POPULARITY
We're back! After a long hiatus due to professional/ life stuff, I'm happy to share with you my interview with Gary Shaw, Professor of History and Medieval Studies at Wesleyan University. Continuing our series on horses, we explore another angle of the long-standing relationship between humans and horses, looking at the role that horses played in human transportation and warfare. As we brace ourselves for the impact of A.I., I find it instructive to look back to a time when our transportation and military technologies depended on other animals. It's impossible to fully comprehend the impact of the shift from horse and buggy to car, but, as we grapple with the scope and limitations of our humanity - and, I would argue, with our animality -, thinking back to a time when other animals were more fully embedded in our lives may serve as a useful counterpart and help us in our attempts to make sense of our present moment. In our conversation, Gary Shaw and I discuss two areas of his scholarship - the development of horse travel in twelfth-century Europe and the role that horses, such as the Duke of Wellington's horse Copenhagen, played in battle during the period of the Napoleonic wars.
In this episode, I sit down with Gary, a former New Zealand detective turned international investigator, to explore his extraordinary journey from policing in Christchurch to fighting human trafficking across the globe.Gary opens up about the incredible highs and devastating lows of his mission to rescue women and children from modern slavery—and the personal cost of living as "James Bond for justice."We cover:Gary's early days in the New Zealand Police and his struggle to fit into a toxic police culture.The heart-wrenching reality of confronting modern slavery, including rescuing children as young as five.How his undercover work in 12 countries pushed him to his psychological and emotional limits.The profound impact of his faith, and how it evolved through his experiences.Lessons on shame, forgiveness, and the journey to self-compassion after hitting rock bottom.If you're curious about the intersection of justice, redemption, and the human spirit, this raw and deeply moving conversation with Gary is not to be missed.This episode was proudly sponsored by NZ Mortgages. You can contact them here - https://www.nzmortgages.co.nzBook Gary for speaking here - https://www.celebrityspeakers.co.nz/speakers/gary-shawFollow Gary on LinkedIn here - https://www.linkedin.com/in/gary-shaw-0706671b7/?originalSubdomain=nzLearn more about Gary here - https://www.garyshaw.co.nzContact Gary here - https://www.garyshaw.co.nzYou can find out what your Slavery Footprint is here - https://slaveryfootprint.org/#Get the Growth Weekly Newsletter sent straight to your inbox and join 1000's of other high-performers on the road to self-mastery - https://www.jjlaughlin.com/newsletter-----Website: https://www.jjlaughlin.comYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC6GETJbxpgulYcYc6QAKLHAFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/JamesLaughlinOfficialInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/jameslaughlinofficial/Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/nz/podcast/life-on-purpose-with-james-laughlin/id1547874035Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3WBElxcvhCHtJWBac3nOlF?si=hotcGzHVRACeAx4GvybVOQLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jameslaughlincoaching/James Laughlin is a High-Performance Leadership Coach, Former 7-Time World Champion, Host of the Lead On Purpose Podcast and an Executive Coach to high performers and leaders. James is based in Christchurch, New Zealand.Send me a personal text messageSupport the show
Glenda discusses this years CAPA conference capa-us.org Glenda & Len reminisce about the passing of Dr. Cyril Wecht. COPA created by John Judge & Dr. Cyril Wecht is now CAPA, There is an annual JFK memorial every November 22 on the grassy knoll. CAPA's 2024 Conference will be held at the Crowne Plaza in downtown Dallas. Oswald Panel, discussing the locations of Oswald during the assassination. Oswald Panel includes Steve Jaffe (by Zoom), Andy Kiel & Matt Crumpton (by Zoom). Prouty documentary produced by Len Osanic & Jeff Carter to be shown. Short file featuring the Dealey Tramps will be viewed. Tribute to Dr. Wecht by Dr. David Mantik & film viewing of 'The Rant'. The Magic Bullet - More Magical Than We Knew? by Dr. Gary Aguilar. JFK Records Panel discuss latest information from Mark Adamcyzk, Andrew Kreig, & Larry Schnapf. Discussion regarding the missing information from the Warren Report with Dr. David Montague. Bryan Edwards & Gary Shaw discuss Roscoe White & the possibility he was the grassy knoll shooter. Breech of Trust (How the Warren Commission failed the nation & why) by Gerald McKnight. Doug Horne discusses 'How We Know The Zapruder Film Was Altered'. Dr. David Mantik discusses his book, 'The Final Analysis'. End of Innocence author John Young, discusses professional assassins in Dealey Plaza on Nov. 22/63. Did you know there was a second arrest in the Texas Theatre when & where Oswald was arrested? Oswald's Russian friend, Prof. Titovetz will speak about Oswald in Russia & answer questions. All of the previous CAPA conferences are on the CAPA website. Part Two Documerntary Filmaker released Col Prouty interview from 1989 Rare Fletcher Prouty interview released Watch Here JOHN EDGINTON DOCUMENTARIES his youtube channel with many other interviews
Garry Thompson joins Dotun and Tim to pay tribute to Gary Shaw and talk about what it was like to be a professional cricketer in the Midlands in the 80'sSUBSCRIBE TO THE YOUTUBE PAGE:https://www.youtube.com/@1129FootballSUBSCRIBE TO BRAZILIAN SHIRT NAME EXTRA FOR EARLY ACCESS AND NO ADS:https://brazilian-shirt-name.hubwave.net/FOLLOW THE BRAZILIAN SHIRT NAME ON INSTAGRAM:https://www.instagram.com/brazilshirtpod/FOLLOW THE BRAZILIAN SHIRT NAME ON FACEBOOK:https://www.facebook.com/BrazilShirtPodFOLLOW THE BRAZILIAN SHIRT NAME ON TWITTER:https://twitter.com/BrazilShirtPod
Dan and Dan pay tribute to Gary Shaw, discuss Villa's big 3-0 win in the Champions League against Young Boys and their 3-1 win against Wolves in the Premier League. Join our FPL league and check out our socials!
RSVP for the TDA link up. All of our community are welcome...Limited places are available RSVP HERE Got a Dilemma? https://www.thenewblxck.com/dilemma Interested In Securing Shares In THE NEW BLXCK -https://app.seedlegals.com/en/pitch/c_VoSPUCwhTo/The-New-Blxck Any questions about this investment opportunity, please contact Brent@TheNewBlxck.com The Day After, (00:00) Intro: House keeping (14:10) Headlines: Kemi Badenoch claims she 'became working class' after securing a job at McDonald's as a teenager, Sex Education actor's arrest to be investigated, Kamala Harris suggests she would be open to exploring reparations for slavery (21:18) Word on Road Eve's new memoir “Who's that girl” reveals advice from Jay Z Miley Cyrus being sued for copyright lawsuit over Bruno Mars song Andrew Schultz makes fun of Shxts n gigs apology United States vs. Diddy (01:13:19) Interview: The One About Clive Lyndsay (02:03:15) Headlines: Man, 27, dies weeks after receiving Covid vaccine he was wrongly invited to take by NHS, Unlawful care homes ‘profiteer' from at-risk kids, Mohamed Al Fayed accused of multiple rapes by staff (02:08:38) The Rotation (02:30:22) What You Saying? Forgiving Our Parents May Be The Key to Healing (03:32:17) Headlines: Musk's satellites 'blocking' view of the universe, Taylor Swift fans slam Pharrell Williams after he criticises stars endorsing politicians, UN General Assembly overwhelmingly calls for end of Israeli occupation (03:36:33) The Reaction: Aston Villa to honour Gary Shaw in Champions League opener against Young Boys (03:39:24) Wrap Up: #News #currentaffairs #sports
Ahead of Anthony Joshua v Daniel Dubois, two British fighters with very different journey's to world title fights, Team GB Boxing's saviour this summer - Lewis Richardson - joins Gabby and Mark to discuss the difficult decision amateur boxers face over when to turn professional and what actually happens when you do... Lewis also looks ahead to an historic night of boxing at Wembley and reflects on his amateur days alongside Daniel Dubois. Plus, Mark and Gabby reflect on the opening Champions League matchdays and pay tribute to the passing of both Aston Villa legend Gary Shaw and Italia 90's icon Salvatore 'Toto' Schillaci.Later, the WSL's first-ever CEO, Nikki Doucet is in The Sports Agents studio ahead of a pivotal season for the Women's Super League and Championship, having split from The FA over the summer and with major broadcast deals set to expire at the end of this season. Executive Producer: Adonis PratsidesProducer: Sophie PenneyVideo Producer: Sam TrudgillSocial Media Editor: Calum ScotlandTom Hughes is Editor for The News Agents podcast networkVicky Etchells is the Commissioning Editor for Global You can listen to this episode on Alexa - just say "Alexa, ask Global Player to play The Sports Agents".And, the Sports Agents now have merch!
The boys return to discuss the Everton result, the return to the Champions League/European Cup and the tragic news of Gary Shaw's passing. Host: Omar Guests: Sam and Alec X: https://twitter.com/villapodcast Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thevillatalks/ Check out our previous episodes: https://podfhttps://podfollow.com/the-villa-talks-podcast #AVFC #PL #UTV #Podcast
Welcome to the latest episode of The Overlap's football history podcast, It Was What It Was.As Aston Villa return to Champions League football this week, Jonathan Wilson and Rob Draper take a deep dive into the club's most iconic moment: their 1982 European Cup triumph.It Was What It Was revisits this historic victory, made even more remarkable by the fact that manager Ron Saunders resigned midway through the season, leaving Tony Barton to step in and guide Villa to European glory.Jonathan and Rob walk us through the unforgettable campaign, which saw Villa travel to Germany and Ukraine before defeating Bayern Munich 1-0 in the final. The win became even more legendary when first-choice goalkeeper Jimmy Rimmer was forced off with an injury, only for his inexperienced replacement, Nigel Spink, to step up and deliver a crucial performance in just his second-ever first-team appearance, cementing his place in Villa's history on one of the club's greatest nights.If you enjoyed the podcast, please hit subscribe to never miss an episode.***Please note this episode was recorded before the death of the late Gary Shaw.*** Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Dan and Dan are back! Ollie Watkins opens his account for the 2024/25 Premier League season with a brace against Everton. Jhon Duran's screamer bailed Villa out of jail in superb style. The boys also discussed the passing of club legend Gary Shaw and previewed Villa's huge Champions League match against BSC Young Boys. Join our FPL league and check out our socials!
Mat Kendrick reflects on his own Gary Shaw memories as he joins the growing list of people wanting to pay tribute to an Aston Villa icon after his sad passing. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dave looks at today's news & gossip as the football world pays respects to Aston Villa legend Gary Shaw. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Arguably the top U.S. Heavyweight is back headlining for Top Rank Boxing, a British 130 lb. contender is back in action for Matchroom and we have news and lots of good nostalgia on the newest "Big Fight Weekend Preview Podcast."Host T.J. Rives is back with insider Dan Rafael of his "Fight Freaks Unite" Substack and BigFightWeekend.com to go over it all.They talk Jared "Real Big Baby" Anderson returning after a tumultuous last few months with two arrests and now fighting a slightly known veteran in the Top Ran main event on ESPN from Texas. Dan and T.J. have their reservations about Anderson's heart and commitment to the sport of boxing and more. There's further conversation on heavyweights Efe Ajagba and Guido Viannelo fighting in the co-feature and maybe, that bout has more "sizzle."Next, there's some quick conversation on Jordan Gill topping the Matchroom bill in Manchester, England, as he fights Zelfa Barrett in a 12 rounder to help solidify his standing in the junior lightweight rankings.Then, there's fight news on newly elevated IBF welterweight champ Jaron "Boots" Ennis jumping to Matchroom to promote him. Dan has insight on his next potential fight, but T.J. wants to know why can't we get an Ennis-Terence Crawford undisputed 147 lb. fight late in the year, as well?Dan has more on the passing of significant U.S. promoter Gary Shaw who died earlier this week and more on the undercard of the upcoming Canelo-Munguia card on May 4th.The boys close with Anthony Joshua anniversary nostalgia on his first heavyweight title win and a classic Oscar De La Hoya battle with fellow hall of fame laegend, Pernell "Sweet Pea" Whitaker, too!It's all on the "Big Fight Weekend Preview Podcast" and make sure to follow/subscribe on Apple, Spreaker, Spotify, etc.!!
Arguably the top U.S. Heavyweight is back headlining for Top Rank Boxing, a British 130 lb. contender is back in action for Matchroom and we have news and lots of good nostalgia on the newest "Big Fight Weekend Preview Podcast."Host T.J. Rives is back with insider Dan Rafael of his "Fight Freaks Unite" Substack and BigFightWeekend.com to go over it all.They talk Jared "Real Big Baby" Anderson returning after a tumultuous last few months with two arrests and now fighting a slightly known veteran in the Top Ran main event on ESPN from Texas. Dan and T.J. have their reservations about Anderson's heart and commitment to the sport of boxing and more. There's further conversation on heavyweights Efe Ajagba and Guido Viannelo fighting in the co-feature and maybe, that bout has more "sizzle."Next, there's some quick conversation on Jordan Gill topping the Matchroom bill in Manchester, England, as he fights Zelfa Barrett in a 12 rounder to help solidify his standing in the junior lightweight rankings.Then, there's fight news on newly elevated IBF welterweight champ Jaron "Boots" Ennis jumping to Matchroom to promote him. Dan has insight on his next potential fight, but T.J. wants to know why can't we get an Ennis-Terence Crawford undisputed 147 lb. fight late in the year, as well?Dan has more on the passing of significant U.S. promoter Gary Shaw who died earlier this week and more on the undercard of the upcoming Canelo-Munguia card on May 4th.The boys close with Anthony Joshua anniversary nostalgia on his first heavyweight title win and a classic Oscar De La Hoya battle with fellow hall of fame laegend, Pernell "Sweet Pea" Whitaker, too!It's all on the "Big Fight Weekend Preview Podcast" and make sure to follow/subscribe on Apple, Spreaker, Spotify, etc.!!
Chris Gallop's facebook group: JFK-The Continuing Inquiry 11th Annual JFK-The Continuing Inquiry Luncheon: Wednesday, Nov 15, 2022; Time: 11am-6pm Address: Location: 3132 Milam St, Fort Worth, TX 76112 Chris Gallop's facebook profile Speakers include J. Gary Shaw, Jeff Meek, Robert Groden, Randy Benson, and others For more details, email Chris at cjgallop@yahoo.com or text him at 817-291-1891 Jim to be at the Mercantile Library of Cincinnati on 14th of Nov Address: 414 Walnut St #1100, Cincinnati, OH 45202 Website: www.mercantilelibrary.com Jim to speak about how the death of JFK led to the rise of the neocons at the Pittsburg conference Book: Rose Cherami: Gathering Fallen Petals by Dr. Michael Marcades Listener questions answered Paul Landis will be speaking at the Pittsburg conference Vince Palamara's review of Landis's book The Final Witness FREE Borrowable Ebook: Spooks: The Haunting of America- The Private Use of Secret Agents by Jim Hougan Directionally silenced rifles designed by Mitchell Werbell Video: Edward Lansdale in Dealey Plaza, Dallas on 22 Nov, 1963 comfirmed by Col. Prouty & Gen. Victor Krulak FREE Download Ebook: Final Judgment by Michael Collins Piper Book: The JFK Assassination Chokeholds by Paul Bleau, Jim DiEugenio, Mark Adamcyzk, et al: Kindle
It's our lengthiest pod of the season and with good reason as we hear from two now-retired LOI stars, Gary Shaw and Alan Keane. Shawsey tells us why at 31, he's called time on his playing career (for now anyway) while he also talks about his former club Shamrock Rovers and their pursuit of four-in-a-row. Alan Keane talks all things Sligo with the Bit O'Red gearing up for a do-or-die clash with Cork City this weekend. Kieran and Gary have some interesting debates this week while the BTS kebab review makes a long-awaited return. Sponsored by QuinnAv.ie
With Karl on his own again, there's an Icelandic theme to this week's show as he chats to Breidablik fan Hafstein Arnason, and there's a return to the podcast of two special guests, the goalkeeper who played in the 7-0 aggregate win over Fram Reykjavik in 1982, Alan O'Neill, and the man who scored Rovers' winning goal away to Stjarnan in 2017, Gary Shaw. Big Al remembers that week long stay in Iceland, alongside his friends Robbie Gaffney and Jacko McDonagh, and also discusses Gavin Bazunu and The Boot Room and Alan Mannus taking his club record of 120 clean sheets. Shawsy helps review a poor game in Dundalk last Friday, before taking a trip down memory lane to Bradser's first European win six years ago. Plus, #RTEGate, news on next Friday's landmark 250th episode and the last 16 of Questions From The East Stand gets underway with Gary O'Neill vs Sean Kavanagh - hosted by quizmaster Harry Moore.
Sermon from guest minister; Gary Shaw who speaks on how to walk in joy in the midst of trials. This message was recorded on Sunday 26/02/23
Chris Gallop's facebook group: JFK-The Continuing Inquiry 10th Annual JFK-The Continuing Inquiry Luncheon: Wednesday, Nov 16, 2022; Time: 11am-5pm Address: Lone Star Garden, 3132 Milam Street, Fort Worth, Texas 76112 Google Maps location of the venue Speakers include J. Gary Shaw, Jeff Meek, Robert Groden, Leslie Sharp and others For more details, please mail Chris at cjgallop@yahoo.com You can also text him at 817-291-1891 New documentary by Meredith Mantik (D/o Dr. David Mantik) titled Invisible Witness; check poster here Showreel/sizzle reel of the documentary to be shown for the very first time at the luncheon The documentary should be released in time for the 60th anniversary next year If Oswald indeed acted alone then there's no reason to withhold the files for 60 years Stream/buy JFK Revisited: Through the Looking Glass: Showtime, Prime, iTunes, Vudu, Microsoft Stream/buy the documentary series JFK: Destiny Betrayed: Amazon Prime, iTunes, Vudu Video: The collapse of WTC Building 7 Facebook page of The JFK Historical Group The JFK Historical Group Conference from Nov 17-20, 2022 at the DoubleTree by Hilton, Dallas Speakers include J. Gary Shaw, Robert Groden, Mal Hyman, Vince Palamara, John Barbour and others Part B: David Talbot; beginning at 29:24 David Talbot is the founder and former editor-in-chief of Salon And the author of The Devil's Chessboard by David Talbot: Hardcover, Paperback, Kindle, Audiobook And Brothers: Real History of the Kennedy Years: Paperback, Kindle, Scribd, Audiobook News: Paul Schrade passes away Schrade introduced Robert Kennedy to Cesar Chavez Schrade went on to champion the release of Sirhan Sirhan Thomas Noguchi's autopsy report of Senator Robert F. Kennedy (read online) Sirhan was granted parole but Governor Gavin Newsom reversed the parole board's recommendation Book: A Lie too Big to Fail by Lisa Pease: Hardcover, Kindle, Scribd The browbeating of witness Sandra Serrano Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated by Thane Eugene Cesar, declares RFK Jr" CIA may have used contractor who inspired ‘Mission: Impossible' to kill RFK Kennedy, King, Malcolm X relatives and scholars seek new assassination probes The Truth and Reconciliation Committee: www.americantruthnow.org FREE Borrowable Ebook: The Last Investigation by Gaeton Fonzi President Kennedy fired Allen Dulles after the Bay of Pigs fiasco FREE Borrowable Ebook: The Brothers: John Foster Dulles, Allen Dulles & Their Secret World War by Stephen Kinzer It was Richard Helms that really ran the CIA during 1962 & 63; not John McCone Richard Helms continued to report to Allen Dulles even after Dulles was fired Allen Dulles (probably) organized the crime and also the cover-up too Video: Jim Garrison meets Mr. X (Oliver Stone's JFK) William Harvey worked directly under Allen Dulles at the CIA Harvey was incharge of the blackops and assassinations for Allen Dulles "The Old Man will take care of it" What Kennedy was doing was in the best interests of all humanity June 10 1963, JFK's American University commencement address titled 'A Strategy of Peace': Audio, Video, Text Video: Fletcher Prouty explains how and why the Gary Powers' U2 flight was sabotaged Limit CIA Role To Intelligence by Harry S. Truman, Dec 22, 1963, The Washington Post Bobby Kennedy knew that his brother was killed as a result of a high-level domestic plot FREE Online Ebook: The Secret Team by Col. L. Fletcher Prouty (1973) FREE Online Ebook: (html version) Understanding Special Operations, And Their Impact on Vietnam War Era 1989 Interview with L. Fletcher Prouty, Colonel USAF (Retired) by David Ratcliffe (1999) NSAM 271 President Eisenhower's farewell address on Jan 17, 1961: Video, Text Remarks prepared for delivery at the Trade Mart in Dallas, TX, Nov 22, 1963 (Undelivered)
On episode 64 I talk with Gary Shaw (the unhip uplander) from Kansas and talk more about traveling to hunt, Setters, prairie grouse and awhole lot more. Enjoy! ------------ Subscribe to the Upland Rookie YouTube Channel by clicking here. As a reminder, if you are enjoying the podcast, please go leave a rating and review on whichever podcast platform you listen on. Much appreciated. ----------- *TITLE SPONSOR - BPro Kennels* LISTENERS CAN SAVE 10% ON A DOG BOX FROM BPRO KENNESL USING PROMO CODE ROOKIE10) BPRO Kennels was founded with a vision to create a premium dog box that was customizable to fit any needs and stand the test of time. These hand-crafted kennels are proudly built in the USA with no corners cut, with your dog's safety as the first priority. These are made of high grade, lightweight aluminum that can be left raw or powder coated to whatever color combinations you can think of. The podcast is presented by: Final Rise - Preimum upland gear for the serious bird hunter. Check out the new Sidekick fest for ultra slim design and light weight. Every product is made in the USA and is durable season after season. Sponsor of the podcast: Trinity Bretons. Angels in the home and demons in the field. Trinity offer puppies, The Trinity Upland Academy with George Hickox, Started Dogs and Stud Service and some damn fine bird dogs. ---------- AFFILIATES: OnX Hunt. Save 20% off your subscription today by using promo code TUR20 ---------- CONNECT WITH ME: Email: uplandbritts@gmail.com Instagram: @upland_britts or @theuplandrookiepodcast Facebook: The Upland Rookie Podcast Twitter: @uplandrookiepod
Filmmaker Bobby Ross and our favorite beer drinking ultra-runner Leaky Hourglass Race director Gary Shaw join Evan for a Halloween specific episode. The three talk about some of their favorite Halloween franchises and why you should (or shouldn't) watch them. The group stays spoiler free for any new movies and even manages to stay spoiler free for many of these movies that came out in the 80s. They even manage to tie in some bizarre links to OCR in the horror movie world. What do you think of this episode? Did we miss any of your favorites? Should we bring this back next year? Episode brought to you by Squirrel's Nut Butter...prevent the scariest thing of all during endurance running...horrible chaffing with Squirrel's Nut Butter. Music provided by Dino Sinos
Nick and Tyler are joined by Gary Shaw - the Unhip Uplander. Gary is an avid upland hunter who has hunted many states and has had success bagging multiple upland species. Not only has he had success hunting chickens, sharpies, and sage this season but he has also had recent success creating some stellar memes. Tune in to hear Gary talk about his recent trip where him and Douglas Spale were able to bag a sharpie, sage, and chicken in one day, the trips he has planned for the rest of the season and more! Podcast brought to you by: Hunt REDI - https://huntredi.com Uplnd Outfitters - https://uplndoutfitters.com Bpro Kennels - https://bprokennels.com Tetra Hearing - https://tetrahearing.com/FlushEm Gun Dog Outdoors - gundogoutdoors.com Dakota283 - https://dakota283.com Cornerstone Gundog Academy - Save $50 - https://www.cornerstonegundogacademy.com/a/39346/oQ3aXZZf
Two amazing guests: 1. Our beer drinking ultra-runner (and newly engaged) Gary Shaw joins the group to talk about his 24x24x24 record (24 beers, 24 miles, under 24 hours) and then explains what makes the Leaky Hourglass Ultra such a unique event with unique participant swag. (Plus a shout out to Squirrel's Nut Butter.) Leaky Hourglass Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/LeakyHourglassUltra 2. Former Pro track athlete that was sponsored by Brooks and physical therapist, William Shell joins the group to talk about Mythic Race. The 5k and 5 hour option with some of the most unique obstacles in the sport. Mythic Race Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/Mythic-Race-101941148527352 OCR Everest Documentary: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yH0snwDEbF4&t=22s Infinite Hero Fundraiser: https://www.gofundme.com/f/ocr-everest-2022-inifinite-hero-foundation Strength & Speed Patreon: www.patreon.com/ultraocrman Optimize Yourself Podcast Link: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ep183-pushing-yourself-to-your-limits-when-quitting/id1276450332?i=1000568881088 Episode brought to you by Volition Chiropractic, if you're passing through KC, stop by an OCR athlete and professional for the best treatment around: https://volitionchiropractic.com/ Music provided by Dino Sinos
Mr. Igor Lopatonok is an Ukrainian-born producer and director Links to his documentaries (watch free online): Documentary: Ukraine on Fire (2016) (featuring Oliver Stone) Documentary: Revealing Ukraine (2019) (featuring Oliver Stone) Documentary: Ukraine: 30 Years of Independence - The Everlasting Present Documentary: Maidan Massacre YouTube and Vimeo censoring Igor and his documentaries Glenn Greenwald highly recommends Ukraine on Fire; check the tweets below: Tweet 1, Tweet 2, Tweet 3, Tweet 4, Tweet 5, Tweet 6 Susan Sarandon tweets about Ukraine on Fire How and why Igor decided to make documentaries on Ukraine Igor's experience working with Oliver Stone Viktor Medvedchuk in Revealing Ukraine Sheeple following the narrative of "Russian aggression" blindly The civil war going on in Eastern Ukraine (Donbas) for the past eight years There's no mention of neo-nazis by the Western media Mikheil Saakashvili, the former President of Georgia appointed as the Governor of Ukraine's Odessa Oblast in 2015 Was the Maidan massacre a false flag operation? All the usual troublemakers of the world were active in Ukraine like George Soros, NGOs, CIA proxies, etc. Robert Parry of Consortium News featured in Ukraine on Fire "Sometimes I don't quite understand the logic of our partners, sometimes it looks like they need an external enemy to keep in leash and establish discipline in their own, so-called Western European Bloc" - Vladimir Putin Documentary: Watch Oliver Stone's The Putin Interviews for free: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4 The Military Industrial Complex profits from war Russian suffering at the hands of Nazis The CIA has been building neo-nazi assets in Ukraine for 70 years Russia will not hestitate to use nuclear weapons if their very existence is threatened Ukraine's President Zelensky hints at developing nuclear weapons Russia's aims are the demilitarization and de-nazification of Ukraine Putin's 2007 Munich speech: Video, Transcript Was the 2014 Crimean referendum fake? Video: Kiev MP Petro Poroshenko jeered and chased by Crimean protesters (2014) An article in nbcnews.com about the same incident Zelenskyy is playing a role and reading the dialogs written by the script writer !! "The United States aids Ukraine and her people so that we can fight Russia over there and we don't have to fight Russia here" - Rep. Adam Schiff Video: Adam Schiff on why US funds Ukraine (watch for 10 sec) Video: Nuland-Pyatt leaked phone conversation The illogical and false narrative of Russiagate The propaganda documentary Winter on Fire (2015) Documentary: Ukraine - Masks of the Revolution (2016) Igor's next documentary series titled QAZAQ: History of the Golden Man Trailer: QAZAQ: History of the Golden Man Igor's next project on Ukraine titled Ukraine: Final Confrontation Igor Lopatonok's facebook page Global Tree Pictures YouTube channel Global Tree Rumble Page Part B: David Denton; beginning at 1:09:40 Upcoming JFK conference on April 8th and 9th Details of the event can be found here The in-person event is free and open to the public Get access to the zoom meeting at just $40 Speakers include Dr. John Newman, Robert Groden, Gary Shaw, Brian Edwards, Prof. Mal Hyman Book: Burying the Lead: The Media and the JFK Assassination by Mal Hyman Paperback, Kindle "To be ignorant of what occurred before you were born is to remain always a child" - Marcus Cicero
Gary Shaw, President and CEO of Nantucket Cottage Hospital, talks about the positive impact the vaccines have had and why it's important to get tested for Covid-19 only when you have symptoms.
Today we had Gary Shaw, President and CEO of Nantucket Cottage Hospital in the station to talk about the developing COVID-19 situation on Nantucket. In recent days, Nantucket Cottage Hospital has seen a significant spike in COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations. This issue of high case volume of COVID-19 is compounded by an already active 2021 flu season. “You can help us by protecting yourself this year and wearing a mask, practicing good hygiene and social distancing when possible,” said Shaw. “We can make it through this by staying vigilant and taking care of one another, but we have to do it together.”
This episode includes some of my friends who serve as guests. They talk about their favorite excerpts and chapters from my newest book - LIKABILITY. You will enjoy Katy McKee and Gary Shaw on the show. Visit troveinc.com and drrickforbus.com. Purchase the book at the link below: https://www.amazom.com/Likability-SecretSaucetoLeadershipInfluence
In 1970, a woman named Beverly Oliver told conspiracy researcher Gary Shaw at a church revival meeting in Joshua, Texas, that she was the Babushka Lady.[5] Oliver stated that she filmed the assassination with a Super 8 film Yashica and that she turned the undeveloped film over to two men who identified themselves to her as FBI agents.[5] According to Oliver, she obtained no receipt from the men, who told her that they would return the film to her within ten days. She did not follow up with an inquiry.[5] She reiterated her claims in the 1988 documentary The Men Who Killed Kennedy.[5] According to Vincent Bugliosi, Oliver "has never proved to most people's satisfaction that she was in Dealey Plaza that day."[5] Confronted with the fact that the Yashica Super-8 camera was not made until 1969, she stated that she received the "experimental" camera from a friend and was not even sure the manufacturer's name was on it.[5]Beverly Oliver's claims were the basis for a scene in Oliver Stone's 1991 film JFK, in which a character named "Beverly" meets Jim Garrison in a Dallas nightclub.[6] Played by Lolita Davidovich, she is depicted in the director's cut as wearing a headscarf at Dealey Plaza and speaking of having given the film she shot to two men claiming to be FBI agents.
In 1970, a woman named Beverly Oliver told conspiracy researcher Gary Shaw at a church revival meeting in Joshua, Texas, that she was the Babushka Lady.[5] Oliver stated that she filmed the assassination with a Super 8 film Yashica and that she turned the undeveloped film over to two men who identified themselves to her as FBI agents.[5] According to Oliver, she obtained no receipt from the men, who told her that they would return the film to her within ten days. She did not follow up with an inquiry.[5] She reiterated her claims in the 1988 documentary The Men Who Killed Kennedy.[5] According to Vincent Bugliosi, Oliver "has never proved to most people's satisfaction that she was in Dealey Plaza that day."[5] Confronted with the fact that the Yashica Super-8 camera was not made until 1969, she stated that she received the "experimental" camera from a friend and was not even sure the manufacturer's name was on it.[5] Beverly Oliver's claims were the basis for a scene in Oliver Stone's 1991 film JFK, in which a character named "Beverly" meets Jim Garrison in a Dallas nightclub.[6] Played by Lolita Davidovich, she is depicted in the director's cut as wearing a headscarf at Dealey Plaza and speaking of having given the film she shot to two men claiming to be FBI agents.
Keith and Tommy discuss the new LP's from Deafheaven and Turnstile, the Turnstile mosh pit incident, Hurricane Ida, the recent passing of Michael K. Williams and bring you another round of "Sad Youtube Comments". We also call Gary Shaw of This Day Forward to ask him when the reunion is happening.
Dean Smith is a dyed-in-the-wool fan living the dream. As a youngster, the Aston Villa manager watched his club's glory days from the Holte End when the European Cup was clinched and talents like Brian Little, Gary Shaw, Gordon ‘Sid' Cowans, Andy Gray and Didier Six plied their trade. But the man he has just sold for £100million – Jack Grealish – rivals them all.Enjoy.GrahamSubscribe to The Big Interview YouTube channel See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Randy Owen's research into the assassination began at age eleven. In 1970, while researching a school project on JFK and PT 109, Owen began reading about the assassination and hasn't stopped since. His interest grew when he came across two different versions of Life Magazine from October 2, 1964. Essays earned him top marks in various history classes. His collection of JFK assassination material includes over 400 books and unpublished manuscripts (many autographed), over 500 hours of video (including live coverage of the assassination and rare home movie footage) and audio tape (including Dallas Police and Air Force One transmissions), over 3,000 newspaper and 1,000 magazine articles. He has talked with: -alleged assassin Lee Harvey Oswald's widow, Marina Oswald Porter, and her husband Ken, -assassination witnesses Charles Brehm, Jean Hill, Harold Norman, Beverly Oliver, Norman Similas, Jim Tague, Phil Willis and Rosemary Willis, -intelligence officers James Hosty and Farris Rookstool of the FBI, David Atlee Phillips of the CIA, Abraham Bolden and William Carter of the Secret Service, U.S. Army Major John Newman of the Pentagon, and Oleg Nechiporenko of the KGB (during a chance encounter on the grassy knoll), -medical witnesses and experts Dr. Robert McClelland, Dr. James Humes, Dr. Cyril Wecht, Dr. Earl Rose, and Aubrey Rike, -Dallas Police officers H.B. McLain (motorcade motorcyclist), M.N. McDonald (who arrested Oswald), Jim Leavelle (the detective handcuffed to Oswald when Jack Ruby shot him), Sheriff Jim Bowles, -Texas Theater employee Butch Burroughs, and LBJ mistress Madeline Brown, -investigators David Belin of the Warren and Rockefeller Commissions, and Gaeton Fonzi of the House Select Committee on Assassinations, -authors Walt Brown, John H. Davis, retired British detective Ian Griggs, Robert Groden, Larry Hancock, Ron Lewis, David Lifton, Norman Mailer, Jim Marrs, Jim Moore, Dick Russell, Gary Savage and Rusty Livington, J. Gary Shaw, Lamar Waldron and Craig Zirbel, -various researchers around the world including Gary Mack of the Sixth Floor Museum in Dallas, Jack White, and filmmaker Oliver Stone. In 1993, Owen turned down an offer to help write a book about Mafia boss Santos Trafficante. His research has drawn the attention of Random House and the family of alleged assassin Roscoe White. Owen has visited Dallas several times, including the 30th anniversary on November 22, 1993 when Dealey Plaza was officially declared a National Landmark. He has studied material in the National Archives and at the Assassination Archives and Research Center in Washington, D.C.******************************************************************To listen to all our XZBN shows, with our compliments go to: https://www.spreaker.com/user/xzoneradiotv*** AND NOW ***The ‘X' Zone TV Channel on SimulTV - www.simultv.comThe ‘X' Chronicles Newspaper - www.xchroniclesnewspaper.com ******************************************************************
Gary Shaw, President and CEO of NCH, talks about Covid-19 updates.
John Kelly (www.randomforestrunner.com) is one of the best ultra-runners of all time with major accomplishments including: 1st to complete “The Grand Round” – the UK's big 3 fell running rounds, biking between them 2017 Barkley Marathons winner – becoming just the 15th person to finish the race in 30 years Breaking a 31 year old record on the Pennine Way (before it was broken again a week later) 2020 Spine winner John is joined very briefly by our beer drinking ultra-runner Gary Shaw (race director of Leaky Hourglass Ultra: ) and Ultra-OCR Man Evan Perperis (www.ultraocrman.com) to talk the far reaches of endurance including training, fueling, gear, major goals and a lot more. Links for the Ultra-OCR Bible and Ultra-OCR Man: https://www.teamstrengthspeed.com/books This episode was brought to you by XOSKIN, a veteran owned company providing high quality compression apparel that John Kelly uses for multi-day endurance without issues. Use code Strength20 to save 20% off http://xoskin.us Music provided by Dino Sinos
Kieran, Jon & Gary are back to review another dramatic week in the LOI particularly at Waterford and Dundalk while the team also looks ahead to this weekend's fixtures in BOTH DIVISIONS. There are interviews with Harps legend Kevin McHugh, Bray striker Gary Shaw and we continue our fan interviews by chatting with Galway supporter Ronan Coleman. All this and more on Between the Stripes LOI podcast!
The Assassination of JFK - Randy Owen's research into the assassination began at age eleven. In 1970, while researching a school project on JFK and PT 109, Owen began reading about the assassination and hasn't stopped since. His interest grew when he came across two different versions of Life Magazine from October 2, 1964. Essays earned him top marks in various history classes. His collection of JFK assassination material includes over 400 books and unpublished manuscripts (many autographed), over 500 hours of video (including live coverage of the assassination and rare home movie footage) and audio tape (including Dallas Police and Air Force One transmissions), over 3,000 newspaper and 1,000 magazine articles. He has talked with: -alleged assassin Lee Harvey Oswald's widow, Marina Oswald Porter, and her husband Ken, -assassination witnesses Charles Brehm, Jean Hill, Harold Norman, Beverly Oliver, Norman Similas, Jim Tague, Phil Willis and Rosemary Willis, -intelligence officers James Hosty and Farris Rookstool of the FBI, David Atlee Phillips of the CIA, Abraham Bolden and William Carter of the Secret Service, U.S. Army Major John Newman of the Pentagon, and Oleg Nechiporenko of the KGB (during a chance encounter on the grassy knoll), -medical witnesses and experts Dr. Robert McClelland, Dr. James Humes, Dr. Cyril Wecht, Dr. Earl Rose, and Aubrey Rike, -Dallas Police officers H.B. McLain (motorcade motorcyclist), M.N. McDonald (who arrested Oswald), Jim Leavelle (the detective handcuffed to Oswald when Jack Ruby shot him), Sheriff Jim Bowles, -Texas Theater employee Butch Burroughs, and LBJ mistress Madeline Brown, -investigators David Belin of the Warren and Rockefeller Commissions, and Gaeton Fonzi of the House Select Committee on Assassinations, -authors Walt Brown, John H. Davis, retired British detective Ian Griggs, Robert Groden, Larry Hancock, Ron Lewis, David Lifton, Norman Mailer, Jim Marrs, Jim Moore, Dick Russell, Gary Savage and Rusty Livington, J. Gary Shaw, Lamar Waldron and Craig Zirbel, -various researchers around the world including Gary Mack of the Sixth Floor Museum in Dallas, Jack White, and filmmaker Oliver Stone. In 1993, Owen turned down an offer to help write a book about Mafia boss Santos Trafficante. His research has drawn the attention of Random House and the family of alleged assassin Roscoe White. Owen has visited Dallas several times, including the 30th anniversary on November 22, 1993 when Dealey Plaza was officially declared a National Landmark. He has studied material in the National Archives and at the Assassination Archives and Research Center in Washington, D.C.For Your Listening Pleasure for these Lockdown / Stay-At-Home COVID and Variants Times - For all the radio shows available on The 'X' Zone Broadcast Network visit - https://www.spreaker.com/user/xzoneradiotv.Our radio shows archives and programming include: A Different Perspective with Kevin Randle; Alien Cosmic Expo Lecture Series; Alien Worlds Radio Show; America's Soul Doctor with Ken Unger; Back in Control Radio Show with Dr. David Hanscom, MD; Connecting with Coincidence with Dr. Bernard Beitman, MD; Dick Tracy; Dimension X; Exploring Tomorrow Radio Show; Flash Gordon; Imagine More Success Radio Show with Syndee Hendricks and Thomas Hydes; Jet Jungle Radio Show; Journey Into Space; Know the Name with Sharon Lynn Wyeth; Lux Radio Theatre - Classic Old Time Radio; Mission Evolution with Gwilda Wiyaka; Paranormal StakeOut with Larry Lawson; Ray Bradbury - Tales Of The Bizarre; Sci Fi Radio Show; Seek Reality with Roberta Grimes; Space Patrol; Stairway to Heaven with Gwilda Wiyaka; The 'X' Zone Radio Show with Rob McConnell; Two Good To Be True with Justina Marsh and Peter Marsh; and many other!That's The ‘X' Zone Broadcast Network Shows and Archives - https://www.spreaker.com/user/xzoneradiotv
This week we're focusing on the opening weekend of the First Division with Treaty United manager Tommy Barrett, Bray Wanderers striker Gary Shaw and Wexford keeper Tom Murphy talk about how their sides are preparing for the season ahead. The show starts with co-hosts, Dean Zambra and Breifne Earley discusses the results of the weekend including Dean's Longford Town side getting out of the blocks early with a 2-0 victory over Derry City. They also discuss the unlikely top three sides in a very early league table. Treaty United manager Tommy Barrett joins to talk about the return of senior League of Ireland men's football to Limerick and the mid-west region, the circumstances and driving forces behind the emergence of Treaty United and the expectations on and off the field for the league's new boys. Wexford netminder Tom Murphy, an ever present for the side last season, discusses new arrivals and the strengthening of the club in the dugout as well as within the playing squad. He discusses the significance of the new LOITV service and Dean and Tom finish the chat with a mention of their shared interest in following Peamount United's campaign in the Women's National League. Finally, Bray Wanderers top marksman last season Gary Shaw is in very relaxed form ahead of the new season. He chats about the differences in the league over his career specifically the support staff with video analysis, nutrition and strength & conditioning all now common place with each of the clubs. Gary also highlights the importance of international call ups for squad members such as Brian Maher and the international pathway this showcases for youngsters coming through the underage sides at any League of Ireland club.
Once upon a time in the Midlands, there was a moneyball miracle. Come and join Lee, Gary and Mike as they travel all the way back to 1980, one of the outer markers of the Nessun Dorma time period, to look at Aston Villa’s epic achievements at the start of that decade.In part one we take a look at how that team was assembled by manager Ron Saunders, running the rule over players like Allan Evans, Dennis Mortimer, Gordon Cowans, Tony Morley, Peter Withe and one of English football’s greatest lost talents, Gary Shaw. Firstly though we kick things off with our Player of the Pod, and reflect on the career of jet-heeled winger Andrei Kanchelskis See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Keith and Tommy discuss Tommy's recent teaching award, the recent passing of Keith's friend and our first one star review. We also catch up with Vadim Taver to discuss math, teaching on Zoom, Korn (again) and his upcoming solo record due out this fall. Last, but not certainly not least, we check in with Gary Shaw of This Day Forward to discuss his recent banning from the 90's Hardcore Facebook group.
Gary describes growing up as the son of one of the most feared and well-known men in London.
Gary describes growing up as the son of one of the most feared and well-known men in London.
The Assassination of JFK - Randy Owen's research into the assassination began at age eleven. In 1970, while researching a school project on JFK and PT 109, Owen began reading about the assassination and hasn't stopped since. His interest grew when he came across two different versions of Life Magazine from October 2, 1964. Essays earned him top marks in various history classes. His collection of JFK assassination material includes over 400 books and unpublished manuscripts (many autographed), over 500 hours of video (including live coverage of the assassination and rare home movie footage) and audio tape (including Dallas Police and Air Force One transmissions), over 3,000 newspaper and 1,000 magazine articles. He has talked with: -alleged assassin Lee Harvey Oswald's widow, Marina Oswald Porter, and her husband Ken, -assassination witnesses Charles Brehm, Jean Hill, Harold Norman, Beverly Oliver, Norman Similas, Jim Tague, Phil Willis and Rosemary Willis, -intelligence officers James Hosty and Farris Rookstool of the FBI, David Atlee Phillips of the CIA, Abraham Bolden and William Carter of the Secret Service, U.S. Army Major John Newman of the Pentagon, and Oleg Nechiporenko of the KGB (during a chance encounter on the grassy knoll), -medical witnesses and experts Dr. Robert McClelland, Dr. James Humes, Dr. Cyril Wecht, Dr. Earl Rose, and Aubrey Rike, -Dallas Police officers H.B. McLain (motorcade motorcyclist), M.N. McDonald (who arrested Oswald), Jim Leavelle (the detective handcuffed to Oswald when Jack Ruby shot him), Sheriff Jim Bowles, -Texas Theater employee Butch Burroughs, and LBJ mistress Madeline Brown, -investigators David Belin of the Warren and Rockefeller Commissions, and Gaeton Fonzi of the House Select Committee on Assassinations, -authors Walt Brown, John H. Davis, retired British detective Ian Griggs, Robert Groden, Larry Hancock, Ron Lewis, David Lifton, Norman Mailer, Jim Marrs, Jim Moore, Dick Russell, Gary Savage and Rusty Livington, J. Gary Shaw, Lamar Waldron and Craig Zirbel, -various researchers around the world including Gary Mack of the Sixth Floor Museum in Dallas, Jack White, and filmmaker Oliver Stone. In 1993, Owen turned down an offer to help write a book about Mafia boss Santos Trafficante. His research has drawn the attention of Random House and the family of alleged assassin Roscoe White. Owen has visited Dallas several times, including the 30th anniversary on November 22, 1993 when Dealey Plaza was officially declared a National Landmark. He has studied material in the National Archives and at the Assassination Archives and Research Center in Washington, D.C.
Milestone episode: 1000th Show of Black Op Radio 3:09: Previously unreleased audio of John Judge 10:31: Governor Jesse Ventura on running for President and red lives matter too Video: Putin on US interfering in other countries When Gov. Ventura met Fidel Castro in Cuba and talked about the JFK assassination 42:03: Oliver Stone on his upcoming documentary series JFK: Destiny Betrayed Vietnam was not Kennedy's war 53:48: Zachary Sklar, editor of Jim Garrison's book On the Trail of the Assassins Also co-wrote the screenplay of the movie JFK with Oliver Stone 1:08:03: James Douglass, author of JFK and the Unspeakable Bob Dylan's new song/poem on the JFK assassination: Murder Most Foul Douglass working on a new book about Malcolm, King and RFK 1:17:35: Douglas Horne, author of Inside the ARRB The Zapruder film is altered but not entirely fake Video: The Zapruder Film Mystery featuring Doug Horne and Shane O'Sullivan Listen to this amazing 2-hour episode featuring Doug Horne about the Pearl Harbor attack Books: Deception, Intrigue, and the Road to War by Horne: Vol.1, Vol.2 1:31:16: William Pepper, author of An Act of State Represented James Earl Ray and now represents Sirhan Sirhan Feature film on The Plot to Kill King 1:35:45: Vince Palamara, author of Survivor's Guilt 1:45:09: Pedro Fernandez, award-winning writer, TV commentator, radio talk show host The bullet doesn't match the rifle, Oswald was a paid operative of the CIA according to James Wilcott Testimony of James Wilcott, former employee of the CIA: Read Online, Download PDF Anamolies in the Zapruder film 1:56:55: John Armstrong, author of Harvey and Lee (2003) (.pdf) John's website: www.harveyandlee.net The dictabelt recordings were altered / fabricated Oswald was arrested for murdering Tippit but wasn't asked any questions about the Tippit murder 2:10:16: Gary Shaw, co-author of Cover-Up by J. Gary Shaw 2:17:18: Lisa Pease, author of A Lie Too Big to Fail And co-editor of The Assassinations with Jim DiEugenio Lisa Pease interviews Len Osanic about how he got started on the JFK case 2:30:28: Jim DiEugenio, author of Destiny Betrayed And The JFK Assassination: The Evidence Today 2:38:50: Dr. Cyril Wecht 2:44:43: Dr. David Mantik, author of John F. Kennedy's Head Wounds Mantik's daughter is working on a documentary about the researchers 2:48:23: Dr. Gary Aguilar on the skull x-ray evidence which shows JFK was shot with a non-jacketted bullet Video: Junk Science and the Death of JFK by Dr. Gary Aguilar 3:03:31: Jeff Carter, co-produced 50 Reasons for 50 Years with Len And Postscript 1968 3:09:03: Anita Langley, first co-host and co-founder of Black Op Radio Buy the complete Season 1 of BOR for just $10 here 3:28:56: Mark de Valk, Senior Lecturer in Film Production at The University of Winchester John McAdams-Jim DiEugenio debate; listen to shows 442-444 FREE Online Ebook: The Secret Team by Col. Prouty FREE Borrowable Ebook: JFK: CIA, Vietnam and the Plot to Assassinate JFK by Col. Fletcher Prouty FREE Online Ebook: Understanding Special Operations Interview with Col. Prouty 3:57:26: Dave Ratcliffe, www.ratical.org 4:11:22: Randy Benson, filmmaker Producer and Director of the documentary The Searchers 4:20:36: Walt Brown, author of The People v. Lee Harvey Oswald And Treachery in Dallas (FREE Borrowable Ebook) 4:25:13: Joan Mellen, author of A Farewell to Justice 4:31:02: David Josephs 4:36:34: Bill Simpich, author of State Secret FREE Online Ebook: The Twelve Who Built the Oswald Legend by Bill Simpich 4:42:57: Shane O'Sullivan, author of Who Killed Bobby Documentary: RFK Must Die Brad Johnson, author of The Assassination of Robert F. Kennedy, passed away 4:48:47: John Barbour, director of The Jim Garrison Tapes Documentary: The American Media & The Second Assassination of Presiden...
Gary and Nicole have done some amazing things in a short time in the ultra world. Their April challenge was inspiring. Join as we chat about their journey to doing ultramarathons and how they navigate it as a couple.
Gary Shaw and Nicole Fleming are a power couple with impressive ultra-distance race resumes includes podium finishes at 100 mile races as well as top finishes in Ultra-OCR such as Tough Mudder's World's Toughest Mudder (Nicole 7th) and OCR World Championships Enduro (Gary 12th Elite and Nicole 1st 40-49 AG). They can also power through some short stuff too including a string of podiums in the beer mile (four beers and four laps of the track). However, in April of 2020 they took on the insane #RunTheDate challenge where they ran the number of miles equivalent to the date. They join Evan Perperis to talk about training, racing and preparing for such crazy endeavors. Plus, there is some funny/enjoyable digression at the end of the podcast about non-OCR "fun" stuff. Gary also followed it up with a 42 mile run on the 31st day, then on May 16th did 24 beers / 24 miles / under 24 hours. He demolished the previous known record of 14 hours with a 9.5 hour finish and without going to the hospital or throwing up. ***Don't try this*** Episode brought you by the best anti-chaffing product on the market, Squirrel's Nut Butter Music by Marc Capaldo of Madison Ambush
Gary Shaw stopped by to visit the KZRG Morning News Watch! Progress in opening the city and our area!
Michael Mueller-Bungart, Senior Manager | Strategy & Operations, DeloitteGary Shaw, Principal Business Consultant, QAD DynaSys Demand Driven MRP (DDMRP) is a new method of operational planning & execution that uses real demand, rather than forecasts, to drive replenishment. But what about the tactical and strategic planning that is still required to ensure your supply chain can […]
We continue our Player of the Year series with Gary Shaw (2017) and Alan Byrne (1994), either side of an interview with Rovers fan and Marathon Man Ger Twohig.
Conference at Kansas City, Missouri from April 16-19, 2020 / Please Check in case of postponement J. Gary Shaw is a first-generation researcher Co-author of Cover-Up FREE Download Ebook: Cover-Up by J. Gary Shaw and Larry R. Harris Gary Shaw to speak at the Kansas City conference in April Conference co-organized by JFK Historical Group and Project JFK/CSI Dallas Book your tickets here Conference to focus on the three major assassinations of the 1960s: JFK, MLK and RFK To be hosted by Brian Edwards, David Knight and Casey Quinlan Speakers include Lisa Pease, Dr. Gary Aguilar, Dr. Cyril Wecht, Mal Hyman and many others Shaw's photographic and slide collection Steve Cameron, author and producer of the upcoming book and movie The Deputy Interviews about Roger Craig, DPD Video: The Deputy Interviews by Steve Cameron - Book trailer Video: JFK Assassination: The Roger Craig Story Order your copy of the book here Special discount for Black Op Radio listeners: $10 off: Use the coupon code blackopradio Gary Shaw interviewed for the book The Deputy Interviews Shaw's presentation at the conference titled Getting legitimate answers requires asking legitimate questions What you don't know can hurt you Shaw's presentation is designed for the newcomers to the case If Lee Oswald was the lone assassin, there would be no reason to keep the files classified When Oliver Stone's JFK was released, former WC lawyers accumulated 4 Million USD to counter Stone's film Dr. Michael Marcades, son of Rose Cherami Book: Rose Cherami: Gathering Fallen Petals by Dr. Michael Marcades: Paperback Gary Shaw has written the introduction for this book Michael Marcades interviewed on Black Op Radio; listen to episode 807 Shaw's new book to be released by 2023 Gary Mack, Sixth Floor Museum curator FREE Borrowable Ebook: JFK: Conspiracy of Silence by Charles A. Crenshaw, Jens Hansen and J. Gary Shaw FREE Borrowable Ebook: JFK Has Been Shot by Charles A. Crenshaw, Jens Hansen and J. Gary Shaw Five or six possible patsies in Dallas Oswald had to die because they didn't have any evidence to prove that he shot Kennedy The Chicago Plot to Kill JFK: Read Online, Download PDF Videos: Gary Shaw on Alternative Views: watch here; or download Part 1, Part 2 Our secret government is killing us There were only a few places in the US in 1963 that they could have killed the President And gotten away with it and get the cooperation that they need Dallas was one such place Others included Chicago, Miami, Los Angeles
An action packed show this week as Burke & Brier review two sets of Premier Division results as well as week 1 in the First Division while Canadian international Kris Twardek joins us for the first time with Gary Shaw making a re-appearance after scoring on his second Bray debut. We've also got full fixture previews & our weekly charity bet. Tune in & subscribe.
David Denton heads the JFK Historical Group More info here Website: www.jfkhistorical.com Conference co-organized by JFK Historical Group and Project JFK/CSI Dallas Conference at Kansas City, Missouri from April 16-19, 2020 Book your tickets here Conference to focus on the three major assassinations of the 1960s: JFK, MLK and RFK To be hosted by Brian Edwards, David Knight and Casey Quinlan Speakers include Lisa Pease, Gary Shaw, Dr. Gary Aguilar, Dr. Cyril Wecht, Mal Hyman FREE Download Ebook: Cover-Up by J. Gary Shaw and Larry R. Harris Barbara Honegger to speak at the conference Edgar Tatro also to speak at the conference Ryan Jones, a historian at the King Museum, to talk about the MLK case Other speakers on the King assassination: Phil Nelson and Joe Green Dick Russell and Robert Groben also to speak at the conference FREE Borrowable Ebook: The Man Who Knew Too Much by Dick Russell Randolph Benson, director of the documentary The Searchers Documentary: The Searchers by Randolph Benson (vimeo on demand) Rick Russo's video presentation at the conference Richard Bartholomew and Larry Rivera The Westport Connection Meet and Greet with the speakers William Harvey, CIA officer Mal Hyman, author of Burying the Lead Book: Burying the Lead: The Media and the JFK Assassination Also available on Kindle, Google books and Scribd Video: Lisa Pease on the RFK assassination at the JFK Historical Group Full schedule of the conference It's easy to understand that there was a conspiracy in the JFK case Since the official investigation was so bad, we have to be our own investigators Question: Where did the shots come from? -- John Judge: "From Washington" Rent/buy videos from the 2019 conference here (Vimeo on demand) DCI John McCone's sudden trip to the Pentagon shortly before the assassination Videos: 50 Reasons for 50 Years Oliver Stone and Jim DiEugenio's upcoming documentary series JFK: Destiny Betrayed Oliver Stone's movie JFK Book: JFK: The Book of the Film by Oliver Stone and Zachary Sklar: Paperback, Kindle FREE Borrowable Ebook: On the Trail of the Assassins by Jim Garrison FREE Ebook: A Heritage of Stone by Jim Garrison: Scanned PDF, Text PDF, Online (html)
Steve Cameron, author and producer of the upcoming book and movie The Deputy Interviews about Roger Craig, DPD The Deputy Interviews facebook page The foreword for the book is written by Dave Ratcliffe Video: The Deputy Interviews by Steve Cameron - Book trailer Video: JFK Assassination: The Roger Craig Story Roger Craig's bio Video: Tribute to Roger Dean Craig: An Unsung American Hero Order your copy of the book here The true story of JFK Assassination witness and former Dallas Deputy Sheriff Roger Dean Craig Special discount for Black Op Radio listeners: $10 off: Use the coupon code blackopradio Nigel Turner's The Men Who Killed Kennedy Oliver Stone's movie JFK inspired Steve to learn more about the case FREE Online Ebook: When They Kill A President by Roger Craig When They Kill A President facebook page Witness statements were changed by the WC The Columbine High School massacre How the media manipulates news stories Problem-Reaction-Solution Documentary: Evidence of Revision: Watch online: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6 Download the documentary Evidence of Revision (MP4): Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6 How Steve got in touch with Roger Jr. Patrolman J.W. Foster's testimony to the WC: Read Online, Download PDF Wayne and Edna Hartman's story An FBI agent "inspects" the area for bullet fragments: see pic here From the book The JFK Assassination File by Retired Dallas Police Chief Jesse Curry Roger Craig arrested a woman immediately after the shooting Roger Craig Jr. is also a former Dallas Deputy Sheriff Witness Arnold Rowland said he saw two men on the sixth floor: see video here Roger Craig was one of the first officers at the "sniper's nest" He saw three shells lying about an inch apart from each other facing the same direction But the shells are scattered in the photographs we see today Deputy constable Seymour Weitzman saw a 7.65 mauser rifle on the sixth floor Roger Craig was right there when that happened That rifle then morphed into a 6.5 Italian carbine rifle Roger Craig was named Man of the Year by the sheriff's office in 1960 Craig saw Oswald escape the scene of the assassination in a rambler station wagon Clay Shaw owned a rambler station wagon Roger Craig was eventually let go or fired by Sheriff Bill Decker Five attempts on Craig's life Seymour Weitzman stated in his affidavit dated 11.23.1963 that he saw a 7.65 mauser rifle: typed, handwritten FREE Borrowable Ebook: Rush to Judgment (1967) by Mark Lane FREE Borrowable Ebook: Rush to Judgment (1992) by Mark Lane FREE Borrowable Ebook: Coup d'etat in America by Alan J. Weberman and Michael Canfield Weitzman wasn't allowed to talk to the HSCA Eugene Boone's affidavit stating that he saw a 7.65 mauser: IMAGE ONE , IMAGE TWO, IMAGE THREE FREE Download Ebook: Cover-Up by J. Gary Shaw and Larry R. Harris J. Gary Shaw knew Roger Craig through Penn Jones Penn Jones was working with Jim Garrison FREE DOWNLOAD EBOOK: Forgive My Grief by Penn Jones, Jr.: Vol 1, Vol 2, Vol 3, Vol 4 How Roger Craig met Penn Jones Movie: Executive Action starring Burt Lancester: watch full movie Roger Craig's father was convinced that his son was murdered The body had bruises on his knees and both the wrists The Medical Examiner concluded that it was a suicide Robert Groden had a scheduled recording with Roger the day he was killed or shortly after Sheriff Decker told all of his deputies that they are not to participate in the motorcade Dallas Mayor Earl Cabell's brother Charles Cabell was the Deputy Director of the CIA in 1961 He was fired by President Kennedy following the Bay of Pigs fiasco Abraham Bolden, the first African-American secret service agent on the White House detail JFK hired Bolden personally Vince Palamara highly recommends the book The Deputy Interviews...
Russ Altman: Today on The Future of Everything, the future of detecting DNA in your blood.Now DNA is the building block of life. It is a relatively simple long molecule or polymer made out of four components or DNA bases which have one letter abbreviations, the famous ATCG, which stand for their chemical names. It's like a string of beans, beads, beads, but it is long. A human genome is made of about three billion DNA bases, divided into 23 chromosomes. So if you add up the beads in each chromosome, you get about three billion. You get a genome from mom and you get one from dad. So you have two copies of the genome, mostly the same but obviously not identical, or six billion total.Now DNA contains the blueprints for how your cells live, how they grow, how they interact with other cells, and like a computer program, it allows the cell to perform simple computations to make decisions about when and where things happen.If this goes wrong, you can get cancer. Mutations in the DNA cause the computations and decisions to go wrong.Other things can happen too. In the last ten years, researchers have learned that they can detect DNA in the blood. Now we knew that the cells in the blood had DNA, so that was not surprising, but what was surprising is that there is sometimes DNA from other cells in the body, often cells that have died and just released their DNA into the bloodstream. This is sometimes called cell-free DNA because it is floating in the blood and it's not really part of a cell. Although this may seem like it's junk, it offers evidence of lots of other processes going on in the body, processes diverse as cancer, pregnancy, stress on organs, or even death and many others.Dr. Stephen Quake is a professor of Bioengineering, Applied Physics and Physics and Stanford University. Steve pioneered the detection of DNA in the blood and some its first applications.Steve, what drove your interest in detecting DNA, and what was the first demonstration that this would actually be useful?Stephen Quake: Well, my interest came actually when I became a father. My wife and I were in to see the doctor, and the doctor says you guys should think about getting amniocentesis. And it was seemed like a theoretical question and something we have time to think about. We said yeah, okay, that sounds like the right thing if recommending it.Russ Altman: And this is a super risky procedure in many ways. A needle goes into the uterus near the baby to extract fluids.Stephen Quake: Big needle right in the mom's belly, right next to the fetus to try to grab a few cells, and so to do genetic testing. And we said yeah, it sounds like a good idea, thinking we schedule another appointment for it. Next thing we knew, the guy was turning around with a giant needle, plunges it right into my wife's belly,Russ Altman: Whoa.Stephen Quake: Yeah, whoa, exactly. That was our response. And it's the response of many people who undergo that certain invasive testing. And not surprisingly, there's risk associated with doing that testing. Sometimes, you lose the baby and other health problems that might happen.Russ Altman: How far into the pregnancy were you?Stephen Quake: That's typically done, I don't know, around 14 weeks, something like that, 15 weeks, somewhere around there. And so that sensitized me to holy cow, there's a problem here that you're asking a diagnostic question, and there's a lot of risk associated with it. And so I began to think are there ways to ask these genetic questions and do diagnostics without adding risk? And I eventually stumbled upon this old scientific literature about this cell-free DNA that you were mentioning, which, as it turns out, was first discovered as a phenomenon in 1948.Russ Altman: That's before Watson and Crick even articulated the importance of DNA for genetics.Stephen Quake: It's before the structure, and it's before people knew. It's roughly contemporary people first realized that DNA was the molecule of inheritance.Russ Altman: Right.Stephen Quake: Oswald Avery just that same year was working that out. So it was blood chemistry to those guys who did it. But the field stayed alive, and it was mostly people doing cancer research. And eventually, it was figured out that when you're pregnant, some of the DNA in your blood comes from the fetus, and that was worked out in the late 1970s. And –Russ Altman: And so this is not a large amount, I'm guessing.Stephen Quake: It's not much, just a few percent of what's there, so it's a very challenging measurement problem and the decade-long search to try to figure out how to really use that to build a diagnostic that would allow you to understand the genetics of the baby without having to risk the baby's life. And we saw that at Stanford, and it was through the work of a really terrific graduate student in my lab when the bioengineering department was young, Christina Fan. And that has now been the first real clinical application of cell-free DNA in diagnostics, and that's how I got into it, to answer your question.Russ Altman: So in that initial demonstration or in your first industrial translation, what are the things that we can actually detect from the DNA of a fetus in the mom's blood?Stephen Quake: Well, when we published the paper on this, started getting press inquiries. When is this gonna be available in the clinic? I said, I don't know, decades, something like that.Russ Altman: That's usually the answer.Stephen Quake: It takes a long time, right. It turns out people jumped on like you wouldn't believe. Clinical trials were launched immediately. Within three years, the first real commercial diagnostic products had been launched, and now it's four million women a year, something like that, get the test, and the use of amniocentesis has plummeted.Russ Altman: And so now you do this as a screening before you make the decision about the amnio. Is that the general use of it?Stephen Quake: That was the initial indication, and it's very quickly moving to replacing amnio completely.Russ Altman: Completely, yeah. And what kind of things can we diagnose in the fetus these days?Stephen Quake: So the major genetic disorders you have for live births are things like Down syndrome; that's number one. And it's an aneuploidy is what it's called technically, means the extra copy of a chromosome. And there's a few other disorders, which are extra copies of chromosomes that are also detected with this approach.Russ Altman: Awesome. So that has had big-time market impact, and it's changing people's lives. I think it's on the street now. People know you can get this blood test instead of the amnio, so it didn't stop there. Now you had this hammer, and it worked. You hit one nail. What was the next nail you guys turned your attention to?Stephen Quake: Well, after we published that, word got around Stanford that I was interested in non-invasive diagnostics. And I got a call one day from Hannah Valantine, who's a cardiologist –Russ Altman: Great cardiologist.Stephen Quake: Yep, and she says, well Steve, we got a similar problem in heart transplants. We give people a new heart, and after the operation, we then go biopsy that new heart and rip out pieces of the tissue to make sure it's not being rejected by the body. And we're doing that every couple of months. And so is there a blood test that could replace that? Same sort of problem, patients were having this painful, risky procedure, and there was a question of whether it could be replaced by a simple blood test. And so we thought about that a bit, and –Russ Altman: The key opportunity here is that the DNA and the heart that belongs to the donor is not gonna match the DNA of the person who received the heart, and, like the baby and the mom, because those are different DNAs, you have a chance of picking it up.Stephen Quake: Yeah, the key there is that the DNA is different. A little different with the baby and the mom because we don't use differences in their DNA. But in the case of the transplant, absolutely. The whole principle is based on there being different genomes of every cell in the heart compared to other cells in the recipient's body. And we monitor those so-called polymorphisms, those changes.Russ Altman: And so you went after this, and you were indeed able to show that people who were in rejection were spilling, so to speak, the heart DNA into the blood, and maybe we can avoid some of those biopsies.Stephen Quake: Absolutely. So we did a proof of principle study with some bank samples she had, and then we wrote a grant together and were able to do a very large study on both heart and lung transplants where pretty much every transplant patient at Stanford for those two organs was enrolled in our study over a period of three years, and were able to validate it. It was amazing. One of my kids was in elementary school at the time, and there was a new family who was in the class that year. And at the end of the year, we got a note around saying that, well, there's a family that's in town because they were at the Ronald McDonald House. One of their kids was in the hospital and very ill, and would anyone wanna put them up for the last couple of months because their time had run out there. And so we invited them –Russ Altman: Took them in.Stephen Quake: to our house, yeah, and very interesting family. They were immigrants from Africa. The father had been a nurse there, had some medical training and knew that when his son was infant and very ill that needed serious help and eventually got him to Stanford where the son had had a heart transplant.Russ Altman: Whoa.Stephen Quake: And we were talking around the dinner table one night, and the dad says well, and we're just so proud to be part of this study where people are trying to figure out if they can replace the biopsies. And we enrolled our son in it and drew the blood. I said that's my study. It was amazing and felt very good about it.Russ Altman: Of course, of course.Stephen Quake: And now that's available. So there's now tens of thousands of people every year who are getting that test, and it's saving a lot of pain and suffering for those patients.Russ Altman: This is The Future of Everything. I'm Russ Altman. I'm speaking with Dr. Steve Quake about detecting DNA, and at this moment, detecting DNA in transplant, hoping to detect rejection. So does the test detect rejection potentially earlier than the old-fashioned biopsy approach would?Stephen Quake: It does, and we've proved that, absolutely. You see rejection weeks, if not a month, earlier than the biopsy.Russ Altman: And then presumably, that gives the docs more option for changing the immunosuppression.Stephen Quake: Oh, absolutely because yeah, as you mention, all these patients are immunosuppressed to try to prevent rejection, and too much of that, and they'll get an infectious disease. Too little of that, you have rejection. So they can dial up the immunosuppressants a little bit and try to avoid the rejection event, and that's much better for the patients. Once they hit rejection, all sorts of bad things happen, and so the whole thing is trying to keep them properly suppressed.Russ Altman: And just to flesh it out a little bit, how frequently are they getting these blood draws? Is this every six months or every three months or –Stephen Quake: The standard of care for the invasive biopsies was every two months, and that's where they initially matched it. But this is the sort of thing that can and should be done more frequently, and I think it's gonna change the way people treat the patients over time.Russ Altman: I know that there are more applications, and I'm interested to know which ones you wanna talk about, but let's talk about one that fascinates me, which is the detection of infectious agents in the blood. Can you tell me how this technology has been used in that regard and what's the future look like?Stephen Quake: Yeah, so when we were doing the large transplant study, my post doc at the time, Ian De Vlaming, was looking at all the sequencing data very carefully and realized that not all of the sequence reads off the sequence that were mapping to the human genome. And he said maybe 98% of it's mapping; there's one or 2% that aren't. And I said that's great. It means we're not having a lot of contamination and it's all good, and he didn't let it go with that, thank goodness. And he started looking at those things that weren't mapping, and he realized it wasn't contamination, and they actually were not human, and it was part of the microbiome of these individuals. So the bacteria and the viruses and funguses that live in our body also release cell-free DNA, and we were measuring that as well. And he realized that we could use that to monitor things like what happens to your microbiome when your immune system gets turned offRuss Altman: Right, because a lot of folks —Stephen Quake: Because a lot of patients are immunosuppressed, exactly.Russ Altman: Right.Stephen Quake: And then we realized ‘cause some of them are getting infectious disease, we could also see infectious disease. And so that has evolved into a new kind of infectious disease diagnostic, which is hypothesis free. You don't have to test for a particular thing. You're essentially testing for a thousand infections all at once, and it's just now reached commercial development. We're seeing the first peer-reviewed studies showing how to use it, and it's a very exciting innovation for infectious disease.Russ Altman: People might find this surprising so let's just unpack this a little bit. We know that there are some bacteria that live in our gut, and we've always expected to see them there. Many of us have assumed that my blood should be pretty much infection free. That's not where the bacteria and the viruses live. I guess the first question is how much of a surprise, what do you see in normal people who are not immunosuppressed, and how do we interpret this? Do we know that these are diseases? Are these pathogens causing problems, or might they be part of some ecosystem of health?Stephen Quake: Yeah, all good questions. So a fun way to think about it is to do an order of magnitude calculation. Could we talk about calculations here?Russ Altman: Yes, this is something that physicists do, folks.Stephen Quake: So there's a statistic going around by the microbiome people. You've got 10 times more bacterial cells in your body than you do human cells. If you take that at face value and you say well, the human genome is 1,000 times longer. You said three billion base pairs, then the typical bacterial genome, which about three million base pairs. You do the math on that, and you say by mass, all the DNA in our body is 99% human, 1% bacterial. And so if you were to mush this all up in a blender, purify the DNA out, that's what would come out.Russ Altman: And that matches what your post doc found.Stephen Quake: Yes, exactly.Russ Altman: So are these normal signs? Are these normal organisms, or are these things that we have to run to the doctor and get treated for?Stephen Quake: The vast majority of it, the vast majority of is our normal microbiome, bugs that live with us commensally and happy, equilibrium, with us as humans.Russ Altman: I'm guessing you saw viruses or bacteria that were either entirely novel or not appreciated as living in humans?Stephen Quake: Absolutely, we have discovered traces of novel organisms that is an area of ongoing research in the group to try to understand what they are and where they fit into the tree of life.Russ Altman: This is The Future of Everything. I'm Russ Altman. I'm speaking with Dr. Steve Quake, and now we're talking about infectious disease detection.As a doctor, I know that we have patients come into the emergency room or into the clinic with what we call FUO, fever of unknown origin. They look sick, they have a fever, it's not normal to have a fever, and they look infected, but we can't find an infection. And so I'm guessing that one of the key applications of this technology would be, well, what DNA are we seeing in the bloodstream, ‘cause that might point us to the infectious agent. Is that how the infectious disease community —Stephen Quake: Absolutely, yep.Russ Altman: — is taking this up?Stephen Quake: Absolutely. That's a major application. There's a bunch of others that are really interesting. And to come back to the earlier point you raised about blood infections being a different thing, the point is that the blood is like the septic system of the body, and it's exploring all the tissues and organs. And when cells are dying and they're releasing their DNA, it picks it up and carries it. So even if the infection is not in the blood, you see the remnants of the infection in the blood from that cell-free DNA.Russ Altman: Yes, and so the final area that I wanted to get into, of course, is cancer. And, in fact, you mentioned cancer in your initial comments. Where are we with the detection of cancer from cell-free DNA?Stephen Quake: Yeah, that's been an area of intense interest for decades. That's the one that was primarily driving the field before the prenatal work and because tumors have different genomes than the normal body does. And so people would monitor those differences in the blood and try to understand how the disease was progressing and to try to do detection. And that's been a little later into the clinic than the prenatal stuff, but it's happening now. And it's an area of intense interest. There's a bunch of companies out there that have launched tests or about to launch tests, and it's gonna be very important for helping monitor course of treatment, and that's the first clinical application that's out there.Russ Altman: That's what I was gonna ask. Is this about detection or about monitoring? And it sounds like the monitoring.Stephen Quake: That's the first one. It's the easiest one ‘cause you're in such a high risk group and it makes it an easier technical task.Russ Altman: And you know the cancer, so you've been able to characterize what you're expecting to find if the cancer comes back.Stephen Quake: Correct. But the big thing to go after is early detection, and that would help a lot of people and save a lot of lives. And that's something that is gonna be coming. Maybe it's five years, maybe it's sooner, but there'll be some very valuable tools for that coming down the pike; I'm pretty confident about that.Russ Altman: Yeah, so let's just think about that for a moment because one of the things that I know is an issue is when these new technologies arise, they often move up the time of detection. You could get the cancer detection earlier, you get the rejection. In general, that's a good thing. But in cancer, it's a little tricky because there is some, if I understand the literature, there's some indication that some cancers arise, and it's the body's own immune system suppresses the cancer effectively before it can grow. Have people worked out what actions you should actually take if you see a very early indication of cancer? Is it definite that we're gonna hit the patient very hard with chemotherapy and radiation and whatnot, or might we still have to figure out what to do about that?Stephen Quake: Yeah, that's a really good question and important issue, and I think we're so early on that that's being worked out in the clinical community. But the initial thought is not that you would go right to treatment with chemotherapy but that you would reflex to other testing methods that are more expensive and more sophisticated and are not the sort of thing you use to screen people broadly but if you got a hint that something's wrong, you'd use them, things like imaging techniques and such forth.Russ Altman: Makes sense. This is The Future of Everything. I'm Russ Altman. More with Dr. Stephen Quake about DNA, the future of health and biology and bioengineering, next on Sirius XM Insight 121.Welcome back to The Future of Everything. I'm Russ Altman. I'm speaking with Dr. Stephen Quake about the fabulous uses of DNA that's floating around in our cells. Now Steve, we just went through a bunch of really killer apps, but I know that there's yet another one, which is looking at pre-term birth. And that's a funny one to me because it's not immediately obvious how detecting DNA would have anything to do with a pre-term birth. So tell us that story.Stephen Quake: Yeah, so pre-term birth ends up being number one cause of neonatal mortality and complications later in life. It's a huge problem, and there's been, despite decades of effort, no real progress on creating a meaningful diagnostic that tells people who's at risk. And there's been a lot of effort put into –Russ Altman: So the goal would be very early, say this looks like a pregnancy that might have some pre-term problems.Stephen Quake: Exactly. And more generally, when is the baby gonna be due? Even if it's not early, can you predict the due date? And there's been a lot of effort put into understanding the genetics of that, the DNA base part, that has not really had a lot of predictive power or success. And so we turned to looking at RNA, which is carries the message from the genome and tells you about not the inheritance but the state of the cell and body at any given point. And it turns out same guys who discovered cell-free DNA in 1948 also discovered cell-free RNA.Russ Altman: They have a good year.Stephen Quake: They did.Russ Altman: Same year?Stephen Quake: Same paper!Russ Altman: Same paper!Stephen Quake: And so we began looking at cell-free RNA as a way to measure what's going on in the mom's body and with the baby and the placenta at any given point in time and how are things changing and can that signal to us when the baby's gonna be born and if the baby's gonna be born early. And we were able, after a long effort, it took seven or eight years of work by a very large group of people, a number of collaborators here at Stanford, including David Stevenson and Gary Shaw and Yair Blumenfeld, bunch of the MFM docs.Russ Altman: MFM is maternal fetal medicine.Stephen Quake: Fetal medicine, thank you.Russ Altman: It's okay, it's my job.Stephen Quake: But we managed to, we managed to figure it out. And we published a paper last year showing that there's a handful of transcripts which indicate when the mom is gonna give pre-term birth, about two months in advance of that.Russ Altman: Wow, so these are like canaries in the coal mine.Stephen Quake: Exactly. And we found another set of transcripts which were predict gestational age, so you can tell how old the baby is and predict when it's gonna be born. And that turns out to be a really interesting problem as well.Russ Altman: I was gonna say, I thought that good old-fashioned subtract nine months from the date of birth gets you a pretty, and in fact, I must say, I'm born on November 5th, and that's important because if you go back nine months, that gets you to February 14th, Valentine's Day. So that's a side story.Stephen Quake: Okay, I got a couple of stories there for you.Russ Altman: But tell me about this.Stephen Quake: All let me give you a couple of stories.Russ Altman: Tell me about this.Stephen Quake: So when we were having our first kid, the one with the amnio, right, I asked the doctor what's the due date, tells us the due date. I said what's the error of your measurement, your estimate? And he got very offended ‘cause he thought I was questioning his ability as a doctor.Russ Altman: Of course, of course.Stephen Quake: We had a very tense discussion. Finally, I manage to communicate I was asking about the uncertainty in the estimate ‘cause I wanted to know when to adjust the travel schedule to make sure I didn't miss it. And he couldn't tell me the uncertainty, but he told me a number that I could use to derive the uncertainty, and so I did that. Worked out to two sigma three sigma. I had three sigma baby. So the baby was premature by three and a half weeks, and it was fortunate –Russ Altman: Oh, it was at the border of the plus minus.Stephen Quake: Yeah, I was fortunately in town, and fortunately, she turned out fine. But this got me aware of the importance of not only pre-term birth but also understanding, trying to understand when the baby's gonna be born and prediction of due date.Russ Altman: Okay, so you sold me. This is actually an impactful question.Stephen Quake: Yes, exactly.Russ Altman: So what can you guys do?Stephen Quake: Well, it's early still. Our first paper was a small number of women, few dozen women, and yet it seems very promising, and we've now been able to reproduce it in a different cohort that we can predict pre-term birth and gestational age and, from gestational age, hopefully predict when the normal baby's gonna be born. But it's all now going into much larger clinical trials to validate it. It's very much the beginning of the story, but it's an exciting one.Russ Altman: So, great. This is a new molecule for our discussion, this RNA molecule, also from the baby or the placenta or both and a combination of maternal and fetal factors gives you the data you need and a big data mining approach, not to overuse that, to actually draw inferences that might be very impactful both for the actual due date but, more importantly, for uh oh, we have a woman who might be having a pre-term birth, let's do what we can, and again, the ability of doctors to intervene is probably much better if they have two-month warning.Stephen Quake: Correct, correct.Russ Altman: Well, so this has been an amazing ride, and I wanna turn our attention a little bit now to a separate thing but very excited that you're involved with. A few years ago, I think three years ago, the Chan and Zuckerberg Foundation announced the creation of a big biomedical research institute with you and a colleague from UCSF, Joe DeRisi, as co-presidents, and it had a very bold mission. The mission was to, I believe, cure or manage all disease by the end of the century, something like that; you can correct me if I'm wrong.Stephen Quake: Cure, treat, or prevent all human disease by the end of the century.Russ Altman: Bingo. So you agreed to that charge. You've now been doing it for three years. Can you tell us a little bit about how it was set up and why it was set up, and is it really even possible to imagine that level of progress in the next century?Stephen Quake: Yeah. So since we've been talking about becoming parents, and Mark and Priscilla began to turn their attention to philanthropy in a pretty large way when they became parents. And they wrote an open letter before their first daughter was born that launched the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative and ultimately the Biohub with this idea of trying to create a better world.Russ Altman: It's called the Chan Zuckerberg –Stephen Quake: Chan Zuckerberg Biohub.Russ Altman: Biohub, mm-hmm.Stephen Quake: And so in their children's lifetime, so broadly in this hundred-year span, they wanted to see if they could fund scientific research that would help make the world a healthier place for their kids and everyone else, which is a lovely mission. And it sounds crazy, right?Russ Altman: Sounds crazy.Stephen Quake: It sounds absolutely absurd, and for awhile, I couldn't say it even to them with a straight face.Russ Altman: And yet a few moments ago, you said it forcefully and convincingly, so wait to go.Stephen Quake: In, well –Russ Altman: What turned you?Stephen Quake: Well, you think about it for awhile, and it helps to think backwards in time and think about how far medicine has advanced in the last 100 years. And in this country, mortality has been cut in half. And the things that kill us now are very different than the things that killed us 100 years ago. Primarily, it was infectious disease then. Now it's things like heart disease and such forth. And so we've eliminated entire classes of diseases, effectively, and cut mortality in half. So you can project forward another 100 years and say if we don't do anything, we should get another factor of two. And with some really serious effort, maybe we can do better than that. It's just very hard for people to think on century-long timescales. We're thinking when's our next grand proposal or something like that or when's our next student gonna graduate, and it's not often that we have the opportunity to think on that sort of timescale.Russ Altman: This is The Future of Everything. I'm Russ Altman. I'm speaking with Steve Quake, now about curing, managing, treating, and what was the other verb?Stephen Quake: Prevent.Russ Altman: Preventing all disease. Do you take a portfolio approach? It sounds like you were talking about the causes of death 100 years ago, so you have to look at the causes of death now. And I guess you have to pick the low-hanging fruit to say how do we make progress. So how have you decided to deploy the assets of the Biohub for the next five to 10 years?Stephen Quake: Yeah, well, a two-fold approach. One approach is to pick a couple of areas that capture a large part of the global burden of disease, and we've chosen two that we focus on in our internal research. One is cell biology, and a lot of diseases are a consequence of disorders of cell biology, cancer, heart disease, pulmonary disease, a number of neurological diseases. And so better understanding how cells work will lead to new therapies and treatments.Russ Altman: Could be a platform of discoveries that will have multiple applications.Stephen Quake: Right, exactly, and that covers a large part of the global burden, as you work out the numbers of that. The other big part is infectious disease.Russ Altman: So it's still a problem.Stephen Quake: Still a problem worldwide, absolutely. There's a bunch of open areas, malaria, HIV. There's a bunch of other ones, TB, number of viral infections. So that's our other big internal effort. And at the Biohub, our researchers have been hired to focus on those two areas. Now the other, all the rest, what we've done is we've partnered with the Bay Area University, to Stanford, UCSF, and Berkeley, and we fund research of nearly 100 faculty at those universities across everything else. We have an open competition. We've committed roughly $100 million to those faculty over the next five years, and we'll do it again for the second five years. And we're encouraging them to work on the riskiest, most exciting ideas, whether they're basic science, technological, or more disease focused, to cover the span of where we think a lot of the great innovations are gonna come over the next decades.Russ Altman: So that does sound compelling. So basically, a two-fold strategy with some top-down projects that you know are gonna be impactful, and then you spread your bets by giving money to a bunch of smart people and say just do what you think is right. And the hope is that that will lead to the next set of challenges that you guys can perhaps adopt as top-down challenges.Stephen Quake: That's right.Russ Altman: So how is it going?Stephen Quake: Well, as you mentioned, we just celebrated our third birthday three weeks ago. Joe and I have been working really hard, but it feels great. I feel like we're at full steam, and great science is happening, and the people we're funding are doing great work, and the future is bright.Russ Altman: And I guess are the donors satisfied? Are the people who put up the funds, are they starting to see their fruits of their vision?Stephen Quake: Well, you'll have to ask them that. It's not my place to say. But they haven't fired us yet, and so we take that as a good sign.Russ Altman: Thank you for listening to The Future of Everything. I'm Russ Altman. If you missed any of this episode, listen anytime on demand with the Sirius XM app.
Chris Gallop's The Continuing Inquiry: JFK Luncheon & Symposium 11am to 5pm, Sunday, 24 Nov at Dirty Job Brewing, 117 Main Street, Mansfield, Texas 76063 Admission fee $65 only Speakers include Bill Simpich, author of State Secret (free online ebook) Roger Craig Jr., son of Roger Craig Sr. who discovered a 7.65 mauser at the sixth floor of the TSBD Video: JFK Assassination: The Roger Craig Story Hank Slaughter, a retired army sniper, to talk about how Oswald could not have made those shots Steve Cameron, author and producer of the upcoming book and movie The Deputy Interviews about Roger Craig The Deputy Interviews facebook page Dr. Michael Marcades, son of Rose Cherami Book: Rose Cherami: Gathering Fallen Petals by Dr. Michael Marcades: Paperback, Kindle Dr. Michael Marcades to release the complete medical records of Rose Cherami An updated second edition of the book to be released soon J. Gary Shaw, first generation reseacher and author FREE DOWNLOAD EBOOK: Cover-Up by J. Gary Shaw and Larry R. Harris FREE BORROWABLE EBOOK: JFK: Conspiracy of Silence by Charles A. Crenshaw, Jens Hansen and J. Gary Shaw FREE BORROWABLE EBOOK: JFK Has Been Shot by Charles A. Crenshaw, Jens Hansen and J. Gary Shaw Getting legitimate answers requires asking legitimate questions Videos: Gary Shaw on Alternative Views: watch here; or download Part 1, Part 2 Jonathan Pike, son of William Roy Pike aka Mickey Ryan Ryan was the bookkeeper/bartender in the carousel club who worked closely with Jack Ruby Ryan told a judge that he saw Jack Ruby and Oswald together several times Randolph Benson to film the symposium Documentary: The Searchers by Randolph Benson (vimeo on demand) Chris Gallop to be present at the book store, CAPA Conference, 22-23 Nov Rare and out of print books of the case to be sold at the CAPA Conference Chris' facebook profile Join JFK-The Continuing Inquiry facebook group Chris' website: www.jfk-thecontinuinginquiry.com Contact Chirs at cjgallop@yahoo.com
Somehow we've managed to cram in two sets of Premier Division reviews, a First Division review and both divisions previews into this weeks show alongside three cracking interviews. Gary Shaw talks St.Pat's, Mike Ahern updates us on Limerick's off-field woes, while James Rogers previews Dundalk V Shamrock Rovers. Burke & Brier are off to Bala this weekend so send them away happy by subscribing and leaving us a five star review!
undefined See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
On this episode of the "Dewback Discussion" we talk about the current state of Star Wars Fandom, we have special guest Gary Shaw on, and a lot more.https://www.teepublic.com/user/dewbackdiscussion
Sustained economic growth, rising interest rates, and higher investment income contributed to a strong year for insurers in 2018. Tanya talks to insurance practice leader Gary Shaw about the possibilities for 2019—will it be another banner year, or will longer-term challenges like the potential for economic slowdown and ongoing disputes over tariffs and trade rules cast a shadow on the industry?
My guest on this podcast is Scott Shaffer, litigation attorney and Partner at Olshan, Frome and Wolosky, as well as a longtime senior boxing writer at Boxingtalk.com. Scott has represented some of the top promoters in the sport including Sauerland Promotions, DiBella Entertainment and Gary Shaw, as well as world champions such as Ricky Hatton. We look at what happened in the year of boxing for 2018. We also look ahead at what's to come in 2019. It was a great discussion - enjoy!.
Researcher Chris Gallop joins S.T Patrick to discuss the JFK Assassination. Gallop had an interesting school-aged entry into the assassination, an event further impacted by a revelation from his grandfather. Tonight, he discusses his mentor Gary Shaw, the research on Roscoe White, the Texas research community, the most important witnesses, the medical mistakes, and the 6th annual JFK Assassination Luncheon/Symposium, which he will host on Monday, November 19th, 2018 from 11am-5pm. Go to MidnightWriterNews.com for our FREE archives!
The third episode of our podcast series features Gary Shaw, professor of history at Wesleyan University and associate editor of the journal History and Theory. Gary answered our five questions at the third INTH conference in Stockholm, August 2018.
Rev. Gary Shaw of Carter Memorial United Methodist Church in Needham speaks with Stefan Geller of the Needham Times about how he has seen attendance change at his church and what has been causing the decline in church attendance across all denominations over the past several decades.
The WAPL Sound Bar is Open! Brett Newski, Feed the Dog, Trampled by Turtles, Joe Richter, Babe Club, Listening Party, Blueheels, Kurt Gunn, Gary Shaw, Mo Lowda & the Humble, Beth Kille, Boxkar*Streaming 24/7 @ waplhomebrewed.com*To Go on the New WAPL Mobile App*Download the WAPL Mobile App to take Wisco ♫ To Go w/ You.CHEERS to Your Ears!
The WAPL Sound Bar is Open! Brett Newski, Feed the Dog, Trampled by Turtles, Joe Richter, Babe Club, Listening Party, Blueheels, Kurt Gunn, Gary Shaw, Mo Lowda & the Humble, Beth Kille, Boxkar*Streaming 24/7 @ waplhomebrewed.com*To Go on the New WAPL Mobile App*Download the WAPL Mobile App to take Wisco ♫ To Go w/ You.CHEERS to Your Ears!
The Mayor And City Manager join Chad and Sarah to talk about Police and Fire pay and other issues
We dissect the Dublin Derby, interview Robert Goggins (Programme award winner) and Pat O'Toole (Pig's head thrower) and then it's Lee Grace v Gary Shaw in the quiz.
My guest on this podcast is Scott Shaffer, litigation attorney and Partner at Olshan, Frome and Wolosky, as well as a longtime senior boxing writer at Boxingtalk.com. Scott has represented some of the top promoters in the sport including Sauerland Promotions, DiBella Entertainment and Gary Shaw, as well as world champions such as Ricky Hatton. We look at what's ahead in 2018 as far as major fights. We also take a look at what will happen with the PBC possibly joining forces with the UFC, year two of Top Rank's ESPN deal as well as where HBO goes from here. Great discussion - enjoy!.
Ambitions to be a superhero as a child and how that affected the decision to become a policeman and then work for many years as an anti-human trafficker, the highs and lows, including burn-out and depression and what you learn through that. Gary Shaw is now the Corporate Social Responsibility Manager at Kathmandu.
Gary Shaw joins us in studio. He talks the League Cup final, his injury, old FAI job, Bray 2010, Galway love, the India tour and he even gives Sean Heaney a call.
We talk about the Pat's defeat, the red card, their stolen flag, and look ahead to the must win game against Finn Harps tomorrow. Graham Burke and Gary Shaw take Questions From The East Stand.
Sally Gellett reports from a June 16, 2016 press briefing outside of a regulatory hearing on the Indian Point nuclear facility on the Hudson River in New York State. Several citizen’s spoke including Jeanne and Gary Shaw, Nancy Gans, Marilyn Ellie, and Ellen Winnegar. https://closeindianpoint.wordpress.com/
Doug played defensive tackle for the University of Texas and the Detroit Lions. He suffered a career ending neck injury in 1985 that led him to entrepreneurship and ultimately to a great charitable organization, The Lone Star Paralysis Foundation. Join us as Doug and I sip tequila, talk about his businesses and the inner workings of his brain! Books referenced in the interview: "The Lincoln Myth" by Steve Berry "Meat On A Hoof" by Gary Shaw