno State, and her uncle Super Bowl Champion Tom Brady. In the episode, We talk with UCF's Head Coach Cindy Ball-Malone about their upcoming season and the American Conference going to a four-game series. Plus, we hear from Texas Head Coach Mike White, who spoke for the first time publicly about Miranda Elish opting out of the 2021 season and the impact it has and will have. We also hear from Arizona Head Coach Mike Candrea and Alabama's Patrick Murphy.
On this super packed edition of In The Circle, Eric Lopez talks with UCLA's Head Coach Kelly Inouye-Perez about the high expectations this season and getting Rachel Garcia and Bubba Nickles. Inouye-Perez talks about Maya Brady's growth as a player and the traits she has from her mother, Maureen Brady, an All-American pitcher at Fresno State, and her uncle Super Bowl Champion Tom Brady. In the episode, We talk with UCF's Head Coach Cindy Ball-Malone about their upcoming season and the American Conference going to a four-game series. Plus, we hear from Texas Head Coach Mike White, who spoke for the first time publicly about Miranda Elish opting out of the 2021 season and the impact it has and will have. We also hear from Arizona Head Coach Mike Candrea and Alabama's Patrick Murphy.
College softball is back! To get you ready for the season, Tom Canterbury and Gray Robertson are here to breakdown everything you need to know about Alabama, the SEC, and much more. Here's your trip around the bases: At the Plate (0:00-23:30): Tom and Gray thoroughly examine the Alabama roster, go through the schedule, discuss possible lineups, and sort through an incredibly deep Crimson Tide pitching staff. Advancing to First (24:54-53:19): Tom and Gray discuss the preseason All-SEC Team, the disconnect between the media and coaches in the preseason polls, and then dissect and preview each team in the Southeastern Conference. Stealing Second (53:27-1:15:48): ESPN analyst and 7Innings Podcast contributor Amanda Scarborough is back to talk about whether we'll see parity similar to 2020 this season, the Big Three in the SEC, how Texas will handle life after Elish, what to expect from opening weekend in Austin, the legendary possibilities for UCLA, and so much more. Rounding Third (1:15:58-1:43:24): Softball aficionado Emily Pitek joins the guys for "Pitek's Point of View" to discuss the 2021 season, the departure of Skylar Wallace, Alabama's schedule, what Rhoads with a limited capacity will be like, the Olympics, and much more. Heading Home (1:43:36-2:15:51): To close the premiere, it's an extremely loaded final segment. Tom and Gray make bold predictions for the upcoming season in the "Landmine or Goldmine" segment, and then also present their entire 2021 SEC predictions. Plus, the guys give a preseason “Off the Wall” going into opening weekend.
In this edition of In The Circle, Eric Lopez talks with Louisiana Head Coach Gerry Glasco about Ragin' Cajuns outlook for the 2021 season. In the episode, Eric and Victor Anderson discuss the surprising news over the weekend of Miranda Elish opting out of the 2021 season and what it means for the Longhorns and Big 12?
In this edition of In The Circle, Eric Lopez talks with Louisiana Head Coach Gerry Glasco about Ragin' Cajuns outlook for the 2021 season. In the episode, Eric and Victor Anderson discuss the surprising news over the weekend of Miranda Elish opting out of the 2021 season and what it means for the Longhorns and Big 12?
Dr. Laurie Elish-Piper talks to us about building relationships in education, families as educational partners, and optimism in uncertain times. Laurie is known for her work with literacy assessment and teaching, literacy coaching to improve student learning, and teacher professional development. Laurie is a Distinguished Engagement Professor and a Distinguished Teaching Professor at Northern Illinois University where she currently serves as the Dean of the College of Education.To cite this episode:Persohn, L. (Host). (2020, Dec. 22). A conversation with Laurie Elish-Piper. (Season 1, No. 7) [Audio podcast episode]. In Classroom Caffeine Podcast series. https://www.classroomcaffeine.com/guests. DOI: 10.5240/EA03-6D0A-C05D-1CCE-0A94-0
#coversong --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/alifa-monica-jency/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/alifa-monica-jency/support
Wacky Wednesday is back our DEC 2020 edition! We talk about how we The USA maybe the laughing stock of the world. Also whats Pop star Billie Ellish doing in studio. All this with parodies on Joe Biden, Our thoughs on Thugs in Seattle RECLAIMING so called land of theirs and.... more!
Wacky Wednesday is back our DEC 2020 edition! We talk about how we The USA maybe the laughing stock of the world. Also whats Pop star Billie Ellish doing in studio. All this with parodies on Joe Biden, Our thoughs on Thugs in Seattle RECLAIMING so called land of theirs and.... more!
Wacky Wednesday is back our DEC 2020 edition! We talk about how we The USA maybe the laughing stock of the world. Also whats Pop star Billie Ellish doing in studio. All this with parodies on Joe Biden, Our thoughs on Thugs in Seattle RECLAIMING so called land of theirs and.... more!
Ogni notte, quando ci addormentiamo, veniamo trasportati in un altro regno. Non abbiamo scélta in mèrito. Prova a passare più di tre giorni senza dormire e guarda cosa succede. Sappiamo che il corpo sfrutta l'opportunità per la crescita, la riparazione cellulare e una serie di altre funzioni cruciali. Ma dove andiamo mentre il corpo dorme e perché siamo svegli nei nostri sogni? Questa è anche la domanda che si fa Billie Ellish nel suo album di debutto When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? disco che ha scalato le classifiche di tutto il mondo. Billie afferma che in tutte le canzoni dell’album cerca di dare una risposta a questa domanda. Domanda nata proprio da una serie di incubi durante i quali, ogni notte, viene perseguitata da mostri che lei puntualmente disegna sul suo taccuino e sulla parete della sua camera da letto. Questi incubi diventano quindi forza motrice e fonte di ispirazione per il suo lavoro artistico. In ogni testo, c’è un frammento in più del suo inconscio che cerca di emergere già dal titolo dei brani: i love you, è una dolce ballata acustica, che parla di una relazione complicata… per il mio racconto mi sono fatto ispirare da questa frase del testo Non sono mai stata il tipo daLasciare che qualcuno mi veda dentro” e così mi sono immaginato una donna che non ha mai permesso a nessuno di dormire con lei tutta la notte e quando l’uomo di turno raccoglie la sua roba non vede l’ora di chiudere la porta alle sue spalle… ma una notte….Grazie alla partecipazione di Tiziana.I Love You - Billie Eilish
As the former Lord Advocate tells Edi, her roots in Govan are a far cry from the pomp of the Crown Office but she has been a passionate moderniser of the legal system.
Ne febbraio del 2017 Billie Eilish e suo fratello Finnies sono fermi ad un semaforo pedonale di Sidney, quando scatta il verde parte uno suono. Si guardano scoppiano a ridere. Finnies prende il telefonino e registra. Qualche mese dopo sono nel loro studio e quel suono lo mettono su una base pop elettronica da 135 battute al minuto. Stava nascendo Bad Guy uno dei loro brani più famosi. Nel testo Billie prende in giro un amante che fa il “cattivo ragazzo”, ma alla fine dichiara di essere lei più dura di lui. Per questa storia sono partito da queste frasi del testo:- Camicia bianca, ora rossa per il sangue dal mio naso- Lividi, su entrambe le mie ginocchia- Faccio quello che voglio quando lo voglio- Aveva gonfiato il petto- Sono solo brava ad essere cattiva...così mi sono Immaginato una bambina che avrebbe voluto nascere maschio, che si comportava come lo fosse, e per dimostralo una giorno ha anche ingoiato un ragno…. poi è cresciuta e…. Ringrazio Angela Ricciardi per la sua voce.
Ogni notte, quando ci addormentiamo, veniamo trasportati in un altro regno. Non abbiamo scélta in mèrito. Prova a passare più di tre giorni senza dormire e guarda cosa succede. Sappiamo che il corpo sfrutta l'opportunità per la crescita, la riparazione cellulare e una serie di altre funzioni cruciali. Ma dove andiamo mentre il corpo dorme e perché siamo svegli nei nostri sogni? Questa è anche la domanda che si fa Billie Ellish nel suo album di debutto When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go? disco che ha scalato le classifiche di tutto il mondo. Billie afferma che in tutte le canzoni dell’album cerca di dare una risposta a questa domanda. Domanda nata proprio da una serie di incubi durante i quali, ogni notte, viene perseguitata da mostri che lei puntualmente disegna sul suo taccuino e sulla parete della sua camera da letto. Questi incubi diventano quindi forza motrice e fonte di ispirazione per il suo lavoro artistico. In ogni testo, c’è un frammento in più del suo inconscio che cerca di emergere già dal titolo dei brani: i love you, è una dolce ballata acustica, che parla di una relazione complicata… per il mio racconto mi sono fatto ispirare da questa frase del testo Non sono mai stata il tipo daLasciare che qualcuno mi veda dentro” e così mi sono immaginato una donna che non ha mai permesso a nessuno di dormire con lei tutta la notte e quando l’uomo di turno raccoglie la sua roba non vede l’ora di chiudere la porta alle sue spalle… ma una notte….Grazie alla partecipazione di Tiziana.I Love You - Billie Eilish
Hark! It's the conclusion of our two part episode on the Prophet Elisha!
This week I have guest Elish Le! We talk about cancel culture, anxiety, and Elish tells me about his spiritual journey with ayahuasca! Elish is a strength coach specializing in movement and recovery. Thank you for listening and watching. Please share, like, comment, and subscribe! You can find Elish at instagram.com/intuitivestrength Follow me on instagram and twitter. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thevmspodcast/support
Don't Smile at Me(2017) é o EP de estréia da cantora e compositora Billie Eilish, que então contava com 16 anos. E o convidado da vez é Danilo de Almeida(Double Cast/ Já ouviu esse disco?), que roteirizou e apresentou o episódio. Gostou do episódio? Que tal deixar um comentário ou nos enviar um e-mail? Tempo do Episódio: 00:17:50
Jarrod A. Freeman (Australian Entrepreneur and Author) talks about Billie and her amazing success but why. What made her so fascinating in the public eye --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Since the beginning, Elish Sheridan and her colleagues have used a TeachMeet format to share their effective uses of the UDL framework when planning and delivering their face-to-face and current distance learning lessons. They’ve continued that sharing style during their school’s closure. Elish shares what her colleagues have discovered during this podcast and via a one-page overview.
This week we are joined by the one and only GENG from the groundbreaking record label Purple Tape Pedigree. We talk about his background as an OG New York city resident, his vision for the record label, and then proceed to rag on Billie Elish's boomer view of hip-hop. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
On This Week's Show The WM40A Crew Talks About Billie Elish Addressing Hip-Hop Cappin, A Failed Impeachment, Nicki Minaj Versus Meek Mill, David Schwimmer's Response to the Living Single Friends Debate, and HBO Max's attempt at Reality TV Pose.
Marcelo Cicali y Marisol García conversaron sobre comidas y música en la tradicional sección de los días viernes.
Marcelo Cicali y Marisol García conversaron sobre comidas y música en la tradicional sección de los días viernes.
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Hoy en los deportes por www.alejandropolanco.com y www.nowmusicradio.com " Gabriel Ortiz y Alejandro Polanco hablarán sobre lo mas sobresaliente del festival Corona Capital, donde conocerás entre otras cosas los tamales oficiales de Billie Elish ... sí, leíste bien, los tamales oficiales. Esto y mas todos los martes de 9 a 11 pm (Hora del centro de México) en el Podcast en vivo con noticias, entretenimiento, humor y más.
Hoy en los deportes por www.alejandropolanco.com y www.nowmusicradio.com " Gabriel Ortiz y Alejandro Polanco hablarán sobre lo mas sobresaliente del festival Corona Capital, donde conocerás entre otras cosas los tamales oficiales de Billie Elish ... sí, leíste bien, los tamales oficiales. Esto y mas todos los martes de 9 a 11 pm (Hora del centro de México) en el Podcast en vivo con noticias, entretenimiento, humor y más.
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A new way hackers are targeting your Android phone... pairs of innocent-looking apps that work together when you download them, to steal data, run up charges, or hijack your device. Gordon Byrd interviews Dr. Karim Elish of Florida Polytechnic University in Lakeland.
Ngomongin EP nya Juicy Lucy , Danilla dan Rachun. Glenn dan Padi punya lagu baru ?
In this episode, I sat down with powerlifting and movement coach Elish Le. This podcast is loaded with information! We talked a lot about the role of a great coach/mentor, the importance of quality movement, the benefits of unilateral exercises, the ideal warm up, how to avoid injuries and more. Connect with Elish: Instagram: @ElishLe Connect with Kyle: Instagram: @HuntFitness YouTube: @HuntFitnessTv Get Strong Now - Absolute Strength Powerlifting Program: http://www.kylehuntfitness.com/absolute-strength/
[Study: Accordance 10.4] Genesis chapter one is often used today as evidence in all sorts of faith vs science debates, but what was its original purpose? What was its message to its first, ancient audience—and how can we hear that message today? In this podcast, Dr. J compares and contrasts Genesis one with an ancient Akkadian creation story. The differences between the two tell us some very important things about the God of ancient Israel.
Kirsty Young's castaway this week is the lawyer Dame Elish Angiolini. The first woman to become both Scotland's Solicitor General and Lord Advocate she's currently principal of St Hugh's College Oxford. It's a long way from Govan where her father heaved bags of coal round the streets and there wasn't always money for the meter. She was the youngest of four and by her own admission being "gabby" was the only way she got heard. It's an early skill that seems to have served her pretty well - in the legal establishment she gained a reputation as a gutsy moderniser, unafraid to challenge the system. Among her innovations a pioneering support scheme for vulnerable victims and establishing the National Crimes Sex Unit for Scotland - the first of its kind in Europe. Her predisposition to seeing things from the victim's point of view might have something to do with her own experience - in 1984 she was badly injured in a rail disaster that killed 13 others - including the two men sitting opposite her. She says "... Advocacy is a great life skill. If you go to your bank manager asking for an overdraft, or if you barter at a market, you are employing advocacy skills. It is all about empathy and charisma." Producer: Paula McGinley.
Kirsty Young's castaway this week is the lawyer Dame Elish Angiolini. The first woman to become both Scotland's Solicitor General and Lord Advocate she's currently principal of St Hugh's College Oxford. It's a long way from Govan where her father heaved bags of coal round the streets and there wasn't always money for the meter. She was the youngest of four and by her own admission being "gabby" was the only way she got heard. It's an early skill that seems to have served her pretty well - in the legal establishment she gained a reputation as a gutsy moderniser, unafraid to challenge the system. Among her innovations a pioneering support scheme for vulnerable victims and establishing the National Crimes Sex Unit for Scotland - the first of its kind in Europe. Her predisposition to seeing things from the victim's point of view might have something to do with her own experience - in 1984 she was badly injured in a rail disaster that killed 13 others - including the two men sitting opposite her. She says "... Advocacy is a great life skill. If you go to your bank manager asking for an overdraft, or if you barter at a market, you are employing advocacy skills. It is all about empathy and charisma." Producer: Paula McGinley.
Location, location, location. Choosing where to live can be one of life's most important concerns, but it's also a decision we often give little sophisticated attention. Chosing a hometown affects your and your children's ability to fulfil your vocation, and be as virtuous as possible. It can also affect your potential earning power. We share about our experience in suburban wastelands, ask whether a good person should live in an urban environment, and why some who grew up in the city are nervous in the country.
Sumerians relate on baked clay how, 300,000 years ago, a team of tall, millenia-old human scientists (Enki, Ningishzidda and Ninmah) in Zimbabwe from the planet Nibiru to mine Earth's gold created us as a species of disposable, poorly engineered mine slaves by combining their genes with those of Homo Erectus, a compassionate human already on the planet for a million years. Advertise on Renegade Talk click the link for more Info http://renegadetalk.fm/Donations.html Thank You Renegade Nation Richie and Marla
[Resources: Accordance 9] This podcast will show how to set up a custom workspace for any Study Bible. It will also review Zondervan's Archaeological Study Bible, a goldmine of information, a great introduction to how the fruits of archaeology can increase our understanding of the Bible. Designed with the conservative Christian in mind, this study Bible features 8000 study notes, 500 articles, 500 color photographs and 15 maps. Accordance makes it easy to explore all the features in this resource, especially when navigating among the articles in the five major categories: Archaeological Sites, Cultural and Historical Notes, Ancient Peoples and Lands, The Reliability of the Bible, and Ancient Texts and Artifacts.