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Note: "Act 1" was a separate published audio podcast.*Get a FREE 7 day trial to Patreon to "try it out."*Watch the show live, daily at 8AM EST on Twitch! Please click here to follow the page.Email the show on the Shoreliners Striping inbox: eric@ericzaneshow.comTopics:*All American Rejects House Party.*EZ audience member dogging All American Rejects.*EZ talks about meeting Pop Evil and not listening to GRD.*The world's most powerful laser was made in Michigan.*Crazy bitch special ed teacher molests special ed student. Turned in by hubby.*Audience member of EZ's radio show thinks EZ wants to hear every detail of his life.Asshole of the DaySponsors:Adam Casari Realty, Impact Power Sports, Frank Fuss / My Policy Shop Insurance, Kings Room Barbershop, The Mario Flores Lakeshore Team of VanDyk Mortgage, Shoreliners Striping, Ervines Auto Repair Grand Rapids Hybrid & EV, TC PaintballInterested in advertising? Email eric@ericzaneshow.com and let me design a marketing plan for you.Contact: Shoreliners Striping inbox eric@ericzaneshow.comDiscord LinkEZSP TikTokSubscribe to my YouTube channelHire me on Cameo!Tshirts available herePlease subscribe, rate & write a review on Apple Podcastspatreon.com/ericzaneInstagram: ericzaneshowTwitterSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/the-eric-zane-show-podcast/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Note: "Act 2" will be a separate published audio podcast.*Check out EZ's morning radio show "The InZane Asylum Q100 Michigan with Eric Zane" Click here*Get a FREE 7 day trial to Patreon to "try it out."*Watch the show live, daily at 8AM EST on Twitch! Please click here to follow the page.Email the show on the Shoreliners Striping inbox: eric@ericzaneshow.comTopics*EZ looking rough.*EZ had a horrible dream where Pooh Bear left him for another dude.*The thought is suggested that Pooh Bear "went back to black."*Some thoughts on the Lions game this weekend.*An awkward moment at the Grand Rapids Gold basketball game.*The time EZ got fired by the basketball team.*Working on GRD was like being in "golden handcuffs."*The time Justin Nettlebeck tried to get EZ fired from Q100.*EZ showed up on The Boomer Bunker to put those fat fucks on blast.*Ozempic is cool.*Amanda is already making horrible decisions when it comes to "The Fat-a-thon."*Some local moron, painter not a fan of advertising on EZ.*It's been a while, but Joe Martinez is back to talk shit.Sponsors:TAG Accounting, Green Medicine Shop, Frank Fuss / My Policy Shop Insurance, Kings Room Barbershop, The Mario Flores Lakeshore Team of VanDyk Mortgage, Shoreliners Striping, Ervines Auto Repair Grand Rapids Hybrid & EV, TC PaintballInterested in advertising? Email eric@ericzaneshow.com and let me design a marketing plan for you.Contact: Shoreliners Striping inbox eric@ericzaneshow.comDiscord LinkEZSP TikTokSubscribe to my YouTube channelHire me on Cameo!Tshirts available herePlease subscribe, rate & write a review on Apple Podcastspatreon.com/ericzaneInstagram: ericzaneshowTwitterSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/the-eric-zane-show-podcast/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
L'Energie est au carrefour de nombreux défis. Transition écologique, mobilité, chauffage, des enjeux au cœur du scrutin de juin prochain. Est-ce que la Wallonie sera au rendez-vous de ces défis ? Le réseau tiendra-t-il quand nous roulerons tous à l'électricité ? Alors qu'il décroche déjà avec les panneaux photovoltaïques. On fait le point avec le patron du principal gestionnaire de réseau de distribution, GRD, ORES. Un des acteurs du marché de l'énergie qui distribue l'électricité et le gaz. Fernand Grifnée est l'invité de Matin Première. Merci pour votre écoute Matin Première, c'est également en direct tous les jours de la semaine de 6h à 9h sur www.rtbf.be/lapremiere Retrouvez tous les épisodes de Matin Première sur notre plateforme Auvio.be : https://auvio.rtbf.be/emission/60 Et si vous avez apprécié ce podcast, n'hésitez pas à nous donner des étoiles ou des commentaires, cela nous aide à le faire connaître plus largement.
*Support the show and enjoy great products! Check out EZ on Vouch!**Save 50% on Factor Meals! Go to FACTORMEALS dot com slash zane50 and use code zane50 for 50% off***Get a FREE 7 day trial to Patreon to "try it out."*Watch the show live, daily at 8AM EST on Twitch! Please click here to follow the page.Email the show on the Shoreliners Striping inbox: eric@ericzaneshow.comTopics*We just passed the 8 year anniversary of my last day on GRD! *A bullshit video of two squares making up stories about my firing.*Dear Meathead*More Ben "Ah, Ummmmm hilarity."*Jennifer Crumbley convicted of four counts of involuntary manslaughter.*Asshole of the Day BTYB TC PaintballSponsors:Green Medicine Shop, Impact Powersports, TC Paintball, The Grand Rapids Gold, Kings Room Barbershop, TAG Accounting, Frank Fuss/ My Policy Shop Insurance, Ervine's Auto, Repair Grand Rapids Hybrid and EV, A&E Heating and Cooling, The Mario Flores Lakeshore Team of VanDyk, Mortgage, Shoreliners Striping, Interested in advertising? Email eric@ericzaneshow.com and let medesign a marketing plan for you.Contact: Shoreliners Striping inboxeric@ericzaneshow.comDiscord LinkEZSP TikTokSubscribe to my YouTube channelHire me on Cameo!Tshirts availableherePlease subscribe, rate & write a review on Apple Podcastspatreon.com/ericzaneInstagram: ericzaneshowOur Sponsors:* Check out Factor 75 and use my code zane50 for a great deal: https://www.factor75.com/Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/the-eric-zane-show-podcast/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
*Support the show and enjoy great products! Check out EZ on Vouch!**Save 50% on Factor Meals! Go to FACTORMEALS dot com slash zane50 and use code zane50 for 50% off***Get a FREE 7 day trial to Patreon to "try it out."*Watch the show live, daily at 8AM EST on Twitch! Please click here to follow the page.Email the show on the Shoreliners Striping inbox: eric@ericzaneshow.comTopics*We just passed the 8 year anniversary of my last day on GRD!*A bullshit video of two squares making up stories about my firing.*Dear Meathead*More Ben "Ah, Ummmmm hilarity."*Jennifer Crumbley convicted of four counts of involuntary manslaughter.*Asshole of the Day BTYB TC PaintballSponsors:Green Medicine Shop, Impact Powersports, TC Paintball, The Grand Rapids Gold, Kings Room Barbershop, TAG Accounting, Frank Fuss/ My Policy Shop Insurance, Ervine's Auto, Repair Grand Rapids Hybrid and EV, A&E Heating and Cooling, The Mario Flores Lakeshore Team of VanDyk, Mortgage, Shoreliners Striping, Interested in advertising? Email eric@ericzaneshow.com and let medesign a marketing plan for you.Contact: Shoreliners Striping inboxeric@ericzaneshow.comDiscord LinkEZSP TikTokSubscribe to my YouTube channelHire me on Cameo!Tshirts availableherePlease subscribe, rate & write a review on Apple Podcastspatreon.com/ericzaneInstagram: ericzaneshowOur Sponsors:* Check out Factor 75 and use my code zane50 for a great deal: https://www.factor75.com/Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/the-eric-zane-show-podcast/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Sunny "Sweet Daddy Fonk" Wong & DJZigZag Present: WAGRadio's Groovin' Blue Xmas Show with Blu Mankuma Sleigh In . . . Tune Up . . . . . Slide Out . . . . . . . ( :49) WAGRadio Xmas 2023 Open – Produced by William “Fats Is Back” Reiter featuring BROOK BENTON (3:17) “What Christmas Means To Me” – CEE LO GREEN [Elektra Cd No. 531749-2“CeeLo's Magic Moment”] 2012 Prod. Adam Anders, Peer Astrom ( :11) NEPTOON RECORDS ROB FRITH (Vancouver, B.C.) Xmas greeting http://neptoon.com/ (3:21) “Santa Baby” – CHER [Warner Cd No. 093624849261 “Christmas”] (3:11) “O, Tannenbaum” – GARY BURTON [GRP Records Inc. Cd No. GRD-9574 “GRP Christmas Collection] 1988 (4:42) “O Holy Night” – B.G.O.T.I. [Death Row Records/gamma Cd No. INTD-90108 “Christmas On Death Row”] 1996 Prod/Arr Kevyn Lewis ( :06) BLU MANKUMA WAGRadio Xmas Id https://www.behindthevoiceactors.com/Blu-Mankuma/ (3:11) “Jingle Bells” – JIMMY SMITH [Verve Vinyl Lp No. V6-8666 “Christmas Cookin'”] 1966 ( :13) DB CHESSA (Victoria B.C.) Xmas greeting https://livevictoria.com/dbchessa (4:19) “(A Postcard In) Winter [DJZigZag EdiT]” – PHIL PERRY [Private Music Cd No. 01005-82181-2 “My Book Of Love”] 2000 ( :13) CARL GRAVES (Skylark) [Vancouver / Los Angeles] Xmas greeting https://www.allmusic.com/artist/carl-graves-mn0001244495 (4:31) “Sugar Rum Cherry Mix” – JOHN BEASLEY [digital platforms release] – Christian Euman (dm), Edwin Livingstone (bs), John Beasley (pn) Arr. John Beasley ( :11) MIKE CHERRY (Sky Valley Radio – Salt Spring Island, B.C. / KYAC - AM/FM– Seattle) Xmas greeting https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D3bMzb8xTEg (3:04) “Snowbound” – CARMEN McRAE [Roulette Records Vinyl Lp No. 52091] 1963 Prod. Teddy Reig Arr. Don Costa * full name – Carmen Mercedes McRae (3:35) “Snowbound” –THE RAMSEY LEWIS TRIO [Argo Vinyl Lp No. LPS-745 “More Sounds Of Christmas”] 1964 Eldee Young / Cleveland Eaton (bs), Red Holt / Steve McCall (dm), John Avant (tbn), Ramsey Lewis (pn) Arr. King Fleming ( :05) BLU MANKUMA WAGRadio Xmas Id (3:59) “Merry Christmas Baby” – JAMES BROWN AND THE FAMOUS FLAMES [King Records Vinyl Lp No. 1010 “James Brown Sings Christmas Songs”] 1966 ( :16) CAMERON HUGHES (Keynote speaker) https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/king-of-cheer-cameron-hughes/1138021864 (3:10) “Soulful Christmas” – JAMES BROWN [King Records Vinyl Lp No. KS 1040 “A Soulful Christmas”] 1968 (1:12) DJZigZag Xmas Jangle Id with SUNNY “S.D.F.” WONG (3:54) “One Wish” – THE HAMILTONES [Ghetto Allstars] (4:11) “Let It Snow” – BOYS II MEN, BRIAN McKNIGHT [Warner Music Benelux Cd No.505419686395 "The Christmas Feeling"] 2015 (2:36) “Ghetto Christmas” – LOVE RENAISSANCE (LVRN), 6LACK, SUMMER WALKER [LVRN/Interscope Records Ep “Home For The Holidays Vol 1”] 2020 Prod. Lisa McCall & Slimwav (4:20) “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen” – LOREN SCHOENBERG [MusicMasters Jazz Cd No. 01612-65089-2 "Hot Jazz For A Cool Night" (Various Artists)] 1992 (4:33) “Give Love On Christmas Day” – JOHNNY GILL [Motown Cd No. MOT-6292 "Motown Christmas Album - Christmas Cheers From Motown"] 1989 Prod. Paul Lawrence ( :47) “Silver Bells (segment)” – THE RAMSAY FAMILY [gift from Miles Ramsay] (2:59) “Christmas Time For Everyone Else But Me“ – HANK BALLARD & THE MIDNIGHTERS [King Records 45rpm No. 45-5729] 1963 ( :04) WAGRadio Id (3:17) “This Christmas” – CORINNE BAILEY RAE [Universal Music Canada] 2011 ( :30) NARDWUAR (UBC Radio – Vancouver, B.C.) Xmas greeting https://nardwuar.com/ (3:59) “Silent Night mix” – JOHN BEASLEY [digital platforms release] Christian Euman [dm], Edwin Livingstone [bs], John Beasley [pn] Arr. John Beasley ( :20) WAGRadio Id (2:15) “Boogie Woogie Santa Claus” – MABEL SCOTT [Excellsior 78rpm No. EXC-1336-C] 1948 * written by Leon Rene (3:49) “Dear Mrs Claus” – THE BARR BROTHERS [Secret City Records Inc.] 2011 (1:52) AL FOREMAN (The SoulMates) Xmas greeting . . . . . .
No quinto episódio desse curso sobre degradação ambiental, abordamos as diversas etapas necessárias de pré-processamento de dados SAR. Todas as etapas, tanto para dados SLC como para os GRD. Vale a pena conferir. Um grande abraço! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/geosensor/message
GreenRunsDeep is an integral part of the online Celtics culture. While not traditional media, he is perhaps the most popular and influential person in the Celtics' social media space. GRD joins us to discuss his role in Celtics culture, both online and in the arena, as well as the upcoming season, Banner 18, and much more. ------- Twitter: @First2TheFloor IG/TikTok: @First2TheFloor YouTube: @firsttothefloor Playback Room: https://playback.tv/firsttothefloor ------- First to the Floor is Powered by FanDuel Sportsbook, the exclusive wagering partner of the CLNS Media Network. Get a NO SWEAT FIRST BET up to $1000 DOLLARS when you visit https://FanDuel.com/BOSTON! That's $1000 back in BONUS BETS if your first bet doesn't win.21+ in select states. First online real money wager only. $10 Deposit req. Refund issued as non-withdrawable bonus bets that expire in 14 days. Restrictions apply. See full terms at fanduel.com/sportsbook. FanDuel is offering online sports wagering in Kansas under an agreement with Kansas Star Casino, LLC. Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER or visit FanDuel.com/RG (CO, IA, MI, NJ, OH, PA, IL, TN, VA), 1-800-NEXT-STEP or text NEXTSTEP to 53342 (AZ), 1-888-789-7777 or visit ccpg.org/chat (CT), 1-800-9-WITH-IT (IN), 1-800-522-4700 or visit ksgamblinghelp.com (KS), 1-877-770-STOP (LA), Gamblinghelplinema.org or call (800)-327-5050 for 24/7 support (MA), visit www.mdgamblinghelp.org (MD), 1-877-8-HOPENY or text HOPENY (467369) (NY), 1-800-522-4700 (WY), or visit www.1800gambler.net (WV). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
We begin Season 6 of the GRD podcast with a brand new interview with on-the-rise worship artist Aaron Williams, plus an 11-year rewind interview with Seabird.TRACK LIST FOR EP. 47"All Things Together" - Aaron Williams"The Hope of Christ - Aaron Williams (ft. Shane & Shane)"Abide" - Aaron Williams (ft. Aaron Keys)"Trust" - Seabird"Rocks Into Rivers" - Seabird"Stand Out" - SeabirdCREDITS FOR EP.47Host/Producer - Dave TroutSPONSOR1: Allie Murphy - https://is.gd/ambetterspSPONSOR2: SongRx - https://is.gd/utremailUTR's Heart, Soul, & Mind Playlist - https://utrmedia.org/hsm19Bellsburg Online Store (opens 11/1) - https://richmullins25.com/storeSpecial thanks to Brian Smith of Turning Point MediaEmail: greenroomdoorpodcast@gmail.comAll music is used with permission or under fair use provisions(c) 2022 UTR Media. All Rights Reserved. A 501(c)(3) non-profit org - info at https://utrmedia.org
Galway Rural Development are looking to take on 170 more Tús participants in the coming months. GRD manages the programme for the Department of Employment Affairs and Social Protection, which is helping people across East Galway find employment. For more information, people can email tusadmin@grd.ie. CEO of GRD, Steve Dolan, tells us about the areas of placements on offer:
In the studio this week was Steve Dolan, head of GRD, telling us of the fight to better utilize the RSS and Tus projects. Because of the existing narrow parameters of both schemes, rural communities are being disadvantaged hugely, Steve and his cohorts have instigated a campaign to highlight these. These schemes are both beneficial to the communities and participants, a win-win situation for all. The government must take action. Then we have Kerrie Gardiner, who is instrumental in the running of Bord Bia's Bloom in the Phoenix Park. Kerrie brings us through her duties and responsibilities and the festival's attractions. This is Bloom's first year back and it's incredibly busy, I can't wait to get to this. Also we have Michael Fahy's upcoming Book launch in the Loughrea Hotel and Spa this Friday 10th of June at 7.30pm, all are welcome. Michael has written a book on his uncle Frank Fahy Revolutionary and Public Servant. Finally we give a shout to the Predator Triathlon Club, who are launching their race, Loughrea Triathlon, to be held at the end of the summer.
The Boston Celtics are headed to the finals for the first time since 2010. It will be a tall task to take down the Golden State Warriors, but if any team can do it it's the Boston Celtics. Buckle up because it's going to be a wild ride.
GRD (220) STARFIELD nuevos detalles | LLUVIA de DEMOS PS PLUS | POLÉMICA SONIC CLÁSICOS | RETRASO MARIO ¿solo en cines? ¡ÚNETE A NUESTRO GRUPO DE 🔵 TELEGRAM 🔵 PARA ESTAR AL TANTO DE LAS MEJORES OFERTAS! https://t.me/gr_ofertas_videojuegos SORTEAMOS 14 DÍAS DE XBOX GAME PASS ULTIMATE ENTRE LOS QUE DÉIS ME GUSTA A LOS PROGRAMAS DE ESTA SEMANA WEB-- https://www.guardadorapido.com PATREON-- https://www.patreon.com/guardadorapido TWITCH -- https://www.twitch.tv/guardadorapido SUSCRÍBETE A YOUTUBE https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCxcqs2_4q5rKwQBHrbpIYVA?sub_confirmation=1 SUSCRÍBETE A TWITCH https://www.twitch.tv/guardadorapido APÓYANOS EN IVOOX Y ACCEDE A CONTENIDO EXCLUSIVO https://www.ivoox.com/premium?affiliate-code=66232985b87dc6122ad49d08d659cfe3 WEB www.guardadorapido.com 🔉 Ya tienes aquí un nuevo programa de GR DIARIO donde cubrimos la actualidad más candente del mundo de los videojuegos. Comenzamos el programa con el retraso de la película de Super Mario hasta 2023 y debatimos sobre el impacto de esta noticia en el calendario de lanzamientos de Nintendo. Seguimos con la noticia de que Sony obligará a los desarrolladores a publicar versiones de demostración de sus juegos en PlayStation Plus y con el rumor de que el modo Battle Royale llegaría a Halo Infinite en Noviembre. Además, os traemos información sobre la banda sonora de Starfield y sobre una iniciativa de Sony de cara a favorecer la preservación de videojuegos, lo cual no parece seguir mucho ni Sega ni Ubisoft al retirar la primera de la venta los juegos de Sonic incluidos en Origins y la segunda cerrando el online de más de 100 juegos. 🔉 Esperamos que os guste el programa tanto como nosotros hemos disfrutado grabándolo. DESGLOSE PROGRAMA: 03:59 - Retraso de la película de Super Mario Bros 11:45 - Sony obligará a los desarrolladores a publicar demos en PlayStation Plus 18:02 - El modo battle royale de Halo Infinite podría llegar en noviembre 22:50 - Nuevos datos sobre la banda sonora de Starfield 28:50 - Sony apuesta por la preservación de videojuegos ... 32:20 - ... Sega y Ubisoft no tanto. HAN COLABORADO EN ESTE PROGRAMA: - Alberto García. - Jorge Bernal. PRESENTA: - Omar Sánchez. DIRIGE: - Jorge Bernal. EDICIÓN - Jorge Bernal. FORMAS DE CONTACTO Twitter, Instagram y Facebook: @GuardadoRapido Email de contacto: guardadorapido@gmail.com Contacto para prensa y distribuidores: press@guardadorapido.com #starfield #supermariobros #haloinfinite Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
Lisa Nguyen is the Founder & CEO of Smart Bean Inc., a team of people with diverse entrepreneurial backgrounds that share one common goal: to revolutionize the relationship between small business entrepreneurs and their numbers through innovative and affordable products and services. Over the last 20 years, Lisa Nguyen has worked for small businesses, invested in small businesses, and owned her own small business, and has tremendous respect and empathy for small business entrepreneurs as a result, as it takes intelligence, resilience, tremendous self-awareness and guts to start and build a viable business. Lisa is realizing her dream with Smart Bean Inc., as her team develops products and services that will make intrepid entrepreneurs smile more, love more, and achieve more from life. SmartBean® uses technology to streamline the bookkeeping process, making it more efficient and therefore more affordable. In this edition of Critical Mass Business Talk Show, Lisa Nguyen joins host Ric Franzi to discuss her entrepreneurial journey and insights as the founder & CEO of Smart Bean Inc. -- Critical Mass Business Talk Show is Orange County, CA's longest-running business talk show, focused on offering value and insight to middle-market business leaders in the OC and beyond. Hosted by Ric Franzi, business partner at Renaissance Executive Forums Orange County. Learn more about Ric at www.ricfranzi.com. Catch up on past Critical Mass Business Talk Show interviews... YouTube: https://lnkd.in/gHKT2gmF LinkedIn: https://lnkd.in/g2PzRhjQ Podbean: https://lnkd.in/eWpNVRi Apple Podcasts: https://lnkd.in/gRd_863w Spotify: https://lnkd.in/gruexU6m #orangecountyca #mastermind #ceopeergroups #peergroups #peerlearning #collectiveintelligence #southerncalifornia
Rodney Brenneman is a seasoned veteran in the medical device space. He has been CEO, board member, advisor and consultant to many early-stage medical technology companies. He is a mechanical engineer by training, with over 30 years of experience in medical device development, mostly in early-stage start-up companies. His experience spans many specialties including vascular, general surgery, interventional cardiology, pulmonology, emergency medicine, ENT, GI, urology and orthopedics. Rodney is currently the CEO of PhageTech and prior to that, founded and lead ROX Medical for 14 years, raising $90M in venture funding. Rodney counts innovative problem solving as one of his core talents and is a named inventor on over 130 patents. Rodney has worked closely with all aspects of medical device development including fundraising, board management, R&D, quality, manufacturing, finance, regulatory, clinical, and physician training. Rodney most enjoys the leadership of small efficient teams solving important medical device and procedure challenges. In this edition of Critical Mass Business Talk Show, Rodney Brenneman joins host Ric Franzi to share his career journey and insights as CEO of PhageTech. -- Critical Mass Business Talk Show is Orange County, CA's longest-running business talk show, focused on offering value and insight to middle-market business leaders in the OC and beyond. Hosted by Ric Franzi, business partner at Renaissance Executive Forums Orange County. Learn more about Ric at www.ricfranzi.com. Catch up on past Critical Mass Business Talk Show interviews... YouTube: https://lnkd.in/gHKT2gmF LinkedIn: https://lnkd.in/g2PzRhjQ Podbean: https://lnkd.in/eWpNVRi Apple Podcasts: https://lnkd.in/gRd_863w Spotify: https://lnkd.in/gruexU6m
Mit sieben Jahren hatte Christiane Stenger einen überragenden IQ von 145, mit 15 schrieb sie ihr Abi, und dann war sie auch noch Juniorenweltmeisterin im Grdächtnissport. Heute arbeitet die 34-jährige als Gedächtniscoach und Autorin.
Unter dem Projektnamen Neuer Kampfpanzer (NKPz) beauftragte die Gruppe für Rüstungsdienste (GRD) im Sommer 1978 die Firma Contraves AG mit der Übernahme der Generalunternehmerschaft für die Realisierung eines neuen Kampfpanzers, welcher die bestehende Panzer 68 Flotte ab Anfang der 1990er Jahre ablösen sollte. Obwohl der Panzer nie gebaut wurde, war das zukunftsweisende Konzept beim Projektabbruch im Dezember 1979 bereits weit fortgeschritten. Ein Artikel von Hptm Stefan Bühler, Think Tank OG Panzer, gelesen von Alexandra Meier. // Ein Artikel aus dem Buch "Panzerfahrzeuge der Schweizer Armee" --> Driektlink: https://www.ogpanzer.ch/single-post/typenkompass-schweizer-panzerfahrzeuge" // OG Panzer Think Tank: https://www.ogpanzer.ch/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ogpanzer/message
In this week's episode of the GRD Podcast, GRD and Jake discuss: West Coast Struggles The NBA's recent surge in COVID-19 Celtics' Tough December Schedule Your Questions! Follow us on social media! @_JakeSeymour @Greenrunsdeep
Jake Seymour and GRD return to the Green Runs Deep Podcast for season 2 of the show! In this reintroduction episode, GRD and Jake discuss: What's wrong with the Celtics? West Coast Road Trip Tough December Schedule
Groove Radio Detroit is Detroit's premire station for Music/Talk Radio, Podcasts, Mix Shows & Music Videos. GRD is the home of Independent Artistry & business. Live Streaming + Internet Radio showcasing Detroit & beyond! #GetInTheGroove Proud collaborators with Podcastic, Rocky Road Productions, One Media World Radio & E Block Radio and the new home for Couch Boyz Radio! www.grooveradiodetroit.comwww.themcouchboyz.com
This week we talk about all the updates with the Boston Celtics. New head coach. Players returning, and shipping out of Boston. Plenty of news this week and we talk about it all!
The Bruins lose their second round matchup to the New York Islanders ending their season. This week we wrap up the series and season for the Bruins and Celtics.
Welcome back to another episode of the Green Runs Deep Podcast! In this episode, GRD, Jake, Reid, and Kyle welcome Celtics Fans to the show! The gang hosted a room on Locker Room to discuss the breaking news revolving around Danny Ainge's departure and Brad Stevens' promotion. Welcome to Ride The Wave Media's basketball podcast, GRD Podcast! The Green Runs Deep Podcast is a podcast that is all about the Celtics and the NBA! The podcast is hosted by Jake Seymour, Kyle Baxter, Reid Miller, and the one and only Green Runs Deep! Make Sure to follow us on Instagram! @grdpod Jake: @JakeSeymourNBA Kyle: @therealkylebaxter Reid: @reidmiller5 GRD: @greenrunsdeep - Produced by Jake Seymour
It's our Season Finale of our 4th season of GRD! We're talking with Aedan, Asher, & Skye Peterson (aka, the band Wake Low), plus a 10-year rewind interview with Sara Groves. -------- TRACK LISTS FOR EP.38 --------- * Autumntide - Wake Low * Curtains - Wake Low * Roll To The Middle [LIVE] - Sara Groves ---------- CREDITS ------------ * Host/Producer - Dave Trout * Wake Low's website: https://www.facebook.com/wakelowmusic/ * Wake Low's Backyard Concert with UTR - https://youtu.be/YHzmEBI3YVw * Sara Groves' website: https://saragroves.com * Sara Groves Spotlight Interview with UTR - https://youtu.be/WdwwXRMCk4c * SPONSOR: White Owl Music Fest - https://whiteowlmusicfest.com * Promo Code for #WOMF21 (May 7-9 only) = MOM21 * Special Thanks to ReFrame Media, Northwind Manor, Cedar Lake Ministries, Eric Hufford, & UTR's support team (c) 2021 UTR Media. All Rights Reserved. A 501(c)(3) non-profit org - info at https://utrmedia.org
Welcome back to another episode of the Green Runs Deep Podcast! In this episode, GRD, Jake, Reid, and Kyle talk about: Marcus Smart rumors Is anyone untouchable on the Celtics? Will the Celtics make a move? Welcome to Ride The Wave Media's basketball podcast, GRD Podcast! The Green Runs Deep Podcast is a podcast that is all about the Celtics and the NBA! The podcast is hosted by Jake Seymour, Kyle Baxter, Reid Miller, and the one and only Green Runs Deep! Make Sure to follow us on Instagram! @grdpod Jake: @JakeSeymourNBA Kyle: @therealkylebaxter Reid: @reidmiller5 GRD: @greenrunsdeep - Produced by Jake Seymour
Welcome back to another episode of the Green Runs Deep Podcast! In this episode, GRD, Jake, Reid, and Kyle talk about: Celtics vs Pelicans The Bench All-Star Game How embarrassing was this offseason? Latest on the Traded Player Exception Welcome to Ride The Wave Media's brand new podcast, GRD Podcast! The Green Runs Deep Podcast is a podcast that is all about the Celtics and is hosted by Jake Seymour, Kyle Baxter, Reid Miller, and the one and only Green Runs Deep! Make Sure to follow us on Instagram! @grdpod Jake: @JakeSeymourNBA Kyle: @therealkylebaxter Reid: @reidmiller5 GRD: @greenrunsdeep - Produced by Jake Seymour
Welcome back to another episode of the Green Runs Deep Podcast! In this episode, GRD, Jake, Reid, and Kyle talk about: West Coast Struggles Kemba's Struggles Danny Ainge wants "shooting with size" Should the NBA host the 2021 NBA All-Star Game? - Produced by Jake Seymour
Welcome back to another episode of the Green Runs Deep Podcast! In this episode, GRD, Jake, Reid, and Kyle talk about: Lakers-Celtics Smart Injury Looking ahead to the West Coast Road Trip - Produced by Jake Seymour
Grd si, sovražim te, so bili komentarji, ki jih je mama izrekala malemu dečku, potem ko ga je vsakodnevno pijana pretepala. V oddaji Srečanja smo gostili Damijana Janžekoviča, 25-letnega mladeniča, ki se je pri 18 letih odselil od mame, ker ga je psihofizično zlorabljala. Kaj je doživljal? Kako se soočata s številnimi travmami danes? Kaj pripelje mamo do tako izrazitega sovraštva do otroka, da mu želi celo vzeti življenje?
Welcome back to another episode of the Green Runs Deep Podcast! In this episode, GRD, Jake, Reid, and Kyle talk about: James Harden Trade Celtics and their COVID problems Kemba Walker returning to the lineup Welcome to Ride The Wave Media's brand new podcast, GRD Podcast! The Green Runs Deep Podcast is a podcast that is all about the Celtics and is hosted by Jake Seymour, Kyle Baxter, Reid Miller, and the one and only Green Runs Deep! Make Sure to follow us on Instagram! @grdpod Jake: @bostonsportscenter617 Kyle: @therealkylebaxter Reid: @reidmiller5 GRD: @greenrunsdeep - Produced by Jake Seymour
Welcome back to another episode of the Green Runs Deep Podcast! In this episode, GRD, Jake, Reid, and Kyle talk about: Miami Heat Game Recap Pritchard's Game Winner Is Marcus Smart frustrated? Washington Wizard Game Recap Why did the Celtics lose their 28 point lead? Welcome to Ride The Wave Media's brand new podcast, GRD Podcast! The Green Runs Deep Podcast is a podcast that is all about the Celtics and is hosted by Jake Seymour, Kyle Baxter, Reid Miller, and the one and only Green Runs Deep! Make Sure to follow us on Instagram! @grdpod Jake: @bostonsportscenter617 Kyle: @therealkylebaxter Reid: @reidmiller5 GRD: @greenrunsdeep - Produced by Jake Seymour
Welcome back to another episode of the Green Runs Deep Podcast! In this episode, GRD, Jake, Reid, and Kyle talk about: Recap of the Detroit Pistons and Toronto Raptors games. Why is Payton Pritchard seeing so much early success? Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown Duo. Looking ahead to Miami. Welcome to Ride The Wave Media's brand new podcast, GRD Podcast! The Green Runs Deep Podcast is a podcast that is all about the Celtics and is hosted by Jake Seymour, Kyle Baxter, Reid Miller, and the one and only Green Runs Deep! Make Sure to follow us on Instagram! @grdpod Jake: @bostonsportscenter617 Kyle: @therealkylebaxter Reid: @reidmiller5 GRD: @greenrunsdeep
Welcome back to another episode of the Green Runs Deep Podcast! In this episode, GRD, Jake, Reid, and Kyle talk about: Recap the Indiana Pacers series Thoughts on a potential James Harden-Celtics relationship Looking ahead to Memphis Welcome to Ride The Wave Media's brand new podcast, GRD Podcast! The Green Runs Deep Podcast is a podcast that is all about the Celtics and is hosted by Jake Seymour, Kyle Baxter, Reid Miller, and the one and only Green Runs Deep! Make Sure to follow us on Instagram! @grdpod Jake: @bostonsportscenter617 Kyle: @therealkylebaxter Reid: @reidmiller5 GRD: @greenrunsdeep
Uncomfortable Conversations Podcast The Untold Stories of the 3HO Kundalini Yoga Community
Today's guest is Siriji Lamenzo, born Siri Sunderta Kaur Khalsa in 1976 in Hartford, CT. Most of her family on her mom's side are all in 3HO. Grandma, 3 aunts, and lots of cousins. She has 2 older sisters who also were born and raised in 3ho and “swapped”, sent to India etc. She was sent to India in 1983 at age 7. Went to GNFC and GRD, came home in 1991. She did all the usual 3HO things--children's camp, India, etc. She never felt any connection to 3HO. And never got into doing yoga or meditation. She removed herself as best as she could after finishing high school in Espanola, and has been open about her own negative experiences in India and with 3HO for as long as she can remember. She's spent many, many years unravelling the trauma of the 3HO upbringing and the effects it's had on her life and who she is. Song Credit: 'Radio' by Rancid
Welcome back to another episode of the Green Runs Deep Podcast! In this episode, Jake and Reid talk about: The Celtics 122-121 win over the Bucks Make Sure to follow us on Instagram! @grdpod Jake: @bostonsportscenter617 Kyle: @therealkylebaxter Reid: @reidmiller5 GRD: @greenrunsdeep
Welcome back to another episode of the Green Runs Deep Podcast! In this episode, GRD, Jake, Reid, and Kyle talk about: Western Conference Predictions 2021 Awards
Welcome back to another episode of the Green Runs Deep Podcast! In this episode, Jake, Reid, and Kyle are joined with Adam Taylor from Celtics Blog! They talk about: Season Expectations for... Rookies Tristan Thompson Jeff Teague And more! Welcome to Ride The Wave Media's brand new podcast, GRD Podcast! The Green Runs Deep Podcast is a podcast that is all about the Celtics and is hosted by Jake Seymour, Kyle Baxter, Reid Miller, and the one and only Green Runs Deep! The GRD Podcast would like to thank Adam Taylor for joining this week's episode! Make sure to check out Adam's work for celticsblog.com and SB Nation! You can find Adam on Instagram and Twitter @adamtaylornba too! Make Sure to follow us on Instagram! @grdpod Jake: @bostonsportscenter617 Kyle: @therealkylebaxter Reid: @reidmiller5 GRD: @greenrunsdeep
Welcome back to another episode of the Green Runs Deep Podcast! In this episode, GRD, Jake, Reid, and Kyle talk about: Chris Paul to the Suns Jure Holiday to the Bucks The Hayward Situation Other Celtics trade rumors/ideas
Welcome back to another episode of the Green Runs Deep Podcast! In this episode, GRD, Jake, Reid, and Kyle break down their predictions for the Eastern Conference.
Abbiamo parlato sul canale Twitch di CulturaPOP con MS Edizioni e Enrico Emiliani dei GDR usciti ed in uscita per scoprire cosa l'editore prevede di far arrivare sul mercato per il suo comparto editoriale!Il podcast è tratto da una intervista live tenuta sui canali social di Casa Kilamdil, potrebbero esserci pertanto dei riferimenti ad elementi visti non visionabili ovviamente ascoltando solo l'audio.
Welcome back to another episode of the Green Runs Deep Podcast! In this episode, GRD, Jake, Reid, and Kyle talk about: Thoughts on Celtics-Heat series Who should the Celtics resign or let walk? Major Announcement
Welcome back to another episode of the Green Runs Deep Podcast! In this episode, GRD, Jake, Reid, and Kyle talk about: 60-second recap of the Celtics-Raptors series. Looking ahead to Miami. We answer your questions!
Welcome back to another episode of the Green Runs Deep Podcast! In this episode, GRD, Jake, Reid, and Kyle talk about: In this week's episode of the GRD Podcast, the gang recaps the Celtics-Raptors Debacle as well as look ahead to the future potential series against the Heat. Oh yeah, screw Tony Brothers. Welcome to Ride The Wave Media's brand new podcast, GRD Podcast! The Green Runs Deep Podcast is a podcast that is all about the Celtics and is hosted by Jake Seymour, Kyle Baxter, Reid Miller, and the one and only Green Runs Deep! Make Sure to follow us on Instagram! @grdpod Jake: @bostonsportscenter617 Kyle: @therealkylebaxter Reid: @reidmiller5 GRD: @greenrunsdeep
En temps de pandémie, les drames s'enchaînent et il est parfois possible de passer à côté des vrais débats. Cette semaine, GRD reçoit un invité qui pourra vous démontrer à quel point un bal des finissants est nécessaire en ces temps sombres.
What's up GRDPOD Nation! The boys are back for another episode, discussing all the highlights and lowlights from the Celtics first game against the Philadelphia Seventy Six Seeds. They go into Gordon Hayward's Injury, and what that means for the Celtic's in the later rounds. Also it seems like GRD has a top 5 reddit account in the world with The Spike King? Tune into for all that and more this week on GRD POD! The Green Runs Deep Podcast is a podcast that is all about the Celtics and is hosted by Jake Seymour, Kyle Baxter, Reid Miller, and the one and only Green Runs Deep! Make Sure to follow us on Instagram! @grdpod Jake: @bostonsportscenter617 Kyle: @therealkylebaxter Reid: @reidmiller5 GRD: @greenrunsdeep
GRD Podcast is back with it's full crew and then some! The boys invited @thespikeking on for tonights episode to give his views on the bubble and the upcoming 2020 NBA Playoffs. This is an action packed episode filled with more Kyle Blunders, Kory oneliners, Reid with some impressive stats, and Jake just being Jake. Make Sure to follow us on Instagram! @grdpod Jake: @bostonsportscenter617 Kyle: @therealkylebaxter Reid: @reidmiller5 GRD: @greenrunsdeep
Welcome to episode three of the GRDPODCAST, the best Celtics podcast in all of Boston. The boys were shorthanded this week without Reid, but went through all the recent Celtics drama. Celtics Center - Who should be starting and what do you feel about Daniel Theis Celtics Playoffs - Predictions on the first round matchup Rajon Rondo - Love him or hate him? Make Sure to follow us on Instagram! @grdpod Jake: @bostonsportscenter617 Kyle: @therealkylebaxter Reid: @reidmiller5 GRD: @greenrunsdeep
Dr Ram, also widely known as KKR, is an esteemed educator, an acclaimed author, strengths coach and a fervent globetrotter. He has visited many nations in pursuit of his academic interests & participated in international conferences to share & enrich his thirst for knowledge. He inspires many thousands of students as the Director of GRD, one of the leading Management/Commerce colleges in India and his students inspire him further. To hear his stories of learning, growing and connecting is a privilege and a delightfully enriching experience. Find Dr Ram Here - https://twitter.com/drkkr https://brandthinkmarketingdo.com/ Find Kerrie here - Website - https://kerriephipps.com/ LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/kerriephipps/ Facebook public figure page - https://www.facebook.com/KerriePhipps1/ Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/kerriephipps/ Twitter - https://twitter.com/KerriePhipps Twitter podcast - https://twitter.com/ConnectingPod --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/kerriephipps/message
Welcome back to another episode of the Green Runs Deep Podcast! In this episode, GRD, Jake, Reid and Kyle talk about: Takeaways from the Suns and Celtics scrimmage Predictions for Rockets and Celtics scrimmage Our predictions for the playoffs We answer your questions!
In this episode of Boston Power Hour, Jake, Caiden, and Lane are joined with Green Runs Deep (GRD). They talked about: How did GRD start his page? What are the Celtics' chances in the playoffs? Thoughts on Kyrie wanting to cancel the playoffs Why the MLB Draft is such a joke What happens to the NHL?
Podcast O Método da Cumbuca com José Elias, Bacharel em Administração pela UPE, com MBA em Gestão de Projetos, Coach, Certificado PMP pelo PMI, com curso pela Falconi Consultores de Resultados, é atualmente Sócio-Diretor de 3 empresas nos segmentos de educação e consultoria, engenharia e tecnologia, além de Professor, Consultor e ex-diretor e atual Presidente do Conselho do Project Management Institute – PE. Colunista nas Rádios Nordeste, UPE e RWI com os temas Empreendedorismo e Gestão de Projetos. Tem experiência em Escritórios de Gerenciamento de Projetos (PMO) de grandes empresas brasileiras e multinacionais. Também possui experiência em serviços de consultoria organizacional como: planejamento estratégico, GPD, GRD, pesquisa de mercado, plano de negócios, análise financeira, estruturação financeira, análise de excelência em gestão, entre outras atividades, para os mais diversos ramos: Construção, TI, Energia, Alimentício, Comércio, Serviços, entre outros. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/pmi-pernambuco-brazil/message
*Topics: *Shenanigans at the house leads to soome rants. *I ran into a dude I used to work with at GRD. *Diana wanted to smash my face in! *I think I set a record for waiting on hold yesterday. *My advice for dealing with people on the phone. *The "Mainstream Media" is a term I hate, but two stories dominated yesterday. My take on both. *Colin Kaepernick doubles down with* *Iran drivel!* ( https://ericzaneshow.com/2020/01/07/colin-kaepernick-doubles-down-with-iran-drivel/ ) * *George Lopez will soon hear a* *knock on his door* ( https://ericzaneshow.com/2020/01/07/comedian-actor-george-lopez-will-be-getting-a-knock-on-his-door-from-people-in-suits-over-joke-i-think/ ) *from people in suits over a joke (I think). ** *The Heidi Broussard case* ( https://ericzaneshow.com/2020/01/07/heidi-broussard-case-takes-even-more-bizarre-twist/ ) *. *Don't F*#k With Cats* *Sponsors on today's podcast: * *BK Guns N Stuff* ( https://www.facebook.com/bkgunsnstuffllc/ ) *,* *Bennett Florring Installation* ( https://bennettflooringinstallation.com/ ) *,* *Blue Frost IT* ( https://www.bluefrostit.com/ ) *,* *Back Alley Comedy Club* ( http://backalleycomedyclub.com/ ) *,* *Kreeps With Kids* ( https://www.ticketweb.com/event/kreeps-with-kids-comedy-tour-emerald-theatre-tickets/10007265 ) *,* *Next Level Arms* ( http://nextlevelarms.com/ ) *,* *Prince Arming* ( http://www.princearming.com/ ) *,* *Franco's Pizza* ( https://www.francosgr.com/ ) *,* *Hudsonville Fit Body Boot Camp* ( https://www.facebook.com/Hudsonvillefitbodybootcamp/ ) *Events we can hang out at: ** *EZSP 1 year anniversary bash.* ( https://www.facebook.com/events/1342075242639626/ ) * *With* *Terry Town RV* ( https://www.terrytownrv.com/?gclid=EAIaIQobChMIjPqX9ZHl5gIVhobACh2uiAybEAAYASAAEgL4FPD_BwE ) *at the* *Grand Rapids Camper, Travel & RV Show* ( https://showspan.com/GRV/home/dates-times-admission/ ) */ Devos Place Thu 1/9 6-8 PM, Fri 1/10 4-6 PM, Sun 1/12 2-4 PM. *Grand Rapids Griffins Great Skate Event Saturday 1/18 4-6 PM Rosa Parks Circle Grand Rapids, Michigan. * *Hire me on Cameo!* ( https://www.cameo.com/ericzane ) *Tickets for Kreeps With Kids* ( https://www.ticketweb.com/event/kreeps-with-kids-comedy-tour-emerald-theatre-tickets/10007265 ) * * *Tshirts available here* ( https://twistedbat.com/collections/eric-zane-show ) *Please subscribe, rate & write a review on Apple Podcasts* ** ( http://patreon.com/ericzane ) *patreon.com/ericzane ( http://patreon.com/ericzane )* * Instagram: ericzaneshow* *Twitter: @ericzaneshow* ** ( http://facebook.com/ericzanefanpage ) *Facebook.com/ericzanefanpage ( http://Facebook.com/ericzanefanpage )*
It's the Season 3 Premiere of GRD, and we have an extended conversation with Denver-based singer-songwriter Joel Ansett about the making of his new album "A Place I Knew Before." ------------ TRACKS FEATURED ----------- * "Slow Down" * "Sugar Coat" * "It Hurts Me" * "Dwelling Place" [All songs are from Joel Ansett's 2019 release "A Place I Knew Before"] ------------ CREDITS -------------- * Joel Ansett's Website: http://joelansett.com * 'A Place I Knew Before' on Spotify: http://is.gd/joelasp * SPONSOR 1: Civilized Creature - http://is.gd/civcre * SPONSOR 2: Matt Case - http://is.gd/mcasesp * SPONSOR 3: UTR's GoFundMe Campaign - https://gofundme.com/utrstudio * Enter the Slugs & Bugs contest - https://utrmedia.org/winsb (c) 2019 UTR Media. All Rights Reserved. A 501(c)(3) non-profit organization - info at https://utrmedia.org
A sample of what you get on the Patreon... Full, uninterrupted shows from a simpler time on GRD with Gregg and Chris. Subscribe at patreon.com/ericzane ( https://www.patreon.com/Ericzane ) Hire me on Cameo! cameo.com/ericzane ( http://cameo.com/ericzane ) Buy a tshirt at https://ericzaneshow.com/ Many styles and colors. Please subscribe, rate & write a review on Apple Podcasts Twitter: @ericzaneshow Facebook.com/ericzanefanpage ( http://facebook.com/ericzanefanpage ) email eric@ericzaneshow.com
Welcome back, citizen! Join us for a micro-battle in the soil! This week, we'll get familiar with nematodes and learn about an incredible adaptation that some familiar fungi have. My guest this time is Dr. Greg Thorn with Western University in London, Ontario. If you want to learn more about this episode's topics, here are some links: The University of Nebraska at Lincoln - nematode page American Phytopathological Society - nematode page Medscape - Icky nematode-caused human diseases Dr. George Barron - University of Guelph The Atlantic - When Tulips Kill Thank you to Dr. Greg Thorn for teaching us about the tricky traps fungi set for their prey, to Rowen Cannon for providing transcription, and to the Mycological Society of America's Student Section. You can access a transcript of this episode here. Please check out my sponsor, Lichen Landscapes, for unique cards and prints and don't forget to enter promo code "FUNGITOWN" to get a 10% discount on your order. Are you a musician? Would you like to have your funky version of Fungi Town featured on the show? Send your .mp3 to fungitownpod [at] gmail [dot] com. If you're enjoying the show so far, please consider becoming a patron. Just click the green "become a Patron" button on your screen (upper right corner) or go here. $1 level gets you access to bonus mini episodes + a Fungi Town vinyl sticker $5 level gets you all of the above + a "Follow Me to Fungi Town" bumper sticker $10 level gets you all of the above + your choice of any of three beautiful mushroom prints by Athens artist Maggie Baxter. If you've already become a patron and want to bump up a level for the new rewards, it's easy! Fungi Town is written, directed and produced by Jen Parrilli and hosted on Podbean. Theme music is by the awesome Athens, GA band Shehehe. Defunked theme music is Fminor_Funk_BassGroove_100bpm by GRD-music used via Creative Commons license through Freesound. Background music is Mycelium by Lookyan. The thumbnail image for this episode was provided by the scientific journal Paracite. You can find Fungi Town on Facebook. Twitter, and Instagram: @fungitownpodor email at fungitownpod[at]gmail[dot]com. Check out the new YouTube channel! Once the channel hits 100 subscribers, I'll be doing a fantastic fungi giveaway!
Welcome back, citizen! What's got people so excited about the Great Lakes? A great discovery in the lakes is getting a lot of attention lately. So, I spoke to the researchers who plumbed the depths of the Great Lakes and brought up something surprising. My guests this time are Dr. Andrew Miller from the University of Illinois and Dr. Robert Cichewicz from the University of Oklahoma. If you want to learn more about this episode's topics, here are some links: Science Direct article - “What Lies Beneath? Fungal diversity at the Bottom of Lake Michigan and Lake Superior” Illinois Prairie Research Institute article - "Scientists find new fungi at the bottom of the Great Lakes" Michigan Radio article - "Could a fungus from the bottom of a the Great Lakes hold a cure for cancer?" What's In Your Backyard? citizen science project Thank you to Dr. Miller and Dr. Cichewicz for sharing their remarkable discoveries with me, to Rowen Cannon for providing transcription, and to Leslie Masson of the Mushroom and Lichen Dyers United group. You can access a transcript of this episode here. Please check out my sponsor, Lichen Landscapes, for unique cards and prints and don't forget to enter promo code "FUNGITOWN" to get a 10% discount on your order. Are you a musician? Would you like to have your version of Fungi Town (like Funky Town) featured on the show? Send your mp3 to fungitownpod [at] gmail [dot] com. If you're enjoying the show so far, please consider becoming a patron. Just click the green "become a Patron" button on your screen (upper right corner) or go here. $1 level gets you access to bonus mini episodes + a Fungi Town vinyl sticker $5 level gets you all of the above + a "Follow Me to Fungi Town" bumper sticker $10 level gets you all of the above + your choice of any of three beautiful mushroom prints by Athens artist Maggie Baxter. If you've already become a patron and want to bump up a level for the new rewards, it's easy! Fungi Town is written, directed and produced by Jen Parrilli and hosted on Podbean. Theme music is by the awesome Athens, GA band Shehehe. Defunked theme music is Fminor_Funk_BassGroove_100bpm by GRD-music used via Creative Commons license through Freesound. Background music is Flammulina velutipes by Keiss. You can find Fungi Town on Facebook. Twitter, and Instagram: @fungitownpod or email at fungitownpod[at]gmail[dot]com. Check out the new YouTube channel! Once the channel hits 100 subscribers, I'll be doing a fantastic fungi giveaway!
Welcome back, citizen! Listen to this very special Halloween episode, where we'll talk about eerie glows, a mushroom that looks like a pumpkin, and fairy rings. My guest this time is Dr. Andrew Miller from the Illinois Natural History Survey. If you want to learn more about this episode's topics, here are some links: Dr. Miller's co-authored article about Omphalotus The Mushroom Expert's "conspiracy" article Current Biology article about bioluminescence Wikipedia's entry on fairy rings Thank you to Dr. Andrew Miller from The Illinois Natural History Survey for sharing his expertise on Omphalotus, Dr. Marin Brewer for teaching us about fairy rings, and to Rowen Cannon for providing the transcript for this episode, which you can find here or in the transcripts tab. Please check out my sponsor, Lichen Landscapes, for unique cards and prints and don't forget to enter "FUNGITOWN" in the order notes. ***Update*** Fungi Town citizen, Leslie Masson, reached out to share some of her findings about this episode's fungi: "I have a foolproof way of distinguishing chanterelles from Jack o’lanterns - put them in hot water. Jack O’Lanterns are a dye fungi so the water will become orange. When put into hot water chanterelles produce a negligible color change. Below are photos of chanterelles (left & top)& jacks (right & bottom) in hot water." Are you a musician? Would you like to have your version of Fungi Town (like Funky Town) featured on the show? Send your mp3 to fungitownpod [at] gmail [dot] com. If you're enjoying the show so far, please consider becoming a patron. Just click the green "become a Patron" button on your screen (upper right corner) or go here. For $1 a month, you get access to exclusive mini episodes of the show, for a $5 montly contribution, you get one of my new Fungi Town bumper stickers, and now there's a $10 option that gives you a choice of any of three beautiful mushroom prints by Athens artist Maggie Baxter. If you've already become a patron and want to bump up a level for the new rewards, it's easy! Fungi Town is written, directed and produced by Jen Parrilli and hosted on Podbean. Theme music is by the awesome Athens, GA band Shehehe. Defunked theme music is Fminor_Funk_BassGroove_100bpm by GRD-music, evil monster laugher by maarten.tepaske, both used via Creative Commons license through Freesound. You can find Fungi Town on Facebook. Twitter, and Instagram: @fungitownpod or email at fungitownpod[at]gmail[dot]com. Check out the new YouTube channel! Once the channel hits 100 subscribers, I'll be doing a fantastic fungi giveaway!
Aodan Enright – 1% BetterWelcome to Episode 85 of the 1% Better Podcast.I’m very much delighted to introduce Aodan Enright as my guest for this episode. Aodan is someone I’ve taken inspiration from, admired and enjoyed getting to know over the last couple of years and was someone I’ve wanted to have on to the show from the very start. Now it's a reality. We both share a fascination for human performance and this conversation certainly lived up to my hopes and expectations.Aodan is the Founder of Smarter Egg, where he works to help people: organisations, business owners, self-employed, high-calibre professionals. He’s an Executive Coach and works one-to-one with clients. Aodan also gives talks, plays the role of MC/Interview for events and runs events himself that align to his passion for personal development.During this interview, we cover a lot of ground and it has lots of useful and practical insights that you can use. So I would recommend getting a pen and paper out and taking notes! Active learning required.Below is a summary questions and answers as well as timings. Expect to see more and more Aodan out and about more in the coming weeks and month.My asks to you – enjoy, learn, take action, and share this with others.Summary:0-1min - Intro & How to get to the point in posts/articles1min – function of growing up and finding your voice3min – Working with the inner voice – the best approach to fight with it?4min – Curiosity and deep thinking from the early days5mins – Thinking about Big Questions as a teenager6mins – Getting more and more interested in Things!7mins – The Arsenal Affliction and Good times!8mins – Learning as a passion but not a big fan of school10mins – Working in the Engineering Initially and having no plan!11mins – Conforming in School13 mins – Not seeing a career path in psychology or development14 mins – starting to move towards people management and development16 mins – Getting to know Thyself – Focusing more on why people behave the way they do!18 mins – Six Sigma & Lean Thinking19 mins – Pull & Push Factors as a turning point in making to the move to go solo!21mins – The importance of Thinking Things and Reinventing Himself23 mins – Returning to the Voice in the Head in the early days!25 mins – Learning to take value from the network during Executive Coaching Training28 mins – The Curse of Knowledge with opening up and reflecting!!!!!29 mins - Emotional Intelligence and EQ being an underappreciated element of work today30 mins – Understanding what to focus on next!32 mins – The Ego of saying Yes and developing the ability to say No!You’re better off going with someone else!34 mins – Smarter Egg, the beginnings, the concept and how it’s grown.36 mins – Biggest Successes – Satisfaction from connecting others39 mins – Lessons learned – Overreaching41 mins – Feeling & Intuition – Trusting the Gut – Pay attention of what’s screaming to you!43 mins – All Data should be respected44 mins – Coaching the Coach - The importance of verbalising everything going on in your head – there is more than one way of thinking/seeing/feeling46 mins – Knowing when to delegate now – getting better at this! Courage needed here.47 mins – A role that gives the greatest joy – designing and delivery of the solution.49 mins – Do the same talk twice and the value of this.50 mins – Quarterly Off-sites and Approaches taken – following the process52 mins - Reduction in the % of people averting their gaze when talking about self-reflection. Meditation and Mindfulness55mins onwards - 1% Better Tips:Goal Setting – Running Life Through ProjectsGetting Things Done (GTD) System – David AllenResilience about the habits we keep – Neil O’BrienConversations as a key tool to bounce backMeditation – The ability to calmly put things into perspectiveAnchor Problem – Holding you down!Favourite Saying or Cliché – All models are wrong, some are usefulBook Recommendations:Mindful Walking – Hugh O’Donovan - https://amzn.to/2CT2Na4How to have a good day – Caroline Webb - https://amzn.to/2NRwvxdConnect in with Aodan & sign up for his Sunday Morning Newsletterwww.smarteregg.comTwitter - @AodanEnrightPLEASE DO LET ME KNOW WHAT YOU THINK VIA THE FEEDBACK PAGE OR ANY OF THE SOCIALS – LINKS BELOW:Email Twitter Facebook WebsiteYOU CAN SUBSCRIBE TO BOTH SHOW ON APPLE & GOOGLE PODCASTS APPS – JUST CLICK ON THE BELOW LINKShttp://eepurl.com/c1-GRD
Aodan Enright – 1% BetterWelcome to Episode 85 of the 1% Better Podcast.I’m very much delighted to introduce Aodan Enright as my guest for this episode. Aodan is someone I’ve taken inspiration from, admired and enjoyed getting to know over the last couple of years and was someone I’ve wanted to have on to the show from the very start. Now it's a reality. We both share a fascination for human performance and this conversation certainly lived up to my hopes and expectations.Aodan is the Founder of Smarter Egg, where he works to help people: organisations, business owners, self-employed, high-calibre professionals. He’s an Executive Coach and works one-to-one with clients. Aodan also gives talks, plays the role of MC/Interview for events and runs events himself that align to his passion for personal development.During this interview, we cover a lot of ground and it has lots of useful and practical insights that you can use. So I would recommend getting a pen and paper out and taking notes! Active learning required.Below is a summary questions and answers as well as timings. Expect to see more and more Aodan out and about more in the coming weeks and month.My asks to you – enjoy, learn, take action, and share this with others.Summary:0-1min - Intro & How to get to the point in posts/articles1min – function of growing up and finding your voice3min – Working with the inner voice – the best approach to fight with it?4min – Curiosity and deep thinking from the early days5mins – Thinking about Big Questions as a teenager6mins – Getting more and more interested in Things!7mins – The Arsenal Affliction and Good times!8mins – Learning as a passion but not a big fan of school10mins – Working in the Engineering Initially and having no plan!11mins – Conforming in School13 mins – Not seeing a career path in psychology or development14 mins – starting to move towards people management and development16 mins – Getting to know Thyself – Focusing more on why people behave the way they do!18 mins – Six Sigma & Lean Thinking19 mins – Pull & Push Factors as a turning point in making to the move to go solo!21mins – The importance of Thinking Things and Reinventing Himself23 mins – Returning to the Voice in the Head in the early days!25 mins – Learning to take value from the network during Executive Coaching Training28 mins – The Curse of Knowledge with opening up and reflecting!!!!!29 mins - Emotional Intelligence and EQ being an underappreciated element of work today30 mins – Understanding what to focus on next!32 mins – The Ego of saying Yes and developing the ability to say No!You’re better off going with someone else!34 mins – Smarter Egg, the beginnings, the concept and how it’s grown.36 mins – Biggest Successes – Satisfaction from connecting others39 mins – Lessons learned – Overreaching41 mins – Feeling & Intuition – Trusting the Gut – Pay attention of what’s screaming to you!43 mins – All Data should be respected44 mins – Coaching the Coach - The importance of verbalising everything going on in your head – there is more than one way of thinking/seeing/feeling46 mins – Knowing when to delegate now – getting better at this! Courage needed here.47 mins – A role that gives the greatest joy – designing and delivery of the solution.49 mins – Do the same talk twice and the value of this.50 mins – Quarterly Off-sites and Approaches taken – following the process52 mins - Reduction in the % of people averting their gaze when talking about self-reflection. Meditation and Mindfulness55mins onwards - 1% Better Tips:Goal Setting – Running Life Through ProjectsGetting Things Done (GTD) System – David AllenResilience about the habits we keep – Neil O’BrienConversations as a key tool to bounce backMeditation – The ability to calmly put things into perspectiveAnchor Problem – Holding you down!Favourite Saying or Cliché – All models are wrong, some are usefulBook Recommendations:Mindful Walking – Hugh O’Donovan - https://amzn.to/2CT2Na4How to have a good day – Caroline Webb - https://amzn.to/2NRwvxdConnect in with Aodan & sign up for his Sunday Morning Newsletterwww.smarteregg.comTwitter - @AodanEnrightPLEASE DO LET ME KNOW WHAT YOU THINK VIA THE FEEDBACK PAGE OR ANY OF THE SOCIALS – LINKS BELOW:Email Twitter Facebook WebsiteYOU CAN SUBSCRIBE TO BOTH SHOW ON APPLE & GOOGLE PODCASTS APPS – JUST CLICK ON THE BELOW LINKShttp://eepurl.com/c1-GRD
Welcome back, citizen! Life on Earth faces some serious challenges. In this episode, I'll go over some of the major events that have shaped life on our planet and talk about our current "extinction event." I'll also speak with Dr. Taegan McMahon about her efforts to save our amphibian species. If you want to learn more about this episode's topics, here are some links: Mass Extinctions (American Museum of Natural History) Mass Extinctions (National Geographic) Cambrian Extinction (Live Science) Devonian Extinction (Encyclopedia Britannica) Anthropocene Extinction (Time) Amphibian Extictions (NZFrog) Thank you to Dr. Taegan McMahon from The University of Tampa for sharing her expertise on frogs and fungi, and to Rowen Cannon for providing the transcript for this episode, which you can find here. Please check out my sponsor, Lichen Landscapes, for unique cards and prints and don't forget to enter "FUNGITOWN" in the order notes. Are you a musician? Would you like to have your version of Fungi Town (like Funky Town) featured on the show? Send your mp3 to fungitownpod [at] gmail [dot] com. If you're enjoying the show so far, please consider becoming a patron. Just click the green "become a Patron" button on your screen (upper right corner) or go here. For $1 a month, you get access to exclusive mini episodes of the show, for a $5 montly contribution, you get one of my new Fungi Town bumper stickers, and now there's a $10 option that gives you a choice of any of three beautiful mushroom prints by Athens artist Maggie Baxter. If you've already become a patron and want to bump up a level for the new rewards, it's easy! Fungi Town is written, directed and produced by Jen Parrilli and hosted on Podbean. Theme music is by the awesome Athens, GA band Shehehe. Defunked theme music is Fminor_Funk_BassGroove_100bpm by GRD-music, wildlife by conleec, bats by klankschap, and cane toads by bhobby all used via Creative Commons license through Freesound. Ominous music was Psathyrella Aquatica by Sobrio, also used through a Creative Commons license. You can find Fungi Town on Facebook. Twitter, and Instagram: @fungitownpod or email at fungitownpod[at]gmail[dot]com. Check out the new YouTube channel! Once the channel hits 100 subscribers, I'll be doing a fantastic fungi giveaway!
Welcome back, citizen! What do gangrene, witches, and LSD have in common? Find out when I talk to Dr. Anthony Glenn from the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Agricultural Research Service about the plant pathogen known as ergot of rye. If you want to learn more about this episode's topics, here are some links: Claviceps purpurea (Wikipedia) Ergot (American Phytopathological Society) Grass (Encyclopedia Britannica) Thank you to Dr. Anthony Glenn from The USDA for sharing his expertise on the show and to Rowen Cannon for providing the transcript for this episode, which you can find here. Please check out my sponsor, Lichen Landscapes, for unique cards and prints and don't forget to enter "FUNGITOWN" in the order notes. Are you a musician? Would you like to have your version of Fungi Town (like Funky Town) featured on the show? Send your mp3 to fungitownpod [at] gmail [dot] com. If you're enjoying the show so far, please consider becoming a patron. Just click the green "become a Patron" button on your screen (upper right corner) or go here. For $1 a month, you get access to exclusive mini episodes of the show, for a $5 montly contribution, you get one of my new Fungi Town bumper stickers, and now there's a $10 option that gives you a choice of any of three beautiful mushroom prints by Athens artist Maggie Baxter. If you've already become a patron and want to bump up a level for the new rewards, it's easy! Fungi Town is written, directed and produced by Jen Parrilli and hosted on Podbean. Theme music is by the awesome Athens, GA band Shehehe. Defunked theme music is Fminor_Funk_BassGroove_100bpm by GRD-music, lawn mower by ainayave, baseball hit by AmishRob, and grasswalk by smaigin; all used via Creative Commons license through Freesound. You can find Fungi Town on Facebook. Twitter, and Instagram: @fungitownpod or email at fungitownpod[at]gmail[dot]com. Check out the new YouTube channel! Once the channel hits 100 subscribers, I'll be doing a fantastic fungi giveaway!
Welcome back, citizen! Invasive species are a hot topic these days. With pythons in Florida and Lion Fish at the Atlantic coast, they're making news everywhere. But what exactly is an "invasive species" and how do we control them? I'll answer those questions and talk to Kristen Wickert from West Virginia University about how she's learning to control an invasive tree. If you want to learn more about this episode's topics, here are some links: Kudzu (Atlantic Journal Constitution) Kudzu (Smithsonian Magazine) Lion Fish (NOAA) Lion Fish (Nature) Biolcontrol (Sciencing.com) Biocontrol (Biocontrol Journal) Cane Toads (National Geographic) Cane Toads (Australian Government) Mongoose (Hawaiian Government) Mongoose (MauiInvasive.org) Mongoose (BigIslandNow.com) Tree-of-Heaven (Nature Conservancy) Tree-of-Heaven (Maryland Dept. of Natural Resources) Tree-of-Heaven (USDA) A photo comparing healthy and infected branches: A photo showing the transfer of purple dye in Kristen's experiment: Thank you to Kristen Wickert from West Virginia University for sharing her expertise on the show and to Dr. Marin Brewer for her contribution to De-funked! You can read Kristen's paper titled, "Seed Production, Viability, and Reproductive Limits of the Invasive Ailanthus altissima (Tree-of-Heaven) within Invaded Environments" here. Please check out my sponsor, Lichen Landscapes, for unique cards and prints and don't forget to enter "FUNGITOWN" in the order notes. Are you a musician? Would you like to have your version of Fungi Town (like Funky Town) featured on the show? Send your mp3 to fungitownpod [at] gmail [dot] com. If you're enjoying the show so far, please consider becoming a patron. Just click the green "become a Patron" button on your screen (upper right corner) or go here. For $1 a month, you get access to exclusive mini episodes of the show, for a $5 montly contribution, you get a snazzy Fungi Town logo vinyl sticker PLUS access to the mini episodes, and now there's a $10 option that gives you a choice of any of three beautiful mushroom prints by Athens artist Maggie Baxter. If you've already become a patron and want to bump up a level for the new rewards, it's easy! Fungi Town is written, directed and produced by Jen Parrilli and hosted on Podbean. Theme music is by the awesome Athens, GA band Shehehe. Defunked theme music is Fminor_Funk_BassGroove_100bpm by GRD-music, eating apple by niwki, wind by InspectorJ, african-lion by soundbytez, ship horn by Grotelue, creaky dock by kev_durr, ship bell by CGEffex, pet shop by RTB45, boa constrictor by Kjell Persson, chopping wood by MAJ061785, chomp chew bite by bbrocer, tea by MC_Minnaar, gulp by brookmorgan, spray by WeeJee_vdH, squeak by Nakhas, and cane toad by bhobby; all used via Creative Commons license through Freesound. Photos were contributed by Kristen Wickert and used with permission. You can find Fungi Town on Facebook. Twitter, and Instagram: @fungitownpod or email at fungitownpod[at]gmail[dot]com. Check out the new YouTube channel! Once the channel hits 100 subscribers, I'll be doing a fantastic fungi giveaway! A transcript of this episode is available here.
Welcome back, citizen! This episode is the long-awaited smut episode! But, no need to usher the kids out of the room, because I'm talking - of course - about a type of fungi. My guest, Dr. Marin Brewer of the University of Georgia's Plant Pathology department, will talk about the biology of Ustilago maydis. I'll also speak to Daniel Brooks from Licha's Cantina about cooking with huitlacoche, a.k.a. "corn smut". Here are some articles about this episode's fungus: Food Republic Aqui es Texcoco restaurant PBS video NPR article Are you a musician? Would you like to have your version of Fungi Town (like Funky Town) featured on the show? Send your mp3 to fungitownpod [at] gmail [dot] com. Very special thanks goes to Leah Churner, host of the Hothouse podcast, for helping me connect with Licha's Cantina. If you're interested in permaculture or just like to garden, check out her show on her website or wherever you get your podcasts. If you're enjoying the show so far, please consider becoming a patron. Just click the green "become a Patron" button on your screen (upper right corner) or go here. For $1 a month, you get access to exclusive mini episodes of the show, for a $5 montly contribution, you get a snazzy Fungi Town logo vinyl sticker PLUS access to the mini episodes, and now there's a $10 option that gives you a choice of any of three beautiful mushroom prints by Athens artist Maggie Baxter. If you've already become a patron and want to bump up a level for the new rewards, it's easy! Fungi Town is written, directed and produced by Jen Parrilli and hosted on Podbean. Theme music is by the awesome Athens, GA band Shehehe. Defunked theme music is Fminor_Funk_BassGroove_100bpm by GRD-music, record scratch by luffy, and smutty music by leehayeskerr, all used via Creative Commons license through Freesound. Photo was taken by Jen Parrilli. You can find Fungi Town on Facebook. Twitter, and Instagram: @fungitownpod or email at fungitownpod[at]gmail[dot]com. Check out the new YouTube channel! Once the channel hits 100 subscribers, I'll be doing a fantastic fungi giveaway!
Welcome back, citizen! This episode, I focus on having fun with fibers. My guest, Alissa Allen of Mycopigments, will talk about how to turn mushrooms and lichens into yarn dye! As a fiber artist, I'm especially excited to learn about this creative alternative to chemical colors. I'll also speak to Alissa's client and friend, Tess Barlow, about her experiences discovering her regional color palette. (Big apologies for the sticky keyboard sounds during Alissa's interview. I spilled beer on my laptop. T_T) You can reach Alissa and other mushroom dyers on the Mushroom and Lichen Dyers United Facebook group. You can find a brief overview of the known history of dyes here. I'll be going to the Podcast Movement convention next week, to learn about how to be a better podcaster and improve the quality of the show. If you're enjoying it so far, please consider becoming a patron. Just click the green "become a Patron" button on your screen (upper right corner) or go here. For $1 a month, you get access to exclusive mini episodes of the show, for a $5 montly contribution, you get a snazzy Fungi Town logo vinyl sticker PLUS access to the mini episodes, and now there's a $10 option that gives you a choice of any of three beautiful mushroom prints by Athens artist Maggie Baxter. If you've already become a patron and want to bump up a level for the new rewards, it's easy! Fungi Town is written, directed and produced by Jen Parrilli and hosted on Podbean. Theme music is by the awesome Athens, GA band Shehehe. Defunked theme music is Fminor_Funk_BassGroove_100bpm by GRD-music and sheep sounds are by soundmary; both used via Creative Commons license through Freesound. Photo is by guest Alissa Allen and has been resized. You can find Fungi Town on Facebook. Twitter, and Instagram: @fungitownpod or email at fungitownpod[at]gmail[dot]com.
Welcome back, citizen! This week, Fungi Town has gone batty! These often misunderstood but very beneficial creatures are one of the most fascinating things in nature. We've got 47 species in North America. One of America's native bats is the Pallid bat, that feeds on the "deathstalker" scorpion, the sting of which is said to be able to kill an adult human. Did you know that Austin, TX is home to the largest urban bat colony in the world? Those bats can eat tons of insects per night! But North America's bats represent only 3% of the worlds bat species. I could go on and on about all of the great things about bats, but I've brought in two great guests this episode to share their love for bats. Karen Vanderwolf of the University of Wisconsin and Melissa Ingala from the American Museum of Natural History will help us learn about the biggest threat to our bats: White Nose Syndrome. For a WNS distribution map, go here. What do you do if you've found a bat? Generally, you shouldn't disturb it, but if you think it may be injured or in danger, here are a few links where you can learn how to safely help the bat and who you can contact for help. Bat World Sanctuary, Inc. - in the U.S. Essex Bat Group - in the U.K. If you'd like to help bats in general, consider donating or volunteering to one of these organizations: Bat Conservation International Lubee Bat Conservancy If you're a member of the caving community, here are some resources that cover how to help protect bats while you're caving: Bat Caver White-Nose Syndrome.org Great news! I'm going to the Podcast Movement convention in July. If you'd like to support my attendence at the world's largest podcasting convention, please consider becoming a patron. Just click the green "become a Patron" button on your screen (upper right corner) or go here. For $1 a month, you get access to exclusive mini episodes of the show, for a $5 montly contribution, you get a snazzy Fungi Town logo vinyl sticker PLUS access to the mini episodes, and now there's a $10 option that gives you a choice of any of three beautiful mushroom prints by Athens artist Maggie Baxter. If you've already become a patron and want to bump up a level for the new rewards, it's easy! Fungi Town is written, directed and produced by Jen Parrilli and hosted on Podbean. The new theme music is by the awesome Athens, GA band Shehehe. Defunked theme music is Fminor_Funk_BassGroove_100bpm by GRD-music, bat sounds are by klankschap, insect sounds are by heatfuse used via Creative Commons license through Freesound. Photo is by guest Karen Vanderwolf and has been cropped and resized. You can find Fungi Town on Facebook. Twitter, and Instagram: @fungitownpod or email at fungitownpod[at]gmail[dot]com.
Welcome back, citizen! In this episode of Fungi Town, we learn about a culinary delicacy from the American south that just might become a boon for Georgia farmers. Cousin to the well-known and much-sought-after European black truffle, the pecan truffle can be found much closer to home, but still fetches a nice price in the local market. Find out what a pecan truffle is, how it was discovered, and where to find it when I talk with Dr. Tim Brenneman from the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences at the University of Georgia and Dr. Matthew Smith and Ph.D. student Arthur Grupe from the University of Florida's Plant Pathology Department. **correction: I mistakenly described the pecan truffle fungus as being endomycorrhizal, when in fact it is ectomycorrhizal. Here's a cute infographic on the differences between the chocolate truffle and the mushroom variety (you'll need to scroll down a little). There's a great article about Georgia Pecan Truffles in Garden & Gun Magazine. To watch a video of my guests with a truffle dog, go here. Want to teach your dog to hunt truffles? Try Truffle Dog Co. or Southern Tradition Kennels. To order pecan truffles, pecan truffle oil, and schedule a truffle hunt, try Pecan Ridge Plantation. To get your science on and view pictures of truffle look-alikes to watch out for, try this. Thirsty? Here's a European black truffle infused vodka called Black Moth (for funzies). During the break, I make an exciting announcement about the Podcast Movement convention in July. If you'd like to support the podcast, please consider becoming a patron. Just click the green "become a Patron" button on your screen (upper right corner) or go here. For $1 a month, you get access to exclusive mini episodes of the show, for a $5 montly contribution, you get a snazzy Fungi Town logo vinyl sticker PLUS access to the mini episodes, and now there's a $10 option that gives you a choice of any of three beautiful mushroom prints by Athens artist Maggie Baxter. If you've already become a patron and want to bump up a level for the new rewards, it's easy! Fungi Town is written, directed and produced by Jen Parrilli and hosted on Podbean. The new theme music is by the awesome Athens, GA band Shehehe. Defunked theme music is Fminor_Funk_BassGroove_100bpm by GRD-music used via Creative Commons license through Freesound. Photo is by guest Dr. Matthew Smith and has been cropped and resized. You can find Fungi Town on Facebook. Twitter, and Instagram: @fungitownpod or email at fungitownpod[at]gmail[dot]com.
Hello, citizen. Welcome back to Fungi Town! This time, we go underground to explore complex relationship between orchids and fungi. Did you know that all orchids depend on underground fungi to grow? In fact, most plants grow better with a fungal partner. But it's not all smiles and handshakes in this relationship. Find out more as I talk to Melissa McCormick from the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center about mycorhizzal fungi. For a good overview of mycorrhizae, check out this article from Untamed Science. For a thorough read about orchids, try this entry by Encyclopedia Britannica. Confused about ecto and endo mycorrhizae? Here's a great infographic from Plant Science 4U. Okay, now WTF is an "endophyte?" Yeah, here's Wikipedia's entry on the subject. Special thanks to my guests, Melissa McCormick, as well as Dr. Dorset Trapnell and Patrick Smallwood of UGA's Plant Biology department. If you like this podcast, please consider becoming a patron. To get access to special mini episodes and a sweet vinyl sticker, just visit www.fungitown.com and click the green "become a patron" button in the upper right corner of your screen. How about leaving a review? Leaving a review on Apple Podcasts will go a long way toward helping other listeners find their way to Fungi Town. New episodes are released every two weeks. Join me next time, when we talk about a subterranian southern delicacy. Fungi Town is written, directed and produced by Jen Parrilli and hosted on Podbean. The new theme music is by the awesome Athens, GA band Shehehe. Defunked theme music is Fminor_Funk_BassGroove_100bpm by GRD-music, Ice Cream Truck Melody, Wind, kisses, and Primary school children playing were cropped and used via Creative Commons license through Freesound. You can find Fungi Town on Facebook. Twitter, and Instagram: @fungitownpod or email at fungitownpod[at]gmail[dot]com.
Hi citizen! Welcome back to Fungi Town! This week, we focus on the amazing ability some fungi have to clean our environment. Lots of people enjoy growing and eating oyster mushrooms, but did you know that they can also clean diesel fuel and motor oil out of the soil? They're not the only species of fungi skilled at breaking down toxic materials. Since fungi don't have mouths and stomachs, they have to digest their food outside of their bodies and then reabsorb the nutrient soup that results. These digestive secretions, known as enzymes, are great at breaking big molecules (like petrochemicals) down into smaller, digestable ones. Join me as I talk to two mycoremediation experts about the great possiblilites and the challenges of cleaning our Earth with fungi. To read about how brown rot fungi can be used in the biofuel industry, go here. To learn more about dog waste and waterways, check out this pamplet by the Athens-Clarke County Transportation and Public Works Department. To find out more about Athens' chicken laws, check out this article in The Flagpole. Special thanks to my guests: Tradd Cotter of Mushroom Mountain in South Carolina. His book is Organic Mushroom Farming and Mycoremediation, published by Chelsea Green, contains several remediation projects you can do at home with a limited budget. And to Levon Durr of Fungaia Farm. If you like this podcast, please consider becoming a patron. To get access to special mini episodes and a sweet vinyl sticker, just visit www.fungitown.com and click the green "become a patron" button in the upper right corner of your screen. How about leaving a review? Leaving a review on Apple Podcasts will go a long way toward helping other listeners find their way to Fungi Town. New episodes are released every two weeks. Join me next time, when we talk about the fascinating relationship between fungi and orchids. Fungi Town is written, directed and produced by Jen Parrilli and hosted on Podbean. Theme Music was created using the Bandimal App from Yatatoy. Defunked theme music is Fminor_Funk_BassGroove_100bpm by GRD-music, sound effects were Chopping Onion by ObieDaz and Butter Sizzling by hmoosher, all used via Creative Commons license through Freesound. You can find Fungi Town on Facebook. Twitter, and Instagram: @fungitownpod or email at fungitownpod[at]gmail[dot]com.
Hi citizen! Welcome back to Fungi Town! This week, we investigate the mysterious partnership between fungi and algae that forms lichen. Although they may look like moss and live in some of the same habitats, lichens are completely different organisms. To help me explain what lichens are and what makes them so interesting, my guest Dr. Frank Bungartz from Arizona State University and the Charles Darwin Foundation talks about his work in the Sonoran Desert and the Galapagos Islands. We'll also discuss a new discovery that de-funked over 140 years of lichenology. To learn more about Tony Spribille's discovery, check out the excellent videos below: SciShow Talk Show What's in a Lichen - National Geographic If you like this podcast, please consider becoming a patron. To get access to special mini episodes and some sweet vinyl stickers, just visit www.fungitown.com and click the green "become a patron" button in the upper right corner of your screen. How about leaving a review? Leaving a review on Apple Podcasts will go a long way toward helping other listeners find their way to Fungi Town. New episodes are released every two weeks. Join me next time, when we talk about how fungi may be the solution to cleaning up our environment. Special thanks to my guests: Dr. Frank Bungartz of Arizona State University and the Charles Darwin Foundation and Haley Golz of Lichen Landscapes, who contributed the artwork for this episode. Check out her website for some beautiful prints and cards. Fungi Town is written, directed and produced by Jen Parrilli and hosted on Podbean. Theme Music was created using the Bandimal App from Yatatoy. Defunked theme music is Fminor_Funk_BassGroove_100bpm by GRD-music, used via Creative Commons license through Freesound. You can find Fungi Town on Facebook. Twitter, and Instagram: @fungitownpod or email at fungitownpod[at]gmail[dot]com.
Welcome back to Fungi Town! This week, we explore one of my favorite topics - beer! What has beer got to do with fungi? Everything! In fact, you can't make beer without it. Join me as I talk to two beer brewing experts and find out what role our fungal friends have in making the most consumed alcoholic beverage on the planet. (But you don't have to be 21 to listen.) Then, I'll travel to Walton County to visit with a healthcare professional who will help me de-funk a fungi myth. Please like this podcast and subscribe! Leaving a review on Apple Podcasts will go a long way toward helping other listeners find their way to Fungi Town. New episodes are released every two weeks. Join me next time, when we talk about the crustiest - or crustose-iest - fungi of all, lichens. Special thanks to my guests: David Thornton of Carolina Bauernhaus Ales and Southyeast Labs, Brian Roth from Southern Brewing Company, and Kelsey Flick of the Walton County Health Department. Thanks also go to Sarah Peck and Eric Wagoner for their assistance. Fungi Town is written, directed and produced by Jen Parrilli and hosted on Podbean. Theme Music was created using the Bandimal App from Yatatoy. Defunked theme music is Fminor_Funk_BassGroove_100bpm by GRD-music, used via Creative Commons license through Freesound. You can find Fungi Town on Facebook. Twitter, and Instagram: @fungitownpod or email at fungitownpod[at]gmail[dot]com.
Welcome back to Fungi Town! One of the very best ways to learn about mushrooms is to go out and find them. But once you do, how do you know what you've got? How do you know if it's poisonous? Where should you look to find more of them? To answer any of those questions, you'll need to get a proper mushroom ID and on this episode of Fungi Town, we'll find out how to do just that! Here are a few of the mushroom identification resources mentioned in this episode: Mushroom Observer Mushroom Expert Mushrooms Demystified Yellow Elanor Here's a simple mushroom diagram: Please like this podcast and subscribe! Leaving a review on Apple Podcasts will go a long way toward helping other listeners find their way to Fungi Town. New episodes are released every two weeks. Join me next time, when we talk about one of my favorite subjects - beer! Special Thanks to Alan Rockefeller for his input on mushroom identification, Bill Sheehan and Sam Landes of the Mushroom Club of Georgia for helping me connect with Alan, and Rachel Zoller from Yellow Elanor for letting me use her wonderful mushroom diagram. Fungi Town is written, directed and produced by Jen Parrilli and hosted on Podbean. Theme Music was created using the Bandimal App from Yatatoy. Defunked theme music is Fminor_Funk_BassGroove_100bpm by GRD-music-, School bell.wav is by 13FPanska_Stranska_Michaela, chalkboard-writing-pan-timelapse.wav is by newagesoup, and Spy Music.wav is by Alvinwhatup2, all used via Creative Commons license through Freesound. You can find Fungi Town on Facebook. Twitter, and Instagram: @fungitownpod or email at fungitownpod[at]gmail[dot]com.
Segelpodcast.com: Segeln, Wale, Delfine und Mee(h)r von und mit Monika Bubel
www.segelpodcast.com 079 - Klaus Heyser im Interview (15) - Gesellschaft zur Rettung der Delphine In Folge 079 - Klaus Heyser im Interview (15) - Gesellschaft zur Rettung der Delphine habe ich Klaus Heyser auf der Boot in Düsseldorf über die Gesellschaft zur Rettung der Delphine interviewt. Ich war ja am 28.01.2017 auf der Bootsmesse unterwegs und hatte am Stand der Gesellschaft zur Rettung der Delphine auch zwei tolle Interviews mit Nina Kreicker von Dolphin Watch Alliance und Constanze Conrad von Blue heaven holidays, beides Biologinnen, die sich für die Wasserwelt in Ägypten einsetzen. Unterstützt werden sie dabei von der Gesellschaft zur Rettung der Delphine, die 1991 von Segler Rollo Gebhard gegründet wurde. Schon im Jahr 1992 traf Klaus Heyser auf der Boot auf Rollo Gebhard und setzt sich seit dem mit der Gesellschaft zur Rettung der Delphine für den Delfinschutz weltweit ein. Klaus sprach mit mir über die Anfänge des gemeinnnützigen Vereins, die Hauptprobleme der Meeresbewohner und welche Projekte in welchen Ländern von der GRD unterstützt werden. Er erwähnte auch kurz, dass mit Sigmar Solbach nun ein bekannter Schauspieler, der den Gründer Rollo Gebhard über lange Jahre gekannt und unterstützt hat, neuer Vorsitzender der Gesellschaft ist. Ich wünsche dir viel Spaß und Erkenntnisse beim Interview mit Klaus Heyser und natürlich wie immer LEBE FREIHEIT deine Moni Hier geht es zur "Gesellschaft zur Rettung der Delphine" http://www.delphinschutz.org/ www.segelpodcast.com www.waleunddelfine.de
Show Notes: 01:11 - Doing Dumb Stuff aka “Throwaway Projects” 06:06 - Combatting Burnout 10:01 - Dumb Projects That Pay You Back 17:00 - Brainstorming and Abstraction 25:19 - chillestmonkey.com 20:19 - “The Iron Triangle”: Creativity, Accomplishment, and Learning Resources: React Native and Chill: A tale of stupid made fast by Charles Lowell Transcript: CHARLES: Hello, everybody and welcome to The Frontside Podcast, Episode 59. We're getting up there, 59. That's like, I don't know, it's not a milestone but it's something. ROBERT: It's like one away from 60. CHARLES: Yeah, it is. It's past middle age. It's like elderly. ROBERT: Start thinking about retirement. CHARLES: Yeah, exactly. JEFFREY: These are our golden years. [Laughter] CHARLES: Welcome to the golden years. ROBERT: All right. Possibly, we need to go and watch the Golden Girls. [Laughter] CHARLES: Actually, I think it was only five or six episodes, maybe 10 episodes, we were singing The Golden Girls theme so it all comes back around. We're here with a very special guest and that guest is nobody. It's just folks from The Frontside -- JEFFREY: I was hoping you would say it was Betty White. [Laughter] CHARLES: We're going to fly it solo or like tri-lo or like trio. ROBERT: Trello? CHARLES: Trello. I, of course, am Charles Lowell. With me is Jeffrey Cherewaty and Robert DeLuca. Hey, guys. JEFFREY & ROBERT: Hey, what's up? CHARLES: We were kicking ideas around and something that's been kind of percolating around the offices is a theme for 2017 is doing dumb stuff, just stuff that has no apparent value but that you can learn from. I think, we each have a bunch of these experiences where we've done something a very little import that ends up being really, really helpful, either both in the short-term and the near-term. JEFFREY: And who knows, maybe this episode will turn out the same way. ROBERT: Oh, how meta. This could become a black mirror episode. I'm start to questioning my values. CHARLES: I know for me, I recently did some explorations into React Native, which I found to be very edifying. I could obviously talk about that experience quite a bit I did on a blog post but I'm curious, if you guys recently had something that was a throw away, something that you did that wouldn't really matter if it had come into existence or it didn't but it's just so happens that in this thread of reality, it did. ROBERT: You know, I have. It's always been centered around the impagination library that we wrote here. I was always kind of intimidated by impagination for some reason because it was this big library that I didn't necessarily understand. I was like, "You know what? I'm just going to go for it. I'm going to go do something dumb with it," and then I just decided to implement the most useless infinite scroll. It solved absolutely nothing and as you're paginating through 500 records of robots from Faker, I sat down and spent six days and wrote some code and implemented it React Native and it was actually the most informative and fun thing I've ever did. I don't feel tied to it. CHARLES: Yeah, so what kind of inspired to do that? Because usually, it feels like there's this pressure to ship something. Ship something is like just go build something but the idea is that you're going to build something that people actually might use. ROBERT: Yeah, I always had that idea. Maybe you can think about it as like feeling getting cornered, like the pressure of shipping sort of pushing me into a corner. Then eventually, I just kind of lash it out like, "No, screw this. I'm out." I'm going to go do something that's not even useful. I don't care. I'm not going to try and support people or make it to something that other people can use. If that is what falls out of this, that's cool but I'm going to totally sidestep and this needs to be something that other people can use. Sometimes, when I go to build a project, I start thinking, "This is going to be in my GitHub public profile. What if somebody comes and finds it? What are they going to think about my code?" And I just shed all of that fear away, then what happened is I learned a ton. After that experience, I was like, "Whoa. This is massively valuable." CHARLES: Yeah, like hearing you talk about it makes me think about one time I went to a Picasso art exhibit and they had all these sketches that he'd made just in pencil from when he was younger and they were in studies. I guess, apparently artists do this a lot where it was like just a goat's leg. Or some old man's nose. You know, just in pencil or charcoal and these are little tropes that he later integrated into all of his painting -- ROBERT: That is an amazing way to put. JEFFREY: It's funny. When you see engineering tutorials are like, "This is how you learn to make software." A lot of times that is the way they're structured it is around studies. Like, "Make this little tiny thing that by itself is worthless but can be part of a greater whole." ROBERT: Yeah, take that impagination infinite scroll thing, I think three months later, it turned into a full on talk about co-chairing between React and React Native but it started with this dumb little project that I decided, "If I don't finish it, nothing bad happens. It just kind of sits there and rots." I feel no guilt. No pressure. JEFFREY: Would you say that was part of your blue period? [Laughter] CHARLES: Yeah, I like you [inaudible] point to like ship it. It's like we have a culture of ship it or don't. In any way, it's entirely up to you. ROBERT: I kind of thought to think about it as the extreme of ship it. Literally, just ship it even if it doesn't work. CHARLES: Right, ship it even if it's wrong. ROBERT: The other thing that I figured out was who is to determine what's wrong or right. I figured out that no one like I figured that out and I choose if it's wrong or right. CHARLES: Right, and it's like whether I learned something or whether I didn't or whether I get to be the arbiter of what I get out of this experience. ROBERT: And you almost always learn something. Always. CHARLES: Yeah, you definitely do. I think it can pay off, both in the short term and in the long term too. I know with my recent experience, I was feeling extreme burnout. I don't know... You feel like the code that you're working on or the things that you're doing have become a burden. I guess that's kind of to your point, Rob like when you are building something that it creates users. It creates code. It creates maintenance cost. It creates contributors. There's all this mass and inertia and momentum that are for it and that can be great if you own something massive, you can have a lot of momentum and it can be extremely energizing. But it can also be a burden, if it's something that you have to carry and you feel obligated to carry. ROBERT: Yeah and when you have those huge successful projects, things that come to mind like Ember or React or Babel or things like that, those are awesome. But I was always experiencing that responsibility with things where I had big plans for them but nobody knew that just by looking at the projects like it was still very much a work in progress. But I felt that feeling in my gut. CHARLES: Right and that mass and that inertia can come completely and totally from an internal source. It's both important for the project to be like these throwaway projects to be completely and totally free from all attachment, especially from your own dreams and your own ego and things like that. ROBERT: And when I learn to let go, that's when I learn that I'll learn. [Laughter] ROBERT: I'm going to learn-learn. CHARLES: I guess, the kind of greater point that I was making is that when you are able to approach a project like that, then it can be a really intense cure for burnout because you are just allowing yourself to create, you're allowing yourself to feel creative and actually deliver something whose success parameters you define entirely. I think, Brandon actually talked about this almost like two years ago with that robot. That project that he did where he was kind of in a similar situation and he really, really needed to do something that was not a web app. I think there was a series of talks that came out of it but that was primarily for the burnout case. ROBERT: I think I can agree with that. I might have been in the similar situation where I was starting to think about the feeling cornered. It was maybe because of burnout. CHARLES: Maybe those are one of the same. ROBERT: Because I felt like I wasn't producing anything and I was like, "I should be doing this stuff but I feel like I should be but I'm not," and the things that I'm doing aren't great enough because the things that I have done in the past and that's a bad way to think about it. JEFFREY: There's something so refreshing about being able to switch contexts of I've been working on this same app for a few months and doing kind of similar tasks over and over and that's such a nice way to create at really recharge like, "I'm just going to do something completely different and see how that feels." ROBERT: Yeah, I've gotten really good at writing computer properties but I want to write something else. JEFFREY: Just like anyone who does a lot of Ember, they're great at computer properties. CHARLES: It really is the equivalent of throwing a dart into a map. If you're feeling burnt out and you're looking for what to do, There are so many things like you actually aren't cornered. You have the universe of possibilities and the dumber the better. Choose something random that you can do in five minutes, do something random that you can do in an hour or a week or something like that so it has that payoff for being an answer to burnout. I've experienced where these types of activities come back and pay you back down the road. ROBERT: It doesn't have to solve a problem. I was always looking for the next project that I could build that would solve a problem. I always felt like I needed to solve a problem and I was just looking at it backwards. You should also be looking at things like it solve a problem. That's cool. But why not take a piece of technology and like, "How can I bend this? What can I do?" And exercise the different corners of this framework or do just something that's totally useless. CHARLES: I remember actually, that was something that Ryan, when he first started coming to the Ember meetups, he was asking questions about it and I think he was coming from Backbone and was -- ROBERT: Just Ryan from [inaudible]? CHARLES: Yeah, [Ryan Ralph?] from [inaudible] and he was asking questions and like, "Yeah, it's pretty good. The only disadvantage right now is you can't have multiple apps inside of a single tab," so literally he comes back the next month with a talk of how I embedded more than one app in a tab and here's what I had to do it. First thing was like, "Let's see how does it break." Let me prod at it and poke it in and just see what happens. I know I had an experience recently where I had done something really, really stupid with Amazon Lambda and I just very recently came back like the fact that I had actually gone through the process of just deploying a very dumb -- ROBERT: How dumb, Charles? Tell me how dumb? CHARLES: Remember when I was going on and on about badges and how we needed to have our own custom badges. I kept on trying to get everybody excited -- JEFFREY: I don't know that we need that. CHARLES: That was pretty much the response that I got from, I think in a poll of nine out of ten. It was 9.11 or something like that. ROBERT: -- That was cool but -- CHARLES: It was cool but no one wanted to put it anywhere. The badge was just a static SPG that was served on top of the Amazon Lambda but as part of that, I had to go through all of the steps through actually getting it to deploy. While that thing was completely useless and it was thrown away, that knowledge ended up becoming useful almost a year later or maybe six months later, something like that. I feel like it was sunny so it had to have been at least six months ago and so -- ROBERT: You know, that it's always sunny here. CHARLES: Uhh... Ish. I mean -- JEFFREY: It's not Philadelphia. ROBERT: I was trying to work somewhere. CHARLES: It was warm but it's a practice that often has long term payoffs. I guess that's just the learning aspect of it, the fact that you're going to learn something. ROBERT: The thing I want to stress here is you don't have to go into it expecting that. CHARLES: Yes, that actually is critical. ROBERT: Yeah, that absolutely is critical because then if you expect that, then the problem with all the things for me started with setting expectations. It was always I had expectations. You take them and throw them out. Toss those things out the window. CHARLES: Zero expectations. JEFFREY: Really, it's an adjustment of your expectations to where at any point, you can say, "No, I'm kind of done with this. I learned something but it's not going to turn into anything," versus the expectation of, "I'm going to make something amazing that thousands of people are going to use." ROBERT: Yeah, that's the way I always start out as like, "Here we go." CHARLES: "I'm going to take over the world." [Laughter] ROBERT: "I'm writing another JavaScript frameworks. Next step, world domination." CHARLES: Yeah, I know it's absolutely important to make sure that if this thing that you're doing just cease to exist, you wouldn't feel good or bad. It wouldn't make any difference. Very Zen, I think. Some people try to approach every aspect of their life that way. I'm not sure if that's healthy. ROBERT: That's another podcast. [Laughter] CHARLES: But I certainly think it is, if you at least allocate a portion of your projects to be that way. I think that applies to any creative endeavor that you try to undertake. Jeffrey, you had some actually some non-programming examples that you were talking about earlier. ROBERT: It ties in nicely to the Picasso thing. JEFFREY: Yeah, actually I was I'm moving right now to a new apartment and I have no architectural background at all but I am comfortable with vector graphics in Illustrator and doing things mathematically precisely in there. I do have a little bit of problem solving that comes out of this. It's not purely exploration but I've been like, "I'm moving to this new place. These are the pieces of furniture I have. How can I rearrange them and play and --" ROBERT: Did you actually set the scale correctly to your -- JEFFREY: Oh, absolutely. ROBERT: Oh, that's amazing. [Laughter] JEFFREY: --Otherwise it's worthless. ROBERT: This is a whole new world. This is awesome. CHARLES: -- Like there's an atomic gauge on the couch. [Laughter] JEFFREY: My couch is six feet, three inches and 24 angstroms. I have not reached that level -- [Laughter] ROBERT: Does Illustrator have that level precision? JEFFREY: It can go pretty far. But yeah, it's just an opportunity to play around and like in a situation where actually moving those pieces of furniture in 30 different ways would be a pain and just unrealistic but thinking about it more in the abstract and just being able to play with it at a scale that's playable with, turns it into something fun and creative. CHARLES: Yeah, I guess that's a luxury that we have, I guess in the modern era of being able to simulate so much and be able to apply this practice of total creativity in a consequence free zone where people might not have been able to do so before. Before the advent of computer-aided design, I don't think that would've been a possibility. ROBERT: There will be a lot of manual hand-drawing and sketches and stuff. JEFFREY: And now software it's at point where -- CHARLES: Or you just get your children to do it. [Laughter] CHARLES: "Move it over there." You guys are sweating but man, I'm feeling really creative. JEFFREY: Yeah, really making stuff happen here. But software has kind of reach the point where we have similar abstractions there to be able to do it, move pieces around like that. Maybe not as fluidly as I'm going to move all these squares around in Illustrator but we're at the point where we can kind of plug in pieces and see how it performs and plug in another piece and see how that performs in a way that feels maybe more creative and less scientific than getting lower down in the code. ROBERT: Honestly, I wonder if this is where React began because the idea of rerendering the entire dom every time was more performant like you just throw something at the wall. See if it sticks. I don't know but -- CHARLES: Yeah, you have to wonder. I'm actually become surprised at the origin story is not more widely known. ROBERT: Yeah, I also don't really know it. I kind of heard of it like -- CHARLES: I remember hearing about it the first time I was like, "That's crazy." ROBERT: Yeah, that sounds like it'd be massive performance hit. That sounds really slow. Why would you rerender everything? CHARLES: Right but then again, it's always getting into pre-[inaudible] optimization. We always fall down these paths of optimizing in our heads. Of course, we want to do incremental rendering. Why? Because it's faster but nobody's actually measured then realized that it's actually the dom that's slow. ROBERT: It's like opening up your world to this. It's just like you explore everything. JEFFREY: That's another thing we can take from design thinking and the philosophies around the design field that maybe aren't as recognized in engineering is the idea of simply brainstorming of being open to dozens of ideas, trying out dozens of ideas and seeing what feels right and being able to have so many ideas that you can throw most of them away. In software, so many times we get to the point where maybe we'll have two or three ideas but none of them are worth throwing away. We feel uncomfortable throwing out any work. CHARLES: Part of it is you were so busy. You have so much invested in your current track that it's very easy because your current track is on Rails. It goes forward, there's clearly a path forward and to hop off of those Rails, it require some sort of energy and are you going to be leaping into like a chasm? I don't know. ROBERT: Or in Jeffrey's case, if your computer dies and you're forced to think without a computer -- JEFFREY: That actually happened the other day. CHARLES: That was amazing. That was worth a story. JEFFREY: I forgot to bring my charger to the office so I have one of those new [inaudible] MacBook with the USB-C charger and we didn't have any backups in the office. I was hacking along on some configuration devops kind of stuff and just kept running experiments and eventually my battery died. Then I was forced to whiteboard out by what I was doing and I came way over to conclusion that I would have ever come to, if I had just been sitting on my computer the whole time. It was another case of where I needed that abstraction away from looking at the code to be able to rearrange the blocks in a way that made sense. ROBERT: Pull yourself out of the [inaudible]. JEFFREY: Yeah, definitely. CHARLES: I really like that idea. Again, I'm not being too familiar with the way that the design world works. Is that kind of like a modus operandis to have too many ideas that you can throw a bunch of them away at any given point? ROBERT: Where you start stealing pieces from all of them and you make one master design. In my digital design class -- shout out to Miss McDaniel -- she would always make us start off -- JEFFREY: Check for that in the show notes. [Laughter] CHARLES: -- She would always make us start off in a sketch book and I remember because I'm not an artist at all. If you know me, I draw even the worst stick figures: my arms and stick figures don't line up. That's how bad it is. She would always make us start off in a sketch book and it drove me nuts. But after doing it for two months, I finally realized the value because she would make us come up with five or six different design concepts. Then after I did the process a couple more times, I realized, "This actually has a ton of value." I sort of picking things from one of the other. It makes you think outside the box. The first couple of ones that I would turn into her she would be like, "You actually have three of almost the same design here. You need to think more outside the box. Think of something that's completely different." Seriously, it's just like you're throwing things at the wall. Whatever freestyle off top of the brain and just let it go. JEFFREY: I'm thinking of a concept side of exercise where maybe you're playing around with layouts for selling a magazine or something and you'll sketch them out and you'll sketch out maybe a few dozen of them but you don't get into the nitty-gritty details. You do it at a very-low fidelity where it's just pencil and some boxes and rearranging those boxes and maybe mark what that box is but you don't worry about the details of that box until you mix and match like, "That layout is not going to be great. This layout seems like it might be along the right track. I like this piece of this one. Let's combine them and make something completely different." Then once you have that high-level view, that make sense to you and you've gone through lots and lots of iterations, then you can start honing in on the high-fidelity details. CHARLES: This conversation makes me feel like there's definite poverty in our processes as software developers in the sense that what I'm hearing is that these things are just taken for granted, that these are the activities that you're going to be doing as part of design and what are we doing if not design. Each of us has these experiences that are kind of these one off things where we actually experience this creative space. It seemed very special and it seemed revelatory but really, it almost sounds like you need to make sure that it's something that you're revisiting again and again and you're doing it as integrated with your work. But I feel like it would be hard to pitch that -- JEFFREY: That's not understood to be part of the software design process. CHARLES: Maybe that's a little bit of what happens when we've put together our design documents -- ROBERT: Yeah, it just occurred to me like looking back through my history of how I landed to be a software developer, I actually wanted to be a designer first. That's why I was in digital design and stuff. I rejected design so much because I thought it was super... What's the word I'm looking for? Flighty? CHARLES: Wishy-washy? Non-committal? [Laughter] ROBERT: Anybody could walk in and say, "I don't like that design. It looks ugly. It doesn't look good," and I thought I was going to programming because it was more black and white like, "This is the right solution. That's not the right solution." As I've worked my way into my career, I actually realized they're actually really similar because you're designing software and software is abstract. As much as you want to try to think about as it's not, you start to develop this mental picture of the programs that you're developing. You're designing these things. It's just a different form of design and design is problem solving. CHARLES: In digital design, it's not artwork. It is measured by some quality. It's just hard to put your finger on but there is some kind of external measure of, "Does this fit the purpose for me, which it was made?" JEFFREY: "Does this solve the problem?" Usually, there are some expectations just like there are software of, "There's been best practices established. Did you stick to those best practices? And if you didn't, Why not?" Because sometimes there is a good reason to break those best practices. CHARLES: Right. I wonder if it would be interesting at integrating into our process like what we think of as the ideal pull request or issue reporting or design document have. It kind of similar to some of the RFC processes out there. It's like, "What are some crazy alternatives?" Not just any alternative -- JEFFREY: I don't just need viable alternative. CHARLES: Yeah, I don't need viable. Give me the in-viable. Give me the ones that are like, "What crack are you smoking? Oh, wait a second... Hmmm..." [Laughter] ROBERT: "All right. Here we go. I got it. It's got to be powered by nuclear --" No. [Laughter] CHARLES: Curious. I'm very, very, very curious. ROBERT: Let the curiosity fly. JEFFREY: Charles, do you had a blog post recently about a dumb project you built. Would you tell us about that? CHARLES: Sometimes, it gets stressful around here. Sometimes it gets stressful in life. Sometimes you just feel stress and there are a lot of things you can do to deal with it. Everybody has their coping mechanisms. For me, one of my secret weapon coping mechanisms -- ROBERT: Not a secret anymore. CHARLES: It's not secret anymore. [Laughter] CHARLES: This also will be in the show notes but I'll go ahead and say it right now is ChillestMonkey.com. If you need to enhance your chill, you can just go to ChillestMonkey.com and I guarantee you will not be disappointed. You will feel instantaneously better. I was in the point where I was feeling a lot of stress. I don't know exactly how it came up but I was actually with Stephanie and she was like, "Charles, you just got to do something stupid. You just got to do exactly what it is that we've been talking about on this podcast. You've got to just do it and you've got to do it fast and you've got to not look back and look forward." I was like, "Oh, my God. You're right." That planted the seed in my brain but then, I think it was the next day, I was talking about ChillestMonkey.com -- go check it out. You can pause the podcast right now and go have a look at it. It's really awesome -- And I was showing it to everybody and then I think Rob were like, "Oh, my goodness. We've got to have this on the Apple TV." ROBERT: It just lands itself perfectly. CHARLES: Yeah, I was like, "Yes. Absolutely we need it on the Apple TV. We need it on the Apple Watch. I need this on my iPhone," so right that minute, I hearken back to the conversation I had with Stephanie and I was like. "This is it. This is perfect scope." I have been looking to build something in React Native. Something that I can just completely and totally throw away, something that fits in a small time box and I also have this opportunity to build this thing that I really need but if it doesn't work out, it's fantastic. I went home. I think that was that very night and started hacking on React Native and took the Chillest Monkey, then put it first into an npm package. You can include it in any React Native application. Then once that was accomplished, I went out and checked the support for Apple TV had dropped literally ten days before, maybe even less. I was like, "It's a sign and this has got to happen." It was a little bit of a slog but we were able to get it up on our Apple TV and with a remote and feel that glassy touchpad, move it over to the Chillest Monkey and open it up and just see those wisps of hair and those tranquil eyes up there and six feet across. It was just such a great feeling. But it was something that was accomplishable within a day or two. I don't think it was more than that but it serve the purpose that I was able to learn a lot about React Native. I was able to learn about packaging, shared components. ROBERT: Actually, I remember we fought about flex box and what not for a little while. CHARLES: Yeah, that's right. I learned about laying out images and kind of the best practice around there. Also, I think this is important as I got to experience a win and it felt good to be able to experience that win. It felt like if I hadn't experienced it, it probably wouldn't have been that big of a deal. But the fact that I was able, it was a low-hanging target but it felt like a big-hanging target. It's hard because there's no such thing as a free lunch but kind of there is, when it comes to little projects like this because when you see something totally stupid come together and it works exactly you wanted it to work, then it feels like you've accomplished something major. I don't know if that's some sort of brain hackery or some sort of life hack or what but that was extremely good for my internal morale. JEFFREY: This is an example of a project where, maybe you didn't get as much creative juices flowing out of it. CHARLES: No. JEFFREY: But you've got a high accomplishment and learning value, which I guess are all, I call that the iron triangle of building dumb stuff. [Laughter] JEFFREY: You can have two of the three. CHARLES: On one side is creativity, on the other side is what? JEFFREY: Accomplishment. CHARLES: -- Is accomplishment, just shipping it and then on the third is time? It's the iron sticks -- [Laughter] JEFFREY: The third side was learning. That's creativity, accomplishment and learning. You can't have all three, sorry. It doesn't work that way. CHARLES: It doesn't work that way. Okay. [Laughter] ROBERT: Then you'll take on a big project, that's how you'll get all three. CHARLES: I like that. JEFFREY: In a particular project where you're having to throw tons of ideas at the wall, You're probably going to be learning, you're probably have to be very creative but your chance of shipping here is much lower. CHARLES: It's almost a detriment. ROBERT: Yeah. CHARLES: Whereas in this case it was take something that is easily accomplishable and accomplished it. JEFFREY: And you learned something from it. CHARLES: You learn and you accomplish but you're not particularly creative. But it's still a feather in your cap. I like that. It's a good way to categorize it. ROBERT: And the accomplishment is how you define it. In this case, you actually finished this project. CHARLES: Yeah. I finished it. We have it on Apple TV. ROBERT: Yeah, and like you said, you have to do that. For me, after I did a couple of these things, actually what I just do, a newsletter has come in and somebody was like, "Look at this new thing," and I'm just going to put it off to the side and then eventually, I'll stack two or three of those things together and decide, "We're going to take all three of these things, we're going to put them all together and see what happens," and that's how GraphQL and dove in to create React app. CHARLES: That's actually a good idea. I like the random newsletter driven development -- [Laughter] CHARLES: -- You're like, "I'm going to subscribe to this newsletter. I'm going to pick one thing from each week and after I have five things, I'm going to build something with those things. ROBERT: Wait. I have a dumb app idea. We could make this just a random app idea generator. It takes ten packages and you see like -- JEFFREY: A bunch are required to build the Hackernews clone. Isn't that a classic newsletter driven development? ROBERT: Or the Reddit clone? This feel like that's the React thing -- the Reddit clone. CHARLES: Yeah. I think it's more like Frankenstein driven development like you've got GraphQL, Vue.js and I don't know... Datomic. JEFFREY: Like a GRD stack -- CHARLES: No, like a rando stack. [Laughter] CHARLES: Rando.js, that would actually be a good -- ROBERT: You hear it first. It's our new JavaScript framework. CHARLES: A stack generator. JEFFREY: It's going to be a high on learning and not so much on accomplishment. ROBERT: You won't ship anything but damn will you learn? Every week! CHARLES: What is an example then? We've talked about the one where the accomplishment. I'm wondering if there's an affinity between those sides of the triangle. What would be an example of a project that was high on creativity, low on shipping? How do you approach projects like that and then make it okay to fail? Because I think, one of the things that was great about the Chillest Monkey Native was I did get to ship it. It wasn't much but it felt great. How do you prepare yourself for those projects which are high on creativity that you're not going to ship? What is one of those look like? JEFFREY: I think those kinds of projects are usually tend to be ones where you're more comfortable with the tools already so that you do have the space to be creative and you're not having to fight against, "I don't know how to do this." The learning is already been done, at least to a point to where you're comfortable enough to go, to feel loose and creative and be able to brainstorm without having to bump up against walls over and over. CHARLES: I guess, tender love is a master of that, where it's really has a deep knowledge of Ruby and systems programming and does some fun and creative. Do I say zany? ROBERT: The Ember example of this, I think it's Alex Matchneer. Matchneer? CHARLES: Matchneer, yeah. ROBERT: Sorry, I cannot pronounce names. The Photoshops, I mean those aren't exactly -- [Laughter] ROBERT: -- Those aren't exactly programming related but -- JEFFREY: High on creativity and accomplishment, low on learning. [Laughter] ROBERT: And then the Ember Twiddle is the one that I laughed out and I was like, "Can React router do this?" CHARLES: I don't actually see that one. ROBERT: Actually, it was broken when I went to look at it but the responses were hilarious. They're like, "Actually, no. I'm happy. I can't." [Laughter] ROBERT: But he always has the Twiddle and he's like, "What about this? It's like the programming equivalent of his Photoshops. [Laughter] JEFFREY: I'm wondering if there are particular, out of those kind of three different types of dumb projects that we've identified. If there are particular types that people gravitate toward like I know that I am higher on the, "Just go, do something creative with tools you already know side," versus, "I enjoy learning," but I'm more likely to want to accomplishment up things and be loosen in my creativity. I'm wondering what the breakdown is among different engineers of those different profiles. ROBERT: It's quite interesting and I wouldn't think of myself as an explorer but I feel like I'm driven by FOMO -- fear of missing out. That's where this comes from for me. All this technology that I hear so many good things about that I haven't even done anything with. I don't even have Hello, World or anything. That's usually where I start picking things up the shelf and I'm like, "What if I did redux, Vue.js and whatever else. Let's see if we can make all these things work together." CHARLES: Do you feel like you can, at least always be kind of touching? ROBERT: Yeah. CHARLES: Pinging different areas of the ecosystem? ROBERT: Yeah, I really like to see what they're doing because they all have different takes on things. I really like what Chris Freeman said, he's like, "I feel like programming is just gaining experience points." Like it's video games where you're just going through and you're getting experience points with different things. That's kind of the approach that I've been taken for the past five months. Since I discovered this, this is just like, "Oh, that look shiny." Maybe that's also driven because of our JavaScript-type cycle or whatever you want to call it, where something new is always coming out. Somebody is always reinventing the wheel. CHARLES: Whenever I see a cool demo or whenever I read a really provocative blog post that guides my exploration a lot, which I guess those things usually are extensions of some activity like what we're talking about that someone did. A lot of really good blog posts are just like, "I've been doing this stuff for five years and I have gained an absurd level of expertise on it. Let me take you to school." I definitely love those but a lot of it is like, "Look at this cool thing that I've done." Without talking about murdering names, what is it? Hakim...? Gosh, I can't remember his last name. The guy who does Slides. Some of his demos for CSS and JavaScript animations back in the day we're just like, "Woah, someone has just revealed a huge power source," and so I want to go do it. But most of that came from him just having to play. ROBERT: Jeffrey, you've actually got my brain ticking here. I'm thinking about where people fall in applying this like just go do something dumb and it doesn't have to mean anything. This makes me starting to think, "Maybe I need to go do something really creative in Ember." JEFFREY: It's making me think that I need to go do some learning -- [Laughter] JEFFREY: -- Just try some new stuff so I have new tools to play with. ROBERT: Because that's the whole purpose of this, right? I just recognized that I am not doing very creative things and the tool sets that I am comfortable with. CHARLES: Yeah, it is harmonious. The more learning projects you do, you acquire tools and then with familiarity with those tools, engenders creativity so you can see how the process feeds in to itself. ROBERT: Now, I'm going to build something creative. CHARLES: All right everybody. There you have it. Go out, build something useless, build something creative, build something that will help you learn and acquire new tools, new techniques and take you [inaudible] and do it quickly.
M J Craig is a writer, researcher and composer who lives in Wiltshire, England. He's involved in projects that seek to establish a more enlightened civilization in our world. His first book "Secret Mars: The Alien Connection" was published in 2013. On this episode of Alchemy Radio Michael discusses the book and the many fascinating anomalies highlighted therein, as well as NASA's deafening silence whenever these issues are brought to public attention. Could there be a another establishment cover-up at play? More info: Secret Mars Host: John Gibbons Music: T. Rex - Ballrooms Of Mars Contact: info@alchemyradio.net Website: www.alchemyradio.net Twitter: www.twitter.com/alchemyradio Facebook: www.facebook.com/alchemyradio.net
From the multiple time, non award winning podcast, it's GRD. A live recording of crazy fun, geeky talk and a few surprises.
Filamin and Cortexillin are F-actin crosslinking proteins in Dictyostelium discoideum allowing actin filaments to form three-dimensional networks. GAPA, an IQGAP related protein, is required for cytokinesis and localizes to the cleavage furrow during cytokinesis. Here we describe a novel interaction with Filamin which is required for cytokinesis and regulation of the F-actin content. The interaction occurs through the actin binding domain of Filamin and the GRD domain of GAPA. A similar interaction takes place with Cortexillin I. We further report that Filamin associates with Rac1a implying that filamin might act as a scaffold for small GTPases. Filamin and activated Rac associate with GAPA to regulate actin remodelling. Overexpression of filamin and GAPA in the various strains suggests that GAPA regulates the actin cytoskeleton through interaction with Filamin and that it controls cytokinesis through association with Filamin and Cortexillin.
Great River Days 2009 will be July 29-August 2, 2009. Dan Clark's guest is GRD co-chair Kerry Keller. This 51st edition of the "family-friendly and affordable" riverfront celebration promises "the best music entertainment seen in many years." Kerry plays music from headliners LoCash Cowboys http://locashcowboys.com/ and Su DeBaco & Wise Fools http://www.wise-fools.com/. Learn more about the newly reorganized event at http://www.greatriverdays.com/.