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PTSD From Police Work Life and Death. A Fight for Life domestic violence call where the suspect beat up 2 Sheriff Deputies, and his mother. The suspect was high on cocaine, meth and heroin. He grabbed his gun and tried prying it out of my holster while we fought for some time until the suspect's heart stopped from the drugs and fight. Causing his death. Plus, a Hostage shooting incident where a suspect fired at at him and other officers with a rifle which lead to deadly force. Jeremy Wood developed debilitating PTSD from these and numerous other traumas as a Police Officer. He is a guest on the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast. You can listen to the interview as a free podcast on the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast website and platforms like Apple Podcasts, Spotify and most major podcast platforms. He talks about the incidents, the effect on him, his family members and how he is recovering and living a full life. Follow the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast on Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, Newsbreak, Medium and most all social media platforms. The Reality of PTSD from Police Work Jeremy Wood retired from the Marysville, Washington Police Department after 21 years of service, half of which he spent on the SWAT team. His career was marked by numerous traumatic incidents, including a hostage situation and a life-and-death struggle with a suspect under the influence of multiple drugs. These events led to severe PTSD, altering his life in profound ways. Read the supporting stories about this and much more from Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast in platforms like Medium, Newsbreak and Blogspot. Major Incidents Leading to PTSD One of the most harrowing moments of Wood’s career occurred during a SWAT operation in February 2007. A suspect, armed and threatening, refused to surrender. Despite negotiations, the suspect fired his weapon, forcing Wood to return fire. The suspect was killed. Shortly after returning to duty, Wood was called to another crisis: a suicidal individual holding what appeared to be a firearm. Though the weapon turned out to be an airsoft gun, the stress of the event compounded his existing trauma. PTSD From Police Work Life and Death. The interview is available as a free podcast on the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and podcast website, also available on platforms like Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and most major podcast outlets. Another defining moment came during a domestic violence call, where a suspect, intoxicated with cocaine, meth, and heroin, violently attacked two sheriff’s deputies and his own mother. The struggle escalated as the suspect attempted to grab Wood’s firearm. The intense altercation ended only when the suspect's heart stopped due to the combination of drugs and physical exertion. Understanding PTSD: Symptoms and Effects Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is a severe mental health condition triggered by witnessing or experiencing traumatic events. Symptoms include: Intrusive memories: Flashbacks, nightmares, and severe distress when reminded of the trauma. Avoidance behaviors: Steering clear of situations, places, or conversations that trigger distressing memories. Negative changes in mood and thinking: Persistent negative emotions, memory problems, emotional numbness, and detachment from loved ones. Altered physical and emotional reactions: Heightened alertness, self-destructive behaviors, sleep disturbances, and difficulty concentrating. For Wood, these symptoms manifested in deep emotional exhaustion, hypervigilance, and an overwhelming sense of distress. The impact on his personal and professional life was profound, leading him to seek help and eventually retire. PTSD From Police Work Life and Death. Follow the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and podcast on Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, Newsbreak, Medium and most all social media platforms. The Road to Recovery: Seeking Treatment Understanding the need for support, Wood co-founded Brothers In Healing, an initiative dedicated to helping first responders and veterans manage PTSD. Alongside his partner Chris, he established a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, Bigger Than Us, to provide financial assistance for inpatient PTSD treatment at accredited facilities. Breaking the Stigma: The Role of Social Media and Podcasts Social media platforms such as The Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show's Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn have played a crucial role in spreading awareness about PTSD and reaching those in need. These platforms allow first responders to share their experiences, find support, and access mental health resources. Check out the show on Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, Newsbreak, Medium and most all social media platforms. Additionally the interview with him on the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show is available as a free podcast on their website, it is also available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and most major podcast platforms. The Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast Newsbreak page is also a powerful tool in normalizing conversations about PTSD. Through these mediums, Wood and Chris discuss: The realities of PTSD in law enforcement The importance of seeking professional treatment Effective coping strategies and self-care techniques Real-life recovery stories from first responders and veterans Transforming Pain into Purpose Wood and Chris travel across the U.S., conducting workshops and training sessions to educate others about PTSD. Their mission is to ensure that no first responder feels alone in their struggle. By providing financial sponsorships for treatment, they remove barriers to recovery and offer hope to those who feel trapped by their trauma. PTSD From Police Work Life and Death. It is available as a free podcast on the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast website, on Apple Podcasts, Spotify and most major podcast platforms. Lessons in Healing Through their work, they emphasize key takeaways: Acknowledgment is the first step: Recognizing PTSD is critical to beginning the healing process. Seeking professional help is essential: Therapy, medication, and inpatient treatment can significantly improve quality of life. Peer support is invaluable: Connecting with others who have experienced similar trauma fosters a sense of understanding and community. Self-care and resilience-building strategies matter: Regular exercise, mindfulness, and healthy lifestyle choices aid in long-term recovery. A Message of Hope PTSD is not the end of the road. With the right support, treatment, and community, recovery is possible. Through Brothers In Healing and Bigger Than Us, Wood and Chris continue their mission to help first responders and veterans reclaim their lives. PTSD From Police Work Life and Death. Stay Connected For more information, visit www.brothersinhealing.com. Follow their journey on the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn pages, in addition to their appearances on the radio show and listen to the free podcast versions on their website, also on Apple podcasts, Spotify, and most major podcast platforms. You can help contribute money to make the Gunrunner Movie. The film that Hollywood won't touch. It is about a now Retired Police Officer that was shot 6 times while investigating Gunrunning. He died 3 times during Medical treatment and was resuscitated. You can join the fight by giving a monetary "gift" to help ensure the making of his film at agunrunnerfilm.com. Learn useful tips and strategies to increase your Facebook Success with John Jay Wiley. Both free and paid content are available on this Patreon page. Get the latest news articles, without all the bias and spin, from the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast on the Newsbreak app, which is free. Find a wide variety of great podcasts online at The Podcast Zone Facebook Page, look for the one with the bright green logo. Background song Hurricane is used with permission from the band Dark Horse Flyer. Be sure to check out our website. Be sure to follow us on MeWe, X, Instagram, Facebook,Pinterest, Linkedin and other social media platforms for the latest episodes and news. You can contact John Jay Wiley by email at Jay@letradio.com. PTSD From Police Work Life and Death. Attributions Herald.net Marysville Globe Wikipedia Mayo Clinic Brothers In HealingSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
During this special episode, I am being interviewed by Jeremy Wood, host of the Geek Within podcast!As you listen you will discover,* What inspired me to become your Procrastination Prevention Partner!* How To Make The Most of Your Minutes!*What to do when you experience a "What Now Moment!"and more!Make sure you follow "The Geek Within" on YouTube & Spotify!Listen NOW To discover, How To Pivot Towards Your Purpose!
Jeremy Wood is a Federal IT implementer, strategist, and enthusiast specializing in complex business systems. He focuses on providing value to business through technology solutions to reduce cost and increase efficiency. Jeremy is currently in a pivotal role at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) that will help transform both the business and IT roles and systems through planning, alternative analysis, developing business cases, and facilitating the investment review process. He is also the host of The Geek Within Podcast where he talks to people in his network that have passion projects, side hustles, or amazing hobbies in addition to their day job. Listen NOW to discover, "How To Monetize Your Passion Project"
Welcome Back! Today, we have a powerful episode of Dropping Bombs. I'm your host Brad Lea and today I sat down with guests Jeremy Wood and Chris Sutherland, co-founders of Brothers in Healing, a nonprofit organization supporting First Responders, veterans, and others dealing with PTSD, this is an awesome cause! Jeremy and Chris share their personal journeys as SWAT officers who faced life-altering trauma, including PTSD, and overcame it through specialized treatment. Together, they shed light on the hidden struggles of First Responders and offer hope and solutions for those battling similar challenges. This is one episode that can touch the hearts of all listeners whether you, yourself are dealing with trauma and PTSD or know someone who is. Don't miss this one… Looking for a way to give back this holiday season? Donate here: https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/brothersinhealing What You'll Learn: Listeners will learn how trauma profoundly impacts First Responders, the importance of addressing PTSD with proper support and training, and actionable steps to help themselves or others overcome its challenges. Highlights: The Reality of PTSD School Shooting Trauma Life-Changing Therapy Techniques Personal Rock Bottoms The Role of Training A Glimpse into the Future Resources Mentioned: https://brothersinhealing.com/ You can follow today's guest at: https://www.instagram.com/brothersinhealing/ Watch the full video episode on Brad's Rumble here: https://rumble.com/c/c-2544182 Watch the full video episode on Brad's Youtube here: https://bradlea.tv
Grappling with the issues in western Christianity, from flaws to toxicity, is a journey that is transformational, IF handled well.. We need to take care that we don’t throw out gorgeous baby amidst toxic bathwater. There is humility in recognizing that each of us, regardless of how we identify ourselves, can harbor insidious pharisaical attitudes and mindsets. Join Jeremy Wood and myself in this refreshing discussion as he shares his powerful journey and insights. Contact: Facebook: @jeremywood Tiktok: @jeremywood9889 Book: “Thriving In The Gap (The Redefining Series)” https://a.co/d/01JQqgr Stay connected with Catherine: Catherinetoon.com FB: Catherine Toon, MD IG: @CatherineToon Watch on YouTube: Catherine Toon, MD (like & subscribe for more!)
In this episode, we chat about affection for extraneous livestock, raising longhorns for our classes, how temperament is the most important thing with cows, harvesting a cow out of a ditch, culling fencing jumping cows (and their horns), and Wallace's Three Hearts Pilgrimage. Announcements: Come to the 2-Day The Art of Foie Gras class in Louisiana this January 19-20. You'll learn the art of goose harvesting from Brandon and the art of gavage from Ross McKnight of Backwater Foie Gras. Spots are limited to just eight students so as to keep the hands-on experience undiluted. Jump on this chance and sign up today! https://backwaterfoiegras.com/foiegrasclass Come to a 3-Day Family Pig Harvest class, April 25-27, May 2-4, or May 16-18, where you will use only your hands to turn two pigs into kitchen-sized pork cures, cuts, sausage, and charcuterie. Spots are limited to just eight students so as to keep the hands-on experience undiluted. Jump on this chance and sign up today! https://farmsteadmeatsmith.com/the-family-pig/ Come to a 3-Day Family Lamb Harvest class, June 20-22 or October 3-5, where you will use only your hands to turn four sheep into kitchen-sized lamb cuts, sausage, and charcuterie. The main difference between the Family Lamb and Family Pig is the skinning of sheep. Removing the hide from sheep, deer, elk, etc, ought to be learned by hand for an efficient and satisfying harvest. Spots are limited to just eight students so as to keep the hands-on experience undiluted. Jump on this chance and sign up today! https://farmsteadmeatsmith.com/product/3-day-complete-lamb-harvest-course/ Meatsmith Membership A gift that gives all year long! More than 45 Harvest Films, Brandon's Harvest Journal, and our community FaceBook group. 60-day free trial available! Use the Newsletter Special option on our sign-up page and apply the coupon code 60daytrial at checkout. Sign up today at FarmsteadMeatsmith.com/product/membership/. Support our podcast on Patreon! Production of each episode takes hours of work, filming, and editing. Becoming a patron can help us keep our episode quality high and allow us to continue filming. Become a patron today at https://www.patreon.com/meatsmith. Timestamps/Topics for Episode 92: 0:00 Affection for extraneous livestock 4:39 Longhorns for our beef classes 6:30 Temperament is the most important 8:04 Harvesting a cow out of a ditch 13:03 Fence jumping cows 20:26 Harvesting the cow & horns 27:00 Blowing the horn 28:38 Wallace's Three Hearts Pilgrimage 33:11 Cull your fence-jumping animals Links for Episode 92: Three Hearts Pilgrimage https://www.threeheartspilgrimage.org/ Our Lady of Clear Creek Abbey https://clearcreekmonks.org/ Greg Judy - regenerative rancher https://www.youtube.com/@gregjudyregenerativerancher Thank you, Patrons! Ellen Bloomfield, Monica Allen, Will Eichler, Tim Jones, Dennis M Carlson, Matthew Klimczak, Nate Crown, Tim Colton, Jeremy Wood, Warren Lund, Dohrman Farm, Ps42, Danielle, Alan Fortini-Campbell, Meghan Hickman Become a Patron by going to Patreon.com/meatsmith.
In this episode, we chat about the time of year to harvest pigs, the Mangalitza pig breed, our longhorn escapade, fast vs. slow stitch animals, and extraneous livestock. Announcements: Come to the 2-Day The Art of Foie Gras class in Louisiana this January 19-20. You'll learn the art of goose harvesting from Brandon and the art of gavage from Ross McKnight of Backwater Foie Gras. Spots are limited to just eight students so as to keep the hands-on experience undiluted. Jump on this chance and sign up today! https://backwaterfoiegras.com/foiegrasclass Our Fall classes have SOLD OUT. Come to a 3-Day Family Pig Harvest class, April 25-27, May 2-4, or May 16-18, where you will use only your hands to turn two pigs into kitchen-sized pork cures, cuts, sausage, and charcuterie. Spots are limited to just eight students so as to keep the hands-on experience undiluted. Jump on this chance and sign up today! https://farmsteadmeatsmith.com/the-family-pig/ Come to a 3-Day Family Lamb Harvest class, June 20-22 or October 3-5, where you will use only your hands to turn four sheep into kitchen-sized lamb cuts, sausage, and charcuterie. The main difference between the Family Lamb and Family Pig is the skinning of sheep. Removing the hide from sheep, deer, elk, etc, ought to be learned by hand for an efficient and satisfying harvest. Spots are limited to just eight students so as to keep the hands-on experience undiluted. Jump on this chance and sign up today! https://farmsteadmeatsmith.com/product/3-day-complete-lamb-harvest-course/ Meatsmith Membership A gift that gives all year long! More than 45 Harvest Films, Brandon's Harvest Journal, and our community FaceBook group. 60-day free trial available! Use the Newsletter Special option on our sign-up page and apply the coupon code 60daytrial at checkout. Sign up today at FarmsteadMeatsmith.com/product/membership/. Support our podcast on Patreon! Production of each episode takes hours of work, filming, and editing. Becoming a patron can help us keep our episode quality high and allow us to continue filming. Become a patron today at https://www.patreon.com/meatsmith. Timestamps/Topics for Episode 91: 0:00 Intro & Family Pig classes 3:52 THE time of year to harvest pigs 6:13 Mangalitza pigs 11:51 Our Longhorn escapade 26:56 Fast vs slow twitch animals 30:38 Extraneous livestock Thank you, Patrons! Ellen Bloomfield, Monica Allen, Will Eichler, Tim Jones, Dennis M Carlson, Matthew Klimczak, Nate Crown, Tim Colton, Jeremy Wood, Warren Lund, Dohrman Farm, Ps42, Danielle, Alan Fortini-Campbell, Meghan Hickman Become a Patron by going to Patreon.com/meatsmith.
In this episode, we discussed farm tasks that build virtue, our upcoming The Art of Foie Gras class, farming as an art, the myth of "do what you love," what is the Good Life, the burden of abundance, foie gras as preservation, and horses and cows in our future. Announcements: Come to the 2-Day The Art of Foie Gras class in Louisiana this January 19-20. You'll learn the art of goose harvesting from Brandon and the art of gavage from Ross McKnight of Backwater Foie Gras. Spots are limited to just eight students so as to keep the hands-on experience undiluted. Jump on this chance and sign up today! https://backwaterfoiegras.com/foiegrasclass Come to a 3-Day Family Pig Harvest class, April 25-27, May 2-4, or May 16-18, where you will use only your hands to turn two pigs into kitchen-sized pork cures, cuts, sausage, and charcuterie. Spots are limited to just eight students so as to keep the hands-on experience undiluted. Jump on this chance and sign up today! https://farmsteadmeatsmith.com/the-family-pig/ Come to a 3-Day Family Lamb Harvest class, June 20-22 or October 3-5, where you will use only your hands to turn four sheep into kitchen-sized lamb cuts, sausage, and charcuterie. The main difference between the Family Lamb and Family Pig is the skinning of sheep. Removing the hide from sheep, deer, elk, etc, ought to be learned by hand for an efficient and satisfying harvest. Spots are limited to just eight students so as to keep the hands-on experience undiluted. Jump on this chance and sign up today! https://farmsteadmeatsmith.com/product/3-day-complete-lamb-harvest-course/ Meatsmith Membership A gift that gives all year long! More than 45 Harvest Films, Brandon's Harvest Journal, and our community FaceBook group. 60-day free trial available! Use the Newsletter Special option on our sign-up page and apply the coupon code 60daytrial at checkout. Sign up today at FarmsteadMeatsmith.com/product/membership/. Support our podcast on Patreon! Production of each episode takes hours of work, filming, and editing. Becoming a patron can help us keep our episode quality high and allow us to continue filming. Become a patron today at https://www.patreon.com/meatsmith. Timestamps/Topics for Episode 90: 0:00 Foie gras class & the art of farming 8:09 The myth of, "Do what you love." 17:17 The Good Life 22:55 The burden of abundance 37:00 Why foie gras would develop 43:25 Foie gras as preservation 48:29 Horses & cows in our future Links for Episode 90: Ross McKnight of Backwater Foie Grass https://backwaterfoiegras.com/ The Art of Foie Gras class at Backwater Foie Gras January 19-20. https://backwaterfoiegras.com/foiegrasclass The Third Spiritual Alphabet by Francisco de Osuna https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/132629129-the-third-spiritual-alphabet "Only them that has em can loose em." All Creatures Great and Small by James Herriot. https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/32085.All_Creatures_Great_and_Small?ref=nav_sb_ss_1_26 Dr. Richard Meloche of the Alcuin Institute and St. Thomas Aquinas https://alcuininstitute.org/author/richardmeloche https://alcuininstitute.org/writings/musings/thomas-cure-malaise https://alcuininstitute.org/captivate-podcast/aquinas The Importance of the Rural Life: According to the Philosophy of St. Thomas Aquinas A Study in Economic Philosophy by George H Spetz https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/18837689-the-importance-of-the-rural-life?from_search=true&from_srp=true&qid=YIVUsafgXi&rank=1 Thank you, Patrons! Ellen Bloomfield, Monica Allen, Will Eichler, Tim Jones, Dennis M Carlson, Matthew Klimczak, Nate Crown, Tim Colton, Jeremy Wood, Warren Lund, Dohrman Farm, Ps42, Danielle, Alan Fortini-Campbell, Meghan Hickman Become a Patron by going to Patreon.com/meatsmith.
In this episode, we discuss the French monarchy, the difference between power and authority, the history of botulism (or lack thereof), Brandon's aversion to recipes, and our upcoming Art of Foie Gras class with Backwater Foie Gras in Louisiana. Announcements: Come to the 2-Day The Art of Foie Gras class in Louisiana this January 19-20. You'll learn the art of goose harvesting from Brandon and the art of gavage from Ross McKnight of Backwater Foie Gras. Spots are limited to just eight students so as to keep the hands-on experience undiluted. Jump on this chance and sign up today! https://backwaterfoiegras.com/foiegrasclass Come to a 3-Day Family Pig Harvest class, April 25-27, May 2-4, or May 16-18, where you will use only your hands to turn two pigs into kitchen-sized pork cures, cuts, sausage, and charcuterie. Spots are limited to just eight students so as to keep the hands-on experience undiluted. Jump on this chance and sign up today! https://farmsteadmeatsmith.com/the-family-pig/ Come to a 3-Day Family Lamb Harvest class, June 20-22 or October 3-5, where you will use only your hands to turn four sheep into kitchen-sized lamb cuts, sausage, and charcuterie. The main difference between the Family Lamb and Family Pig is the skinning of sheep. Removing the hide from sheep, deer, elk, etc, ought to be learned by hand for an efficient and satisfying harvest. Spots are limited to just eight students so as to keep the hands-on experience undiluted. Jump on this chance and sign up today! https://farmsteadmeatsmith.com/product/3-day-complete-lamb-harvest-course/ Meatsmith Membership A gift that gives all year long! More than 45 Harvest Films, Brandon's Harvest Journal, and our community FaceBook group. 60-day free trial available! Use the Newsletter Special option on our sign-up page and apply the coupon code 60daytrial at checkout. Sign up today at FarmsteadMeatsmith.com/product/membership/. Support our podcast on Patreon! Production of each episode takes hours of work, filming, and editing. Becoming a patron can help us keep our episode quality high and allow us to continue filming. Become a patron today at https://www.patreon.com/meatsmith. Timestamps/Topics for Episode 89: 0:00 Intro & French monarchy 16:47 Difference b/w power & authority 21:26 Inspectors & illegality of property tax 31:13 Your virtues are the oversite 35:13 Botulidm is a modern occurrence 39:10 Brandon's aversion to recipes 44:11 Foie Gras class in January Links for Episode 89: Acadian Flag https://www.usflagsupply.com/historical-flags/historical-american-flags/3-ft.-x-5-ft.-acadian-flag.html La Bannière Louisianaise flag https://newvendee.com/store/p/la-bannire-louisianaise Who's the heir to the French throne? Unknown. There is evidence to suggest that the line of Louis XVI continued through Louis XVII, but mysterious circumstances surround the child-king's imprisonment and potential escape. He was 11 years old when he was imprisoned by the Revolutionary government, and yet a 14-year-old boy was found deceased in his cell. The KNOWN senior Bourbon descendant is Louis Alphonse de Bourbon (if crowned, would be Louis XX) The French monarchy author mentioned is Xavier Reyes-Ayral. The interview between him and Joe McClane can be found: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mFzKTlXfoJo The current Duke of Anjou is Louis Alphonse de Bourbon, who, as stated above, is the apparent senior Bourbon heir. The term Anjou-ism is seen used by those legitimists (pro-French-monarchy activists) who do not believe that Louis Alphonse is the rightful heir. There are other claimants: https://www.connexionfrance.com/article/Mag/French-Facts/Who-are-the-four-rival-claimants-to-the-French-throne The Uprising in the Vendée occurred as a response to Revolutionary incursions into the Vendée, persecution of faithful priests, the murder of Louis XVI, the attempted installation of apostate priests in the parish churches in the Vendée, etc. It was a peasant uprising, nonetheless, led by noblemen and soldiers. It was successful for 3 years until the military campaign of the Catholic and Royal Army of the Vendée failed in the Loire valley. However, resistance to the Revolution continued for years after the destruction of the counter-revolutionary army. La Nouvelle Vendée www.newvendee.com. Their recent conference in Arnaudville, Louisiana, launched a sort of Catholic Counter-Revolution in Louisiana. Crusade Channel with Mike Church https://www.youtube.com/@mikechurch5461 Vendée Radio is a podcast https://www.youtube.com/@vendeeradio6794/featured. (They are not affiliated with La Nouvelle Vendée / The New Vendée.) Dr. Douglas Mark Haugen ... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dfo84AAv5ZQ (the "egregore") Mr. Michael Matt is the editor of The Remnant Newspaper and the host of The Remnant Underground: https://www.youtube.com/@TheRemnantvideo Before Church and State: A Study of Social Order in the Sacramental Kingdom of St. Louis IX by Andrew Willard Jones https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/34847571-before-church-and-state?from_search=true&from_srp=true&qid=2ANrSpobno&rank=1 Men referenced in property tax education: Alphonso Faggiolo: https://www.youtube.com/@TheRemnantvideo and Brandon Sibley: https://www.youtube.com/@TheBigsib Chef John False https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Folse Thank you, Patrons! Ellen Bloomfield, Monica Allen, Will Eichler, Tim Jones, Dennis M Carlson, Matthew Klimczak, Nate Crown, Tim Colton, Jeremy Wood, Warren Lund, Dohrman Farm, Ps42, Danielle, Alan Fortini-Campbell, Meghan Hickman Become a Patron by going to Patreon.com/meatsmith.
Jeannette shares her appearance on the incredible Beyond The Fail podcast, hosted by Jeremy Wood, in which she shares her journey from a young ambitious graduate to leading major companies like TUI and Saga PLC. She discusses her biggest business failures, including a challenging business deal in Moscow surrounded by gun violence and the consequences of choosing the wrong location for her new business. Jeannette's story highlights the importance of perseverance, self-belief, and finding a balance between ambition and enjoying the journey KEY TAKEAWAYS Imposter syndrome is a common challenge that many leaders and entrepreneurs face. It's vital to instil positive self-talk and surround oneself with supportive individuals. While Jeannette achieved significant milestones in her career, she acknowledges that she could have taken more time to appreciate the experiences and environments she was in. The lack of diversity in leadership positions, particularly in the corporate world, remains a significant issue. There is a need for more female role models and advocates for greater diversity and inclusion across all aspects of business. Even experienced entrepreneurs face challenges and unexpected obstacles. It is important to adapt and adjust strategies when faced with adversity and to reassess goals and priorities when necessary. BEST MOMENTS "Failure is an essential part of the business journey, as well as being the key to success." "I was the only one to go to university in my family... I knew that my life was not going to be just to stay in Manchester." "I always knew I wanted to be the boss and running a big business... Why not be the boss? Why not me?" "I used to suffer a hell of a lot with imposter syndrome... I've had to constantly work on my internal dialogue." This is the perfect time to get focused on what YOU want to really achieve in your business, career, and life. It's never too late to be BRAVE and BOLD and unlock your inner BRILLIANCE. If you'd like to jump on a free mentoring session just DM Jeannette at info@jeannettelinfootassociates.com or sign up via Jeannette's linktree https://linktr.ee/JLinfoot VALUABLE RESOURCES Brave, Bold, Brilliant podcast series - https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/brave-bold-brilliant-podcast/id1524278970 ABOUT THE GUEST Jeremy Wood is a public speaker, podcaster and co-founder of Kove Properties, an investment company that has helped their client's acquire over £40 million in property. As well as being a Mentor at Progressive Property Jez has run a number of 6 figure businesses, and has 15 years experience in project management, fundraising, and marketing, working with the likes of Deloitte, Vodafone and Deutsche Bank. He is the host of the Beyond the Failure podcast, which speaks to entrepreneurs and leaders to learn the secrets of failure and how your business can bounce back. https://www.linkedin.com/in/jezwood/ https://linktr.ee/beyondthefail https://www.instagram.com/jezwood/?hl=en ABOUT THE HOST Jeannette Linfoot is a highly regarded senior executive, property investor, board advisor, and business mentor with over 25 years of global professional business experience across the travel, leisure, hospitality, and property sectors. Having bought, ran, and sold businesses all over the world, Jeannette now has a portfolio of her own businesses and also advises and mentors other business leaders to drive forward their strategies as well as their own personal development. Jeannette is a down-to-earth leader, a passionate champion for diversity & inclusion, and a huge advocate of nurturing talent so every person can unleash their full potential and live their dreams. CONTACT THE HOST Jeannette's linktree - https://linktr.ee/JLinfoot https://www.jeannettelinfootassociates.com/ YOUTUBE - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtsU57ZGoPhm55_X0qF16_Q LinkedIn - https://uk.linkedin.com/in/jeannettelinfoot Facebook - https://uk.linkedin.com/in/jeannettelinfoot Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/jeannette.linfoot/ Email - info@jeannettelinfootassociates.com Podcast Description Jeannette Linfoot talks to incredible people about their experiences of being Brave, Bold & Brilliant, which have allowed them to unleash their full potential in business, their careers, and life in general. From the boardroom tables of ‘big' international businesses to the dining room tables of entrepreneurial start-ups, how to overcome challenges, embrace opportunities and take risks, whilst staying ‘true' to yourself is the order of the day.Travel, Bold, Brilliant, business, growth, scale, marketing, investment, investing, entrepreneurship, coach, consultant, mindset, six figures, seven figures, travel, industry, ROI, B2B, inspirational: https://linktr.ee/JLinfootThis show was brought to you by Progressive Media
Jeremy Wood is from Firm 360, the all-in-one practice management software, and an advisor. They aim to keep solid connections with the people we help. They are aware that to do that, they must gain the respect of every single client. Because of this, they work hard to satisfy and even beyond all of their clients' expectations. They wish to have a constructive influence. Their corporate ideals encourage us to uphold the highest standards of conduct. They pledge to live up to these values. They are passionate about creating software that makes life easier for people. They are dedicated to identifying solutions that ease some of the burdens on everyone. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/rush-tech-support/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/rush-tech-support/support
Keith is the Co-founder and CEO of OpenStore, a portfolio of brands building its own shopping destination. Before starting OpenStore, Keith was an early executive at companies like PayPal, eBay, LinkedIn, and Square, a co-founder of OpenDoor, and an early investor in companies like DoorDash, Faire, Affirm, Webflow, Ramp, and Stripe, and is also currently a General Partner at Founders Fund Keith started the company in 2021 with co-founders Jack Abraham, Matt Lanter, and Jeremy Wood, and has since raised over $150 million supported by investors like Atomic, Founders Fund, General Catalyst, Khosla Ventures, Lux Capital, and Vine Ventures. — Brought to you by Packsmith, better fulfillment for growing brands. Sign-up here https://bit.ly/PacksmithBanana — In this episode, we discuss: • The 3-minute conversation that started OpenStore • All the problems that still exist in ecommerce • Why Instagram Shopping failed • What Keith and team are building at OpenStore • Why Wish failed • The margin profile of most consumer brands • A crash course on contribution margin and profitability for startup founders • How OpenStore gets 3x higher contribution margin than other consumer brands • As a VC, the one thing Keith looks for in the founders he backs • A framework for founders and investors to consider when incubating companies • Why Keith thinks no great SF-based startups has been founded since March of 2020 • The reasons he moved to Miami • Why he's bearish on most AI startups • His favorite interview questions for candidates Referenced: • Email Keith - keith@foundersfund.com Where to find Keith: • Twitter: https://twitter.com/rabois • LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/keith Where to find Turner: • Newsletter: https://www.thespl.it • Twitter: https://twitter.com/TurnerNovak Production and distribution by: https://www.supermix.io Want to sponsor the show? https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSebvhBlDDfHJyQdQWs8RwpFxWg-UbG0H-VFey05QSHvLxkZPQ/viewform
This week on The #MiamiTech Podcast the hosts chat with Jeremy Wood founder at OpenStore.While working at Google, he watched as companies like Shopify brought small businesses online and was re-energized by the space. When Keith Rabois told me about an idea to maintain founder-created brands while giving the founder liquidity so they can move on, he knew he was onto something big. The goal was to preserve those brands that might otherwise get shut down. They launched less than a year ago and it's been incredible working with such a passionate, energized team here in Miami. We've already acquired a number of Shopify businesses and have very ambitious goals for next year.Topics on Deck:- His Experience working @google- Building @openstore in Miami with @rabois- Solving Liquidity Problems for Merchants- Developing a New Influencer Marketplace at getgumdrop.app- We Share Our Favorite Miami Restaurants!- And More!Follow Jeremy on Instgram:https://www.instagram.com/jemdwood/?hl=enCheck out OpenStore: https://open.storeGreat Article in Forbes about Jeremy and OpenStore:https://www.forbes.com/sites/garydrenik/2022/01/05/the-startup-that-allows-shopify-merchants-to-cash-in-on-their-business/?sh=6b8af3f8a3e3Check out Gumdrop:https://www.getgumdrop.appFollow the Hosts:Brian Breslin @BrianBreslinMaria Derchi @MariaDerchiIf Interested in being on the podcast please email: Miamitechpod@gmail.comPlease Like + Subscribe + Rate + Review!#miamitech #miamitechpod #crypto #nft #technology #startup
Jeremy Wood's solution, OpenStore, offers these founders the option to sell their businesses or have OpenStore operate and run the stores on their behalf. This innovative approach has not only provided a lifeline for many e-commerce founders but has also positioned OpenStore as a major player in the e-commerce market. Join Adam O'Donnell and Jeremy Wood as they delve deeper into this topic on the next episode of Sit Down Startup.Lark is a next-generation team productivity suite that boosts organisations' efficiency, creativity, and engagement.Get 6 months of free access to Lark Pro by joining Lark for Startups program: https://www.larksuite.com/paid/startupRaion.io is creating the worlds best user experience for founders to engage with investors. Access exclusive discounts and credits from the company's, "including Zendesk" supporting your startup...and connect with Americas leading investors at Raion.io. Learn more at https://raion.io/
The FIRST EVER Ozark Turkey Report! Thank you to Jeremy Wood of Arkansas Game & Fish AND Nick Oakley of Missouri Dept. of Conversation.Arkansas: 1:57Missouri: 32:08The Ozark podcast sits down with men and women from the Ozarks who have a passion for the outdoors. Our aim is to listen, learn, and pass along their knowledge and experiences to help you become a better outdoorsman.Our two hosts are Kyle Veit (@kyleveit_) and Kyle Plunkett (@kyle_plunkett)AND our producer is Daniel Matthews (@datthews)Theme music by JD ClaytonFollow us on Instagram: @theozarkpodcastReach out to us with any recommendations or inquiries: theozarkpodcast@gmail.comThanks to our monthly supporters Mikayla Craig Stauber Jason Howell Wright Henry Matthews Kyle Plunkett Kenzie Veit Conner Veit ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
Today we are joined with Jeff Craig and Arkansas Game & Fish Commissions Turkey Program Coordinator Jeremy Wood to talk about the status of turkeys in Arkansas. We took a bunch of commonly asked questions and and discussed them to try and address your concerns.If you care about having more birds in Arkansas, or most any state in the Eastern's range, you should tune in!
In this week's Mumbrellacast, former Nine and Fairfax execs Chris Janz and David Eisman are set to launch their own subscription news platform, Scire (4:29), while News Corp spruikes its shopfront capabilities at its annual D_Coded event (10:07) . Then, indie agency Bullfrog nabs senior talent from Saatchi & Saatchi (13:12). All this before the inside scoop on the Adobe Summit happening in Las Vegas, with the podcast joined by Adobe head of product marketing Jeremy Wood, UNSW head of marketing and campaigns, Carmen Michael, and president of digital transformation firm Bounteous, Michael McLaren (20:25)
We're in Season 11 of Step by Step and this season, we're focusing on architecting your business for a dream exit. We've partnered with OpenStore to bring you stories from real founders who have successfully built and sold their businesses and will equip you with the tools you need to confidently sell your own business. In this episode, we welcome Jeremy Wood, Co-Founder of OpenStore to discuss OpenStore's approach to negotiating and buying businesses and what entrepreneurs need to know when thinking through an exit. Listen now!In this episode:0:07:38 - How to explore objective metrics for business valuation0:10:12 - Discussion on the commonalities of profitable eCommerce businesses0:13:48 - How to build Shopify stores and build for an exit0:19:09 - eCommerce, drop shipping, and OpenStore's differentiators0:23:29 - The importance of simplicity and transparency in eCommerce transactions0:25:17 - The role of timing an eCommerce business exit0:34:11 - Explore the OpenStore acquisition process0:38:05 - How to maximize the valuation for your dream exitAssociated Links:Want to learn more? Read more about how to architect a dreamy eCommerce exit on our Insiders blog here!Learn more about OpenStore Here.Listen to more Step by Step episodes.Have you checked out our YouTube channel yet?Get your copy of Archetypes, our newly published 240-page journal! Check it out at ArchetypesJournal.comSubscribe to Insiders and The Senses to read more of what we are witnessing in the commerce world!Listen to our other episodes of Future CommerceHave any questions or comments about the show? Let us know on Futurecommerce.fm, or reach out to us on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, or LinkedIn. We love hearing from our listeners!
Jeremy Wood grew up in Portland, and has been heavily influenced by that upbringing. He enjoyed really strong maker communities, supporting local craft artists to thrive and build their business. He moved to the Bay Area for school, and was surrounding by optimism, tech focus, and sheer intelligence. I was under the impression that Portland was beautiful all year round, but Jeremy clued me in that 3 months out of the year, it's a drizzly, soggy mess.As I mentioned, Jeremy was really into the craft builder community, which also led him to be interested in eCommerce. He observed Shopify grow as a marketplace, that made things so easy to launch a store. What he figured out was that there was a need for these store owners to offload and sell their store.This is the creation story of Openstore.SponsorsAirbyteDopplerHost.ioIPInfomablSupportZebraLinksWebsite: https://open.store/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jemdwood/Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/code-story/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Schools such as Tipping Point Academy are changing how we view education. Public schools are not the only option!
Ask, and you will grow. Jeremy Wood recommends benching your pride and learning from those around you — peers, mentors, managers, and clients. The relationships you nurture will always be your most significant resource. Now the Senior Director of Delivery for memoryBlue, East, Jeremy reflects on his climb through the company ranks. As Jeremy's career evolves, he's paying it forward, helping others to elevate their own. In this episode of Tech Sales is for Hustlers, Jeremy shares what matters most when recruiting and nurturing talent, the number one way to improve client relationship management, and why it never pays to take the easy route.
Arizona has now fully embraced Universal School Choice and parents and their kids should be very excited about this.
On this episode Clay is joined by Misty, Josh, Kobly Morehead and Arkansas Game and Fish wild turkey biologist, Jeremy Wood. The crew notes that Misty is the only person without a mustache so Josh brought her a stick-on-stache. Kolby Morehead talks about the Bear Hunting Magazine team in the campaign to raise money for a bear collaring study in Arkansas. Clay jumps on his soap box of picking up stone points on his own land, they discuss some new art he got of Warner Glenn, and a gift from Kolby. They all tell their favorite turkey story from the last Bear Grease Podcast. Then they jump into the issues surrounding wild turkeys in Arkansas with Jeremy. It's an action and information packed episode. Connect with Clay and MeatEater Clay on Instagram MeatEater on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, and Youtube Shop Bear Grease Merch See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode we are in Rat Camp in Crane, Oregon, at Diamond A Guides and the cast includes four guys from SW Washington – Dave Cole, Jeremy Nielsen, Jeremy Wood and Josh Contreras. It has been a good day on the fields shooting sage rats in eastern Oregon and now, in a wall camp with a fire in the wood stove, we talk long range shooting, building guns, hunting in New Zealand, the MacNab Challenge and conservation.
Kyle Veit and Adam Treece sit down with AGFC Turkey Program Coordinator Jeremy Wood to discuss the recent trends in Arkansas turkey population, how it's on the rise, turkey's home range size, how to better manage your property for turkey, and what affects the all-important poult to hen ratio. Support the show & gain access to exclusive video footage of our interviews + free monthly stickers through our patreon: patreon.com/theozarkpodcast Advertising inquiries: theozarkpodcast@gmail.com Instagram: @theozarkpodcast The Ozark Podcast is presented by Inland (@inland.us). Check out our website for merchandise at www.inland-us.com
Collaborating together produces great solutions for government, and in this DevCast John Janek talks with Jeremy Wood (host of "https://www.thegeekwithin.net/ (The Geek Within)"), Jeremiah Akinbohun, and Casey Acosta about the impact of the many opportunities for industry and government collaboration through the https://www.actiac.org/ (American Council for Technology and Industry Advisory Council (ACT-IAC)). If you're in GovTech, you won't want to miss this episode!
Matt Lanter is OpenStore's Head of Product and Co-Founder. Matt served as an engineering and product leader at Opendoor, Facebook and Apple. He was the Chief of Staff at Founders Fund where he worked closely with entrepreneurs building the next set of companies. OpenStore provides life-changing liquidity to Shopify business entrepreneurs that are ready to sell their business so they can move on to what's next. Anyone can get a free, no obligation offer for their business within 24 hours by visiting open.store.00:14 - Helping entrepreneurs exitMatt explained that just like selling a house, selling a business can be a lengthy and complicated process. He wanted to change that.“We provide liquidity to Shopify entrepreneurs. We provide them with an exit and the ability to sell their business when they're ready to. A lot of these entrepreneurs don't really have other options to sell their business. They're too small for private equity. They don't necessarily have the characteristics that venture capitalists are looking for. And there are brokers and marketplaces they could go with, but similar to all other marketplaces, even selling your house, there's no guarantee you'll be able to find a buyer. You can spend a lot of time talking to potential buyers and waste time. So we wanted to make it really simple for these Shopify entrepreneurs to come to our website, connect their Shopify account, their Facebook and Google marketing data if they have it, and get an offer within a day to sell a business if they're ready to.”04:16 - The problem with private equityPrivate equity tends to go after high-value targets. It's also very high-touch, with a process and payment terms that can move at a glacial pace.“Private equity tends to be more like $50 million+ in GMV, so it tends to be on the larger side. Whereas for us, our target size of businesses is between $500K and $10 million. Part of it is that private equity firms tend to be very human-based and use a lot of humans to value these businesses and go through that process. Whereas we've built this pricing engine that's able to within 24 hours deliver an offer for your business. So we're able to serve a much wider swath of businesses and really serve as many people as we can….With private equity also, it's usually a multi-year payout. And there's earnouts over time and all these percentages, and it's a fairly complicated thing for sure. We want to make it very simple. You come to us, you get your offer. It's a very clear price. You actually get 80% of it on the day you close. And then there's a short 1-2 month transition period where you help us learn about your business. And then you get the remaining 20% at the end of that.”15:11 - A streamlined sale processWhen selling on OpenStore, founders immediately get 80% of the payout. After helping transition the business, they get the rest. Meanwhile, OpenStore works hard to maintain brand integrity.“Once you close you get 80% of the cash around then, and then it's a 1-2 month transition period. So the founder works with our team for us to understand how they run their business, transition everything over to us. Domains, all the various parts of the business. And then we run it from there. To that point, as we build out this operating platform we've created a set of OpenStore best practices. Various tools, internal and external, that we use to help run these businesses at scale. And analytics is a very important thing as well. So investing in that and moving those brands to our way of running and growing them. But one thing is we do really want to maintain the brands and grow the brands. We don't want to take a company and then just get rid of the brand. We really want to keep the brand and grow the brand and highlight what the entrepreneur has built.”19:57 - The power of brandOpenStore works exclusively with Shopify brands because they find branding to be important and rewarding work. Shopify provides the tools that the team needs to help brands thrive.“We really like that these Shopify e-commerce brands have a really strong brand. Whereas the ones on Amazon tend to don't need to focus as much on the brand, because they're on Amazon. And Amazon helps them with customer acquisition. And so we focused on Shopify stores because we believe in a strong brand and a strong building-out of these brands. For example, you look at Nike, which is obviously a very well-known brand. and they aren't on Amazon. They can't control their brand experience. And we really want to control the full stack of things…When you're running these businesses, there's marketing, supply chain, demand, planning, forecasting, all those complex things. Which when you run them on Shopify, there's like a lot of room for us to really grow and build out a great platform there. Whereas Amazon takes care of a lot of those things for you, so it was less exciting work for us.”22:45 - Promoting entrepreneurshipMatt and his team are big cheerleaders for entrepreneurs. They hope that the ability to make an easy exit with OpenStore will convince even more people to build something new.“Part of the reason people may be hesitant to start a brand right now, even if they have a really cool idea, is that they could pour years of their life into this and a lot of hard work. And then there's no certain exit after that. Like after five years, let's say, maybe they want to do something else. They don't want to sign up like, ‘I'm going to work on this brand for the next 80 years' or a long time. But now that we provide an exit, hopefully more people will create brands. Generally I think entrepreneurship is just great for society and great for the individuals as well.”26:20 - Catering to startup addictsMatt recognizes that some founders enjoy the thrill of a zero-to-one startup environment. They don't want to be handcuffed to a business long-term, even if it's successful.“A lot of people just enjoy the zero-to-one type of work, and don't want to do the scaling work. Just like you see at startups or other companies, the types of people who enjoy working at a startup versus a larger tech company tend to be different as well. And we have found, to your point about shutting down the business, some of the early companies we acquired when we actually met the founders right when we were starting, some of them were actually in the process of already even shutting down their business. And then they found out about us at the last minute, and were very excited and happy. But it is crazy to think about you pour all your time and effort in this business, just to shut it down.”29:06 - How to prepare to sell your businessOpenStore serves entrepreneurs of all business types. That said, Matt recommends improving product margin and lowering CAC to make your business profitable and attractive.“We want to serve as many entrepreneurs as possible. So we're not particular with what they sell or even the characteristics of the business. It could be a higher margin, lower margin, different repeat purchase rates, average order sizes. But in terms of things to obviously improve your business and grow them, I'm sure it's a lot of things people have heard and standard things. Obviously improving the margin of your products helps by decreasing your fixed costs. On the customer acquisition side, lowering your cost of customer acquisition, which kind of ties to building a product that delights customers. That will lower your costs naturally.”31:11 - OpenStore's 5 foundersA complex business requires a team with varied expertise. That's why Matt is one of five founders who share the work of running the business.“There's five founders of us in total. Obviously it's a really complex business, so we wanted to start with a really great team. So myself, I'm the head of product. And then like I mentioned, Jack Abraham from Atomic came up with the idea, and has been helping us along. As well as Keith Rabois, who is a partner at Founders Fund, another venture firm, and was an executive at Square and LinkedIn. He's currently our CEO, so helping making sure that we're building a great company and making the right decisions. And then we have Jeremy [Wood] our head of engineering, and Mike [Rubenstein] our president who's been president of other great startups, helping us build and scale the company. And as we build out the team, we focus a lot on engineering, product, design, so that we can really run these brands at scale. So both the pricing engine, being able to build a great pricing engine with data science to quickly deliver evaluation to businesses as well as building out the operations platform to help run these businesses.”33:03 - The magic of MiamiRight now, Miami is a hotbed for startup innovation. The city is in full “building mode” compared to more established startup cities that are in “preservation mode.”“I think everyone's really excited about Miami. I think in some ways there's actually similarities between startups and companies and cities. So early in a startup, obviously people are very excited about what you're building. You're focusing on 10x opportunities to grow the business and really optimistic about the future. And then once a company builds something valuable, then companies naturally switch a little more into value preservation or protection. And I think cities are the same way. So San Francisco and New York obviously have been great tech scenes and are great tech scenes, but they're a little bit more in this value preservation mode rather than being excited about building new things. And so what we all love about Miami is everyone here is super excited about building, solving really hard problems. So it's great both from a work and a lifestyle standpoint.” This episode is brought to you by OrderGroove and OpenStore:Visit https://www.ordergroove.com/dtcpod/?utm_source=event&utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=2022q1_dtcpodpodcast_thirdparty_demo_us&utm_content=demo today to receive 2-months off your first contract.Visit https://open.store to get a free, no-obligation offer for your ecommerce business from OpenStore in 24 hours. Have any questions about the show or topics you'd like us to explore further? Shoot us a DM, we'd love to hear from you. Matt Lanter - Head of Product of Open.storeRamon Berrios - CEO of Trend.ioBlaine Bolus - COO of Omnipanel
While Jay and I were speaking at 365 EduCon D.C., we were able to sit down with Jeremy Wood and talk about Teams in Government and how the US Government uses Teams. Jeremy Wood is a Federal IT implementer, strategist, and enthusiast specializing in complex business systems. His expertise and career spans infrastructure, service desk,... Continue Reading →
Founded in 2015 by Charles Hoskinson and Jeremy Wood, IOG (Input Output Global) is one of the world's pre-eminent blockchain infrastructure research and engineering companies. They are a fully decentralised remote working organisation committed to the highest principles of academic rigour and evidence-based software development. The company builds high-assurance blockchain infrastructure solutions for public, private sector and government clients. It is also the driving force behind the decentralised and smart contract platform, Cardano.Guest: Romain Pellerin, Chief Technology Officer - IOGIOHK website ➜ https://bit.ly/IOHKADA#Cardano #ADA #Blockchain~IOHK interview | Creators of Cardano ADA~⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺⎺Become a Diamond Circle Member FREE! ➜ https://bit.ly/PBDiamondCircleSubscribe on YouTube ✅ https://bit.ly/PBNYoutubeSubscribeFacebook
Jeremy Wood shares his mission with his company Balanced by Oils, using natural remedies and yoga to help children with diverse abilities. Jeremy is planning to open a yoga studio merged with a soup kitchen commune to feed people in need. His vision is to combine a cabin-like retreat for hospice patients to transition in dignity using cannabis healing. Jeremy will be offering Reiki training in the fall, and is offering a special discount for Fire & Heart subscribers. He will have a kickstarter to help crowdfund his endeavors.
The Turkey Hunter Podcast with Andy Gagliano | Turkey Hunting Tips, Strategies, and Stories
Possible Progress in Arkansas with Jeremy Wood This week, Jeremy Wood, the Wild Turkey Program Coordinator for the Arkansas Game and Fish Department, joins Andy and Cameron on the show. Jeremy and other biologists proposed some fairly drastic changes to the state of Arkansas a couple of years ago, and he got tremendous buy-in from the turkey hunters in the state who care enough about their turkey population to see if these changes will work. Jeremy talks about some of those changes to regulations and season dates as well as some of the results of their research. Jeremy also speaks about some of the habitat improvement projects going on in the state that are beneficial to wild turkeys. Listen in to this week's show to see if Jeremy touches on something that you think may work to help increase the wild turkey population in your own state.
Jeremy Wood is the Turkey Program Coordinator for Arkansas Game and Fish Commission, he joins the pod to tells us about what's going on in the Natural State.
It doesn't matter if you bring in millions a year or put all your effort into just keeping your small business running — you need to market your business online. With so many digital channels, how do you get the most bang for your digital marketing buck? Kim talks to Jeremy Wood of Hootsuite about using social media to connect with your audience. Mike Huber of Vertical Measures tells us about using social media to build an "owned" audience. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It doesn't matter if you bring in millions a year or put all your effort into just keeping your small business running — you need to market your business online. With so many digital channels, how do you get the most bang for your digital marketing buck? Kim talks to Jeremy Wood of Hootsuite about using social media to connect with your audience. Mike Huber of Vertical Measures tells us about using social media to build an "owned" audience. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It doesn't matter if you bring in millions a year or put all your effort into just keeping your small business running — you need to market your business online. With so many digital channels, how do you get the most bang for your digital marketing buck? Kim talks to Jeremy Wood of Hootsuite about using social media to connect with your audience. Mike Huber of Vertical Measures tells us about using social media to build an "owned" audience.
On this episode of the Room for Joy show we are taking a break from our Roman's 13 series to chat with a SPECIAL GUEST, Jeremy Wood of Phoenix, AZ Jeremy has been an entrepreneur since the age of 24. In 2006 he founded a home improvement, design and building store in NE Phoenix, called “Improve Home Center” where he serves as the CEO. He graduated from Southwestern Bible College in 2002 with honors and a degree in Biblical studies with an emphasis on pastoral ministries. He was a pastor in his early 20’s and has extensive leadership experience with church and parachurch ministries over the past 20 years, and has been happily married to his beautiful wife, Karina since 2004. They have 3 amazing children, and most recently he is the Founder of Great 48! Great 48 is a movement to protect and restore our constitutional freedoms during times of crisis. Jeremy's movement has attracted the attention and participation of tens of thousands of people, many of whom aren't clear on what Great 48 is trying to do and why. So, we sat down with Jeremy to hear his story and why he is so passionate about protecting our freedoms here in Arizona. Let us know you're listening and what you think.
Welcome to The Download, a deep discussion of the trends shaping technology today. In this RegTech Innovation episode we are joined by three firms from across the marketplace. We discuss how relevant POC’s and Trials are for market engagement and during the decision making process, finding out the features that make POC’s shine. Our guests also uncover the role of consultancy firms in the RFP RFI process, as well as discussing which side comes out on top between regulation driving technology vs technology driving regulation. We also find out what happens when the rules change, when firms are in the middle of an engagement, such as IFRS17 extensions. Our guests in this episode are John Pucciarelli Director of Strategic Initiatives at AcadiaSoft who leads outreach to IM phase 5 firms. Andy Reid, a global payments and digital banking expert, who drives the International Business Growth Strategy as Chief Revenue Officer at Bleckwen - headquartered in Paris. Jeremy Wood, CEO & Founder at Legerity has 25 years’ experience in finance systems and accounting rules technology. He is a winner of the prestigious EY Entrepreneur of the Year award and 2018 UK Technology Enterprise Awards.
Jeremy has been leading his young government agency's Teams pilot program. Hear about what it takes to roll out Teams in the GCC in a regulated environment and how this effort has lead to a significant reduction in emails.
On this week's episode of Insurtech Insider, hosts Sarah Kocianski and Nigel Walsh are joined by new and returning guests to discuss the latest news in the world of insurance and insurtech. This week's guests include: Antton Pena - Founder of Flock Jeremy Wood - CEO and Founder of Legerity Financials Sophie Winwood - Investor at Anthemis We cover the following stories from the insurtech and insurance space: SMEs increase insurance for Brexit (04:30) Death fraudster sentenced to almost 6 years in jail (11:25) Two of Australia's biggest insurers stop selling insurance in fire-affected areas (15:58) ByMiles gets open banking license (23:08) Grab enables travel insurance! (28:22) We also bring you an amazing interview with Getsafe CEO and Co-Founder, Christian Wiens! (33:23) All that and much more on this week's episode of Insurtech Insider! Our friends over at Honcho are crowdfunding! If you want to be part of and support the insurtech revolution, check them out on Crowdcube! https://www.crowdcube.com/honcho Subscribe so you never miss an episode, leave a review on iTunes and every other podcast app. Spread the insurtech love by sharing or tweeting this podcast. Love fintech? Then sign up for our newsletter, Fintech in Five. A snack-sized selection of the week's biggest stories, longer reads, soundbites and more. Just visit this link to sign up! 11fs.com/newsletter This episode of Insurtech Insider was produced by Hanna Samuelson and edited by Alex Woodhouse. Special Guests: Antton Pena, Jeremy Wood , and Sophie Winwood.
Episode 190 of The Independent Characters has a return to our Show of Force series - and this time it's all about The Insidious Curse... We take a deep dive into the horror that is The Genestealer Cults! To help us out with this, we have brought in our resident Genestealer Cult player, new guest host, new member to our gaming group, AND new 40k Player (since January!), Matt Bruner! He is a long time friend of Jodys and we think you will love him as much as we do! We kick off the show getting to know Matt, then launch into a lengthy hobby progress and games played section with Jody talking a little bit about his experience at the Boise GT. You can hear even more about that on the Splintermind Podcast (link below). Then it's time to launch into our coverage of The Genestealer Cults. What an amazing army this is! While the concept isn't new, the army IS, and you will hear all about it here. Finally we have a short interview with Facebook Group fan-favorite Jeremy Wood. If you aren't a member of the group, you are really missing out on some incredibly work Jeremy does with his dioramas. Then it's time to say goodbye as we close out another episode. We hope you enjoy it. We couldn't figure out why it was taking so long to record... until I put it together and it is nearly four hours of content! Time Stamps: 0:00:00 - Show Intro and Host Introduction 0:16:30 - Workbench and Hobby Progress 1:22:10 - Show of Force - The Insidious Curse: Part 1 2:42:50 - Show of Force - The Insidious Curse: Part 2 3:37:10 - Interview with Jeremy Wood 3:52:10 - Final Thoughts and show closing Relevant Links: KR Multicase - SPONSOR Tablewar! - SPONSOR Wargamma - SPONSOR CK Studios - SPONSOR Forge World Games Workshop The Black Library Objective Secured Events and Podcast Splintermind Podcast Creature Caster
The Independent Characters - A Warhammer 40k Podcast | Radio
Episode 190 of The Independent Characters has a return to our Show of Force series - and this time it's all about The Insidious Curse... We take a deep dive into the horror that is The Genestealer Cults! To help us out with this, we have brought in our resident Genestealer Cult player, new guest host, new member to our gaming group, AND new 40k Player (since January!), Matt Bruner! He is a long time friend of Jodys and we think you will love him as much as we do! We kick off the show getting to know Matt, then launch into a lengthy hobby progress and games played section with Jody talking a little bit about his experience at the Boise GT. You can hear even more about that on the Splintermind Podcast (link below). Then it's time to launch into our coverage of The Genestealer Cults. What an amazing army this is! While the concept isn't new, the army IS, and you will hear all about it here. Finally we have a short interview with Facebook Group fan-favorite Jeremy Wood. If you aren't a member of the group, you are really missing out on some incredibly work Jeremy does with his dioramas. Then it's time to say goodbye as we close out another episode. We hope you enjoy it. We couldn't figure out why it was taking so long to record... until I put it together and it is nearly four hours of content! Time Stamps: 0:00:00 - Show Intro and Host Introduction 0:16:30 - Workbench and Hobby Progress 1:22:10 - Show of Force - The Insidious Curse: Part 1 2:42:50 - Show of Force - The Insidious Curse: Part 2 3:37:10 - Interview with Jeremy Wood 3:52:10 - Final Thoughts and show closing Relevant Links: KR Multicase - SPONSOR Tablewar! - SPONSOR Wargamma - SPONSOR CK Studios - SPONSOR Forge World Games Workshop The Black Library Objective Secured Events and Podcast Splintermind Podcast Creature Caster
Hootsuite, the global leader in social media management, trusted by more than 18 million customers and employees at more than 80% of the Fortune 1000, recently announced the launch of a Google My Business app integration in the Hootsuite platform and its new Google Preferred Partner status. This is Hootsuite’s second major Google integration launch in less than a year and is a testament to Hootsuite’s commitment to deepening its product integrations and alliance with Google. Hootsuite also recently unveiled seven new chatbot building platforms in its App Directory. These new services will enable unique use cases and integrations that will help customers engage key audiences, grow their following, and obtain a full view of the social conversations impacting their brand. They also support the integration of Facebook messages in Hootsuite Inbox. I also learned that Audi Italia utilizes chatbots to dramatically increase engagement with their audience of Audi Fans through user-generated content related to the vehicle and brand. I felt compelled to find out more and invited them onto the show. Jeremy Wood, VP of Product Marketing at Hootsuite joins me on my daily tech podcast to share his insights into how advancements in conversational AI and why it is the driving force behind bots. Jeremy leads the Product Marketing organization, focused on strategically shaping and bringing Hootsuite's products to market. He has more than 19 years in global marketing experience with SMB and Enterprise Saas businesses.
Whether you work for a Fortune 500 company, a small mom-and-pop shop, or act as a "solo-preneur," you need to market your business online. With so many digital channels, where do you get the most bang for your digital marketing buck? We talk to Jeremy Wood of Hootsuite about using social media to connect with your audience. And Mike Huber of Vertical Measures tells us about using social media to build an "owned" audience. Is there some magical formula that works? Listen to this conversation and find out. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Whether you work for a Fortune 500 company, a small mom-and-pop shop, or act as a "solo-preneur," you need to market your business online. With so many digital channels, where do you get the most bang for your digital marketing buck? We talk to Jeremy Wood of Hootsuite about using social media to connect with your audience. And Mike Huber of Vertical Measures tells us about using social media to build an "owned" audience. Is there some magical formula that works? Listen to this conversation and find out.
Mike and Patrick dive into what it means to create a brand in beer...Jeremy Wood from Brewery Branding Co joins the show, and Beer of the Week!
In this episode of Project Management Office Hours, Joe Pusz, PMO Joe has a great discussion with special guests Jeremy Wood, Sr Agile Coach with Matrix. Joe and Jeremy have a light-hearted, but informative, discussion on the benefits, challenges, and mindset of Agile. Jeremy also shares details on the upcoming BADD Conference on September 18th presented by the local IIBA Chapter.As a Sr Agile Coach, Jeremy has extensive experience working with organizations to transform or implement Agile. Agile is a mindset and not a methodology. He shares the distinction between Agile, Scrum, Kanban and how they are utilized within Agile. Jeremy also provides examples of the challenges organizations face with transforming or converting from traditional thinking to an Agile mindset. However, he also shares the benefits. He is realistic in his assessment and does not live in the Utopian world an Agile coach would like to have you think exists. A great insight Jeremy shared is that when using an Agile mindset you are not seeking to implement Best Practices as that would indicate you are done, rather Agile prefers thinking of continuous improvement thinking. Jeremey does a great job in this fast-moving hour-long discussion making the concepts of Agile simple enough to understand and follow along, yet complex enough to get a true understanding of what Agile really is. Listen in to get all the insights and details!Thank you to our Sponsors, TALAIA and THE PMO SQUAD. TALAIA is a European based PPM Software solution provider which is entering the US market. To sign up for a free 30-day trial and learn more about this PMBOK aligned solution visit – http://en.talaia-openppm.comTune in for upcoming shows with Project Management leaders discussing a wide range of current topics and events!
E13 Jeremy Wood Sr Agile Coach Matrix Resources In this episode of Project Management Office Hours, Joe Pusz, PMO Joe has a great discussion with special guests Jeremy Wood, Sr Agile Coach with Matrix. Joe and Jeremy have a light-hearted, but informative, discussion on the benefits, challenges, and mindset of Agile. Jeremy also shares details […] The post E13 Jeremy Wood Sr Agile Coach Matrix Resources appeared first on Business RadioX ®.
In this edition of Round Table Roulette, we sit down with SolutionsIQ's Alan Dayley, Reece Schmit from Agile Velocity, and Jeremy Wood from Matrix Resources. Some questions and head-scratchers that our panel wrestles with include:- Where will Agile be in 10 years?- What's your favorite retrospective technique?- How do you know if your pace is sustainable?- Describe the high-performing Agile team you've ever seen. Hosted by SolutionsIQ's Howard Sublett at Agile Arizona 2017 in Phoenix, Arizona. To receive real-time updates: Podcast library: www.agileamped.com Subscribe to our newsletter: www.solutionsiq.com/agile-amped/ Connect on Twitter: twitter.com/AgileAmpedFollow us on Facebook: www.facebook.com/agileamped
The “ownership” of Southern food is a divisive cultural issue, reflective of the ongoing struggle for racial justice in America. Michael Twitty shares with us that struggle in The Cooking Gene: A Journey Through African American Culinary History in the Old South (Harper Collins: Amistad 2017). He brings to life the unsung heroes of American food history, the black cooks in slavery and freedom who created an innovative and syncretic cuisine. Like them, he builds upon the South’s diverse botanical ecosystems, a continent of indigenous nations, and the long roots of memory, extending back across the middle passage to West Africa. For Twitty, this is also a tale of family. He shares his ancestors experiences through stories, recipes, genetic tests, and historical documents. He travels from abandoned cotton plantations to black-owned organic farms, from synagogues in Georgia to vodun rituals in New Orleans. As Twitty takes us on this journey, he shows how food and memory together can heal. He reminds that as uncomfortable as honest conversation about racism’s legacy can be, its the only path to rejuvenating body, soul, and American community. Jeremy Wood is a Seattle appellate attorney. Much of his scholarly work has concerned Native American interests. He also serves as Co-Chair for the Seattle City Human Rights Commission and as a Jewish educator. You can learn more about his work by visiting https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyfwood. He can be reach at jeremywood10@gmail.com.
The “ownership” of Southern food is a divisive cultural issue, reflective of the ongoing struggle for racial justice in America. Michael Twitty shares with us that struggle in The Cooking Gene: A Journey Through African American Culinary History in the Old South (Harper Collins: Amistad 2017). He brings to life the unsung heroes of American food history, the black cooks in slavery and freedom who created an innovative and syncretic cuisine. Like them, he builds upon the South's diverse botanical ecosystems, a continent of indigenous nations, and the long roots of memory, extending back across the middle passage to West Africa. For Twitty, this is also a tale of family. He shares his ancestors experiences through stories, recipes, genetic tests, and historical documents. He travels from abandoned cotton plantations to black-owned organic farms, from synagogues in Georgia to vodun rituals in New Orleans. As Twitty takes us on this journey, he shows how food and memory together can heal. He reminds that as uncomfortable as honest conversation about racism's legacy can be, its the only path to rejuvenating body, soul, and American community. Jeremy Wood is a Seattle appellate attorney. Much of his scholarly work has concerned Native American interests. He also serves as Co-Chair for the Seattle City Human Rights Commission and as a Jewish educator. You can learn more about his work by visiting https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyfwood. He can be reach at jeremywood10@gmail.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/african-american-studies
The “ownership” of Southern food is a divisive cultural issue, reflective of the ongoing struggle for racial justice in America. Michael Twitty shares with us that struggle in The Cooking Gene: A Journey Through African American Culinary History in the Old South (Harper Collins: Amistad 2017). He brings to life the unsung heroes of American food history, the black cooks in slavery and freedom who created an innovative and syncretic cuisine. Like them, he builds upon the South’s diverse botanical ecosystems, a continent of indigenous nations, and the long roots of memory, extending back across the middle passage to West Africa. For Twitty, this is also a tale of family. He shares his ancestors experiences through stories, recipes, genetic tests, and historical documents. He travels from abandoned cotton plantations to black-owned organic farms, from synagogues in Georgia to vodun rituals in New Orleans. As Twitty takes us on this journey, he shows how food and memory together can heal. He reminds that as uncomfortable as honest conversation about racism’s legacy can be, its the only path to rejuvenating body, soul, and American community. Jeremy Wood is a Seattle appellate attorney. Much of his scholarly work has concerned Native American interests. He also serves as Co-Chair for the Seattle City Human Rights Commission and as a Jewish educator. You can learn more about his work by visiting https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyfwood. He can be reach at jeremywood10@gmail.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The “ownership” of Southern food is a divisive cultural issue, reflective of the ongoing struggle for racial justice in America. Michael Twitty shares with us that struggle in The Cooking Gene: A Journey Through African American Culinary History in the Old South (Harper Collins: Amistad 2017). He brings to life the unsung heroes of American food history, the black cooks in slavery and freedom who created an innovative and syncretic cuisine. Like them, he builds upon the South’s diverse botanical ecosystems, a continent of indigenous nations, and the long roots of memory, extending back across the middle passage to West Africa. For Twitty, this is also a tale of family. He shares his ancestors experiences through stories, recipes, genetic tests, and historical documents. He travels from abandoned cotton plantations to black-owned organic farms, from synagogues in Georgia to vodun rituals in New Orleans. As Twitty takes us on this journey, he shows how food and memory together can heal. He reminds that as uncomfortable as honest conversation about racism’s legacy can be, its the only path to rejuvenating body, soul, and American community. Jeremy Wood is a Seattle appellate attorney. Much of his scholarly work has concerned Native American interests. He also serves as Co-Chair for the Seattle City Human Rights Commission and as a Jewish educator. You can learn more about his work by visiting https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyfwood. He can be reach at jeremywood10@gmail.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The “ownership” of Southern food is a divisive cultural issue, reflective of the ongoing struggle for racial justice in America. Michael Twitty shares with us that struggle in The Cooking Gene: A Journey Through African American Culinary History in the Old South (Harper Collins: Amistad 2017). He brings to life the unsung heroes of American food history, the black cooks in slavery and freedom who created an innovative and syncretic cuisine. Like them, he builds upon the South’s diverse botanical ecosystems, a continent of indigenous nations, and the long roots of memory, extending back across the middle passage to West Africa. For Twitty, this is also a tale of family. He shares his ancestors experiences through stories, recipes, genetic tests, and historical documents. He travels from abandoned cotton plantations to black-owned organic farms, from synagogues in Georgia to vodun rituals in New Orleans. As Twitty takes us on this journey, he shows how food and memory together can heal. He reminds that as uncomfortable as honest conversation about racism’s legacy can be, its the only path to rejuvenating body, soul, and American community. Jeremy Wood is a Seattle appellate attorney. Much of his scholarly work has concerned Native American interests. He also serves as Co-Chair for the Seattle City Human Rights Commission and as a Jewish educator. You can learn more about his work by visiting https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyfwood. He can be reach at jeremywood10@gmail.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The “ownership” of Southern food is a divisive cultural issue, reflective of the ongoing struggle for racial justice in America. Michael Twitty shares with us that struggle in The Cooking Gene: A Journey Through African American Culinary History in the Old South (Harper Collins: Amistad 2017). He brings to life the unsung heroes of American food history, the black cooks in slavery and freedom who created an innovative and syncretic cuisine. Like them, he builds upon the South’s diverse botanical ecosystems, a continent of indigenous nations, and the long roots of memory, extending back across the middle passage to West Africa. For Twitty, this is also a tale of family. He shares his ancestors experiences through stories, recipes, genetic tests, and historical documents. He travels from abandoned cotton plantations to black-owned organic farms, from synagogues in Georgia to vodun rituals in New Orleans. As Twitty takes us on this journey, he shows how food and memory together can heal. He reminds that as uncomfortable as honest conversation about racism’s legacy can be, its the only path to rejuvenating body, soul, and American community. Jeremy Wood is a Seattle appellate attorney. Much of his scholarly work has concerned Native American interests. He also serves as Co-Chair for the Seattle City Human Rights Commission and as a Jewish educator. You can learn more about his work by visiting https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyfwood. He can be reach at jeremywood10@gmail.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The mass incarceration of Japanese Americans in the Pacific West is one of the most shameful episodes in our nation's history. As the United States waged war against fascism, it removed tens of thousands of American citizens and their families from their homes. The First to Cry Down Injustice?: Western Jews and Japanese Removal during WWII (Lexington Books, 2008) invites us into a community in the middle of that contradiction. American Jews knew too well the dangers of prejudice but remained firmly committed to the fight against Nazism, at any cost. Professor Ellen Eisenberg invites us into the complexity of Jewish response to Japanese incarceration. In doing so, she parses the tense and near universal silence that Jewish institutions kept as their Japanese neighbor disappeared. This silence, she proposes, reflected not indifference but a struggle to reconcile opposition to bigotry with an unwillingness to risk speaking out. But she also tells other stories at the margins of that silence. Jewish civic leaders, academics, and Rabbis who raised their voices in resistance. And one Jewish institution that chose a different path, and in doing so providing the federal administration propaganda to support the incarceration policy. Professor Eisenberg paints in great detail the larger context of the Western ethnic landscape and argues that Jewish responses to Japanese incarceration were linked to, and help to illuminate the identity of western Jews both as Westerners and as Jews. Jeremy Wood is a Seattle attorney. Much of his legal and scholarly work has concerned Native American interests. He also serves as Co-Chair for the Seattle City Human Rights Commission and teaches Jewish literature to high school students after school. You can learn more about his work by visiting https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyfwood. He can be reach at jeremywood10@gmail.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The mass incarceration of Japanese Americans in the Pacific West is one of the most shameful episodes in our nation’s history. As the United States waged war against fascism, it removed tens of thousands of American citizens and their families from their homes. The First to Cry Down Injustice?: Western Jews and Japanese Removal during WWII (Lexington Books, 2008) invites us into a community in the middle of that contradiction. American Jews knew too well the dangers of prejudice but remained firmly committed to the fight against Nazism, at any cost. Professor Ellen Eisenberg invites us into the complexity of Jewish response to Japanese incarceration. In doing so, she parses the tense and near universal silence that Jewish institutions kept as their Japanese neighbor disappeared. This silence, she proposes, reflected not indifference but a struggle to reconcile opposition to bigotry with an unwillingness to risk speaking out. But she also tells other stories at the margins of that silence. Jewish civic leaders, academics, and Rabbis who raised their voices in resistance. And one Jewish institution that chose a different path, and in doing so providing the federal administration propaganda to support the incarceration policy. Professor Eisenberg paints in great detail the larger context of the Western ethnic landscape and argues that Jewish responses to Japanese incarceration were linked to, and help to illuminate the identity of western Jews both as Westerners and as Jews. Jeremy Wood is a Seattle attorney. Much of his legal and scholarly work has concerned Native American interests. He also serves as Co-Chair for the Seattle City Human Rights Commission and teaches Jewish literature to high school students after school. You can learn more about his work by visiting https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyfwood. He can be reach at jeremywood10@gmail.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The mass incarceration of Japanese Americans in the Pacific West is one of the most shameful episodes in our nation’s history. As the United States waged war against fascism, it removed tens of thousands of American citizens and their families from their homes. The First to Cry Down Injustice?: Western Jews and Japanese Removal during WWII (Lexington Books, 2008) invites us into a community in the middle of that contradiction. American Jews knew too well the dangers of prejudice but remained firmly committed to the fight against Nazism, at any cost. Professor Ellen Eisenberg invites us into the complexity of Jewish response to Japanese incarceration. In doing so, she parses the tense and near universal silence that Jewish institutions kept as their Japanese neighbor disappeared. This silence, she proposes, reflected not indifference but a struggle to reconcile opposition to bigotry with an unwillingness to risk speaking out. But she also tells other stories at the margins of that silence. Jewish civic leaders, academics, and Rabbis who raised their voices in resistance. And one Jewish institution that chose a different path, and in doing so providing the federal administration propaganda to support the incarceration policy. Professor Eisenberg paints in great detail the larger context of the Western ethnic landscape and argues that Jewish responses to Japanese incarceration were linked to, and help to illuminate the identity of western Jews both as Westerners and as Jews. Jeremy Wood is a Seattle attorney. Much of his legal and scholarly work has concerned Native American interests. He also serves as Co-Chair for the Seattle City Human Rights Commission and teaches Jewish literature to high school students after school. You can learn more about his work by visiting https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyfwood. He can be reach at jeremywood10@gmail.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The mass incarceration of Japanese Americans in the Pacific West is one of the most shameful episodes in our nation’s history. As the United States waged war against fascism, it removed tens of thousands of American citizens and their families from their homes. The First to Cry Down Injustice?: Western Jews and Japanese Removal during WWII (Lexington Books, 2008) invites us into a community in the middle of that contradiction. American Jews knew too well the dangers of prejudice but remained firmly committed to the fight against Nazism, at any cost. Professor Ellen Eisenberg invites us into the complexity of Jewish response to Japanese incarceration. In doing so, she parses the tense and near universal silence that Jewish institutions kept as their Japanese neighbor disappeared. This silence, she proposes, reflected not indifference but a struggle to reconcile opposition to bigotry with an unwillingness to risk speaking out. But she also tells other stories at the margins of that silence. Jewish civic leaders, academics, and Rabbis who raised their voices in resistance. And one Jewish institution that chose a different path, and in doing so providing the federal administration propaganda to support the incarceration policy. Professor Eisenberg paints in great detail the larger context of the Western ethnic landscape and argues that Jewish responses to Japanese incarceration were linked to, and help to illuminate the identity of western Jews both as Westerners and as Jews. Jeremy Wood is a Seattle attorney. Much of his legal and scholarly work has concerned Native American interests. He also serves as Co-Chair for the Seattle City Human Rights Commission and teaches Jewish literature to high school students after school. You can learn more about his work by visiting https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyfwood. He can be reach at jeremywood10@gmail.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The mass incarceration of Japanese Americans in the Pacific West is one of the most shameful episodes in our nation’s history. As the United States waged war against fascism, it removed tens of thousands of American citizens and their families from their homes. The First to Cry Down Injustice?: Western Jews and Japanese Removal during WWII (Lexington Books, 2008) invites us into a community in the middle of that contradiction. American Jews knew too well the dangers of prejudice but remained firmly committed to the fight against Nazism, at any cost. Professor Ellen Eisenberg invites us into the complexity of Jewish response to Japanese incarceration. In doing so, she parses the tense and near universal silence that Jewish institutions kept as their Japanese neighbor disappeared. This silence, she proposes, reflected not indifference but a struggle to reconcile opposition to bigotry with an unwillingness to risk speaking out. But she also tells other stories at the margins of that silence. Jewish civic leaders, academics, and Rabbis who raised their voices in resistance. And one Jewish institution that chose a different path, and in doing so providing the federal administration propaganda to support the incarceration policy. Professor Eisenberg paints in great detail the larger context of the Western ethnic landscape and argues that Jewish responses to Japanese incarceration were linked to, and help to illuminate the identity of western Jews both as Westerners and as Jews. Jeremy Wood is a Seattle attorney. Much of his legal and scholarly work has concerned Native American interests. He also serves as Co-Chair for the Seattle City Human Rights Commission and teaches Jewish literature to high school students after school. You can learn more about his work by visiting https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyfwood. He can be reach at jeremywood10@gmail.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The mass incarceration of Japanese Americans in the Pacific West is one of the most shameful episodes in our nation’s history. As the United States waged war against fascism, it removed tens of thousands of American citizens and their families from their homes. The First to Cry Down Injustice?: Western Jews and Japanese Removal during WWII (Lexington Books, 2008) invites us into a community in the middle of that contradiction. American Jews knew too well the dangers of prejudice but remained firmly committed to the fight against Nazism, at any cost. Professor Ellen Eisenberg invites us into the complexity of Jewish response to Japanese incarceration. In doing so, she parses the tense and near universal silence that Jewish institutions kept as their Japanese neighbor disappeared. This silence, she proposes, reflected not indifference but a struggle to reconcile opposition to bigotry with an unwillingness to risk speaking out. But she also tells other stories at the margins of that silence. Jewish civic leaders, academics, and Rabbis who raised their voices in resistance. And one Jewish institution that chose a different path, and in doing so providing the federal administration propaganda to support the incarceration policy. Professor Eisenberg paints in great detail the larger context of the Western ethnic landscape and argues that Jewish responses to Japanese incarceration were linked to, and help to illuminate the identity of western Jews both as Westerners and as Jews. Jeremy Wood is a Seattle attorney. Much of his legal and scholarly work has concerned Native American interests. He also serves as Co-Chair for the Seattle City Human Rights Commission and teaches Jewish literature to high school students after school. You can learn more about his work by visiting https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyfwood. He can be reach at jeremywood10@gmail.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The mass incarceration of Japanese Americans in the Pacific West is one of the most shameful episodes in our nation’s history. As the United States waged war against fascism, it removed tens of thousands of American citizens and their families from their homes. The First to Cry Down Injustice?: Western Jews and Japanese Removal during WWII (Lexington Books, 2008) invites us into a community in the middle of that contradiction. American Jews knew too well the dangers of prejudice but remained firmly committed to the fight against Nazism, at any cost. Professor Ellen Eisenberg invites us into the complexity of Jewish response to Japanese incarceration. In doing so, she parses the tense and near universal silence that Jewish institutions kept as their Japanese neighbor disappeared. This silence, she proposes, reflected not indifference but a struggle to reconcile opposition to bigotry with an unwillingness to risk speaking out. But she also tells other stories at the margins of that silence. Jewish civic leaders, academics, and Rabbis who raised their voices in resistance. And one Jewish institution that chose a different path, and in doing so providing the federal administration propaganda to support the incarceration policy. Professor Eisenberg paints in great detail the larger context of the Western ethnic landscape and argues that Jewish responses to Japanese incarceration were linked to, and help to illuminate the identity of western Jews both as Westerners and as Jews. Jeremy Wood is a Seattle attorney. Much of his legal and scholarly work has concerned Native American interests. He also serves as Co-Chair for the Seattle City Human Rights Commission and teaches Jewish literature to high school students after school. You can learn more about his work by visiting https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyfwood. He can be reach at jeremywood10@gmail.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Scholars have long treated cities as spaces in which indigenous people have little presence and less significance. This notion that urbanity and indignity stand at odds results from a potent mix of racist essentialism and the historical myth of progress from savagery to civilization. Just as this paradigm excludes native peoples from the City, it excludes them from modernity. Perhaps no city expresses this erasure of Indigenous bodies, minds, and histories so effectively as London, the capital of the British Empire. Yet as Dr. Coll Thrush demonstrates in his new book Indigenous London: Native Travelers at the Heart of Empire (Yale University Press, 2016), beneath this erasure lie centuries of indigenous experience. In his hands London becomes not merely the Heart of Empire but the periphery of a richly textured indigenous diaspora, a Red Atlantic. Dr. Thrush ambitiously recasts five centuries of London’s history through the lived experiences of native visitors from Canada, the United States, New Zealand, and Australia. These travelers were royal statesmen and diplomats, missionaries and athletes. They came to further the complex interests of their own Nations. They critiqued the metropolis’s excess, its ecological unsustainability, and its inhumanity towards the poor. In doing so, they participated in creating London’s present. Their impact remains in London’s material culture and its understanding of its own urban and suburban realities. Join us as Dr. Thrush invites us into an Indigenous London that is not so much hidden as deliberately silenced, and which courses throughout the fabric of the modern city. Jeremy Wood is a Seattle attorney. Much of his legal and scholarly work has concerned Native American interests. Additionally he serves as a Human Rights Commissioner for the City of Seattle and teaches Jewish literature to middle and high school students in an after school program. You can find out more about his work by visiting https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyfwood. He can be reach at jeremywood10@gmail.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Scholars have long treated cities as spaces in which indigenous people have little presence and less significance. This notion that urbanity and indignity stand at odds results from a potent mix of racist essentialism and the historical myth of progress from savagery to civilization. Just as this paradigm excludes native peoples from the City, it excludes them from modernity. Perhaps no city expresses this erasure of Indigenous bodies, minds, and histories so effectively as London, the capital of the British Empire. Yet as Dr. Coll Thrush demonstrates in his new book Indigenous London: Native Travelers at the Heart of Empire (Yale University Press, 2016), beneath this erasure lie centuries of indigenous experience. In his hands London becomes not merely the Heart of Empire but the periphery of a richly textured indigenous diaspora, a Red Atlantic. Dr. Thrush ambitiously recasts five centuries of London’s history through the lived experiences of native visitors from Canada, the United States, New Zealand, and Australia. These travelers were royal statesmen and diplomats, missionaries and athletes. They came to further the complex interests of their own Nations. They critiqued the metropolis’s excess, its ecological unsustainability, and its inhumanity towards the poor. In doing so, they participated in creating London’s present. Their impact remains in London’s material culture and its understanding of its own urban and suburban realities. Join us as Dr. Thrush invites us into an Indigenous London that is not so much hidden as deliberately silenced, and which courses throughout the fabric of the modern city. Jeremy Wood is a Seattle attorney. Much of his legal and scholarly work has concerned Native American interests. Additionally he serves as a Human Rights Commissioner for the City of Seattle and teaches Jewish literature to middle and high school students in an after school program. You can find out more about his work by visiting https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyfwood. He can be reach at jeremywood10@gmail.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Scholars have long treated cities as spaces in which indigenous people have little presence and less significance. This notion that urbanity and indignity stand at odds results from a potent mix of racist essentialism and the historical myth of progress from savagery to civilization. Just as this paradigm excludes native peoples from the City, it excludes them from modernity. Perhaps no city expresses this erasure of Indigenous bodies, minds, and histories so effectively as London, the capital of the British Empire. Yet as Dr. Coll Thrush demonstrates in his new book Indigenous London: Native Travelers at the Heart of Empire (Yale University Press, 2016), beneath this erasure lie centuries of indigenous experience. In his hands London becomes not merely the Heart of Empire but the periphery of a richly textured indigenous diaspora, a Red Atlantic. Dr. Thrush ambitiously recasts five centuries of London’s history through the lived experiences of native visitors from Canada, the United States, New Zealand, and Australia. These travelers were royal statesmen and diplomats, missionaries and athletes. They came to further the complex interests of their own Nations. They critiqued the metropolis’s excess, its ecological unsustainability, and its inhumanity towards the poor. In doing so, they participated in creating London’s present. Their impact remains in London’s material culture and its understanding of its own urban and suburban realities. Join us as Dr. Thrush invites us into an Indigenous London that is not so much hidden as deliberately silenced, and which courses throughout the fabric of the modern city. Jeremy Wood is a Seattle attorney. Much of his legal and scholarly work has concerned Native American interests. Additionally he serves as a Human Rights Commissioner for the City of Seattle and teaches Jewish literature to middle and high school students in an after school program. You can find out more about his work by visiting https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyfwood. He can be reach at jeremywood10@gmail.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Scholars have long treated cities as spaces in which indigenous people have little presence and less significance. This notion that urbanity and indignity stand at odds results from a potent mix of racist essentialism and the historical myth of progress from savagery to civilization. Just as this paradigm excludes native peoples from the City, it excludes them from modernity. Perhaps no city expresses this erasure of Indigenous bodies, minds, and histories so effectively as London, the capital of the British Empire. Yet as Dr. Coll Thrush demonstrates in his new book Indigenous London: Native Travelers at the Heart of Empire (Yale University Press, 2016), beneath this erasure lie centuries of indigenous experience. In his hands London becomes not merely the Heart of Empire but the periphery of a richly textured indigenous diaspora, a Red Atlantic. Dr. Thrush ambitiously recasts five centuries of London’s history through the lived experiences of native visitors from Canada, the United States, New Zealand, and Australia. These travelers were royal statesmen and diplomats, missionaries and athletes. They came to further the complex interests of their own Nations. They critiqued the metropolis’s excess, its ecological unsustainability, and its inhumanity towards the poor. In doing so, they participated in creating London’s present. Their impact remains in London’s material culture and its understanding of its own urban and suburban realities. Join us as Dr. Thrush invites us into an Indigenous London that is not so much hidden as deliberately silenced, and which courses throughout the fabric of the modern city. Jeremy Wood is a Seattle attorney. Much of his legal and scholarly work has concerned Native American interests. Additionally he serves as a Human Rights Commissioner for the City of Seattle and teaches Jewish literature to middle and high school students in an after school program. You can find out more about his work by visiting https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyfwood. He can be reach at jeremywood10@gmail.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Scholars have long treated cities as spaces in which indigenous people have little presence and less significance. This notion that urbanity and indignity stand at odds results from a potent mix of racist essentialism and the historical myth of progress from savagery to civilization. Just as this paradigm excludes native peoples from the City, it excludes them from modernity. Perhaps no city expresses this erasure of Indigenous bodies, minds, and histories so effectively as London, the capital of the British Empire. Yet as Dr. Coll Thrush demonstrates in his new book Indigenous London: Native Travelers at the Heart of Empire (Yale University Press, 2016), beneath this erasure lie centuries of indigenous experience. In his hands London becomes not merely the Heart of Empire but the periphery of a richly textured indigenous diaspora, a Red Atlantic. Dr. Thrush ambitiously recasts five centuries of London’s history through the lived experiences of native visitors from Canada, the United States, New Zealand, and Australia. These travelers were royal statesmen and diplomats, missionaries and athletes. They came to further the complex interests of their own Nations. They critiqued the metropolis’s excess, its ecological unsustainability, and its inhumanity towards the poor. In doing so, they participated in creating London’s present. Their impact remains in London’s material culture and its understanding of its own urban and suburban realities. Join us as Dr. Thrush invites us into an Indigenous London that is not so much hidden as deliberately silenced, and which courses throughout the fabric of the modern city. Jeremy Wood is a Seattle attorney. Much of his legal and scholarly work has concerned Native American interests. Additionally he serves as a Human Rights Commissioner for the City of Seattle and teaches Jewish literature to middle and high school students in an after school program. You can find out more about his work by visiting https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyfwood. He can be reach at jeremywood10@gmail.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Scholars have long treated cities as spaces in which indigenous people have little presence and less significance. This notion that urbanity and indignity stand at odds results from a potent mix of racist essentialism and the historical myth of progress from savagery to civilization. Just as this paradigm excludes native peoples from the City, it excludes them from modernity. Perhaps no city expresses this erasure of Indigenous bodies, minds, and histories so effectively as London, the capital of the British Empire. Yet as Dr. Coll Thrush demonstrates in his new book Indigenous London: Native Travelers at the Heart of Empire (Yale University Press, 2016), beneath this erasure lie centuries of indigenous experience. In his hands London becomes not merely the Heart of Empire but the periphery of a richly textured indigenous diaspora, a Red Atlantic. Dr. Thrush ambitiously recasts five centuries of London’s history through the lived experiences of native visitors from Canada, the United States, New Zealand, and Australia. These travelers were royal statesmen and diplomats, missionaries and athletes. They came to further the complex interests of their own Nations. They critiqued the metropolis’s excess, its ecological unsustainability, and its inhumanity towards the poor. In doing so, they participated in creating London’s present. Their impact remains in London’s material culture and its understanding of its own urban and suburban realities. Join us as Dr. Thrush invites us into an Indigenous London that is not so much hidden as deliberately silenced, and which courses throughout the fabric of the modern city. Jeremy Wood is a Seattle attorney. Much of his legal and scholarly work has concerned Native American interests. Additionally he serves as a Human Rights Commissioner for the City of Seattle and teaches Jewish literature to middle and high school students in an after school program. You can find out more about his work by visiting https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeremyfwood. He can be reach at jeremywood10@gmail.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Want to find out how to shed pounds of body weight by eating fat and riding your bike? In this episode we speak with super keto dieter Jeremy Wood. Also know as @ex_fat_guy on Instagram, Jeremy lost a whopping 165 lbs by following a low carb high fat ketogenic diet, as well as putting in some miles on the bike! Listen in and find out more about Jeremy's fascinating weight loss journey, his tips for getting started, and some tricks around keto carb substitutes.
In our 8th episode, Dan talked to Diane Robertson, who co-hosts a locally produced tv show called Just Down The Road. Now, with some exciting news about the show, the other co-host sits down with Dan. He takes some time to clear the air about all the awful things Diane said about him, as well […]