Podcast appearances and mentions of Jack Tatum

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Best podcasts about Jack Tatum

Latest podcast episodes about Jack Tatum

LocoFootball Podcast
#88 - NFL Draft 2025: Die Quarterbacks + QB-Puzzle / Zu Gast: Justin (Rookies&Prospects)

LocoFootball Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2025 133:18


Liebe Draft-Community, wir starten unsere Coverage zum NFL Draft 2025 mit der ersten Position Preview. Wir nehmen mit unserem Gast Justin von Rookies&Prospects die Klasse auseinander und analysieren die Quarterbacks auf ihre NFL-Tauglichkeit. Als kleines Special haben wir ein großes QB-Puzzle, bei dem wir die aktuellen Picks mit den Picks der Vorjahre vergleichen. Wo liegt das Top Tier der Klasse? Welche Spieler sind Day1 Picks, wen wählen wir an Tag 2&3? Neben nem netten Plausch über die abgelaufene College Football Saison küren wir zudem unsere besten Picks aus 2024. Wo lagen wir richtig? Bei wem daneben? Und wer waren die besten Rookies aus 2024? Garniert wird das ganze mit ner Palette an User-Fragen und dem üblichen Statistik-Salat! Also wenn ihr nicht wie die Gegner von Jack Tatum enden wollt, dann hört lieber rein in diese Folge, lasst ne Bewertung da und empfiehlt das Ganze euren Freunden! Bis dahin: Just Win Baby!

Casino Tears
Who's On First What's on Twelve

Casino Tears

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2025 31:02


On this week's episode: Player Skills Breakdown Crapless Strategies Heated Exchange We also touch on the situational awareness, football scenarios, planets aligning, Nakatomi Tony, Jack Tatum, repeater goggles and Ed calls Ten Ton a dumbass. Call The Casino Tears Vent Line 229-NO SEVEN (667-3836) Now! Leave a message, ask a question or simply get something off your mind -  We might even play it on air!! NEW EPISODES DROP WEEKLY ON TUESDAYS - Please visit our home page at casinotears.com for more info, merch, and host contacts Extended versions will also drop Tuesdays on Patreon - Don't miss out :) Email: noseven@casinotears.com Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/CasinoTears Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/casinotearspodcast YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@CasinoTears X: https://x.com/CasinoTears Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/casinotears Pro Shop: https://www.casinotears.vegas/shop/  Color Comin' In: https://www.cci.vegas/

twelve extended jack tatum
Get Rich Education
529: How to Be the Best in the World at Anything

Get Rich Education

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2024 56:19


Former NFL player, Broadway playwright, best-selling author and in-demand public speaker, Bo Eason, joins us to discuss the power of storytelling and achieving greatness. Bo emphasizes the importance of setting high standards, such as aiming to be the best, and seeking out mentors. He shares his upbringing, where his father instilled confidence by telling him he was the best, which influenced his success. Bo highlights the significance of personal, physical, and unapologetic storytelling to build trust and connect with others. Adopt the mindset of striving to be the best, not just settling for mediocrity. Make the Gold Medal the standard, not the end goal.  Develop and share your personal, compelling story to build trust and attract opportunities. Resources: Text "PERSONALSTORY" to 323-310-5504 to receive a free video course from Bo on uncovering your powerful personal story. Show Notes: GetRichEducation.com/529 For access to properties or free help with a GRE Investment Coach, start here: GREmarketplace.com GRE Free Investment Coaching:GREmarketplace.com/Coach Get mortgage loans for investment property: RidgeLendingGroup.com or call 855-74-RIDGE  or e-mail: info@RidgeLendingGroup.com Invest with Freedom Family Investments.  You get paid first: Text FAMILY to 66866 For advertising inquiries, visit: GetRichEducation.com/ad Will you please leave a review for the show? I'd be grateful. Search “how to leave an Apple Podcasts review” Best Financial Education: GetRichEducation.com Get our wealth-building newsletter free— text ‘GRE' to 66866 Our YouTube Channel: www.youtube.com/c/GetRichEducation Follow us on Instagram: @getricheducation Complete episode transcript:   Automatically Transcribed With Otter.ai    Keith Weinhold  0:02   Welcome to GRE. I'm your host. Keith Weinhold, how do you become the best in the world at anything that you want to do in your life? Today's remarkable guest will tell you how so you can become the best version of yourself. He's become the best in more than one endeavor, including playing in the NFL. We'll also learn about the persuasive power of story and how you can find your very best personal story that you do have inside of you. It's a show rated PG for personal growth today on get rich education   Speaker 1  0:41   since 2014 the powerful get rich education podcast has created more passive income for people than nearly any other show in the world. This show teaches you how to earn strong returns from passive real estate investing in the best markets without losing your time being a flipper or landlord. Show Host Keith Weinhold writes for both Forbes and Rich Dad advisors and delivers a new show every week since 2014 there's been millions of listener downloads of 188 world nations. He has a list show guests and key top selling personal finance author Robert Kiyosaki. Get rich education can be heard on every podcast platform, plus it has its own dedicated Apple and Android listener phone apps build wealth on the go with the get rich education podcast. Sign up now for the get rich education podcast, or visit get rich education.com   Corey Coates  1:27   You're listening to the show that has created more financial freedom than nearly any show in the world. This is get rich education. You Keith,   Keith Weinhold  1:43   welcome to GRE from Europe's Iberian peninsula to New Iberia, Louisiana and across 188 nations worldwide. I'm Keith Weinhold. As always, I'm grateful to have you along this week. This is get rich education. Most investing is left brained, but most decision making for your investment, choice is right brain. If you don't know the difference, left brain is about the numbers. It's analytical and logical. So left brain people, they're good at math and critical thinking and language as well. If you're more right brained, then you are more creative and emotional, and you tend to be good at recognizing faces and the attribute of diplomacy that's right brained. And it's a right brained kind of episode. Today you're going to learn how to be a performer and be the best at whatever you want to be. I mean, the best, whether that's as a real estate investor, business person, apartment building syndicator, or a real estate agent that's trying to sell homes, it'll even help you become the best parent, child, best spouse, best at basketball, best at table tennis. And you know, you are part of a really well educated and influential audience that we have here. Maybe you're trying to be the best physician or politician or even social media influencer or the best church minister that you can be. And in fact, as it turns out, people that are trying to raise money end up consulting today's guest quite a bit. And as you'll see, this guest really can tell a story. You'll learn that he has achieved elite success, even best in the world, success in a number of different areas. He's had like, three or four successful people's lives, yet he's the same guy. He's sort of like, in a sense, President Elect Donald Trump. Love him or hate him. Trump found success in real estate and then in media, with his show The Apprentice and then as the 45th and 47th president. Well, those disciplines there for Trump, they're somewhat related. Well, today's guest became the best in areas that aren't even related to each other at all, which is even more amazing. So therefore, maybe today it's really more of an Arnold Schwarzenegger parallel. I mean, Schwarzenegger, he was first the successful bodybuilder, winning Mr. Olympia, then he went on to become a successful actor. He married into the Kennedy family, and he became the California governor. Well, before I introduce you to today's guest, well, we are a wealth building show here, and as we talk about being the best in something, you know, I really want to ask you a question, Are you content with being middle class? You know, despite the way that inflation has ravaged it us, middle class life isn't all that bad. In fact, it's pretty good in a lot of ways, from the iPhone to the luxury of having a gym membership. I mean, that's just middle class stuff. Sheesh. Life is so good that when it's time to reset a password, people treat that as some sort of existential crisis. And you know, this is the time of year that even the middle class indulge in, say, pretty elaborate Christmas decorations. In fact, I increasingly notice that it's more and more common to hire a Christmas decorating contractor to decorate your real estate for you. They'll get ladders and a lift truck to hang lights in your tallest trees. That's something that the middle class does. Here's a new one. There's at least one mainstream, I guess, paper products company that now makes toilet paper with perforations that are wavy instead of being straight across, because it's easier to tear that way. So I think that you could make the case that American middle class life really isn't too bad, but in your life, if you want to be all that you can be, or anywhere close, you're not going to settle for something that's just better than not too bad. You can want more, and you should want more because you're capable of more, if for nothing else create the type of value for the world so that you can have more free time for yourself. I expect to have a terrific time and learn some things here where I am today in New Orleans for the 50th anniversary of the New Orleans Investment Conference, we've got speakers and exhibits covering real estate investing, economics, a lot of gold investing material at this conference Bitcoin and even stocks. And of course, I invited you, the listener here the past couple months, to come to the conference and meet in real life. As this is about to kick off, I wonder if I will find someone to go running with me. I always go running along the Mississippi River. Here in New Orleans, there is a trail paralleling the river right here, close to the event site. Yeah, I think I'm recovered from a mild back injury by now. Gosh, it was so weird. I hurt my back at the gym last month. And here's the thing. Somehow I heard it while doing my warm up exercises, of all things, sheesh. In fact, this is a triumvirate of fitness paradoxes here in doing this. Number one, warm ups are activities that you do before you work out to prevent hurting yourself, but I hurt myself in the warm up. Secondly, I never seem to injure myself while running steep, rocky trails or skiing down slopes outdoors, but indoors where the floor is level, that's the place where I seem to get injured. And then thirdly, the gym is where you go to improve your fitness, not lose fitness. So yes, that is the triumvirate of paradoxes there. Well, our guest, you know, he really knows the power of story, and just listen to him. I bet he'll tell a better story than hurting my back at the gym. Let's meet him.    Today, we have a guy with massive ambitions who I know is going to bring out the best in you during his lifetime, he's chased what it means to be world class, not just in one discipline, but in five different disciplines, and he's achieved a true level of greatness in all of them. He has played in the NFL for four seasons with Houston, then went on to become a San Francisco 49er, next, a super successful Broadway playwright, then an in demand public speaker, most recently, an eight time best selling author, and he has gone on to write screenplays for movie stars, so get ready to hear him talk about the one factor that's been the driving force behind his success in all of these disciplines. Hey, welcome to get rich education. Bo Eason.   Bo Eason  9:13   Keith, thanks for having me.   Keith Weinhold  9:14   Well, it's the first time that we have a former NFL player on the show, and Bo played the same position that my favorite football player of all time did, Ryan Dawkins, that is the safety position. But we're not here to discuss football so much as how you can build the architecture of success like Bo has and Bo your success is astounding, and our listeners hope that some of their virtual proximity to you rubs off on them today, I do too, and it's remarkable because you've reached the pinnacle of success in some of these disciplines that don't even seem to be related to each other at all. So what can you reveal here? Is there one common driver that led to them all?   Bo Eason  9:58   Man, you know what? That's. A great question, going back the way my dad woke us up as kids. So I'm the youngest of six kids, so I grew up on a ranch, on a farm in northern California. My dad was a cattle rancher, and I four older sisters and a brother who's a year older than me, so every morning he woke up all six of us to go do our chores, you know, on this ranch at five in the morning, and he would wake us up by rubbing our backs. He pulled back the covers. He'd rub our backs really hard, like, not easy, not like gentle, like dads of today, like this was a cowboy, you know, with dirty hands and rough hands. And he would rub our back and he would whisper in our ear and tell us that we were the best. And so for the first 18 years of my life, every morning he'd come into me in my brother's room. He'd wake up my brother in the same way he woke me up by rubbing his back and whispering his ear, you're the best. Get up, you're the best. And after you hear that for 18 years, my brother went off to college. I went off to college. My sisters all went off to college. And I always think back to those eight first 18 years, because when I would come home and visit our parents. So my brother got drafted. He was the first round pick of the New England Patriots. He was the quarterback for the New England Patriots took them to their first Super Bowl. So that best term worked out for him. And then I was a second round pick for the Houston Oilers, and got to play with them for several years. And this term, I always thought back to it, like, Why was my dad saying that? Because when we were growing up, when we were playing Little League, and we're playing sports, when we were kids, we actually weren't the best. But he wouldn't say that we were like, I would strike out every time in Little League, I was so bad at baseball, and every time he would yell at me through the chain link fence that I was the best, and my teammates are like, You got to be kidding me, Bo What is your dad even saying You're the worst? And he's telling you you're the best for most of our lives, the first half of our lives, it was a source of embarrassment to me and my brother and I remember going on a date one time, a double date with my brother. In fact, I couldn't even drive my brother could, and we went on a this double date with the thomasini sisters. So we were going, and my dad walks out to the car with us, and we're like, What the heck is my What's dad doing? Why is he coming out to the car with us? He came out there to tell us that we were leaders and that we were the best before a date. And I'm like, Dad, go in the house, right? And then finally, you know me and my brother, we weren't recruited as football players coming out of high school. Not one person, not one college recruited us, but we had these dreams of being pro football players, and at that time, 350 colleges played college football, but no one wrote us a letter. No one recruited us. So my brother went to a junior college, and then he ended up, after that, got a scholarship to the University of Illinois, and then became a first round pick. Well, I went to a school called UC Davis in Northern California, which was division two football and no scholarships. So basically, no one was on scholarship. There. You just walked on and you played football for fun. Well, that's where I went. And then, you know, cut to four years later, my brother's a first round pick. I'm a second round pick, and we always looked back from that point on, deciding, like Dad always embarrassed us, friends in front of our dates, in front of everybody. But then at that point, 21, 22 years old, we looked back, we said, Man, you know what? We just kind of surrendered to, what he saw in us, and we were the best. We were the best at our positions, and the only reason we were is because we had somebody who saw our greatness and pretty much spoke it into existence. Now, when you grow up like that, Keith, you think you assume that every other kid has grown up like that too, right? But that wasn't true, right? We thought it was true. You know, it turns out that the other guys we were playing with, the other guys who are our teammates, they did not grow up like that. So I would say that that principle was huge for me and my brother, just somebody who saw something in us that we couldn't see for ourselves, and he did it up to a point where we began to see it for ourselves. He just was very patient. And, you know, I find myself doing this with my kids. I have three kids, and they're all going to be d1 athletes, two of them are already, wow. Yeah, and it's because that's how I woke him up, too, like so I know that's kind of a simple story, but it really set the foundation for us, and here's how it did, Keith, it told me what was expected of us, even when we weren't the best. He was expecting us to live into what he saw, and we did, and I found my kids to do the same, like I was looking at my kids, and I was like, Man, are they going to be athletes like me and my brother are at that level, because that was their dreams, right? But I didn't know if they had what it took. As I woke them up every morning, I could see them starting to live into their potential or live into their birthright. So I think to start off with Keith, that was a principle that is a mainstay. It taught me not only what was expected of me, but what I could set the standard for other people, and then they would live on into that standard, been able to do that. So those couple of things were huge in my upbringing.   Keith Weinhold  16:02   Well, this is remarkable, and I think you're already giving the parents in our audience quite a few ideas. Bo, this phrase, you're the best kind of got indelibly baked into your being and who you are, your dad even chasing you around on a double date, reinforcing you're the best and you know, Bo, I think that a person can be simultaneously grateful for what they have yet at the same time strive for more, as often say here on the show and adopting an abundance mindset with wealth building. Don't live below your means, grow your means. Now, I was watching an NFL football game just this past weekend, and a commercial came on for the IBEW, the labor union, and Bo it struck me as so odd that a trainee at the IBEW smiled, and they were all gratified that they were part of the IBEW. And they said, this is like now I have my golden ticket to the middle class, which I mean, because being middle class isn't like altogether awful in the United States, but it just sounded like this was the be all and end all, and hey, now I have a guarantee of mediocrity in my life that struck me as so odd. I don't think their father was telling them you're the best like yours did.   Bo Eason  17:21   No, they definitely did not. I'm always shook by that too, where people will sometimes come to me and they go, Bo, I want to push back on being the best. I just want to, you know, be kind of a good player, kind of medium wealth. And I'm like, Well, if you want to push back on me, you should take that up with Mother Nature, because if you just go back to the day that we were conceived, you know, if we want to have a little refresh of course on the day we were conceived, you were going to find out that there was the odds of us even being born were 300 million to one, and we were the champion of that first race that we entered right like 300 million to one odds, you're the champion, and yet here we are, you and me number one. You know, the gold medalists of those odds, and now we're supposed to be born into a world and be mediocre. I don't think Mother Nature set it out like that. I don't think that's how it happened. I think the standard is the gold medal, not the silver medal. You know, it's the gold medal. Now, some people win silver medals. If they lose the gold that's fine, that's great, but the gold medal is the thing. And I think the minute we lower ourselves from that. We're just trying to give ourselves a soft landing, I think, and then we don't ask enough of our potential, which is, if you're following Mother Nature, your potential is 300 million to one odds, and you already won that gold medal. So what are you doing? You know? What are you doing? So, as I progressed, Keith, so I went from football, I played in the lake for five years, and I didn't know what I was going to do, right? So I just started again. I just said, so instead of being the best safety in the world, because that was my first declaration, I just said, I want to be the best safety in the world. That's it. So I was able to achieve that. And then when football was over, I did the same thing for playwriting and performing. I just said, I don't care. I know I don't have any experience in this, but I'm going to declare right now, and I draw it up, that I'm going to be the best stage performer of my time. So that principle has worked every time, but I had to use the term the best. And I don't know why. I guess it was just locked in my brain. But here's the next thing, the next principle that I think is important for the audience. And this goes for wealth building. This goes for whatever you want to build, whether it's your family or, you know, an apartment complex. It doesn't matter we're building stuff. And here's what I did the second. All around I said, I want to be the best stage performer, the best playwright of my time. So I didn't know how to do that. So I moved to New York City because I knew everybody did plays there. They did Broadway, they did off Broadway. And I asked everybody in my class, who's the best at this this was in 1990 who is the best at this stage performance. And every kid in my class, and there were kids I was a little older because I was playing football, I said, Where is the best stage performer of our time? Who is it? And they all said, Al Pacino. And I said, Cool. Where is he? And they said, Well, I don't know where he is. He's on a movie set somewhere, or, you know, rehearsing for a theater show. And I said, I want to know him. I want to meet him, because only the best can tell me how to be the best. Only the best can tell me how to take his mantle of being the best stage performer. Wow, most people don't think that, or say that. You said Brian Dawkins, me too. I'm like, who's the best safety in the world? Let me go talk to that dude, because that dude knows what, like Ronnie. Lott, was that for me? Jack Tatum, Ronnie. Lott, those kind of guys I ended up playing with. Ronnie. Lott, you know you end up playing with these guys. You know the guys you're looking up to? Well, within a week of me asking these kids in my class, where is Al Pacino? I'm having dinner with Al Pacino, in New York City and I go, Dude, what do I do? What do I do? You tell me, I'll do it. And he goes, Okay, Bo, I'll draw it up for you. We'll draw it up. You know what that's going to take, but that's going to take you 15 years, and I go, perfect. That's my kind of timeline. I'm good like that, you know? And he goes, Okay, so he drew it up and I did what he said. He told me who to work with. Basically, he's telling me to put my butt on a stage. More than any other person can put their butt on a stage. So I go, I can control that, that I know how to control, because that's what I did. As far as training to be the best safety. I wasn't the best safety, but as the years went by, guess what? I passed up everybody who was ahead of me. You know, you're the top safety in the league. Well, same thing for being on Broadway, he told me what to do. I did exactly what he told me to do. And 15 years later, I am opening a play in New York City that I wrote that I'm the only guy in and I swear I was so nervous before opening night to run out and look Keith I had played against the biggest and baddest dudes on the planet. You know, I wasn't as scared as going out on a stage to face those dudes. I would rather face refrigerator Perry or Walter Payton than going out on a Broadway stage. And I went out on starting the play, I am having an out of body experience because I'm the only one. I'm talking to the audience. The New York critics are in the house. Everybody's in there. And I make eye contact with a guy right on the row. He's sitting right on the aisle. It's Al Pacino. I had seen him in 15 years. He told me what to do. I did what he said. He's in my play, I wrote, and I'm the only guy, Al Pacino, the best stage performer of all time, is sitting right there on the aisle. That's so cool. And he's nodding his head. He's like, Yeah, I'm doing you did it. And so a you have to have a declaration, and that declaration has to be the best. So the declaration of being the best safety, being the best playwright, being the best stage performer, those things actually come true because you have a declaration which you're living into existence instead of following some to do list, right? I did the same thing for playwriting. I did the same thing with Al Pacino, and that career really set me off because I performed that play 17 years. One play 17 years it immediately gets bought by Castle Rock pictures as a movie. Frank Darabont bought the play as a movie. And I don't know if you know who Frank Darabont is, but he's the guy who wrote and directed the Shawshank Redemption, The Green Mile Saving Private Ryan collateral. He's the guy who his team's TV show he created is The Walking Dead. So this dude was nominated for 12 Academy Awards for writing and directing. He bought my play to produce it for him, and so he hired me, who's never written a screenplay, to write the screenplay for him. This dude has been nominated for 12 Academy Awards for lighting, and he hires me. I go, Dude, don't hire me because I've never written a screenplay. I don't understand it. I don't get it. I'm not a great speller. In fact, I do. Don't even have a computer. And he goes, I don't care about that. I think you can tell the story. Yeah. And I go, okay, so he was hiring me basically based on my guts or my heart, and we did that. So he bought that. I wrote the screenplay for him. Then Leonardi DiCaprio and Toby McGuire come to the play. They come running backstage, they say, Bo, we want you to write a movie for us. And I go, You know what, you guys, I don't write movies. They go, we pay a lot of money for our screenwriters. We think you can do it. And I go, Yeah, based on that money, I think I can do it too. And so the crazy part about this whole thing is it all falls back to this ability to share myself, to tell a story, to tell a story that has physicality to it, that has heart to it, the ability to do that has really given me all these occupations. And then people came to me like business owners from Wall Street. They would come to the play like with their wife, because their wife wanted to go to the theater and they were watching my play. Well, they would come backstage, Keith, and they would say, Hey, man, I want you to bring this to my fortune 500 company. And I'm like, wait, what do you mean? What do you I don't this is a play. I don't take this to Fortune 500 companies. This play, you got to come to the theater. They go, No, we don't want to. I want our sales force. I want our leadership executives to learn to do what you do on stage. I was like, what? I couldn't believe it. Me and my wife, we're like, going, I don't understand what you read. They said it's the funniest thing, because typically, when you're on Broadway, the people who come backstage to see you, they shake your hand, or they get you autograph and they say, Wow, you're a terrific performer. Or what great writing. That's what they usually say, right? Not my play. They come backstage and they don't say, I'm great. This is what they say, Can you teach my people to do what you just did? Yeah, on stage, we're like, of course, because I was taught I could retrace my steps. And I can teach business people, leaders, doesn't matter the business coaches, whatever I can teach them to express themselves in front of other people, which then makes them wealthy, because in the end, I learned Keith that whoever tells the best story wins.   Keith Weinhold  27:33   Yeah, I want to get to the power of story after the break before we do that when one knows that the best that word is out there for them, I think oftentimes they're stricken with fear. Fear is a great obstacle. How do you overcome the fear from listening to you? It seems to me that your mechanism for coping with fear and becoming the best is facing it, getting in there and getting the reps.   Speaker 2  28:00   Yeah, 100% there's a great quote, the world was not created by great men, the world was created by a demanding situation where great men then rose. So we don't know our greatness until we're faced with a demanding situation. So if you're nine, you have no obstacles in your life, you're like, Wow, this is really fun. I'm living on a farm. There's pals, there's horses. What a nice life. And then Bo created his own problem. He created a declaration that said, I want to be the best safety in the world. Well, right then, right when I got creative. Now, Bo's life became a demanding situation where I had to grow strong and I had to eat right, I had to exercise, I had to run faster than anybody else. So I created all these demanding situations for my life. But that's the only way to reveal character. No NFL team is drafting anybody who doesn't have a characteristic that makes you a successful NFL player, and the only way to get those characteristics is to lose is to get your butt kicked, is to face your opposing players that's putting yourself in a demanding situation. So us, you know, as successful guys and successful gals, we kind of get satisfied and so that we forget to keep putting ourselves in demanding situations. That's where the fear comes in. Because once you're in a demanding situation, you get scared. You're like, oh, do I have what it takes to do this? And then you discover by going forward that you actually do. You do have what it takes, and fear is like a made up thing, and you start to realize that you're the creator of your own fear. So look, when I wrote the play in New York, I had never written anything in my life. Like I said, I couldn't spell good. I didn't have a computer, but here's what I did have. I had the ability, because I already did this in my life. I knew how to put myself in a demanding situation and then take a step forward. I knew how to do that based on my football career. I knew it so the principles of being the best safety in the world and being the best playwright in the world are the exact same principles. You have to have the declaration. It has to be at a standard that's way out of your comfort zone that puts you in that demanding situation. Then you have to start running the miles. Then you have to hire an expert coach that sees you clearly, and it is a critical thinker like can see you and go, Bo, stop that. Do that. Stop doing that. And do that just like a nutritionist. Hey, I want to live longer. I want to be there for my daughters when they walk down the aisle. Okay, then you better stop eating this and start eating that. You have to have these experts in your life to fulfill on your birthright of being the best. So now you just break your life down. I just broke my life down like five different times because I enter a new era, like screenplays. How am I going to write a screenplay? I don't know how. I don't understand, but here's what I do. Know how to do. I know how to work. I know how to be the best. Those principles are pretty much the same as safety and playwright. So the guy who buys my play to hire me as a screenplay writer is the greatest screenwriter in Hollywood. So he's the guy paying me, he's the guy coaching me, he's the guy looking over my shoulder going, Bo Don't say that. Say this, say less, do this. Those are just first three principles. We're talking about the best. The standard has to be sky high. Otherwise it's not going to be demanding. It's not going to require enough of your humanity to fulfill on yourself. So it's got to be there. Then you've got to take the time to run the miles to do this thing, and you cut your time in half, or less than a half, by having somebody who is an expert mentor or an expert coach. A guy like Al Pacino, a guy like Frank Darabont who just goes, Bo do this. Don't do that. A guy like Ronnie Lott, both don't do that, do this. And I just do what they say, because, guess what, they're the best in the world at what they do. You guys, those principles, I found I just keep repeating them over and over again. Now a lot of you might be saying, Bo, that's a little much for me, because I don't know Al Pacino or I don't know Ronnie Lott, and I don't know Frank darabonda. You guys, I didn't know him either. I didn't know him either, but I do know this the best in their field, whoever that is, don't say you want to be the wealthiest person on the planet. Well, the wealthiest person on the planet is more available than you think. Guess why? Because everyone thinks they're too busy and they don't ask of their time. You ask of their time. No one's asking of Al Pacino's time. Guess why? Because they don't want what he has. They want to be famous. I wasn't interested in fame. They want to get an agent in Hollywood. I wasn't interested in that. I was interested in what Al Pacino had, which was he was the best stage performer of his time. That they're willing to tell you, because they know if you're asking that question, they want to be involved with you.   Keith Weinhold  33:44   right, because you dared to ask. And they can probably perceive your ambition, and people can sense that, and they love that, and it sure can be scary to say, but fear should be your guide. You should follow your fear. We all know that that's where the growth is. It's like the gap in the game. It's been said that the gap between where we are and where we want to be lies our greatest opportunity for growth. We're talking with former NFL player Bo Eason about being the best. We're going to come back and talk about the power of story. Next. I'm Keith Weinhold. You're listening to get rich education.    Oh, geez, the initial average bank account pays less than 1% on your savings, so your bank is getting rich off of you. You've got to earn way more, or else you're losing your hard earned cash to inflation. Let the liquidity fund help you put your money to work with minimum risk, your cash generates up to a 10% return and compounds year in and year out. Instead of earning less than 1% in your bank account, the minimum investment is just 25k you keep getting paid until you decide you want your money back. Their decade plus track record proves they've always paid their. Investors 100% in full and on time. And you know how I'd know, because I'm an investor in this myself, earn 10% like me and GRE listeners are. Text FAMILY to 66866, to learn about freedom. Family investments, liquidity fund on your journey to financial freedom through passive income. Text, FAMILY to 66866.    hey, you can get your mortgage loans at the same place where I get mine at Ridge lending group NMLS, 42056, they provided our listeners with more loans than any provider in the entire nation because they specialize in income properties, they help you build a long term plan for growing your real estate empire with leverage. You can start your pre qualification and chat with President Caeli Ridge personally. Start Now while it's on your mind at Ridge lendinggroup.com that's Ridge lendinggroup.com   Matt Bowles  36:08   Hey everybody. This is Matt Bowles from Maverick investor group you're listening to get rich education with Keith Weinhold and don't quit your Daydream.   Keith Weinhold  36:27   Welcome back to get rich education. We're on a mindset journey today to help you level up, be a better person and even be the best.Talking with former NFL football player Bo Eason, and Bo, you're such a powerful storyteller, and I think it's a really important time to be a powerful storyteller. Trust in institutions seems to be at an all time low, from the government to the media. This is partly why the rise of influencer culture has become a thing. So tell us about how a powerful personal story can build instant trust and connection in seconds. Even when it seems like trust is at an all time low.   Bo Eason  37:07   it is at an all time low. That's what Gallup does a poll every year on trust. The question they ask is, do you trust your neighbor? And it's at its lowest it's ever been. They started this in 1972 but it's down to single digits. This is your neighbor. This isn't somebody across the street. This is this isn't somebody in the next town or the next state you know, or the next country. This person you share a backyard fence with.   Keith Weinhold  37:34   right? Like you're afraid to ask them to check for packages on your front porch when you're on a vacation or something. Yeah, the trust   Bo Eason  37:41   below. But everybody gets depressed by the statistic. I get excited about it because there is one group of us that can restore trust. It is the storyteller. It's not just the storyteller, you guys, it's the person who can share themselves personal story, not just a story, although stories, you know, work, and they've always worked for 1000s of years, but personal stories move the dial the most. Give you the most Trust, the most credibility. Personal stories like if I say to you a sentence like this, when I was nine years old, I had this dream, so I decided to draw up a 20 year plan to achieve my dream. If I tell you a sentence like that, you and me, even though it's a simple sentence, right? It's personal to me. Well, personal equals universal. Whenever you're telling a personal story, it affects your audience that much more, because your audience locates themselves inside of your story. That is the science of storytelling, and that's why you earn trust by sharing yourself personally. Now most people don't want to do that. They push back, especially business people, especially left brain, analytical type people, they say to me, Bo I'm not going to share myself, because who cares about my story? And I say everybody, you're just telling the wrong story. You have to tell it very personal and very specific to you, and it has to be a pain point. It has to be a low point in your life. That's where you start the story, because if you start at the top, there's no place to go with story. It's like, think of rocky everybody. Sylvester Stallone was a very smart guy. He was an unemployed actor, and he said, I'm going to employ myself for the rest of my life. Guess how he plays the role of Rocky? He writes the role of Rocky. Who does he put in front of him, Apollo Creed, the greatest heavyweight champion in the world, a character named after a god that's called great storytelling. He put Mount Everest in front of him. And if you notice, that's what he's always done every movie he writes. He's given himself a career because he puts himself at the base of Mount Everest every time. Well, that's where I want you to put yourself. What is your story? Where did you get rejected? It's always at a younger age. You know, Michael Jordan's story is the same as Tom Brady's story is the same story that I have, which is, we all were rejected in high school. We all were told we weren't good enough to play a high school sport. So what did we become the best in our fields? That's what always happens. That's always the story of an elite athlete. So I want you guys sharing yourselves with these stories, and these stories are kind of the ones you kind of don't want to tell because they reveal certain things about you that are kind of humiliating. But humility is the best connective tissue that us human beings have. Isn't that weird? Embarrassment is a great connective tissue success. Isn't that connective? Isn't that weird?   Keith Weinhold  40:58   Yeah, I mean, embarrassment is self deprecating. Most people like that, and everyone can relate to failing.   Bo Eason  41:05   Yep, there's three rules I live by when it comes to storytelling. You guys knew. Number one, it's got to be personal. It's got to be personal. The more personal, the richer you are. It's got to be personal. Guys, I've talked you into this, if I haven't already. Number two, you guys, if you're thinking about wealth, I would think about it in those terms right now. Secondly, it's got to be physical. Stories are physical living things, living, breathing, human things. You can't tell a story like a boring people tell stories they Well, when I grew up, I was poor, and then I walked over to the store, they wouldn't let me have a candy bar. It's boring, it's stupid. It is not physical. You have to embody the story with your physicality. You have to become your story, you guys. I know this might sound crazy to you, but the more physical you are in your life. Now, listen to me, the more physical you are in your life, the more money you make. People don't trust what comes out of anybody else's mouth anymore. They don't trust it. They trust your body 100% of the time. I wish you could see my body right now, because it is alive, and you could probably feel it even though I'm you can just hear my voice. You can hear the physicality of the residents of my voice. Now, the more physical you are in your life, the richer you are, and that's across the board. I don't care if you're a ballet dancer, I don't care if your speaker. I don't care what your occupation is. If you are physical and unapologetic about your physicality, then you're going to make a lot of money. But if you're walking around on eggshells, people know it. If you're walking around apologizing for your masculinity or your femininity, and you're like, you know, you're just half stepping everything. You see people like this all the time. What do you do with them? You dismiss them. But when somebody walks in and you turn your head, you know to look. You heard somebody come in behind you, you turn and look, why? Because they have a presence and they're unapologetic. That is a learned trait, or I should say it's relearning human trait. I've been trained by the greatest movement coach in the world, you guys. The only reason I was trained by him 17 years I was trained by him because every time I saw somebody acknowledge when they won the Academy Award an actor, they would acknowledge this guy. And I go, who the hell this guy that everyone keeps acknowledging keeps thanking for their Academy Award for some performance. I want to know what this guy's doing. I want to know what he's doing with these performers. And he told me where I went and met him. He goes, No one has ever won an award for what they said. No one it's what they did physically. That's how you win. And he's the guy who taught me well. So you guys, number one, the story has got to be personal. Number two, the story has got to be physical, unapologetic. It's so attractive when this happens. That's what I train people to do, because that's what I was trained to do. And then when all these CEOs and stuff started coming to the play, that's what they wanted, that now, you guys, they didn't know to ask me that. They just said, Can you teach my people to do what you do on stage? I go, of course, because I was taught the thing they wanted most was they wanted people to trust their sales people or their leadership team. They wanted all their employees, including them, to be physical in the world, because that is powerful. And you're going to watch this. You can watch this in elections. You can watch this in politicians. The reason they hide behind those podiums is their body betrays them. Their body betrays them. If I ever got hired to coach them, which I've always turned them down, I would put them out in the open like an animal so we can see their whole body, because that we can trust but we don't trust somebody standing behind a podium. Very critical.   Keith Weinhold  45:23   Well, there's a lot there. Yes, so much is conveyed through body language. People like decisiveness and commitment. You talk about how to make a story personal. When you had mentioned when you were nine years old, you laid out a 20 year plan for your life. When you said that me as a listener, that just makes me naturally want to lean in and ask a question about that and let you go on, for example. But when you talk about how stories need to be made personal, why don't we wrap up on how does storytelling work in business? Then say that a real estate investor is trying to attract co investors to his apartment building deal. For example, how would you use story there?   Bo Eason  46:07   Oh, yeah, great question. So many of my clients are people that raise money, whether it's for profit or non profit. They are in the business of building a company, and so they're always asking for money. Well, there's a guy used to run a studio in Hollywood, I think it was Warner Brothers, and he did an experiment. He was building a studio. So he needed millions and millions of dollars, so he went to all his rich friends, and he put a contract out in front of them. One contract only had numbers and percentages and columns written on it. Here's how much you'll invest. Tell us how much you'll make after five years all that stuff. The other contract was the same deal, no numbers, no monies, no percentages, only story, a story of belonging, a story of making a difference. He says, 100% choose the story contract, not the numbers, purpose. There's nothing. There's nothing to connect to. Yeah, I work in the finance world a lot. You guys, people, you know, high wealth, they always want to talk about numbers. And I'm like, rich people are all right brain. You know that? So every billionaire, every millionaire in the world, is right brain, not left right their right brain. But the people managing their money or raising their money are left brain. So they want to talk about numbers. And I'm saying, you guys, you can't talk about numbers, because rich people don't know what you're talking about. Rich people want to belong. They want to see themselves inside the business that you're building. So you better have a hell of a story, and that best story wins no matter what, Best Story wins. If you and me are both building a skyscraper in New York City. If I got a better story than you, guess what skyscrapers gonna get built? Mine. That's got nothing to do with money, because money is everywhere. Money's like air. It's more abundant than air and water. There's money everywhere. But what are rich people attracted to story? Why do you think they call it show business? Show, I'm the show, you're the show. You're the storyteller. The Business People bring the money to the show so rich people don't know how to make movies, they don't know how to tell stories, but they want to give you the money so that you can tell yours. Of course, that's how this thing works. That's why show and business always go together. There's a great saying rich men, when they sit down to dinner, they speak of art. When artists sit down to dinner, they speak of money. Artists sit down to dinner, they speak of money. When finance people sit down to dinner, they speak of art. So they're completing one another. You've got to be an artist. You've got to be able to tell your story, because their dreams and their big bank accounts relying on your vision of what you're going to build that makes you an artist, that makes you here go build what you've got to build here. I want to be a part of it.   Keith Weinhold  49:28   Yeah, I've never heard that before that's remarkable in using story to connect with others, something that seems to be bleeding and so badly needed for connectivity today. Well, Bo this has been great, talking about the best, talking about the power of story. You do so many things to help people in their own growth journey and to expand their own mindset. Tell us about your resource for that.   Bo Eason  49:56   You know what? Because the first thing that when I say, look. Got to find your personal story. Most people go, I don't have one. Well, that's just not true. Everybody has a story. I've worked with 1000s of people, and everyone's got a great, dramatic story. They just don't know it. So I'll send you a free story guide. It's a video course. It's going to give you some prompts, and we're going to find your powerful, personal signature story, so you can begin to use it today. So all you got to do is text me. So text PERSONAL STORY, the word PERSONAL STORY, one word personal story. Text that to this number, 323-310-5504. that's text. Personal story. One word, personal story, to 323-310-5504, text me that, and I will automatically send you a story guide. To start to uncover this thing,you'll start to realize, Wow, I do have a cool story that I can begin to tell whether I'm in the Oval Office or whether I'm in front of 1500 people at us in a speech, you can open with your personal story. It works and it attracts people to you. If I was in your guys shoes, you're interested in building wealth. Me too. If I'm building wealth, guess what? I'm beginning with personal story, and then I just get to go right to the top, because people are only interested in other people who have a vision bigger than the people have for themselves. And that's you. That's you. And your personal story, you have a vision that is bigger than the people have for themselves. If you can do that, guess what? People got to buy into that, they got to invest in, that they got to be around that. They got to marry that.   Keith Weinhold  51:47   Oh, you're so right. I really think this is going to help a lot of our listeners. You the listener, you probably have several good stories inside you, and Bo can really help bring them out, who have the benefit of seeing him on video, he's a really powerful speaker. I've had that same benefit of seeing him on video. You've only listened to him so far. Check out his resource if you think you can benefit from it. Bo, he said, It's surely been valuable. Thanks so much for coming on to the show.   Bo Eason  52:15   Keith, thanks for having me.   Keith Weinhold  52:23   Oh, such sharp insights from a motivating guy, Bo Eason, this week. And hey, if you have kids, are you going to wake them up by hard, rubbing their back in the morning and telling them you're the best? Well, it seemed to work for a little review about what you learned. Bo talked about how the standard is the gold medal, not the end goal, but that the gold medal is actually the standard. That's his mindset. So Bo made sure he met Al Pacino. When they got dinner, he found out that Pacino was the best, so he sought out the best and made sure to get around him. And a lot of people are scared to do that or even ask about the best. And, you know, I just can't help but think that that's like my life experience with women. In high school, I was just so shy and deathly afraid to ask anyone out. But in college and beyond, you know, sometimes I would ask out the most attractive woman, and they would usually say no, but, you know, I can't believe some of them actually would say yes. And see, the more that you do this, the more confident you get. And women like confidence, and can feel that coming from you. And then, so therefore your fear dissipates and it becomes easier to overcome. You have a unique fingerprint in this world, and you yourself. You do have an interesting story. I just know that you have it in you, but the chances are you've never even told your highest and best story to one other human being on this earth, not even once, and perhaps I haven't either. Bo said his stories need to be personal, physical and unapologetic, and his video, course, helps you find your personal story. And if you didn't catch that again, you can get it by texting one word PERSONALSTORY to 323-310-5504.    Coming up in future weeks here on the show, it's probably Yeah, more left brain strategic real estate investing content than right brained emotional content like today's show. But one right brain topic coming up on the show that I want to share with you. I want to tell you why, as a society, we hate Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, because he's wealthy. But yet, society does not dislike wealthy singers like Olivia Rodrigo, Taylor Swift and Dua Lipa. We love them even though they're wealthy. We. Don't resent an actor like Robert Downey, Jr for making $600 million as an actor in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. So it's all about why we vilify successful entrepreneurs for their wealth, including landlords, yet somehow we glorify successful actors, athletes and entertainers for being wealthy. It's a case study that I've been working on. I shared some of it with our newsletter readers last week, and I'll have more on that here on the show. Signing off from the Grand New Orleans investment conference, the nation's longest running investing conference. I'm your host. Keith Weinhold, don't quit your Daydream.   Speaker 3  55:43   Nothing on this show should be considered specific, personal or professional advice. Please consult an appropriate tax, legal, real estate, financial or business professional for individualized advice. Opinions of guests are their own. Information is not guaranteed. All investment strategies have the potential for profit or loss. The host is operating on behalf of get rich Education LLC, exclusively   Keith Weinhold  56:03   The preceding program was brought to you by your home for wealth building get rich education.com.  

100 Yards of Football
Jack Tatum Safety, Oakland Raiders and Ohio State with Vincent Turner

100 Yards of Football

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2024 9:49


Jack Tatum Safety, Oakland Raiders and Ohio State with Vincent Turner We are broadcasting live from Atlanta, GA with host Vincent Turner and producer Jeremiah Long. We are 100 Yards of Football. Live from Atlanta, Georgia! Visit us online many.link/100yardsoffootball Listen to the PODCAST daily: 100 Yards of Football https://many.link/100yardsoffootball, Want to create live streams like this? Check out StreamYard: https://streamyard.com/pal/d/58362923...

RiYL
Episode 624: Jack Tatum (Wild Nothing)

RiYL

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2023 48:32


In 2019, Jack Tatum and his wife made the move from Los Angeles to Virginia. As timing goes, the decision couldn't have been better, as the rode out the pandemic with considerably more space. Since then, the couple have had a son, a factor that weighs heavily on the themes of his latest, Hold. The album is his fifth as Wild Nothing, and his first fully self-produced record since 2010's Gemini. Tatum discusses his creative process and using music to work through pain. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Blamo! | Exploring Fashion with the People Who Shape It

My guest this week is Jack Tatum of Wild Nothing.Jack and I discuss his new album Hold, how parenthood has changed his music, moving to the suburbs and loving it, getting fits off on tour, the creative process, and what he's doing in VA.Wild Nothing on SpotifyWild Nothing on Instagram*Sponsored by Standard & Strange

va wild nothing jack tatum
Cover to Cover with Matt Tarka
Episode 104: Jonny Swift - Wild Nothing/Gemini

Cover to Cover with Matt Tarka

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2023 28:32


Jonny Swift (ex Beat the Radar, Paloma Café) is a Cumbria, UK-based artist who writes, performs and releases music under his own name, and since 2020 has released three albums (Dalton Daze, Story of Luna & Kalimera) via local independent label Seahouse Records. Swift has received national and international radio play and exposure from BBC 6 music, BBC London, BBC introducing, Amazing Radio as well as local independent radio stations.Jonny has released the lead single "She Said" on 17 November 2023 off his forthcoming record "An Awesome Dream" (1 December). Recorded, Mixed and Mastered by Matt Kassell at Digital Man Recording Studio, Barrow, Cumbria, these releases are available on all digital platforms.Sounding like something from 80s indie label Sarah Records, there's no denying that ‘She Said' is a straight forward indie pop song. Jangly guitars, female backing vocals, tambourines and lyrics about rejection place this track firmly in a particular category.With strong influences by The Vaselines, The Wake as well as more modern indie acts such as The Cribs, this perfect slice of pop is perfect for both daytime radio as well as indie-specific shows and playlists.For our conversation today, we discussed the artistic impact of "Gemini" - the debut album by an American indie rock, dream pop act known as Wild Nothing, Released on May 25, 2010, on Brooklyn, NY's Captured Tracks, Wild Nothing is a brainchild of Blacksburg, VA's Jack Tatum and a mainstay of the group since its inception back in 2009.Enjoy the conversation!

The Drop with Danno on GFN 광주영어방송
2023.10.10 Under The Radar

The Drop with Danno on GFN 광주영어방송

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2023 124:41


As broadcast October 10, 2023 with plenty of friends in tow.  Tonight we open with David Skimming, the mastermind behind the Lunar Isles project, which has made some of the best guitar-centric surf dreams in indie anywhere over the past few years, not just in Korea.  His latest is a lovely upbeat affair that is the perfect way to get back into the mode after the Busking World Cup and a bevvy of holidays here in Korea.  After that, we had plenty of friends to ride with tonight, as Broken Baby, Scoobert Doobert, and Otis Kane all had fresh cuts to feature in part one, and there was plenty more in store after that with notable joints just out from Masego, Meernaa, veronicavon, Kevin Abstract, and a slew of other worthies, including a great new album from Norwegian cinematic instrumental outfit Orion's Belte called Women, which is absolutely superb and full of surprises.#feelthegravityUTR 10/10/2023Under The RadarTracklist (st:rt)Part 1 (00:00)Lunar Isles – ArrivalScoobert Doobert – All I NeedWild Nothing – Dial ToneBroken Baby – Ugly Polo & Pan – ChamallowKraak & Smaak feat Otis Kane – Ready for YaIzyBeats w/ Masego & Toian – Tipsy  Part 2 (33:04)Meernaa – Love Is GoodRobohands – DrivenHoly Hive & The Shacks – Middle of the NightMndsgn – MakeUsuper natural lime – The Boat Pelicat – Safe & Soundveronicavon - Dreamgirl Part 3 (61:13)Katie Ferrara – Loud and ProudHoneywhip – PolaroidKevin Abstract – Blanket bed bug guru – Tightrope Born Days – DreamsA Beacon School – Mantra  Part 4 (91:16)Busty & The Bass feat Son Little – Give Me A SmileHala – Run to YouPrateek Kuhad – MulaqatLake Street Dive feat Madison Cunningham – Neighbor SongGeorgia Gets By – Fish Bird Baby BoyOrions Belte feat Oyvind Torvund – I Will Always Miss YouOrions Belte feat Louien – When You're Gone I'll Be Gone

Untold Patriots Stories
Patrick Sullivan, former New England General Manager and son of the Patriots first owner, Billy Sullivan

Untold Patriots Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2023 67:11


Patrick Sullivan takes us through Patriots history - interweaving NFL legends such as Joe Namath, Lamar Hunt, Jack Kemp, Howie Long, Al Davis, Jack Tatum, Don Shula, and Bill Bidwill along the wayHear the innovations of his father, what was unique about the Pats playing at Fenway Park, the backstory of Schaefer Stadium, find out who initiated “The Great Flush”, how Patrick was physically assaulted by Matt Millen on the field after a game, and how his new company played a roll in Edelman's “miracle” catch in Super Bowl LI. This episode is chock-full of Untold Patriots Stories you'll wanna hear!

Mscs Media
Brandon Tatum: Officer Tatum, Being A Black Cop In America. Blexit. Aldene to North Of Richmond Media Craze. | Manhood/Fatherhood | Mscs Media #337

Mscs Media

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2023 122:01


Brandon Tatum: Author of Beaten Black and Blue: https://www.theofficertatumstore.com/products/beaten-black-and-blue IG: @theofficertatum. YT: @TheOfficerTatum We discuss what it's like being a black police officer in today's civil unrest with BLM, and people yelling A.C.A.B. Brandon runs a YouTube channel called "The Officer Tatum" with almost 3 million subscribers. Tatum has also appeared as a guest on Candace Owens's PragerU show The Candace Owens Show and her The Daily Wire political podcast Candace as a panelist. Along with Owens, Tatum founded Blexit, an organization meant to persuade the black American population to leave the Democratic Party. The name is Blexit is a combination of the words "black and "exit". – Why do so many Black Americans vote Democrat? He and Candace recommend black voters leave the democratic party, why? Tatum was an All-American football player in high school. His father, Bobby Tatum, was a Fort Worth Fire Department captain. His great uncle, Jack Tatum, was an Ohio State All-American, NFL All-Pro, and Super Bowl champion with the Oakland Raiders. Tatum was featured in the US-Army All-American Game, which showcases the top 78 high school football players in the nation. Tatum committed to playing on a full athletic scholarship from the University of Arizona in 2004. Tatum played at Arizona for five years and entered the NFL Draft in 2010. ➔ZBiotics: 15% off on your first order with code: MSCSMEDIA Go to ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://sponsr.is/biotics_mscsmedia_0723⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ➔MAGIC SPOON: https://www.magicspoon.com/MSCS to grab a variety pack and try it today! And be sure to use our promo code MSCS at checkout to save $5 off your order! ➔Hormone levels falling? Use MSCSMEDIA to get 25% off home test: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://trylgc.com/MSCSMEDIA⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ➔Manscaped: Get 20% Off and Free Shipping with the code MSCSMEDIA at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://Manscaped.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ➔Fiji: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://Fijiwater.com/mscs⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ $5 off free shipping Unleash ➔Monster Energy: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.monsterenergy.com/us/mscsmscsmedia ⁠⁠⁠ ➔Aura: See if any of your passwords have been compromised. Try 14 days for free: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://au⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ra.com/⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠MSCS⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Thank you to Aura Clips of all episodes released: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.instagram.com/mscsmedia⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠| ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠mscsmedia.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠| ⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠https://www.reddit.com/r/mscsmedia⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠ ➔ Stay Connected With MSCS MEDIA on Spotify Exclusive: ALL ► ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://spoti.fi/3zathAe⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ (1st time watching a video podcast on Spotify when you hit play a settings pop-up will show, tap under the settings pop-up to watch the video playing.) ► All Links to MSCS MEDIA:⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ https://allmylinks.com/mscsmedia⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

TWIPF: THE PODCAST
1972, Week 2

TWIPF: THE PODCAST

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2023 56:08


TWIPF: The Podcast, 1972, Week 2 is online! This week we discuss the historic Jets-Colts air circus, Jack Tatum's record setting play, the expanding use of Bill Loose music, and John Reeve's unusual career. Quote of the week: "Watch out for those green rubber curtains, Harold!" Intro-outro music is "Business End of the Shotgun," by Loose. 

Iona College Radio Hour with Willie O'Ree and Chelsea Cabarcas

Harris ran for 12,120 yards and won four Super Bowl rings with the Steelers in the 1970s, a dynasty that began in earnest when Harris decided to keep running during a last-second heave by Pittsburgh quarterback Terry Bradshaw in a playoff game against Oakland in 1972. With the Steelers trailing 7-6 and facing fourth-and-10 from its own 40-yard line and 22 seconds remaining in the fourth quarter, Bradshaw drifted back and threw deep to running back John "Frenchy" Fuqua. Fuqua and Oakland defensive back Jack Tatum collided, sending the ball careening back toward midfield in the direction of Harris.

Mad Dog's Daily Bite
Franco Harris talks Immaculate Reception 50 Years Later

Mad Dog's Daily Bite

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2022 18:46


Doggie talked to the Great Franco Harris about the Immaculate Reception 50 years later and what it means to him.

Sports the NEMO way
LAS VEGAS RAIDERS

Sports the NEMO way

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2022 66:14


In this episode of Sports the NEMO Way we bring the Las Vegas Raiders to the table for discussion. 

SportsEpreneur Podcast
Jack Tatum and The Game | Buckeye Focused

SportsEpreneur Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2022 31:58


As we all know, life is deeper than just football. It goes without saying. That doesn’t mean sports aren’t important — if anything that’s why they are important. Sports bring people together, sports create stories, sports teach you about winning and losing, sports get you in shape, sports get you interested, and sports matter because ... Read more The post Jack Tatum and The Game | Buckeye Focused appeared first on SportsEpreneur.

game sports focused buckeyes jack tatum sportsepreneur
Thoughts From A Balcony
|Ep. 21| Speedy Sheppard Jr.: Be Intentional With Your Energy

Thoughts From A Balcony

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2022 49:08


Speedy Sheppard Jr. is a motivational speaker, content creator, and former football player from New Jersey. Speedy discusses how his tumultuous upbringing and football career led him to find his purpose of motivational speaking. As a content creator, he highlights the importance of creating intentional energy through your authentic self if you want to experience positive results on social media. Through technical difficulties, I discover Speedy is the cousin of legendary Raiders safety- Jack Tatum, and we go over his family's athletic lineage. We get to talk about his experience eating an 100% plant based diet, and the negative side effects he noticed throughout 3 years that led him to start eating meat again. Speedy is such a genuine dude and his positive energy is contagious to say the least! Beyond blessed to connect and learn about his story and mindset! Hope y'all enjoy ✌️ Follow Speedy on IG: https://www.instagram.com/thespeedytribe/?hl=en

ESPN Daily
Top Prospect Derek Stingley Jr.'s Complex NFL Legacy

ESPN Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2022 37:36 Very Popular


Derek Stingley Jr. is one of the most coveted defensive backs in tonight's NFL Draft, and his name might sound familiar to older NFL fans. Derek Jr. is the grandson of Darryl Stingley, a young New England Patriots wide receiver who was paralyzed by a notorious, vicious hit from Oakland Raiders safety Jack Tatum in 1978. ESPN's Gene Wojciechowski brings us the story of how the Stingley family endured despite that tragedy, and continued to pursue an NFL legacy.

Raider Roots Podcast
Ep 16 - 1971

Raider Roots Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2021 18:05


Revisit the Oakland Raiders in 1971 and meet two new unforgettable players, Jack Tatum and Phil Villapiano.

oakland raiders jack tatum
Yesterday's Sports
1980 Oakland Raiders: The Unlikely Super Bowl Champs

Yesterday's Sports

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2021 11:10


Yesterday's Sports is part of the https://sportshistorynetwork.com/ (Sports History Network - The Headquarters For Sports Yesteryear). NETWORK SPONSORS https://sportshistorynetwork.com/row1/ (Row One) - the vintage shop for sports history fans! https://www.thrivefantasy.com/?promo=SHN (THRIVE FANTASY) - a daily fantasy sports app for player props. Use promo code SHN or this link when you sign up today and you will receive a 100% instant first deposit match up to $100! EPISODE SUMMARY From 1967–1977, the Raiders had been one of the top teams in professional football, reaching the post-season every year except for 1971. They had played in nine AFL/AFC Championship games, winning two of them, and in two Super Bowls, winning one. But 1978 was a disappointing year. In a pre-season game against the New England Patriots, Raiders' defensive back Jack Tatum's hit resulted in Patriots receiver Darryl Stingley getting paralyzed. The play seemed to cast a dark cloud over the team. QB Ken Stabler threw 30 interceptions and only 16 touchdowns, receiver Cliff Branch scored only one touchdown, and the Raiders failed to reach the playoffs for the first time since 1966. They finished the year at 9–7. To no surprise, 1979 brought change. Coach John Madden retired, and assistant coach Tom Flores took over. Future Hall of Famers Willie Brown and Fred Biletnikoff retired........ You can read the https://sportshistorynetwork.com/weightlifting/bulgarian-weightlifting (full blog post here). https://www.newspapers.com/freetrial/?xid=2229&duration=semiannual&subtype=extra&ft=true (Get a FREE 1-Week Trial to Newspapers.com to learn about this topic and much more!!!) YESTERDAY'S SPORTS BACKGROUND Host Mark Morthier grew up in New Jersey just across the river from New York City during the 1970s, a great time for sports in the area. He relives great moments from this time and beyond, focusing on football, baseball, basketball, and boxing. You may even see a little Olympic Weightlifting in the mix, as Mark competed for eight years. See Mark's book below. https://amzn.to/3kf5MuO (No Nonsense, Old School Weight Training: A Guide For People With Limited Time) https://amzn.to/3snjccy (Running Wild: (Growing Up In The 1970s)) Support this podcast

Buckeye Talk: Ohio State podcast by cleveland.com
Chase Young, Jack Tatum and some tough calls for Ohio State defenders on Mount Buckmore

Buckeye Talk: Ohio State podcast by cleveland.com

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2021 97:53


It's another Friday Mount Buckmore episode on Buckeye Talk as Doug Lesmerises, Nathan Baird and Stephen Means squeeze in two position groups this time.Defensive ends and cornerbacks are debated, with each of the guys picking their four players for each spot, and the text subscribers casting their votes as well. The defensive ends are first and pretty fun. The cornerbacks are second and more of a grind, though not as difficult as Doug feared.Quarterbacks, running backs and receivers were done on previous episodes, and it was time to get to the defensive side of the ball.Next week -- linebackers. For now, thanks for listening to this Buckeye Talk from cleveland.com. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Sounds! HD
Sounds! Album der Woche: Molly Burch «Romantic Images»

Sounds! HD

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2021 108:54


Zwischen Hollywood und Indie-Pop: Molly Burch wuchs in Los Angeles und mit dem Sound von Nina Simone und Billie Holiday auf, studierte im Südstaaten-Kunstnest Asheville Jazzgesang und lebt heute in der Musikstadt Austin. Das 3. Album der Songwriterin kommt gewürzt und gezuckert: Mit Synthies und Disco werden Ideen und Realitäten der grossen Liebe ergründet. Mitschuldig am neuen Klang mit elektronischem Vintage-Touch sind alte Bekannte: Alaina Moore und Patrick Riley vom Yacht Pop-Duo Tennis haben das Album produziert und für das Highlight «Emotion» wurde Jack Tatum von den träumerischen Indie-Rockern Wild Nothing verpflichtet. Wie immer: Wir verlosen das Sounds! Album der Woche täglich im Radio - gewinnt Molly Burchs «Romantic Images» auf Vinyl oder CD!

Sounds!
Sounds! Album der Woche: Molly Burch «Romantic Images»

Sounds!

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2021 108:54


Zwischen Hollywood und Indie-Pop: Molly Burch wuchs in Los Angeles und mit dem Sound von Nina Simone und Billie Holiday auf, studierte im Südstaaten-Kunstnest Asheville Jazzgesang und lebt heute in der Musikstadt Austin. Das 3. Album der Songwriterin kommt gewürzt und gezuckert: Mit Synthies und Disco werden Ideen und Realitäten der grossen Liebe ergründet. Mitschuldig am neuen Klang mit elektronischem Vintage-Touch sind alte Bekannte: Alaina Moore und Patrick Riley vom Yacht Pop-Duo Tennis haben das Album produziert und für das Highlight «Emotion» wurde Jack Tatum von den träumerischen Indie-Rockern Wild Nothing verpflichtet. Wie immer: Wir verlosen das Sounds! Album der Woche täglich im Radio - gewinnt Molly Burchs «Romantic Images» auf Vinyl oder CD!

CFL America Radio
The Story of the 1976 Oakland Raiders

CFL America Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2021 27:51


When it comes to great teams in Raiders history, many teams come to mind. Between the 70's and 80's, the Oakland Raiders were the winningest team in all of professional sports. However no team epitomized the Oakland Raiders quite like the team of 1976. No team was as crazy off the field, especially with their owner's approval. No team struck quite as much fear into opposing teams on the field. Al Davis and John Madden had a great philosophy for running their team: You can be who you are off the field as long as you win on Sunday. This meant many practices with hangovers, late nights before games, and whatever antics the players brought with them. It also meant a lot of wins. Leading the team at quarterback was Ken "the Snake" Stabler, known for his 4th quarter comebacks and off the field antics. Though not in the typical sense of the word, Stabler was a true leader who had the respect of his teammates and opponents alike. Stabler was blessed with a great set of targets to throw to. Hall of Famer, Fred Biletnikoff, was the prototype hard-nosed possession receiver, while tight end Dave Casper, also a Hall of Famer, was always a big clutch play waiting to happen. However, most teams feared the speedy deep ball artist, Cliff Branch, even more than Casper and Biletnikoff. The offense was also fueled by a great offensive line. Art Shell, Gene Upshaw, and Dave Dalby made up arguably the best left side of any offensive line in the history of the game. This line made life easy for running backs like Clarence Davis and Mark Van Eeghen. The defense struck fear into all opposing offenses. Jack "the Assassin" Tatum and George Atkinson made the hardest hitting safety duo in the game's history, while Hall of Famer Willie Brown and Skip Thomas, a.k.a. Dr. Death, made one of the best cornerback duos ever. As if that secondary wasn't enough, Hall of Famer Ted "the Mad Stork" Hendricks and Phil Villapiano made a linebacking corp no team looked forward to facing. It was also the Raiders first year with the late John Matuszak at defensive end, a giant who was a crazy on the field as he was off of it. The Raiders dominated the Minnesota Vikings in Super Bowl XI. Oakland's offense put up 32 points, led by the stellar performance of Super Bowl MVP, Fred Biletnikoff. Meanwhile, the Vikings offense was shut out in the first half and managed 14 points in the second half. The Raiders defense showed up in full force as rookie receiver Sammie White found out when Jack Tatum and Skip Thomas knocked his helmet off with a vicious hit. The Oakland Raiders of 1976 were the most feared team of all. They had seven Hall of Famers (if you include John Madden) and quite a few more players who should be in there. They were and still are the true epitome of the Silver and Black.

Song of the Day
Japanese Breakfast - Be Sweet

Song of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2021 3:16


Japanese Breakfast - "Be Sweet" from the 2021 album Jubilee on Dead Oceans. Michelle Zauner of Japanese Breakfast is one busy lady. Mere months following the release of her memoirCrying in H Mart, she's releasing her third album, Jubilee, on June 4th via Dead Oceans. Today's Song of the Day is the first single, the joyous, upbeat “Be Sweet.” “I wrote ‘Be Sweet’ with Jack Tatum from Wild Nothing a few years ago. I’ve been holding onto it for so long and am so excited to finally put it out there,” she said via a press release. The track was accompanied by a self-directed music video featuring Zauner and Missy of Mannequin Pussy as FBI agents, inspired by the TV show The X-Files.  The song's effervescent feel is reflective of the new LP, a change of pace after previous albums — Soft Sounds from Another Planet and her debut Psychopomp — reflected on the loss of her mother in 2014, from pancreatic cancer. “After spending the last five years writing about grief, I wanted our follow up to be about joy,” Zauner continued. “For me, a third record should feel bombastic and so I wanted to pull out all the stops for this one.”  Read the full post on KEXP.org Support the show: https://www.kexp.org/donate See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Kyle Meredith With...
Aly & AJ on Channeling Classic Laurel Canyon Vibes

Kyle Meredith With...

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2021 25:40


Aly & AJ catch up with Kyle Meredith to talk about their first album in 14 years, A Touch of the Beat Gets You Up On Your Feet Gets You Out and Then Into the Sun. The sisters talk about making a West Coast record with heroes Grace Slick, Janis Joplin, and the Laurel Canyon scene in mind, all while reflecting on the turmoil going on in the country. The actor/musicians also discuss working with Heart’s Nancy Wilson and Wild Nothing’s Jack Tatum on “Listen!!”, having their 00’s hit "Potential Breakup Song" become a TikTok trend, updating their past catalog, and upcoming tour plans. Follow on Facebook | Podchaser | Twitter --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Buckeye Talk: Ohio State podcast by cleveland.com
Ohio State vs. Michigan, 1968: Buckeye ReTalkables

Buckeye Talk: Ohio State podcast by cleveland.com

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2020 84:59


With the preseason winding down, we had to bring The Game into our discussion of the important games in Ohio State football history. So we took our little time machine back to 1968, when the Buckeyes dominated Michigan with the Super Sophs en route to the national championship.This game lives on as Woody Hayes' finest moment OSU's head coach. It also came during a time of upheaval in society. One year later, Bo Schembechler took over the Wolverines, setting off the Ten Year War in the rivalry.On this day, however, we focused on Rex Kern and a Buckeyes running game equal parts beautiful and punishing. We also paid homage to Jack Tatum and a defense that dominated much of this game and set a tone for the triumph to come in the Rose Bowl against O.J. Simpson and USC.Watch the youtube cut-up version of this Ohio State classic, then join us for this discussion. Thanks as always for listening to Buckeye Talk. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

LISTEN: This Day In History
August 12 This Day in History

LISTEN: This Day In History

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2020 2:22


Today in History: -Echo 1 launched. -IBM introduces first personal computer. -Daryl Stingley paralyzed. -Ian Flemming passes. -Wizard of Oz world premiere. See omnystudio.com/policies/listener for privacy information.

Beyond the Game Podcast
Chapter 16 - Darquez Dennard

Beyond the Game Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2020 47:55


Special guest Darqueze Dennard joins us for the 16th episode of Beyond the Game Podcast. Carving his name in the history books, Darqueze has continuously exceed expectation. A native of Georgia, Darqueze attended Michigan State as a defensive back where he earned all kinds of honors. Big Ten Champion, Rose Bowl Champion, Jack Tatum trophy, Jim Thorpe award, Unanimous All-American, First Team All-Big Ten, Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year, Big Ten Back of the Year.  Furthering his career, Dennard was drafted 24th overall to the Cincinnati Bengals in 2014. Humble but hungry the road traveled for Darqueze has been a fun filled ride and when asked about his journey he answers with it was "Gods plan". Follow Darqueze on all his social platforms below  IG: @darqueze IG Foundation Page: @dennarddifference  Twitter: @Queze  Website: www.dennarddifference.com 

The Pillaging Podcast
#128 - Mike Mayock is at the Podium

The Pillaging Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2020 160:59


The Greatness of the Raiders This week we cover all the Raiders news from the week and continue our search for the Greatest Raider of All Time (GROAT). On this episode, we focus on the greatest Raider play makers on defense. Ranking greats such as Jack Tatum, Charles Woodson, Willie Brown, and Lester Hayes is a tough job but someone has to do it.   We're here to talk about all that and more on this episode of the Pillaging Podcast! On Tonight's Show: Raiders sell back their practice facility real estate for 30 times its original value Mike Mayock takes the podium at the NFL combine Mayock on Derek Carr Mayock's philosophy on drafting Wide Receivers Josh Jacobs role in the passing game Ranking the greatest play makers on defense (and then some) Your phone calls You're listening to The Pillaging Podcast! The #1 Raiders Podcast in Raider Nation! Call in and leave us a message to be played on air at: (408) 909 - PJFF Follow us on Twitter: @pillagingpod DC4L Custom tees: dc4lcustomtees.com One Nation Fan Wear: onenationfanwear.com Donate: paypal.me/pj4f #raiders #raidernation #oaklandraiders #nfl #justwinbaby #oakland #rn4l #silverandblack #lasvegasraiders #commitmenttoexcellence #football #derekcarr #theblackhole #raidersfootball #oaktown #raider #NFLCombine #NFLDraft #lasvegas #townbidness #realmenwearblack #bayarea #prideandpoise #joshjacobs #raidersallday #jongruden #onenation #losangelesraiders #CNPN #PJ4F #1N #JonGruden #MikeMayock #MarkDavis #GROAT #GOAT

PFRPA Podcast
Mike Haynes | PFRPA Podcast #001 | Snow Plow Game, First Free Agent, Wide Receiver to Defensive Back

PFRPA Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2019 29:04


The inaugural episode of the PFRPA Podcast hosted by Brian DeMarco features Hall of Famer and Super Bowl XVIII Champion Mike Haynes, who played cornerback in the NFL for 14 seasons. Follow the PFRPA on Twitter: https://twitter.com/thepfrpa?lang=en Follow the PFRPA on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thepfrpa/ Like the PFRPA on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PFRPA/ Visit the site www.pfrpa.com for more info.

This Broken Mixtape
S2E27 - Wild Nothing (Dream Pop Band)

This Broken Mixtape

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2018 29:16


Wild Nothing frontman Jack Tatum started his then-solo dream pop project making low-fi recordings in his college dorm room at Virginia Tech. The band's fourth record, Indigo, leans more into Tatum's new wave influences. Thematically, the album explores how love and relationships have shifted in the digital age. We sat down with Tatum before their packed Opera House show to talk about how Indigo took its cue from the pop sensibilities of Roxy Music and The Cure, writing songs with Mitski and Japanese Breakfast, and why he prefers New Order over Joy Division.

Sports Wednesday
10.03.18: FIGHT NIGHT! Hats of the Week gets nasty! MLB Playoff predictions, Mustache Madness update, NFL picks, D3 College Mascots and more

Sports Wednesday

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2018 81:27


FIGHT NIGHT! Coach and BMOC throw down over hats of the week, plus MLB playoff predictions, Mustache Madness update, a new card is drawn from the big box o'cards, D3 college mascots, locks of the week and Wild Card trivia...

Sports Wednesday
09.26.18: Greatest Sports Mustaches, Winner, Winner Browns and Tiger, D3 Mascots and Listener Mail

Sports Wednesday

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2018 63:36


09.26.18: We seed the top 8 sports mustaches of all time in preparation for Mustache Madness, plus we have live audio of the Brown's win, talk Tiger Woods and Tinder, plus Listener Mail, D3 Mascots, and Baseball Playoff trivia

10 West Podcast
Ep. 16 - Rod Martin former USC Trojans and Raiders linebacker

10 West Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2017 55:42


It's not very often that we get to talk with a Super Bowl record holder. Former LA/Oakland Raiders and USC Trojans linebacker Rod Martin joined us to talk about his two Super Bowl victories, playing on Raiders teams with the likes of Jack Tatum and of course, his three interceptions of the Eagles Ron Jaworski in Super Bowl XV, a record that still stand to this day!

ESPN Tallahassee Jeff Cameron Show

1) Lee Sterling joins the show 2) Golden State/Houston game/Draymond Green's ball kicking issue 3) Lee Sterling of JoeBucsFan.com joins the show 4) Tarvarus Mcfadden win the Jack Tatum award

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Crash Chords Podcast
CCP Ep. #141: Nocturne by Wild Nothing | Featuring Devin Jackson Mullen of Anxious Kids Make Good People

Crash Chords Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2015 114:33


Anxious Kids Make Good People (AKMGP): the acronym, the axiom, and the "-nym" are all coined by today's guest, Devin Jackson Mullen, who writes & performs under the namesake. Straight from his career in sound design and the release of his latest EP, Radio Fire Flies, Devin joins our team to unveil the 2012 album Nocturne by Wild Nothing (the brainchild of Virginia-based artist Jack Tatum.) After Devin helps us break apart the album, we go on to break apart Devin! Figuratively, that is. For those who can't wait, Devin's interview begins at 1:25:37. For his three groovy surprises however, you'll have to hunt. Continue reading

Raider Nation Podcast - Oakland Raiders News and Opinion with Raider Greg
07/26/11 - Show #309: NFL Lockout is OVER! Raiders must get down to business. FAST!

Raider Nation Podcast - Oakland Raiders News and Opinion with Raider Greg

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2011 41:47


TOPICS: Segment #1: "Rest in peace Raiders legend Skip Thomas" A quick segment honoring the passing of Skip Thomas, who passed away on Sunday July 24th of a heart attack. A member of the "Soul Patrol" along with Jack Tatum and George Atkinson, Skip wore the silver and black from 1972 to 1977. Rest in peace Skip. Segment #2: "The NFL Lockout is finally over!" The owners voted 31-0 to approve their new CBA proposal. The Raiders abstained from the vote due to "philosophical differences". The players association agreed and signed yesterday. Raider Nation is excited. The season can finally get under way! Segment #3: "The Next Steps: What do the Raiders need to do to get to the next level?" Now that the lockout is over, many things must get done in less than a week. Free agent signings, free agent acquisitions, start of training camp. What must the Raiders do to move to the next level? What do we need to do to get under the new salary cap? Should we try to keep Nnamdi Asomugha? Can we afford to? Should we go after any free agents? Do you think Al Davis will come up with a big deal on a new player? Raider Greg gives his opinions. Segment #4: The Boneline (our toll-free voicemail line) 1-800-620-7181 Here are this week's callers: 01. Houston Raider Steve 02. Loudog from Riverside, California 03. OC Raider from Orange County, California 04. Raider Travelito from Ivanhoe, California 05. The Surface Raider from the UK 06. The Nature Boy, Raider Josh 07. Raider Sambo from Stillwater, Oklahoma You too can call in to the Boneline and get on the podcast yourself. Toll-Free 1-800-620-7181. Try to keep your call around 2-3 minutes long. If we get a lot of calls we may not be able to air all of them, so make them good. Preference may be given to first time callers. Sorry if your call is not aired. Please call back to get on another show. Running time - 41:47

Clash & Look Behind You Podcast
Clash & Look Behind You Podcast Episode 2

Clash & Look Behind You Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2010 52:27


This month, Roman, Dave and Clash's Matt Bennett, hail Interpol's return with exclusive interview snippets from Clash Magazine's cover stars, talk to Wild Nothing's Jack Tatum and choose their favourites for the month including Two Bears, Zola Jesus and, cherry-picked from Look Behind You's Twitter feed, AudioDax. The trio also mull over the month's music news with Muse's stadium shaking antics, Kings Of Leon's curious video for their single 'Radioactive', and select their choice for a new service that offers to press your ashes into a playable vinyl record.

Raider Nation Podcast - Oakland Raiders News and Opinion with Raider Greg
07/29/10 - Show #277: A Tribute To Jack Tatum

Raider Nation Podcast - Oakland Raiders News and Opinion with Raider Greg

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2010 57:41


TOPICS: Segment #1: "Raiders Camp News Update" Lamarr Houston signed his contract and will be in camp. Players started arriving on Tuesday, practices start on Thursday (today). When Raider Greg recorded this show yesterday (Wed. 7/30/10), Rolando McClain had not yet signed...and Raider Greg stated as such. However, great news came out today that McClain has signed, so he will be in camp. Segment #2: "A Tribute To Jack Tatum" Jack Tatum passed away from a heart attack on July 27th, shocking the Raider Nation and sports community. The Raiders issued a statement recognizing Jack as a true Raider "warrior". We have included an audio file from local ABC television which covered the story very well. Raider Greg also gives his thoughts. Segment #3: "Why Is Raiders Training Camp Such A Secret?" Many NFL teams open their training camp up to fans, allowing them to watch their team practicing for the upcoming season. The Raiders have been known for keeping a tighter lid on their camp than most teams. Raider Greg and a lot of other Raider fans wish that the Raiders would adapt a more open policy. Segment #4: "John Herrera.....Saint?" The Napa Valley Register, the local newspaper in Napa....where the Raiders training camp is located.....did an article on Raiders executive John Herrera on this Tuesday. It details his long association with the Raiders, going all the way back to when he was 16 years old and began working for the Raiders. The article portrays him in a very positive light. Raider Greg tells the story, and gives his thoughts about John. You can read the newspaper article here: http://napavalleyregister.com/sports/article_d18d4e86-9938-11df-84aa-001cc4c03286.html Segment #5: "What Are Denver Podcasters Saying About Raider Greg and the Raider Nation Podcast?" Raider Greg got an email from Denver podcasters who do a show called, "South Stands Denver: The Fancast". They wanted to let Raider Greg know that they used a portion of our show #276 "Raider Greg's 2010 Crystal Ball" in their most recent show. We play you that excerpt from their show, plus their 2010 predictions for the Denver Broncos. Raider Greg rebuts a few comments that they had about Raiders fans and Greg personally. You can find the Denver Fancast here: http://www.southstandsdenver.com The show in which they talked about us is Show #41 (2nd half). Segment #6: The Boneline (our toll-free voicemail line) 1-800-620-7181 Here are this week's callers: 01. Raider Dee from Sheffield, England 02. Raider Queef from Oxnard, California 03. San Jo Raider, San Jose, California 04. The Metal Raider 05. Raider Tatum from the midwest 06. Ohio Raider 07. Obi-Wan Raider 08. Raider Maniac from Central Illinois 09. Raider Jaime from Bakersfield, California 10. Arkansan Raider You too can call in to the boneline and get on the podcast yourself. Toll-Free 1-800-620-7181. Try to keep your call around 2-3 minutes long. If we get a lot of calls we may not be able to air all of them, so make them good. Preference may be given to first time callers. Sorry if your call is not aired. Please call back to get on another show. Credits: The ABC newscast that covered the Jack Tatum story can be seen here on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5NBGLFKAUM0 Running time - 57:41

Ray Ellis Sports
Ray Ellis Sports - A Tribute to Jack Tatum

Ray Ellis Sports

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2010 56:00


Raider Nation Podcast - Oakland Raiders News and Opinion with Raider Greg
04/08/07 - Show #142: The "ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT" ON JACK TATUM

Raider Nation Podcast - Oakland Raiders News and Opinion with Raider Greg

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2007 40:18


SHOW #142 - TOPICS: (1) Raiders Working Hard For The Fans (2) Could Moss Be ...A Pussy? (3) The "Assassination Attempt" on Jack Tatum (4) The Bucs Want To Move Up In The Draft - At What Cost? (5) Westside Pirate Calls the Boneline (6) Comments Forum

Murf's Fan Cave
Flashback! Ep. 45 "Assassin" Jack Tatum

Murf's Fan Cave

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 1970 14:14


Join author of the RAIDERS Encyclopedia, Rich Smelter, as he tell the greatest stories of the RAIDERS historic past!TeePublic:https://www.teepublic.com/stores/rfr-live-swagAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy