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You might be surprised to hear it given some of the economic and geopolitical news this year, but the big news from the NYU International Hospitality Industry Investment Forum was a presentation from Jan Freitag, the national director of hospitality analytics at CoStar Group, and Adam Sacks, president of Tourism Economics, that significantly revised upward their 2026 U.S. hotel forecasts from earlier this year. For this conversation we’re turning to Freitag and Travel Weekly hospitality editor Christina Jelski to review the new forecast and what’s driving the rosy outlook. We talk about the current shape of the economy, interest in domestic travel, the enduring stability of the upper-end and luxury segment. And as the FIFA World Cup kicks off, we take yet another look at demand around the match cities and how some industry watchers may have been missing the story. This episode was recorded June 12 and has been edited for length and clarity. Episode sponsor This episode is sponsored by Brendan Vacations https://www.brendanvacations/com/traveladvisors Related links Early numbers brighten the 2026 forecast for U.S. hotels https://www.travelweekly.com/Travel-News/Hotel-News/Early-numbers-brighten-2026-forecast-US-hotels Hotel data firms deliver good news at NYU event https://www.travelweekly.com/Travel-News/Hotel-News/Industry-groups-unveil-revised-2026-US-hotel-forecast Hotel group says World Cup demand is below expectations https://www.travelweekly.com/Travel-News/Hotel-News/World-Cup-demand-is-below-expectations Folo episode on the World Cup with U.S. Travel's Erik Hanson https://www.travelweekly.com/Podcasts/Folo/US-travel-and-FIFA-World-Cup The USA is on full display https://www.travelweekly.com/North-America-Travel/USA-on-full-display-250th-anniversary CoStar Group https://www.costargroup.com/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Movie of the Year: 1971Straw Dogs (feat. Erik from the Cradle to the Grave pod!)The Straw Dogs Podcast: Peckinpah's Most Dangerous FilmThe Straw Dogs podcast episode of Movie of the Year confronts one of 1971's most debated, disturbing, and relentlessly provocative films — Sam Peckinpah's psychological siege thriller starring Dustin Hoffman and Susan George. Ryan, Mike, and Greg are joined by Erik Hanson of the Cradle to the Grave podcast. Together, they examine the film's violence, its contested rape scene, and the gender dynamics at the heart of Peckinpah's vision. Consequently, no other episode this season demands more from its hosts — or from its audience.Moreover, the 1971 film Straw Dogs arrived in remarkable company. A Clockwork Orange, Dirty Harry, and The French Connection all hit theaters the same year — forming a cluster of films that fundamentally altered what Hollywood was willing to show. Furthermore, Straw Dogs distinguished itself from all of them. Filmed entirely in a Cornish village, it replaced the city's noise with something quieter and more suffocating. Ultimately, it is a film that has never stopped demanding conversation — and that is exactly what the Taste Buds deliver.About the FilmSam Peckinpah directed Straw Dogs (1971), starring Dustin Hoffman as David Sumner, a mild-mannered American mathematician who relocates with his English wife Amy (Susan George) to her rural hometown in Cornwall. David hires local men to repair their farmhouse. Almost immediately, however, the couple faces escalating harassment, intimidation, and violence from the villagers — including Amy's former boyfriend Charlie (Del Henney).Peckinpah and screenwriter David Zelag Goodman adapted the film from Gordon M. Williams's 1969 novel The Siege of Trencher's Farm. Peckinpah famously dismissed the source material. The film builds to a harrowing siege in which David, pushed past every limit, defends his home with escalating brutality. Additionally, the title derives from the Tao Te Ching, which describes straw dogs as ceremonial objects — used briefly, then discarded without feeling. The Criterion Collection edition includes a discussion of this symbolism in its supplemental materials.Released theatrically in the UK in November 1971, the film earned a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Original Score. It was later issued as a Criterion Collection release featuring new critical scholarship. The British Film Institute also maintains an entry on the film. The British Board of Film Classification banned it for home video release for years after its UK theatrical run.Guest Panelist: Erik HansonJoining the Taste Buds for this Sam Peckinpah film discussion is Erik Hanson, the creator and host of Cradle to the Grave — a horror movie podcast built around a distinctive structural premise. Starting with 1971, his own birth year, Erik ranks and discusses his Top 10 horror films from every year of his life, covering each in depth with rotating guests. The show has developed a devoted following for Erik's knowledgeable, laid-back, and genuinely funny approach to the genre.In addition to podcasting, Erik is the author of Death Machine, a debut horror novel set in 1987 Northern California that reimagines the Zodiac Killer returning to terrorize a group of kids. Based in Sacramento, California, Erik is also a musician. His work across fiction and podcasting reflects a lifelong relationship with horror that goes well beyond fandom and into genuine craft. Notably, the fact that Cradle to the Grave begins precisely with 1971 makes Erik an especially fitting guest for a deep dive into one of that year's most unsettling films. You can pick up Death Machine on Amazon.Peckinpah and Violence: A Director Pushed to the EdgeBy 1971, Sam Peckinpah had already established himself as Hollywood's most uncompromising chronicler of violence. The Wild Bunch (1969) had rewritten the grammar of the Western, deploying slow-motion carnage in a way that made violence impossible to process cleanly. Straw Dogs, however, moved in a very different direction. Furthermore, Warner Bros. had effectively exiled Peckinpah from Hollywood following a chaotic falling out, which is why he filmed this Straw Dogs 1971 production entirely in England, far from his natural terrain.The violence in Straw Dogs is not operatic like The Wild Bunch. Instead, it is domestic, intimate, and deeply uncomfortable. Peckinpah builds menace through accumulation — small humiliations, loaded glances, minor intrusions — before releasing it all in the siege. Additionally, the film implicates the audience in David's rampage by making it feel, at least in the moment, cathartic. That troubling catharsis is entirely the point. As a result, the Straw Dogs podcast discussion centers on Peckinpah's central question: whether violence is ever truly civilized, or whether it simply waits beneath the surface of every man who believes he is better than it. Roger Ebert, writing for the Chicago Sun-Times in 1971, gave the film two stars and called it a film committed to the pornography of violence while laying on moral outrage with a shovel — a dissent worth hearing even for those who disagree.The Rape Scene: Context, Controversy, and CriticismNo discussion of Straw Dogs is complete without addressing its most contested sequence. Charlie, her former boyfriend, first assaults Amy — then a second attacker follows. What makes the scene so difficult to analyze is the way Peckinpah films the first assault. Many critics interpreted Amy's shifting emotional response during the rape as suggesting consent or complicity. That reading fueled decades of fierce feminist criticism of the Sam Peckinpah film.Moreover, the British Board of Film Classification rejected the film for home video release for years, specifically over this content. The studio cut the scene for the US release to secure an R rating. Susan George has spoken in interviews about her complex relationship to the role and the sequence. Notably, film scholar Linda Williams frames the film within the longer history of misogynistic representation in cinema. Her analysis appears in the Criterion Collection release. She argues that Straw Dogs belongs in conversation with works that are technically significant but ethically compromised. Consequently, the scene is not a matter of simple condemnation or simple defense. It is the central wound around which the entire film's meaning turns, and the Taste Buds treat it accordingly.David, Amy, and Gender in Straw Dogs 1971At its core, Straw Dogs is a film about masculinity in crisis. David Sumner is an intellectual — passive, avoidant, and seemingly incapable of the physical authority the Cornish village treats as natural male behavior. The film, however, refuses to position his bookishness as a virtue. Dustin Hoffman understood his character as a man who unconsciously provokes the violence around him — a pacifist whose repressed aggression the siege finally unlocks.Amy occupies an equally impossible position. The film's gaze codes her as provocative — bare feet, no bra, conspicuous in the village — while simultaneously punishing her for that very visibility. Nevertheless, Susan George's performance introduces ambiguity and depth that the script does not always earn on its own. The dynamic between David and Amy is as much a source of tension as the men gathering outside. They seem genuinely ill-suited and miscommunicate constantly. Above all, Straw Dogs asks what gender roles cost everyone involved. Specifically, the film suggests that masculinity, however dormant, will ultimately assert itself through violence. That is Peckinpah's most unsettling argument — and one that the A Clockwork Orange episode of Movie of the Year covers from a very different angle.Career Retrospective: Dustin HoffmanBy the time the Straw Dogs podcast era film was released in 1971, Dustin Hoffman had already fundamentally changed what a movie star could look like. His breakthrough in The Graduate (1967) — neurotic, unhandsome, deeply searching — made him a voice for a generation that distrusted certainty. Midnight Cowboy (1969) proved he could disappear entirely into character, earning his first Academy Award nomination. Little Big Man (1970) demonstrated his ability to age through an entire life on screen. Straw Dogs, therefore, marks something different in his catalog: not charm or pathos, but something colder and harder to forgive.Hoffman's Career After...
We finally watched Wolfen… and now it's time to find out how wrong we were.In this POST GUT episode of the Gutted Horror Podcast, hosts Aleece and Tony revisit their original predictions from the PREGUT episode and compare them to what actually happens in this cult classic 1981 horror film. Did the trailer mislead us? Did we call anything correctly? Or were we completely off?Along the way, we dive into a full spoiler discussion of Wolfen, breaking down the story, themes, atmosphere, and what makes this film stand out in the world of early 80s horror. From eerie urban dread to its unique take on werewolf mythology, this is one we had to spill our guts on.Huge shoutout to Erik Hanson from the Cradle to the Grave Podcast for recommending this film for the PREGUT. This one definitely gave us a lot to talk about.If you enjoy horror deep dives, retro horror reviews, and seeing whether predictions actually hold up, this episode is for you.Have you seen Wolfen? Did it match your expectations or surprise you? Let us know in the comments.Subscribe for more horror reviews, Pregut and Post Gut episodes, and deep dives into classic and underrated horror films.#Wolfen #Wolfen1981 #HorrorMovies #HorrorReview #WerewolfMovies #80sHorror #CultHorror #GuttedHorrorPodcast #HorrorPodcast #MovieReview❤️
On today's Friday Focus podcast, Malachi Herbster sits down with Erik Hanson to talk about Erik's journey into camp ministry and the ways the Lord used camp service to shape his life. Erik shares how God worked through his college years at camp to teach him practical lessons about service, growth, and faithfulness in everyday responsibilities.They also discuss the importance of discovering and developing gifts you may not even realize you have. For Erik, that meant stepping into areas like construction and hands-on projects—skills he never expected to develop. This conversation challenges listeners to try new things, grow in areas that feel uncomfortable, and pursue the opportunities God may place in front of them as they learn, serve, and become more equipped for the future.
In June 1977, eight-year-old Renee Freer was brutally murdered near her home in Monroe. With advanced technology accessible to police combined with new interest in the case, Monroe Police focused more on the case. However, police announced the case is now officially closed. Local author, Erik Hanson, wrote Dead End Road to bring more attention to the case and released it in late 2024. He shared his reaction to the news from Monroe Police. Image Credit: Getty Images
"The Publishers and the so-called Purveyors of "Fine Art" have conspired to keep the public in the dark about the true potential of comics!" Rick Veitch is joined by artists Shawn McManus, Jim Fern, Stan Woch, and Tom Yeates for a bit of monkey shines in Swamp Thing Annual #3 entitled "Distant Cousins." Erik Hanson from the Cradle to the Grave podcast returns to help discuss this issue as we try to make sense of the all the madness of this issue and put it in context. Reader: Erik Hanson Original Music: Jim Laczkowski of Now Playing Network Logo: Nat Almirall of Where the Long Tail Ends Dedicated to the Memory of John Bierly
Erik Hanson from the Hartford Wolfpack calls in to talk about the team, the home opener, this season's promotions and of course the newly renovated People's Bank Arena.
Join us for a special DESERT ISLAND SHOWDOWN episode with special guest Erik Hanson from the Cradle to the Grave Podcast!! We talk all things vampire and decide which Vampire movies will make it to our desert island..and which movies just SUCK!You can find Cradle to the Grave here:
¿Lindsay Lohan, Anne Hathaway y Kris Jenner rejuvenecieron 20 años... o ¿la sustancia es real? En este episodio de PHITLOSOFÍA destapamos el verdadero secreto detrás de los rostros más comentados del año. ¿Es Sculptra? ¿Rellenos? ¿Un peinado estratégico? ¿O hay algo más que no sabemos? El Dr. Erik Hanson nos cuenta qué hay detrás del “rejuvenecimiento invisible”, qué funciona, qué no… y qué podría salir muy mal. Dale play y saca tus propias conclusiones antes que nadie. No olvides compartir este episodio y darle Like para que podamos seguir investigando y compartiendo información de valor. Disponible en Spotify, Apple Music y YouTube. Transforma tu cuerpo y hábitos con Phit. Entrena donde quieras y desde 20 minutos diarios. Síguenos en Instagram. Te regalo 7 días: https://www.phit.mx/offers/hACuVsND/checkout Síguenos en nuestras plataformas: Instagram: @denissephit @Phitchallenge Entrena: https://www.phit.mx
Erik Hanson from the Hartford Wolfpack talks about tonight's game and what they got cookin in the coming dates
Erik Hanson of the Hartford Wolfpack calls in to discuss this weekend's game that is celebrating 50 years of pro hockey in Hartford.
Erik Hanson from the Hartford Wolfpack comes in to talk about the home opener and what fans can expect this season at the XL Center!
Hey Cinners! Shannon and Sean are so incredibly lucky to have the dynamic duo of superstar author, John Langan and supernova podcaster, Erik Hanson in the house to talk about the 2024 remake of Stephen Lings 'SALEM'S LOT. We give truly honest opinions about the movie, vampire films in general, Erik's massive crush on Lewis Pullman and so much more. Come for the fangs, stay for the bites!SHOW NOTES:https://wordhorde.com/authors/john-langan/https://cradletothegrave.buzzsprout.com/PLEASE FOLLOW US AND REVIEW!!:Subscribe to us on YouTube: / @cine-fulcutspodcast Find us on INSTAGRAM: @cineful_cutsFind us on Spotify: spotify.link/ncvbbRYDmDbFind us on Apple Music: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast...Send us an e-mail why don't ya!: Cinefulcuts@gmail.comCo-Host: Shannon Bushmann - Montalbano (Instagram: @shannonvonbushmann)Co-Host: Sean O'Connor (Instagram: @seanoc32)Producer: Sean O'Connor Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Monroe Police are feeling hopeful they can finally give closure to the family of Renee Freer. The 8-year-old girl was murdered back in June 1977 and 47 years later, a Facebook group has given new life to the case. Erik Hanson is a Monroe native and an author who is pursuing the story for his new book. But what he discovered in his work led him to something much bigger than he expected. Image Credit: Getty Images
The Worship Conference 2024 | Session 3 | Psalm 137 | January 3, 2024 Click this link for the free Worship Conference 2024 Session Notebook: wc24_notebook.pdf See this link to listen to all other Worship Conference 2024 sessions: session-recordings2.html
God has the power to rescue and redeem anyone. This week, Erik Hanson relates four powerful stories of weak men who were Redeemed & Restored.
God has the power to rescue and redeem anyone. This week, Erik Hanson relates four powerful stories of weak men who were Redeemed & Restored.
God has the power to rescue and redeem anyone. This week, Erik Hanson relates four powerful stories of weak men who were Redeemed & Restored.
God has the power to rescue and redeem anyone. This week, Erik Hanson relates four powerful stories of weak men who were Redeemed & Restored.
Erik Hanson is an investment sales broker for JLL that has been selling office buildings in San Francisco for the past 15 years. His team has been especially busy over the past 12 months selling most of the deals you see in the news like 60 Spear, 115 Sansome, etc.Our conversation covered many topics, including:- Summary recap of the office market from 2009 to today- Recent transactions- How buyers are valuing vacant vs leased buildings- Tenant demand / current market rent- Market vacancy in Class A vs B/C buildings- Changing work-from-home trends- Acquisition financing
Hey Cinners, this episode was an absolute blast. We had Erik Hanson from the Cradle to the Grave Podcast on to talk about Dracula old and new. We bring up some classics and maybe even one or two that weren't on your radar. We cover Nosferatu, Universal, Hammer, BBC and Tobe Hooper (that one's a bit of a cheat) just to name a few. Erik was a superstar, just like he always is on Cradle to the Grave. We had so much fun, hope you do too.SHOW NOTES:https://cradletothegrave.buzzsprout.com/https://www.amazon.com/Death-Machine-Erik-Hanson/dp/B0BJKSNCFWINSTAGRAM: @cradle2thegravepodPLEASE FOLLOW US AND REVIEW!!:Subscribe to us on YouTube: @CINE-FULCUTSPODCASTFind us on INSTAGRAM: @cin.ful_cutsFind us on Spotify: spotify.link/ncvbbRYDmDbFind us on Apple Music: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/cine-ful-cuts/id1702441060Send us an e-mail why don't ya!: Cinefulcuts@gmail.comCo-Host: Shannon Bushmann - Montalbano (Instagram: @shannonvonbushmann)Co-Host: Sean O'Connor (Instagram: @seanoc32)Producer: Sean O'Connor Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
"How long he has stood here, gazing sadly at the ruptured ruins of the mouldering barn that was once his private laboratory, he cannot remember-- nor would it truly matter if he did--" It's a changing of the guard as Nestor Redondo steps in to art duties after Bernie Wrightson had left. Returning guest Erik Hanson steps in as we assess Redondo's art. And the story of alien worms and would be saviors that Len Wein conjures up. Reader: Robert Reineke Original Music: Jim Laczkowski of Now Playing Network Logo: Nat Almirall of Where the Long Tail Ends Dedicated to the Memory of John Bierly
It's a double-dose of Deth this week as we return to one of our earliest franchises, TRANCERS! The only Empire film series to make it onto the Full Moon label, the Tim Thomerson-starring franchise has always been a favorite of Charles Bands, but do these carry over the charm of the original or is it a case of diminishing returns? Erik Hanson from the Cradle 2 the Grave Podcast joins us to find out! Hosted by Jarrod Hornbeck and Steve Guntli Theme song by Kyle Hornbeck Logo by Doug McCambridge Email: puppetmasterscastlefreaks@gmail.com Instagram/Threads: @puppetmasters_castlefreaks YouTube: @PuppetMastersCastleFreaks Next week's episode: The Dungeonmaster
To conclude the series on "Faith Without Sight", Erik Hanson focuses on the story of a woman healed with a simple touch of Christ's garment from Luke 8:41-48.
In Luke 7:1-10, a Roman centurion himself has more faith than most Jews had in Jesus. Erik Hanson highlights this man's faith and humility in this episode of this week's series, "Faith Without Sight".
Just like the disciples followed Christ faithfully in Luke 5, they continued to obey Him in John 21, at the end of Jesus' ministry. Listen as Erik Hanson continues the series, "Faith Without Sight" with another inspiring story of the disciples' faith in Christ.
Erik Hanson begins his series, "Faith Without Sight", with a look at the story of the disciples in Luke 5:1-11. What kind of faith to you have?
In the first episode of Into the Paint Anthony interviews artist and publisher, Ben Goulder. Anthony and Ben talk about Ben's new project, New Dimension as well as Sheffield's hardcore scene, DIY galleries, sauna culture and independent publishing. Theme music by Harry Bix. Recorded by Erik Hanson and Anthony Tino. Special thanks to all of the podcasts, projects and conversations which have brought me to this point. Support Into the Paint on Acast+ https://plus.acast.com/s/in-the-paint-1. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In S1E11, the guys predict the year-end standings in the American League East and their picks will surprise you; the Blue Jays' six-man starting rotation is shaping up; and Griff remembers the day in 1997 when he played golf with two Cy Young Award winners ... ...... and Erik Hanson.
After a long-awaited comeback Cody has bailed yet again (but for a good reason) on a Roundup, but no fear because Robbie was joined by hunter, attorney, California BHA co-chair and first time podcaster Erik Hanson. The boys tackle the amazing update on the corner ‘crossing case' controversy that has embroiled the hunting world for over a year and Erik shares his experience as the man personally wrote the amicus brief that helped win the case. If you're in the mood, give Cody a hard time by texting #ClassicCody to 620-860-4804. Remind him that Avery DEFINITELY would have understood (kidding Avery, we love you). Learn more about Hunt Quietly: https://huntquietly.org Shoutout to our Conservation Club Members! Hunt South Africa with Wettstein Safaris https://www.southafricanhunt.com/ Visit Sun Africa safaris here https://www.sun-africa.com/ Visit Bear Country Outdoors https://bearcountryoutdoors.com/ See more from Blood Origins: https://bit.ly/BloodOrigins_Subscribe Music: Migration by Ian Post (Winter Solstice), licensed through artlist.io Podcast is brought to you by: Bushnell: https://www.bushnell.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
"There wasn't any natural way to restore the mines... so my pappy... he started checking into unnatural ways... the occult... and the supernatural... Then one night... I guesss he thought he was ready... He gathered up all the mystic books as such he'd been collecting... and carried them into the mine... And that was the last anyone ever saw of my pappy... Oh, there was the scream that night of course..." With issue #8 of Swamp Thing, Len Wein and Bernie Wrightson turn their sites on Lovecraftian horror after Swamp Thing has wrapped up his initial origin loose threads. Erik Hanson comes on as a guest to discuss the issue and our relationship with Lovecraft. Reader: Erik Hanson of Cradle to the Grave Original Music: Jim Laczkowski of Now Playing Network Logo: Nat Almirall of Where the Long Tail Ends Dedicated to the Memory of John Bierly
(Romans 5:18-21)
(James 1:5-8)
(Proverbs 1:7)
(1 Kings 3)
Our general scifi, fantasy, and horror movie and book episodes aren't going anywhere. You're in the right place!We are joined by Erik Hanson of the "Cradle to the Grave" Podcast to discuss a little known Jude Law vampire movie called "Wisdom of the Crocodiles" or, more inanely, "Immortality." Although the movie in no way mentions immortality and thats generic and I'm not receiving it right now. I first saw this movie back when the internet was still delivered to your mailbox via discs in little red envelopes and I've had something of a soft spot for it every since. Jude Law and all the actors in the film do a good job lending a good amount of nuance and softness to what could have been an overly artistic and enigmatic plot. Listen to see if Erik agrees (spoiler alert: He might not.)Find Erik's Instagram here: Cradle2theGravePodFind your favorite spot to listen to his podcast here: Link!Read his newest Horror book "Death Machine": Here!There's more from the Strange and Beautiful Network!Listen to Rachel, Kate, and Hannah discuss spicy books, serious books, and everything in between (but mostly spicy!). It's like sitting down with girl friends to chat about hot book boyfriends but in podcast format! Listen now at Feast, Sheath, Shatter: A Book Chat PodcastLove Movies, TV Shows and Books in the Fantasy, Scifi, and Horror genre and want to hear more? Check us out at The Strange and Beautiful Book Club where Rachel and her husband Matt discuss all things genre related.Longing for a simpler time in the police procedural genre AND love Vampires? Matt and Rachel also review the classic television show Forever Knight on their podcast, Come in 81 Kilo.You can also:Join us on Instagram here: https://www.instagram.com/strangeandbeautifulbookclub/Join us on Patreon here: https://www.patreon.com/strangeandbeautifulbookclubFind us on YouTube here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCz9ENwKdHrm57Qmu8L4WXwQ ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
Today we are going to hear from Erik Hanson who is the Project Manager at Southland Christian Camp. Erik has served at southland with his family since 2018.
(I Thessalonians 5:18)
"They will be back... the ones that killed me... Ferrett and the others will be back... and I will be waiting!" Welcome to season 2 of Swamp Things which will be exploring the Len Wein and Bernie Wrightson run of Swamp Thing. Erik Hanson joins Robert to explore the Swamp thing #1 and the Dark Genesis of Swamp Thing.
(Colossians 2:6-7)
Rossifari Podcast - Zoos, Aquariums, and Animal Conservation
Today, the Safari heads back to Adventure Aquarium for our fifth episode in our special events series there as we help them celebrate Shark Tooth Summer! You'll get to learn about the shark species that live at the aquarium, including Anchor, the great hammerhead shark that is only one of two that lives in an aquarium in North America!EPISODE LINKS: www.adventureaquarium.com @adventureaquarium on social media ROSSIFARI LINKS: patreon.com/rossifari to support the pod @rossifari on socials @rossifaripod on TikTok rossifari.com
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Dr. Erik Hanson, M.D. is a psychiatry fellow in the New Orleans, LA area. In this episode, we sit down and discuss with Dr. Hanson his specialty, how his patient base has been affected due to COVID-19, and much more! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rory-bellina6/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/rory-bellina6/support
Learn About Investment and Partnership Opportunities with Kevin and His Team Recommended Resources: Check out our company and our investment opportunity by visiting www.SunriseCapitalInvestors.com Self Directed IRA Investment Opportunity – Click Here To Learn More About How You Can Invest With Us Through Your SDIRA Accredited Investors Click Here to learn more about partnering with me and my team on Mobile Home Park deals! Grab a free copy of my latest book “The 21 Biggest Mistakes Investors Make When Purchasing their First Mobile Home Park…and how to avoid them MobileHomeParkAcademy.com Schedule your free 30 minute "no obligation" call directly with Kevin by clicking this link https://www.timetrade.com/book/KV2D2
"Laissez les bontemps rouler. Please. For us. For all of us." We've reached the end of Alan Moore's run with issue 64 "Return of the Good Gumbo". Alan Moore is joined by Tom Yeates, Rick Veitch, and Stephen Bissette to bring closure and a decision about Swamp Thing's relationship with mankind. Erik Hanson comes on to discuss this finale. Reader: Erik Hanson Original Music: Jim Laczkowski of Now Playing Network Logo: Nat Almirall of Where the Long Tail Ends Dedicated to the Memory of John Bierly
Today we get caught up to speed on perhaps the most impactful redevelopment project of our generation: the 48 acre Upper Harbor Terminal on the North Minneapolis riverfront. We start by celebrating the work of Community Members for Environmental Justice and the Minnesota Center for Environmental Advocacy who forced the city to delay the scheduled Feb 16th vote until the mandatory environmental reviews are completed. We finish with a reflection on public land ownership at the Upper Harbor Terminal. As always, produced by Isaac Specktor ---Call To Action--- Call/Email MPLS Director of Economic Policy and Development Erik Hanson to demand they call off the eviction of the near North encampment Erik Hanson -612-679-5159 Erik.hansen@minneapolismn.gov Subscribe on Patreon to power working class journalism
Cleanse Me (2-7-21) Erik Hanson by Grace Commons Church
From Dead Rising to Resident Evil to Zombies Ate My Neighbors, this week, Tim, Clayton, and two guests from Chicago Loot Drop (Mike Chuck and Erik Hanson) will cover all your favorite zombie games - and some that maybe you don't like as much. And while you're listening to the show, do some reading on Chicago Loot Drop, especially their Shamblers Ball fundraiser happening next Monday at the Public House Theatre!