Podcast appearances and mentions of Jim Stone

American football player

  • 27PODCASTS
  • 75EPISODES
  • 27mAVG DURATION
  • ?INFREQUENT EPISODES
  • May 9, 2025LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about Jim Stone

Latest podcast episodes about Jim Stone

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball
Mastering the Defensive Toolbox, Navigating Injuries at Major Tournaments, and High IQ Plays

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2025 30:43


In this episode of The Volley Pod, the hosts discuss the importance of defensive skills in volleyball, the challenges of managing injuries during tournaments, and strategies for effective communication and player replacement. They emphasize the need for coaches to prepare their teams for unexpected challenges and to recognize the value of every player, regardless of their role on the team.The Art of Coaching Volleyball videos from today's episode:https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/controlling-the-dig/   Jim Stone with Morgan Hentzhttps://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/emergency-moves-for-passing-and-defense/  Jen Flynn Oldenburg, Ohio Statehttps://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/individual-defense-diving-covering-low-balls/  Kirsten Bernthal-BoothResourceshttps://soulperformanceacademy.com/ Soul Performance Academy, Dan MickleMental skills training, Team culture, and LeadershipFind The Art of Coaching Volleyball at:⁠⁠ ⁠⁠www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com⁠⁠⁠⁠ The Art of Coaching Volleyball is a comprehensive resource designed to help coaches of all levels to improve their skills, teaching methods, and enhance their knowledge of volleyball. It offers a mix of instructional support, tools, and resources to support coaches in developing athletes and running effective practices.Check out Balltime at:⁠⁠ ⁠www.balltime.com⁠⁠⁠Balltime is an AI-powered volleyball platform designed to provide professional-level game breakdowns, video analysis, and highlight creation for players, coaches, and clubs. Developed by a team of passionate volleyball players and technology enthusiasts, Balltime aims to make advanced video and analytics accessible to everyone.Check out The Volley Pod on Instagram at⁠⁠ ⁠https://www.instagram.com/aoc.thevolleypod/⁠⁠Email us your take at ⁠thevolleypod@gmail.com⁠

The Insurance Coffee House
S4 EP69: Making a company an even greater place to work - Allison Keavey Luther, Deputy Chief of Human Resources, Plymouth Rock Assurance

The Insurance Coffee House

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2025 21:12


On the Insurance Coffee House Podcast this week, we welcome Allison Keavey Luther, Deputy Chief of Human Resources at Boston-based Plymouth Rock AssuranceAllison talks about her career journey from TV producer at CNBC to catching the start-up bug, working as General Manager for early-stage businesses. From there she rode a massive wave of growth at Wayfair, where she was ‘pulled' in to HR.She joined Plymouth Rock in 2023 to work alongside CHRO, Mary Strong, and support the next phase of business growth. Allison gives an insight in to Plymouth Rock's 40-year history, with the business now managing over $2 billion in auto and home insurance premiums, across Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania.She highlights the top-down culture, embodied by founder Jim Stone and the desire to create an environment where employees are happier than they would be anywhere elseAllison discusses some of the initiatives in place to drive culture forward, including being intentional about how they work together in the physical environment. On-site gym facilities, drop-in meditation sessions, online recognition program all contribute to creating a culture of friendliness, good citizenship, integrity, loyalty, hard work, and the pursuit of excellence.She shares her one recommendation for insurance leaders coming to interview there at Plymouth Rock. “Let us see who you are. When we are making a hire, particularly at the senior level, culture matters just as much as technical qualifications.Our culture statement is such a critical part of our success that we need to have folks who can advance our culture in the right ways.”Allison urges her HR peers to set the bar high and not to make short-term trade-offs when looking to fill roles. She shares some of the tools and technology Plymouth Rock are using to support talent and help people do their jobs better. As for the one lesson her job has taught her, she wants everyone to learn, Allison emphasizes the power of active listening. “Whether it's a talent or a business challenge, taking the time to really get the full picture. Hear whatever sides of the story are there to make the best decision for the business and the people in it.”And for anyone considering an insurance career move, Allison concludes by advising people to consider how they feel at work every day. “Sometimes we don't check in regularly enough with are we feeling valued? Are we feeling respected? Do, do we feel like there is growth for us ahead? At Plymouth Rock, those are the standards for our people and for our leaders.”Connect with Allison Keavey Luther on LinkedIn or find out more about Plymouth Rock Assurance The Insurance Coffee House Podcast is brought to you by Insurance Search.We are a global Insurance Executive Search Consultancy, supporting Insurance and Insurtech businesses to attract and retain the very best insurance talent.Find out more about showcasing your employer brand as a guest on the Insurance Coffee House Podcast or sign up to our News and Insights. Or follow us on

Double T Mornings On Demand
The Interesting World Of Bill Belichick with Jim Stone

Double T Mornings On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2024 6:20


Double T Mornings is the morning show on 96.7 The Eagle in Rockford, Illinois. Not only does Double T play Rockford's favorite Classic Rock each day, he's also joined by many fascinating guests including music legends, comedians, pro athletes, and his own stable of experts on random subjects. Plus, it's a local show, so he's all in for Rockford.

Double T Mornings On Demand
Trying To Find Out How To Watch Your Favorite Sports Team with Jim Stone

Double T Mornings On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2024 6:15


Double T Mornings is the morning show on 96.7 The Eagle in Rockford, Illinois. Not only does Double T play Rockford's favorite Classic Rock each day, he's also joined by many fascinating guests including music legends, comedians, pro athletes, and his own stable of experts on random subjects. Plus, it's a local show, so he's all in for Rockford.

Double T Mornings On Demand
Do You Bring Your Phone Into The Bathroom with Jim Stone

Double T Mornings On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2024 3:49


Double T Mornings is the morning show on 96.7 The Eagle in Rockford, Illinois. Not only does Double T play Rockford's favorite Classic Rock each day, he's also joined by many fascinating guests including music legends, comedians, pro athletes, and his own stable of experts on random subjects. Plus, it's a local show, so he's all in for Rockford.

Double T Mornings On Demand
Thunderstruck Drinking Game with Jim Stone

Double T Mornings On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2024 5:31


Double T Mornings is the morning show on 96.7 The Eagle in Rockford, Illinois. Not only does Double T play Rockford's favorite Classic Rock each day, he's also joined by many fascinating guests including music legends, comedians, pro athletes, and his own stable of experts on random subjects. Plus, it's a local show, so he's all in for Rockford.

Double T Mornings On Demand
Top Rated Marys with Jim Stone

Double T Mornings On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2024 5:04


Double T Mornings is the morning show on 96.7 The Eagle in Rockford, Illinois. Not only does Double T play Rockford's favorite Classic Rock each day, he's also joined by many fascinating guests including music legends, comedians, pro athletes, and his own stable of experts on random subjects. Plus, it's a local show, so he's all in for Rockford.

Double T Mornings On Demand
Talking Hurricanes with Jim Stone

Double T Mornings On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2024 7:17


Double T Mornings is the morning show on 96.7 The Eagle in Rockford, Illinois. Not only does Double T play Rockford's favorite Classic Rock each day, he's also joined by many fascinating guests including music legends, comedians, pro athletes, and his own stable of experts on random subjects. Plus, it's a local show, so he's all in for Rockford.

Double T Mornings On Demand
Talking Flannel Jam with Jim Stone

Double T Mornings On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2024 6:50


Double T Mornings is the morning show on 96.7 The Eagle in Rockford, Illinois. Not only does Double T play Rockford's favorite Classic Rock each day, he's also joined by many fascinating guests including music legends, comedians, pro athletes, and his own stable of experts on random subjects. Plus, it's a local show, so he's all in for Rockford.

Double T Mornings On Demand
Talking Sloppy Joe's with Jim Stone

Double T Mornings On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2024 6:52


Double T Mornings is the morning show on 96.7 The Eagle in Rockford, Illinois. Not only does Double T play Rockford's favorite Classic Rock each day, he's also joined by many fascinating guests including music legends, comedians, pro athletes, and his own stable of experts on random subjects. Plus, it's a local show, so he's all in for Rockford.

Double T Mornings On Demand
Talking Football with Jim Stone

Double T Mornings On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2024 7:14


Double T Mornings is the morning show on 96.7 The Eagle in Rockford, Illinois. Not only does Double T play Rockford's favorite Classic Rock each day, he's also joined by many fascinating guests including music legends, comedians, pro athletes, and his own stable of experts on random subjects. Plus, it's a local show, so he's all in for Rockford.

Double T Mornings On Demand
Belt Problem with Jim Stone

Double T Mornings On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2024 4:31


Double T Mornings is the morning show on 96.7 The Eagle in Rockford, Illinois. Not only does Double T play Rockford's favorite Classic Rock each day, he's also joined by many fascinating guests including music legends, comedians, pro athletes, and his own stable of experts on random subjects. Plus, it's a local show, so he's all in for Rockford.

Double T Mornings On Demand
KFC Closed In Rockford with Jim Stone

Double T Mornings On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2024 3:41


Double T Mornings is the morning show on 96.7 The Eagle in Rockford, Illinois. Not only does Double T play Rockford's favorite Classic Rock each day, he's also joined by many fascinating guests including music legends, comedians, pro athletes, and his own stable of experts on random subjects. Plus, it's a local show, so he's all in for Rockford.

Double T Mornings On Demand
Talking Back To School with Jim Stone

Double T Mornings On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2024 6:46


Double T Mornings is the morning show on 96.7 The Eagle in Rockford, Illinois. Not only does Double T play Rockford's favorite Classic Rock each day, he's also joined by many fascinating guests including music legends, comedians, pro athletes, and his own stable of experts on random subjects. Plus, it's a local show, so he's all in for Rockford.

Double T Mornings On Demand
Stadium Naming Rights with Jim Stone

Double T Mornings On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2024 4:37


Double T Mornings is the morning show on 96.7 The Eagle in Rockford, Illinois. Not only does Double T play Rockford's favorite Classic Rock each day, he's also joined by many fascinating guests including music legends, comedians, pro athletes, and his own stable of experts on random subjects. Plus, it's a local show, so he's all in for Rockford.

Double T Mornings On Demand
Talking Olympics with Jim Stone

Double T Mornings On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2024 6:00


Double T Mornings is the morning show on 96.7 The Eagle in Rockford, Illinois. Not only does Double T play Rockford's favorite Classic Rock each day, he's also joined by many fascinating guests including music legends, comedians, pro athletes, and his own stable of experts on random subjects. Plus, it's a local show, so he's all in for Rockford.

Double T Mornings On Demand
Old School Video Games with Jim Stone

Double T Mornings On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2024 7:28


Double T Mornings is the morning show on 96.7 The Eagle in Rockford, Illinois. Not only does Double T play Rockford's favorite Classic Rock each day, he's also joined by many fascinating guests including music legends, comedians, pro athletes, and his own stable of experts on random subjects. Plus, it's a local show, so he's all in for Rockford.

Double T Mornings On Demand
Double T Tours Hard Rock Casino Rockford & Shares Experience With Jim Stone

Double T Mornings On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2024 6:00


Double T Mornings is the morning show on 96.7 The Eagle in Rockford, Illinois. Not only does Double T play Rockford's favorite Classic Rock each day, he's also joined by many fascinating guests including music legends, comedians, pro athletes, and his own stable of experts on random subjects. Plus, it's a local show, so he's all in for Rockford.

Double T Mornings On Demand
Angel Murals with Jim Stone

Double T Mornings On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2024 4:30


Double T Mornings is the morning show on 96.7 The Eagle in Rockford, Illinois. Not only does Double T play Rockford's favorite Classic Rock each day, he's also joined by many fascinating guests including music legends, comedians, pro athletes, and his own stable of experts on random subjects. Plus, it's a local show, so he's all in for Rockford.

Double T Mornings On Demand
Our Names Tattooed On Listener's Butt with Jim Stone

Double T Mornings On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2024 4:07


Double T Mornings is the morning show on 96.7 The Eagle in Rockford, Illinois. Not only does Double T play Rockford's favorite Classic Rock each day, he's also joined by many fascinating guests including music legends, comedians, pro athletes, and his own stable of experts on random subjects. Plus, it's a local show, so he's all in for Rockford.

WCS Wild Audio
S4 E13: How the American Bison Became the U.S. National Mammal

WCS Wild Audio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2024 16:35


Last week in Part 1 of our series on bison conservation, we explored the historical role that WCS and Indigenous and other partners played in helping to save the American bison from extinction and begin to restore this iconic species on tribal lands in the west. In Part 2, we look at how critical partnerships across lines of geography, culture, and politics helped to establish the bison as the national mammal of the United States.  Reporting: Nat MossGuests: Keith Aune, John Calvelli, Dave Carter, Jim Stone

Double T Mornings On Demand
Talking Woman Watching Murder Shows With Jim Stone

Double T Mornings On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2024 3:52


Double T Mornings is the morning show on 96.7 The Eagle in Rockford, Illinois. Not only does Double T play Rockford's favorite Classic Rock each day, he's also joined by many fascinating guests including music legends, comedians, pro athletes, and his own stable of experts on random subjects. Plus, it's a local show, so he's all in for Rockford.

Double T Mornings On Demand
Double T Shares His 1st Sam's Club Appearance with Jim Stone

Double T Mornings On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2024 5:40


Double T Mornings is the morning show on 96.7 The Eagle in Rockford, Illinois. Not only does Double T play Rockford's favorite Classic Rock each day, he's also joined by many fascinating guests including music legends, comedians, pro athletes, and his own stable of experts on random subjects. Plus, it's a local show, so he's all in for Rockford.

Double T Mornings On Demand
Review of TicTok Dance Cult Documentary with Jim Stone

Double T Mornings On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2024 3:26


Double T Mornings is the morning show on 96.7 The Eagle in Rockford, Illinois. Not only does Double T play Rockford's favorite Classic Rock each day, he's also joined by many fascinating guests including music legends, comedians, pro athletes, and his own stable of experts on random subjects. Plus, it's a local show, so he's all in for Rockford.

Double T Mornings On Demand
Talking Jeeps & Rubber Ducks with Jim Stone

Double T Mornings On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2024 3:50


Double T Mornings is the morning show on 96.7 The Eagle in Rockford, Illinois. Not only does Double T play Rockford's favorite Classic Rock each day, he's also joined by many fascinating guests including music legends, comedians, pro athletes, and his own stable of experts on random subjects. Plus, it's a local show, so he's all in for Rockford.

The Jersey Shore Morning Show With Lou and Shannon On Demand
Bears New Stadium Plan with Jim Stone

The Jersey Shore Morning Show With Lou and Shannon On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2024 3:57


Double T Mornings is the morning show on 96.7 The Eagle in Rockford, Illinois. Not only does Double T play Rockford's favorite Classic Rock each day, he's also joined by many fascinating guests including music legends, comedians, pro athletes, and his own stable of experts on random subjects. Plus, it's a local show, so he's all in for Rockford.

Double T Mornings On Demand
Bears New Stadium Plan with Jim Stone

Double T Mornings On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2024 3:57


Double T Mornings is the morning show on 96.7 The Eagle in Rockford, Illinois. Not only does Double T play Rockford's favorite Classic Rock each day, he's also joined by many fascinating guests including music legends, comedians, pro athletes, and his own stable of experts on random subjects. Plus, it's a local show, so he's all in for Rockford.

Double T Mornings On Demand
Jim Stone Joins Double T To Talk About A Picture Sent To Him

Double T Mornings On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2024 3:43


Double T Mornings is the morning show on 96.7 The Eagle in Rockford, Illinois. Not only does Double T play Rockford's favorite Classic Rock each day, he's also joined by many fascinating guests including music legends, comedians, pro athletes, and his own stable of experts on random subjects. Plus, it's a local show, so he's all in for Rockford.

We Get Work
The Year Ahead 2024: Manufacturing

We Get Work

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2024 17:05


Jackson Lewis Manufacturing industry group co-chairs Jim Stone and Maurice Jenkins bring their combined 55 years of experience to discuss the sobering and structural challenges 2024 has in store in terms of recruitment and retention. Skill gaps and mismatches, change management, new compensation strategies, internal talent marketplaces, employee referral programs, false barriers to entry, DEI, and more are all on the horizon.

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball
Episode 84: Common misperceptions for coaching youth volleyball part 2, When you want to start fast in a match, and CoachUp

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2023 29:08 Very Popular


Episode 84: Common misperceptions for coaching youth volleyball part 2, When you want to start fast in a match, and CoachUp Wait! Use code "VOLLEYPOD" for 20% off of almost anything on The Art of Coaching Volleyball's platform INCLUDING memberships, nearly all of the books, printouts, and more! ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Also, be sure to follow The VolleyPod on Instagram at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.instagram.com/aoc.thevolleypod/⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ and Twitter at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://twitter.com/TheVolleyPod ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠for exclusive content and immediately useful tips and drills! Our skill segment focuses on two more common misperceptions for coaching youth volleyball. This segment follows up on a prior podcast we did, but this time we focus on the ideas that everything you do in practice should be relevant to what the athletes will do later in their high school volleyball experience (it does not need to be), and how being "positionless" in their youth volleyball experience can help them down the road (they should). Our scenario segment deals with an important topic for club coaches: when you want to get off to a fast start for a match. We all have those early morning matches, and often teams get off to a slow start and blame it on the team not be "awake". This segment goes into how to make sure that your team will be ready to go for their first match of the day! For our resource segment we share information about CoachUp, a coach finder app that allows anyone to find an individual coach for their needs. This resource gives athletes who do not have access to private coaching or who are not affiliated with a club, the ability to find and connect with a coach in their area. This is a great resource. If you are in the Los Angeles South Bay area you can find Coach Josh Cannon, an excellent beach volleyball coach, on the app and get started! Skill of the Week: Common misperceptions for coaching youth volleyball Scenario of the Week: Getting off to a fast start in a match The Art of Coaching Volleyball videos that we used this week focused on youth volleyball coaching: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/4-2-volleyball-offense-jim-stone-chalk-talk/⁠ Jim Stone does a great "Chalk Talk" explaining the 4-2 in detail https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/hybrid-systems-6-3-in-4-2-style/ Tod explains how to modify the 4-2 into a 6-3 and make a more effective offensive system https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/making-good-hand-contact-when-attacking/ Jim Stone focuses on how to get great hand contact on the ball The Resource of the Week: CoachUp, can be found here: ⁠⁠⁠⁠www.coachup.com

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball
Episode 82: JJ Van Neil talks about practice planning, Taking over a new program, and The Knowledge Project

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2023 29:51 Very Popular


Wait! Use code "VOLLEYPOD" for 20% off of almost anything on The Art of Coaching Volleyball's platform INCLUDING memberships, nearly all of the books, printouts, and more! ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Also, be sure to follow The VolleyPod on Instagram at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.instagram.com/aoc.thevolleypod/⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ and Twitter at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://twitter.com/TheVolleyPod ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠for exclusive content and immediately useful tips and drills! Episode 82: JJ Van Neil talks about practice planning, Taking over a new program, and The Knowledge Project This week we are joined by the Head Coach of Arizona State University, J.J. Van Neil. J.J. has turned around ASU's program in a very short time and has developed a culture there that is unique and player-centered. He speaks with the The Volley Pod squad about practice planning, taking over a new program, and The Knowledge Project. Our skill segment focuses on ideas surrounding practice planning. JJ Van Neil from Arizona State University discusses the value of practice planning, and how it can really help teams to improve. By staying closely connected to their goals and values, teams can make rapid progress. Our scenario segment deals with the challenges that coaches encounter when they take over a program. JJ Van Neil from Arizona State University describes the impact of putting people first, and how having a clear vision can help coaches "stay on track" and optimize their time. For our resource segment we share information about The Knowledge, a podcast, blog, and information site by Shane Parrish. The podcast aims to "uncover(s) the best of what other people have already figured out so you can use their insights in your life." This resource is a great example of using knowledge from all areas of life to better ourself. Skill of the Week: Practice planning Scenario of the Week: Taking over a new program The Art of Coaching Volleyball videos that we used this week focused on youth volleyball coaching: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/practice-and-season-planning/ Dave Rubio discusses practice planning and gets into a lot of great ideas about the structure of great practices https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/effective-practices/ Jim Stone and John Dunning have an hour long discussion about practice planning, complete with questions from the audience ⁠⁠ https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/karch-kiralys-2-minute-take-5-keys-to-getting-the-most-out-of-practice/ Karch Kiraly is on a quick video explaining how to really get the most out of your practice time The Resource of the Week is The Knowledge Project, which can be found here: https://fs.blog/knowledge-project-podcast/

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball
Episode 80: Postseason Wrap-up: What would we do differently?

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2023 31:03 Very Popular


Wait! Use code "VOLLEYPOD" for 20% off of almost anything on The Art of Coaching Volleyball's platform INCLUDING memberships, nearly all of the books, printouts, and more! ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Also, be sure to follow The VolleyPod on Instagram at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.instagram.com/aoc.thevolleypod/⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ and Twitter at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://twitter.com/TheVolleyPod ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠for exclusive content and immediately useful tips and drills! Episode 80: Postseason Wrap-up: What would we do differently? This special installment of The VolleyPod explores what we would do differently, knowing what we know now, regarding this past season of high school volleyball. This technique can be a coach's best weapon if it is done thoughtfully, and if he/she can parse out why the choices should not have been made, and if the choices should be avoided during their upcoming coaching assignment. The Art of Coaching Volleyball Videos that we focused on for this pod were the AOC Quick Hits (found under the Video Series tab): Jim Stone discusses and demonstrates critical aspects of out of system offense: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/out-of-system-offense/ Jim Stone covers the "Stride Slide" defensive move: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/stride-slide-defensive-move/

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball
Episode 77: Player Vision (What you see is what you get), When a team has beaten you before and you need to beat them now, and The 100 Best Sports Quotes of All Time

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2023 30:16 Very Popular


Wait! Use code "VOLLEYPOD" for 20% off of almost anything on The Art of Coaching Volleyball's platform INCLUDING memberships, nearly all of the books, printouts, and more! ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Also, be sure to follow The VolleyPod on Instagram at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.instagram.com/aoc.thevolleypod/⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ and Twitter at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://twitter.com/TheVolleyPod ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠for exclusive content and immediately useful tips and drills! This week's skill is how to train your players' vision, with a special focus on serve receive. Our scenario segment focuses on when a team has beaten you before, but you need to beat them now. For our resource segment we share a website that is full of insights in the form of quotes from legendary athletes, coaches, and sports commentators. Skill of the Week: Player vision, especially in serve receive, and what your players can do to get better at arriving early to where they will meet the ball Scenario of the Week: When a team has beaten you before and you need to beat them now. Ideas, tips, and ways of thinking about this common scenario. The Art of Coaching Volleyball videos that we used this week focused on vision, especially in serve receive: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/defense-drill-for-training-vision/ Mike Sealy high or low drill for noticing what matters https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/what-makes-morgan-hentz-dominant/ Jim Stone analyzes what organ Hentz is looking at and why she is so good https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/reading-a-part-of-every-skill/ John Dunning reading and serve receive The Resource of the Week is The 100 Best Sports Quotes of All Time, and it can be found here: https://bleacherreport.com/articles/910238-the-100-best-sports-quotes-of-all-time

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball
Episode 73: Coaching Skill: Adding elastic to your gym for faster improvement, When you can't stop and opposing hitter, and Mick Haley's take on stats that matter

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2023 28:23 Very Popular


Wait! Use code "VOLLEYPOD" for 20% off of almost anything on The Art of Coaching Volleyball's platform INCLUDING memberships, nearly all of the books, printouts, and more! ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Also, be sure to follow The VolleyPod on Instagram at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.instagram.com/aoc.thevolleypod/⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ and Twitter at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://twitter.com/TheVolleyPod ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠for exclusive content and immediately useful tips and drills! This week's skill is how and why to use elastic in your gym to enhance training. In hopes of training in an Ecological Dynamics methodology, using elastic can help athletes be free to engage their own learning without being restricted by thinking about their body parts, which slows down processing and learning. They can use external cues to guide their improvement with simple adjustments to the environment that help them to focus on the intention of the action. Elastic is one way to help this process to happen. Our scenario segment is about when your team cannot stop an opposing hitter. We cover a lot of ways to win matches where you cannot find a way to get points when their best hitter is attacking. Some of these ideas that we cover include: minimizing the number of opportunities that the hitter gets in "scoring position", "pulling" the attacker out of her ideal approach spot, and simply giving up trying to stop her and focusing on stopping the other hitters. Coaches will surely get a nugget or two that will help them to get ideas for their own teams, when they have to deal with bigger hitters. For our resource section we share an amazing wealth of information that can found on Youtube: Mick Haley's discussion on statistics that matter, via Front Range Volleyball Club and Jim Stone. This talk is so rich in formation and it only has around 700 watches on Youtube! You can be one of the only people who has heard this incredibly impactful video that touches on: winning rally scoring matches, the most important stats to keep, how to perceive digs and their usefulness and much more. Coaches will surely think differently after watching this information-rich video! Skill of the Week: Using elastic in your gym to enhance learning Scenario of the week: When your team cannot stop an opposing attacker and what to do This week's Art of Coaching Volleyball videos focused on why and how to use elastic in your practice: This video by Mark Rosen shows how he uses elastic to teach players to hit high above the net: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/over-the-elastic-attacking-drill/ This video from Dan Meske from Louisville shows how to use elastic to teach blockers how to cut off angles: ⁠https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/elastic-blocking-drill/ Tod Mattox discusses how to get your athletes to have amore ideal hand path as they block over the net: ⁠https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/ideal-hand-path-when-blocking/ The Resource of the Week, Mick Haley Talks Volleyball on Youtube, by Mick Haley and presented by Front Range Volleyball Club and Jim Stone, can be found here: ⁠https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-fxhtsSnK1I

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball
Episode 70: How to create a more balanced offense, Two teams practicing on one court, and Honoring Byron Shewman and his legacy

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2023 28:05 Very Popular


Wait! Use code "VOLLEYPOD" for 20% off of almost anything on The Art of Coaching Volleyball's platform INCLUDING memberships, nearly all of the books, printouts, and more! ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Also, be sure to follow The VolleyPod on Instagram at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.instagram.com/aoc.thevolleypod/⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ and Twitter at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://twitter.com/TheVolleyPod ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠for exclusive content and immediately useful tips and drills! This week's skill is how and why to develop a more balanced offense. Many teams fall into over-setting their best hitters and can miss out on opportunities to increase their team hitting efficiency. In this episode we discuss how to create more strong scoring attempts merely by getting offense from all parts of the net. Our scenario segment is about when two are sharing a court and how to make the most out of that time for everyone. These ideas are really cool and are sure to help when your team when you share a court. For our resource section we honor the life and legacy of Byron Shewman, a leader in the volleyball community, and an extremely generous person. Shewman was an outspoken advocate for volleyball and founded The Starlings Volleyball Program, a community-based club system, that was able to reach groups of people that typically would not have much access to volleyball. He was also an extremely talented player, and played on the Olympic team, and later on the beach. Beach Volleyball, by Shewman and Karch Kiraly is a thorough look at how to become a high level beach volleyball player. Skill of the Week: How and why to create and implement a more balanced offense Scenario of the week: When two teams are practicing on the same court and how to make the most of your team This week's Art of Coaching Volleyball videos focused on why and how to create a balanced offense: This video by Jim Stone discusses team attacking and using a variety attack positions across the net: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/jim-stone-sample-offense-with-multiple-attack-points/ This video from the AOC Vancouver Hitting Clinic explores running offense in gaps and overloading the block: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/running-an-offense-finding-gaps-overloading-blockers/ Tod Mattox discusses how to get offense from your middle blockers when the pass is in the middle of the court: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/running-the-middle-from-center-court-with-a-block/⁠  The Resource of the Week, Beach Volleyball, by Byron Shewman and Karch Kiraly, can be found here: https://www.amazon.com/Books-Byron-Shewman/s?rh=n%3A283155%2Cp_27%3AByron+Shewman

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball
Episode 66: Defense cues and tips, high school tryout ideas, and Catch Them Being Good

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2023 32:45 Very Popular


Wait! Use code "VOLLEYPOD" for 20% off of almost anything on The Art of Coaching Volleyball's platform INCLUDING memberships, nearly all of the books, printouts, and more! ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Also, be sure to follow The VolleyPod on Instagram at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.instagram.com/aoc.thevolleypod/⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ and Twitter at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://twitter.com/TheVolleyPod ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠for exclusive content and immediately useful tips and drills! This week's skill is defense cues and tips. Davis takes listeners through 15 of his favorite sayings and skill cues that help his teams play awesome defense. He also provides a framework for teaching defense that works without taking a million reps of every skill. In our scenario segment, Tod discusses how to run a highly effective high school tryout. He goes into everything from administration, evaluation, cuts, and communicating your program's values throughout tryouts, as well as shares the games and drills he does at tryouts. You are sure to pick something up from Tod's 40 years in the game! We always share one great resource each week, and this week it is Catch Them Being Good, by Tony Dicicco, Colleen Hacker, and Charles Salzberg. This book focuses on how to connect with girl-athletes specifically and how to use this knowledge to build more effective teams. With questions and activities for parents and coaches, this book points out some key differences between training boys and girls, and how treating each team uniquely, coaches can get the most out of their teams, and help create a more positive overall experience for their athletes. Skill of the Week: Defense cues and tips Scenario of the week: High school tryout ideas The Art of Coaching Volleyball Videos discussed on The VolleyPod This Week focused on floor defense and reading: Mike Sealy (UCLA) talks about connecting defense to vision: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/defense-drill-for-training-vision/ Jim Stone and Morgan Hentz demonstrate how vision affects defense: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/vision-impacting-defense/ Kimi Olsen from Michigan State has a cool look at how to "capture space" to play better defense: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/individual-defense-capture-space-and-have-more-range/ The Resource of the Week, Catch Them Being Good, can be found here: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/290724/catch-them-being-good-by-tony-dicicco-colleen-hacker-phd-and-charles-salzberg/

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball
Episode 63: Passing 2.0, Middle School Summer Camp plans, and Run To The Roar

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2023 30:17 Very Popular


Wait! Use code "VOLLEYPOD" for 20% off of almost anything on The Art of Coaching Volleyball's platform INCLUDING memberships, nearly all of the books, printouts, and more! ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Also, be sure to follow The VolleyPod on Instagram at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.instagram.com/aoc.thevolleypod/⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ and Twitter at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://twitter.com/TheVolleyPod ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠for exclusive content and immediately useful tips and drills! This week's skill is Passing 2.0. Davis covers his fundamentals of serve receive and how he thinks about teaching serve receive to young players. This talk is a more in-depth look at passing, complete with reading, movement, emergency moves, talent evaluation, and much more. In our scenario segment, we go over an awesome plan that coaches can steal or change to make their own, for a middle-school grade summer volleyball camp. Tod and Davis both love running camps and Tod lays out his best plan for what to do with middle schoolers who want to learn to play volleyball. We always share one great resource each week, and this week it is from the great Squash coach Paul Assaiante from Trinity College in Connecticut. His book Run To The Roar is about dealing with fear and consequences with resilience, courage, and humility. The motivational and educational nonfiction memoir points out the human nature of striving for excellence and how failure is just as important as success in the realm of sports. Skill of the Week: Passing 2.0 - more advanced serve receive concepts and skills Scenario of the week: Summer Camp plan for Middle School age athletes The Art of Coaching Volleyball Videos discussed on The VolleyPod This Week focused on Serve Receive: Joe Sagula from North Carolina University and Jen Flynn Oldenburg from Ohio State University cover emergency moves that can help passers out of difficult situations: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/emergency-moves-for-passing-and-defense/ Jim Stone's video about creating angles is super informative and helpful: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/practicing-passing-angles/ John Speraw's foundations of serve receive skill is a must watch for coaches: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E6Vpr1oGXwI&t=19s The Resource of the Week, Run To The Roar by Paul Assaiainte, can be found here: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠http://www.runtoroar.com/

Inside the Coaching Mind with Terry Pettit
Jim Stone: How to Run a Better Volleyball Practice - ITCM 45

Inside the Coaching Mind with Terry Pettit

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2023 62:05


Hall-of-Fame coach Jim Stone talks about the coaching behaviors that create a more interactive and efficient practice.For 26 years, Jim was the Head Women's Volleyball Coach at Ohio State University and a frequent coach for USA Youth National Teams.He has authored "A Game Plan for Better Practices" and his journal on coaching volleyball can be found at his website, Jim Stone Consulting.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball
Episode 58: Working against the block, is my offensive system a good use of our personnel, and Positive University

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2023 29:16 Very Popular


Wait! Use code "VOLLEYPOD" for 20% off of almost anything on The Art of Coaching Volleyball's platform INCLUDING memberships, nearly all of the books, printouts, and more! ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Also, be sure to follow The VolleyPod on Instagram at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.instagram.com/aoc.thevolleypod/⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ and Twitter at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://twitter.com/TheVolleyPod ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠for exclusive content and immediately useful tips and drills! This week's skill is a relatively advanced skill: working against the block. On this episode we provide a bunch of ideas that you can train with your team that can help your hitters to deal more effectively with a big or disciplined block and score more points. There are ideas are points that coaches can implement right now with their hitters as opposed to saying "we will wait until she gets stronger and jumps higher". Mastering the ideas in today's episode will definitely help your team win more games. In our scenario segment, we discuss how to handle the question: "is my offensive system a good use of my team's personnel?". The coaches with The VolleyPod discuss how to look at this question through a lens of the uniqueness of your team, and which strengths that you can maximize to get the most out of your team from an offensive standpoint. This is one of our most fun things to do in coaching; find the unique factors that make your team great! We always share one great resource each week, and this week it is from the super-optimistic mindset teacher Jon Gordon. His podcast, Positive University, focuses on people who have become masters of their mindset. It includes people like Kerri Walsh-Jennings, Damian Lillard, and Drew Brees. There is a broad plan of helping people who listen to make a greater impact and overcome challenges, but there are many different topics discussed within those broader goals. This podcast is a great listen for anyone trying to make the most out their situation in life. Skill of the week: Attacking against a big or disciplined block Scenario of the week: Is our offensive system a good use of our personnel? The Art of Coaching Volleyball Videos discussed on The VolleyPod This Week focused on working against the block: Mark Barnard's drill for tooling the block: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/hitting-scoring-off-the-block-drill/ Jim Stone teaches three of the most useful options for dealing with the block, score, recycle, or tool: ⁠https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/5-hitting-options-kill-recycle-tip-use-block-in-play/ Jim Stone has athletes demonstrate another highly useful game for working against the block: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/competitive-5-point-blocking-and-hitting-drill/ The Resource of the Week, Jon Gordon's Positive University, can be found here: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://positiveuniversity.com/

Everything Rodeo
Stoney Saddlery

Everything Rodeo

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2023 70:46


ER EP.17 - Since 1977, custom saddle maker Jim Stone has been building and perfecting the art of saddlery. From steer roping to barrel racing saddles, he takes pride in his work, and his top priority is to make sure you and your horse get the comfort you both deserve to perform at your peak.We get to know a little bit about him and his success in and out of the arena. Jim is a successful businessman and shares some insights that may help you along the way with your business. "Sometimes the simplest things make the biggest difference."  Jim has paid attention to small details in his saddle making, life, and relationships that we all can learn from.https://stoneysaddlery.com/WATCH THE FULL YOUTUBE VIDEO HERE

Sport Radio - Australia
Inside Supercars - The Real Gentleman Jim - Jim Stone

Sport Radio - Australia

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2023 30:19


The real Gentleman Jim talks about attending the final Pukekohe race meeting, and his amazing career in motorsport, from New Zealand to America with Mclaren then to Australian, winning Bathurst and Championships along the way. From the race track to your device with Tony Whitlock and Craig Revell on Inside Supercars Inside Supercars Podcast: Subscribe Apple Podcasts I Spotify I Google Podcasts Supported by: P1 Australia Link:P1 Australia Auto Action RevLimiter – Subscribe here: Apple Podcasts I Spotify I Google Podcasts MusicCreative Commons Music by Jason Shaw on Audionautix.com MusicComa-Media from Pixabay #RepcoSC #TCRAust #Supercars #Motorsport #ADL500

Inside Supercars
Inside Supercars - The Real Gentleman Jim - Jim Stone

Inside Supercars

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2023 30:19


The real Gentleman Jim talks about attending the final Pukekohe race meeting, and his amazing career in motorsport, from New Zealand to America with Mclaren then to Australian, winning Bathurst and Championships along the way. From the race track to your device with Tony Whitlock and Craig Revell on Inside Supercars Inside Supercars Podcast: Subscribe Apple Podcasts I Spotify I Google Podcasts Supported by: P1 Australia Link:P1 Australia Auto Action RevLimiter – Subscribe here: Apple Podcasts I Spotify I Google Podcasts MusicCreative Commons Music by Jason Shaw on Audionautix.com MusicComa-Media from Pixabay #RepcoSC #TCRAust #Supercars #Motorsport #ADL500

Lure of the Lake
Jim Stone - Tytan Pictures - Be Fast, Be Different or Be Forgotten (Part 2)

Lure of the Lake

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2023 58:34


My guest today has led an interesting, adventure-filled (or should I say adventure fueled!) life! Jim Stone is one of the most diverse and interesting people you will meet! And the fact that he has brought his full service video & film Production Company here to Eatonton is a well-kept secret that really needs not to be! Tytan Pictures is based right here in the area, and has produced a number of highly acclaimed commercials & films that have won over 200 awards including ADDY's and Emmy's! Jim Stone is the man behind the company. Tytan works from pre-production to post-production and everything in between! His home base now is in Eatonton, his offices are located in a decommissioned state prison facility that he and other companies have used as a set for a number of projects. We will talk about Jim's life before film production, his early life and events that propelled him, not directly into film production, but first into high-end bicycle design & racing, then later into engineering and design of private jets for the ultra wealthy! Jim is a master storyteller and you'll enjoy his story and the transition from making “toys for rich people” (his words!) into making scripts to screens! I think you'll agree that Jim's life is quite intriguing! Guest: Jim Stone https://tytanpictures.com/ Sponsors: Lake Oconee Bistro & Tim Broyles State Farm https://www.lakeoconeebistro.com/ https://www.mydowntownagency.com/ https://www.facebook.com/tbprotectincome

Lure of the Lake
Jim Stone - Tytan Pictures - Be Fast, Be Different or Be Forgotten (Part 1)

Lure of the Lake

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2023 49:27


My guest today has led an interesting, adventure-filled (or should I say adventure fueled!) life! Jim Stone is one of the most diverse and interesting people you will meet! And the fact that he has brought his full service video & film Production Company here to Eatonton is a well-kept secret that really needs not to be! Tytan Pictures is based right here in the area, and has produced a number of highly acclaimed commercials & films that have won over 200 awards including ADDY's and Emmy's! Jim Stone is the man behind the company. Tytan works from pre-production to post-production and everything in between! His home base now is in Eatonton, his offices are located in a decommissioned state prison facility that he and other companies have used as a set for a number of projects. We will talk about Jim's life before film production, his early life and events that propelled him, not directly into film production, but first into high-end bicycle design & racing, then later into engineering and design of private jets for the ultra wealthy! Jim is a master storyteller and you'll enjoy his story and the transition from making “toys for rich people” (his words!) into making scripts to screens! I think you'll agree that Jim's life is quite intriguing! Learn more about Tytan: https://tytanpictures.com/ Made Possible by: Lake Oconee BistroTim Broyles State Farm

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball
Episode 39: The tempo spread Offense, the end of the season, and AOC's Youtube channel

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2023 30:31 Very Popular


Do you want to score more points and run a fun, fast offense that uses all of your players to achieve a way higher hitting efficiency, create more 1 on 1 attacking opportunities, and put more stress on the defense? The Tempo Spread Offense is the answer. But what is it and how can you use it achieve its best effects? This episode goes into the fundamentals of the Tempo Spread offense and how and why to use it with your teams. Also, Tod goes into how he handles the end of the season, player recognition, and the end of season event. Finally, we share AOC's Youtube channel which is loaded with great videos, including The VolleyPod! Skill of the week: The Tempo Spread Offense Scenario of the week: The end of the season event Resource of the week: The Art of Coaching Volleyball's Youtube Channel is located here:https://www.youtube.com/@AoCVB AOC Volleyball resources mentioned in this episode: - Kerry McDonald from Volleyball Canada discussed how to create attacker-blocker advantages: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/running-an-offense-finding-gaps-overloading-blockers/ - Kirsten Bernthal Booth discusses the many advantages of running an up-tempo offense: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/how-a-fast-offense-can-give-your-team-an-edge/ - Jim Stone goes into how and why to run an offense that uses space across the whole net to help attacker score from a variety of attack points: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/jim-stone-sample-offense-with-multiple-attack-points/ Now you can listen to The VolleyPod without any ads! Subscribe to TVP and never hear an ad again. Just click here: https://anchor.fm/thevolleypod/subscribe Also, be sure to follow The VolleyPod on Instagram @aoc.thevolleypod and Twitter @thevolleypod for exclusive content and immediately useful tips and drills!

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball
Episode 24: The quick 1, Davis' top 10 tips for new coaches, and a resource for your athletes' bounce

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2022 31:02 Very Popular


Running the quick quickset, otherwise known as the "1", can be inefficient and a downright waste of a good hitter if your team doesn't connect well. So how can coaches run the quick in a useful way to score and not miss? On this episode of The VolleyPod, long-time volleyball coaches Tod Mattox and Davis Ransom discuss how to train and run the 1 in a way that helps hitters score more, and the setters and middles truly connect for great effect. Then, Davis explains his Top 10 Tips for New Coaches! They share a resource that will help to get your athletes jumping higher, TODAY! That's right, today! In addition, they share 3 drills that will be unlocked on The Art of Coaching Volleyball's website that coaches can use to expand their knowledge and skill. Skill of the week: The Quick 1 Scenario of the week: Davis' Top 10 Tips for New Coaches Resource of the week: ProjectPureAthlete, can be found at https://projectpureathlete.com/ AOC Volleyball drills mentioned in this episode: - Jim Stone's quick video about how to teach the quick-quick with example video: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/quick-middle-attack/ - Team Canada's Kerry McDonald addresses how to fix some typical issues that present themselves when training the quick attack: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/remedy-common-middle-attack-issues/ - Ray Bechard from Kansas and his fun and effective middle vs. middle drill: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/middle-vs-middle-drill-with-back-row-attacking/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball
Episode 22: Out-of-system setting, coaching when you have to both develop players AND win, and NOAH

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2022 30:46 Very Popular


How can your team score more points when the setter isn't setting? On this episode of The VolleyPod, Tod Mattox and Davis Ransom talk about scoring more "out of system". Then they go into how to approach when coaches are tasked with both winning games and matches AND developing players for the future. They also share a technology for coaches and players that helps setters become more consistent with their setting trajectory called Noah. In addition, they share 3 drills that will be unlocked on The Art of Coaching Volleyball's website that coaches can use to expand their knowledge and skill. Skill of the week: Out of system setting and concepts Scenario of the week: Coaching when you have to both develop players AND win Resource of the week: Noah can be found here: http://volleyball.noahbasketball.com/volleyball/dunning.php AOC Volleyball drills mentioned in this episode: - Christy Johnson-Lynch's revolving 4 player back row setting game: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/follow-your-set-drill-attacking-out-of-system/ - Jim Stone's quick video about how to get swings out of system with examples from USA Volleyball's Junior National Team: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/out-of-system-offense/ - Stanford's fun and useful setter digs out of system game: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/setter-dig-drill-with-stanfords-kevin-hambly/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball
Episode 18: Teaching rotations, managing a wide range of interest levels, and getting into "flow"

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2022 27:10 Very Popular


On this episode of The VolleyPod, Davis and Tod go into great ways to teach the rotations to new players and teams. Then, they discuss how to keep your practices effective when you have a wide variety of interest levels in volleyball on your team. And, as always, they highlight 3 videos from The Art of Coaching Volleyball library that coaches can use to help coaches teach their teams' rotations. Finally, they explore a fascinating book about how to access the flow state. Skill of the week: Teaching the rotations Scenario of the week: When your team has a wide range of interest levels Resource of the week: Flow by Mihaly Csikszentmihaly can be found here: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/224927532_Flow_The_Psychology_of_Optimal_Experience AOC Volleyball drills mentioned in this episode: Brennan Dean's introduction to offensive systems: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/intro-to-offensive-systems/ Mark Barnard's thoughts on system flexibility and creativity based on your personnel (with links to the 4-2, 5-1, and 6-2): https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/mark-barnard-dont-get-locked-into-a-system/ Jim Stone's chalk talk about the middle-front-sets-style 4-2: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/4-2-volleyball-offense-jim-stone-chalk-talk/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball
Episode 16: Special guest Villanova University's Josh Steinbach, The 31, staying connected during difficult times and a coaching canon book about the inner game

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2022 29:33 Very Popular


On this special episode of The VolleyPod, Villanova University's Head Coach, Josh Steinbach, joins Davis and Tod to discuss running The 31. Coach Steinbach also presents an important scenario, ideas for how to stay connected with your athletes during difficult times. They also share 3 videos from The Art of Coaching Volleyball library that coaches can learn from to help their teams use the 31 as a great scoring option. Skill of the week: The 31 or "3" set Scenario of the week: Staying connected with your athletes during difficult times Resource of the week: The Inner Game of Tennis by W. Timothy Gallwey can be found here: https://theinnergame.com/inner-game-books/the-inner-game-of-tennis/ AOC Volleyball drills mentioned in this episode: - Volleyball Canada's Kerry MacDonald teaches when to run the 31: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/running-an-effective-31-middle-attack/ - Jim Stone diagrams the 31 and shows USA's Women's National Team using it with full effect: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/jim-stone-run-the-middle-attacker-away-from-the-setter/ - Jamie Morrison's middle blocker approach angle ideas: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/mb-approach-angles-for-31-slide/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball
Episode 15: Attacker transition, deciding on a lineup and a practice-changing tool

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2022 29:28 Very Popular


On this episode of The VolleyPod, Davis and Tod discuss attacker transition from defense to offense and why it is critical for their success. They also look at ways to think about your lineup for younger teams and share a fantastic tool for practice – eSCORE by Insight Sports. Plus, you'll learn from four videos related to attacker transition that will be unlocked on The Art of Coaching Volleyball's online platform! Skill of the week: Attacker Transition Scenario of the week: Deciding on a lineup Resource of the week: eSCORE by Insight Sports can be found here: https://www.escoresport.com/ AOC Volleyball drills mentioned in this episode: Cathy George's blocker transition drill: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/blocker-drill-with-cathy-george/ Ryan Theis from Marquette University's middle blocker transition footwork drill: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/train-middle-transition-footwork/ Jim Stone's outside hitter transition drills:https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/outside-hitter-footwork/ Beth Launiere's super fun 4 v 4 game: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/4-on-4-kamikaze-volleyball-drill-with-beth-launiere/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball
Episode 6: Teaching diving safely, how to set up a system for a brand new youth team and a little book with immense wisdom

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2022 29:57 Very Popular


In this episode of The VolleyPod, Tod and Davis "dive" into how to dive safely, how to teach diving to young players, and why you should teach it to them. They discuss how to quickly set up an effective system that will get young teams playing volleyball right away, and point listeners towards Daniel Coyle's work and wisdom. They also share three helpful drills that you can watch in The Art of Coaching Volleyball's online library that will help you teach defensive moves to your young players. Have fun! Skill of the week: Diving safely Scenario of the week: A brand new team needs a system, quick! Resource of the week: The Little Book of Talent by Daniel Coyle, available on www.danielcoyle.com AOC Volleyball drills mentioned in this episode: - Sock slide drill : https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/sock-slide-drill/ - Russ Rose's defense variations: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/individual-defense-emergency-moves/ - Jim Stone's advanced defense moves: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/the-side-slide-taught-by-jim-stone-and-kori-moster/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball
Episode 3: Serve receive footwork, working with a big team and a foundational book for coaches

The VolleyPod presented by The Art of Coaching Volleyball

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2022 27:40 Very Popular


In this episode of The VolleyPod, Tod and Davis talk about why and how to teach serve receive footwork, discuss how to handle working with a big (in terms of numbers) team, and share a resource that compiles teachings from many of volleyball's top coaches ever into one amazing book. They also unlock three drills that coaches can use to help their athletes be better in serve receive by enhancing athletes' balance, consistency and posture. Skill of the week: Serve receive footwork Scenario of the week: Coaching a team with a large number of players Resource of the week: The Volleyball Coaching Bible (Volume 1), compiled by Cecile Reynaud and Don Shondell, available here: https://www.amazon.com/Volleyball-Coaching-Bible-Donald-Shondell/dp/0736039678 AOC Volleyball Drills mentioned in this episode: - 1, 2, 3 footwork: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/improve-your-passing-footwork-by-saying-1-2-3/ - Jim Stone shuffle-through: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/keep-your-feet-moving-in-serve-receive/ - Christy Johnson-Lynch drop-step: https://www.theartofcoachingvolleyball.com/passing-the-deep-ball-using-the-drop-step/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Local Waste Music Podcast
06. Bounty is a m*****f***er

Local Waste Music Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2022 122:36 Very Popular


In this episode, we interview Lamont Thomas (Bassholes, Flipping Hades, OBNOX, My Uncle Wayne, This Moment in Black History), and Ron House (co-founder of Used Kids Records, Twisted Shouts, Great Plains, Thomas Jefferson Slave Apartments, Ego Summit, Psandwich, and Counter Intuits). Songs featured in this episode: Twisted Shouts "Entirely Different Person" Bassholes "Interzone" Flipping Hades "Blunderbuss" Great Plains "Letter to a Fanzine" OBNOX "Too Punk Shakur" My Uncle Wayne "The Matador Meets the Blue Bull" Thomas Jefferson Slave Apartments "Negative Guest List" This Moment in Black History "Obama" Ego Summit "Half Off" Psandwich "Not In Jail" Counter Intuits "Rocket Surgery" You can find photos, flyers, and links to songs on our Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/localwastemusic NOTE: This episode is dedicated to Jim Stone. Please note that the actual interview with Ron and Lamont was recorded prior to Stone's passing.

Almost Live With Dr. Dannielle Blumenthal
Urgent: Jim Stone Warning Of Possible Planned Ottawa False Flag (Brief)

Almost Live With Dr. Dannielle Blumenthal

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2022 3:06


This episode is also available as a blog post: https://drdannielleblumenthal.wordpress.com/2022/01/30/urgent-jim-stone-warning-of-possible-planned-ottawa-false-flag-brief/

Midnight Train Podcast
Christmas Disasters

Midnight Train Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2021 115:39


For bonuses and to support the show, sign up at www.patreon.com/themidnighttrainpodcast   This week is our Christmas special here on the train. First, we've covered Krampus, Christmas killings, and ghost story Christmas traditions. Then, in keeping with our tradition of crazy Christmas episodes, today, we bring you some crazy Christmas disasters! Christmas isn't immune to crazy shit going on, from natural disasters to fires. Not only that, we're giving you guys a pretty good dose of history today. So with that being said, let's get into some crazy Christmas stuff!   While this first topic isn't necessarily a disaster in the usual sense, it definitely caused nothing but problems. And yes, it's a disaster. In 1865 on Christmas Eve, something happened that would change things for many people in this country and still causes grief to this day. While most people in the u.s. were settling down for the night with their families, leaving milk out for Santa, and tucking the kids in for the night, a group of men in Pulaski, Tennessee, were getting together for a very different purpose. Frank McCord, Richard Reed, John Lester, John Kennedy, J. Calvin Jones, and James Crowe were all officers with the Confederacy in the civil war. That night, they got together to form a group inspired at least in part by the then largely defunct Sons of Malta. While it started as a social club, within months, it would turn into one of the most nefarious groups around, the Ku Klux Klan. According to The Cyclopædia of Fraternities (1907), "Beginning in April, 1867, there was a gradual transformation. ...The members had conjured up a veritable Frankenstein. They had played with an engine of power and mystery, though organized on entirely innocent lines, and found themselves overcome by a belief that something must lie behind it all – that there was, after all, a serious purpose, a work for the Klan to do." It borrowed parts of the initiation ceremony from the sons of Malta with the same purpose: "ludicrous initiations, the baffling of public curiosity, and the amusement for members were the only objects of the Klan," according to Albert Stevens in 1907. In the summer of 1867, local branches of the Klan met in a general organizing convention. They established what they called an "Invisible Empire of the South." Leading Confederate general Nathan Bedford Forrest was chosen as the first leader, or "grand wizard," of the Klan; he presided over a hierarchy of grand dragons, grand titans, and grand cyclops. The organization of the Ku Klux Klan coincided with the beginning of the second phase of post-Civil War Reconstruction, put into place by the more radical members of the Republican Party in Congress. After rejecting President Andrew Johnson's relatively lenient Reconstruction policies from 1865 to 1866, Congress passed the Reconstruction Act over the presidential veto. Under its provisions, the South was divided into five military districts. Each state was required to approve the 14th Amendment, which granted "equal protection" of the Constitution to formerly enslaved people and enacted universal male suffrage. From 1867 onward, Black participation in public life in the South became one of the most radical aspects of Reconstruction. Black people won elections to southern state governments and even the U.S. Congress. For its part, the Ku Klux Klan dedicated itself to an underground campaign of violence against Republican leaders and voters (both Black and white) to reverse the policies of Radical Reconstruction and restore white supremacy in the South. They were joined in this struggle by similar organizations such as the Knights of the White Camelia (launched in Louisiana in 1867) and the White Brotherhood. At least 10 percent of the Black legislators elected during the 1867-1868 constitutional conventions became victims of violence during Reconstruction, including seven who were killed. White Republicans (derided as "carpetbaggers" and "scalawags") and Black institutions such as schools and churches—symbols of Black autonomy—were also targets for Klan attacks. By 1870, the Ku Klux Klan had branches in nearly every southern state. The Klan did not boast a well-organized structure or clear leadership even at its height. Local Klan members, often wearing masks and dressed in the organization's signature long white robes and hoods, usually carried out their attacks at night. They acted on their own but supported the common goals of defeating Radical Reconstruction and restoring white supremacy in the South. Klan activity flourished particularly in the regions of the South where Black people were a minority or a slight majority of the population and were relatively limited in others. Among the most notorious zones of Klan activity was South Carolina, where in January 1871, 500 masked men attacked the Union county jail and lynched eight Black prisoners. Though Democratic leaders would later attribute Ku Klux Klan violence to poorer southern white people, the organization's membership crossed class lines, from small farmers and laborers to planters, lawyers, merchants, physicians, and ministers. In the regions where most Klan activity took place, local law enforcement officials either belonged to the Klan or declined to act against it. Even those who arrested Klansmen found it difficult to find witnesses willing to testify against them.    Other leading white citizens in the South declined to speak out against the group's actions, giving them implicit approval. After 1870, Republican state governments in the South turned to Congress for help, resulting in three Enforcement Acts, the strongest of which was the Ku Klux Klan Act of 1871.   For the first time, the Ku Klux Klan Act designated certain crimes committed by individuals as federal offenses, including conspiracies to deprive citizens of the right to hold office, serve on juries and enjoy the equal protection of the law. In addition, the act authorized the president to suspend the habeas corpus, arrest accused individuals without charge, and send federal forces to suppress Klan violence. For those of us dummies that may not know, a "writ of habeas corpus" (which literally means to "produce the body") is a court order demanding that a public official (such as a warden) deliver an imprisoned individual to the court and show a valid reason for that person's detention. The procedure provides a means for prison inmates or others acting on their behalf to dispute the legal basis for confinement.   This expansion of federal authority–which Ulysses S. Grant promptly used in 1871 to crush Klan activity in South Carolina and other areas of the South–outraged Democrats and even alarmed many Republicans. From the early 1870s onward, white supremacy gradually reasserted its hold on the South as support for Reconstruction waned; by the end of 1876, the entire South was under Democratic control once again.   Now, this was just the first version of the Klan. A second version started up in the early 1900s and later on another revival which is the current iteration of the Klan. We're not going to go into the later versions of the Klan because well…. Fuck 'em! We've already given them too much air time! But… This most definitely qualifies as a Christmas disaster.   Next up, we have a couple natural disasters.    First up, Cyclone Tracy. Cyclone Tracy has been described as the most significant tropical cyclone in Australia's history, and it changed how we viewed the threat of tropical cyclones to northern Australia.   Five days before Christmas 1974, satellite images showed a tropical depression in the Arafura Sea, 700 kilometers (or almost 435 miles for us Americans) northeast of Darwin.   The following day the Tropical Cyclone Warning Center in Darwin warned that a cyclone had formed and gave it the name Tracy. Cyclone Tracy was moving southwest at this stage, but as it passed the northwest of Bathurst Island on December 23, it slowed down and changed course.   That night, it rounded Cape Fourcroy and began moving southeast, with Darwin directly in its path.   The first warning that Darwin was under threat came at 12:30 p.m. on Christmas Eve when a top-priority flash cyclone warning was issued advising people that Cyclone Tracy was expected to make landfall early Christmas morning.   Despite 12 hours' warning of the cyclone's impending arrival, it fell mainly on deaf ears.   Residents were complacent after a near-miss from Cyclone Selma a few weeks before and distracted by the festive season.   Indeed in the preceding decade, the Bureau of Meteorology had identified 25 cyclones in Northern Territory waters, but few had caused much damage. Severe Tropical Cyclone Tracy was a small but intense system at landfall.   The radius of the galeforce winds extended only 50 kilometers from the eye of the cyclone, making it one of the most miniature tropical cyclones on record, according to the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).   Records show that at least six tropical cyclones had severely impacted Darwin before Tracy.   The worst of these was in January 1897 when a "disastrous hurricane" nearly destroyed the settlement, and 28 people died.   However, unlike Tracy, it is thought this cyclone did not directly pass over Darwin.   And while Tracy was reported as a category four cyclone, some meteorologists today believe it may have been a category five shortly before it made landfall.   At midnight on Christmas Day, wind gusts greater than 100 kilometers or over 62 miles per hour began to be recorded.   The cyclone's center reached East Point at 3:15 a.m. and landed just north of Fannie Bay at 3:30 a.m.   Tracy was so strong it bent a railway signal tower in half.    The city was devastated by the cyclone. At least 90 percent of homes in Darwin were demolished or badly damaged. Forty-five vessels in the harbor were wrecked or damaged.   In addition to the 65 people who died, 145 were admitted to the hospital with serious injuries.   Vegetation was damaged up to 80 kilometers away from the coast, and Darwin felt eerily quiet due to the lack of insect and birdlife.   Within a week after the cyclone hit, more than 30,000 Darwin residents had been evacuated by air or road. That's more than two-thirds of the population at that time.   Cyclone Tracy remains one of Australia's most significant disasters.   As Murphy wrote 10 years after the cyclone: "The impact of Cyclone Tracy has reached far beyond the limits of Darwin itself. All along the tropical coasts of northern Australia and beyond a new cyclone awareness has emerged."   Merry fucking Christmas! Damn, that sucks. The information in this section came from an article on abc.net.au   Next up, we are going way back. The Christmas Flood of 1717 resulted from a northwesterly storm, which hit the coastal area of the Netherlands, Germany, and Scandinavia on Christmas night of 1717. During the night of Christmas, 1717, the coastal regions of the Netherlands, Germany, and Scandinavia were hit by a severe north-western storm. It is estimated that 14,000 people died. It was the worst flood for four centuries and the last significant flood to hit the north of the Netherlands.   In the countryside to the north of the Netherlands, the water level rose up to a few meters. The city of Groningen rose up to a few feet. In the province of Groningen, villages that were situated directly behind the dikes were nearly swept away. Action had to be taken against looters who robbed houses and farms under the fraudulent act of rescuing the flood victims. In total, the flood caused 2,276 casualties in Groningen. 1,455 homes were either destroyed or suffered extensive damage. Most livestock was lost.   The water also poured into Amsterdam and Haarlem and the areas around Dokkum and Stavoren. Over 150 people died in Friesland alone. In addition, large sections of Northern Holland were left underwater and the area around Zwolle and Kampen. In these areas, the flood only caused material damage. In Vlieland, however, the sea poured over the dunes, almost entirely sweeping away the already-damaged village of West-Vlieland.   We also found this report from a German website. It's been translated, so our apologies if it's wonky.    "According to tradition, several days before Christmas, it had blown strong and sustained from the southwest. Shortly after sunset on Christmas Eve, the wind suddenly turned from west to northwest and eased a little. The majority of the residents went to bed unconcerned, because currently was half moon and the next regular flood would not occur until 7 a.m. At the time when the tide was supposed to have been low for a long time, however, a drop in the water level could not be determined. Allegedly between 1 and 2 a.m. the storm began to revive violently accompanied by lightning and thunder. Between 3 and 4 o'clock in the morning the water reached the top of the dike. The current and waves caused the dike caps to break, so that the tide rolled over the dike into the flat land with a loud roar of thunder. Many only had time to save themselves in the dark on the floor under the roof. Most of the time there was not even time to take clothes, drinking water and some food with you. Numerous houses could not withstand the rising water and the current. In the higher and higher water and the increasing current, windows were Doors and entire walls dented. Allegedly the hurricane and the storm surge raged against the coast for three full days, so that it was not until December 28 that the water fell so far that one could come to the aid of one's neighbors with simply built "boats." In many places, the dykes had been razed to the ground, which meant that in lower-lying areas, every regular flood caused renewed flooding. At the places where the dykes were broken, deep valleys, some of which were large, formed. In many places where the dike is led around in a semi-arch, these walls, also known as pools or bracken, are still visible and testify to the force of the water. At that time, many people are said to have believed that the march was forever lost. In the low-lying areas, the water was later covered with ice floes, sometimes held up for months. Up until the summer months, bodies were said to have been found repeatedly during the clean-up work on the alluvial piles of straw and in the trenches. Many people who survived the flood later fell victim to so-called marching fever. New storm surges in the following years ruined the efforts for the first time to get the dike back into a defensible condition, and many houses, which were initially only damaged, have now been completely destroyed. Numerous small owners left the country so that the Hanover government even issued a ban on emigration."   Looks like the Netherlands got a proper Christmas fucking as well! Some towns were so severely destroyed that nothing was left, and they simply ceased to exist. Damn.    Cyclones and floods… What else does mother nature have for us? Well, how's about an earthquake! On Friday, December 26, 2003, at 5:26 a.m., Bam city in Southeastern Iran was jolted by an earthquake registering a 6.5 magnitude on the Richter scale. This was the result of the strike-slip motion of the Bam fault, which runs through this area. The earthquake's epicenter was determined to be approximately six miles southwest of the city. Three more significant aftershocks and many smaller aftershocks were also recorded, the last of which occurred over a month after the main earthquake. To date, official death tolls have 26,271 fatalities, 9000 injured, and 525 still missing. The city of Bam is one of Iran's most ancient cities, dating back to 224A.D. Latest reports and damage estimates are approaching the area of $1.9 billion. A United Nations report estimated that about 90% of the city's buildings were 60%-100% damaged, while the remaining buildings were between 30%-60% damaged. The crazy part about the whole thing… The quake only lasted for about 8 seconds.   Now I know what you're thinking… That's not Christmas… Well, there spanky, the night of the 25th, Christmas, people started to feel minor tremors that would preface the quake, so fuck you, it counts.   We have one more natural disaster for you guys, and this one most of you guys probably remember. And this one was another that started last Christmas night and rolled into the 26th, also known as boxing day. So we're talking about the Boxing Day Tsunami and the Indian ocean earthquake in 2004.    A 9.1-magnitude earthquake—one of the largest ever recorded—ripped through an undersea fault in the Indian Ocean, propelling a massive column of water toward unsuspecting shores. The Boxing Day tsunami would be the deadliest in recorded history, taking a staggering 230,000 lives in a matter of hours.   The city of Banda Aceh on the northern tip of Sumatra was closest to the powerful earthquake's epicenter, and the first waves arrived in just 20 minutes. It's nearly impossible to imagine the 100-foot roiling mountain of water that engulfed the coastal city of 320,000, instantly killing more than 100,000 men, women, and children. Buildings folded like houses of cards, trees, and cars were swept up in the oil-black rapids, and virtually no one caught in the deluge survived.   Thailand was next. With waves traveling 500 mph across the Indian Ocean, the tsunami hit the coastal provinces of Phang Nga and Phuket an hour and a half later. Despite the time-lapse, locals and tourists were utterly unaware of the imminent destruction. Curious beachgoers even wandered out among the oddly receding waves, only to be chased down by a churning wall of water. The death toll in Thailand was nearly 5,400, including 2,000 foreign tourists.   An hour later, on the opposite side of the Indian Ocean, the waves struck the southeastern coast of India near the city of Chennai, pushing debris-choked water kilometers inland and killing more than 10,000 people, primarily women and children, since many of the men were out fishing. But some of the worst devastations were reserved for the island nation of Sri Lanka, where more than 30,000 people were swept away by the waves and hundreds of thousands left homeless.   As proof of the record-breaking strength of the tsunami, the last victims of the Boxing Day disaster perished nearly eight hours later when swelling seas and rogue waves caught swimmers by surprise in South Africa, 5,000 miles from the quake's epicenter.   Vasily Titov is a tsunami researcher and forecaster with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Center for Tsunami Research. He credits the unsparing destructiveness of the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami on the raw power of the earthquake that spawned it. The quake originated in a so-called megathrust fault, where heavy oceanic plates subduct beneath lighter continental plates.    "They are the largest faults in the world and they're all underwater," says Titov.   The 2004 quake ruptured a 900-mile stretch along the Indian and Australian plates 31 miles below the ocean floor. Rather than delivering one violent jolt, the earthquake lasted an unrelenting 10 minutes, releasing as much pent-up power as several thousand atomic bombs.   In the process, massive segments of the ocean floor were forced an estimated 30 or 40 meters (up to 130 feet) upward. The effect was like dropping the world's most giant pebble in the Indian Ocean with ripples the size of mountains extending out in all directions.   Titov emphasizes that tsunamis look nothing like the giant surfing break-style waves that many imagine.   "It's a wave, but from the observer's standpoint, you wouldn't recognize it as a wave," Titov says. "It's more like the ocean turns into a white water river and floods everything in its path."   Once caught in the raging waters, the debris will finish the job if the currents don't pull you under.   "In earthquakes, a certain number of people die but many more are injured. It's completely reversed with tsunamis," says Titov. "Almost no injuries, because it's such a difficult disaster to survive."   Holy fuck… That's insane!   Well, there are some crazy natural disasters gifted to us by mother nature. So now let's take a look at some man-made disasters… And there are some bad ones.    First up is the 1953 train wreck on Christmas Eve in New Zealand. So this is actually a mix of mother nature fucking people and a man-made structure failing. This event is also referred to as the Tangiwai disaster. The weather on Christmas Eve was fine, and with little recent rain, no one suspected flooding in the Whangaehu River. The river appeared normal when a goods train crossed the bridge around 7 p.m. What transformed the situation was the sudden release of approximately 2 million cubic meters of water from the crater lake of nearby Mt Ruapehu. A 6-meter-high wave containing water, ice, mud, and rocks surged, tsunami-like, down the Whangaehu River. Sometime between 10.10 and 10.15 p.m., this lahar struck the concrete pylons of the Tangiwai railway bridge.   Traveling at approximately 65 km per hour, locomotive Ka 949 and its train of nine carriages and two vans reached the severely weakened bridge at 10.21 p.m. As the bridge buckled beneath its weight, the engine plunged into the river, taking all five second-class carriages with it. The torrent force destroyed four of these carriages – those inside had little chance of survival.   The leading first-class carriage, Car Z, teetered on the edge of the ruined bridge for a few minutes before breaking free from the remaining three carriages and toppling into the river. It rolled downstream before coming to rest on a bank as the water level fell. Remarkably, 21 of the 22 passengers in this carriage survived. Evidence suggested that the locomotive driver, Charles Parker, had applied the emergency brakes some 200 m from the bridge, which prevented the last three carriages from ending up in the river and saved many lives. Even still, 151 of the 285 passengers and crew died that night in the crash.   This information was taken from nzhistory.gov.    Next up is the Italian Hall disaster.    Before it was called Calumet, the area was known as Red Jacket. And for many, it seemed to be ground zero for the sprawling copper mining operations that absorbed wave after wave of immigrants into the Upper Peninsula.   Red Jacket itself was a company town for the Calumet and Hecla Mining Company, a large firm that in the 1870s was known as the world's largest copper producer. For a time, C&H had the world's deepest copper mines.   But the company wasn't immune from the organized labor push that swept across the Keweenaw Peninsula and other parts of the U.P. in 1913. Miners in Montana and Colorado had unionized, and in July of that year, the Western Federation of Miners called a strike against all Copper Country mines. According to a mining journal published that year, they were pushing for a $3 daily wage, 8-hour days, safer working conditions, and representation.   "The strike took place in a very complicated time in American history," said Jo Holt, a historian with the National Park Service's Keweenaw National Historical Park. "We had all these different things coming together. An increasingly industrialized country was grappling with worker's rights, gender issues, and immigration. We were moving from a gilded age into a progressive era, and recognizing the voice of labor.   "We see this event happen in the midst of that struggle."   "The reason it resonates today is we are still having these conversations. How do we create a just economy that functions for everybody? ... We are still, almost hundred and 10 years later, in the midst of these conversations."   As the strike wore into fall and the holiday season, a women's auxiliary group to the WFM organized a Christmas Eve party for the miners' families at the Italian Benevolent Society building, better known as the Italian Hall.   It was a big, boisterous affair, researchers have said. The multi-story hall was packed, with more than 600 people inside at one point. Children were watching a play and receiving gifts. Organizers later said the crowd was so large that it was hard to track who was coming in the door.   When the false cry of "Fire!" went up, pandemonium reached the sole stairway leading down to the street.   "What happened is when people panicked, they tried to get out through the stairwell," Holt said. "Someone tripped or people started to fall, and that's what created the bottleneck. It was just people falling on top of each other."   The aftermath was horrifying. As the dead were pulled from the pile in the stairwell, the bodies were carried to the town hall, which turned into a makeshift morgue. Some families lost more than one child. Other children were orphaned when their parents died.   One black and white photo in the Michigan Technological University Archives shows rows of what looks like sleeping children lying side-by-side. Their eyes are closed. Their faces were unmarred. The caption reads: "Christmas Eve in the Morgue."   After the dead were buried, some families moved away. Others stayed and kept supporting the strike, which ended the following spring.   Rumors emerged later that the Italian Hall's doors were designed to open inward, preventing the panicked crowd from pushing them outward to the street. Those were debunked, along with the suggestion in Woody Guthrie's "1913 Massacre" song that mining company thugs were holding the doors shut from the outside that night.   Damn… Mostly kids. On Christmas. That's a tough one.   Here's another touchy one. A race riot erupted in Mayfield, Kentucky, just before Christmas 1896. Although slavery in the U.S. ended after the Civil War, the Reconstruction period and beyond was a dangerous time to be black. Things were awful for non-whites in the former Confederacy, amongst which Kentucky was especially bad for racial violence. In December 1896, white vigilantes lynched two black men within 24 hours of each other between the 21st and 22nd, one for a minor disagreement with a white man and the other, Jim Stone, for alleged rape. A note attached to Stone's swinging corpse warned black residents to get out of town.   In response to this unambiguous threat, the local African-American population armed themselves. Rumors spread amongst the town's white people that 250 men were marching on the city, and a state of emergency was called. The whites mobilized, black stores were vandalized, and fighting broke out between the two sides on December 23. In the event, three people were killed, including Will Suet, a black teenager who had just got off the train to spend Christmas with his family. It was all over on Christmas Eve, and a few days later, an uneasy truce between the races was called.   Ugh! Y'all know what time it is? That's right, it's time for some quick hitters.   Many of us enjoy the Christmas period by going to the theatre or watching a movie. In December 1903, Chicago residents were eager to do just that at the brand-new Iroquois Theatre, which had been officially opened only in October that year. 1700 people in all crammed themselves in to see the zany, family-friendly musical comedy, Mr. Bluebeard. But just as the wait was over and the show started, a single spark from a stage light lit the surrounding drapery. The show's star, Eddie Foy, tried to keep things together as Iroquois employees struggled to put the curtains out in vain.   However, even the spectacle of a Windy City-native in drag couldn't stop the terrified crowd stampeding for the few exits. These, preposterously, were concealed by curtains and utterly inadequate in number. When the actors opened their own exit door to escape, a gust of wind sent a fireball through the crowded theatre, meaning that hundreds died before the fire service was even called. 585 people died, either suffocated, burned alive, or crushed. The scene was described in a 1904 account as "worse than that pictured in the mind of Dante in his vision of the inferno". Next up, the politics behind this ghastly event are pretty complicated – one Mexican lecturer described the massacre as "the most complicated case in Mexico" – but here's an inadequate summary. The small and impoverished village of Acteal, Mexico, was home to Las Abejas (the bees'), a religious collective that sympathized with a rebel group opposing the Mexican government. Thus, on December 22, 1997, members of the then-ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party crept down the steep hill slopes above the village. They chose their moment to attack carefully as people gathered at a prayer meeting when they finally slunk into Acteal.   Over the next few hours, assassins armed with guns executed 45 innocent people in cold blood. Amongst the dead were 21 women, some of whom were pregnant, and 15 children. Worst of all, investigations into this cowardly act seem to implicate the government itself. Soldiers garrisoned nearby did not intervene, despite being within earshot of the gunfire and horrified screams. In addition, there was evidence of the crime scene being tampered with by local police and government officials. Though some people have been convicted, there are suspicions that they were framed and that the real culprits remain at large.   -Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the house, not a creature was stirring… except the Soviet Union. The Marxist-Leninist Khalq and Parcham parties had ousted the Afghan president in April 1978. Still, communism was so unpopular in Afghanistan that the mujahideen succeeded in toppling them just over a year later. So Khalq and Parcham turned to the Soviet Union for help, and on Christmas Eve that year, they obliged by sending 30,000 troops across the border into Afghanistan by the cover of darkness. Bloody fighting ensued, and soon the Soviet Union had control of the major cities.   The Soviets stayed for nine years, at which time the mujahideen, backed by foreign support and weapons, waged a brutal guerrilla campaign against the invaders. In turn, captured mujahideen were executed, and entire villages and agricultural areas were razed to the ground. When the Soviets finally withdrew in February 1989, over 1 million civilians and almost 125,000 soldiers from both sides were killed. From the turmoil after the Afghan-Soviet War emerged, the Taliban, installed by neighboring Pakistan, and with them Osama bin Laden. This indeed was a black Christmas for the world.   -How about another race riot… No? Well, here you go anyway. Although, this one may be more fucked up. The Agana Race Riot saw black and white US Marines fight it out from Christmas Eve to Boxing Day, 1944. Guam was host to both black and white US Marines in 1944. But instead of fighting the enemy, the white troops elected to turn on the all-black Marine 25th Depot Company. First, the white Marines would stop their fellow soldiers from entering Agana, pelt them with rocks, and shout racist obscenities at them. Then, on Christmas Eve 1944, 9 members of the 25th on official leave were seen talking to local women, and white Marines opened fire on them. Then, on Christmas Day, 2 black soldiers were shot dead by drunken white Marines in separate incidents.   Guam's white Marines were decidedly short on festive cheer and goodwill to all men. Not content with these murders, a white mob attacked an African-American depot on Boxing Day, and a white soldier sustained an injury when the 25th returned fire. Sick of their treatment by their fellow soldiers, 40 black Marines gave chase to the retreating mob in a jeep, but further violence was prevented by a roadblock. Can you guess what happened next? Yep, the black soldiers were charged with unlawful assembly, rioting, and attempted murder, while the white soldiers were left to nurse their aching heads.   One more major one for you guys, and then we'll leave on a kind of happier note. This one's kind of rough. Be warned.    In late December 2008 and into January 2009, the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) brutally killed more than 865 civilians and abducted at least 160 children in the northern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). LRA combatants hacked their victims to death with machetes or axes or crushed their skulls with clubs and heavy sticks. In some of the places where they attacked, few were left alive.   The worst attacks happened 48 hours over Christmas in locations some 160 miles apart in the Daruma, Duru, and Faradje areas of the Haut-Uele district of northern Congo. The LRA waited until the time of Christmas festivities on December 24 and 25 to carry out their devastating attacks, apparently choosing a moment when they would find the maximum number of people altogether. The killings occurred in the Congo and parts of southern Sudan, where similar weapons and tactics were used.   The Christmas massacres in Congo are part of a longstanding practice of horrific atrocities and abuse by the LRA. Before shifting its operations to the Congo in 2006, the LRA was based in Uganda and southern Sudan, where LRA combatants also killed, raped, and abducted thousands of civilians. When the LRA moved to Congo, its combatants initially refrained from targeting Congolese people. Still, in September 2008, the LRA began its first wave of attacks, apparently to punish local communities who had helped LRA defectors to escape. The first wave of attacks in September, together with the Christmas massacres, has led to the deaths of over 1,033 civilians and the abduction of at least 476 children.   LRA killings have not stopped since the Christmas massacres. Human Rights Watch receives regular reports of murders and abductions by the LRA, keeping civilians living in terror. According to the United Nations, over 140,000 people have fled their homes since late December 2008 to seek safety elsewhere. New attacks and the flight of civilians are reported weekly. People are frightened to gather together in some areas, believing that the LRA may choose these moments to strike, as they did with such devastating efficiency over Christmas.   Even by LRA standards, the Christmas massacres in the Congo were ruthless. LRA combatants struck quickly and quietly, surrounding their victims as they ate their Christmas meal in Batande village or gathered for a Christmas day concert in Faradje. In Mabando village, the LRA sought to maximize the death toll by luring their victims to a central place, playing the radio, and forcing their victims to sing songs and call for others to come to join the party. In most attacks, they tied up their victims, stripped them of their clothes, raped the women and girls, and then killed their victims by crushing their skulls. In two cases, the attackers tried to kill three-year-old toddlers by twisting off their heads. The few villagers who survived often did so because their assailants thought they were dead.   Yeah...so there's that. We could go much deeper into this incident, but we think you get the point.    We'll leave you with a story that is pretty bizarre when you stop and think about it. But we'll leave you with this story of an unlikely Christmas get-together. This is the story of the Christmas truce.    British machine gunner Bruce Bairnsfather, later a prominent cartoonist, wrote about it in his memoirs. Like most of his fellow infantrymen of the 1st Battalion of the Royal Warwickshire Regiment, he was spending the holiday eve shivering in the muck, trying to keep warm. He had spent a good part of the past few months fighting the Germans. And now, in a part of Belgium called Bois de Ploegsteert, he was crouched in a trench that stretched just three feet deep by three feet wide, his days and nights marked by an endless cycle of sleeplessness and fear, stale biscuits and cigarettes too wet to light.   "Here I was, in this horrible clay cavity," Bairnsfather wrote, "…miles and miles from home. Cold, wet through and covered with mud." There didn't "seem the slightest chance of leaving—except in an ambulance."   At about 10 p.m., Bairnsfather noticed a noise. "I listened," he recalled. "Away across the field, among the dark shadows beyond, I could hear the murmur of voices." He turned to a fellow soldier in his trench and said, "Do you hear the Boches [Germans] kicking up that racket over there?"   Yes," came the reply. "They've been at it some time!"   The Germans were singing carols, as it was Christmas Eve. In the darkness, some of the British soldiers began to sing back. "Suddenly," Bairnsfather recalled, "we heard a confused shouting from the other side. We all stopped to listen. The shout came again." The voice was from an enemy soldier, speaking in English with a strong German accent. He was saying, "Come over here."   One of the British sergeants answered: "You come half-way. I come half-way."   In the years to come, what happened next would stun the world and make history. Enemy soldiers began to climb nervously out of their trenches and meet in the barbed-wire-filled "No Man's Land" that separated the armies. Typically, the British and Germans communicated across No Man's Land with streaking bullets, with only occasional gentlemanly allowances to collect the dead unmolested. But now, there were handshakes and words of kindness. The soldiers traded songs, tobacco, and wine, joining in a spontaneous holiday party in the cold night. Bairnsfather could not believe his eyes. "Here they were—the actual, practical soldiers of the German army. There was not an atom of hate on either side."   And it wasn't confined to that one battlefield. Starting on Christmas Eve, small pockets of French, German, Belgian, and British troops held impromptu cease-fires across the Western Front, with reports of some on the Eastern Front as well. Some accounts suggest a few of these unofficial truces remained in effect for days.   Descriptions of the Christmas Truce appear in numerous diaries and letters of the time. One British soldier, a rifleman, named J. Reading, wrote a letter home to his wife describing his holiday experience in 1914: "My company happened to be in the firing line on Christmas eve, and it was my turn…to go into a ruined house and remain there until 6:30 on Christmas morning. During the early part of the morning the Germans started singing and shouting, all in good English. They shouted out: 'Are you the Rifle Brigade; have you a spare bottle; if so we will come halfway and you come the other half.'"   "Later on in the day they came towards us," Reading described. "And our chaps went out to meet them…I shook hands with some of them, and they gave us cigarettes and cigars. We did not fire that day, and everything was so quiet it seemed like a dream."   Another British soldier, named John Ferguson, recalled it this way: "Here we were laughing and chatting to men whom only a few hours before we were trying to kill!"   Other diaries and letters describe German soldiers using candles to light Christmas trees around their trenches. One German infantryman described how a British soldier set up a makeshift barbershop, charging Germans a few cigarettes each for a haircut. Other accounts describe vivid scenes of men helping enemy soldiers collect their dead, of which there was plenty.   One British fighter named Ernie Williams later described in an interview his recollection of some makeshift soccer play on what turned out to be an icy pitch: "The ball appeared from somewhere, I don't know where... They made up some goals and one fellow went in goal and then it was just a general kick-about. I should think there were about a couple of hundred taking part."   German Lieutenant Kurt Zehmisch of the 134 Saxons Infantry, a schoolteacher who spoke both English and German, described a pick-up soccer game in his diary, which was discovered in an attic near Leipzig in 1999, written in an archaic German form of shorthand. "Eventually the English brought a soccer ball from their trenches, and pretty soon, a lively game ensued," he wrote. "How marvelously wonderful, yet how strange it was. The English officers felt the same way about it. Thus Christmas, the celebration of Love, managed to bring mortal enemies together as friends for a time."   So much more can be said about this event, but that seems like an excellent place to leave off this Christmas episode! And yes, when you really do stop and think about it… That's a pretty crazy yet fantastic thing.   Greatest disaster movies of all time   https://www.ranker.com/crowdranked-list/the-greatest-disaster-movies-of-all-time

christmas love american black children chicago australia lord english starting action mexico land americans british french germany colorado fire reading australian german new zealand tennessee south santa south africa congress african americans afghanistan indian kentucky cold iran mexican disasters stone union south carolina republicans christmas eve enemy sick thailand louisiana sons netherlands democrats amsterdam curious civil war montana rumors soldiers doors marine united nations belgium democratic pakistan fuck christmas day constitution frankenstein uganda taliban knights bureau massacre congo soviet union sri lanka bloody marines amendment forty afghan belgians malta sudan republican party ka leipzig no man krampus holt buildings bam reconstruction richter miners laden organizers boxing day allegedly numerous bois scandinavia windy city mayfield guam democratic republic us marines osama confederacy indian ocean ku klux klan national park service kampen soviets western front human rights watch groningen klan chennai battalion northern territory hanover john kennedy meteorology congolese morgue woody guthrie sumatra andrew johnson phuket upper peninsula national oceanic bluebeard haarlem iroquois friesland pulaski zwolle christmas truce fraternities eastern front congo drc calumet duru atmospheric administration noaa lra john ferguson klansmen daruma wfm east point nathan bedford forrest c h boxing day tsunami red jacket banda aceh christmas well cyclone tracy charles parker john lester dokkum richard reed invisible empire keweenaw peninsula one british mt ruapehu civil war reconstruction jim stone cyclop agana acteal institutional revolutionary party white brotherhood
The Wise Fool
Jim Stone, Photographer + Educator (USA)

The Wise Fool

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2021


We discussed: - Teaching photography in Pakistan - Being an artist that uses photography - The pleasure and burden of writing the textbook for photography - The state of Arts Academia - The unsustainable costs of exhibiting art     People + Places mentioned: - Arts Envoy - https://exchanges.state.gov/us/program/arts-envoy - The Midpeninsula Free University - http://midpeninsulafreeu.com - Minor White - https://www.moma.org/artists/6342 - Doc Edgerton - https://edgerton-digital-collections.org - Pearson Education - https://www.pearson.com/us/higher-education/program/London-Photography-12th-Edition/PGM334461.html - Bart Parker - https://www.artic.edu/artists/36132/bart-parker - Ian Van Coller - https://www.ianvancoller.com - Meggan Gould - https://www.meggangould.net - Patrick Manning - https://www.instagram.com/patrickcraigmanning - Karl Baden - https://www.instagram.com/karl_baden - Louise Lawler - https://www.moma.org/artists/7928   http://jimstone.com     Audio engineering by Mickey at CushAudio Services Music by Peat Biby     Supported in part by: EEA Grants from Iceland, Liechtenstein + Norway – https://eeagrants.org               And we appreciate the assistance of our partners in this project: Hunt Kastner – https://huntkastner.com + Kunstsentrene i Norge – https://www.kunstsentrene.no  

The Wise Fool
Jim Stone, Photographer + Educator (USA)

The Wise Fool

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2021 92:30


We discussed: - Teaching photography in Pakistan - Being an artist that uses photography - The pleasure and burden of writing the textbook for photography - The state of Arts Academia - The unsustainable costs of exhibiting art     People + Places mentioned: - Arts Envoy - https://exchanges.state.gov/us/program/arts-envoy - The Midpeninsula Free University - http://midpeninsulafreeu.com - Minor White - https://www.moma.org/artists/6342 - Doc Edgerton - https://edgerton-digital-collections.org - Pearson Education - https://www.pearson.com/us/higher-education/program/London-Photography-12th-Edition/PGM334461.html - Bart Parker - https://www.artic.edu/artists/36132/bart-parker - Ian Van Coller - https://www.ianvancoller.com - Meggan Gould - https://www.meggangould.net - Patrick Manning - https://www.instagram.com/patrickcraigmanning - Karl Baden - https://www.instagram.com/karl_baden - Louise Lawler - https://www.moma.org/artists/7928   http://jimstone.com     Audio engineering by Mickey at CushAudio Services Music by Peat Biby     Supported in part by: EEA Grants from Iceland, Liechtenstein + Norway – https://eeagrants.org               And we appreciate the assistance of our partners in this project: Hunt Kastner – https://huntkastner.com + Kunstsentrene i Norge – https://www.kunstsentrene.no  

The Wise Fool
Artistic Director at Pyramid Atlantic Art Center, Gretchen Schermerhorn (Hyattsville, MD, USA)

The Wise Fool

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2021


We discussed: Active listening, Jim Stone is actually at University of New Mexico, I was wrong, art education, bardering, print trades, what an artistic director does, less bureaucracy and being able to act fast, the light kiss of a print, prints as protest, life long learning, why to collect art, value based consumerism, certificate of Authenticity, edition sizes, the importance of finding you tribe, limitations breed creativity, process videos on Instagram   People and Places mentioned: Jim Stone - http://www.jimstone.com Georgia Deal - https://georgiadeal.com Matthew Barney - https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artists/matthew-barney-2362 Glen Echo Park - https://glenechopark.org San Francisco Center for the Book - https://sfcb.org Hung Liu - http://www.hungliu.com Joyce J. Scott - https://www.craftinamerica.org/artist/joyce-j-scott Renee Stout - http://www.hemphillfinearts.com/artists/renee-stout Certificate of Authenticity & Hologram System - https://www.hahnemuehle.com/en/digital-fineart/my-art-registry/certificate-of-authenticity.html   https://www.gretchenschermerhorn.com https://www.pyramidatlanticartcenter.org   Hosted by Matthew Dols http://www.matthewdols.com   Transcript available: https://wisefoolpod.com/transcript-for-episode-141-artistic-director-at-pyramid-atlantic-art-center-gretchen-schermerhorn-hyattsville-md-usa/

The Wise Fool
Artistic Director at Pyramid Atlantic Art Center, Gretchen Schermerhorn (Hyattsville, MD, USA)

The Wise Fool

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2021 83:08


We discussed: Active listening, Jim Stone is actually at University of New Mexico, I was wrong, art education, bardering, print trades, what an artistic director does, less bureaucracy and being able to act fast, the light kiss of a print, prints as protest, life long learning, why to collect art, value based consumerism, certificate of Authenticity, edition sizes, the importance of finding you tribe, limitations breed creativity, process videos on Instagram   People and Places mentioned: Jim Stone - http://www.jimstone.com Georgia Deal - https://georgiadeal.com Matthew Barney - https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artists/matthew-barney-2362 Glen Echo Park - https://glenechopark.org San Francisco Center for the Book - https://sfcb.org Hung Liu - http://www.hungliu.com Joyce J. Scott - https://www.craftinamerica.org/artist/joyce-j-scott Renee Stout - http://www.hemphillfinearts.com/artists/renee-stout Certificate of Authenticity & Hologram System - https://www.hahnemuehle.com/en/digital-fineart/my-art-registry/certificate-of-authenticity.html   https://www.gretchenschermerhorn.com https://www.pyramidatlanticartcenter.org   Hosted by Matthew Dols http://www.matthewdols.com

Living Beyond Podcast
Jim Stone - Head Coach Women's Soccer - Ep. 3

Living Beyond Podcast

Play Episode Play 45 sec Highlight Listen Later May 8, 2020 31:38


In this episode, we will interview Coach Jim Stone, the Head Coach of the Bemidji State University Women's soccer program.  Entering his 18th season as head coach in 2019, Coach Stone is the winningest coach in Bemidji State University soccer history. Prior to his arrival in 2002, BSU had an overall record of 13-80-3. In the 17 seasons since, his BSU teams have accounted for over 92 percent (185) of the program's total victories (198), which includes a program record 18 wins (18-1-2) in 2018. Stone led the Beavers to their first national ranking and NCAA Division II Tournament appearance in 2017 and first win in the NCAA Division II Tournament in 2018, while the Beavers have missed the NSIC Tournament just one time in the last 13 seasons. Not only does Coach Stone lead a program that understands how to win, it's equally important the culture that has been created under his leadership which focuses on three pillars: love, faith, and hard work. Coach Stone is not only developing leaders on the soccer field, but he's developing leaders in life that will extend beyond their athletic careers. Support the show (https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=XBLPPHPVTPULQ)

From The First Chair Podcast
Épisode 28 (FR) - Quelques pensées au sujet du contre et de la prise de décision à partir de données

From The First Chair Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2019 56:13


Dans cet épisode sans invité, François et Thierry présente deux capsules : des concepts au sujet de la technique du contre sont discutés et la prise de décision fondée l'analyse de données est présentée.   (1:00) - Les épisodes sans invité touchent à divers thèmes dont un élément technique Épisode 4 - service Épisode 8 - réception de service Épisode 9 - apprentissages du symposium Épisode 15 - apprentissages de l'été Épisode 21 - attaque   (2:55) - Ressource: Read the Game de Karch Kiraly (Part 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9)   (4:05) - Ressource: Integrating Cue Reading and Decision-Making into Skill Development from Volleyball Canada   (4:35) - Ressource: Tested to the Limit with Ronaldo (15:58 sur le suivi du regard, 20:18 sur la lecture du jeu)   (5:33) - Pourquoi est-ce que la technique du contre est négligée par les entraîneurs? Critical Analysis of Blocking by Art of Coaching Volleyball   (7:26) - À quel âge est-ce que le contre devrait être introduit en entraînement?   (10:37) - Est-ce que le contre est la technique la moins maîtrisée par les entraîneurs au niveau civil?   (11:57) - Comment est-ce possible de mieux intégrer la lecture et la prise de décision chez l'athlète lorsque le contre est entraîné?   (15:25) - Ressource: Blocking Progressions - Team Canada Men's Volleyball    (17:04) - Comment est-ce possible de modifier des situations de jeu avec des conditions pour aider les athlètes à mieux lire le jeu et prendre des décisions plus efficacement?   (24:59) - Quels sont les critères les plus importants à accentuer avec la technique du contre?   (31:08) - Pourquoi est-ce que l'usage de la vidéo est particulièrement utile avec le développement du contre chez l'athlète?   (34:15) - Est-ce que le central doit tenter de fermer l'intervalle au contre ou laisser l'intervalle au joueur de la position 6?   (38:40) - Quelle est la séquence visuelle à prôner avec les athlètes et comment en faciliter le développer?   (41:55) - Serait-ce bénéfique de suivre divers patrons d'échauffement au contre durant l'échauffement?   (44:20) - Comment s'appuyer davantage sur des données scientifiques pour sa prise de décision comme entraîneur?   (45:52) - Using Science to Develop a Team Game Plan   (47:00) - Playing Probabilities: How Data Helped Break a 35-Year National Championship Drought   (49:30) - Killer Serves: What Do Effective Jump Spins, Jump Floats and Standing Floats Have in Common? by Jim Stone, Art of Coaching Volleyball   (55:05) - À l'approche de la saison des championnats, veuillez s.v.p. nous proposer des thèmes spécifiques à discuter sur la balladodiffusion en nous écrivant au ftfc@maverickvolleyball.ca.

From The First Chair Podcast
Episode 28 (EN) - Thoughts on Blocking and Data Driven Coaching Decisions

From The First Chair Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2019 53:09


In this guestless episode, Frank & Thierry tackle two different topics: training the skill of blocking and how data can help a coach make more educated decisions.   (0:50) - Guestless episodes cover various topics including a technical skill Episode 4 - Serving Episode 8 - Passing Episode 9 - Symposium Lessons Episode 15 - Summer Lessons Episode 21 - Attacking   (2:15) - Resource: Read the Game from Karch Kiraly (Part 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9)   (3:38) - Resource: Tested to the Limit with Ronaldo (15:58 on eye tracking, 20:18 on cue reading)   (4:05) - Resource: Integrating Cue Reading and Decision-Making into Skill Development from Volleyball Canada   (4:40) - Why is blocking often a skill that is neglected by coaches?   (6:48) - How early should coaches focus on the skill of blocking? Critical Analysis of Blocking by Art of Coaching Volleyball   (10:35) - How important is it to teach proper footwork for efficient blocking?   (11:10) - How can blocked training be minimalized with the training of blocking?   (13:35) - Resource: Blocking Progressions - Team Canada Men's Volleyball    (17:40) - Why is using video so useful for training blocking?   (20:51) - Is the string above the net useful to teach early hand penetration?   (23:33) - How can various game like blocking scenarios help athletes read better and improve their blocking ability?   (28:23) - What are some key technical cues that should be used with blocking?   (33:03) - Should a late middle reach to close the block?   (37:19) - Can going through various blocking patterns be used as a warm up?   (38:30) - What is the eye sequence with blocking and how can it be trained?   (41:20) - How to be data driven when making coaching decisions?   (42:02) - Using Science to Develop a Team Game Plan   (42:40) - Playing Probabilities: How Data Helped Break a 35-Year National Championship Drought   (44:48) - Killer Serves: What Do Effective Jump Spins, Jump Floats and Standing Floats Have in Common? by Jim Stone, Art of Coaching Volleyball   (49:24) - Is midline passing better from a data perspective?   (52:15) - Please propose some topics for the championship season that should be discussed on the podcast at ftfc@maverickvolleyball.ca.

Sport Radio - Australia
Inside Supercars - #171 - Matt Stone Racing and DJR Team Penske

Sport Radio - Australia

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2018 52:07


Inside Supercars
Inside Supercars - #171 - Matt Stone Racing and DJR Team Penske

Inside Supercars

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2018 52:07


CCE Sermons
Episode 1 - Jim Stone

CCE Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2017 21:30


Pastor G's Neighborhood
Episode 1 - Jim Stone

Pastor G's Neighborhood

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2017 21:30


I AM STREAMING
30 Years After 'Black Monday,' Has Wall Street Learned Its Lesson?

I AM STREAMING

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2017 10:56


On Oct. 19, 1987, the stock market fell 22.6 percent, the largest single-day loss in Wall Street history. Though the day became known as “Black Monday,” many of the details of what happened have been lost to history. New York Times financial reporter Diana Henriques (@dianabhenriques) examines what led up to Black Monday and what lessons can be learned from it in “A First-Class Catastrophe: The Road to Black Monday, the Worst Day In Wall Street History.” She joins Here & Now‘s Jeremy Hobson to talk about the book. Book Excerpt: ‘A First-Class Catastrophe’ By Diana Henriques He was a towering six foot seven, his round, balding head perpetually wreathed in cigar smoke. Paul A. Volcker, the chairman of the Federal Reserve System, was formidable even when he was cheerful. On Wednesday afternoon, March 26, 1980, he was furious. Volcker, in office for barely seven months, had been pulled out of a meeting by a frantic message from Harry Jacobs, the chairman of Bache Halsey Stuart Shields, the second-largest brokerage firm on Wall Street. The Fed had almost no authority over brokerage firms, but Jacobs said he thought “it was in the national interest” that he alert Volcker to a crisis in the silver market—a market over which the Fed also had virtually no authority. Jacobs’s news was alarming. Silver prices were plummeting, and two of the firm’s biggest customers, a pair of billionaire brothers in Texas named William Herbert and Nelson Bunker Hunt, had told him the previous evening that they could not cover a $100 million debit in their Bache accounts, which they had used to amass millions of ounces of actual silver and paper claims on millions more. If silver prices fell further and the Hunts did indeed default on their debt to the firm, the silver they had pledged as collateral was no longer worth enough to cover their obligations. Bache was confronting a ruinous loss, possibly a threat to its financial survival. Jacobs suspected the Hunts also owed money to other major banks and Wall Street firms and may well have pledged more of their silver hoard as collateral. Volcker immediately wanted to know which banks had made loans to the Hunts. He didn’t regulate Wall Street brokers or silver speculators, but he emphatically did regulate much of the nation’s banking system. There, at least, his authority to act was clear. Indeed, Volcker had been responding to fire alarms in the banking system for weeks, as banks and savings and loans struggled with rising interest rates—themselves a consequence of Volcker’s attack on the raging inflation that had sapped the economy for nearly a decade. Confidence in America’s banks was as fragile as blown glass, and the last thing Volcker needed was a “bolt from the blue” like this. Yet, here was the head of Wall Street’s number-two firm warning him that some big banks were financing what sounded like wildly speculative silver trading by a couple of Texas plutocrats. Within minutes, Volcker had reached out to Harold Williams, the urbane and seasoned chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, the primary U.S. government regulator of Bache and its fellow brokerage firms. Williams was at a conference in Colonial Williamsburg; he ducked into a side room, spoke with Volcker about Bache, and then phoned to tell his staffers to check immediately on the rest of Wall Street’s exposure to the silver speculators. Williams then hurried back to Washington. A senior Treasury Department official and the comptroller of the currency (another bank regulator) were also alerted to the potential crisis. Both headed for the Fed’s headquarters on Constitution Avenue. Together, perhaps they could cover all the financial corners of this unfamiliar crisis. To do that, the group needed a regulator with some authority over the silver markets. Volcker called the office of James M. Stone, who had been tapped less than a year earlier by President Jimmy Carter to be the chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, a young federal agency that regulated the market where most of this silver speculation had gone on. At age thirty-two, Jim Stone—a cousin of the notable filmmaker Oliver Stone—had already studied at the London School of Economics and earned a doctorate in economics from Harvard. His doctoral thesis had been published as a prescient book predicting how computers would revolutionize Wall Street trading, first by doing the paperwork but ultimately by sweeping away the traditional stock exchanges entirely. Stone was a slight, brilliant, and determined young man, but his view that regulation played a positive role in the markets made him deeply unpopular in the industry he regulated and put him at odds with his more laissez-faire CFTC colleagues. One grumpy board member at a leading Chicago commodity exchange privately dismissed him as a “little twerp.” Almost everyone in political circles (except Volcker, apparently) knew that young Dr. Stone had become so isolated at the CFTC that he could barely get support for approving the minutes of the last meeting. When Volcker got Stone on the phone, his question was similar to the one he had asked Harold Williams at the SEC: how big a stake did the Hunt brothers have in his market? “I can’t tell you that. It’s confidential,” Stone said. The politely delivered answer stopped Volcker cold; he was momentarily speechless. Then he let loose. Volcker conceded later that he “did not react very well” to Stone’s refusal to share the vital information, even after the CFTC chairman explained that a law passed in 1978 barred his agency from revealing customer trading positions, even to other regulators. Stone simply did not have the authority to comply with the Fed chairman’s request. Stone, like Volcker, instantly saw that the silver crisis was a danger to the financial system because of the hidden web of loans that linked the banks and the brokerage firms to the Hunts and to one another. He promptly headed for Volcker’s office. Sometime later, the SEC’s Harold Williams arrived. Aides shuttled in and out, working the telephones, checking silver prices, and pressing bankers and brokerage finance officers for straight answers. By 6 p.m., as twilight filled the deep, high windows of Volcker’s office, the ad hoc group had finally established that at least a half-dozen major Wall Street firms, including Merrill Lynch and Paine Webber, had set up trading accounts for the Hunts and that a number of major banks had been lending money to those firms, or directly to the Hunts, since at least the previous summer, transactions secured by a growing pile of rapidly depreciating silver. Eight months earlier, on August 1, 1979, silver was trading below $10 an ounce. Prices rose through Labor Day, past Thanksgiving, and into the Christmas holidays. At $20 an ounce, silver had broken out of its traditional ratio to gold. At $30 an ounce, the sky-high price prompted newlyweds to sell their sterling flatware before burglars could steal it. Printers and film manufacturers, which used silver as a raw material, started laying off workers and feared bankruptcy. Through it all, the Hunts kept buying, largely with borrowed money. Then, on January 17, 1980, silver prices paused at $50 an ounce and started to slide. At that point, the Hunts’ hoard was worth $6.6 billion. After that date, prices dropped sharply; they had fallen to $10.80 on Tuesday, March 25, the day before Harry Jacobs at Bache called Volcker. At that price, the Hunts owed far more than their silver would fetch in the cash market, and their lenders were pressing for more collateral of some kind. It was on that Tuesday evening that the brothers told Jacobs they were unable to pay anything more. The next day, they shared the same unwelcome news with their other brokers. Crisis had arrived, and panic might quickly follow if a big bank or brokerage firm failed as a result of the Hunts’ default. That’s where Paul Volcker stepped into the story. After their Wednesday war room conference, held together more by personality and mutual respect than by any clear lines of authority, Volcker and his fellow regulators sweated out Thursday’s trading day. Stone, in defiance of the CFTC’s legislative restrictions, had finally given his fellow regulators an estimate of how much money the Hunts owed in his market: $800 million. That figure, which turned out to be an understatement, was so staggering it prompted the shocked bank regulators immediately to order examiners to visit various vaults to be sure that the Hunt brothers hadn’t pledged the same silver to multiple lenders. By Thursday, the rest of Wall Street had gotten wind of the silver crisis, and the stock market had a wild day. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell by as much 3.5 percent before stabilizing, as traders reacted to rumors that the Hunts and some of their creditors were dumping stocks to raise desperately needed cash. Of course, it is true that every share of stock that is sold is also bought—by someone, at some price. When far more people want to sell than to buy, prices have to drop sharply before buyers will bid for even a few shares. The term heavy selling, then, means that shares can be sold only at increasingly lower prices—not that everyone is selling and no one is buying. With that caveat, “heavy selling” is what happened as the stock market reacted to fears of a default by the Hunt brothers. One Wall Street veteran said that Thursday’s trading reminded him of the frenzied response to President John F. Kennedy’s assassination in 1963. A Treasury official called the leadership at the New York Stock Exchange several times that day to assess how it was faring in the storm. The fear in Washington and on Wall Street was that the Hunts’ failure to pay their creditors would mean that those creditors would default on their own debts, spreading the contagion. Infusions of cash by the owners of the most vulnerable silver trading houses prevented an immediate disaster, but t

(URR NYC) Underground Railroad Radio NYC
Gary Larabee & Jim Stone - "TRUMP SAVED WHAT IS LEFT OF CALIFORNIA"

(URR NYC) Underground Railroad Radio NYC

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2017


http://www.rumormillnews.com/cgi-bin/forum.cgi?read=65910

Top of Mind with Julie Rose
Commonsense Solutions, Love Letters from Mt. Rushmore

Top of Mind with Julie Rose

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2016 102:19


Jim Stone, CEO of Plymouth Rock discusses today's economic challenges. Author Richard Cerasani talks about his book "Love Letters from Mount Rushmore."

School for Startups Radio
06.15 Chris Dessi w Silverback Social & Jim Stone with Plymouth Rock Company

School for Startups Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2016


June 15, 2016 Chris Dessi w Silverback Social & Jim Stone with Plymouth Rock Company

plymouth rock jim stone chris dessi silverback social
deepredradio
The Trust (German)

deepredradio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2016 4:07


Story: Im Mittelpunkt der Handlung stehen die beiden zwielichtigen Cops David Waters und Jim Stone, die bei ihrer Arbeit bei der Beweissicherung auf einen versteckten Safe stoßen. Das weckt ihr Interesse und führt sie aber auch in einen Sumpf der Korruption, wo sie um ihr Leben fürchten und jeden ihrer Schritte genau bedenken müssen. DVD/Blu Ray-Release: 29.04.2016 (Ascot Elite Home Entertainment) Thriller, Krimi Land: USA 2015 Laufzeit: ca. 87 min. FSK: 16 Regie: Alex Brewer, Benjamin Brewer Drehbuch: Benjamin Brewer, Adam Hirsch Mit Nicolas Cage, Elijah Wood, Jerry Lewis, Sky Ferreira, Kevin Weisman, ... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KRo6xT4v5_Q

deepredradio
The Trust (German)

deepredradio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2016 4:07


Story: Im Mittelpunkt der Handlung stehen die beiden zwielichtigen Cops David Waters und Jim Stone, die bei ihrer Arbeit bei der Beweissicherung auf einen versteckten Safe stoßen. Das weckt ihr Interesse und führt sie aber auch in einen Sumpf der Korruption, wo sie um ihr Leben fürchten und jeden ihrer Schritte genau bedenken müssen. DVD/Blu Ray-Release: 29.04.2016 (Ascot Elite Home Entertainment) Thriller, Krimi Land: USA 2015 Laufzeit: ca. 87 min. FSK: 16 Regie: Alex Brewer, Benjamin Brewer Drehbuch: Benjamin Brewer, Adam Hirsch Mit Nicolas Cage, Elijah Wood, Jerry Lewis, Sky Ferreira, Kevin Weisman, ... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KRo6xT4v5_Q

Project Camelot
03/28/2012 - Jim Stone

Project Camelot

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2013


03/28/2012 - Jim Stonehttp://archive.org/download/ProjectCamelot/Project-Camelot-32k-032812.mp3

Project Camelot
06/22/2012 - Brooks Agnew - Alienated Nation

Project Camelot

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2013


06/22/2012 - Brooks AgnewBrooks Agnewhttp://archive.org/download/ProjectCamelot/Project-Camelot-32k-062211.mp3Brooks Agnew, physicist and author of the new book "Alienated Nation" and many other books, updates us on the current status of his planned expedition to discover the entrance to Inner Earth http://npiee.org/ as well as gives further validation to the nukes triggered by Stuxnet in the Fukushima disaster.  Brooks has worked closely with Jim Stone (see the Project Camelot Livestream discussion with Jim) on researching the real cause behind Fukushima and lends his background in nuclear physics to clarifying what really happened..alienatednation.com