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Only 31% Of Americans Have A WillThe Basics Of Estate PlanningWill Retiring Lead To An Early Death? It Happens.GDP Contracts in 1st Quarter, Biden's Fault Or Trump's?The Many Corrupt Media Hoaxes During Trump's First 100 DaysIs Trump Administration Ready To Arrest Sanctuary City Leaders? Trump 100 Days Speech Excerpts And Much More!!!
Text your questions or comments to us.You missed a day. You broke the streak. You fell off the plan. Now what? what to do when your discipline fails. Because it will. And when it does, most men fold. But not the dangerous ones. We are giving you 4 clear moves to reset fast, re-engage your focus, and make sure your discipline doesn't die where you dropped it.What do you do when your discipline fails or gets derailed?What do you do when your plan didn't pan out?What do you do when you don't get the job done?QOTD: “Discipline isn't about being perfect. It's about being relentless when you're not.”ACTION STEPS:1.IT HAPPENS, ACCEPT AND MOVE ON.Every man hits walls. You're not broken—you're human.Own the failure, don't excuse it.2. RESET FASTER, NOT SOFTERDon't wait until Monday. Don't wait for feelings.Recommit immediately—with one small win today.3. ADAPT STRATEGY, NOT STANDARDSIf the plan failed, pivot. Don't drop the bar.4. DOUBLE DOWN ON ACCOUNTABILITYTell someone. Get accountable. Isolation fuels inconsistency.SOTD: Proverbs 24:16 (ESV) - “For the righteous falls seven times and rises again, but the wicked stumble in times of calamity.”Final Charge “Discipline isn't about never falling. It's about refusing to stay down. Reset. Reload. Execute.”Support the show TDMP SITE: https://dangerousmanpodcast.com/ Grab some DANGEROUS GEAR in our shop https://dangerousmanpodcast.com/shop/ Support the show for as little as $3 a month https://www.buzzsprout.com/2080275/supporters/new Follow us on X for more shenanigans https://twitter.com/TDMPodcast603 Follow us on Instagram for extra shenanigans https://www.instagram.com/thedangerousmanpodcast/ Connect with Matt Fortin & Rory Lawrence Email us at: thedangerousmanpodcast@gmail.com Remember men... Stop trying & start training! Top Men's Podcast for 2024... https://podcasts.feedspot.com/mens_podcasts/
Being the boss isn't about power trips—it's about leaving your jerk card at the door. Turns out, surviving the workplace often comes down to one simple rule: don't be an asshole. Kim Scott and Amy Sandler sit down with Stanford's Bob Sutton, author of The No Asshole Rule and The Friction Project, to talk about how real leadership means treating people like people, not just cogs in a machine. Bob gets straight to the point about why toxic behavior kills productivity, how organizational “friction” can be both helpful and harmful, and what it takes to build teams that fight fair and thrive together. They also tackle why efficient isn't always effective, how to spot—and stop—assholes before they do lasting damage, and why the best bosses aren't afraid to show up with both candor and care. As Kim puts it, sometimes it's better to have a hole than an asshole. Whether you're leading a team or just trying to survive one, this conversation is your reminder that treating people with decency is never optional—and if you're stuck choosing between keeping an asshole or leaving a hole, always go with the hole. Get all of the show notes at RadicalCandor.com/podcast. Episode Links: Transcript Radical Friction: The Editor/Author Relationship Books | Bob Sutton Work Matters | Bob Sutton How To Get A Radically Candid Boss | Radical Candor Podcast 3 | 12 Don't Let A Bad Boss Derail You | Radical Candor Podcast 6 | 18 Are Assholes More Effective? Bob Sutton Weighs In Website Instagram TikTok LinkedIn Facebook YouTube Chapters:(00:00:00) IntroductionKim and Amy introduce Stanford Professor Emeritus Bob Sutton.(00:01:35) The No Asshole Rule Origin StoryHow Bob's research into organizational decline led to a focus on workplace jerks.(00:07:02) Layoffs Done Right (And Wrong)Kim and Bob trade stories on compassionate vs. catastrophic layoffs.(00:11:16) Good Friction vs. Bad FrictionThe Friction Project and why not all efficiency is actually efficient(00:16:23) Building Emotional TrustHow emotional trust grows and fuels creative partnerships.(00:24:58) The Asshole Survival Guide: 4 Ways to DealStrategies for handling difficult people and navigating toxic environments.(00:29:50) Certified vs. Clueless AssholesRecognizing the moments when you might actually be the asshole.(00:33:47) It Happens at the Listener's EarHow context shapes whether something feels candid or cruel.(00:38:59) Decision-Making, Simplicity & ReversibilityQuestions friction-fixers ask to decide when to slow down or speed up.(00:46:15) Gossip as a Strategic ToolThe ways gossip can help you avoid toxic work environments.(00:52:03) Fixing Friction at StanfordBob shares his current work helping Stanford reduce internal friction.(00:55:54) Where to Find Bob SuttonWhere to find Bob and his books — plus a final note on long emails.(00:56:50) Conclusion Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Susan Mulcahy and Frank DiGiacomo are former reporters for The New York Post and co-authors of Paper of Wreckage: The Rogues, Renegades, Wiseguys, Wankers, and Relentless Reporters Who Redefined American Media. Susan worked on Page Six from 1978 to 1985, including three years as editor. She has also written for The New Yorker and The New York Times. Frank worked as a Page Six freelancer in the late 1980s and was its editor from 1991 to 1993. He is currently an executive editor at Billboard.The Gossip Behind the Gossip, by Frank DiGiacomo for Vanity FairConfessions of a Trump Tabloid Scribe, by Susan Mulcahy for PoliticoA Tabloid Alum Blasts News to the New York Post Nation, by Susan Mulcahy for The New YorkerGround News gathers news coverage from around the world, empowers free thinking, and makes media bias explicit. Subscribe through my link at https://check.ground.news/Next for 15% off your subscription.If You Liked This Conversation, You'll Probably Like These Episodes of Where We Go Next:108: Investigative Journalism Is in Jeopardy, with Nancy Rommelmann105: Religious Cults, Fringe Science, and the Need for Belief, with Ross Blocher & Carrie Poppy104: The War for Critical Minerals and Our Electrified Future, with Ernest Scheyder101: Uncovering the Hidden Truths in Political Memoirs, with Carlos Lozada91: Free Speech Isn't Just for People We Like, with Kat Rosenfield65: Untangling Partisan Narratives and Fixing Political News, with Isaac Saul45: Filming the News as It Happens, with Ford Fischer6: Every News Story Is a Kind of Fiction, with Shaun Cammack----------If you liked this episode, consider sharing it with someone you think might like it too.Email: michael@wherewegonext.comInstagram: @wwgnpodcast
Introduction (0:00:00). Speaking slowly, competing quickly... "...It Happens to All of Us" (0:04:14) Northwestern's Josh Jones and DePaul's Theo Thomas discuss how to more effectively coach Black students and how to build a more inclusive trial program.Where are they now? (0:45:06) 2022 Top Gun champion Haley Kairab talks about what it was like winning Top Gun, how she turned down more lucrative jobs to start her career in the courtroom, the confidence that mock trial has given her, and how she spent that giant Top Gun check.Mailbag Question (0:57:36). Georgia's Kellie Casey asks, should Tournament of Champions should change its selection criteria by including more than just two competitions?
Jonathan Turley is a law professor, columnist, television analyst, and litigator. Since 1998, he has held the Shapiro Chair for Public Interest Law at George Washington University Law School. He has served as counsel in some of the most notable cases in the last two decades, representing members of Congress, judges, whistleblowers, five former Attorney Generals, accused spies and terrorists, journalists, protesters, and workers at Area 51. He has written for The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and The Washington Post, and has worked as a legal analyst for CBS, NBC, BBC, and Fox.The Indispensable Right: Free Speech in an Age of Ragejonathanturley.orgGround News gathers news coverage from around the world, empowers free thinking, and makes media bias explicit. Subscribe through my link at https://check.ground.news/Next for 15% off your subscription.If You Liked This Conversation, You'll Probably Like These Episodes of Where We Go Next:95: The Government Is Seizing Innocent People's Property, with Billy Binion 91: Free Speech Isn't Just for People We Like, with Kat Rosenfield90: In Defense of an Eternally Radical Idea, with Greg Lukianoff65: Untangling Partisan Narratives and Fixing Political News, with Isaac Saul45: Filming the News as It Happens, with Ford Fischer25: A Robust Defense of Free Speech, with Greg LukianoffFollow Jonathan on X: @JonathanTurley----------If you liked this episode, consider sharing it with someone you think might like it too.Email: michael@wherewegonext.comInstagram: @wwgnpodcast
Wicked, Travis, Fae, and Dread discuss Wes Craven's 1978 “Made for TV Movie” Summer of Fear! Have You Heard of Jaws? Spin the Dice. It Was a Movie… the T-shirt. Justin Long Needs To Do Some More Horror. Toothless TV movie. Playing with Her Food. Baby Horsey. The Occult Specialist Next Door. Grabbing at Cheekies. Personal Bikini Pic. A Couple of Wangs. Grossishness. It Happens to Every Car. Teenage Shadow of a Doubt. Support us on Patreon at patreon.com/GORE13 Check out our website created by Baumbie GOREpodcast.com Follow the show on Twitter @GOREpodcast Email the show at GOREpodcast13@gmail.com
Nancy Rommelmann is an investigative journalist, columnist, and author. Her on-the-ground reporting includes covering the war in Ukraine, the fight over abortion rights in Kansas City, and Donald Trump's New York trial. Her work appears in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Reason Magazine, and elsewhere, and she posts on her Substack - titled “Make More Pie” about “Portland, New York, media, murder, culture, and pie - both literal and figurative.” She also co-hosts the Smoke ‘Em If You Got ‘Em podcast with Sarah Hepola.Make More Pie - Nancy's SubstackSmoke 'Em If You Got 'Em Podcast - cohosted with Sarah HepolaBubba: A Cancel-Culture CasualtyDestruction and Hope in PortlandThe Last #MeToo: Part 1The Last #MeToo: Part 2The Slow Leave Taking: On Watching My Mother Slip AwayTo the Bridge: A True Story of Motherhood and MurderIf You Liked This Conversation, You'll Probably Like These Episodes of Where We Go Next:101: Uncovering the Hidden Truths in Political Memoirs, with Carlos Lozada95: The Government Is Seizing Innocent People's Property, with Billy Binion 91: Free Speech Isn't Just for People We Like, with Kat Rosenfield81: Mining Universal Truths From Personal Stories, with Sarah Hepola 65: Untangling Partisan Narratives and Fixing Political News, with Isaac Saul58: Making Andrew Yang a Household Name, with Zach Graumann45: Filming the News as It Happens, with Ford Fischer40: Great Writers Must Be Vulnerable in Public, with Andrew Sullivan6: Every News Story Is a Kind of Fiction, with Shaun CammackFollow Nancy on X: @NancyRomm----------If you liked this episode, consider sharing it with someone you think might like it too.Email: michael@wherewegonext.comInstagram: @wwgnpodcast
Gen Kimura is a YouTube creator and documentary filmmaker tackling controversial political topics via on-the-ground reporting with average citizens and inquisitive interviews with relevant experts.Gen's YouTube ChannelBridging the Bias newsletterSquatters Invaded America. Here's How. - YouTubeIf You Liked This Conversation, You'll Probably Like These Episodes of Where We Go Next:105: Religious Cults, Fringe Science, and the Need for Belief, with Ross Blocher & Carrie Poppy 101: Uncovering the Hidden Truths in Political Memoirs, with Carlos Lozada69: Creating a Space for Empathy on YouTube, with Gen Kimura65: Untangling Partisan Narratives and Fixing Political News, with Isaac Saul45: Filming the News as It Happens, with Ford FischerFollow Gen: linktr.ee/genkimura----------If you liked this episode, consider sharing it with someone you think might like it too.Email: michael@wherewegonext.comInstagram: @wwgnpodcast
Carrie Poppy and Ross Blocher are the hosts of Oh No, Ross and Carrie!, an investigative podcast with over half a million downloads monthly. Whether it's joining secretive religious cults, searching for the paranormal, or experimenting with alternative medicine, they bring a skeptical yet open-minded approach to uncovering the truth.Oh No, Ross and Carrie!A Scientific Approach to the Paranormal - Carrie's TED TalkTesting the Perimeter Fences - Ross's SkeptiCamp Talk"I am, among humans, a very lucky god." A Eulogy for Ella.We miss you, Darcy.If You Liked This Conversation, You'll Probably Like These Episodes of Where We Go Next:69: Creating a Space for Empathy on YouTube, with Gen Kimura59: Sketch Comedy, Spoofing Genres, and Sparking Creativity, with Chris Smith & Jack De Sena45: Filming the News as It Happens, with Ford FischerFollow Oh No, Ross and Carrie! on X: @OhNoPodcast----------If you liked this episode, consider sharing it with someone you think might like it too.Email: michael@wherewegonext.comInstagram: @wwgnpodcast
In this episode we WadeOutThere with James Mugele from Livingston, Montana. James started fly fishing while attending college in Vermont. After befriending a retired fishing guide from out west, James found his introduction to fly fishing grounded in tying big flies and casting for Muskies. James' dream became to move to Montana and fish big Western rivers with his black lab Bo as his faithful companion. After school he had saved enough to drive to Montana and stay with a friend that was guiding on the Yellowstone River. Livingston was his first stop on the road trip, and after one good float down the Yellowstone throwing hoppers he knew he was home. James has been guiding on the Yellowstone ever since, and recently became part owner of Hatch Finders fly shop. We discuss adjusting your tactics based on different flows, the Yellowstone River, and James shares some of his techniques and philosophies on fishing streamers. James also shares why even fishing dogs benefit from time on the water. To learn more about James and the topics we discussed in this episode, or to schedule a guided trip, check out the following links:HatchFinders.comREAD: WADEOUTTHERE | Don't Let High Stream Flows Ruin Your Next Fly Fishing Trip. Part 1 of 2. PlanningREAD: WADEOUTTHERE | Don't Let High Stream Flows Ruin Your Next Fly Fishing Trip. Part 2 of 2. TacticsREAD: WADEOUTTHERE | Don't Fear the Skunk. Part 1 of 2. It Happens.READ: WADEOUTTHERE | Don't Fear the Skunk. Part 2 of 2. Two Strategies to Avoid It.Newsletter Sign-UpView Jason's ArtworkThanks for listening.VR- Jason
Carlos Lozada is an opinion columnist at The New York Times and co-host of the “Matter of Opinion” podcast. He has won the Pulitzer Prize for criticism, and is the author of What Were We Thinking: A Brief Intellectual History of the Trump Era. His new book, The Washington Book: How to Read Politics and Politicians, is out now.The Washington Book: How to Read Politics and PoliticiansCarlos Lozada at The New York TimesIf You Liked This Conversation, You'll Probably Like These Episodes of Where We Go Next:65: Untangling Partisan Narratives and Fixing Political News, with Isaac Saul58: Making Andrew Yang a Household Name, with Zach Graumann45: Filming the News as It Happens, with Ford Fischer40: Great Writers Must Be Vulnerable in Public, with Andrew Sullivan6: Every News Story Is a Kind of Fiction, with Shaun CammackFollow Carlos on X: @CarlosNYT----------If you liked this episode, consider sharing it with someone you think might like it too.Email: michael@wherewegonext.comInstagram: @wwgnpodcast
Mike Fisher (@FishSports) #DallasCowboys Fish at 6 4/25: #nfldraft 'Shake Up The World!? NOTEBOOK as IT HAPPENS! ✭ SUBSCRIBE to the NEW Fish Report Podcast here: https://www.dspmediaonline.com/show/the-dallas-cowboys-fish-report/ ✭ ✭ STRAIGHT DOPE. NO BULLSH. ✭ ✭ UNCLE FISH STORE https://shorturl.at/gJPS2 ✭ FISH SPORTS GEAR www.fishsportsnetwork.com ✭ ✭Listen on the Go, 24/7! Download the NEW Fan Stream Sports APP on iOS and Android! ✭ ✭Follow FISH on X: @FishSports ✭ ✭ Join the NEW Fan Stream Sports Facebook group to interact with hosts and other fans: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1701025303664208 ✭ ✭ Facebook group to interact with hosts and other fans: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1701025303664208 #DallasCowboysReport ✭
Mike Fisher (@FishSports) #DallasCowboys Fish at 6 4/25: #nfldraft 'Shake Up The World!? NOTEBOOK as IT HAPPENS! ✭ SUBSCRIBE to the NEW Fish Report Podcast here: https://www.dspmediaonline.com/show/the-dallas-cowboys-fish-report/ ✭ ✭ STRAIGHT DOPE. NO BULLSH. ✭ ✭ UNCLE FISH STORE https://shorturl.at/gJPS2 ✭ FISH SPORTS GEAR www.fishsportsnetwork.com ✭ ✭Listen on the Go, 24/7! Download the NEW Fan Stream Sports APP on iOS and Android! ✭ ✭Follow FISH on X: @FishSports ✭ ✭ Join the NEW Fan Stream Sports Facebook group to interact with hosts and other fans: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1701025303664208 ✭ ✭ Facebook group to interact with hosts and other fans: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1701025303664208 #DallasCowboysReport ✭
What happens if you transform HOW you think? In this episode, Bill Bellows and host Andrew Stotz discuss the problem of thinking in one dimension at a time (as we were taught in school) and its impact on our ability to solve problems. BONUS: Book recommendations to broaden your understanding of Deming and more. TRANSCRIPT 0:00:02.1 Andrew Stotz: My name is Andrew Stotz, and I'll be your host as we continue our journey into the teachings of Dr. W. Edwards Deming. Today, I'm continuing my discussion with Bill Bellows, who has spent 30 years helping people apply Dr. Deming's ideas to become aware of how their thinking is holding them back from their biggest opportunities. The topic for today is, well, episode 19, Transforming How we Think. Bill, take it away. 0:00:29.9 Bill Bellows: And good evening, Andrew. 0:00:35.8 AS: Good evening. 0:00:36.2 BB: And, but just as a point of clarity, I view it as transforming how we think about our thinking. And that's what I've been focusing on for the, since the mid, the early '90s is not how we think, but what is our awareness of our thinking, and I think that ties in well with SoPK. So first in late breaking news, I am seeing with new eyes, Andrew. Literally, I've got new monofocal lenses in both eyes. The left eye three weeks ago, the right eye, a week ago. I was told about five years ago, eventually I'll have to have cataract surgery. And I spoke with a few friends who had it done, and they said, oh, it's easy. And what was so amazing was it was easier than they said. It was. 0:01:41.0 BB: But one neighbor who's had it done, and kind of a sad note is he claims, and I've not double checked this, he's a sharp guy. He claims 80% of the world's population would benefit from cataract surgery that they don't have access to and eventually go blind. And I don't know, I can believe, and he is in fact he's quoted me twice on that. But I am literally seeing with new eyes. The grays are now, shades of gray, are now shades of blue. When I look at the sky. My depth perception's a whole lot better. And so it ties in well with all this vision therapy stuff. So. 0:02:36.8 AS: Aren't you glad that those machines are high quality and the operations that they do are high quality? 0:02:41.6 BB: Oh, yeah. 0:02:42.4 AS: Just one little mistake on that one. And, that's... 0:02:46.2 BB: Well, and I'm signing the documents and there's a little bit of a flutter when I'm signing, in terms of the liability. And one friend's mom had a bad cataract procedure, so it doesn't always go. And I shared this with Kevin. Kevin's had the same, as likewise had the procedure done. And we shared the anxieties and then it worked out well. But yeah when I signed that form that there was in the event, and I thought, whoa, that'd be, anyway, it worked. All right, so where I want to pick up in episode 19 is where we left off with episode 18. And there near the end, I referenced from Dr. Deming. He says Dr. Deming says in chapter three of The New Economics, and he says, "we saw in the last chapter that we're living under the tyranny of the prevailing style of management. Most people imagine this style has always existed. It is a fixture. Actually," he said, "it's a modern invention, a trap that has led us into decline. Transformation..." 0:04:03.0 BB: You remember that word from last time? Okay. "Transformation is required. Education and government, along with industry are also in need of transformation. The System of Profound Knowledge will be introduced in the next chapter. To be introduced in the next chapter is a theory for transformation." So I've got some bullet points and I want to get into the additional chapters and references from The New Economics on Dr. Deming's use of the term transformation. 'Cause I think what he's talking about... SoPK is a theory for transformation. So I think it's just not enough to talk about SoPK without understanding how does that fit in with what Dr. Deming's talking about? 0:04:49.0 AS: And for the listeners who come out of the blue here, SoPK stands for the System of Profound Knowledge. 0:04:56.1 BB: Yes. And system then gets into elements and the four elements that Dr. Deming proposed in The New Economics, going back to the late '80s when he started to put these thoughts together. We need to think about the elements of Profound Knowledge are looking at things as a system and understanding of variation and appreciation of psychology. That's the people aspect. And then theory of knowledge, which gets into what he would explain as how do we know that what we know is so. So the one thing I wanted to bring up on the System of Profound Knowledge is conversations with Dick Steele. And a neat way of looking at the System of Profound Knowledge is to say, well, what if we were to look at some data points, one element, we look at variation, and we see some data the output of a process. 0:06:00.0 BB: We see it go up and down. Well, if that's the only element we have, then we can't ask what caused that, 'cause that's the upstream system. Well, that's the system piece. We cannot talk about what does this variation do downstream? That's the system piece. We cannot talk about how might we change that. That might get into the theory of knowledge or would get into the aspect of the theory of knowledge and some theories as to how we can go about changing the average, changing the amount of variation. And then what that leads us immediately to is, where do those ideas come from but people. 0:06:44.7 BB: So it's kind of, I think it's interesting. So Dr. Deming says the elements, but it's as connected to each other. So what I explain to the students in my courses is, in the beginning, and I remember when I'm looking at this, I'm looking at the elements. I'm thinking, okay, that variation, that's the Control Chart stuff. Common causes, special causes, well, it also includes variation in people. Oh, now we're talking about the people stuff. And then, so I find it interesting is it is easy to look at them as separate, but then in time they meld together really well. So it's not to say that we shouldn't start out looking at things as the elements 'cause I think that's what our education system does. In fact, there's a great documentary I watched a few years ago with Gregory Bateson, who was born in 1900 or so, passed away in the 1980s. 0:07:52.6 BB: And when I ask people have you ever heard of Gregory Bateson? They say, no. I say, well, have you heard of Margaret Mead? Yeah. Well, they were married once upon a time. That was her, he was her first husband. And so Bateson gives a lecture in this documentary that his daughter produced. And he says, and he is at a podium. You don't see the audience. You just see he's at a lectern. And he says, you may think that there's such a thing as psychology, which is separate from anthropology, which is separate from English, which is separate from... And he goes on to imply that they really aren't separate. But then he says, "Well, think what you want." 0:08:38.1 AS: Think what you want. 0:08:39.7 AS: And I thought that's what the education system does. It has us believe that these things are all separate. And so that's what's kind of neat. Yeah. And, but again, I think when you go to school, you're learning about history, then you learn about math. But one thing I noticed later on, many years later was the history people never talked about, if they talked about the philosopher who was well known in mathematics, we didn't hear that mathematics piece, nor in the math class did we hear about this person as a historical figure. We just learned about... And so the education system kind of blocks all that out. And then years later when we're outta school, we can read and see how all this stuff comes together and it does come together. So the one big thing I wanna say is that, is I think it's neat to look at something with just one of those elements and then say, how far does it go before you need the others to really start to do something? 0:09:47.0 BB: And that gets into the interactions. And by interactions, I mean that when you're talking about variation and you're thinking about people are different, how they feel is different, how they respond is different. Now you're talking about the interaction between psychology, at least that's one explanation of the interaction between people amd psychology. I wanna share next an anecdote. I was at a UCLA presentation. A friend of mine turned me on to these maybe once a month kind of deal to be an invited speaker. 70 people in the room. And these were typically professors from other universities, authors, and there is one story I wanna share is a woman who had written a book on why really smart kids don't test well in secondary schools. And there were a good number of people there. 0:10:45.6 BB: And I'm listening to all this through my Deming lens, and she's talking about how kids do on the exams. That goes back to an earlier podcast. How did you do on the exam? And so I'm listening to all this and she's drawing conclusions that these students are really smart, but they freak out. And then how might they individually perform better? As if the greatest cause by them all by themselves. And so afterwards, I went up and stood in line and I had a question for her that I deliberately did not want to ask in front of the entire room. 'Cause I wanted her undivided attention, and I really wanted to see where she'd come with this. 'Cause perhaps it could lead to an ongoing discussion. So I went up and introduced myself and I think I said something like, are you familiar with W. Edwards Deming? And I believe she said she was. I think she was a psychologist by background. And then I moved into the... Essentially the essence of what if the grades are caused by the system and not the student taken separately, which she acknowledged. She's like, yeah, that makes sense. And I remember saying to her, "Well then how might that change your conclusions?" 0:12:11.2 BB: And so I throw that as an example of... Deming's saying you could be an expert in, you know, you just look at something. Actually, when that comes to mind is Deming is saying something like shouldn't a psychologist know something about variation? Well, shouldn't a psychologist know something about systems? And I didn't maintain a relationship with her, but it was just other things to do. Next I wanna share a story. And I wrote this up in an article. Then when this is posted... 0:12:49.0 BB: Typically these are posted on LinkedIn. Then I'll put a link into the article. And it's a classic story that Russ Ackoff was very fond of saying, and I heard the story told quite a few times before I started to think about it a little bit differently. So the story is he was working for General Electric back in the 1960s. He is in a very high level meeting. And in the room is this, the then CEO of GE, Reginald Jones and all of the senior VPs of General Electric are in the room. And Russ... I'm guessing he was doing, I know Russ did a lot of work with Anheuser-Busch, and he did a lot of work with GE. So Russ says he is in the room. There's maybe a dozen of these senior VPs of plastics of all the different GE divisions. 0:13:41.2 BB: And there's, Russ said there's one of them that was relatively new in a senior VP position, now over plastics or over lighting or whatever it was. And at one point he gets up. And one by one he raises a question with each of his peers. Something like, "Andrew, I noticed last year you installed a new software system." And you would say, "yeah, yep, yep." And I said, "I noticed you went with..." Let's say Apple, "you went with Apple Software", and you're like, "yeah," "that's what I thought. Yeah, you went with Apple." And then you might say something like, "why do you ask?" And he says, "well, the rest of us use Microsoft products. And it just seems kind of odd that you would go off and buy something different." 0:14:41.0 BB: And the point, and Russ didn't get into these details, the essence was every single one of them he'd figured out over the last year had made a decision, pretty high level decision that that senior VP felt was good for that division, but not good for General Electric. And Russ said what got his attention was, he wasn't sitting in that room hearing those conversations and he hears one decision then another, now he's got a whole list. So Russ says, he goes around the room and calls out every single one of his peers. So, and Russ shared this in one phone call, the Ongoing Discussions that I've mentioned. And people said, Russ, do you have that documented? And he is like, well, I don't think I have that any anymore. But somebody else asking. 0:15:35.3 BB: And then no sooner was the call over I had some friends call me up, said, "Bill, can you ask Russ if you have that, if he can get a copy of that? It's probably on his shelf. You're in his office". I said to one friend. I said, "so you'd be surprised that a member of Parliament does what's best for his district and not what's best for the United Kingdom. You think, you'd be surprised that a congressman from Los Angeles is gonna do what's best for Los Angeles, not what's best for the country. 0:16:07.2 BB: So you're telling me you're surprised by that?" Well, "no, no, no." I said, "well then why do you have to have the documentation?" So that's one aspect of it. So I heard that story again and again. And so finally it, I said, wait a minute, wait a minute. So I said, "Russ, on that story, you being in the room with GE?" He says, yeah. He says, I know you don't have the documentation, I said, "but what happened after this guy called them all out? How did that go down?" He says, "one of the peers looks at this guy and says, so what's your point?" 0:16:42.3 BB: And the meeting moved on. And I wrote that for an article for the Lean Management Journal called, "You Laugh, It Happens". And when I look at that through the lens of the System of Profound Knowledge, is that surprising that that goes on? No, not at all. I wanna reference a couple books that I don't think I've mentioned at all. And I share these because for the Deming enthusiasts, these books have some brilliant examples of in different arenas that I think you absolutely love and you can use in your classes, use in your education, whatever. All fairly recent. The first one is "The Tyranny of Metrics" written by a historian. He is an American University historian, Jerry Mueller, and he has, I mean, Dr. Deming would just love this. Oh, bingo! Bingo! Bingo! Thank you. 0:17:48.4 AS: Yep. There it is. "The Tyranny of Metrics". 0:17:50.1 BB: Right? 0:17:50.7 AS: Yep. 0:17:51.3 BB: Right. Is that a great one? 0:17:53.2 AS: That's a great book. And you can follow him on Twitter also. He does do a lot of posts there. 0:18:00.4 BB: Now I reached out to him 'cause I relished the book 'cause the stories were just, you just can't make up all those stories. I mean the story that I shared with Russ is nothing in comparison to what Muller has in the book. I just don't believe that Muller has a solution that can... I don't think, I think the only thing missing from the book is if he had an understanding of the System of Profound Knowledge, he'd have a far better proposal as to what to do. 0:18:31.8 AS: Yeah. I read that and I felt similar that there was something that was missing there. It was, it was great stories as you say, but how do we connect that? How do we apply that? And what's the root cause here? And how do we, this, there was just... That was missing from it. And maybe that should be his next book. 0:18:53.9 BB: Oh, enormously. But it's worth reading regardless. 0:18:57.3 AS: Yeah. Agreed. 0:19:00.1 BB: But I was, I was, I wasn't surprised. I'd say this. He honestly tried to offer a proposal, but I just looked at it and said, Professor Muller, you would just love it. In fact, I believe I reached out to him. I don't know that I heard from him. Alright, that's one book. 0:19:17.1 AS: That reminds me of what Dr. Deming said. "How would they know?" 0:19:21.3 BB: Exactly. Exactly. 0:19:22.4 AS: So if he hadn't been exposed to the System of Profound Knowledge... 0:19:25.3 BB: Oh, no. No, no, no. 0:19:25.7 AS: Then it would be hard to pull it all together. Yep. Okay. 0:19:28.8 BB: Yeah. So the next book, which is somewhere behind you in your bookshelf, is "The End of Average" by Todd... 0:19:36.8 AS: Actually, I don't think I have that one. 0:19:39.4 BB: By Todd Rose, who's a research fellow at Harvard. It's a riveting book. Oh, Andrew, you would absolutely love it. Just, he goes back ages. I mean, hundreds of hundreds of years and looks at how lost we became... How lost civilizations were dealing with trying to make, deal with averages. And the book opens with the most riveting story. And I started reading this and immediately I started thinking, "Okay, okay, okay, okay." And I figured it out. So in the opening paragraph, he says, In one day in 1949, there were 17 military planes crashed. In one day. 17 military planes crashed in one day. And this was... It would have been after the Air Force separated from the Army Air Corps. And so I started thinking, okay, late '40s, planes are going faster. The US industry has German technology, and... Because the Germans had jet engines in the late '40s. So I'm thinking it's about speed. It's about something about speed, something about speed. And there's more and more planes flying. 0:21:06.6 BB: So they grounded the fleet. They had a major investigation, brought in this young guy as a data researcher. And he passed away a few years ago, I did some research with him recently. And what he found was the cockpits were designed, you're writing, Andrew, for the average size pilots. Everything in the cockpit was fixed for the average arm length, the average hand length, the average finger length, the average height, the... Everything about... All these measurements on the torso, the cockpit had, everything was fixed. And that's exactly what I thought was going on. As the planes are going faster and faster, reaction times need to be faster and faster. And they're not. So his research was, they went off and measured thousands of pilots and found out that there was no pilot met the average. 0:22:11.2 AS: Oh, God. 0:22:11.3 BB: And the conclusion was... And again, until the plane started flying faster, that was not an issue. And that's what I was thinking with all my training in problem solving, decision making, what is going on there? What is going on there? And that's what changes the... I mean, the speed was accelerating, but compounded by the fixed geometry. So the solution by the government Pentagon, to the contractors was, add flexibility to the cockpit, allow the seat to move up and down, and then the auto industry picked up on that evidently. And so this is one example of how a fixation on average and a number of other stories outside of engineering it's just fascinating. 0:23:01.4 AS: Let me just summarize. The End of Average by Todd Rose. And it was published in about 2016. It's got a 4.5 out of 5 review on Amazon with 1,000 ratings and has a very high for Goodreads review of about 4.1. So I'm definitely getting that one. I don't have it and I'm buying it. 0:23:22.1 BB: Yeah. And it's again, he, I believe in there he offers what we should do instead, which again, I think would be, benefit from an understanding of SoPK. And so, again, for the Deming enthusiast, there is stuff in those two books, which you'll just love. And the third book came out at, I think, 2020 during the pandemic, The Tyranny of Merit, that tyranny word again, by Michael Sandel from Harvard. And I believe we've spoken about him before. And it's the tyranny of meritocracy, which is the belief that I achieved my success all by myself. I earned the grade all by myself. Everything I've done, I've done all by myself. There is no greater system. And I've written... In fact I sent an email to Michael Sandel complimenting him for the book and trying to point out that everything he's talking about fits in very well with Deming's work and that the issues are bigger than that. 0:24:34.4 BB: And I have not yet heard back, but he's a busy guy. But those three books are I would say, must reads. Then I go on to say that, because I used earlier that Dr. Deming talked about we are living under the tyranny of the prevailing style of management. So then I looked. I wanted to, so what exactly is this tyranny stuff? I mean, I'm so used to the word, so I wanted to go back and get a definition. "Tyranny is often synonymous with cruelty and oppression." And I said, that's... Yeah. Yeah. Oh, absolutely. All right. 0:25:26.4 BB: So, next, I wanna talk about... In previous podcasts I talked about work at Rocketdyne, what we called an... In the beginning it was called A Thinking Roadmap. And then as we got turned on to thinking about thinking, we changed that to An InThinking Roadmap. And that constituted roughly 220 hours of training over a dozen or so courses. So we had a one day class in Edward de Bono's Six Thinking Hats, a one day class in his, in other, actually two days in some of his other. So anyways, we had a number of courses on de Bono's work. I had a 40-hour intro course to Taguchi methods and a 40-hour advanced class in Dr. Taguchi's work. We had a 9-hour session called Understanding Variation. We had a things we were trained in that were developed by others, and then things we designed ourselves. 0:26:36.6 BB: And in the courses are tools and techniques. So tools are a cell phone, a slide rule, a computer. And the technique is how do we use it? And they provide what Ackoff would call efficiency, but also a number of these courses were inspired by Dr. Deming and Russ Ackoff were about improving effectiveness. And I got into concepts and strategies. And then what I wanted to mention that I don't think I've mentioned before is the whole concept of an InThinking Roadmap, and in this thinking about our thinking, which is a big part of the theme for tonight is, as that was inspired by, in the early '90s, Rockwell, Rocketdyne was then part of Rockwell, every division of Rockwell had a technology roadmap. And that had to be presented to higher and higher levels. 0:27:33.3 BB: What technologies are developing? What's the roadmap? And so more and more and more I heard this tech roadmap, tech roadmap. And then with colleagues, we started thinking about thinking, we thought, we need to have a thinking roadmap to combine with the technology roadmap. So the technology roadmap is gonna be helping us enormously in terms of efficiency, but not effectiveness. And I thought to integrate those two is quite powerful, which is, again another reminder of why Dr. Deming's work is a brilliant foundation for the use of technology. Otherwise, what you end up doing in a non-Deming company is with a cell phone you can increase the speed of blame. 0:28:21.4 BB: All right. So then I went back since last time I did some more research into transformation and came up with some great thoughts from Russ Ackoff. Again, our dear friend Russ Ackoff. And this is from an article that Russ wrote on transformations. And he says, "transformation is not only require recognition of the difference between what is practiced and what is preached. He says a transformation called four years ago by Donald Schön in his book Beyond the Stable State," and this is a 1991 book, he said, "it requires a transformation in the way we think.” “Einstein," Russ says "put it powerfully and succinctly." He says, "without changing our patterns of thought, we'll not be able to solve the problems we created with our current pattern of thought." 0:29:08.2 BB: Russ continues. "I believe the pattern of thought that is required is systemic. It is difficult if at all possible to reduce the meaning of systemic thinking to a brief definition. Nevertheless, I try. Systemic thinking," again from Russ, "is holistic versus reductionist, synthetic versus analytic. Reductionist and analytic thinking derived properties from the whole, from the parts, from the properties of their parts. Holistic and synthetic thinking derived properties of parts, from the property of the whole that contains them." So I thought it was neat to go back and look at that. And then I want, more from Russ. "A problem never exists in isolation. It's surrounded by other problems in space and time. The more of a context of a problem that a scientist can comprehend, the greater are his chances of truly finding an adequate solution." 0:30:11.4 BB: And then, and so when I was going through this over the last few days, thinking, boy, I wish Dr. Deming defined transformation, it would've been, if he had an operational definition. But I thought, but wait a minute. 'Cause part of what I'm finding is, in my research, an article I came across years ago, Leading Change in the Harvard Business Review, a very popular article, 1995, by John Kotter, Why Transformations Fail. So Kotter uses that word and the title is Leading Change: Why Transformations Fail. And he is got establishing... Eight steps of transformation. "Establishing a sense of urgency, forming a powerful guiding coalition, creating a vision, communicating the vision, empowering others to act on the vision, planning for, and creating short-term wins." And under that step, Andrew, he's got a couple of steps, I'd like to get your thoughts on. One is "recognizing and rewarding employees involved in the improvements." So I thought, but of course this is transformation in the realm of the prevailing system of management. And so what that got me... Tossed around on it. I thought, well, wait a minute. There's a bunch of words that Dr. Deming uses that others use, but we know they mean something different. So Dr. Deming... 0:31:56.6 AS: Like I'm thinking, improvement is what he may be talking about. 0:32:02.4 BB: Well, but Dr. Deming talks about teamwork and the need to work together. Everybody talks about that. 0:32:08.1 AS: Yep. 0:32:09.2 BB: But just that we know, in a non-Deming environment, it's about managing actions, completing those tasks in isolation. I can meet requirements minimally, hand off to you, and that in a non-Deming environment, we call teamwork. So what I was thinking is, well, it's not that we need a new, 'cause I was even thinking, maybe we need a new word. Maybe in the Deming community, we should stop using the word transformation and come up with another word. Well, the trouble is, there's a whole bunch of other words that we use from teamwork to work together, to leader, quality. We talk about performance. We talk about root cause versus root causes. We talk about system. And so it's not that we need a new word, we need a new foundation. And that goes back to this notion as you read The New Economics or Out of the Crisis, you're hearing words that Dr. Deming uses that others use like John Kotter, but they're not used in the same context. 0:33:26.2 AS: How would you wrap up the main points you want people to take away from this discussion about transformation? 0:33:38.1 BB: Big thing is, we are talking about transformation. We are talking about seeing with new eyes, hearing with new ears. So the seeing, we talked about last time, is it's not just the systems. We're seeing systems differently. We're seeing variation differently. We're thinking differently about people and what motivates them and inspires them. The psychology piece, the theory of knowledge piece, we're challenging what we know. And then we have to think about all those interactions between two of them, between three of them, between four of them. And so I'd say that it's, the essence is transformation is essential. It is about rethinking our thinking. And I just wanna leave with two quotes. One fairly recent, one a little older. And the first quote, the more recent one from Tom Johnson, "How the world we perceive works depends upon how we think. The world we perceive," Andrew "is a world we bring forth through our thinking." 0:34:44.9 BB: That's H. Thomas Johnson, a dear friend in his 1999 book, Profit Beyond Measure. And my advice to people in reading that book is, do not attempt to read it laying down in bed. It's just, now you can read those other books we talked earlier. I think you can read those lying in bed. But Tom is very pithy. You wanna be wide awake. The last quote I wanna leave is from William James, born in 1842, died in 1910. He was an American philosopher, psychologist, and the first educator to offer a psychology course in the US. He is considered to be a leading thinker of the late 19th century, the father of American psychology, one of the elements of Profound Knowledge. And his quote that I wanna leave you with, Andrew is, "The greatest discovery of my generation is that human beings can alter their lives by altering their attitudes of mind." 0:35:45.2 AS: Whoa. Well, Bill, what an ending. On behalf of everyone at The Deming Institute, I want to thank you again for the discussion. For listeners, remember to go to deming.org to continue your journey. And if you want to keep in touch with Bill, just find him on LinkedIn. This is your host, Andrew Stotz, and I'll leave you with my favorite quote from Dr. Deming. "People are entitled to joy in work."
The Killer Pod Krew is back for a Christmas edition of War Games! For this War Games, we are ranking our Top 10 "It Happens to be Christmas" Films. We aren't talking your typical holiday films in this list. We are going for movies that certainly have a Christmas presence but isn't the focus of the plot. This is a fun list we put together and will give you some films to watch for the season but aren't dripping with Christmas spirit. Check it out!
A classic song by a band that filled their musical space better than anyone, and a surprising duet that's a complete departure, that's still utterly faithful to the original. Have You Ever Seen The Rain, originally by Creedence Clearwater Revival, covered by Willie Nelson featuring Paula Nelson. Outro music is It Happens by Sugarland, so we know you'll get your recommended daily allowance of twang.
MDV, James, and Max are back on the mic for this week's episode of THE INTRO:[0:00] Mr. New Haircut[1:52] Things you will never do again[3:16] You look good, you feel good, you coach good [6:34] If I've learned everything from Ted Lasso...[8:40] You can't coach in pajamas[9:43] Little foot wears dinosaur nanos[10:44] Bullshit false senses of decorum[13:30] What should a coach be wearing? (according to MDV)[15:00] ...now according to Max[16:41] You don't want to be pig pen (the body odor conversation)[22:53] Phylis' perfume and patchouli[23:38] Coaching is 50% crop dusting[24:29] You should look like you are putting coaching first (seminar staff expectations)[26:35] There is never a reason to eat during class... IT HAPPENS[27:40] New age pocket sandwich[29:38] MDV did a really cool workout[33:14] A coach needs a high emotional IQ[36:37] Thoughts on the word "functional" and over "scienc-ing" fitness[39:45] Be a beginner in a group setting[41:15] Fun fact about Max and swimming[43:20] Getting frustrated with athletes[47:31] It's incredible how obient a class can be[50:09] There's levels to everything[52:47] Painting 4 portraits at the same time[54:30] Tin foil hat segment[56:07] Frog kip v. butterfly kip pull-ups (Max's mic drop)[1:00:26] Apple is king[1:02:10] 38 ways to cook a steak[1:05:22] Flava flav[1:07:47] What workout is James doing today?[1:10:28] Sexiest, shreddiest, tattiestGrab a notebook, grab a chair, and let's learn a thing or two about fitness, nutrition, and performance from the fellas. New episodes of THE INTRO launch every Tuesday on Apple Podcasts & Spotify.Follow MDV Follow Max Follow James Follow NCFIT NCFIT Programming For Gym Owners Coach Like A Pro Coaching Development Course
The National League Town monthly series “It Happens in Threes” pulls into the garage after zooming ahead one more decade, to remember 2023 (75-87) in a segment short on long-term perspective, but no doubt fortified by recency bias. As could be said of 1963 (51-11), 1983 (68-94), 1993 (59-103), 2003 (66-95) and 2013 (74-88), these were not the best the best of times, but they're the only times we got to know in Met years that ended in “3” (you gotta believe pennant-winning 1973 remains the exception to that rule of threes). Also, we thank the Phillies' backup catcher for thinking of us at a highly unlikely moment. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nationalleaguetown/message
It Happens on July 8 at 11:15 UTCAs July rolls around, and our number crunchers thought it was worth fact-checking a July-related claim that has been making the rounds on the internet lately. In the original post, Reddit user GiddySwine presents a still image of our Day and Night World Map, claiming that 99% of the world's population is between dawn and dusk on July 8 at 11:15 UTC. A more widely circulated version claims that 99% of the population gets daylight at that moment.
Expectations were raised, expectations were dashed. In a nutshell, that's been 2023 for the Mets. Still, hope springs eternal, even in the last days of a season about to end with no sign our most recent spasm of hope transformed into the success we dared expect. We can't control what the players accomplish, yet we'll be back to look forward to a collection of them next year doing better than they did this year. One decade ago, we had only one day in five to really look forward to, and we rode that Day for all it was worth. The “It Happens in Threes” series lands in 2013, a.k.a. Harvey Year (11:15). National League Town also takes a moment to remember the Mets fan author who preserved for us every Met day of the franchise's first twenty years (37:45). --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nationalleaguetown/message
Ever have your team sign an accomplished quarterback, a pedigreed coach, a dazzling shooter or a reliable lefty reliever and you weren't thrilled because, quite frankly, you didn't like the idea of rooting for that particular person? Funny we should ask, as Greg and Jeff are talking about the kind of adjustment a fan sometimes makes in the name of hoping your team wins more games. In 2003, the Mets constituted something of a test case in this regard, and didn't win many games, but they left behind some intriguing memories, which National League Town explores this week in It Happens in Threes (14:50). --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nationalleaguetown/message
This week on Breaking Battlegrounds, Chuck and Sam are joined by friend of the show, Martin Di Caro of the Washington Times and host of the History as It Happens podcast. Later in the, Utah's Congressman Blake Moore calls in to talk about his work on the House Ways and Means Committee. -Martin Di Caro brings 25 years of broadcast journalism experience to the Washington Times. He has won numerous prestigious awards throughout his career in major media markets across the country. Before coming to the Times, Martin was a news anchor at Bloomberg Radio's Washington bureau. From 2012 to 2017, he covered transportation at NPR member station WAMU 88.5 in Washington, where his work on the yearslong Metrorail crisis earned Martin his second Edward R. Murrow award, which included hosting the radio station's first podcast, Metropocalypse. Martin worked as a reporter for AP Radio in New York and Washington for eight years starting in 2008. He lives in the Columbia Heights neighborhood of D.C. and his interests include reading history and following his beloved New York Jets. He can be reached at mdicaro@washingtontimes.com.-A native of Ogden, Blake Moore is a proactive problem solver committed to representing each and every constituent of Utah's First District. He is dedicated to reflecting Utah's values in Congress and finding solutions to the challenges facing the district and the state. Advocating for inclusive, pro-growth, and aspirational principles, Blake is amplifying Northern Utah's voice on a national level to ensure Utahns receive the service and representation they deserve.Blake currently serves as the first-ever Utah Republican on the House Ways and Means Committee, where he sits on the Healthcare, Social Security, and Work and Welfare subcommittees. He also serves on the House Budget Committee to push for policies to reverse our national debt crisis and advocate for Utah's defense community. Blake continues to represent Hill Air Force Base as co-chair of the Armed Forces and Depot caucuses.Before being elected to Congress, Blake worked for small businesses and in the foreign service, experiences that now guide his work on domestic and foreign policy. As a Principal at Cicero Group, Blake worked primarily in the social impact, marketing research, and strategy practice areas leading projects and serving clients throughout Utah and the nation. He has expertise in education, financial services, public policy, healthcare, transportation, supply chain, and waste industries, and this work informs his customer service and problem solver approach in Washington, D.C., as he identifies ways to help the federal government better work for Northern Utah. His passion for helping organizations manage the change process drives his ambition to overcome partisan gridlock, improve federal agencies, and smartly streamline the nation's bureaucracy.Previously, Blake worked abroad in business development in the healthcare and financial services industries, which led him to understand the challenges that small businesses grapple with daily. Blake was also honored to serve in the Foreign Service for the U.S. Department of State, where he gained first-hand knowledge of America's international threats. This experience taught him to take seriously the United States' diplomatic apparatus, the readiness of the Armed Forces, and the nation's commitment to strengthening partnerships and alliances across the globe.Blake joined Congress in 2021 and served on the Armed Services, Natural Resources, and Budget committees during his first term. On these committees, he advocated for Hill Air Force Base and Utah's defense community, promoted domestic energy production, worked on addressing our debt and deficit crises, among several other efforts. Congressman Moore convened a Debt and Deficit Task Force in Ogden to create a framework of solutions with local leaders for how the federal government can grow the economy, save and strengthen vital programs, focus America's spending, and fix Congress's budgeting process. For these efforts, he was named a 2022 Fiscal Hero by the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. He also successfully pushed for provisions in the National Defense Authorization Act packages for FY22 and FY23 that support Hill Air Force Base's modernization efforts, Sentinel program, housing availability, and more.Blake was the most successful freshman Republican member in terms of legislation passed, with four bills signed into law by President Biden and several more passed through committee. His bills that became law are the Saline Lake Ecosystems in the Great Basin States Program Act, the Better Cybercrime Metrics Act, the National Medal of Honor Act, the Modernizing Access to our Public Land Act, and provisions in the Afghanistan Accountability Act.Blake is an active and valued team player within the House Republican Conference, chosen to serve as an Assistant Whip on the Republican Whip Team, the House Armed Services Committee conferee on the China legislation conference committee, and co-chair of the bipartisan Depot, Air Force, and Future caucuses. Blake obtained a Master's in Public Policy and Administration from Northwestern University. He graduated from the University of Utah after serving a mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints in Seoul, South Korea, and signing a scholarship to play as the quarterback at Utah State University. In high school, he was awarded the Wendy's National High School Heisman, an award honoring one male and one female senior for excellence in athletics, academics, and citizenship. He remembers fondly a conversation with a Heisman trustee after the ceremony. The trustee mentioned that it was Blake's Eagle Scout and other service projects that set him apart. Blake recalls thinking at that moment, “I'm not special; that's just the way kids are raised in Northern Utah!”Blake is married to Jane Boyer, his amazing, humorous, and very candid wife, who encourages him to take risks and pursue big things. Blake and Jane have four awesome and active boys who keep them on their toes- Max, George, Winston, and Franklin. Even with a congressional term under his belt, Blake's most prized title is “Little League Coach.”-Connect with us:www.breakingbattlegrounds.voteTwitter: www.twitter.com/Breaking_BattleFacebook: www.facebook.com/breakingbattlegroundsInstagram: www.instagram.com/breakingbattlegroundsLinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/breakingbattlegrounds This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit breakingbattlegrounds.substack.com
This week on Breaking Battlegrounds, Chuck is out of the studio but Sam is joined by friend of the show, former Arizona State Legislator Michelle Ugenti-Rita. Sam and Michelle speak to Ann Atkinson who organized a Health, Wealth, and Happiness program at Arizona State University which featured prominent conservative speakers and was met with intense opposition from the left. Later in the show, Christina Eichelkraut returns to offer a unique perspective on the impact of artificial intelligence. -Ann Atkinson is the former Executive Director of the T.W. Lewis Center for Personal Development at Barrett, the Honors College. Ann is a Barrett alumna, entrepreneur, former public company executive, frequent public speaker, healthcare real estate expert, wife, mother, and triathlete. She has regularly volunteered for the Lewis Center, which has helped fulfill her passion to better prepare students for the challenges and opportunities of life. Ann earned a Bachelor of Science in Finance from ASU, where she graduated from Barrett, the Honors College and with honors from the W.P. Carey School of Business. She was introduced to commercial real estate through her Barrett honors internship, which led to a distinguished 17-year career in healthcare real estate. She most recently founded and led a privately-held national healthcare real estate investment firm. Previously, she was an executive officer for a healthcare real estate investment trust listed on the New York Stock Exchange, where she led acquisitions and dispositions on behalf of the company. Formerly, she worked for Jerry Colangelo, David Eaton, and Mel Shultz of JDM Partners, specializing in commercial real estate investments. Ann started her career with a national commercial real estate brokerage firm, specializing in office and medical office investment sales. -Connect with us:www.breakingbattlegrounds.voteTwitter: www.twitter.com/Breaking_BattleFacebook: www.facebook.com/breakingbattlegroundsInstagram: www.instagram.com/breakingbattlegroundsLinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/breakingbattlegroundsTranscription: Sam Stone: [00:00:10] Welcome to another episode of Breaking Battlegrounds with your host, Chuck Warren. I'm Sam Stone. First up today, we're very excited to have returning guests, Martin Di Caro. Martin is a broadcast journalist for The Washington Times and host of The History As It Happens podcast, which I know Chuck is a huge fan of. I've tuned into a number of times, highly recommend that folks and Chuck take it away.Chuck Warren: [00:00:32] So folks, we'll post this on our social media. Martin had a great episode this past Thursday called Our Radical Declaration, talking about the Declaration of Independence since July 4th is here coming up. And Martin, thanks for visiting us today.Martin Di Caro: [00:00:49] Chuck and Sam, I'm delighted to be here. Happy Independence Day in advance.Chuck Warren: [00:00:54] Thank you very much. Are you as well? So the podcast is history as it happens. And Martin, I want to I want to start off with this question. So we all have origin stories. We were talking before the show, Apple, they did a garage. I mean, it seems like all tech companies start in a garage for some reason, but nonetheless, it's a garage, right? But these origin stories define who we are. Right? And I was thinking the other day on a flight where I hit four cities in five days and the Delta flight attendant came up and hand me a thank you letter for flying three. 3 million miles, Right. Like, I don't know what they expect me to do with the letter, but nonetheless, it was nice of her. And and I thought about all the times I have taken red eyes home to go see kids games, be there for events. And I asked my kids, what do they remember? And they said, I just remember you sacrifice for the family. So that's an origin story for our family, right? What is the origin story for our country, specifically July 4th? And does that origin story still stand?Martin Di Caro: [00:01:55] I would say yes. We're still living in the political world of the founders. Lots of changes. Of course, lots of stuff has happened, had a civil war and what is often called our second founding with the 13th, 14th and 15th Amendments. And of course, World War Two made the United States a global power right. Uncontested global power in the Cold War victory in late 1980s. But to get back to your question, yes, our origins are still very important. They're still contested. But, you know, we're a nation built upon ideas, and ideas are never static. They're dynamic. And, you know, what does it mean to be an American? That question was trenchant in the late 18th century, and we're still contesting it today. And that's kind of the nature of democracy, right? It's permanent origin. It's permanent argument. Just look at the Supreme Court decisions that have come down the past week. Right. They deal with fundamental rights, sometimes competing rights. You know, as David M Kennedy, a great historian has said, who gets a seat at the table of the great American barbecue. So our origins, you know, in retrospect, were rather puny when you think about what the revolutionaries accomplished, right? But that egalitarian rhetoric, those egalitarian ideals are still very much with us. We're still contesting them. Our history is a history of political conflict.Sam Stone: [00:03:20] Martin I actually don't like the idea of a second founding as much as realistically after the Civil War was the I don't want to say culmination because we've seen with these Supreme Court cases even this week the continuation. But that was really the first major step in fulfilling all the promises that the founders laid out. And part of the genius to me of of both the declaration and the Constitution is that they understood that they were imperfect and that they would not achieve right away all the ideals they laid down on paper, but they left a path for us to do it.Martin Di Caro: [00:03:56] Absolutely. And I like how you linked both the Declaration and the Constitution together. Obviously, the Constitution created our government or our second government because the Articles of Confederation didn't work out. But that was very Lincolnian of you. I mean, he saw both of them as being connected. Yeah, I mean the revolution. And I'm going to I'm going to cite Gordon Wood's work here, by the way, in my first podcast of this three part series I'm doing, my guests were Sean Wilentz and Jim Oakes. They are fantastic. I hope everyone takes a listen to that. But I'll cite Gordon Wood here. He says the revolution did more than legally create the United States. It transformed our society. The changes were radical and they were extensive, he says. You know, instead of focusing on what the revolution did not accomplish, to your point about it being incomplete, we should focus instead on why these ideas were so powerful and continue to animate our politics to this day. Our revolution eliminated monarchy. It created a large republic. It reconstituted again, citing Gordon Wood. What Americans meant by public or state power brought an entirely new kind of politics and a new kind of democratic. Office holder onto the world stage. And I do think the revolutionaries of the late 18th century knew that they were you know, I don't want to say that they knew they would be talking for the ages, you know, for all time. But they got the sense that they were on history's stage as well. I mean, it was a revolution. It did reorder society.Chuck Warren: [00:05:26] Wherewith Martin Di Caro. He is a broadcast journalist for The Washington Times and host a great podcast history As it happens. If you want to be smart, listen to that podcast. Let me ask you this question. I think there's one thing people don't understand about the Revolutionary War and the Declaration of Independence, and hopefully you can talk a little bit about it. A third of the country supported it. A third probably was ambivalent. And the other third was, you know, the British fanboys. Right. I mean, is that fair to say?Martin Di Caro: [00:05:53] Yeah, that's what John Adams said. You know, it's hard to say exactly what public opinion was at any given time. You know, there was no polling. Of course, even polls today aren't altogether accurate. But yeah, that's roughly how how historians see it. You know, you had that middle ground of people who were indifferent. I mean, revolutions and wars are scary things. And we know that ordinary people get swept up in are damaged by, you know, the the vicissitudes of war. How do you like that word? Love it more so than you know, others. So, yeah, you did have people who were ardent revolutionaries who wanted to break with Great Britain. He had other revolutionaries who were more moderate, looking to reconcile even well into 1776. And then, of course, you did have loyalists, but, you know, loyalist the number of loyalists and their strength was always overestimated by I mean, that was one of the problems of the way parliament and the king handled all this. They thought that Loyalism was was stronger than it actually, it was. It was actually. And as the war goes on, it becomes weaker and weaker.Sam Stone: [00:06:56] Well, and when you talk about that ambivalence, one of the things if I if you go back and think about it was a historical in many ways, but the movie The Patriot with Mel Gibson one of the one of the depictions that I did like in that was that they showed the war happening in people's front yards. Right. Which was the truth, right? I mean, this was not being fought in some remote battlefield that nobody had any connection to. This was this was a civil war, a revolution fought in people's backyards and people's front yards. And so you can understand the ambivalence of a lot of folks who didn't want to see that for any number of reasons, merely the protection of their family.Martin Di Caro: [00:07:36] Yeah, Revolutionary War was in many ways a civil war. Loyalists had their lost their property. They were outcasts from society for a while after the war ended. And we can celebrate the revolution because it turned out the way, you know, we think it should have turned out. But at the time, of course, there was no unity about any of this. Right? Right. We tend to look back at the revolution as a source of, well, something that all of us can celebrate. But don't use the word unity. As I mentioned at the top of the show, we're still contesting its meaning. We're still arguing over the meaning of freedom and civil liberties and rights. I mean, that's something that comes up in this series. I'm doing Jack Rakove, another great historian, will be my guest in part two of this series. He talks about, you know, the revolutionaries who were gathered at the Continental Congress in Philadelphia. They were not concerned with, you know, what we now consider to be statements of individual equality. You know, their purpose and this makes sense, of course, was, you know, in the in the maelstrom of a war, to declare that the colonists as a people had the same rights to self-government as other nations. But, of course, they use universal language. I mean, Jefferson wrote it a certain way for certain reasons, and that language became aspirational for anybody. I mean, even during the war enslaved black people, they start to cite the Declaration of Independence. These ideas about egalitarianism are percolating at a level audible to normal people, and they're citing the declaration to sue for freedom. And they're collaborating with whites to end slavery in the northern colonies than the northern states, which as we know does happen mostly in a gradual sense. But there was an anti-slavery aspect to the revolution.Chuck Warren: [00:09:22] Well, didn't Martin Luther King call the Declaration of Independence a promissory note? He did at.Martin Di Caro: [00:09:27] The March on Washington. 60th anniversary of that is coming up this year. Elizabeth Cady Stanton at Seneca Falls in 1858. She cites the the Declaration of Independence in her Declaration of Sentiments. And that, of course, is part of political struggle. It takes another 70 years for women to get the right to vote in the federal constitution and amendment, of course, even. Ho Chi Minh, a communist. He cited the Declaration of Independence verbatim in 1945 when he tried to announce Vietnamese independence after World War Two.Sam Stone: [00:10:00] You know what I always found interesting about the founding and the writing of the declaration, the Constitution, This was not the first time that any of. These ideas had been put on paper, but it was the first time they were brought together as the foundation of a new government. In other words, these ideas had been percolating.Chuck Warren: [00:10:16] It wasn't a talk, the talk. It was a walk. The walk.Sam Stone: [00:10:18] Right? Yeah. Which made it very different.Martin Di Caro: [00:10:22] And they had no way of knowing it would even succeed. I mean, as a matter of fact, the Revolutionary War did not go well, right? For a lot of reasons. I mean, they barely could keep an army in the field. I mean, this frustrated George Washington to no end. The state governments didn't want to pay, you know, their fair share to keep an army supplied. And it was very difficult to raise taxes at all under the Articles of Confederation to pay for things. Inflation was rampant. As I mentioned, war is miserable. And there was also a smallpox outbreak. Yeah.Chuck Warren: [00:10:55] So. Martin, that is a great point here. I think people seem to forget that America has always been somewhat messy because we're allowed to speak our mind, right? And and with a minute 30 here for our next segment, what have you, as you've studied and interviewed all these great historians, what do you view as the top three or 2 or 3 qualities that American president has to have unite people to for a common good, A common cause?Martin Di Caro: [00:11:21] You said an American president? Yeah. Oh, I think vision is important. I think it's important to invoke our origins to. But not an idealized kind of silly or patriotic way. But, you know, I think also for any president, right. Any politician to understand the importance of politics, I think a lot of people today kind of throw their hands up in the air. Yes. And I noticed this a lot on the especially among younger people on the left. Politics is slow and ineffective. And, you know, our all that egalitarian rhetoric was a lie when they said it back in the 18th century. I do not agree with that position. So, you know, you get this pessimistic, despondent type of attitude when, you know, our history is a history of political conflict. It's about, you know, stating a vision. I think any successful politician can state a vision, but also be good at the politics.Sam Stone: [00:12:14] Fantastic. Martin We're going to be coming back, folks, with more in just a moment from Martin DeCaro of The Washington Times and host of History As It Happens podcast. Be sure you're tuning in and downloading. Go to breaking battlegrounds vote. You can get the links to all of our Substack, Spotify, Apple Podcasts, all the good stuff there. Make sure you're signing up to get our latest episodes right in your email box. We really appreciate it. And hang on because we have more with Martin Di Caro coming right up.Sam Stone: [00:00:05] Welcome back to Breaking battlegrounds with your host, Chuck Warren. I'm Sam Stone. On the line with us is Martin Di Caro, broadcast journalist for The Washington Times and host of History As It Happens podcast. But folks, are you concerned with stock market volatility? If you're not, you should be. Market's been going up and down like a rocket. Any returns you're getting out there, it's very hard to count on them. That's why we at Breaking Battlegrounds have endorsed investing with Y Refy. If you invest with Y Refy, you can earn up to a 10.25% rate of return. That's a fixed rate of return at 10.25%. It's the best deal out there right now. Log on to invest Y Refy.com that's invest the letter y, then Refy.com or call them at 888. Y refy 24 and tell them Chuck and Sam sent you. You won't regret it. Chuck We're continuing on right now with Martin Di Caro. Fantastic conversation so far as we're heading into the July 4th super long weekend. This time.Chuck Warren: [00:01:05] Martin Talk to our audience a little bit, expand further on our last question about how political conflict works in America. And it's sometimes it's just a messy pot of stew. Yeah.Marti Di Caro: [00:01:16] Yeah. No one's going to hire me to be a political consultant, by the way. But I mean, being good at politics is hard. I mean, there's not just one actor either. So you have a, you know, a brilliant political manipulator like Lyndon Johnson. But, you know, he wasn't the only actor in all of that as well. He needed help from other people. But I guess my point is, you know, I'm more interested in I've been doing these shows now about the American Revolution and just trying to understand why things happen the way they did, rather than saying, Oh, I wish this had happened sooner than it actually did. You know, why did it take 20 years to finally get rid of the slave trade through federal legislation in 1807 1808, following the compromise that was made at the Constitutional Convention? Why did it take Abraham Lincoln all of 18 months? As if 18 months is a really long amount of time to do a full emancipation proclamation out of after the start of the Civil War. You know, why did it take 70 years after Elizabeth Cady Stanton in the Seneca Falls meetings in 1858? 70 years to finally get, you know, women's suffrage? Well, instead of saying, you know, complaining that things didn't happen on the schedule, we think it should have, we need to think more historically and really understand why things happen the way they did. How is an American Revolution even possible to begin with? Why were people ready to hear those egalitarian words and act on them when they did? I think we get a better understanding of our origins when we do that.Sam Stone: [00:02:41] Because in many ways, Martin, a lot of those ideas were not to the benefit of the the most powerful people who had guided our society and every other society prior to the implementation of these ideals, right? I mean, they they benefited from the system that was previously in place.Marti Di Caro: [00:02:59] Absolutely. I mean, you can make the point about Thomas Jefferson himself, right? He penned the document with some help from Adams and Franklin and others. He was a lifelong slaveholder and he certainly did not want to see slavery. Well, you know, Jefferson's views on slavery do change over time. Early in his career, he took some aggressive moves to try to end slavery. But later on, he didn't, partly because it was an unpopular thing to do in Virginia, which was a very large, you know, slave holding colony, then slaveholding state. But certainly, yeah, you know, this is a very corrosive idea, egalitarianism. It challenges the status quo. Other people are free to interpret those words any way they want in a democratic society and say, you know what, I want a seat at the table as well. So, yeah, you're right.Chuck Warren: [00:03:48] Of the 56 delegates at the Second Continental Congress, we call them our founding fathers, who was one besides the obvious? Thomas Jefferson, Ben Franklin, who's who's somebody that stands out that people don't pay enough attention to.Marti Di Caro: [00:04:00] I think somebody like John Dickinson, who was a patriot and a revolutionary, but he was rather moderate. I think it's interesting to look at the way and I can recommend a book about this. Please do. Please do. Yeah. Well, and I think this book is still in print. I was able to find a copy of it. Wouldn't that be great if I recommend a book that no one can actually find?Chuck Warren: [00:04:18] Yeah. Yeah.Marti Di Caro: [00:04:19] The Beginnings of National Politics by Jack Rakove. I use this book to frame our conversation in part two of my series. Dickinson was very, very interesting as to why he was trying to still reconcile with the Crown. You know, people like James Otis, George Mason, they articulated many of these ideas and ideals, but we don't often think of them. They don't come to mind right away. We rather think of Jefferson, Franklin, Madison, George Washington.Chuck Warren: [00:04:47] Will Gallup this week released a poll and the headline Extreme Pride Americans remains Near Record Low, which was funny about it, is 67% of Americans are extremely or very proud of the United States. That's a pretty high number. Right. And then which.Sam Stone: [00:05:03] Throws a lot of the modern.Chuck Warren: [00:05:04] Narrative. Yeah. Yeah. It did. Another 22% of us adults are moderately proud. I mean, so basically you're over you're close mid 80s on this. Right. But why do you think to our audience, why do you think we should be proud to be Americans?Marti Di Caro: [00:05:18] Well, you know, I'm also not happy with a lot of things these days. And, you know, I guess depending on your politics, maybe the Supreme Court has you pulling your hair out. Maybe you think, hey, this is how our founders intended it to be. Right? Right. You know, your question again, why, why or why should people be proud of their country? I think because, you know, we have a premise for a politics, a progressive politics, if you want to use that word, to make positive change. Now, maybe some people aren't happy with that use of my choice of words there. So guess what? I guess what I'm trying.Sam Stone: [00:05:52] I'm all for stealing progressive back.Marti Di Caro: [00:05:55] You know, if people are going to sneer at our country, right. And our founding and these ideals and the egalitarian, egalitarian rhetoric and say, well, it was a lie then and we've never been able to fulfill it as if anyone actually argues it was a reflection of reality in the late 18th century. Right. Well, if they're going to sneer at that, as James Oakes said on my show, then what's their premise for change? What are you going to base your politics on? Right. I think I like our system, right. I like the idea of fundamental human equality as the guiding principle for our nation.Sam Stone: [00:06:30] I think that's a great point, because with all the tear the system down rhetoric you hear today in the news and on social media, the one thing that's missing is what? What follows? What are what are you trying to replace these current systems with other than some vague notion of.Chuck Warren: [00:06:49] Yo have a my way or the highway mentality is what you.Marti Di Caro: [00:06:51] Have. That's people who give up on politics. Then, you know, abolish the Senate, abolish the Supreme Court. I mean, that's not serious stuff.Chuck Warren: [00:06:58] But, you know, but in fairness to you, you're also a patient man. I mean, for example, you're a Jets fan, right? So this is taught you this is taught you amazing patience over the years, right?Marti Di Caro: [00:07:08] Yes. And I will never give up on them because I know the moment I finally, you know, throw in the towel, they'll win.Chuck Warren: [00:07:14] I remember I remember for the Giants became this this great power years when I grew up in the Northern California, the old next door neighbor who loved the giants said, look, I've just learned to say there's always next year, you know? And I think that's for the Jets fans, too. You know?Sam Stone: [00:07:28] You know what? You know what I want for the Jets season? I want a great like six games from Aaron Rodgers, who goes down with a tragic injury. And we see we see we see Zach Wilson come back with the all time great comeback. Yeah, great comeback. Rebirth of his career.Marti Di Caro: [00:07:45] Well, you know, everyone needs a soap opera. Some people watch real soap operas. I watch the Jets.Sam Stone: [00:07:51] Well, I get I get The New York Post in my news every morning, and they're panic over. That would be.Chuck Warren: [00:07:56] Fantastic. It'd be amazing.Marti Di Caro: [00:07:58] Great sports section in that paper.Chuck Warren: [00:08:01] Martin. Martin, what else with our limited time here, what else do you think people should pay more attention to regarding the July 4th? We have one minute.Marti Di Caro: [00:08:10] You know what? Go and read the Declaration of Independence. Everyone can cite those, you know, 55 most famous words. Read the grievances, especially the final grievance. You know, we didn't get to this, but that's okay. This whole idea of a slavery revolution, that's a nonsensical idea that's been put out there by the 1619 project. Yeah. Read those grievances and then go and understand, you know, what was the purpose behind them? Why was Jefferson and his compatriots, why did they, you know, go after King George the third the way they did after, you know, going after parliament through most of.Sam Stone: [00:08:42] The the antidote to ahistorical nonsense is actual history. Thank you so much, Martin De Caro, broadcast journalist for Washington Times and History as It Happens podcast. We love having you on the program and look forward to having you again, folks. Breaking battlegrounds. Back with more in just a moment.Chuck Warren: [00:00:09] Welcome to Breaking Battlegrounds. I'm your host, Chuck Warren, with my co-host, Sam Stone. Today, we are lucky to have with us on these two segments, Congressman Blake Moore. Congressman Moore represents Utah's first Congressional District. He is also the first ever Republican from Utah who sits on the House Ways and Means Committee, which discusses issues we talk about all the time. Sam, health care, Social Security work and welfare subcommittees.Sam Stone: [00:00:32] Pretty much all the most important stuff in the country goes through ways and means.Chuck Warren: [00:00:35] Exactly. He is married to Jane Boyer, who the former Jane Boyer. And she is a very candid wife. And so we want to know how she's candid with you, Blake. And he's also the father of four active boys and he's also a little league coach. How are you as a Little League coach, Congressman?Congressman Moore: [00:00:54] You know, I've had a ref pull me aside the other day. He said, wait, you're the congressman, aren't you? And I go, Oh, boy. And he said, he goes, You were on our case today, but I like it. I'd vote for you because you're fiery. I like that you got passion. So I figured it could very well work in the opposite for me as well, too. So I do have to be careful.Chuck Warren: [00:01:18] So what are the what are the age range for your boys?Congressman Moore: [00:01:21] Ten, seven, seven and about 18 months.Chuck Warren: [00:01:24] So which one do you coach, the ten year old or seven year old?Congressman Moore: [00:01:26] Mostly to this point. The ten year old. The seven year old started playing a lot of sports kind of right when I was first running for office. And that was that was tough. So I did a lot with the seven year old. And now I'm picking it back up now that I'm, you know, in my second term, a little bit of a groove scheduling wise that I can, you know, try to try to get engaged a little bit more. So mostly. Mostly, yes. Football, basketball and baseball. You get me outside those three sports, I don't know what I'm doing.Chuck Warren: [00:01:53] Or does your wife feel outnumbered in the house or everybody knows who's really in charge there?Congressman Moore: [00:01:58] They know who's in charge. But she. I actually wanted the girl more. Uh, ironically enough, I think if we were to have had a girl, it would have been she. She would have definitely said that was the best thing. But I still am the one that wants the daughter wants the wedding one day to give away the all that stuff. A little bit of a traditionalist there. So I do feel like we never got that girl, but we definitely don't need five boys. So the risk of going for any more is going to be way, way out.Chuck Warren: [00:02:30] You're not you're not taking that to Vegas. Um, so how do you handle the travel with four young boys and take it? Your family lives in the district in Utah. How do you handle your travel back and forth?Congressman Moore: [00:02:40] Fortunately, I'm about 15 minutes from the airport, and we have direct flights from Salt Lake. So that is a uniquely special thing we can have direct to DC. So that cuts down. I have colleagues from North Dakota, Iowa, some places in Texas, they're an hour, hour and a half away from an airport. Then they're taking a layover. It can always be worse for you. And so my mindset is, one, it could always be worse. I have it pretty, pretty good. Um, think of what some of our military folks go through and the time they spend away from their family and, and, you know, the duty and honor that they do in their life and their service is more honorable, I think, than than what we do in Congress. But it is a fight in Congress. And and it is it is a sacred position. So, um, other folks have always sacrificed more. I think that's how I look at it. My wife deals with it. She she said to me when I first ran, Now listen, if you win, which I don't think you will, you when you win, you can't give me a hard time or make any of those snide comments you do. When we budget together, you can't be passive aggressive about babysitting costs. You just have to you just have to take it and you have to deal with it and not give me a hard time. And you let me own that.Sam Stone: [00:03:53] And Congressman, we could feel bad for you. But we've had the member from Guam on this show and there's nobody who's got a travel schedule as rough as that Poor guy.Congressman Moore: [00:04:02] Exactly.Chuck Warren: [00:04:03] Um, quickly here, tell us a little bit about your work with small business. Is there any bills you're sponsoring on it?Congressman Moore: [00:04:09] So in 2017, Republicans, you know, went at it alone. They used the budget reconciliation process, which allows you to pass a bill without, you know, by bypassing the filibuster when you have the White House, House and Senate, Republicans and Democrats both do this often. Sometimes that leads to big legislation that you wouldn't otherwise do or be able to do given the filibuster. But, um. They they they did the Tax Cut and Jobs Act. And in that tax cut, Jobs Act was a lot of things. And it is our job now and we're in a different political environment. So we're not going to be able to do that same thing over again and re-up everything that's in the Tax Cut and Jobs Act because it's not a political reality. Right. The things that expired, the Democrats aren't going to go on board with. But there are issues. There are there are provisions inside that bill that we have to be able to look back and say, what has worked, what has driven growth, and the Small Business Growth Act that we put together that was passed out of the committee just a few weeks ago, something we're really excited about. And basically it doubles your ability to take itemized deductions on capital improvements, farm equipment, office equipment and just things that you're investing in your own business. A major piece of manufacturing. If you can write all.Chuck Warren: [00:05:25] These all these things, that creates productivity and jobs, correct? Exactly. We're going to take a quick break here with Congressman Blake Moore. Utah's first Congressional District. He sits on the House Ways and Means Committee. This is breaking battlegrounds. You can find us at breaking battlegrounds. Vote. We'll be right back.Sam Stone: [00:00:11] Welcome back to Breaking battlegrounds with your host, Chuck Warren. I'm Sam Stone. Continuing on the line with us, Congressman Blake Moore from Utah's first Congressional District here in just a moment. But folks, are you struggling with stock market volatility right now, especially with Joe Biden in office? What if you could invest in a portfolio with a high fixed rate of return that's not correlated to the stock market? A portfolio where you know what each monthly statement will look like with no surprises, you can turn your monthly income on or off, compound it, whatever you choose. There's no loss of principle. If you need your money back at any time, your interest is compounded daily, you're paid monthly. There are no fees. And this is a secure collateralized portfolio that delivers a fixed rate of return up to 10.25%, up to 10.25%. It's the best deal out there in investing right now. Check out our friends at Invest Y Refy.com That's invest the letter Y. The letter Y, then Refy.com or give them a call at 888 Y Refy 24 and tell them Chuck and Sam sent you. Okay, Chuck Continuing on with Congressman Moore. Congressman, are you familiar with the proposal that I believe it's Congressman Schweikert here from Arizona has put up to increase the minimum before businesses have to file a 1099 for contract employees and the like from I believe it's currently $600 or 800 up to 5000. Talking to a lot of small business owners, that's the kind of simple thing that would make their lives massively easier. Is that something that that you're looking to support and that others should be talking about more? Because I heard a little about it and then it seems to have disappeared.Congressman Moore: [00:01:47] It's absolutely yeah, I know about it. We passed it in the the economic package a few weeks ago. This is the this is an opportunity to that the chairman, Chairman Smith wanted us to go out into, you know, regular America, not just inside the Beltway and do some and do some public hearings. And this is one of the things that rang true and kind of highlighted to us. Well, we need to really be focused on this. This is like listening to, you know, everyday Americans running their businesses. This is what we learn from them. And we're like this. This was set years and years ago. And if you would have just adjust for inflation, it would go up. That's how you get with the regulatory body. It becomes archaic and you don't create opportunities to be dynamic within the system. So it's a no brainer in my opinion. It's an overly burdensome. And I think the best example is the Chairman Smith, who still runs a small family farm. If someone comes and bails hay for him, like every like high school senior that comes and bails hay for, you know, ten bucks an hour, they end up having to do a full 1099. That is not the intent. So up the threshold, still holding people accountable. This isn't where the all the tax evaders are doing a bunch of high school seniors. This is not where it is. And babysitters like.Sam Stone: [00:02:58] No smarter.Congressman Moore: [00:02:59] Than our economy.Sam Stone: [00:03:00] The tax evaders tend to be in much higher tax brackets than people who are filing a few thousand dollars in a 1099. Exactly right. One of the things that I think has been a good focus within this Congress and this touches on it, but is and it seems like we could at least find some more room with Democrats to agree on. This is going through some of these archaic rules and saying, hey, does this really still work or does it need to be adjusted or does it need to be replaced or gotten rid of it? Deregulating in a way that doesn't reduce oversight is very possible, isn't it?Congressman Moore: [00:03:35] Yeah, it's very possible. And we need to be adults back in Washington and find those simplistic things we can address on in the Ways and Means Committee. Right now, trade is largely bipartisan and we actually have really good collaborative work together. We do on that. Taxation has become so toxic that I feel that I fear people aren't looking at the big picture. And and if you take an individual piece, I think you got a lot of agreement, but it's how you move it forward. And that's the thing I don't think Americans necessarily understand well enough is, yeah, we agree on a lot of things, but then how you move the package forward, do you tie it to something else that's less popular and try to get more support? That's where we've got to get to more single issue voting that would make everything run more smoothly back there.Chuck Warren: [00:04:24] Well, that's absolutely right. We've often wondered and we talked to various members and they all say, yes, you're correct, Why don't you push more single issue? So, for example, here's one we had a former attorney here who worked on the border and she suggesting, for example, an immigration bill that says unless you come through a port of entry and there's about 327 of them, some of them in the United States, unless you come through a port of entry, you're immediately denied asylum. You need to come through the front door. Right? Right. There needs to be a process that seems like a pretty easy bill. If somebody just submitted that issue alone, one pager, it gets through.Sam Stone: [00:04:57] From an Arizona perspective. It separates the wolves from the sheep. Right. Because the wolves will keep going through.Chuck Warren: [00:05:02] So why don't so so, Congressman, more why don't they do that more?Congressman Moore: [00:05:08] I, i, i. It would make so many things better in our legislative experience. Um. I. Immigration particularly has become a wedge issue. I don't know how else to put it. For 40 years, we've had people that want to to build the right type of policy. You either have to do one of two things on immigration and I'll be brief. You either have to do what we're talking about, make it very simplistic, and tie it together or make it more comprehensive. And and I think people want to get like halfway comprehensive, like I'm supportive of of truly looking at DACA and a visa system that makes sense and is streamlined and gets more workers here. I want more workers here. My district desperately needs more good workforce here, and that can come from a more streamlined immigration. But if we do all if we do that before we tighten up the border process, then the cartels will just be the cartels will be empowered. So you have to build a more comprehensive approach. I do like what Maria Salazar is doing in that comprehensive piece. I just don't think we're we're not ready for it right now because as Republicans, we want to make sure that you see the first part done, and that is the good policy remain in Mexico policy and tighten up the border security. And then we'll get plenty of people on board for for for streamlining it. But it's it's a conundrum and it's a wedge issue. And that's that's and we're not living up to what the Americans need. Every single person back in Washington isn't isn't living up to what they need.Chuck Warren: [00:06:37] So, Congressman Moore, let's talk about a simpler issue. And I say that sarcastically. You're on the House Ways and Means Committee. What do we do about Social Security? I mean, it's a ticking time bomb. People are not being honest about the reform. I have not heard any Republican to say, yeah, we're going to cut benefits now. We've made promise to some people currently retired and those close to retirement that need to be upheld. But what do we need to do for a workforce in their 20s and 30s who are going to have 80 plus year, you know, longevity? What do we do?Congressman Moore: [00:07:06] We took the best first step, last, last session of Congress. The 117th passed the secure 2.0 bill. Secure 2.0 will allow for younger workers to have an extra five or so years saving for retirement. If you are paying down your student loan, say you've graduated from grad school, you're 25 years old and you start paying down your student loan, you you oftentimes have to choose between paying down your student loan or contributing to your 401. K. Your company can. Now, if you are if you're paying your student loan down and a big, big win in Scotus today about the student loan repayment, we can get into that but the company can now contribute on your behalf even if you're not putting in your own match. So we're going to start having people save for retirement much earlier. Um, and that that will.Sam Stone: [00:07:53] That's a great step, Congressman. And thank you. I mean, it's the.Congressman Moore: [00:07:57] Right it's the right step. It had over 400 votes in Congress in the House to pass. Very bipartisan. It's productive. We we have to create other incentives that you do probably have to means test Social Security going forward. We got people getting it that really have that don't really they don't really need it. And they could actually probably delay if they were to be willing to take it in case they lived longer just to offset that risk. So there's all sorts of productive ways we can be doing this without just saying we need to tax more because we have a worker to retirement work ratio issue and we've known it's been coming. I will say this retroactively, if we would have done what President Bush had tried to push, tried to do, we would have been putting money instead of just into a, you know, a government low yield bond like the trust fund. We would have been putting money into mutual funds. And and Dems Democrats will always say, oh, you're privatizing it. You just want to help your Wall Street buddies. That's fundamentally false. And they know it and it's dishonest. If we would have done that, we would have been able to grow the amount of money that we have to contribute to that. Over the last 20 years, would anybody not choose to put money into an S&P 520 years ago? Absolutely not. It was closing at 900 and today it's closing at 4000. Stock markets go up into the right generally over time. They always have. If we don't if we're not willing to trust that, then we're not going to be able to to to to do that. So there's all sorts of things out there that could be doing and we're stuck in stagnation. And if we don't do something in the next ten years to truly address this issue, then, you know, we are we are literally dooming people to having far fewer, you know, 75% of the benefit automatically kicks in. So we're doing them regardless.Sam Stone: [00:09:41] It's a it's a really dishonest talking point, Chuck, to say that the market is somehow robbing people because over any 1 or 2 or 3 or 5 year period, the market may go up or down. But over any ten year period in US history, over 20 years, 50 years, it always goes up. Well, it's even more.Congressman Moore: [00:09:58] Look at all these Ivy League schools with their endowments, right? They're out there. They're out there engaging in growth opportunities, in market opportunities. And and I don't hear any Democrats complaining about all these Ivy leagues that are that are, you know, using their endowments to to cover their expenses. And they're doing a they're doing a fabulous job. And they're also very profitable. And we could be doing that more with with the government. I think Senator Cassidy, I believe, has got some really good proposals that that way it's tougher now because we just don't the trust fund is in such a dire it's in a more dire situation than it was back in the early 2000 when when President George W Bush wanted to push this more. It's just disingenuous.Sam Stone: [00:10:39] And I'm really glad, Congressman, that you brought up means testing, because I've heard too many politicians be afraid of that. But I've never talked to anyone who was rich who cared. No, you know, I mean, honestly, if you're rich, the amount you're going to get from Social Security is so minimal that it takes an actual Scrooge to care about whether they're going to get that money at that point, that that's just the way it is.Congressman Moore: [00:11:02] And what wealthy people want to see is good money going after good. If they're good, money is going after complete government waste. And right now we have just too much government spending and people are like, well, geez, I would love to be contributing to paying down our debt. If I knew that it was going to actually make a difference. But if it's not making a difference, then they shouldn't. So so I kind of see it both ways. But you're right, you've been saying and I think you can offset the risk by saying, I don't need to engage in this for, you know, if I live past I'm 80 or, you know, at 78, I will defer that to that point. There's no real serious conversations going on. It's more so just a little bit of of the latter. And, you know, Republicans had a chance to do it in 2017 and they they deferred and they President Trump wanted to wait till he was in his second term. And it's so ironic right now. I'm a guy that can call it both ways to see President Trump criticize House Republicans, trying to say we're out there trying to get rid of Social Security. That is also disingenuous and it's all political and it's just kind of lobbying for older people's votes. And that's that's not what that's not being an adult back there as not good.Sam Stone: [00:12:08] Governance, that's.Chuck Warren: [00:12:09] For sure. Governance at all. We have two minutes left here. So we're coming up on the July 4th weekend. Tell our audience what this holiday means to you. And specifically, what is your hope and vision for America ten, 20 years down the road?Congressman Moore: [00:12:24] Oh, thank you. I love that question. I really appreciate you focusing on that. You know, it's not just a talking point or a feel good statement, but but God, country and family, they really do mean a lot. And they should be. What everybody what we root ourselves in for this holiday is is family. For me, I've always been able to find time to boat, to golf, to to to something outdoors. We're not great campers. We got young kids still. But like in Utah, like this holiday matters. And there's always time to to find opportunities to to be with family. And I love it. And Utah is a unique place because you have the 4th of July and then you have the 24th of July. And that's our sort of a holiday when the Pioneers came into to Utah. So we call it Pioneer Day. And so there's a lot of fireworks, a lot of God country and family in this place. And my my honest vision for America is to recognize that we have some we have policy differences. Um, but if we let those policy differences divide us continually and if we if that moves into constant personality and division, then China wins, Russia wins, our adversaries win. And we don't have the strength that we have and what we've led the world on over the over the last century. And my vision is to to be firm on where I'm at policy, defend it, try to persuade, and then look for opportunities to to unite our nation more so than than I feel like we are right now.Chuck Warren: [00:14:04] Congressman, we have 15 seconds with you. Where can people follow you on social media?Congressman Moore: [00:14:09] Electmoore.com Is my website or just go to rep Blakemore There's uh, I can't remember. So there's campaign and there's but rep Blakemore on all my socials. Uh, and we would love, would love to follow.Chuck Warren: [00:14:24] Congressman Moore, Utah's first Congressional District. Thanks for joining us. Have a great 4th of July. This is breaking battlegrounds. We'll be back after this break. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit breakingbattlegrounds.substack.com
If it was the worst of times, it wouldn't have been much different from what had been going on for a while. If it was the best of times, it had a funny way of showing it in the standings. From the perspective of 40 years later, it was probably more than a little of each. Welcome to 1983, when Met past, Met present and Met future blended. We remember one of the most pivotal seasons in Mets history in our series It Happens in Threes, focusing on a campaign when the Mets were both pretty lousy and extremely promising, and the characters who populated the team still stand out in memory. National League Town also tries to fill the NL All-Star team with Mets and attempts to make the MLB All-Star Game watchable. All-Star Game: 00:15 "Jeff's Brilliant Idea": 13:15 1983: 18:35 NLT Mailbag: 51:15
National League Town could come up with more than few choice words to describe the first quarter of the season, and Greg and Jeff surely do (4:30), but when a year like 2023 starts getting us down, we turn our attention to a year that can't help but lift our spirits. In the latest edition of our series It Happens in Threes (18:00), we direct our attention to 1973, celebrating the fiftieth anniversary of perhaps the most improbable pennant run any team anywhere has stitched together. By the time you're done listening, you'll be convinced those Mets won it all. Also, we deliver an on-site report from the Mets' recent visit to Washington, featuring an endless rain delay, ample stocks of food and drink, and an unexpected celebrity cameo.
Max Scherzer was ejected from the Mets' final game in Los Angeles for having on his right hand what the pitcher said was perfectly legal sweat and rosin. Perhaps next time he'll see if spit and vinegar meets with the umpires' approval. Whatever substances were involved, the Mets got their California adventure off to an excellent start, running up a 17-6 score in Oakland, which is something you don't see every day (even if you can't help but see that horrible uniform advertising patch). In case 2023 isn't eventful enough for you, National League Town introduces the "It Happens in Threes" anniversary segment that this week will take you back 60 years to the days of banners, placards and Jimmy Breslin. Unicorn Wins: 2:25 Patch commentary: 14:00 It Happens in Threes (1963): 15:30
In this week's episode, we bring you interviews with our external Scope Day speakers. Each Scope Day we arrange for experts to come in and talk to our students about looking after theirmental health and emotional well-being, as well as a range of difficult subjects such as sexual assault, drugs & alcohol and staying safe at music festivals. In this episode, you can hear from: Deana Puccio from the RAP Project, about awareness of sexual assault and issues relating to consent; Henry Hudson from the People Change Minds Project, about coming out as gay and how to be an ally and an inclusivity leader; and Zoe Shuttleworth from IT Happens, about issues relating to drugs & alcohol, including vaping and spiking. These impactful talks act as an extension of our robust PSHE and RSE programme, allowing for deep dive into difficult territory.
Sex, Love, and Addiction: Healing Conversations for Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Men
Carol Teitelbaum is a Marriage & Family Therapist and has been a licensed Therapist since 1985. Carol comes on the show to talk about abuse that has happened to our young boys and how this problem is still minimized in today's society. She shares some common myths people have about men and abuse and how there's a deep silence in the community for these men. She discusses the upcoming “It Happens to Boys” conference. TAKEAWAYS: [2:30] A little bit about Carol. [2:40] Let's talk about our boys. What happens to boys? [3:20] Men do not get over sexual abuse. Men do not just ‘get over it'. [6:30] Men have been told since they were little that they don't have feelings. [8:00] What myths are out there about boys and sexual abuse? [9:10] Abuse is not about sex. It's about power. [11:00] Women abuse boys! Boys get very little empathy when they've been abused by a woman. [15:40] Sexual intimacy goes way beyond just ‘putting it in'. [21:00] How does Carol help someone who has been abused open up? [25:50] What does the healing journey look like for men? [29:50] What's the difference between anger and rage? [30:35] Let's talk about the Creative Change Conference. RESOURCES: Creativechangeconferences.com Menhealing.org QUOTES: “People still think boys can't be abused.” “Men who do not just get over it. Men who don't get help or start their healing process, they rage because of all the emotions that they tucked away.” “I've heard men say, “If you really knew who I was, you'd think I'm disgusting.” It's because they've been abused.”
EVER LEAVE YOUR VIBRATOR OUT FOR ALL TO SEE? TRUST ME... IT HAPPENS! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mistress-mia8/support
2022 LECTURESHIPAs a part of this year's Bear Valley Lectures, Clinging to Hope and Trust in Difficult Times, Cliff Sabroe brought a lesson entitled "It Happens to Us All". The 2022 Bear Valley Lectures - Clinging to Hope and Trust in Difficult Times was held Sept 15-18, 2022 at the Bear Valley church of Christ in Denver, Colorado. Today there is much happening that makes our souls “troubled.” We sing “troublesome times are here” and indeed they are. But our God is great and He is in control. This series of lectureship lessons is full of insightful, informative, and encouraging talks and studies to help us maintain our faith in the almighty God. They will help you cling to hope and trust in difficult times.The Bear Valley Lectures is a work of the Bear Valley Bible Institute International, under the oversight of the elders of the Bear Valley church of Christ in Denver, Colorado. The Bible Institute has been training preachers for work in the Lord's church since 1965 with our graduates working all over the world. For more information about our programs of study visit our website at WeTrainPreachers.com.
Flipping Genius - THE Car Flipping podcast #CarFlipping #FlippingCars
#1 “$500 and a pair of shoes” I know you can find vehicles all over the place – and I know I have told you this before – but let's make it simple – simple – simple! Take a walk! Keep you head on a swivel. Look for that vehicle with the flat tire, the grass up around the tires, the expired tag and/or the season's worth of dirt, leaves or other tell-tale sign of non-use. NOW – go to the door and knock! I know I have said use a post-it note or business card before – but let's take it to the next level and get this thing rolling. Knock on the door and get this conversation started. …When they open the door – say – “Hi, I saw the vehicle in your drive with the expired tag/flat tire/etc. and want to know if you are interested in getting rid of it” DO NOT SOUND ANXIOUS TO BUY IT – they may wind up giving it to you or even paying you to tow it away. IT Happens. Remember, we are trying to do this for $500 or less – so we need to start off with as little out of pocket as possible. Once you get the conversation started – keep that in mind. Only buy what will make you money. Do not be afraid to walk away. You hold all the cards. #2 “Make a difference in someone's life!” You may need to make about 5 of these visits before you find an opportunity, but once you do – it will very likely lead to repeat opportunities and very likely without competition. Find a charitable organizations. Depending on the population of your area – you will find a lot to choose from. Normally – I would use the phone and possibly email to get this thing going – BUT today we are talking about taking action – so I am encouraging you to find 5, look up their address and drive there. Go inside and ask something like this “Do you accept vehicles as donations for fundraising for your organization?” …I recognize this is a little misleading – but my goal is to speak to the person who is on the actual receiving end of this donation. Hopefully the person you ask the question of will access that person and get them in to the lobby for you or at least provide you their name and number. NEXT – explain that you are interested in BUYING their donated vehicles as-is where-is. You are the CASH button that they need to get out of the headache of owning a donated vehicle that is really of no value to them until they push that CASH button! Again – remember that you are here to make a profit – so ONLY BUY what will do that for you and ONLY PAY a price that will result in that conclusion. Be fair – but be smart. Once you create this solution for them, you will be on the speed dial the next time they get a vehicle donated to their organization!! #3 “Partner Up!” Look for a small car lot or a mechanic shop and stop in. tell them you are trying to get involved with flipping cars, but are not quite ready to get a dealer's license yet. Tell them you are looking for a vehicle that you can put a little sweat equity into and sell it for a gain. Ask if they “have anything they would be willing to be partners with you on”. This will likely be a unique offer to them – because most flippers just want to steal the deal, fix it and keep all the profits for themselves. Remember – you want to do that too – but part of what you want from them is the contact and the wealth of their knowledge and connections. That part of the equation can be worth way more than the profits on one $500 flip car. Like I said, you may need to make trips to 5 different places – and you may need to make multiple stops at one place to build rapport and trust – but it can be very, very valuable time invested! Be sure to visit www.FlippinGenius.com to hear all 136 episodes; visit the Flipping Genius RESOURCES PAGE where you can Save Big and Learn More! SUBSCRIBE to the Flipping Genius YouTube Channel and become a Flipping Team Member, Partner or Champion! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/flippinggenius/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/flippinggenius/support
It Happens to Us All. You Need a Fitness Reset. Something slowed you down or you got off track. We'd all love to believe that our fitness is a straight line, but the reality is that we are always course-correcting in life.You've been travelingYou had an injuryA family member has been illNew (insert your) job, house, relationship, dog…The heat (or cold) outside has you staying in and slowing downThe thing is, life happens. When it does, our routines suffer. And, when our practices start slipping, our minds can go straight to worry mode! “Am I going to lose all the fitness I've gained these last three months?”“Is the weight I've lost going to come back?”What to do if You've Gotten Off Track With Your FitnessIf you're having trouble getting restarted, no matter the reason, do these three quick things as MANY times as you need to!Stop the worry and the mind chatter. Take a deep breath. Trust yourself. Ask yourself one question: If it was easy, what would I do today to get moving? (easy is the key word here, we're not looking for a life plan, these are the smallest, most straightforward steps you can take. Actions like the MDM we discussed last week, scheduling your week, planning ahead, and going for a walk. )Schedule an activity in the next two days. Call a friend for a hike, book a class at your gym, or find a local group that plays tennis or pickleball. What would be fun and get you moving?You Can Do It! Action is the antidote. Remember, a body in motion stays in motion. Time to get moving in any manner that makes you happy!
It Happens to the Unsuspecting by the Unsuspected. Visit https://iworksmartmedia.com today.
Listen sometimes your mom calls you on her own birthday and you just take that as an opportunity to break down and cry about being single, IT HAPPENS! Then it leads to this very interesting dating story that I am so excited to tell you. I love my mom so much and this moment made for some amazing content so you know its ok, I will keep my shit together next year...maybe... Honestly this is a top episode for me I am obsessed, today we cover: Somehow smells come up often, its a smelly episode but worth it Also of course me crying on my mom's birthday I have a GLEEK moment Yes we are talking about THAT moment in the Kardashian trailer The major Emmy SNUB in my opinion A very wild dating story Plus how Costco is taking over my bumble Then a interesting ISW moment that might actually be a cry for help..
Feel the flow is a different experience from the usual mixes where u get to vibe with your dj the same way you do in Live shows like in clubs etc. It Happens on Saturdays 10Am EAT on YouTube. Visuals Link >> https://youtu.be/lYeaQmZEQO0
Sometimes the world is so crazy all you can do is laugh and this week Kristian and Cindy continue to do just that as they look into the 52 song project's Don't This Life Just Kill You and pair it with Sugarland's It Happens from the Love On The Inside album.
| Undercover Lover | The O'Jays | 1987 | Love U 2 The Limit | Mac Band | 1990 | Joined At The Hip | Syleena Johnson | 2002 | It Don't Pay To Get Up In The Morning | Johnnie Taylor | 1974 | Hey Love | Chris Jasper | 2022 | Got The Right Attitude | Tashan | 1986 | Dirty Dancin' (Slow Motion) | Walter & Scotty | 1993 | It Happens | MoKenStef | 1995 | This Must Be Love | Solid Solution | 1978 | Same Luv | Tamara Wellons | 2016 | All I Wanna Do Is Spend Time With You | Gang's Back | 1982 | Everlasting Love | Mikki Bleu | 1997 | Tell Ur Man (feat. Joe) | Chico Debarge | 2009 | Conversation Piece | Michon Young | 2022 | I Just Love The Man | The Jones Girls | 1980 | I'm The One Love Forgot | The Pretenders | 1969 | I'll Answer You With Love | The Entertains | 2022 | Now And Forever | Con-Funk-Shun | 1974 | A Proposal (Will U Marry Me) | The Al Ur Pal Project | 2022 | Ooh Baby Baby | The Whatnauts | 1972 | My Everything | Monica | 2006 | Try To Leave Me If You Can (I Bet You Can't Do It) | Bessie Banks | 1974 | Magnificent Lady | Danny Clay | 2014 | You Mean Everything To Me | Four Tracks | 2006 | Broken Heart | Daybreakk! | 2004 | Do It Again | Sam Harris II | 2000 | I Can't Believe It's Over | NKOTB | 1994
10 Things Holding You Back as a PT Confession!
One of the best parts of this Easter Sunday, celebrating Christ's eternal victory, is knowing that He called it! God prophesied His eternal victory and Christ further outlined it to the disciples. And then He ACCOMPLISHED it! That's the power of God's words: when He speaks it, IT HAPPENS. When we're filled with His Holy Spirit, our words have that SAME power! Once we understand this incredible gift from the Lord, we'll use discernment with how we speak and continue to learn how to hear the voice of the Lord! HINT: He speaks in a variety of ways! This show is going to bless you immensely!
One of the best parts of this Easter Sunday, celebrating Christ's eternal victory, is knowing that He called it! God prophesied His eternal victory and Christ further outlined it to the disciples. And then He ACCOMPLISHED it! That's the power of God's words: when He speaks it, IT HAPPENS. When we're filled with His Holy Spirit, our words have that SAME power! Once we understand this incredible gift from the Lord, we'll use discernment with how we speak and continue to learn how to hear the voice of the Lord! HINT: He speaks in a variety of ways! This show is going to bless you immensely! We also want you to have all the knowledge you need, so here are some past shows and Bible studies for you to review: For more on water baptism, CLICK HERE For more on the infilling of the Holy Spirit, CLICK HERE For more Bible studies: CLICK HERE CLICK HERE to learn more on the 5-Fold Ministry! CLICK HERE for our video resources. To contact us with question, prayer requests or if you'd like to get baptized: CLICK HERE Don't forget to SUBSCRIBE to our mailing list. We pray this message blesses you and increases your faith! With much love, The GET YOUR LOVE ON team.
Episode 208 - Long Live the Queen…Games Introduction: News/Crowdfunding: Gamefound: Pilgrim - 9 days left, about $86 Ahau (ah-how) - Rulers of Yucatán - 7 days left, $65 Deeproot Dwellers - 13 days, $45 Games Played: Lords of Vegas with both Expansions Pie Town Founders of Teotihuacan Our Favorite Queen Games: 9: Kingdom Builder 8: It Happens… 7: Parfum 6: Alhambra 5: Neptun 4: Fresco 3: Amerigo 2: Thebes 1: Merlin Honorable Mentions: Queen's Architect, Shogun, Liguria, Escape: The Curse of the Temple Closing:
Burned out? IT HAPPENS. Don't take it as a failure, but use it as an opportunity to clarify your goals, your process, your capacity, and then we can figure out what changes- from major to minor - we should make so you can re-capture your love and keep moving forward. Does this sound like you? Let's talk about it. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/feel-strong/support
A.I. Fabler takes a satirical look into the future of the woke agenda in his book, Agenda 2060: The Future as It Happens. Listen as author, Artie (A.I.) Fabler shares what inspired the book and his perspective on understanding where we are and where we're going. Learn more about A.I. Fabler here: https://agenda2060.com/ (https://agenda2060.com/) WGRT's LIMElight with Jessie is produced by the following team members: Executive Producer: Jessie Wiegand Audio Engineer: George James Administrator: Jessie Wiegand Marketing: Jessie Wiegand Follow Jessie on Instagram here: https://www.instagram.com/wgrt_jessie/ (https://www.instagram.com/wgrt_jessie/)
On this episode of Hey, It Happens, Jerod and Izzy each discuss one of their favorite music projects. Alice in Chains' Jar of Flies and Logic's The Incredible True Story.
It Happens to All of Us Episode Airs Sunday 1-16-22 7pm EST The gals remark on the somber subject of grief & grieving. 23rd psalm https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psalm_23 DOLLY PARTON - AMAZING GRACE https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_4-MyGsLl9A Tennessee Ernie Ford - Rock Of Ages (Live) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZLGzgNtQHnc Byron wants to find a group of keening women for her funeral Keening: The Irish Funeral Song https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HIETK47YN0M Alicia wants 2 songs played when she dies: Elton John Skyline Pigeon: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iRFGgr4XIos Old Crow Medicine Show We're All In This Together https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_TXNSipWUiE Hallowed Homecoming - https://www.facebook.com/events/prince-william-forest-park/2018-hallowed-homecoming-a-samhain-retreat/1641958825896751/ What is a Facebook Legacy account? https://www.facebook.com/help/1568013990080948 Choose a Legacy Contact https://www.facebook.com/help/991335594313139 #WyrdMountainGals #ByronBallard #Grief #Grieving #DigitalWitchery
Self-care podcast exploring Addressing Holiday Binge Eating, Steps to Take if It Happens and Being Kinder to Release Self-Sabotage. TOPICS:: ** Addressing Holiday Binge Eating (05:30). ** Steps to Take if It Happens (24:15). ** Being Kinder to Release Self-Sabotage (26:37). NOTES:: Show notes: amberapproved.ca/podcast/316 Leave me a review at amberapproved.ca/review Email me at info@amberapproved.ca HOLIDAY FLASH SALE! Save 35% off on my online programs from November 24th - December 3rd using code CELEBRATE. Click below to sign up! https://amberapproved.samcart.com/products/holiday-sale-checkout SHOW LINKS:: Click the link below to schedule a 30 minute Body Freedom consultation. https://amberapproved.ca/apply-to-work-together/ Take my free Emotional Eating Quiz here: http://amberapproved.ca/emotional-eating-quiz Click here to enroll in Freedom From Emotional Eating, the 5 week online program! https://amberapproved.ca/take-your-power-back-from-food Listen to Episode 291 about what it's like to work with me here: http://amberapproved.ca/podcast/291/ Follow me on Instagram www.instagram.com/amberromaniuk
EPISODE 50?! Thank you SO much for being here with me on this journey! For this episode we are talking all about when no one seems to understand our dreams..because -IT HAPPENS and is far too familiar from my own experience... but having these mindset switches, reminders, and tips can be SUPER beneficial! Your dreams aren't too crazy or not realistic. You may just be talking to someone that truly cares about you that doesn't want you to possibly fail & is unfamiliar with your dream's potential. Find your tribe. Find the people that have walked in your shoes or are currently that can remind you of how capable you are!AFFIRMATION: "I AM CREATIVE- I use my imagination to construct my own unique path" The last thing I want you to do is to give up on your dreams because you feel no one understands you or believes in you...Come join the Journey To Limitless Podcast FREE Facebook Community!! Click the link below!Community (jtl-lifecoaching.com)Connect with your host, Court, on Instagram: Court• Certified Life Coach (@journeytolimitless_) • Instagram photos and videos
It HAPPENS at the holidays. If someone is 40 minutes early to your party - what do you DO when they ring the doorbell??
It Happens don't be hurt by it. This episode we try and get those of you who are trippin right with topics on finishing and relationships. Also we hit the old saying of "don't judge a book by it's cover", high questions, and more. Full Videos and more: https://www.patreon.com/user?u=53967062 Instagram: David - @david_egbo https://instagram.com/david_egbo?utm_... Justice - @summerset_08 https://instagram.com/summerset_08?ut... Don't Trip - https://instagram.com/donttripwegotu?igshid=1mo9pwxo1y6ey Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Brought to you by PerformBetter.com Get the App! Click here for more info. Highlights of Episode 316 Naamly "Hit The Gym with a Strength Coach" Segment Build Lasting Relationships Through Personalized Communication Molly Galbraith, Co-founder of Girls Gone Strong and author of "Strong Women Lift Each Other Up" We spoke about: Why write "Strong Women Lift Each Other Up"? Personal struggles with the growth of Girls Gone Strong Some of the Principles in the book Why the Ripple Effect is so important Specific Actions you can take to Lift Women Up much more The StrengthCoach.com Coaches Corner with Coach Boyle We spoke about: His video "It Happens in Practice" Forum thread about Timing Slow Athletes Partner Offer from Athletic Greens Subscribe and get a 1 year supply of Vitamin D, 5 Travel packs and 20% off The KISS Marketing "Business Secrets for Gym Owners" Segment with Vince Gabriele Vince discusses "How to drive cash flow in the slow summer months" Part 2 If you need some help with your marketing head over to www.kissmarketing.net to book a FREE coaching call with Will “The Tech Nerd” Matheson…Also known as…Vince Gabriele's secret marketing weapon. The Tech Nerd will take a look at your current marketing plan and give you some real time profit boosting advice…so you can stop stressing about your marketing and start seeing more money in your checking account. The Certified Functional Strength Coach Segment Dan McGinley starts discusses "Why new coaches should "Stick to the Recipe". Get Certified! About "Be Like the Best" During the last 12 years of interviewing many strength coaches, fitness professionals, physical therapists and gym owners, Anthony Renna has accumulated a rolodex of “The Best of the Best” in the fitness profession. This book is a collection of interviews with some of those top successes. Through his conversations, you'll learn how they evolved in their careers, what habits and traits they believe made them successful, their goal setting processes, how they get through the hard times everyone faces and even some books to read and people they recommend following. After each interview, you'll find a challenge or action step based on an important takeaway from each interview. These are designed to encourage you to build the habits to Be Like the Best on your journey to dominating in this profession. As a fitness professional, you're already making an impact in your clients, athletes and patients. This book will help you stand out in a crowded field and help guide you on the road to success. Go to BeLiketheBest.com for more info Thanks for Listening!
In the second installment of the Davey Classic Series, Ally expertly breaks down Dave's groundbreaking story - "It Happens" - from ESPN The Magazine's first Body Issue in 2010. Inspired by NFL MVP Lamar Jackson's recent bout of "cramps" the Flems explore the science, sociology (and, of course, the scatological humor) behind the ultimate sports taboo: elite athletes pooping their pants. We all do it. In fact, we produce 1.5 billion pounds of the stuff every day on this planet. But what happens to the athlete's mind and body when they push themselves beyond the limits of the human body? More often than you think, they end up like Lamar Jackson, Michael Jordan, Serena Williams, surfers, NASCAR drivers, Olympians, 70% of endurance athletes and most NFL linemen - humanized by the Tao of Poo. Listen in as the Flems take a deep dive into the story that launched the iconic Body Issue Undercarriage Anthology.
Daria Shigaeva is a professional performer, creator, and wellness coach. Find more of Daria: Instagram: @darishen A Statement from Daria: "In April 2021 I made a trip to one of the remote areas of my country, rich in mountains. As I consider hiking my best way of meditation, it was inevitable that I took one for half of the day. I've found that all of the situations I was facing with in the mountains can correspond to real-life situations. And so, impatiently enough, all of these insights that popped out in my mind during the walk I put down on the paper afterwards, thinking to create some form of art from these notes and to share it with others. I love searching not obvious meanings of things, and I love to go deeper with them. This “hiking story” consists of 8 different situations, all of which will ultimately be interpreted into 8 different takeaways (life messages). And what I wish for listeners to do – is to “pause” after or to re-listen each of them, so they have enough time to definitely take them in." -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Created during a time of quarantine in the global Coronavirus pandemic, A Moment Of Your Time's mission is to provide a space for expression, collaboration, community and solidarity. In this time of isolation, we may have to be apart but let's create together. Follow Us: Instagram | Twitter Created by CurtCo Media Concept by Jenny Curtis Theme music by Chris Porter A CurtCo Media Production See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
ТРЕТЬЯ БОМБА ! 7 СТИЛЕЙ ЗА 60 МИНУТ. ТАК БЫВАЕТ. КАЧАТЬ, СЛУШАТЬ ТОЛЬКО НА ХОРОШИХ НАУШНИКАХ И КОЛОНКАХ ) УСПЕХОВ ! --- THREE BOMB! 7 STYLES FOR 60 MINUTES. IT HAPPENS. DOWNLOAD, LISTEN ONLY good headphones and speakers) SUCCESS! I set the tone. Plant the taste. Picky about the playlist. Scrupulous in the mix. Just live! I always try to make a diverse selection that you can then listen to a lot of time in cars and in the player and on the radio. Join now! I - Van der Jacques) --- TRACKLIST: 01. Койоты feat. Laura BS - Завалю Снегом (Космос) 2010 (Inertia & Alex Cosmo 02. Atmospheric Version) / Atmospheric Breaks / 03. Layo And Bushwacka ! - Let The Good Times Roll / BreakBeat / 04. BAM, Stereo MCs, Jay Robinson - Work It (Marten Horger Remix) / BreakBeat / 05. Beatman & Ludmilla - In Breaks We Trust (Original Mix) / Breaks / 06. Dirt Monkey & MSD - Intergalactic (Kyle Cross ReVamp) / Breaks / 07. Blazer - Skill Chyper / Breaks / 08. Beatman, Ludmilla - Bazantar (Original Mix) / Psychedelic BreakBeat / 09. Anumana feat Nostromosis - Magic musrooms / Psy Trance / 10. Aquila Vs Chronos - Fuerza / Goa Trance / 11. Space Cat Vs Sesto Sento - Getting High Power (Cosmic Tone Remix) / Full-On / 12. 1200 Micrograms - Acid for Nothing!!!!! / Full-On / 13. Document One - The_Feeling (Original Mix) / Dubstep / --- site http://keksfm.kiev.ua/ Subscribe to our podcast RSS (Подписывайтесь на наш подкаст): http://feeds.feedburner.com/KEXXX-FM or Apple podcast: https://itunes.apple.com/ua/podcast/kexxx-fm-kiev/id1455141824 Весь архив подкаста/скачать тут (Podcast Archive / Download here) https://hearthis.at/kexxx-fm-2/ https://hearthis.at/kexxx-fm/ Podcast by Van der Jacques https://hearthis.at/a1dj/
It Happens... What Happens?? -Poop happens , and all over the floor apparently. Homeless sleeping bag sex - and what a nice suprise the guy found while doing it. Men having sex with men is apparently not gay anymore - says one of the gay'est article every written. Have you ever stuck your tongue so far up a girls ass that.... Guess your gonna have to listen to find out. And the government robbing us - pretty standard fair.Check out our Check out our MERCH at: https://www.rotflpodcast.com/shopBecome a member at www.rotflpodcast.comsend funny stories at rotflpodcast@gmail.comFollow and like our facebook videos here: ROTFL PODCAST FACEBOOK PAGE@rotflpodcast instagram and twitterIts your donations and love that keeps us going and help us improve our show. Love ya ALL!!!Support the show (https://www.rotflpodcast.com/donate)Support the show (https://www.rotflpodcast.com/donate)
Suzan was born and raised in the Caribbean. Broadcast includes - Independent Lens, PBS, World Channel, Lincoln Center. BAG IT - winner of the Britdoc Impact Award, televised in over thirty countries. URANIUM DRIVE-IN - Sundance Institute, Good Pitch and Hot Docs Pitch Forum. Documentary Excellence by the Alliance of Women Film Journalists. MASSACRE RIVER - ITVS funded, Latino Media Market, Points North Fellowship, and IFP Spotlight on Documentaries. Suzan became Festival Director for Mountainfilm festival in Telluride, Colorado in 2017. Suzan is a Hispana-Latina-American and was born and raised in the Caribbean. Her films have shown on Independent Lens, PBS, Pivot TV and on the Documentary Channel, at Lincoln Center, and at many festivals. Her first film, BAG IT, was a winner of the Britdoc Impact Award in Berlin and has been televised in over thirty countries. URANIUM DRIVE-IN was a recipient of Sundance Institute and Chicken and Egg funding and was featured at Good Pitch and at Hot Docs Pitch Forum. The film was awarded the Big Sky Award, was honored for documentary excellence by the Alliance of Women Film Journalists, and was part of the American Film Showcase, an international film program of the U.S. State Department. Her most recent film, MASSACRE RIVER aired on PBS in 2019 and is the recipient of ITVS funding and was selected for the Latino Media Market, Camden International Film Festival Points North Fellowship, and IFP Spotlight on Documentaries. Suzan became Festival Director for Mountainfilm festival in Telluride, Colorado in 2017.FILMS BY SUZAN BERAZAMASSACRE RIVER: The Woman Without a CountryPikilina is a Dominican-born woman of Haitian descent. Racial and political violence erupt when the country of her birth, the Dominican Republic, reverses its birthright citizenship law and she is left stateless, along with over 200,000 others.Uranium Drive-InBag ItTry going a day without plastic. In this touching and often flat-out-funny film, we follow "everyman" Jeb Berrier as he embarks on a global tour to unravel the complexities of our plastic world.New Day was initially formed because the women's movement had arrived and a group of independent filmmakers couldn't find distribution for their feminist films. New Day sustains the ideas that inspired its formation in 1971 - collaboration, hope and social change.“We met at the 1971 Flaherty Seminar, where some of our films were programmed,” recalled founding member Amalie Rothschild. “I was in production with It Happens to Us. I'd been trying to get distribution for Woo Who? May Wilson. I'd take it to non-theatrical distribution companies and they'd say 'It's wonderful, dear, we really like it. But there's no audience...' ”Founding members Julia Reichert and Jim Klein had already started self-distributing their film, Growing Up Female. "The whole idea of distribution," explained Julia Reichert, "was to help the women's movement grow. Films could do that, they could get the ideas out. We could watch the women's movement spread across the country just by who was ordering our films. First it was Cambridge and Berkeley. I remember the first showing in the deep South."Soon, a fourth member joined the three: "When I first met them," Liane Brandon explains, "I'd been inundated with requests to show Anything You Want To Be. I'd been running back and forth to the Post Office, making myself crazy. Other distributors wanted my film, but the most they would offer was a two-year contract, as they were sure the women's movement wouldn't last any longer than that. Because I'd been active in women's groups since 1969, I knew there was a huge demand, but most distributors didn't, so they offered bad deals, or they wanted to ghettoize the films. When I first talked with Jim and Julia and Amalie, I thought 'Ah-hah! Someone else who's experiencing the same things I am.'Much has changed in media distribution since 1971 when the early members were selling 16 mm film prints! But the commitment to quality content and cutting edge distribution remains.Shown at right: left to right back row: Amalie R. Rothschild, Julia Reichert, Jim Klein; front: Liane Brandon.https://www.newday.com/Suzan Berazahttp://reelthing.usLike to have a ASC cinematographer as a mentor?Have you thought of upgrading your cinematography game? Would you like to have an ASC Cinematographer mentor you for free? Join veteran cinematographer Suki Medencevic, A.S.C. (Disney, Pixar, FX Networks, Netflix, American Horror Story). He teaches you how to create beautiful images using three lighting techniques he has mastered on film sets over his 30+ years in the film industry. Each technique uses basic, low-cost lighting equipment so that anyone can achieve beautiful visuals no matter your projects's budget.Learn film lighting from an ASC cinematographer. If you want to take your cinematography to the next level, this free training will get you there. These videos are available for a limited time, so sign up for instant access. CLICK HERE TO REGISTERhttps://www.ifhacademy.com/a/28632/aLFBXkpNIf you liked this podcast, shoot me an e-mail at filmmakingconversations@mail.comAlso, you can check out my documentary The People of Brixton, on Kwelitv here: https://www.kweli.tv/programs/the-people-of-brixtonDamien Swaby Social Media Links:Instagram https://www.instagram.com/filmmaker_damien_swaby/Twitterhttps://twitter.com/DamienSwaby?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5EauthorWebsite http://filmmakingconversations.com/If you enjoy listening to Filmmaking Conversations with Damien Swaby, I would love a coffee. Podcasting is thirsty work https://ko-fi.com/damienswaby
This week I covered It Happens by Sugarland --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mariela-the-terrible-singer/support
The extraterrestrial comedy podcast where we probe dolphins and the dolphin-man. This week, we visit the oceans and discover a man that can communicate with Dolphins. Yes, you read that right. Grey has his mind blown. We find out that dolphins are capable of some extraordinary things and we learn that clothes can be magical. Have you ever seen a dolphin attempt to hump a human? Oh it happens my friends. It Happens. All that and more on this week’s file. YouTube video links: Dolphin Humping Person: https://youtu.be/ZDAdptLZNkQ Dolphin Probing: https://youtu.be/qE_6n1gp3Vw (skip to 30 seconds in) Galactic Orgasm Design Vibratory Frequency clothing: https://youtu.be/TmjOXKdKrNw Probe us:Email: butitwasaliens@gmail.comInstagram @ ButItWasAliensPodcastTwitter @ ButItWasAliensFacebook: @ ButItWasAliens - join Extraterrestrial Towers Hoodies/Clothing/Merch:https://teespring.com/en-GB/stores/but-it-was-aliens Music: Music created via Garageband. Additional music via: https://freepd.com and https://www.purple-planet.com- thank you most kindly good people.
Those who are called to raise Christian kids should be instilling biblical principles in their children. The Holy Spirit will transform them! Ask yourself if you are doing all you can to raise your children to have a strong foundation with Jesus. Regarding teenagers, it is their choice to obey or disobey – understanding that their choices […] The post Prodigal Children, It Happens to the Best of Us! appeared first on Lee Ann Mancini, Author, Producer, Podcaster.
Episode 11 It is our job to instill biblical principles, and the Holy Spirit will do the transforming! Ask yourself if you are doing all you can to raise your children to have a strong foundation with Jesus. Regarding teenagers, it is their choice to obey or disobey – understanding that their choices have consequences. Don’t […] The post Prodigal Children, It Happens to the Best of Us! appeared first on Lee Ann Mancini, Author, Producer, Podcaster.
Episode 133 - Best Tiny Table Games (Small Footprint) Introduction: News: Immune - 12 days; $39 Arcana Notebook - 13 days; $19 Petrichor - 2 days; $99 unless you have the game, then it’s $64 for all the newness Games played: Bring Out Yer Dead Upper Deck Dungeon Drop Gamewright Best Tiny Table Games (Small Footprint): Katie - Ars Alchimia Tasty Minstrel Jason - Tortuga 1667 Facade Games Katie - The Legend of the Cherry Tree Iello Jason - Fire in the Library Weird Giraffe Games Katie - On Tour Boardgametables.com Jason - The Shipwreck Arcana Meromorph Games Jason Honorable Mentions: Spirits of the Wild, Dairyman, Breakdancing Meeples, The Crew Katie Honorable Mentions: Rice Dice, Parks, Tiny Towns, It Happens, Tricky Tides, 7 Ronin, Harbour, Illimat, Drop It Closing:
Life, It Happens! No new episode this week, but we'll be back next week as we get closer and closer to finishing Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone! Also, we're working on a special last episode for this book, so stay tuned for more info. Don't forget, we want to hear from you! Clink the link below to send us a voice message, and we may answer your question or include your comment on our next show. You can also email us at FDPottercast@gmail.com. Listen to us on Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/1IWa9UUBNIckKFSAEyEoTM Google Podcasts - https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy9kNmRhMTk4L3BvZGNhc3QvcnNz Overcast - https://overcast.fm/itunes1498089251/the-father-daughter-pottercast Apple Podcasts - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-father-daughter-pottercast/id1498089251 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/fatherdaughterpottercast/message
Let's be honest here, IT HAPPENS! There's this idea that working from home means you bounce out of bed ready to tackle the world head on every single day. Unfortunately life doesn't quite work that way. Being a woman alone affects your monthly "motivation cycle". If you're not careful it will spiral into a rut of excuses, you'll get very little done and feel frustrated at the lack of cash flow you're experiencing. . Would you like to avoid this from happening? . When you're a driven, go-getter it's easy to feel guilty for feeling unmotivated. In episode 63, we're throwing all that guilt out the window, acknowledging that it happens and hashing out what to do. You ready? Press play and let's go! . I would love to feature your story! Head over to Instagram @godnbusiness and share your #motivationstory Send me a DM with how this episode helped you work through your moment of resistance. . New here?! Welcome! Learn more about God + business here: www.godnbusiness.com and come hang out with me on the gram! @godnbusiness --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/heather-dollar/message
Episode 63 Trench Bro's! We play a game of tape and taste where the beers are all taped up and we guess what it is! We talk Low T as in Testosterone. IT HAPPENS! Things get real about love and life. Fight or flight. I'm sorry Cody Miller - Jesse
THIS EPISODE WE TALK ABOUT THE 450 NORTH DEBACLE WHILE WE DRINK THIER BEER. A COUPLE LOSE THIER MIND ABOUT DOGS AT BREWERIES AND RUIN IT FOR EVERYONE AND THE 20 BEST BEERS THAT WERE CONSUMED IN 2019. SORRY ABOUT THE ENDING IT WAS CUT SHORT IN THIS EPISODE DUE TO OUR DRUNKENESS....IT HAPPENS! ENJOY THE SHOW!
Ex-exterminator, comedian Larry Izzo is joined by host of the New York City Crime Report, Pat Dixon and we discover: - Flying, stinging insects can sense fear and are attracted to it! - Rats chew on the feet of elephants! - Also, what to do if a rat visits you by way of your toilet. IT HAPPENS. Another great episode of The Thrill of the Kill.
As Road Warriors, we've all been there. "IT" (expletive removed) happens at the airport, the conference, or in transit. IT happens to all of us. But how we deal with "IT" can be the difference between being a "Road Warrior" and an "Elite Road Warrior". This week on the podcast, we discuss the four ways to deal with "IT" on the road: ROLL WITH ITLET IT GOLEARN FROM IT MAKE THE BEST OF ITDive into these four and so much more, this week on the podcast! If you're new to the show, every episode has a physical or mental energy habit focus that we'll highlight and many will have a corresponding article (see show notes and the ERW website).Extended Show Notes
Hey Everybody! Welcome to Episode #0035 "Stop Quitting" This podcast originated from an IG post that someone asked my "What made me post this?" Well, since you asked, I will be happy to tell you in a Rant that I didn't see coming lol. The point behind the post was the only things you should quit are being lazy, quit making excuses and quit waiting for the right time (which there is no such thing as the "right time" so cut it out!!) .. I proceeded to tell them that I never quit anything. Want to know exactly what I said, keep listening its all in there. I have so many people say, this didn't work or that didn't work, or their diet doesn' t work, or their workout's aren't working... you know why? because you Quit before you reach the end goal. You want everything instantly and I'm sorry my friends, but that is just now how life works. Want something to turn our great... Well then Stop Quitting before It Happens!!! We talk about money, investing, and I share a part of my story that you may not have heard yet about what I went through to become a personal trainer and how making the decision to Not Quit during that 2 years of hell changed my life forever!! Also... My book cover has been approved and I am just waiting for the final copy so that I can do the Big Reveal!!!As soon as I get all that taken care of look for the details here!!! I hope you guys have the most amazing week ever & I will see you next week!!! Bye bye now! #CaliTammy --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/tammy-loftis/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/tammy-loftis/support
Flip Florey's Super Saturday Board Game Serial | A podcast about the fun in BoardGames
In this episode we meet up with our friend Annette, otherwise known as Nettersplays, also known as personal perch for Gizmo! We chat about Stefan Felds masterpiece It Happens! We chat about anteaters, euro games, what can make a childs game fun, and then I hit Nettersplays with all of those hard hitting anteater questions … Continue reading "Episode 64 – Fun Feldian Forays" The post Episode 64 – Fun Feldian Forays appeared first on Flip Floreys Super Saturday Board Game Serial!.
GottA New Song ft:Kejuan Clemons ,Jj DaFoofoo Mathis and De-Va'Je "Back Seat Action" Dis Song Goes Out To All My Fellaz And Beautiful Women Who Had Some Back Seat Action Or Wants It . Dnt Be Ashamed. It Happens. But Real Tlk I No Yall Gonna Be Feelin Dis Song . TO DOWNLOAD OR LISTEN GO TO: http://soundcloud.com/devajematihs
GottA New Song ft:Kejuan Clemons ,Jj DaFoofoo Mathis and De-Va'Je "Back Seat Action" Dis Song Goes Out To All My Fellaz And Beautiful Women Who Had Some Back Seat Action Or Wants It . Dnt Be Ashamed. It Happens. But Real Tlk I No Yall Gonna Be Feelin Dis Song . TO DOWNLOAD OR LISTEN GO TO: http://soundcloud.com/devajematihs
SOS! Also known as Shiny-Object-Syndrome is REAL and entrepreneurs find themselves facing it all the time. When was the last time you got side tracked into a new lead-gen tactic or sales technique or Youtube training for some obscure LinkendIn messaging scam? IT HAPPENS. In this episode, I break down exactly how to stay laser-focused on your agency growth goals using a strategy and most importantly... a SYSTEM. In this podcast you will get the latest success strategies, scaling techniques and top-tier interviews with agency owners sharing their success stories and lighting the pathway for all to follow. Learn how to go from a freelance marketer to a 6-figure agency owner. Want to skip all the "learned it the hard way" mistakes most agency owners make? Ready to implement a system that cranks out high-ticket leads, rapidly build your team, and perfects your agency sales game?
Dirty Dicks: We got back to the legend of the swollen dick, how to properly clean your uncut dick and Shane Dawson cumming on his cat. Mom Embarrasses Daughter: For the crime of having social media, a mom tells the Internet that she has shitty and pissy underwear. Also an influencer beats up her kid Judge Sentencing: Guy goes off on judge and gets years added to his 22 year sentence. Also Gary Busey and Michael Jace from The Shield. LORD VARYS!, THE REALM!, GAME OF THRONES!, MUELLER REPORT PARTY!, EXCITED!, TRUMP!, CHEETO!, RESIST!, PRISON!, NO MIKE!, RIGHT WING!, SUBWAY!, KICKED IN THE HEAD!, WORLDSTAR!, BAG LADY!, SHANE DAWSON!, CAT!, DID HE FUCK HIS CAT!, NOT JOKING!, EDGELORD!, ATTENTION!, PROPOSED!, THE CHAIR!, DOCUMENTARY!, CONSPIRACY THEORIES!, CHUCK E CHEESE!, SWOLLEN DICKS!, IT HAPPENS!, WARM WATER!, CAN’T PEE!, DIRTY DICKS!, UNCIRCUMCISED!, CUT BOIS!, SHMEGMA!, GOT BIGGER!, SAM ROBERTS!, PISS BALLOON!, WWE!, 19!, EATING CAT FOOD!, EATING DOG FOOD!, DRINKING COKE FULL OF ASHES!, MOTHER EXPOSES DAUGHTER!, INSTAGRAM LIVE!, ELIZABETH’S MOM!, MAKE EXAMPLE OF!, FOR THE CLOUT!, FLEXIN!, CURSING UP A MOTHERFUCKING STORM!, LIKE I TEACH YOU THAT!, RAISED YOU!, A GAME!, WASH YOUR DRAWERS!, SHIT BE ON THERE WITH SHIT AND POO!, JUST LITERALLY WASHED THEM!, GET A JOB!, PAY RENT!, YOU GOT THE RIGHT ONE!, LIPSI!, ANONYMOUS!, INFLUENCER!, CHILD ABUSE!, RANT!, NON APOLOGY!, QUEEN OF ENGLAND!, VITALIK!, KICK TO THE BACK!, SENTENCING!, 22 YEARS!, CONTEMPT!, JUDGE!, MANSON BRYANT!, SUCK MY DICK!, RACIST ASS BITCH!, FUCK YOUR COURT!, PAROLE!, HOME INVASION!, KIDNAPPING!, REMORSE!, PRISON!, SEAN KINGSTON!, GARY BUSEY!, SNORTING BUGS!, THE SHIELD!, MICHAEL JACE!, JULIAN!, MURDER!, WIFE!, SHOT!, RUN IN HEAVEN!, KIDS!, SCARED STRAIGHT!, PRISON TOUR!, CANADA!, SETTLEMENT!, GUARD!, THE HOLE!, MCDOUGAL!, ISIS!, JUSTIN TRUDEAU! CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD JIM AND THEM #579 PART 1 RIGHT HERE!
Chef Patrick joins the show, also serving as producer of GCP for the Spoony Digital Radio station, to discuss the launch of the new show, planning executive chef level meals for large groups, and medical vs restaurant trivia!https://kbmdhealth.comhttps://gutcheckproject.comHey hi Mandy if you don't know me it's probably because I'm not famous but I did start a men's grooming company called Harry's the idea for Harry's came out of a frustrating experience I had buying razor blades most brands were overpriced overdesigned and out of touch and here is our approach is simple here's our secret we make sharp durable blades and sell them at honest prices for as low as two dollars each we care about quality so much that we do some crazy things by world-class German blade factory obsessing over every detail means were confident in offering 100% quality guarantee millions of guys have already made the switch to Harry's so thank you if you're one of them and if you're not we hope you give us a try with the special offer get a Harry starter set with a five blade razor weighted handle shave gel and a travel cover all for just three bucks plus free shipping just go to Harry's.com and enter 5000 at checkout that's Harry's.com code 5000 enjoy and welcome back to the chase project episode number three we are still here and love and we think we can keep doing this to like episode like Joe Rogan episode number 2068 they still let us back on 2068 means only have 2065 the ghetto Jordan close we are getting closer so thank you again for joining us that the feedback is that once awesome it's a it's impressive I had no idea it this many people in such a short amount of time and want to hear what we had to say about bridging the gap between health and nine natural and medical science absolutely I love it we've been as we get to hear shortly is a big message by a bunch of people and had a lot of friends from you know all over the United States contact us and say hey that was that was interesting is recovering some cool stuff special last week with Sean Brian's on if you did not check it out please deep dive into CBD and a little bit into the cannabis industry but really cool such a deep dive that the material was so informative that YouTube of course allowed us to keep spreading the message but Facebook will hold our our recording down for little while we had replaced it with YouTube so I guess if you want to know the truth then sometimes I suppose, slow down a little bit about the debts and we covered those topics like they obviously did that because of the particular topic that were time as we are all about the science of it where showing everything that's working to do really continue to do this and today what could we have our show today we are going to be joined by Chef Patrick Mosher now if you listen to the spoony network already chef Patrick Mosher is already somebody they are quite familiar with however get experience from all different aspects of cooking for gigantic hotels being a part owner of some large chains and putting together the food items ever essentially he's he knows how to build food and how to make something out of his message is you are what you eat my messages all health begins and ends in the gut this is why teaming up with chefs and getting out those can be supercool thrilled to have him is actually the producer of our show so this is going to be any reason to tune in to be that were to move him over here and easier to be a guest so we had to on the fly he had to on-the-fly teach Eric's wife Marie to run the to the production desk over there so if anything let's just stay tuned for that because as a camera isn't where it's supposed to be don't be mad at her doing what she did she just learn how to do it two seconds ago hey you can't blame her for me setting the camera incorrectly can't blame her yelling at the right way that are really fun though regardless speaking of let's get caught up on our on our recent week weekends anything big happened with with you and your families last week it's pretty chill something conical I just mentioned a little bit about how people been messaging us now remember we are the gut check project I phrases check your ego at the door everything is on the table and somebody had messaged me on Instagram and asked why do we what was to get your project Y check your ego at the door and only last week was actually my birthday on our show and I I read a book written by Ryan Holliday called the daily Stoic all this is a fun little way to start your day by those every single day he takes a lesson from a Stoic philosopher McKenna dumbs it down and gets it through okay so March 14 was one that I had I thought it was way too coincidental that somebody message me for this and this was the actual thing so bear with me while I explain this but it makes total sense to me and this is the kind of stuff I start my day with so the quote is from DRG this layer to this Zeno would also say that nothing is more hostile to a firm grasp on knowledge than self-deception so what I like about it Reinhold he then breaks it down basically says self-deception delusions of grandeur these aren't just annoying personality traits ego is more than just offputting and obnoxious instead it is the sworn enemy of our ability to learn and grow as Epictetus said it it is impossible for a person to begin to learn what he thinks he already knows today we will be unable to improve unable to learn unable to earn the respect of others if we think were already perfect and a genius admitting it so that was the philosophy that you and I have ordered set up the show it's got check project check your ego at the door sitdown and let's learn from each other let's teach each other and that's why we have a chef on today is regularly about food right we deftly learn little about food you well it's good question so I speaking to my wife who is going to work in Camas today for a show thank you Marie this this last weekend we spent our time with my boys putting down a new floor on the chicken coop so alive has had experience in the past we've had her own chickens and we harvest on eggs is the best tasting as you can possibly imagine but if you like spending around 72 $73 and egg get yourself some chicken because it's awesome they taste terrific buddy on the great that reminds me because I do believe that you guys tried some beekeeping at one time you and I put together what we've taken care of carob some patients which I'm sure that be okay with me saying that that they were beekeepers so there was a Dr. Robert Bender was a gynecologist in town unfortunately died of cancer but it was the funniest thing having lunch with him and he thought about how him and his wife decide to get into making honey results fantastic to goes I'm a gynecologist I know how to deal with women I sent you will treat one queen really good and I get all this honey and were selling this honey its local natural honey it's $7.60 a bottle only cost me 28 per bottle exactly what you say and I love that guide I love the quote unfortunately always best on book I like it when people take risks like that kind of owner will completely own it, check your ego at the door to tell you that were having fun doing it were not making money the farm fresh eggs taste great we just got to get to the point where we don't have our dogs take chicken that's others to hate the originals you mentioned a book and some is really cool/we even reading this book from Isabella Wentz ideas yes you and I both receive this fantastic book Isabella Wentz is an amazing PhD once you haveso can I fortunately meant to admit Isabel and her husband's a year and 1/2 ago when were working in San Diego and she was diagnosed Hashimoto's and dad she then asked she was diagnosed with Hashimoto she went on to change her diet laminate some of her triggers trigger foods like gluten and dairy containing foods and then began to find that she could eliminate out that inflammation and put herself on a road to recovery it's not any different than what you wrote out what you have the Stoics book the reason was to get to project what dad Dr. RI what does chef Patrick's going to join us and talk about how you can control how you feel with great food it's no different so thank you very much Isabella for Isabella and your husband's name but will find that out and thanks so much for sending us the book W read this to recommend it to my patients you done an amazing job oh yeah Hashimoto's food pharmacology food pharmacology comes with a full meal plan at the very back with all the way down to what exactly what to buy inmates like any other recipe book but it's it's high quality tell you why why you're doing what you're doing not just eat this for here's what will do will all of them will all read come back into her like a sort of synopsis of the book once again as well thank you so much for doing that supersmart woman love talking to her when we were in San Diego with my insurer meeting that was awesome definitely absolutely season quick catch up for listening here on spoony don't forget if you want to drop by and pick up some love my tummy.com/spoony for your own are trying to heal you get a discount for using spinning is the discount code as well as check out KB MD health get your brand-new KB MD CBD in our new store so if any of you have ever read Isabella Wentz's books or if you enjoy the show at all we are all transported to other this is a rising tide will lift all ships one way to do that is to actually go to these websites purchase a product and use those codes so that everyone is trying to help each other out we want to make sure that Chef Patrick has a successful show and his network grows in the spoony radio digital platform becomes massive and one way to do it is definitely going on and supporting our sponsors without question without question will get moving here when our first half-hour and dad, the format is that we touch on health matters as they come through KB MD health was to talk about here the gut check project so can want you tell us a little bit about what is on your mind healthwise today so one of the things I mean I'm a complete nerd so you want to geek out at some point in the show and I was thinking of the articles I but I basically spent my nose in journals all day long and starts trying figure stuff out but then I came across this really cool article about the science of food and it just falls perfectly into this Hashimoto's food pharmacology and were to have Chef Patrick on here so no food is fascinating why do we like it does so many things you've got texture you've got smell you taste the consistency of it there is a whole science cold food pairing Scientology porcine science science and science technology and technology articles food pairing technology Where you look at this and you can actually manipulate which we like for instance one of the examples were the more simple examples would be like when you eat really fatty meal ribeye right will the lubrication that happens on your tongue if you do too much of it you can balance that out with an astringent thing that actually binds to proteins and gets rid of that slimy field okay so it's the balance you don't want too much of anything guess what is very stringent read one that's how come red wine pairs so well with a good adding ribeye has and an actor just get that to go away so I started going down this route a whole family's articles and I'm sure that this is second nature to the chefs out there and the other golf course that is but this work is really fun as it turns out only 20% of your taste is actually happening on your tongue okay 80% is the aroma and it's the aroma the terms on everything else so the we perceive the aromas because they interact with our olfactory nerves so as it turns out these different aromas do different things and you can augment them we talked about the entourage effect last week you can actually have an entourage effect when it comes to food by pairing certain foods that have chemically similar aroma molecules okay so in and before you do for my taking a sip of this be similar you said that you would use an astringent to basically cleanse your mouth it's really probably no different than using I'm guessing Ginger whenever you're about to eat sushi so the ginger works like that exactly so as it turns out like for instance did you know that like white chocolate and caviar go very well together did not it's wild because when you put it through when you take these foods and what the scientists are doing is they're taking the foods and they're putting it into a gas chromatograph okay and what that is is that is something that actually shows the molecular weight you can go out here despite your spike these two foods share similar spikes as it turns out white chocolate and caviar share similar spikes in that molecule is trimethyl Ammon Miriam smells like fish sure does in fact there's a disease on the side note: try methyl or I'm sorry it's try meth alanine is the molecule trimethyl and manure is one that I'm familiar with is I've actually had patients come to me and like it's weird when I eat certain foods people can't be around me there like you have a weird odor that's called trimethyl Avenue area and it's that molecule which is trimethyl M and trimethyl amine certain people have a genetic predisposition with the Caprica and I looked at them going to do anybody receipts in a like for like yeah and Mike got in all we do is change your diet problems gone yet so I could you start looking at some of the stuff in the science behind it is so cool when you're looking at the interactions what can happen is that you can have similar molecules that paying your olfactory nerve to go to your brain and go oh that's this and then if another food pairing pink that same one a little bit a little more little less so on then it heightens the first one so you can build your recipes and food off of the molecular structure and beyond the whole tongue thing you know the sweet salt bitter sour mommy the new one the earthy flavor of this is the way to really take your food to the next level and much of what chefs have probably learned Michelin star rated shaft is there already doing it without realizing that it could be based on the science of this church so for instance like a large portion of a strawberry actually has cheesy molecules really so you can sit there and pair strawberries with a certain cheese and it will augment each other the they will build each other up so really fun I never would've thought about this checking my ego at the door I start going down food science because we got a chef on the show today and then this opened up the whole thing right on the UK website now just real quick it would just be any kind she's surely has to be you would make strawberry nachos I'm just saying I can a case on top of the pile strawberries no no it has to be certain she's with similar molecules okay that have this yet and so you can go to food pairing.com and my kids are having some fun with this today where you can create a recipe so I so I looked out to Chef Patrick give me a protein anything you want give me some food product or to build a recipe offer right now live let's go with duck duck so this done whereas I specifically duck breast reason to start with this not a malady yeah okay would you like to be wild yes okay wild now will begin to do is somebody has put a duck breast into a gas chromatograph and they have figured out how to actually pay the so now foods that are similar or foods that have a molecular component that is similar include all kinds of different stuff but basically here we go I think that you should pair this with as it turns out Remi Martin cognac that's why he had his first thinking online CLE source any serious interest in their honor will find out right here what we put a citrus solicitors one day before he answers Patrick what kind of citrus would you would you already kind of will intuitively think it will because he thinks something is sweet yet astringent like can I do colorize right so you have this rich duck in and it's not just a fat ass again okay accommodation all the flavors some curious if if the classic pairing in particular is one that comes up one would match okay and also so fun about this is that now or build it so I an interesting fruit that you showed up as persimmon oh so will add that one so now it's happenings were build missile recipes so you can decide how you do this so we have the ability now to realize okay why do certain foods taste good so my son Lucas and I were talking others were having fun today looking at this and he goes wait a minute is this a way to prepare foods so that the healthier foods will seem like they taste better take so like I want to put tail and do something else with that and I'm a parent with something that'll augment the cheesy flavor of something else use less of that more of the tail they help each other out like this facet of never ever ever heard of using food pairings through molecular studies to possibly trick your brain into liking the food more making healthy food more appetizing making healthy food more appetizing as well yeah interesting yeah so just come and follow things left my nerdy clip of the of the of the show youngest and hours on there now you just ruined her life anyway though I am so what you can do is you can actually Savior food parents and my kids were doing this also and my daughter Carla built a 40 or 50 when we look at it here she started with C Urchin okay branched out and we've got all kinds of stuff see urgent tied to cow mozzarella which eventually takes us to buckwheat and you can just see how much fun this could be were you could do this and it's it's based off the realm of what I loved about what Lucas said was let's make healthy food tastier sure and do it like this sure a lot of chefs probably know this but this is a way to actually use this as this is the style that I would do when I have the Hashimoto's food pharmacology going on to make it taste a little better as a way to do nano kid let's answer bets and brilliant tool that I had never been exposed to Alec some of the idea that foods could make you smell all the different onions for instance I may not love onions but if not grilled in your eating fresh onions it's MS your partner is also eating onions it sets, no go right you and I had a discussion on and I wanted to rail us off of of building that the foods to make them taste better but wasn't that long ago you and I had a discussion about what asparagus does to urine and you said that somebody was doing a test whenever I believe you are in med school that they were basically trying to figure out how fast somebody could rapidly make the the year and change its odor from consuming disparaging of that conversation is absolutely so back in the day this during my fellowship Dr. Wessler was the was a pioneering guesser elegy he's the guy that figured out that there is such a thing as lactose intolerance and we say that like it's nothing but somebody had to figure out that there's an enzyme called lactase and so he was as it as a scientist and document it was kind of fun because he would give us a lecture every year and the fantastic guy is in his 70s just kinda having fun with us each a part-time no part-time lecturer and it would be the same lectures would be lovely pictures from like the 70s it's awesome he made everybody eat a bowl of asparagus and then they had to go P and never really had the time when they could spell when they could smell the asparagus is because that was his absorption study which are not only do away with that now ribs like you ever eat this brilliant. We started smelling yeah yeah the take away whenever you were doing that they were stressing how quickly it happened to break down the food I was really quickly in these molecules that do this – get in your bloodstream and get filtered through your and some of them remarkably quick so what do we handle distribute on about onions when people take Allison which is a garlic extract that they will actually use the garlic out of their breath out of everything because it just gets absorbed so much and that's one of the issues that my patients will have in the company will be taking supplements be like something's wrong Mark are you and Allison like yeah Mike I could smell it from here well if you happen to watch the gut check project and you want us to have the ability to tackle a new subject the best thing to do is go to KB MD health.com escaping the health.com go to the gut check project show you'll find that there is the ability to connect with us and submit something he wants to tackle that's really how we the last two weeks we stumble across what we've always come across to talk about we cover so much ground he only would it be really cool we were talking last week about bringing Dr. Blair on Col. Blair onward and talk about TBI right now imagine doing the product light on the hospital's trauma hospital we have a food protocol for traumatic brain injury we don't have CBD protocol with DHEA or any that stuff when the beat amazing week ago were going to be a brain information diet your to be on the supplements and this is the protocols can happen that's the goal of this whole thing is to bring science and I mean a whole separate show would be talking about so fewer of thing which is a molecule and cruciferous vegetables like broccoli was it turns out it's really really good for you it's anticancer it's anti-inflammatory but when you cook it the enzyme can't break it down called the Rawson Ace and so like a little hack would be a chef we can sit there and say no were to put some of mustard seed powder on it and then it will actually convert it so you just made your broccoli or broccoli sprouts way healthier sure so if you ever get diagnosed with cancer and there's all these crazy studies about like bladder cancer and stuff like that when you do that like I would love to have a protocol food protocol what you're gonna do the Hashimoto's food protocols right there working have a food protocol if you get this venture headed that way no joke on the Chrysippus vegetables they come with them basically so you're blocking the estrogen correct correct yeah not separate magical inane speaking of preservice vegetables B cauliflower just last night my wife and I went to go eat pizza awesome pizzeria and actually make gluten-free pizza the crust was made out of cauliflower it's amazing what they're doing cauliflower now because it taste like great bread and is not read it all basically having a great Chris Arafat's vegetable while you're eating a delicious pizza and were hoping that in spray glyphosate on it so that it's a good skill LOL yeah non-GMO vegetable crust they taste just like regular bread is real know I love all of those cauliflower crust so it is delicious so we've got about half a minute here before she attaches going to join us in the next half hour just a quick reminder if you are watching spinning network EA know if you haven't you read to be sure and check it out there is also the no-show is hosted by Alisa Shakespeare Alicia Shakespeare and her name her shows no butts to big snow but stupid' TS is too big to get out it's a great show and we will join you in the next half-hour dry don't ill make you feel really good about yourself doing something good for somebody else if you'd like to do that today J DRF.org join them in the fight against type I diabetes J DRF.org it's something good you can do for the world.org hey guys Matlock the conservative cartel I like to take a minute and tell you about a new weight loss product that's instantly becoming part of the mojo 50 family it was launched by a Dallas area company when taken the good stuff and olive oil created a patented product that helps people control their appetite and lose weight 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dish authorized retailer now 800-570-6630 800-570-6630 – 800-570-6630 offers required critical location 20 from early termination fee any auto vein restrictions apply call for hi it's Doc Thompson for Matthew 25 ministries Matthew 25 ministries is one of the few charities all actually endorsed because I know them I've worked with him and I know almost all the money that you donate goes to help people go to M2 5M.org M to 5M.org and welcome back to the project this is GCP and Mayor Gregor joined by your host Dr. Ken Brown what is up check your ego at the door let's learn some stuff hey guess what we have now our second ever guest our third ever show so we figured it out third ever show you never say never guess we are joined to my right the man the myth the legend Chef Patrick Mosher hey don't you know that's that's quite an intro not sure I can live up to you lots not bad for sending DUI if you live in an Iraq chef Patrick does a lot of everything is chef obviously he also produces many the programs here on spoon radio he drives fast he texts and drives he doesn't sleep he likes his smile he likes to laugh Emily now I only text voice text almost and I just use a series command so if it comes in a garbled and funny blame Siri yeah well I just made it up at any another string I like you I drive lightning I got around on the weekends between here and there for work in any other time off I have so like the real work so doctors are unique persons are they have unique personalities I chefs are I think they take the cake and fruit upon the intended I've met a lot of chefs and a lot of sepsis patients and I am just fascinated by that lifestyle that you don't thank you so much for coming on we talked earlier about how Isabella went send us her book and last hour talk about how food is you are what you eat all health begins and ends in the gut and here we are we've got a chef with some serious experience you have you have done a lot if you think you and I worked at been fortunate to work all over the world I asked you can start my culinary career in Japan well as I started my culinary career career in a Sizzler steakhouse when I was like 14 what what kind scissors Western Sizzler is yearly wishes Sizzler stay cast so Sizzler was a pretty big Chad pretty chain back in the 80s and early 90s her hand so I would see I was the busboy dishwasher at the scissor state has until Thursday night came around I got Says that as a dishwasher busboy and apparently on Thursdays there is all you keep popcorn shrimp so the kitchen as he was like okay cool I'll cook so I was Sam's bussing outback that he can put 10 piece shrimp on any given play because it's all you can eat right there Arizona State football team and command after he simply teachers that your back in your ear like helping other iron in their back there, laughing at you because they get your percentage of your tips not only do the hardest job is to clean the fire at the end of the night but they get your money it only took me at six weeks to figure that out here and I was like man I'm the dumbest guy in the planet and and shrimp everywhere feared you yeah you know what's it's interesting that my first job in the kitchen sent me home smelling like seafood because leaders are progressing to see Sheehan seafood specifically every night was like a gate getting came to bed before he took a shower because your sheets are just a mistake in his previous but it is what is your family was your family a frequenter of the Sizzler growing up yes we reduces her in Omaha Nebraska so the salad bar limits telephone the logic of that was just going there my favorite item there as a kid was that not any part of the salad that the canned chocolate pudding for whatever reason quite nutritious goes right alongside the square chicken fried steak so this is what I love me with with your culinary chops that has gone all the way to Japan to learn this is where you start is frying shrimp and it says look I lasted about two weeks at McDonald's for that but I don't really count that right now I have nobody ever does now I was acquitted sure what I should do to food my father had a large garden but we lived in upstate New York and the town of Carinthia Corinth if you live there it's near Saratoga Springs Albany that area coming in the middle of steak and damn mind my dad's entire family all of his siblings except one brother lived it within a mile of each other on the same road and my grandfather owns a few sections of land on either side he had a dairy farm and then a large vegetable garden and my father attended at least an acre garden every year so we spent summers as I was like three on the pic means you're picking beans and snapping beans and helping mom put stuff in jar so she could cannon like a cat I am not sure I tell my first culinary job as a real job in the family right up your alley just doesn't work out well my grandfather's letter to cattle every winter and then we split the meat up but amongst the family charities usually did two more later but early in the winter the first big heavy snowfall made at and C have to string them the absolute peace how you gently say you killed him he just killed the bank and then… Our first episode we are to explain my background were Eric would go with his dad to register you and I would go to the slaughter house and my dad was a running neck and since that's what you're saying that let me know know it's not actually it's more like the ad that gasped AGI part O… Depart this maybe maybe maybe I missed my calling but before they can ask to get the animal there something has to be done so they hang it up upside down you have to climb up a ladder and you have to I was five years old when I was taught this my first time you to cut around the muscle up around of the maintenance and yet the tide because if you don't when the stomach elongates it's a geyser oh comes at the back is so that was my first real job for the family in slaughtering B was I got to climb the ladder and hi Taft about who I now I am I much rather have a mean as more or less permanent constipation makes total sense what you were drawing you like him to know where you already you know why writing for lent for several years plus the cost so after you had the exposure to the dairy farm and all the vegetables then that obviously is setting a foundation for you to get into food you probably had no idea that's where your leaning but i know i did and i really my mother was a great cut my father was a good cook a very good cook and her whole family every every that revolved around food okay so as i got my father died very young i was six years old he died to great cancer at 47 while yes and dad back then there was no really no treatment by the time they figured out why you had back pain is been much over and anyway so but i spent a lot of time when my mother cooking after that – i just i just picked up i really love food i did i i was fortunate enough to move to germany my senior year in high school and the family that that that i lived with that hosted me was very generous in that we had to get other countries in and dine on some fantastic food and food as a way of life for them and in germany is where i learned about minimalism in the covered you know because they have dorm style refrigerators don't have baked refrigerators are slightly larger than little boxes you have in your dormitory in the shop every day every single day at least once a day to shop as it was for your bracket was delivered in the morning fresh while that's pretty interesting. it was awesome so i just a side note growing up and watching my grandmother cook my dad's mom she was she was fantastic i loved her fried chicken as she fried a lot of stuff but for some reason back then she still remained skinny but she and i don't know if your mom or your dad was like this my grandmother could flavor anything to taste terrific fried chicken chicken fried steak vegetables etc. but one of her trademarks was to always cook with a cigarette hanging out of her lip that was flavored building with burn ashes in there as well as i think that she saved all the different kinds of meats that she brought in the oil and in different folders cans fish oil and that chicken grease etc. is it something that you also did not say new york yeah you don't weld eventually i think had a different flavor and if it will will start thereby produce because we have burn pile of year trees that would fall with a lot of property and we burn on the actual garden so what would and might my father would rotate back and forth into plots so each season the previous year's burn pile become the new garden in city dias content right the potash well – content was really high so a lot of minerals and i mean it's it's amazing how healthy the vegetables are when you do that you people used to take the ashes from the fireplace and put them into the burn pile into their compost deep sure we don't anymore but that is not right there was just fantastic for the flavor and the freshness of vegetables but my money as she skewed everything okay you accept what you call it swiss steak was boiled whatever lien beef steak she could buy it was the cheapest cut with a bone in it and smothered in them tomatoes and garlic and then she broil that the oven it was actually pretty good – he sounds delicious compared to what were some of the first part of the show what i'm thinking is that you know smoking has a lot of it is a carcinogen known as benzene but we should do is see the chemical structure similar to benzene to add that good childhood flavor that you're missing the smoke when without getting the cancer yeah yeah probably so he can get you can put winston cigarettes into the mass spectra shouldn't even pops out to charge me figure out figure out what fruit or vegetable has a similar molecular component near benzene time answer i'm interested that i'm really curious about that this is a fascinating science for me and i'm thinking i could just as i could change my restaurant consulting business to just be menu consulting based on this and take the elevator TOoh yeah absolutely this is the kind of stuff and we wouldn't be talking about if we were preparing for the show i was just i was just a deal try to think of okay what's a really cool thing we talk about i have to sciences up i like it i'm a nerd and i'll probably try do this with every single topic that we do find something that yes really fun oh terrible that would be really cool so you're sitting there sobbing for your dispose of this great organic before organic was cool you guys had a mechanically warm touch poor poor alright so what happened after that we moved arizona which was a whole different thing i learned about spicy spicy foods right my first meal out in every week and eat out a lot as a child very rarely maybe once or twice a year at the most we went to this little mexican restaurant between chandler and gilbert arizona which are now massive towns that have grown together but then they were just very small towns and that limit its cost is something this little mexican place and i had a chimichanga's mother eating spicy green chili salsa and i went ballistic it was it was done i was never anything but eat tasty food again and and and and not healthy necessarily but flavorful food and that that cannabis bondholder you and you live down there is i guess i was in sixth grade summer and allowing a nice set of a few years so then you you progress through graduate and then you end up oil before you graduate you worked the sizzler and then how did you decide that food beyond being told they arraigned a danger going to do popcorn shrimp something you want to pursue and deliver to people to make him happy what i had few other jobs cooking after that but what i realized is that no matter how how cash strapped your family might be there is always food in the restaurant and she works there used to get some of it for free sure so i think that was it i think mentally i determined never be hungry again right and i just parlayed into into a career but i really and start cooking full-time jobs in japan is working as an interpreter such working as a copywriter start get some interpret good job in japan like writer i did for chemical trans tech international they were a check technical translation company the parents of a friend of mine had come to united states to go to school in eighth grade and stayed all the way through high school they owned and ran the company in osaka japan and he invited me to come and work for them after while i was acting in college time well so i heard you speak german and you also speak japanese type hello, so wow so this is fascinating so chefs or super intelligent people that know i'm serious. many of my friends are chefs or people of extremes share the nar that is fascinating you speak japanese german english to work and back doing appetizer version and it was as fascinating i love you and japanese chefs are so meticulous they have the waiting approach for japan and she had a proverb that defines through japan and it's it's it's that the only the audience at is actually it's it's not just food it's the food it is the substance of the universe right so their philosophy is let it let little seem like much as long as it is fresh and beautiful let little seem like much, as long as it is fresh and beautiful so small portions very ornate and well garnished very clean and seasonal seasonal is the key word there and typically local all just too far ahead but i do remember one of our previous conversations you did say that you were with the noble as well greg i did work for number for number years i actually i was the executive chef and that helped open a restaurant in aspen last month he said that's his last name and then i was fortunate similar location so in a minute i'll imagine all those principles that you're talking about probably carried over to the live presentation the food yeah you know honeywell there's a whole another layer there and he he lived and worked in peru for a long time and he was fascinated by french cooking techniques so he took these japanese base ingredients added the layer of the like infuse the flavors of's of peru and chile and then to add that to another level by using french cooking techniques and just phenomenal stuff while yelling at ocean would say there so my family were huge asian cuisine fans all of it our favorite restaurant is actually japanese restaurant in plano we go there at least once a week really i mean you can send him a plug – or llama iam a check now yeah we have the it's just unbelievable it's it's it's it's good and sensitive i think is very very traditional japanese food had told me our waitress is always our waitress so we just sit around and through to start showing up that's what i love the methodical just this is what's happening it is predictable it is well and it's thoughtful thoughtful yes so it here's a really interesting cultural thing from japan is a great book called mino because with some the dip the anatomy of interdependency okay okay describes her whole culture one of things in japan and when you start a sentence they finish it for you like ice to teach for this guy jenna ricci he had two small children i spoke in my itouch spoken english i taught them english and japanese speaking is my second day speaking with so gimme a break he would call in and he would say i think you and i say yes he is jonah lychee desiccated and will mean this is generally key and he just stopped and i'm supposed to finish since you must be calling about but i wish i didn't know that right some just like okay hi i just wait for him to say something but eventually you learn it's like him japanese interject a lot they say hi a so they stay in there what they're doing is they might say yes oh is not so there interjecting to let you know there listening actively listening even if they say something in agreement it does mean they agree okay i mean yeah but anyway back to the point i was making is when somebody hurts a guest and some house for the first time in you they say would you like some coffee and you say yes they don't ask you how you want to and they don't bring you the things to put cream and sugar in it they automatically put in cream and sugar because the first time as a guest in their house you should not have to think about how you want your coffee served from then on you can just make your own but the date alleviate the pressure from you even if he didn't want it that way and you accept it graciously because that's the generosity they're getting you to relieve you of the pressure of having to say would you please fix it this way oh wow cool yeah there's so many layers of complexity to japan's culture that's all that's a month that well that's a whole series of shows for next year while even a chef for a long time what would be something that in the year in the realm of being a master chef going from the being taught japanese in the office it was some french i carryover what what take your take you to your favorite style of the play setting now i thinks my love simplicity and food such il might my mother she stupid a lot of things but were really great fresh ingredients if it wasn't steered my father was a big fisher and fishman and hunter and so we had a lot of wild game he had we always had a ton of venison backstrap a lot of rabbits a lot of fish so everything is very simple when we went camping my father did take stuff for dinner he would hunted or efficient while a fish will also describe the pressure then a joke yeah yeah tv show now yesterday i really afraid survive as their grills at this time you shop for breakfast but you a loser it was very simple food so you take out lemons potatoes salt pepper and onion and so if if you cut trout then he to be slice of the potato and onion stuff inside with a couple of wedges lemon slices lemon salt-and-pepper and then wrap it will a pat of butter there wrapped up in tinfoil turn on the fire you know if there is other game to be had than it was you super simple or boiled potatoes and simple fixings and then salt-and-pepper on one of the game and so these really clean simple flavors for me i really would identify with any candidate that you can't really elevate that sure with a few adjustments but really being able to identify the main component like the center of the play item the protein if you can't taste what it's supposed to taste like i'm not sure what the point is sure will will today you just unit of joining us because you had just left a gigantic gathering that you are asked to basically help map out how do you know whenever you have so many mouths to feed that you know i'm going to be able to put together this coming plate to serve this this type of convention or do they give you parameters of what they do and don't want hello hello yeah so i'm to make so many development or menu yeah menu development or menu selection for any large parties very very critical because you have to think about if you have have multiple selections especially then what is the em what is the time to plate each item on a plated is his buffet mean all that comes into play i've done parties as large as 2100 people we get i work for a company in houston and we get a large plated dinner for the md anderson cancer research center answer hospital is so wheat we did 2100 people seated but the preparation for that took a week but nothing is really cooked until needed some things are made today before but not cooked until that day but all the proteins like all the tenderloins all the seabass so there are 1100 pieces seabass and 1400 piece of tenderloin while the kennels were hole we had to cut them i i had cut the measure but yeah that's that was we we all that gets cooked in ovens lined out inside of this big giant makeshift kitchen that's 20,000 ft.² and then we had 16 ovens in there like big commercial ovens do you feel like that your principles and how you wanted to live you want to deliver good health for people through the way that they eat that sometimes you get compromised because it gets so big yeah i mean hat so there are ways to dragon simplicity is number one pitcher and then limiting your your menu to items that fit your your desires and what you want to give to people and bring people in the hospitality industry you can't compromise that so only serving things that you may look for an alternate approaching so if they couldn't afford the that tenderloin we could do something like baseball saker you know tri-tip or something like that site to get a similar quality product just not as expensive i think that's that's part of the creativity that chefs have to work with nowadays is planning for and like an upcoming season we change menus to the four times a year restaurants so you're primarily doing this right now for your work also i do that yeah i mean ii will this is your this is my baby i want to get into that as this is how did you end up here doing a digital show but friend will talk about sorry love you so much anyway but the planning phase is really what it is yet to be very organized and there's a science to you know how many pieces everything you need what the portion sizes and what your standard batch size recipe see to scale that up although there can be complications or because salt doesn't scale directly other some other components like oil don't care they don't scale you know it's not exponential it's not like six times this equals that know if the scale somethings back and skipping some something so what i love about this is that you're talking zach the kind of leads into the first part of the show but this is how i cook i view it more as a science and i want to know what this and you're like i don't i didn't have a grandmother with a marble light in her mouth inside yeah so like now at the stage like i have a really i really enjoy quickbooks us all so excited that isabella went something cookbook i got bobby flay's cookbook which is that one on the quick side note is that the ill be like now add the sausage you like got it and then you turn to page 20 like that sauce is 50 and so there is a very famous book book called the the reese's gag gastronomy great and and there's another one by written by august escoffier who who really founded modern french cuisine right in the way that they cooking french kitchens and what happens it'll say like a cookie was a shock which is its sea scallops with marty athos or something right when he says cc the scalp recipe and it says okay now seat recipes 42 918 when you go to the buyer the year but is like 97 steps and then you have the mornay sauce is like when yeah whatever whatever size you are making is like 467 steps and you can't make it you can't story cold as beheld hot and fresh i mean it's just it's so complicated i was like okay that was go back on the shelf and maybe never adult ever dust the back off again i read it religiously 1000 cal you have a terrible cook and sometimes whenever i want to cook and i'm learning to tip these says certain things together if i see that there's a whole another mess of steps to make one ingredient i usually light which is not have any this it's it's changing out the menu the item is off the menu are going to do something well and that's part of the so i'll say on the show sometimes i don't i don't do show prep well i crept much better for life in restaurants than i do life on the radio sure and sometimes i get half with your essay like this make sense now that in the night so i spent a minute research demo i did next he read the recipe i just assume that this is what they meant because this is the type recipe so pre-reading the recipe knowing the ingredients in the methodology they're coming up are really important during the prep work will before we end up rounding out the last is our since you are one of the main producers for the spoony digital radio station we will get to why you ended up joining spoony radio etc. but tell us little bit about some of the other shows that i can and i are just now joining cemented lisa shakespeare she she actually has a her show no butts to big is phenomenal she's very energetically young lady but she had some health issues and she owns a company called total cluster fudge which is not so there's another new and called some monkey butts but that one is is the healthy version of the desert she does now for total cluster fudge and as this dessert manufactures she had to stop eating the things that she makes in the said these are carried in them convenience stores and cosco and there sold over the internet and at some restaurant seasons well which which is great she touched details each watching three healthy tips and tricks to just we held your life every day and along those lines is gwen rich of the rich solution solution yeah she's just stage iv cancer for the last 6 1/2 years she's why she looked way past her expiration date as she and her husband adam say that she was misdiagnosed for eight years before that so she gives tips on eating mortgage with more nutritional value more healthful and how to if you have been diagnosed how to prevent being diagnosed as best as possible that's the very first show i did with dr. thompson you rest his soul you are supposed to sit on my show he's an undertaking to get here early and you shall prep well i love this didn't really into it like that we can do so we can include the chemistry can say how do we make these things healthier like increase yourself you are paying and stuff like that euro lutherans all these big words that basically you can eat well and you're really healthy why don't i mean we have room for play marsh joseph you want to collaborate that were ready to go yet get so we have you have a minute here for you to wrap this this part up so if you're watching now stay tuned you can always check out love my tummy.com/spooning to pick up electron teal caving de health.com he can pick up your kb md cbd next half-hour going to talk to shift patrick little bit more about not just what is done as a chef or what brought them to spoony that also you also required to experience with cbd chef patrick and told us stories night shift well you know this is the only 24 hour take anywhere platforms dedicated to food and fun we're spoony this hour from townhall.com, the fbi joining a criminal investigation of the faa certification process for the boeing 737 max a jetliner the blazer crash since october killing more than 300 people there are a number of inquiries getting underway including one by the transportation department inspector general and another investigation by congress in the wake of the mosque shootings new zealand's government banning military style semiautomatic firearms in high-capacity magazine prime minister jacinda arter and says additional gun control measures in the pipeline's motor began entrance to look at issues around licensing issues around registration issues around storage there are a range of either an image that we believed to need to be night and it will be the second tranche of reforms yet to come following a visit to ohio today vice president from in michigan in grand rapids tonight the president will address supporters at a make america great again political rally's trip to west michigan follows a daytrip to politically important ohio yesterday where he reminded factory workers about the economic gains during his time in office with 2020 democratic candidates already crisscrossing the country look for president from to also be traveling to states that will be crucial or his reelection greg clugston at joint base andrews in maryland national guard troops been called in residence being told to stay inside after elevated levels of benzene were detected your houston-area petrochemical storage facility that can't fire this week several school districts also canceling classes for the day citing bad air quality the national weather service is warning the plotting and parts of south dakota and northern iowa it soon reach historic levels floodwaters have driven a lot of people out of their homes, several midwestern states wall street the dow up 57 points the s&p seven point tire one of the stories@townhall.com if you are trying to quit drinking or doing too many drugs listen to me you don't know me and will never meet i had a problem like you want i drank and used a party a little too much till he got out of control and almost ruined my life i realize i needed help to fix my problem before it totally destroyed me if you tried to fix your drinking and drug problem and you know you can't do it alone you need to call the national treatment advisors they'll immerse you into a 30 day program to replace your old habits with new habits and totally change your life and if you have ppl private health insurance the entire program may be covered fix your problem right now before it gets any worse get clean call now and learn more 800-296-1252 800-296-1252 800-296-1252 800-296-1252 it looks like you're losing i am i losing weight i am losing my lost about 10 pounds how are you doing it funny name but i've done it with review zone rad use zone.com and the stuff works it's you get it all that the molecule this found in that all i can tell you is it it's a it makes you feel full and it keeps your mind off of wanting to overeat and also boost your metabolism as your done and more guys try it today it's gonna work for you like his work for brad and countless other people read you zone.com are idus zone.com fast track student loans can get your student loans out of the vault stop any wage garnishments stop collection calls and stop seizure of your tax refund give yourself a break to stop the stress and get your student loan payments down to as little as $25 a month based on what you can afford to pay 800-709-4395 800-709-4395 800-709-4395 800-709-4395 six booty food and fun okay we are back for another half hour of gut check project it said year three join here with your host dr. kenneth brown this is awesome so this next half hour should be hilarious because were going into chef stores but more important on which we don't do the job we have are from producer marie rieger how we doing i just cannot send it down alright we have also our guest here and i sent to patrick when i speak to eric when she speaking to micah when i got like this to make sure i keep okay so there is something i have instructions already well so for all of about what one hour is so so you start doing this we have this thing guys have this thing i have to always tell people to come and see you keep the microphone close never looks at me with disdain like like i know guys have this phobia about putting something phallic looking right up to your mouth and show a smile and wave smiling way to be okay :-) how these on an emory better nothing ice not well we left off this last half-hour basically talking about your journey on how to become a chef and where you been we learned that he spoke japanese and german hello the spanish and if he traveled and and it the age of five was able to close a cow: yes tied off time off dear: close to a man climbing up the oh my goodness that's like everything but the last half-hour makes me just feel bad about myself wanting you bring your homework for kindergarten and also to maybe climb the cow instead of a ladder knife in her hand and run around your neck you will tell us a little bit more about your journey now to rejoin here the next for some in the next half-hour you have moved into not just shiftwork but you've also been exploring cbd so i know you got a story behind it what in the world brought a chef is now on a digital radio station to explore cbd well just because he was my was my hero back in high school not really know because my my mother died in a diabetic appeared my father passed of pancreatic cancer and my mom died 01 and about that time i actually heard about that they discovered cbd and that was mid 80s i think when they discover that they were really starting to realize that while they made a big push medical cannabis was now legal in in california working on colorado and so i was just fascinated by that how that worked in the body i i don't like the psychotropic effects of of kinsey's audience is the antiaging specific because you know as a chef i always want to fill a coming control yeah that's that personality so i i really am i never really partook in it but when i found out about that that cds and how they affect the body i got became fascinated and so i just i got involved in a business that was related data in and i'm actually a partner in medical cannabis related business and in an tactic, and in massachusetts but we do a lot of really high cbd extremely low thc strains and stuff like that that's cool so my my experience the reason why i'm so into cds that you know i kinda had a heroes journey where i saw some incredible fact did you have anything like that happen yeah so i you and i think i cacti brushed over that little bit with my children but so my son and daughter have a i'm a 20 else on an essential daughter my son was 12 he kept having these ankle injuries playing soccer and he was trying to get into that a lick big development pool and kinda girl that way anyway so about the third time we took him in for ankle sprain in like six months we took him to specialist but i trust and she does i is really long high arches and his ankles are kinda rolled out he think he has cmt like cmt i don't cmts but so charcot-marie-tooth syndrome causes degradation of the neural pathways between and in the in extremity skin it causes type of neural what neuropathy peripheral neuropathy measure and what happens with that and that that the small muscles start to weaken the bone structure starts to deform so a lot of children or or adults with that with cmt will have like a limp wrist were that the wrist turns in and out a little that is truly painful it can be and will actually ache it can be painful but in this case you have to start to lose sensation so my son at 12 is about between 17 increased 18% deficient in the pass-through of you know the impulse from elbow to fingertips and needed toe okay so after testing their likely something that you can do just keep them strong become a fiscal therapy there's no treatment for its tenets genetic so over time my daughter started getting injuries and my son went off to a 2 am text dammit 18 and as as he was like a 18 a week i think his birthday just to curry start school and he was competitive tennis players i know you have a tennis person family and when a debtor where the antennas from the bottom that's right that's right that's right state championship anyway he was having ankle injuries there so when he came out of that that program the only thing i found i done thousands of hours of research looking for anything that could help them in the only true they say is stay strong be active don't get fat that's the three ways that you treat yourself boxers there's nothing else that they've known to to cause any actually to delay the effects of it if if if it is to progress further than staying strong and healthy and so he was very active but i found this this article the cds actually on that while website that i shared with you called echo connection.org and i did some reading i called some friends i talked to guy another dr. physician california anyway so i just i order my said look you take this twice a day and let see what happens and not only did his focus on his schoolwork away up and his grade started to get better six months let lesson six was later we took him to the texas anam research facility where they do studies on neck back and spine injuries but they also do some neural testing and things like neurological testing so first date they deliver the jet they did not look to the genetic marker on that wednesday we know he has it so what they did do a stated a more comprehensive testing on the neural pathways than he had originally the first two times and it was back to hundred percent so now before he was down he said 1718% he's probably got 25% by the time we took in it by the time he went at this time to be tested so i'm gonna kick that up and break something the results we got scolded for i now i do not migrate a hearing and i just want to be a rock star please not constant today this is my season recap though your son that the biggest change in imago simply does adding this evening i was the only change made the only change that was made in his diet and i was very very he's a very clean eater he actually started cooking his own food he was off his meal ticket at school and he saves on a very at enthusiastic weight training program that he designed himself and so but that was the only thing that changes diet and exercise regimen at all we will be look at this if you realize that charcot-marie-tooth syndrome affects the nerves and we know the cbd of the endo cannabinoid system is deeply rooted in the nerves then when that you start decreasing that inflammatory process and what i love is that you just said the key here is to changes.we know that food can be just like medicine and it can actually help out so here we have a college student it's on cbd and eating his own food not eating on diet plan that's amazing and he been well i mean an end at home he was a very clean eaters while he's like the one person the family does like desserts he won't eat cookie dough like anything with frosting on it very low sugar intake refined sugar like fruit didn't live on it measures none none that i'm aware of it i would like to ask a question he has them his hands and feet are always cold but he does have hair side of the follicles can't really thinking that you can go here with any without any ennui that i thought it might be circulatory service account because there's little knowledge syndrome 90 there were to get a little cold and you your it's an autoimmune it's component of autoimmune disease were your arteries sort of clampdown its interest is also a warning sign for autoimmune diseases top bring us more yeah and angry people all over the place have nods yet it's not uncommon you say it just kinda matter-of-fact all of a sudden you know she had 100% improvement there and you know it's one of those things where people hear the stories and you feel like you're being sold something but you say very genuinely it's like what's this thing that a difference in his life and that's why people are so passionate about cbd gasoline and like i have nothing to gain by telling so i don't not financially sure i'm not rr production facility is even open it were still the middle building it in our tech companies $14 million away from making money so if you want to join in the future of the industry go ahead but yeah there is that i just tell my story to share with people so what did you do when you did when whenever he told you how he felt and you knew that it was a real difference it wasn't it wasn't just subjective it was an objective improvement for him you mentioned his grade you mentioned his his mood is energy etc. so those are things as a parent i know that you would be able to easily perceive what did you want to do that information right off the bat and how did people receive it when you shared well immediately i started taking the product i started my daughter I and so because i want to know the effexor and audiology i for someone who is so well versed in the in the in the industry i don't take it on a regular basis i don't know why i have this it's just it just falls off the plate with so to speak when when i look at my daily supplementation but but so i put my daughter on it right away and then i went to a meeting with some people that were interested in cbd's there is a conference going on and i spoke i gave but i just told my sent store i told my story my son story from my perspective and then and i just type i have been an advocate ever since while we all have kids guessing your kids suffer from anything just well there's no way to ike i can't that's got me held that the greatest loss of for anyone ever is to lose a child but even when they're ill i mean or they don't feel w
The Judge Joe Brown Show (Hosted by Valerie Denise Jones) - SPECIAL EDITION: Race War Documentary (Radio) Promo with Jason BlackAbout Jason Black Jason Black, the creator of 7AM and Gentrified, is a NO HOLDS BARRED kind of industry executive who dared ask the question — Are We In A Race War? __ The question (itself) presents as enigma. Jason Black's film, Race War, is a first-of-its-kind production introduced for the purpose of awareness. The film features experts in various field plus those responsible for the subject matter presented in today's episode.About Trae Dungy and Barrett DungyPlease visit www.filmplug.net and www.urbanhomeentainment.co_____________________________ DISCLAIMER: We had a mishap during the show. However, at BIG MEDIA Worldwide, we make memories NOT MISTAKES. It Happens. It Happened. We love you to LIFE. Please enjoy today's show and share it on all your social media platforms.
CONTENIDO - 00:23 Presentación - 03:30 “Aquí te pillo, aquí temazo” - GenCon 2018 06:30 Reef 07:50 Coimbra 09:03 Moa 10:46 Great Western Trails: Rails to the North 11:35 Yellow & Yangtze 12:36 Blue Lagoon 13:16 Chronicles of Crime 15:26 Founders of Gloomhaven 16:38 Sports Dice: Football 17:30 Endeavor: Age of Sail 19:03 Piepmatz 20:30 Root 22:20 Holding On: The Troubled Life of Billy Kerr 25:20 The Rise of Queensdale 28:00 Race of the New Found Land 29:30 Newton 30:40 Franchise 32:38 Ticket to Ride New York 33:40 A Song of Ice & Fire: Tabletop Miniatures Game 36:25 Kick-Ass: The Board Game 37:31 Too Many Bones: Undertow 38:52 Evil High Priest 39:58 Fireball Island: The Curse of Vul-Kar 41:46 Symphony No.9 44:28 Arkham Horror 3rd Edition 45:25 Legendary Encounters: The X-Files Deck Building Game - 48:30 "Una taza de café marciano" - 01:01:10 “Juega o Muere” 01:11:00 Die Quacksalber von Quedlinburg 01:14:30 Caylus 01:18:20 It Happens... 01:22:30 Altiplano 01:26:50 Shit Happens 01:30:38 Whistle Stop 01:33:56 Vita Mors - 01:37:20 "Así Si y Así No" - 01:48:00 - Despedida y cierre Licencias musicales: 1. S Strong - Whitestick by S Strong https://soundcloud.com/s_strong Creative Commons - Attribution 3.0 Unported - CC BY 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0 Music promoted by Audio Library https://youtu.be/mFz_r_CNB08 2. Funny Song by BENSOUND https://www.bensound.com/royalty-free-music Creative Commons - Attribution 3.0 Unported - CC BY 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0 Music promoted by Audio Library https://youtu.be/9mHpr8lhjZE 3. DJ Quads - A Coffee To Go Song/Free Download - https://youtu.be/MEhGXw-JuY4 Follow DJ Quads - http://smarturl.it/dj-quads 4. Soul (Vlog Music) by Dj Quads https://soundcloud.com/aka-dj-quads Music promoted by Audio Library https://youtu.be/m0UBmJLv208
CONTENIDO - 00:23 Presentación - 03:30 “Aquí te pillo, aquí temazo” - GenCon 2018 06:30 Reef 07:50 Coimbra 09:03 Moa 10:46 Great Western Trails: Rails to the North 11:35 Yellow & Yangtze 12:36 Blue Lagoon 13:16 Chronicles of Crime 15:26 Founders of Gloomhaven 16:38 Sports Dice: Football 17:30 Endeavor: Age of Sail 19:03 Piepmatz 20:30 Root 22:20 Holding On: The Troubled Life of Billy Kerr 25:20 The Rise of Queensdale 28:00 Race of the New Found Land 29:30 Newton 30:40 Franchise 32:38 Ticket to Ride New York 33:40 A Song of Ice & Fire: Tabletop Miniatures Game 36:25 Kick-Ass: The Board Game 37:31 Too Many Bones: Undertow 38:52 Evil High Priest 39:58 Fireball Island: The Curse of Vul-Kar 41:46 Symphony No.9 44:28 Arkham Horror 3rd Edition 45:25 Legendary Encounters: The X-Files Deck Building Game - 48:30 "Una taza de café marciano" - 01:01:10 “Juega o Muere” 01:11:00 Die Quacksalber von Quedlinburg 01:14:30 Caylus 01:18:20 It Happens... 01:22:30 Altiplano 01:26:50 Shit Happens 01:30:38 Whistle Stop 01:33:56 Vita Mors - 01:37:20 "Así Si y Así No" - 01:48:00 - Despedida y cierre Licencias musicales: 1. S Strong - Whitestick by S Strong https://soundcloud.com/s_strong Creative Commons - Attribution 3.0 Unported - CC BY 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0 Music promoted by Audio Library https://youtu.be/mFz_r_CNB08 2. Funny Song by BENSOUND https://www.bensound.com/royalty-free-music Creative Commons - Attribution 3.0 Unported - CC BY 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0 Music promoted by Audio Library https://youtu.be/9mHpr8lhjZE 3. DJ Quads - A Coffee To Go Song/Free Download - https://youtu.be/MEhGXw-JuY4 Follow DJ Quads - http://smarturl.it/dj-quads 4. Soul (Vlog Music) by Dj Quads https://soundcloud.com/aka-dj-quads Music promoted by Audio Library https://youtu.be/m0UBmJLv208
In this episode, Bryce brings It Happens out of the dust, a contributor undusts Trickerion, Bryce follows up on the Ludonaute / Sentinels controversy, discusses the Origins Awards Winners, reviews Immortals and the obscure Traders of Genoa, and tells the story of his misfortune in once playing Road to the White House0:23 - Introduction1:45 - Out of the Dust: It Happens3:06 - Out of the Dust: Trickerion4:37 - Reaction: Ludonaute/Sentinels controversy follow-up5:24 - Reaction: Origins Awards Winners7:34 - What Have I Been Playing: Immortals10:28 - Obscure Bryce Game: Traders of Genoa15:05 - Important Moments in Bryce Board Gaming History: Road to the White House18:11 - Contact Info
Convention season is here! So to help you have the best time possible at any cons you might attend this summer or into the fall, we've collected advice from our listeners on how to have a great con. To kick things off this week, thank you to Kyle - our newest Patreon backer! For our acquisition disorders this week, Anthony discusses Neta-Tanka on Kickstarter now and Chris looks at Heroes of Terinnoth - a new take on the Warhammer Quest Adventure Card Game formula that was so short lived. At the Table this week, Anthony reviews Istanbul The Dice Game and Chris looks at a classic Feld game, It Happens... Finally, we go through answers from the listeners on how to have a good time at a con, and share a few of our own. If you haven’t yet, be sure to connect with us on Facebook (www.facebook.com/boardgamersanonymous), Twitter (http://twitter.com/bgapodcast), and on our website (www.boardgamersanonymous.com). You can support the show as well by donating on Patreon (www.patreon.com/bga), or using our Amazon affiliate link.
Welcome to episode 51 of the “Women in the Business Arena Podcast,” formerly known as, “The Liberation Lab.” In this episode we’re diving deep into “Imposter Syndrome” to explain what it is, how it can affect your life and business as well as your momentum and time. “Where there is more vulnerability, there is a deeper sense of imposter syndrome” Imposter Syndrome happens to everyone at some point in the journey. Essentially, imposter syndrome is the feeling that you’re an “imposter” in your area of expertise and that you’re actually a fraud. Especially for those women (and men) that are putting themselves out there, or maybe have a platform where they are out in front of a lot of people. Why do we find ourselves doubting our own expertise and confidence? “Imposter Syndrome Happens to EVERYONE” It really comes down to a matter of value and self-worth. The root of Imposter Syndrome goes much deeper than just a blanket term - we have to “check in” with ourselves on a regular basis to see what feelings are generating these thoughts and how to navigate them in the moment. “Self-Doubt Sabotages a Woman’s Success” If you ‘ve struggled with feeling inadequate in your life or business, there’s a really good chance that Imposter Syndrome has taken root in some way. The good news is, you CAN beat it and we show you how in this episode. Some topics we talk about in this episode: What is Imposter Syndrome?- 1:30 What are the signs?- 3:05 It Happens for Everyone - 9:15 Effects on Women vs. Men - 10:57 The First Step to Navigating Imposter Syndrome is Awareness - 19:20 The Lie of Comparison - 22:01 The Value in Simple - 29:10 Am I Aligned with Who I Really Am? - 33:05 The Different Pieces of our Feelings - 37:50 How to get involved Join the Women in the Business Arena Group on Facebook and continue the discussion starting next week! https://www.facebook.com/groups/womeninthebusinessarena Reach out to us - we’d love to hear more about where you’re at in life and business! Find out more at www.womeninthebusinessarena.com If you liked this episode, be sure to subscribe and leave a quick review on iTunes. It would mean the world to hear your feedback and to help us spread the word!
Noah Efron, Don Futterman, Ha’aretz International Director Charlotte Hallé, and and ARZA President Josh Weinberg are live in Boston to discuss three topics of incomparable importance. Looking for the patron-supported extra segments? Find them on Patreon. It Happens in the Best of Families What can be done to allow American Jews to identify with a state whose leaders break deals with them, accuse them of living soft and convenient lives, and disparage them in a variety of ways? If I Don't Recognize You, O Jerusalem What fears and hopes are sparked by Trump's decision to recognize Jerusalem as Israel's capital city? What Do and Don't Demonstrations Do? What do demonstrations do? What have demonstrations done? Must we admit that they may have become an empty ritual? All this live at the fabulous Union for Reform Judaism Biennial, through the largesse of the Association of Reform Zionists in America and J-Street, plus the brilliant music of young jazz sensation Lior Tzemach.
Losing weight can feel incredibly stressful. TRUST ME. I GET IT. Boy do I get it. I used to LIVE in constant stress about my weight loss and/or lack thereof. This week I experienced the kind of weight loss stress I hadn't experienced in a long time, and was inspired to share that with you because I THINK ITS ESSENTIAL TO TALK ABOUT. YOU create your weight loss stress. IT IS COMPLETELY OPTIONAL. I decided to opt out of this BS stress I was creating for myself, a long time ago, and when I did- that's when my weight loss results actually improved, not to mention THE QUALITY OF MY LIFE. But again, I get it. IT HAPPENS. It's what we are used to creating for ourselves. STRESS & SABOTAGE. IN THIS EPISODE I TALK ABOUT MY PERSONAL EXPERIENCE WITH WEIGHT LOSS STRESS & HOW I MANAGE IT. HOW I CHANGE IT. WHAT TO DO IN THE MOMENT you are feeling stressed about your weight and/or weight loss process. If you can manage your brain and stress levels about your stress: 1- Your results WILL IMPROVE. 2- THE QUALITY OF YOUR LIFE will improve radically. you. deserve. both. To lose your ‘last 10’ using my proven method JOIN THE LAST 10™ Program- GET ALL THE DETAILS HERE: www.brendalomeli.com/thelast10
About this episode: To Tim Hunze, dedication to your songwriting craft and building your network are two very important factors in pursuing a career in the music industry. In 2011, Tim opened the doors of Parallel Music Nashville in partnership with JP Williams. Tim’s day to day includes managing a roster of songwriters and artists including Jon Mabe, Jesse Lee, Lance Carpenter, Zella Day, Alex Hall, Blake Chaffin, Ryan Beaver, Jenn Schott and more. In our conversation we touch on Tim’s early beginnings in artist management his favorite podcasts, media outlets and how he scouts those future radio hits. About Tim Hunze: Upon graduation from Middle Tennessee State University and armed with a degree in Recording Industry Management, Tim started his own record label, Rhythm and Grooves Records. The label had strong initial success with a hit video on BET and a charted single on Billboard charts. Ultimately, Hunze sold his interest in the company. In 1993 Tim then took at job as archive manger at Great Cumberland Music Group (later renamed to Hamstein Music). After a year as archive manager, Tim garnered his first cut with Giant Records artist, Clay Walker. This cut turn into Tim’s first single that peaked at # 14 on Billboard’s country music chart. Hunze was promoted to creative director in 1995 and procured cuts with artist such as Tim McGraw, George Strait, Diamond Rio, John Michael Montgomery, Rascal Flatts, Kenny Chesney. In 2000, Hamstein sold to Mosaic Music group and then in 2005 sold to Stage Three Music Group. Tim was appointed the General Manger. Under Hunze’s tenure, Stage Three Music Group had over 15 #1’s including Jason Aldean’s “The Truth”, Sugarland’s’ “Want To”, “Already Gone”, and “It Happens”, Carrie Underwood’s, “Cowboy Casanova” and Kenny Chesney’s “Out Last Night”. Stage Three Writer, Bobby Pinson won 2009 BMI Song Writer of The Year award and writer Brett James won 2010 ASCAP writer of the year. In July of 2010, Stage Three Music was sold to BMG Rights Management. In July of 2011, Hunze started Parallel Music Publishing, a partnership with JP Williams. In their four short years they’ve have five number one records: “Better Dig Two”, “Mama’s Broken Heart”, “Til My Last Day”, “Love Me Like Me You Mean It”, and “Kiss You In The Morning”. Parallel’s current roster: Alex Hall, Blake Chaffin, Jennifer Schott, Jesse Lee, Lance Carpenter, Michael Lotten and Michael White. Hear Tim Hunze speak at this year’s NSAI Song Camp happening July 14-16 here in Nashville. Register now at www.nashvillesongwriters.com. About this podcast: NSAI Coffee Break is a series featuring legendary and modern-day songwriters, artists and music industry executives. Each episode highlights their creative journeys, including the successes and the in-betweens, and where they are headed to next!
Holly Peterson is the New York Times best-selling author of four books, including her latest work of social satire, It Happens in the Hamptons. Megan Murphy, Editor of Bloomberg Businessweek, interviewed Ms. Peterson about the new book and its themes of ambition, and the clash of social classes. Peterson also offers a few insights on the Trump family. The book party was hosted by Tammy Haddad, Connie Milstein, Hilary Rosen, Heather Podesta, Kathy O’Hearn and Carol Melton at The Jefferson Hotel in Washington, DC on May 17, 2017.
A lot of what we learned about love relationships we learned in our family or circumstances of origin. Recovery makes it possible to learn new ways of relating. With awareness and commitment, we can recover our sense of self and our ability to develop truly loving, fulfilling relationships. Special guest John Herald Lee is an international best-selling author and speaker and one of the founding members of the men's movement. He shares how men and women can clarify and dismantle counterproductive dynamics of male-female relationships in a nonshaming, nonblaming way. John's latest book is Breaking the Mother-Son Dynamic: Resetting the Patterns of a Man's Life and Loves. Also, on March 24, in Austin, Texas, John will be the keynote speaker at the ninth annual It Happens to Boys Conference, the premiere conference addressing the effects and healing tools for male survivors of sexual abuse, their partners, and families. Learn more at creativechangeconferences.com and johnleebooks.com.
God has a purpose that we may not understand. Like Paul, we trust Him to bring it about.
God has a purpose that we may not understand. Like Paul, we trust Him to bring it about.
@PodcastTNA Review Tnadixie twitter hijacked Abyss/Bram Monster’s Ball Joe low ki confrontation backstage Lashley, King, MVP / Roode, EY, Aries Anderson, Gunner, Shaw / Bromans Eight Man Hardcore War Al Snow Gail Kim, The Beautiful People, Taryn X-Division Championship: Joe vs Low-Ki vs Sanada Ratings The Week in Impact History News Corrections TNA Mecca Spike … Continue reading "Episode #4 – It Happens" The post Episode #4 – It Happens appeared first on Levi D. Smith Games.
We strive for Episode 125, and what happens? It Happens. We have a pretty packed show for you. Mojo got the chance to sit down with Anne Niven, the publisher of Witches & Pagans Magazine (and so much more). Thank you for coming on the show, Anne. We hope you all enjoy the interview. We share a little bit about Morning Glory Zell and her passing. Hail and Farewell, Morning Glory! You were and continues to be an inspiration. Mojo has had a few really great weeks and he tells us a little bit about his experience at the Shamanic Conference. Not only that, but GODZILLA was recently released and we were able to see it on opening night. Blessed belated Beltaine. Ours was fantastic and we hope yours was too. We have two events to share with you this episode. First, Sharon Knight and Winter are going to be here, in the Wigglian Theatre, July 24th. Contact us at thewigglianway@gmail.com for tickets. Limited seating so get your tickets today! Mojo is playing the Sun Wheel Arts Festival June 27-July 1 in Central Alberta. I will be there too as your Mistress of Ceremonies. We are so excited and hope to see you there. You may or may not be aware of who is headlinging the Sun Wheel Arts Festival, but we sure are, and you definitely want to be there. Damh the Bard is visiting Alberta from the UK. I believe that it is his first time in Canada. Let's show him a good time because I KNOW he will be showing us one. On that note, our Feature Album is one of Damh's. From his 2009 release, Tales of the Crow Man, we hear The Cutty Wren and Hal and Tow. We conclude Episode 125 with Damh's The Two Magicians from the same album. SJ Tucker has reworked one of our favourite tunes. Stay tuned for her new version of Snake Star Song. Also, please welcome to the show, Tina Malia with her song, The Silent Awakening. Thanks for listening to the show! It's all abuot the love.
Sometimes, "it happens." How do we respond when we encounter times of suffering? When bad things happen for no good reason, is it okay to express our anger to God?