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Introducing Russell Aaron I didn't learn WordPress at a fancy college or career academy. I graduated from the University of YouTube. My internship was the Las Vegas WordPress Meetup and WordCamp Vegas. The rest I learned building mortgage company platforms, working for casinos, inside managed WordPress hosts, and at some of the best WordPress development and support shops on the planet. Show Notes For more on Russell, check out his website: https://russellenvy.com Transcript: Topher DeRosia: All right. Here we go. Hey folks. Russell Aaron: And three, two, one. Topher DeRosia: Hey folks. Welcome to Hallway Chats. I’m Topher, and I’m here with Russell Aaron. I assume I pronounced that right, because it’s not that hard, but you never know. Russell Aaron: You know, so many people call me Aaron. They’ll tag me and they go, “Thanks, Aaron.” And I’m like, “You know, it’s Russell, but it’s cool.” Topher DeRosia: Yeah, nice. All right. Well, I saw a post on LinkedIn the other day from you talking about podcasts having the same people on episodes all the time. I thought, “Oh, I gotta have that guy on my podcast.” Because then you can’t go on any other ever again, because then you’ll be that guy. Russell Aaron: Maybe. Topher DeRosia: So, I snooped a little. You live much closer to me than I expected. Have we met? Did we meet at a WordCamp? Russell Aaron: I think we met at WordCamp Ann Arbor one year. Topher DeRosia: Oh, okay. I went to a whole bunch of those. Russell Aaron: Yeah. I think I spoke 2018, something like that. Topher DeRosia: Yeah. I was probably there. Russell Aaron: Yeah. Topher DeRosia: All right. So tell me where you live, what you do, all that kind of stuff. Russell Aaron: I currently reside in Indianapolis, Indiana, and I am just freelancing as of right now. You know, I live in a pretty small town where it’s kind of old school WordPress, if you will. Anyone who is worth their salt keys will remember a day when websites were not responsive or a business has a cousin of a friend of a brother who builds websites and, “Hey, he’s working on it,” and three years later, there’s still no new website. I kind of live in a town where I’m kind of getting back to my grassroots, where I stay up late at night with my insomnia, and I will roll up to a business and I will say, “Your new website can look like this today. If you pay me this much money, I will install it today, and this is your new website.” And it’s got your updated menu, and it’s responsive, and it works on mobile, and we can connect it to AppPresser and make it an app and stuff like that. So I’m kind of reliving the glory days of what I remember WordPress to be. Topher DeRosia: I’m also freelancing right now, sort of by choice, sort of not by choice. Somebody I’m married to would rather I had regular pay and insurance. Russell Aaron: Heard that. Topher DeRosia: Are you in the same boat, or did you do this on purpose? Russell Aaron: I did this on purpose. I was not working for the man, but I was working with some people. I’m over the tiny little granular things that somebody can fire you over. Like they’re watching if your mouse moves or they’re watching if you haven’t logged in. There’s just no more trust, I feel like, in so many cases. And so I know that I can do things better on my own, and I’m going to. Topher DeRosia: I have to admit, I love the freelance life. It is pretty special. Russell Aaron: Right. It’s almost like… what’s that movie? The 40-Year-Old Virgin, where they are making a website and they’re like, “Hey, Spider-Man 3’s on in five minutes. Let’s go watch it.” Like they totally ignore their job and they just go watch this movie now. It’s kind of like that. Topher DeRosia: Yeah. Yeah. For me, it’s doing stuff with my wife. She has a day job, but it has kind of chaotic hours and not specific days of the week. And so I work when she does, which sometimes is Saturday and Sunday, and then I just don’t on Tuesday and Thursday. That’s pretty great. Russell Aaron: I’m kind of in the same boat. My wife has a wonderful job, and she is with a great group, and she does global advocacy. I mean, she just deals with people that are happy with the product, and she keeps them happy. She does lots of stuff like that. I’m kind of the same thing, where their company is now starting to get into AI, and they have so many questions, and I’m over here building things with AI and doing things like that. So I’m not exactly consulting, but my ideas are going into their company through my wife. Topher DeRosia: My wife works at a grocery store, and they have a cash machine they use in the back office that runs Linux. Russell Aaron: Oh, wow Topher DeRosia: And the IT guys had to come in and do some work on it, and she saw the screen and she’s like, “Oh, is that Linux?” And I’m like, “Who are you, and what do you know?” Super nerd. So what’s your company name? Do you have one, or is it just WP Pro Support? Russell Aaron: WP Pro Support. Topher DeRosia: WP Pro Support. Okay. Do you concentrate more on support, or do you build more? Russell Aaron: I have been doing support since 2011. I formed my very first support company, and I launched it the same day that Shane Sanderson launched Maintainn. My buddy, who you might know, John Hawkins, I was at the Vegas WordPress Meetup Group, and I had the idea in Vegas WordPress Meetup Group where there’s 70 people sitting right here behind me and they all want help. And I was like, “How do I do this?” So I built my first thing where I gave everybody free-for-life support, and they were my test group, if you will. And they helped me work out my bugs and tickets, and they helped me work out how I actually operate and do stuff like that. Then when I launched it, literally that day, John goes, “Wait, have you seen this?” And we had no idea about each other, but we literally launched them the same day. Fast forward three years down the road, I ended up working for Maintainn when it was owned by WebDevStudios. But everything I’ve done in WordPress has been support, whether I’ve worked for a mortgage company, a casino in Vegas, hosting with Liquid Web, doing stuff with NerdPress or AppPresser. Everything I’ve done is support. That’s really where my passion is because I remember what it’s like being a first timer. I think that there is a huge market potential here of people are always going to be new. I don’t care who you are. There’s always somebody new walking in the door, and there has to be a person who will sit down and say, “Come here, I’ll hold your hand.” And I am that person. I always try to look at WordPress from that lens is if a new person is looking at this today, are they going to be happy? Are they going to be confused? And I go from there. So currently today I’m transitioning away from support as we know it, where you write a ticket and then somebody on the other end is like, “Hey, I fixed your site,” or whatever. And I’m transitioning to a new product that I’m working on. So I’m going to be getting away from traditional support, but I’m still going to be doing things in the support space, if that makes sense. Topher DeRosia: Yeah, that makes sense. When I first got into WordPress, it was 2010, and custom post types were brand new. Russell Aaron: Right? Topher DeRosia: And I was out of my element with WordPress. I did not know what I was doing, but I did know PHP, and no one else knew post types yet. So when it comes to that, I was on an equal footing, and that was my way in. That was my leverage. I made a lot of money in the early days just building custom post types. Russell Aaron: Custom post types and single-posttype.php or whatever. Yeah. Topher DeRosia: So I was a competent PHP guy who didn’t know WordPress. And I feel like we’re in kind of the same transition space right now with AI, where we have tons of competent WordPressers who don’t really know AI yet. I think there’s a great space for that, teaching our friends, teaching everybody we’ve known for 10 years in WordPress. You know what I mean? Russell Aaron: I do. That’s one of the things that I really love about WordPress is that… let’s take the new 7.0 that just came out, I think it re-leveled the playing field. Before this came out, there were people that were ahead of others when it comes to patterns or blocks or the command palette and stuff like that. But now I think with this, we’re back to an even playing field because every… I mean, not exactly. There’s still some people who know AI a lot better than others, but you’re always five minutes ahead of somebody and five minutes behind somebody else. Topher DeRosia: Oh, yeah. Russell Aaron: But I do think that with 7.0, a new level playing field has come out. And now is the time to start learning, or you got to wait until 7.1 comes out where that new level playing field comes out. But that’s what I love about WordPress is that it continues to happen. Like you said, CPTs. I still love CPTs. I think they’re one of my favorite things. I look at all of these features, you know, page builders, another time when the playing field was leveled again. Now you learn page builders and then shortcodes and then this and then that. I think that’s the one gift that WordPress keeps giving is that you might be out of date six months from now, but then 7.1 comes out and you’re caught right back up. Topher DeRosia: Right. Yeah. And while you’re five minutes ahead, you quick do a WordCamp talk. Russell Aaron: Yes. Yeah. Topher DeRosia: For that long, you know more than other people, right? Russell Aaron: At least it’s on video, right? Topher DeRosia: Right. I was an expert for a minute and a half. Russell Aaron: That was my 15 minutes of fame. Topher DeRosia: What is your WordCamp life like these days? When was the last one you went to? Russell Aaron: The last one I went to was in Vegas, 2018. It was at the Plaza Hotel, which I worked at. When John was putting that together, in Vegas we had a wonderful space, and it was called The Innevation Center, and it was at a data facility called Switch. And they donated so much to us, and we are so grateful to them. And then they kind of had a change in their policy where they weren’t doing things, and then they overpriced how much it would cost to hold events and stuff like that. I was working at a hotel, and so we had this giant convention space, if you will. And so because I was able to pull some strings, we got a great, great discount, all food paid for. I mean, all of it. So that was my last WordCamp. The after party was on top of a pool deck, and there was pickleball courts, and there was a pool, and there was an open bar. I mean, it was rad. That was my last one. I have kids now. My kids are seven and eight and so my WordPress travels have slowed. No, I’m sorry. I take it back. WordCamp US last year was my last one, where we went scorched earth. That’s what I call it. I call it WordCamp scorched earth. Topher DeRosia: I was there for that one. I used to go to a lot every year. Go to- Russell Aaron: Five, six? Topher DeRosia: Five and 10. But since COVID, I think maybe just US every year. It’s weird to just go to one. Russell Aaron: It is. And just US, it’s almost like we used to have what I used to call regional events, where I lived in Vegas, I would hit up WordCamp Orange County, then I’d hit up San Diego, then we’d hit up LA, and then we’d make our way up to Portland, and then maybe if San Francisco did one, and then Phoenix. I did all my regional stuff. And then every once in a while I would venture… I mean, I love WordCamp Minneapolis. Love the people up there. Love so much about that event. Used to do that a lot. What’s the one in Ohio that I used to go to? Topher DeRosia: In the teens, there were five in Ohio. And being in Michigan, I used to just cruise down there. Russell Aaron: It’s a three-hour, three-and-a-half-hour drive, huh? Topher DeRosia: Yeah. Russell Aaron: About that. Yeah. Topher DeRosia: At the time, I was working for a company that was paying me to go to WordCamps. I had to make the case for each one, but it was a really simple case for all the Ohio ones because I didn’t need a plane ticket. I just drive over there. It’s like five in Ohio. There was Ann Arbor, there was Detroit, there was Grand Rapids, there was Chicago. I mean, there was almost 10 WordCamps within a three-hour drive of me. Russell Aaron: That’s beautiful. Topher DeRosia: It’s just not there anymore. Russell Aaron: I was very fortunate to work for companies like WebDevStudios, where I could tell them, “Hey, I got into WordCamp Minneapolis. I’m going to speak there.” And because I’m speaking there, they would reimburse me X amount of dollars for something, and then they would sponsor the WordCamp, and then they would make a thing out of it. I mean, I was very fortunate in being able to do that. Then I worked with a really great company called NerdPress, and they are a fantastic group of people that do the same thing. And then I ventured out into different straits, and it was very much different. I’ll say that much. Topher DeRosia: Yeah. Those are good times. Russell Aaron: It’s almost like… the way that I put it is it’s like we all graduated. We all did our four years of college, we all graduated, and now we went to our temp jobs or we went to our internships. Like the band broke up. Topher DeRosia: Yep. Yeah, it is a lot like that. I have seen generations of WordPressers. There was all the crew before 2010 that were downloading zip files and hacking themes to even get them to run. Then there was after 2010, and custom post types were new and stuff. And then there’s the whole Gutenberg generation that never experienced all that crazy theme stuff. Russell Aaron: I mean, you tell people that child themes were so new that people didn’t even grasp the concept of a child theme, and today it’s so baked in. It’s not even something that people think about. It’s just you install this and the child theme, and it’s a thing. But I remember writing those by hand. Topher DeRosia: Yeah. No kidding. Then to a certain extent, not even having child themes anymore because nothing is stored on the file system. Russell Aaron: I love it. I love it. In my very first WordCamp talk in Vegas 2012, I made a prediction that everything was powered by the theme. Everything used to… I mean, that’s as far as I go back is every template was the same. It was left column, right sidebar, header, and every page, whether you liked it or not, looked like a blog post. And it wasn’t full-width, responsive. I remember a lot of that. And then corporate themes came out, and then cupcake themes came out, then lawn company themes came out, and then the rise of Envato and stuff like that. That’s a good name for a band, The Rise of Envato. Topher DeRosia: I’d go see them. Russell Aaron: But all that stuff comes out. And then you look at it now and it’s like, that seems so far away. I still remember the day that I learned about child themes, and I’ve never forgotten that. And I think, coming back full circle, that’s why I stay in this beginner support space because I’m kind of keeping that nostalgia around, I guess. Topher DeRosia: Yeah. There’s a lot of joy in watching people’s eyes light up when they get it. Russell Aaron: That’s the best part is just telling people what’s possible. When they’re frustrated with something and you go, “Oh, hey, Gravity Forms can do that.” And they’re like, “Wait, what?” And I’m like, “Yeah.” And they can also do… And I just start naming stuff. And I show all 50 extensions that they have and they’re just like, “Wait, what?” And I’m like, “Yeah.” I’m like, “This starts getting radical when you’re into it.” Topher DeRosia: There’s something I miss from old WordPress that I don’t see in modern WordPress. It might not be a thing. And that is dramatic new styling with a theme the instant you install it. My wife is not a computer person and does not care about computers. She loves design stuff. There was a time we used Winamp. Russell Aaron: Wow. Topher DeRosia: And she loved getting skins for Winamp. And she would download 30 in a day and try them all out. And then when I set her up for the blog the first time and showed her the theme repo on .org, this is in 2011, she would literally spend a day just downloading theme after theme after theme. Russell Aaron: Same way. Topher DeRosia: And you just install it and poof, your site looks amazingly different. These days, I mean, you install something like Kadence or GeneratePress or Ollie or any of them, really, and it’s kind of a blank canvas. Russell Aaron: It’s very minimalist. It’s very minimalist. Topher DeRosia: I miss the ability to say, “I feel like making a change today,” and two minutes later, your site looks completely different because you’re using… Russell Aaron: Couldn’t agree more. Couldn’t agree more. I mean, I look back at old pictures from when I would host the meetup group in Vegas, and there’s pictures of me talking, and then on the screen behind me is my old site, and it was this old layout. I bought the theme from Envato because I was just fascinated with it. It was everything that I wanted it to look like. But same thing is now when you change your theme from this one to that one, that dark grunge kind of thing is gone, and now you’ve got this bootstrap-looking thing or whatever. I agree with you. I think that comes from my days of being in MySpace. That’s how I got started with all this. So you could change your MySpace template like that, and I think that’s where it comes from, at least for me. Topher DeRosia: I haven’t even looked into it. Can you make a Gutenberg-based blog theme that has a very striking look and just release it? And then, I don’t know, just release a whole bunch of them like in the old days? Theme shops had 35 themes for sale, and they all looked different because they were all totally different themes. Russell Aaron: I remember there was a day on Envato where it was the same theme, it was just rebranded. So it was like theme name 1.0, and it was called Atlas. And then it’s the same theme but in orange, and now it’s 1.2, and it’s called Dungeon or something. And then we have 1.3 again. Same theme, same framework, but each version was named something different. It made that developer look like they had five different products instead of just one over and over. Now you look at something like a page builder, and it’s like, “We’ve got 500 different templates in one thing.” I can’t do that. I think that’s too much for me. Topher DeRosia: It’s like the days of the CSS Zen Garden. Russell Aaron: Right. Topher DeRosia: HTML is the same, CSS changes. Before I used WordPress, I built my own blog system. Russell Aaron: Oh, wow. Topher DeRosia: It never got super advanced, but I used it for 10 years. One of the things you can do in your HTML is register alternate stylesheets. It’s the same tag, it’s just an alternate word in there. And then in Firefox, at least, you can go under “view Page Style”, and they would all be listed there, and you can just choose different themes. I figured out the JavaScript, even though I didn’t know JavaScript. I figured out the JavaScript to make a little dropdown box in my sidebar so my visitors could say, “Oh, I want to change my theme here.” I never figured out how to do that in WordPress because everything was so tied to style.css. I didn’t know how to make a different one be the main one. But that’s something else I miss in WordPress is the ability to just so dramatically and dynamically change your design because your content is structured so well. Russell Aaron: You know, not only that, but I really liked the websites where there was a demo, and then it gave you a basic username. The username was demo, the password was demo. But then the one thing I never figured out was how every 24 hours the site would just reset. So somebody can go in there and they could do whatever they wanted to do. They could create their own pages. They could create their own blog posts. And for 24 hours, there was a page called Russell’s Awesome. But then after 24 hours, it would just reset. I always thought that was so cool, but I could never figure out how to do that. Topher DeRosia: Oh, yeah. And everybody was editing all at the same time, within that 24-hour period. Russell Aaron: I have since restructured my website. I use the block theme from WebDevStudios. I kind of feel like that’s where I got my education from. I was somebody who kind of dabbled around in WordPress, and then when I went to go work with them for three years, they had a set of standards that I couldn’t even fathom to begin with. But then as we built things and I saw how their machine works, how their business revolves, I was like, “You know, for me, this is the way that I like to do things, is the way that they like to do things.” And so my new website… I mean, not new website, but it’s my new theme, I actually had AI build it for me. I had Claude. I was using… It’s by ThemeIsle. Neve. I was using Neve, one of my favorite themes. Love them. So I was using that, and then my site was kind of all over the place. It was an “I’ll teach you how to do this”. That’s kind of the main focus of my site is I will jump on a call with you, and whatever questions you have, I’ll sit here for five hours with you if you want. I will teach you and until you get it. But then I also had this section about band names that were just… earlier when we were talking about the rise of Envato, you know, like I would have a section on my blog where you could create a new band name and then I had all these random blog posts. And so my website was kind of like this potluck, if you will, just like this random stuff. And I was like, you know, I want to be doing something else. I think my website needs to change. And I have those old blog posts still, but they’re hidden. So now with my new theme, I had AI look at my old site and say, this is what I think we should do. I picked out some colors and over like five days, I had it build me five different HTML pages, like completely different, you know? And then I started giving AI and I said like, “Okay, I want to look like this.” And then I was like, well, okay, I like this and I like this, but I also like this from this other site.” So I started feeding it information and like when the HTML came out, I had 12 different templates. I had my blog posts, I had my archive, but I had everything built in HTML. And the cool thing about the WDS block theme is that it serves everything as an HTML page. So I literally just took AI and said, “Take these HTML pages, bake them into how this theme does it,” and bam, my site came up. I had it done in maybe two days. Topher DeRosia: Wow. Russell Aaron: And then after that, I had it take all of those HTML pages and create me patterns. So now I can go in, and when I go into my full site editor, I can go to patterns, I have all my homepage patterns, my blog patterns, I sliced everything up, and they’re all WordPress native blocks. So I can literally go in and change the coloring on any page I want instead of having to edit the HTML or anything. And now that I have that, I feel this sense of freedom where I’m not worrying about an update coming tomorrow, if my update is gonna break or I don’t have to read a changelog that is not specific anymore. I can’t stress how much I love not having to read changelogs or the lack of changelogs. I mean, I’m fully happy with how things have come out. And over time, I’m gonna keep fine-tuning it, but I’m pretty much where I’m at right now. With all of this new technology that’s come out, I’ve really kind of found my love again for WordPress. I was kind of in a slump where I just wasn’t really doing anything. Now I take my son and we’ll drive down to Louisville, Kentucky. He rides BMX. So while he’s racing, I will literally have Claude Code open on my computer and I will log into the Claude app on my phone and I can keep sitting there having the same conversation. So this new thing that I’m building, I can still do it while I’m sitting there watching him race or while I’m doing something else. I was just like, this is fantastic. And then my wife will drive home and I’ll just sit there and I talk into my phone, I literally put the microphone on and I’ll be like, “You know, I don’t like that. And here’s my thoughts about this.” And you know, my phone dictates all of that and then I send it to my computer through the app and it just keeps spinning things up. Then by the time I get home, I have a new version that I can demo or I have a new version that I can test. I mean, I am just so fascinated by it. Topher DeRosia: That’s cool. Were we at WebDev at the same time? Russel Aaron: I don’t think so. Topher DeRosia: I was there just over three years ago. Russel Aaron: I was there 2015 through 2018. Topher DeRosia: Oh, yeah. I came much later. I was only there for like two months. Russell Aaron: Oh, wow. Sometimes that’s the way it goes. Topher DeRosia: Yeah. They were gonna get a big contract that hired a bunch of people and two months later didn’t get the contract and let us all go. Russell Aaron: As much as I hate that, that also taught me that the people that do great work or the people that show up every day and are putting in more than they’re getting out, those are usually the people that stay in companies like that. That really changed my work ethic. I used to be somebody who wanted to be not lazy, but I didn’t wanna be pressed for time or having to go, go, go and having to be on all the time. Now, I’m the opposite. Now, I’m like, now that I’ve done that, I kind of earn for that stretch for a little bit. I mean, you were just saying that how you’ve transitioned to where you are. I was watching a Barstool Sports interview with a guy who runs a pizza shop in… it’s either New Jersey or New York. The guy’s only open Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday. And he’s only open nine to six or something like that. And he built that business… well, it’s been in his family for like 60 years or something. He has one of the last original pizza ovens ever. But anyways, the point is, is that he lives at the pizza place, that’s where his entire life is, but he built the business around his life. I’m doing the same thing where if I wanna literally go jump on my bike right now and go for a two-mile ride, I’m gonna go do that. And I don’t have to feel like, hey, you’re not logged in and we’re not tracking your mouse. Like what’s happening? How come you’re not on Slack? You know what I mean? I’m not tied down to that. And I can’t stress that enough of like, that is where I wanna be. Topher DeRosia: Yeah. Yeah, it is a good life. We are at about the time to wrap it up. Okay. So I’m gonna do that. Where do you hang out online? Russel Aaron: Where do I hang out online? Topher DeRosia: Are you in any common WordPress Slacks? Russel Aaron: I’m on the main WordPress Slack sometimes. I tend to watch more than I do involve anymore. A long time ago, I used to be very vocal and I used to be not afraid to walk in to a room guns blazing. With the big cultural shift that happened in WordPress, I tend to just sit back now and be more self-reserved. So I post on my website, russellenvy.com. I’m on LinkedIn. I’ve been utilizing Reddit a lot too. I think for me, Reddit is a place where I kind of disagree with the fact that you can hide behind a pseudonym, but I do like the brutal honesty that people will have because they are hiding behind something and they will say, dude, this flat out sucks. Or they’ll be like, Hey, this is great, but it would be cool if, or somebody can be like, “Hey, that already exists. You’re not doing anything new.” I do like that. Because it kind of not puts me in my place, but it shows me either how connected or disconnected I am to what I think I’m doing. And so Reddit is a very great place. I mean, everything is russellenvy.com except for Twitter or X, whatever you want to call it. Topher DeRosia: All right, cool. Russel Aaron: Where do you hang out at? Topher DeRosia: I am in probably 40 slacks, but the vast majority of them, I don’t look at. I’m there so that someone can ping me. I’m in a couple of slacks in India. Okay. I’m in the WordPress Italian community Slack. Russel Aaron: That’s interesting. Topher DeRosia: Post status make, of course there’s a hero press Slack. I have my own company Slack, my local meetup has a Slack. There’s just a lot of them. I wouldn’t say I’m super active on any of them. I just occasionally interact with somebody. I use my own company Slack to invite my clients in when we talk there. Russel Aaron: Right. Do you find yourself reading things more than, you know… from the outsider looking in, I post a lot and it looks like I post a lot… I mean, especially on LinkedIn, but I’m always consuming more than I’m posting. Do you find yourself doing that? Like where you’re… maybe not keeping up with the trades anymore, but like, you know… I used to read maybe 1,500 blog posts a week and then… what was that service where you could like save…? I used to have a service where you could save articles and then that way, late at night, I would just read, you know, maybe 10 or 15 of them a night. But now I look at things like Reddit where I see… I just look at somebody who’s going on there and asking for help. Again, it’s a standard WordPress person that, hey, I’m new to this, I don’t know how, and I’m looking at it and I’m just like, how can we make that better? That’s kind of where I’m at these days. Topher DeRosia: I don’t read a whole lot in Slack. It really is for my convenience. I’m pretty active with my RSS reader. I follow a lot of stuff. Russell Aaron: Oh, wow. Topher DeRosia: Because I don’t wanna go chase it all down all over the internet. So, you know, there’s that. I’m on LinkedIn a fair amount, Facebook a little bit. I’m on Mastodon and Blue Sky mostly just to post stuff. It’s funny, I have more followers… No, let me say it this way. Mastodon, I have the fewest followers, but the most engagement from those followers. Russell Aaron: Isn’t that interesting? Topher DeRosia: Yeah, I’ll post something and I’ll get some favorites or reposts or whatever. Blue Sky, I get almost nothing at all, despite the fact that I have like a thousand followers there. Russell Aaron: But Blue Sky is a community that is fast-moving. I almost compare it to anything Meta has, which is you can post today right now and in three minutes you’re 785 posts down. That’s what I really love about Reddit is that I posted something about this AI team that I’m building that I give away for free on GitHub, and so for like five days, I was the number two post on that subreddit. And the volume that I saw from that. I mean, Reddit really loves human writing. If you go in there, you post something that somewhat seemingly might suggest that you had AI do anything with it, they will just downvote it. But if you write original and you write from the heart and stuff, like your stuff skyrockets there. I’ve learned a lot from Reddit because of that. Topher DeRosia: That’s really cool. Russell Aaron: It’s interesting. Topher DeRosia: Yeah. All right, well, thanks for chatting with me. Russell Aaron: Thank you for the time. Topher DeRosia: And now you can’t be on anybody else’s podcast. Russell Aaron: I’m actually starting my own, sir. Topher DeRosia: Are you? All right. Russell Aaron: I have, like you said, the reason why we started this is because you saw something from me that says, “I’m tired of the indie circuit,” if you will. I put out a LinkedIn post, I don’t know, maybe a month ago at this point and I asked people if they wanted to be on a show. So I have WP Roundtable. I got that from Kyle Mahler, a person who I love in WordPress more than I can express. One of the best people on the planet, I feel like. I was thinking about starting that up again, because we don’t have WP Watercooler anymore. We don’t have anything like that. That’s kind of where I got my start from. But again, I also identify that that’s kind of the problem is that every Monday or Friday I was on a show and I was one of the people that you would see constantly. And so I was sitting there thinking and I was like, what doesn’t the space have? What kind of show do I wanna watch? Because I don’t watch shows when they come out, do you? Topher DeRosia: No. Russell Aaron: I always watch them maybe four weeks down the road at like 2:30 in the morning when I have nothing going on. And by that point, the information is almost stale. I mean, the way that anything works these days. And there’s a few that I might watch maybe within 48 hours of coming out, but at this point, there is something… a new idea that myself and… the guy’s actually an automatician. And so it’s actually kind of interesting because we don’t wanna say anything that would put him in a position to where he’s saying something bad about the company he works for, but I’m also the person where I get to say something to the person who works at Automattic to maybe incite some change. So we are working on something like that, but it’s not going to be an interview show. It is not going to be something where you tune it out or you put it on a 2.5 playback speed just to get through it. You know what I mean? And that’s really what the emphasis of my post was about is that so many of the interviews go that way. Topher DeRosia: Yeah. Are you familiar with wppodcasts.com? Russell Aaron: Yes. Topher DeRosia: Okay, good. So when you get it started up, submit it there. Russell Aaron: That’s a place. I’m very fascinated by Gary Vaynerchuk. Are you familiar with Gary V? Topher DeRosia: No. Russell Aaron: I watch something Gary V every day. That guy makes me feel like I’m lazy every single day, but he is also one of the people that says like, “Hey, you’re 40, you’re still just a baby.” A lot of people feel like I should be two kids, a house, marriage, this, that, and because I’m not, I’m behind the ball. And he’s one person that’s like, “Listen, you’re still a kid.” And he’s like, “You’re 40, I’m 40, and you have 10 years until you’re 50.” And even then you’re still so young to where you can generate something again and from 50 to 60, you can now do. That kind of mentality really moved me around. Why I bring that up is, I’m trying not to post on the same places that everybody else is. I wanna find that new venture. Substack is a great one. And they also have a way to release podcast episodes through them. So they can actually be your entire engine. So like you don’t have to host them on different places and stuff like that. So I’m looking for different plays like that. Topher DeRosia: All right, cool. Well, I look forward to hearing about it when it comes out. I’m sure you’ll post on LinkedIn. Russell Aaron: Yes, yeah. Topher DeRosia: All right. All right then, well, I will maybe find you on Slack or Reddit or someplace. Russell Aaron: Slack, Reddit, LinkedIn. Either way, please keep in touch. First of all, it’s great to see somebody familiar in the space. It’s great. I mean, just talking about the old days, I could sit here and do it forever. Topher DeRosia: All right, I’ll see ya. Russell Aaron: Have a good one. Topher DeRosia: All right, so that was the end of the podcast. If you could send me a headshot. And yep, that’s the one. Cool. And any links you want in the liner notes. Russell Aaron: Cool. Topher DeRosia: And two or three sentences about you and what you do and whatnot. Russell Aaron: Cool. I noticed that you… are you trying to revive Hallway Chats? Or is it something that when you just find something interesting, you’re like, hey, I’ll go do that. Topher DeRosia: That’s it right there. Russell Aaron: Okay. Sure, sure. Topher DeRosia: There was a time when it was a weekly podcast and now it’s a whenever I feel like it podcast. Russell Aaron: I love it. I think that’s the biggest reason why I’m trying to do something different is I really dislike watching a podcast. The first thing they do is they come on and they go, “Hey, welcome to WP whatever. Hey, sorry we didn’t post this week. I was bit…” If you are gonna say you’re gonna post every Wednesday at one, that’s on you. But I do not like when things start off with an apology. Like just get to it. Because I’m not watching it Wednesday at one. I mean, unless you’re Joe Rogan, or unless you are somebody who has a huge following that people will watch you live because it’s important. Otherwise, it’s just consumable stuff, you know? Topher DeRosia: Yeah. For years, I posted it Heropress weekly on Wednesday without fail. I would ignore my family to go get it done. Then I was talking to Morton Rand Hendrickson. You know him? Russell Aaron: Uh-huh. Topher DeRosia: Yeah, he’s a huge fan of Heropress. And I said to him, “Do you read every week?” He’s like, “Oh no, not at all.” He’s like, “Oh, I thought you really liked it.” And he said, “Oh, I love it. But I don’t have time to read every week.” Every few months I’ll get depressed about the WordPress community and I’ll go read 10 essays. And then one time I was at WordCamp Ann Arbor, probably the same one you were at and Josepha came to me and said that… she was kind of a sounding board for employees that come to her and said, “Listen, I’ve been working support all day and people suck and I’m depressed and I hate life.” And she would just listen for a while and then at the end they would say, “Okay, I’m gonna go read a bunch of Heropress and I’ll feel better.” And it really changed my perspective of what I was making. I wasn’t making a weekly publication. I was making an archive, a collection to be used as a tool, a library. Russell Aaron: I’m gonna say this poorly, but it’s almost like you are creating a support help hotline where it’s like, if you’re on the verge of blowing up your website, please call this number. We’ll talk you down from it. It’s almost like you’re building that. Topher DeRosia: That’s funny. Russell Aaron: That’s interesting. And then now you’re just selective about it or you’re so far- Topher DeRosia: I’m less aggressive about finding essayists and less insistent that they get it to me by a certain time. Like I would find somebody and say, listen, I need it by Sunday on this date. And they were like, “Okay.” And that worked for a while. Russell Aaron: Oh, before, before. Okay. Topher DeRosia: Yeah. But now I’ll find somebody… No, I don’t go looking as often. Russell Aaron: You’ll maybe find something that somebody wrote and you’ll be like, “Hey, are you interested in doing this?” Topher DeRosia: Yes. And I don’t find people as often. I used to find my people on Twitter and I’m not on there anymore. Russell Aaron: Like by personal choice? Topher DeRosia: Yeah. Russell Aaron: Okay. Topher DeRosia: I just left Twitter. Russell Aaron: Oh, wow. You feel like your life improved? Topher DeRosia: Yes and no. Russell Aaron: Okay. Topher DeRosia: I feel the loss of what Twitter was. And it’s not there anymore. It’s just gone. Russell Aaron: Especially around WordCamp and stuff like that. That used to have to be the place that you’d be on, you know? Topher DeRosia: The Twitter I loved doesn’t exist anymore. And so, yeah, I feel that loss. Russell Aaron: I need a t-shirt that says that. Topher DeRosia: Yeah. Wow. I’m in the process of making a printable store. Printable? Printful. Printful store. Russell Aaron: Cool. Topher DeRosia: With Woo, to make a video with. I need to make a bunch of products. Maybe I’ll make one of those. Russell Aaron: It’s interesting. Wow. You just flat-out left X. Do you feel like with Heropress, it was… and again, this is why I made that post, is that people almost see it like they can make the rounds. And it’s like, well, I haven’t gone there yet. And so they’re gonna submit something to you because they’re gonna get some press out of it. And it’s not so much what’s best for your brand or it’s not best for your website. They just see it as, well, I’m gonna get some exposure there. Do you feel like it used to be that? Topher DeRosia: No. I’ve gotten maybe two or three submissions ever like that. And a couple of them, I was able to say, “No, that’s not what we’re about. It’s this other thing, what Heropress is actually about.” And they’re like, “Oh, well, okay, that’d be great.” And they do that. And maybe one or two people have said, “I built this great company and everyone should come use my company.” Like, no, not so much. Russell Aaron: Interesting. Topher DeRosia: And that’s the end of it. Russell Aaron: I remember back in, I wanna say like 2013, people used to call each other out and be like, why are you giving the same speech at WordCamp Miami, WordCamp Minneapolis, WordCamp San Diego. And that’s kind of where I was at with that same LinkedIn post. It’s like, I really, really enjoy watching Matt Cromwell’s show, but the guy that he just had on also was on Jonathan Denwood and was also on this one. It was also on, I was like, I’ve already seen this. Maybe I get three more percent information that wasn’t in that last, or because Matt knows a little bit more about personal stuff in WordPress or building a business, he might have some more insight there, but it’s like, I’ve already heard this and I’m kind of already over it. And that’s kind of where I was at is you don’t have to just say, I’m gonna do this one and that’s it. But it’s almost like, you’re making yourself not… what’s the word. Not credible because you’re going around and saying the same thing and it’s just, you’re not doing anything different than a blog post could have done. Topher DeRosia: You know what I mean? I don’t feel too bad about repeating WordCamp talks because, especially at small camps, because a lot of people are just gonna go to their local camp and never go to another one. And unless they cruise.tv, they’re not gonna see it. I struggle a little bit with podcasts because I’ve been asked a lot over the last 10 years to come on a podcast and talk about the story of WordPress. And it’s the same story every time, you know? And so, I’ll try to mix it up a little bit, give different information that I’ve never given before, that sort of thing. But it is something I think about and struggle with a little bit. Russell Aaron: What do you struggle with about it? Topher DeRosia: I don’t wanna just say the same thing over and over again. You know, I don’t want people to go, oh, Topher’s on another podcast episode. Oh, I’ve heard this story. I don’t need to be on this episode. Fortunately, it’s been around long enough that I can give a brief synopsis of the beginning and talk about stuff that’s happened in the last couple of years. Russell Aaron: Right. Topher DeRosia: Which is gonna be really different from the podcast episode I was on in 2020. Russell Aaron: You know? Right. Topher DeRosia: It’s an interesting dilemma when you have one story to tell and everybody wants you to tell it. How do you deal with that? Russell Aaron: Well, I’ve noticed that too. It is like, you know, I’ll watch [Insert Famous Name Here], and they have a podcast, and they’re interviewing, again, [Insert Famous Name Here], and that person was also just on That Famous Name and That Famous Name. I actually saw somebody, it’s like almost a year ago, and they were just like, “Do you want me just to say this so your show has this speech in it or are you genuinely asking me?” Because, you know, like you want this story so you can post it on your social media. But I’ve already given that story 15 different times because they wanted it for their own, you know? And it’s almost going that way where I kind of respect it in a way because you don’t want to post other people’s content. But I also feel like I’m tired of saying the same shit over and over again. It’s interesting, man. Topher DeRosia: Yeah, that’s a dilemma. Russell Aaron: So you’re just like kicking back and… are you building something for you that you think is gonna scale or are you trying to get away from WordPress? That’s kind of where I’m at right now. Topher DeRosia: Yes and no. I have always wanted to… I’ve always been better with people than code. I’m a life coach. Russell Aaron: Yeah. I did not know that about you. Topher DeRosia: I love talking to the client more than coding. I love helping people learn things. And so those skills could be anywhere in WordPress, but also could be anywhere outside of WordPress. So I’m looking for those jobs and they are not out there. Russell Aaron: Right. Topher DeRosia: So here we are. Russell Aaron: I’m to the point now where my son, he’s eight, but he races BMX, like actual bikes and stuff. And so there’s a college here in Indianapolis and it’s one of the best cycling schools in the country. And there’s like five Olympians that practice every Tuesday and Thursday and they’re right in our back door. These are people that have a great social following, but they don’t post very well. They have a brand name, but they don’t have a website. So I’m noticing that every new space that I go into, it’s kind of like I get to jump back into WordPress again, where it’s like, hey, I just built a website for this BMX track in Louisville, Kentucky. It’s one of the best tracks in the country by everybody that has ever raced in a sport, they all vote that it’s one of the best, but they don’t have a website period. I just went through this where they have a guy, he’s their treasurer and he’s like, “Well, I’m an AI software guy.” And I’m like, “Well, how come you don’t have a website?” And he’s like, “Well…” And I’m like, “Listen, I submitted a new version of a we… literally, I uploaded it to my Russell website or to my Russell Envy site and I just put it in a sub-folder and I was like, “Your website could look like this today.” I was like, “For free. I don’t want anything from you. No free anything.” I was like, “I want to donate this to you because I want to grow the sport.” And the guy’s like, “I wanted to build it and React.” And I’m like, “Well, why didn’t you?” And the guy’s like, “Uh.” And I’m like, “I have free hosting for life from WPEngine.” And I was like, “I won’t charge you guys ever. I will host a site. I have free with AppPresser. I’ll build you guys an app where you guys can send push notifications.” And the guy’s like, “Well, I want to have a lot of control and say over it.” And I was just like, “All right, you know what?” And then I built my own. Now I own a domain all about their BMX track and now they’re calling me going, “We should have went with you.” I’m to the point now where I’m nice. And then it’s just like, “Dude, I’m 10,000 miles over you and I’m going to go this way.” Liquid Web did that to me. Liquid Web brought me in and they were like, “We’re going to…” I was supposed to be the OG stellar WP. They brought me in, I was hiring all my friends and I was bringing in people and we were building something. And then they called me and they were like, “Well, you can either be a level two support person or you could just not work here.” And I was like, “Well, I don’t work here anymore.” And they were like, “Well, wait, hang on.” And I literally hit “click” and I have never logged on since. Topher DeRosia: That’s funny. Russell Aaron: I’m in that same boat where, you know, I don’t have to work for you. You know what I mean? Like, fuck, I’m 40. I should be doing something on my own anyway. I kind of wish I had… what was WP 101? Sean did that for all those years. I wish I would have done that. Or every week, I should have had some YouTube about talking about something and maybe I could have monetized that, but I’m not behind the ball. I let the ball slip is what I feel like. Topher DeRosia: It’s not too late to start. I picked that up when Sean, quit and I’ve got a YouTube channel with a bunch of stuff on it. I published one today. Russell Aaron: Oh wow. It’s just interesting things that you think about, or is it like educational, like tutorials? Topher DeRosia: It’s educational tutorials, but stuff that I find interesting. Like today I made a desktop wallpaper for WordCamp Europe. Russell Aaron: Nice. Topher DeRosia: And I did it by going to their webpage in my browser and using the console to hack the HTML and CSS until it looked like a screen, a wallpaper. Russell Aaron: That’s fucking cool. Topher DeRosia: So I published it right before I’d started talking to you, like minutes before that. And it has three views. Russell Aaron: Woohoo. Topher DeRosia: But a couple of weeks ago I did one called fun and games in the terminal. And it’s how to play Tetris in the terminal and how to make a choo-choo train go across your screen when you type LS wrong. And it has 784 views right now. Russell Aaron: That’s awesome. Topher DeRosia: I did one on how to brighten a photo. I did a series. I’m working on a series called Topher learns how, or I talk to people who know how to do things that I really should know how to do, but don’t. I talked to Scott Kingsley Clark about pods, which has been around forever, but I’ve never used. I talked to Donata about Termageddon, because I know it’s important, but I have stayed away because I don’t understand and it’s scary. Russell Aaron: Termageddon. I’ve never heard that. Topher DeRosia: Oh. You know the little cookie consent things, privacy policies and whatnot? Russell Aaron: Yeah. Topher DeRosia: So when you sign up with term again, you pay a surprisingly low monthly fee and they have a human get on the phone with you and talk through your requirements of where you live, your legal stuff. Like, are you in Europe? Are you in California? Where are you? Where are your customers, your viewers? Then you drop in a short code for your privacy code and for the cookies and they keep them up to date based on how the laws change. So you don’t have to pay attention to, Oh, did California make some crazy new law about cookies? What do I need to do to update my site? It’s really, really great. So I did an interview with her. Russell Aaron: $12 a month or $119 a year. Topher DeRosia: Yeah. Russell Aaron: What is the point of having a privacy policy if you don’t pay extra for limiting your liability? Wow. That’s amazing. Topher DeRosia: It is. Russell Aaron: That’s someone just thinking outside the box. Topher DeRosia: Yeah. I have a couple of videos where I was given an account at a hosting company that I’ve never used and videoed logging in for the first time and getting to a website. Russell Aaron: Oh, wow. Just from first login to setting everything up to now you have something production. Wow. Topher DeRosia: Yeah. Specifically not reading the docs. Russell Aaron: Oh, just trying to brute force your way through it. Topher DeRosia: Yeah. Russell Aaron: That’s smart, dude. Topher DeRosia: It’s partly about… well, they may have wonderful docs. It may be super easy to do if you read all the docs. I don’t want to read the docs. Russell Aaron: Me neither. Topher DeRosia: Clickety clickety click, I have a website. So I did GreenGeeks. I did honesthosting.io. I did X cloud. So that’s the kind of stuff I’m doing. Russell Aaron: That’s interesting. That is something that, that Gary V talks about a lot is that it used to have to be where you are this WordPress brand and you do just this and all your videos could only be about that. Anytime you stepped outside the box, people were like, “Why am I watching this?” And today now we’re to finally to where my website would probably actually thrive is it’s so random. It’s just something out of my head and one thing can skyrocket and it’s like hitting the jackpot, you know? That’s interesting. Topher DeRosia: Another thing I did is I made a site called topher.how and because I realized I had never really made stuff in my own channel. I’ve been blogging for decades, making videos, WinningWP. I have over a hundred videos on WinningWP. Russell Aaron: WinningWP? Topher DeRosia: Yeah. Russell Aaron: Did you start that when Charlie Sheen started doing Winning? Topher DeRosia: No, no, no, no. But I was thinking, boy, I’d love to have all this stuff on my own website, but I don’t want to go find it all and copy paste posts. And then I realized nearly every place I’ve ever made content has RSS for their authors. Russell Aaron: Yeah. Topher DeRosia: And so I found the sites, found my author RSS feed and started piping them into WP all import. And now topher.how has all my content from the last 15 years on a dozen different sites, doesn’t more than a dozen different sites, all my videos, all my posts, everything on wordpress.tv, all that stuff. So it’s kind of a portfolio. Yeah, so you can go to topher.how and see all my stuff. Russell Aaron: That was actually one thing that I was really proud of was that my entire WordPress journey is documented on somebody else’s project. So, like you go to WPwatercooler and my resume, what is great about it is that it is not me who can edit those videos, it is not me who can master them. Those words are there. Those words are me. You want to know my qualifications in WordPress, there’s all my shit. For me, I was like, “That’s actually pretty sick. You know what I mean?” Topher DeRosia: Yeah. Russell Aaron: Wow. Topher.how. Oh, dude, do you know who Jeffrey Zinn is? Topher DeRosia: No. Russell Aaron: Oh God. Him and Brandon Dove they have Pixel Jar. Have you ever heard of Pixel Jar? Topher DeRosia: Maybe. Russell Aaron: They’re big West coasters. I’ll tell you that much. He just wrote me, “He literally just said, dude, how do you find the time to write so much on LinkedIn? I enjoy all your stuff, but mostly I’m blown away by the volume.” Topher DeRosia: Nice. Russell Aaron: I’m going to write him back and just tell him the truth. But you know, it’s all thought man. Interesting. Topher, I’ve had a lot of fun. Am I taking up your time? Topher DeRosia: I should get back to work. Russell Aaron: All right, sir. Have a good one. Topher DeRosia: All right. I’ll see ya. Russell Aaron: Bye. Topher DeRosia: Bye.
An Elizabethan shipbuilder, naval administrator & commander, merchant, navigator, privateer & slave trader—Admiral Sir John Hawkins (1532–95) was one of the foremost seamen of 16th-century England, he was the chief architect of the Elizabethan navy and was one of the many Buccaneers that roamed the shores of North America on behalf of Queen Elizabeth the First in the 1560s. Check out the YouTube version of this episode at https://youtu.be/5ABe6xFqnkM which has accompanying visuals including maps, charts, timelines, photos, illustrations, and diagrams. John Hawkins book at https://amzn.to/47I8owL Books about Pirates available at https://amzn.to/4aMr1ld Pirate mystery novel (Seeking Sasha) at https://amzn.to/4oqp7Ku ENJOY Ad-Free content, Bonus episodes, and Extra materials when joining our growing community on https://patreon.com/markvinet SUPPORT this channel by purchasing any product on Amazon using this FREE entry LINK https://amzn.to/3POlrUD (Amazon gives us credit at NO extra charge to you). Mark Vinet's HISTORICAL JESUS podcast at https://parthenonpodcast.com/historical-jesus Mark's TIMELINE video channel: https://youtube.com/c/TIMELINE_MarkVinet Website: https://markvinet.com/podcast Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mark.vinet.9 X (Twitter): https://twitter.com/MarkVinet_HNA Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/denarynovels Mark's books: https://amzn.to/3k8qrGM See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Season five of The JP Emerson Show opens with a never‑before‑told story and the guest who unknowingly helped launch the entire podcast: longtime friend Cristy Lee. JP reveals for the first time how an interview he recorded with Cristy just as the COVID‑19 pandemic shut down production, lost its intended home, was published on his own website, and went so viral within 24 hours that it crashed his site — ultimately sparking the creation of the show.Together, JP and Cristy revisit that moment and dive into everything since, from her recent public appearances and wildly popular television shows to her car‑themed wedding at the Packard Proving Grounds, her HGTV and real‑estate projects, and her winter garage plans. Cristy also opens up about her battle with Graves' disease and thyroid eye disease, sharing the surgeries, setbacks, and strength behind her return to filming and her commitment to supporting others with autoimmune conditions.Mixed with dream‑garage talk, classic Mopars, BMW 2002 fantasies, music, friendly competition with her husband, John Hawkins, and a fun Q&A, this premiere blends history, heart, and horsepower in a way only Cristy and JP can.https://www.jpemerson.com/post/garage-squad-s-cristy-lee-how-a-solid-foundation-prepared-her-for-full-throttle-successConnect with Cristy here:https://cristylee.tv/https://www.facebook.com/CristyLeeOfficialhttps://www.instagram.com/cristylee09/https://x.com/cristylee09 Connect with Red Line Oil:www.redline.comConnect with Mecum Auctions:www.Mecum.comConnect with JP Emerson: www.jpemerson.comOlivia “Liv” Harper, Executive Partner, PR, Marketing & Distribution: www.jpemerson.com
In this conversation, Karol Markowicz sits down with writer and commentator John Hawkins to discuss the evolution of blogging, political discourse, and cultural commentary in the digital age. Hawkins shares insights into his newest project, Culturcidal, a platform designed to move beyond clickbait and offer meaningful perspectives on culture, self-help, and personal growth. Karol and John explore the challenges of forming real friendships in an increasingly online world, why people struggle to reach out, and how technology has reshaped human connection. Hawkins reflects on career decisions, lessons learned from working with a life coach, and how intentional action can change personal and professional outcomes. Check out John's site HERESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Texas Hospital Association CEO John Hawkins joins Brad Swail to break down the toughest challenges facing health care in Texas — from rural hospital closures and workforce shortages to Medicare policy, uninsured rates, and the future of federal funding. Hawkins explains how geography, payer mix, population growth, and administrative burdens are reshaping the system, and outlines the state and federal solutions that could stabilize care for millions of Texans. A must-listen for anyone tracking Texas policy, health care access, or the future of hospitals in fast-growing states. Watch Full-Length Interviews: https://www.youtube.com/@TexasTalks
On this day in Tudor history, 7 October 1589, the bells of Deptford tolled for William Hawkins: merchant, sea captain, three-time mayor of Plymouth, and the steadier, quieter elder of the famous Hawkins brothers. Buried at St Nicholas's, his monument is lost, but his impact isn't. In this episode, I trace how Hawkins turned Plymouth into a launchpad for Elizabethan sea power: From Brazil voyages with his father to a Plymouth shipowner and civic powerhouse Privateering in the Channel during the 1557–58 war and pushing London for reprisals after San Juan de Ulúa Building Plymouth's infrastructure (new water conduit, weighhouse, grain transport) and securing Hawkins' Quay Leading a bold 1582–83 venture via Cape Verde to the Caribbean (Margarita, Puerto Rico) Backing, and benefiting from, ventures tied to the 1560s transatlantic slave trade Helping marshal seven Plymouth ships against the Spanish Armada in 1588 Not a household name like Drake or John Hawkins, William was the engineer of capacity - the quay-master, quartermaster, and mayor who kept ships, money, and men moving when England needed them most. Had you heard of this Hawkins before today? Tell me in the comments, and if you enjoy daily Tudor deep dives, please like, subscribe, and ring the bell. #OnThisDay #TudorHistory #ElizabethanEngland #WilliamHawkins #SpanishArmada
On this day in Tudor history, 23 September 1568, a tense “harbour truce” at San Juan de Ulúa (Veracruz) exploded into close-quarters battle. Spanish warships surged in; cannon roared; John Hawkins and his young kinsman Francis Drake barely escaped with the Minion and Judith as the flagship Jesus of Lübeck was wrecked. Many English sailors were captured, some facing the Inquisition. I'm Claire Ridgway. In this episode, I unpack the ambush that hardened English attitudes, reshaped the navy, and helped set the course toward the Spanish Armada, including the uncomfortable truth that Hawkins's ventures were tied to the transatlantic slave trade, central to both profit and Spanish fury. What you'll learn: Why Hawkins sought shelter at San Juan de Ulúa, and the “safe-conduct” deal that failed The battle itself: ship list, tactics, and how Drake cut free Two empires, two narratives: “treachery” vs “piracy” Long consequences: Hawkins's navy reforms and the rise of race-built galleons How Ulúa forged the mindset behind later Elizabethan raids and 1588 If this “On This Day” deep dive gripped you, please like, subscribe, and tell me in the comments: Treachery or piracy, how do you read Ulúa? #OnThisDay #TudorHistory #SanJuanDeUlua #JohnHawkins #FrancisDrake #SpanishArmada #NavalHistory #EarlyEmpire
Lead Pastor Christian Williams hosts a conversation with John Hawkins and Todd Melby on the formation and mission of Leadership Edge Inc, and how this approach to leadership, disciplemaking and mentoring can impact individual lives and guide the future direction of The Grove Church.
As healthcare continues to evolve in response to post-pandemic challenges, workforce shortages, and an ongoing mental health crisis, the institutions that support the backbone of healthcare—hospitals—are under immense pressure. In Texas, where geographic and demographic diversity create unique complexities, the role of hospital associations in steering policy and support services is more vital than ever. With over 9,000 bills filed in the last legislative session, the stakes for hospitals couldn't be higher.What exactly does a state hospital association do—and how does it shape the future of healthcare access, funding, and staffing in Texas?On this episode of I Don't Care, host Dr. Kevin Stevenson welcomes John Hawkins, President and CEO of the Texas Hospital Association (THA), for an insightful conversation that breaks down the THA's multifaceted mission. From advocacy and workforce development to behavioral health infrastructure, John shares how the organization serves as a policy convener, education hub, and essential ally to hospitals across the state.Key Takeaways from the Conversation:Statewide Advocacy and Policy Development:THA represents 85% of acute care hospitals in Texas, navigating the unique needs of urban and rural institutions alike. John emphasizes the association's proactive approach to advocacy—engaging members to identify issues, form policy recommendations, and present unified solutions to the state legislature.Workforce Crisis and Pipeline Solutions:Hawkins underscores the ongoing crisis in healthcare staffing, especially nursing and allied health roles. THA is tackling this head-on by supporting performance-based funding for community colleges, promoting healthcare careers early, and expanding behavioral health workforce initiatives.Behavioral Health, Violence, and Access Challenges:With increasing demand for behavioral health services, John discusses how THA is pushing for more funding, better discharge solutions, and telehealth expansion. He also addresses workplace violence, noting THA's legislative wins in requiring hospitals to implement both preventive and reactive safety measures.John Hawkins became President and CEO of the Texas Hospital Association in January 2022, becoming only the sixth individual to lead the organization since its founding in 1930. With a background in government and public policy from the University of Texas, John spent nearly two decades leading THA's government relations team before stepping into the CEO role. His deep policy experience and commitment to healthcare advocacy have made him a pivotal voice in Texas health system strategy and reform.
En 1588 se hizo a la mar desde Lisboa la Grande y Felicísima Armada, una imponente flota española, algo de unas proporciones desconocidas hasta ese momento, cuyo objetivo era recoger las tropas que el duque de Parma, Alejandro Farnesio, tenía en Flandes y trasladarlas a Inglaterra. El plan partió de Felipe II, que quería con ello conseguir varias cosas. La primera y fundamental derrocar a Isabel I que, tras la muerte de María Tudor había reinstaurado la reforma anglicana. Deseaba también cobrarse cumplida venganza por la ejecución de María Estuardo, reina católica de Escocia. Quería también poner fin a los constantes ataques de corsarios ingleses como Francis Drake o John Hawkins a las posesiones y flotas españolas en América. Aparte de eso, Isabel I también prestaba apoyo a los rebeldes protestantes de los Países Bajos cuyas costas se encuentran frente a las de Gran Bretaña. El plan, inicialmente pensado para que el experimentado almirante Álvaro de Bazán lo llevase a cabo, era ambicioso y de cierta complejidad. La Armada debía navegar desde España hasta el canal de la Mancha, establecer contacto con los Tercios del duque de Parma, unos 30.000 hombres con sus pertrechos, embarcarlos y ofrecer protección a una operación anfibia. Una vez en Inglaterra esas tropas debían dirigirse a Londres, destronar a Isabel I y colocar en su lugar a un soberano afín a los intereses de Felipe II. Pero el destino quiso que Álvaro de Bazán muriera antes de que la flota estuviera lista. Felipe II, ante la urgencia, nombró a Alonso Pérez de Guzmán el Bueno y Zúñiga, VII Duque de Medina Sidonia, como nuevo comandante en jefe. Medina Sidonia, un noble de alta cuna y excelente administrador, pero sin experiencia naval, aceptó el cargo con reticencia e incluso planteó al rey la idoneidad de la empresa. La Gran Armada era grande por méritos propios. Estaba compuesta por unos 130 barcos de distintos tipos armados con 2.500 cañones. Los preparativos se realizaron en España y la flota se reunió en Lisboa para su partida. Pero todo se torció desde el principio ya que por culpa de una tormenta se dispersaron frente a Galicia y tardaron mucho en reagruparse. Una vez en el canal fueron acosados por la más ágil flota inglesa, que rehuyó el combate directo. A pesar de ello, Medina Sidonia logró mantener una formación compacta y prosiguió hacia su objetivo: el puerto de Calais donde deberían embarcar las tropas. Pero los Tercios, muy numerosos y envueltos en una guerra en Holanda, necesitaban una semana para embarcar, por lo que Medina Sidonia fondeó frente a Calais para esperar. Los ingleses, al mando de Charles Howard, atacaron de noche y por sorpresa con brulotes. El pánico obligó a los barcos españoles a cortar amarras y dispersarse. Un día después se produjo la batalla de Gravelinas, que selló el destino de la Armada. Dispersos y sin la posibilidad de reorganizarse, los galeones españoles fueron blanco fácil para los cañones ingleses. Tomaron rumbo norte porque los vientos les impedían regresar por el Canal de la mancha, lo que les forzó a rodear las islas Británicas. Los elementos hicieron el resto. Los temporales, la falta de suministros y las enfermedades diezmaron a las tripulaciones. Solo unos 60 barcos y la mitad de los hombres regresaron a España. Para Felipe II fue una humillación y para Isabel I todo lo contrario. Convirtió la expedición española en un símbolo de su reinado a pesar de que un año más tarde fueron los ingleses derrotados frente a las costas españolas. En El ContraSello: 0:00 Introducción 3:58 La derrota de la Gran Armada 1:07:26 El surgimiento de las ciudades 1:15:42 Interpretaciones de la historia Bibliografía: - "La Armada invencible" de Robert Hutchinson - https://amzn.to/3Hmm5Y6 - "Felipe II y el mito de la Armada invencible" de Antonio Luis Gómez Beltrán - https://amzn.to/4kuq4Aw - "Breve historia de la Armada invencible" de Víctor Luis Sánchez - https://amzn.to/3FJ2bpx - "Contra Armada" de Luis Gorrochategui - https://amzn.to/3HvL8I5 · Canal de Telegram: https://t.me/lacontracronica · “Contra la Revolución Francesa”… https://amzn.to/4aF0LpZ · “Hispanos. Breve historia de los pueblos de habla hispana”… https://amzn.to/428js1G · “La ContraHistoria de España. Auge, caída y vuelta a empezar de un país en 28 episodios”… https://amzn.to/3kXcZ6i · “Lutero, Calvino y Trento, la Reforma que no fue”… https://amzn.to/3shKOlK · “La ContraHistoria del comunismo”… https://amzn.to/39QP2KE Apoya La Contra en: · Patreon... https://www.patreon.com/diazvillanueva · iVoox... https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-contracronica_sq_f1267769_1.html · Paypal... https://www.paypal.me/diazvillanueva Sígueme en: · Web... https://diazvillanueva.com · Twitter... https://twitter.com/diazvillanueva · Facebook... https://www.facebook.com/fernandodiazvillanueva1/ · Instagram... https://www.instagram.com/diazvillanueva · Linkedin… https://www.linkedin.com/in/fernando-d%C3%ADaz-villanueva-7303865/ · Flickr... https://www.flickr.com/photos/147276463@N05/?/ · Pinterest... https://www.pinterest.com/fernandodiazvillanueva Encuentra mis libros en: · Amazon... https://www.amazon.es/Fernando-Diaz-Villanueva/e/B00J2ASBXM #FernandoDiazVillanueva #armada #inglaterra Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
Admiral Sir John Hawkins was an Elizabethan shipbuilder, naval administrator and commander, merchant, navigator, privateer and slave trader. One of the foremost seamen of 16th-century England, he was the chief architect of the Elizabethan navy and was one of the many Buccaneers that roamed the shores of North America on behalf of Queen Elizabeth the First in the 1560s. Mark welcomes guest podcaster Eric Yanis of The Other States of America. Check out the YouTube version of this episode at https://youtu.be/5ABe6xFqnkM which has accompanying visuals including maps, charts, timelines, photos, illustrations, and diagrams. England History books available at https://amzn.to/4526W5n British Kings & Queens books available at https://amzn.to/430VOo0 Age of Discovery books available at https://amzn.to/3ZYOhnK Age of Exploration books available at https://amzn.to/403Wcjx ENJOY Ad-Free content, Bonus episodes, and Extra materials when joining our growing community on https://patreon.com/markvinet SUPPORT this channel by purchasing any product on Amazon using this FREE entry LINK https://amzn.to/3POlrUD (Amazon gives us credit at NO extra charge to you). Mark Vinet's HISTORICAL JESUS podcast is available at https://parthenonpodcast.com/historical-jesus Mark's TIMELINE video channel: https://youtube.com/c/TIMELINE_MarkVinet Website: https://markvinet.com/podcast Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mark.vinet.9 Twitter: https://twitter.com/HistoricalJesu Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/denarynovels Mark's books: https://amzn.to/3k8qrGM See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Infamous pirate John Hawkins, was one of the many Buccaneers that roamed the territory of French Florida in the early 1560s. Mark is joined by The Other States of America's Eric Yanis. Check out the YouTube version of this episode at https://youtu.be/rtq-ZrUPvTM which has accompanying visuals including maps, charts, timelines, photos, illustrations, and diagrams. Support our channel by watching and clicking on the ads in this video. It costs you nothing and by doing so gives us extra credit and encourages, supports & helps us to create more quality content. Thanks! Pirates history books available at https://amzn.to/3KvvhYB Huguenot History books available at https://amzn.to/3MWqEZz Florida History books available at https://amzn.to/43g7GCl North America History books available at https://amzn.to/3OnczVT ENJOY Ad-Free content, Bonus episodes, and Extra materials when joining our growing community on https://patreon.com/markvinet SUPPORT this channel by purchasing any product on Amazon using this FREE entry LINK https://amzn.to/3POlrUD (Amazon gives us credit at NO extra charge to you). Mark Vinet's HISTORICAL JESUS podcast is available at https://parthenonpodcast.com/historical-jesus Mark's TIMELINE video channel: https://youtube.com/c/TIMELINE_MarkVinet Website: https://markvinet.com/podcast Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mark.vinet.9 Twitter: https://twitter.com/HistoricalJesu Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/denarynovels Books: https://amzn.to/3k8qrGM Audio Credit: The Other States of America History podcast with Eric Yanis.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
John Hawkins was an Elizabethan shipbuilder, naval administrator and commander, merchant, navigator, privateer and slave trader. One of the foremost seamen of 16th-century England, he was the chief architect of the Elizabethan navy and was one of the many Buccaneers that roamed the shores of North America on behalf of Queen Elizabeth the First in the 1560s. Martin Frobisher was an Elizabethan seaman, adventurer, explorer and Buccaneer who made three voyages (1576-77-78) to the New World looking for the Northwest Passage to Asia. His initial voyage to Northern Canada was the first well-documented contact between Europeans and Inuit, formally known as Eskimo. Check out the YouTube version of this episode which has accompanying visuals including maps, charts, timelines, photos, illustrations, and diagrams at: https://youtu.be/8ge_Neg3zKE https://youtu.be/5ABe6xFqnkM John Hawkins books available at https://amzn.to/3WPcrlG Martin Frobisher books at https://amzn.to/40NZ06B Queen Elizabeth books available at https://amzn.to/45YvzPN England History books available at https://amzn.to/4526W5n British Kings & Queens books available at https://amzn.to/430VOo0 Age of Discovery books available at https://amzn.to/3ZYOhnK Age of Exploration books available at https://amzn.to/403Wcjx ENJOY Ad-Free content, Bonus episodes, and Extra materials when joining our growing community on https://patreon.com/markvinet SUPPORT this channel by purchasing any product on Amazon using this FREE entry LINK https://amzn.to/3POlrUD (Amazon gives us credit at NO extra charge to you). Video channel: https://youtube.com/c/TIMELINE_MarkVinet Website: https://markvinet.com/podcast Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mark.vinet.9 Twitter: https://twitter.com/HistoricalJesu Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/denarynovels Books: https://amzn.to/3k8qrGM LibriVox: Historical Tales by C. Morris, read by KalyndaSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
610. Join us this week as David Snow tells us about English traveler David Ingram. "In The Extraordinary Journey of David Ingram, author Dean Snow rights the record on a shipwrecked sailor who traversed the length of the North American continent only to be maligned as deceitful storyteller. In the autumn of 1569, a French ship rescued David Ingram and two other English sailors from the shore of the Gulf of Maine. The men had walked over 3000 miles in less than a year after being marooned near Tampico, Mexico. They were the only three men to escape alive and uncaptured, out of a hundred put ashore at the close of John Hawkins's disastrous third slaving expedition. Now available: Liberty in Louisiana: A Comedy. The oldest play about Louisiana, author James Workman wrote it as a celebration of the Louisiana Purchase. Now it is back in print for the first time in 220 years. Order your copy today! This week in Louisiana history. January 26, 1699. (According to one account) Pierre LeMoyne, Iberville landed at Pensacola on his way to Louisiana. This week in New Orleans history. Today we celebrate the first edition of The Picayune on Wednesday, January 25, 1837. It contained 4 pages, few graphics, and was distributed by two carriers who sold 800 of the 1000 copies that had been printed from the office at No. 38 Gravier Street. The following day, January 26, 1837, 2,000 copies were printed and sold. It was the first New Orleans newspaper to sell for less than a dime. A picayune (a Spanish coin) equaled about 6 1/4 cents. This week in Louisiana. The Krewe du Vieux French Quarter (Vieux Carré) 6:30 pm, Saturday, February 15, 2025 Royal & Homer Plessy Way to Andrew Higgens. Parade Route here. When the Krewe of Clones (founded in 1978) decided to become more respectable, Craig "Spoons" Johnson and Don Marshall decided to keep the parade's original raucous, art-inspired spirit alive by starting Krewe du Vieux Carré. At first, the ragtag krewe had 16 subkrewes, and a collection of mule-drawn or hand-pulled handmade floats. But by 2001, KdV had its first title float, and its membership was growing. Its numerous subkrewes with names like Krewe of C.R.U.D.E., Krewe of L.E.W.D. and Mystic Krewe of Spermes meet in the "Den of Muses," a warehouse space, to bring together their costumes and floats. In 2006, KdV was the first parade to march post-Katrina, and garnered national attention for its tenacity and lightheartedness in the face of tragedy. That year's theme was "C'est Levee." Other themes over the years have included "Habitat for Insanity" and "Where the Vile Things Are." Their after party is called "The Krewe du Vieux Doo." Today Krewe du Vieux is loved for its wild satire, adult themes, and political comedy, as well as for showcasing some of the best brass and jazz bands in New Orleans. Postcards from Louisiana. Roz plays at Bamboula. Listen on Apple Podcasts. Listen on audible. Listen on Spotify. Listen on TuneIn. Listen on iHeartRadio. The Louisiana Anthology Home Page. Like us on Facebook.
John Hawkins was an Infamous pirate and one of the many Buccaneers that roamed the territory of French Florida in the early 1560s. Enjoy this HISTORICAL JESUS Extra — The STORY of AMERICA. Check out the YouTube version of this episode at https://youtu.be/rtq-ZrUPvTM which has accompanying visuals including maps, charts, timelines, photos, illustrations, and diagrams. Support our channel by watching and clicking on the ads in this video. It costs you nothing and by doing so gives us extra credit and encourages, supports & helps us to create more quality content. Thanks! Huguenot History books available at https://amzn.to/3MWqEZz Florida History books available at https://amzn.to/43g7GCl North America History books available at https://amzn.to/3OnczVT ENJOY Ad-Free content, Bonus episodes, and Extra materials when joining our growing community on https://patreon.com/markvinet SUPPORT this channel by purchasing any product on Amazon using this FREE entry LINK https://amzn.to/3POlrUD (Amazon gives us credit at NO extra charge to you). Mark Vinet's HISTORY OF NORTH AMERICA podcast: www.parthenonpodcast.com/history-of-north-america Video channel: https://youtube.com/c/TIMELINE_MarkVinet Website: https://markvinet.com/podcast Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mark.vinet.9 Twitter: https://twitter.com/HistoricalJesu Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/denarynovels Books: https://amzn.to/3k8qrGM Audio Credit: The Other States of America History podcast with Eric Yanis. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode of The Common Sense MD, Dr. Rogers sits down with John Hawkins, a knowledgeable industry expert in home sleep studies, to explore the critical topic of sleep apnea. Dr. Rogers recounts his own journey of discovering sleep apnea and discusses the broader implications of this widespread yet often undiagnosed condition. Together, they delve into the benefits and advancements of home sleep studies compared to traditional sleep labs. From the innovative ring-based monitoring system to the importance of accurate and accessible diagnosis, this episode provides valuable insights and practical solutions for those struggling with sleep disturbances. Take a listen to understand why diagnosing and addressing sleep apnea is crucial for overall health and well-being. What did you think of this episode of the podcast? Let us know by leaving a review! Connect with Performance Medicine! Check out our new online vitamin store: https://performancemedicine.net/shop/ Sign up for our weekly newsletter: https://performancemedicine.net/doctors-note-sign-up/ Facebook: @PMedicine Instagram: @PerformancemedicineTN YouTube: Performance Medicine
This is the full show for August 26, 2024. We ask the American Mamas how we stop the left from teaching our kids the wrong history of America. We Dig Deep into how California is destroying journalism. Plus, John Hawkins shares 40 quotes about conservative economics in an article, and it's a Bright Spot. And we finish off with an adoption that will make you say, “Whoa!”
On this week's episode of the Who Are You? Podcast we welcomed back John Hawkins for a follow up interview. We talked about his huge growth in the art community in Jax, upcoming art shows, moving to Texas to be promoted in the military, his future goals with his art, we deep dive into the state that our country that it is currently in and much more. If you are looking for a beautiful piece of art for your home or business, make sure to go check out his social pages and you will definitely find a piece you will love For more on John Hawkins check out the links below Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/_modernslow_/ Sponsors: BetterHelp Go to https://betterhelp.com/whoareyou for 10% off your first month of therapy with BetterHelp and get matched with a therapist who will listen and help #sponsored Make sure to turn on your notifications so you don't miss an episode, please share the episode, leave a like, a review and a 5-star rating. All those things help the podcast be seen by more people! For all business inquires or are interested in being on the show please reach out to me at: whoareyoupod@yahoo.com For all updates and information about the podcast: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/whoareyoupod/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100089483824865 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@who.are.you.podca?is_from_webapp=1&sender_device=pc YouTube: https://youtube.com/@whoareyoupod?si=qHi5b7UP28YqrqwU All other links: https://linktr.ee/Whoareyoupod website: https://www.podpage.com/who-are-you/ --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/connor-overbay/support
Rep. John Hawkins joins us to discuss the exciting announcement that Utah has been chosen to host the 2034 Winter Olympic and Paralympic games, as well as what's being done at the state level to prepare to once again welcome the world to Utah.
Ever wondered how a fishing trip could delay a podcast? Join DJ Harrington and Dariann Weaver as they share a light-hearted story about Darian's recent fishing mishap before diving into the Alabama Towing and Recovery Association's incredible work. Discover the highlights of the Extreme Recovery Workshop at Barber Motorsports Park, featuring industry titans like Tom Luciano and John Hawkins, who promise hands-on training amidst the excitement of live racing and a top-tier motorcycle museum. Whether you're gearing up for this anticipated event or simply looking to understand the association's impact, this segment is packed with insights and information you won't want to miss.But that's not all—towing businesses, get ready to revolutionize your revenue streams with online impound auctions! Learn how these auctions offer a cost-effective and efficient way to boost income, featuring testimonials from satisfied users like Donna Roberts of Twisted Hook LLC. As Father's Day approaches, DJ and Darian take a heartfelt moment to honor the fathers in the towing industry, reflecting on their immense sacrifices and commitment. Don't forget to catch their touching tribute to the mothers who stand by their side. Join us for a blend of valuable industry insights and heartfelt moments that celebrate the towing community.
His life was straight from the pages of a swashbuckling novel… Some even say he was the inspiration for Harry Flashman… Do you know who it is? It's Colonel Frederick Gustavus Burnaby of the Royal Horse Guards. Built like a brick outhouse, strong as an ox, brave as a lion…I could keep going on but I think let's get stuck in to today's interview with John Hawkins. John's written a two volume history of Burnaby's life and really knows his stuff. Please sign up for my newsletter and receive your free eBook on the Battle of Isandlwana - https://redcoathistory.com/2021/10/27/free-book-the-military-history-geeks-guide-to-the-anglo-zulu-war/
RUNDOWN Is it too soon to joke about OJ? Mitch and Hotshot cover all the bases on Mariner's ball, something the Mariners continue to struggle with. The conversation then turns to a more serious topic as Mitch and Hotshot discuss the delicate issue of handling accusations of sexual assault involving college athletes, specifically the case of Tybo Rogers from the University of Washington football team. Mitch chats with Matt Logie, Montana State basketball coach whose Mercer Island Washington roots helped shape him as a coach and a man. Matt's grandfather, coach and inspiration was Legendary Islanders coach Ed Pepple. Mariners No-Table - Joe Doyle, Jason Churchill & Mitch breakdown the Mariner's series losses to the Blue Jays and Cubs. Julio is struggling. Bryce Miller is surging and Seattle is losing sight of .500 baseball. John Hawkins, longtime golf scribe, discusses Masters champion Scottie Scheffler & the chasers falling by the wayside. Is Scheffler the most dominant #1 since Tiger. And what about Woods future, Rory's difficulty & is the LIV vs PGA hurting the game of golf? Other stuff segment includes the SNL cameo by Caitlin Clark, Greg Norman's struggle getting a Master's ticket, Shohei's interpreter in ankle shackles, Olympic wrestler brided to lose, and Bellevue product to coach Kentucky. GUESTS • Matt Logie | Montana State Basketball • Mariners No-Table | Joe Doyle, Jason Churchill • John Hawkins | Longtime Golf TABLE OF CONTENTS 4:13 | Is it too soon to use OJ Simpson jokes for headlines? Innocent or guilty, we're still debating this? 20:45 | The Mariners look worse than ever (6-10-0). Can they get going offensively? Some astonishing stats that don't make the Mariners look good. 24:00 | Mitch and Hotshot discuss the Tybo Rogers rape allegations. How do we handle this? 34:03 | GUEST: Matt Logie - Montana State basketball coach whose Mercer Island Washington roots helped shape him as a coach and a man. Legendary Islanders coach Ed Pepple was Matt's grandfather, coach & inspiration. 52:42 | GUEST: Mariners No-Table - Joe Doyle, Jason Churchill & Mitch breakdown the M's series losses to the Blue Jays and Cubs. Julio is struggling. Bryce Miller is surging and Seattle is losing sight of .500 baseball. 1:16:26 | GUEST: John Hawkins - longtime golf scribe - discusses Masters champion Scottie Scheffler & the chasers falling by the wayside. Is Scheffler the most dominant #1 since Tiger. And what about Woods future, Rory's difficulty & the LIV vs PGA hurting the game of golf? 1:36:08 | Other stuff segment: SNL cameo by Caitlin Clark, Greg Norman's struggle getting a Master's ticket, Shohei's interpreter in ankle shackles, Olympic wrestler bribed to lose, and Bellevue product to coach Kentucky.
On this week's episode of the Who Are You Podcast I sat down with John Hawkins. John is a local artist, navy veteran, father and much more. We talked about what brought him to Jacksonville, what made him want to join the navy, importance of mental health, what made him want to start painting, hosting his first gallery, he gives me one of his works of art, we talk about what fatherhood has been like for him and so much more. definitely go check out his Instagram page to see all the amazing art he has created and is up for sale! For more on John and his artwork follow the links below: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/_modernslow_/ Sponsors: BetterHelp Go to https://betterhelp.com/whoareyou for 10% off your first month of therapy with BetterHelp and get matched with a therapist who will listen and help #sponsored Make sure to turn on your notifications so you don't miss an episode, please share the episode, leave a like, a review and a 5-star rating. All those things help the podcast be seen by more people! For all business inquires or are interested in being on the show please reach out to me at: whoareyoupod@yahoo.com For all updates and information about the podcast: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/whoareyoupod/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100089483824865 Twitter: @connoroverbay All links: https://linktr.ee/Whoareyoupod website: https://www.podpage.com/who-are-you/ --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/connor-overbay/support
0:07:45 - Box Office and upcoming releases. 0:20:00 *** What's Streaming *** AMAZON THE PEANUT BUTTER FALCON, Dir. Tyler Nilson / Michael Schwartz – Shia LaBeouf, Zack Gottsagen, Dakota Johnson, Bruce Dern, Thomas Hayden Church, Jon Bernthal, John Hawkins, 2019. THE HURT LOCKER, Dir. Kathryn Bigelow – Jeremy Renner, Anthony Mackie, Brian Geraghty, Guy Pierce, Ralph Fiennes, David Morse, Evangeline Lilly, Sam Spruell, 2009. A QUIET PLACE: PART II – Dir. John Krasinski – Emily Blunt, Millicent Simmonds, Cillian Murphy, John Krasinski, Noah Jupe, Djimon Hounsou, 2020 0:28:30 - Trailers: LIFT – Kevin Hart, Gugu Mbatha Raw, Sam Worthington, Vincent D'Onofrio, Billy Magnussen, Feature, Netflix. ORIGIN – Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor, Jon Bernthal, Niecy nash, Finn Wittrock, Feature. MR. & MRS. SMITH – Donald Glover, Maya Erskine, Paul Dano, John Turturro, Ron Pearlman, Series. 0:37:45 - TTHE IRON CLAW, Dir. Sean Durkin ( Grayson 8.5 / Roger 9 / Chris 9 ) Hosted, produced and mixed by Grayson Maxwell and Roger Stillion. Music by Chad Wall. Quality Assurance by Anthony Emmett. Visit the new Youtube channel, "For the Love of Cinema" to follow and support our short video discussions. Roger wears aviators! Please give a like and subscribe if you enjoy it. Follow the show on Twitter @lovecinemapod and check out the Facebook page for updates. Rate, subscribe and leave a comment or two. Every Little bit helps. Send us an email to fortheloveofcinemapodcast@gmail.com
Join us on a captivating journey as we sit down with the distinguished photographer and publisher, Earl Johnson, to discuss his extraordinary journey through the tow industry. Earl's book, "The World's Greatest Tow Trucks," is a testament to his passion and dedication towards capturing the essence of these mechanical beasts and the operators behind them. From partnering with John Hawkins, founder of the International Towing and Recovery Hall of Fame and Museum, to his unconventional approach of funding his book through sponsorships, Earl's story is a thrilling adventure through the intricacies of the industry.While Earl's travels have taken him across the globe, he's always been touched by the close-knit community of tow truck operators. From the bustling streets of Paris to the sun-kissed lanes of Australia, his tales shed light on the hardworking and passionate people behind these indispensable machines. And let's not forget the unwavering support of Earl's wife Grace, who played a vital role in the creation of his book. Together, they've navigated the unique challenges of publishing and selling in this niche market.Looking ahead, we're beyond excited about the upcoming plans for our podcast. With a massive distribution of 30,000 digital and print copies to owners and industry professionals, we're expanding our reach and impact within the community. As we delve into these new ventures, we pause to express our heartfelt gratitude to all the vendors and first responders who continue to bolster and enrich the industry. Don't forget, we'll be back with more riveting discussions and industry insights, so stay tuned!
These days everyone takes websites offering conservative news and views for granted. But decades ago, when John Hawkins started RightWingNews.com – and unabashedly called it what it was – he ... The post “Right Wing News, Before it Got Popular” appeared first on ColemanNation.
RUNDOWN To kick things off, the fellas have a laugh at the NIL money Shedeur Sanders is making before opening the listener mailbag which features a question about no show last week. Then, Mitch and Hotshot chat about how last year's Issy softball team isn't getting the band back together, Jerry Dipoto's comments about the trade deadline strategy for the Mariners, and a sneaky strategy the Angels could pull by trading Shohei. A three-pack of guests are former Seahawks quarterback Rick Mirer, SI.com golf writer John Hawkins and acclaimed sports columnist with The Washington Post Sally Jenkins and John Hawkins. “Other Stuff” topics include clarification about Golden Tate's allegations of hooking up with Russ' ex, big changes to the Washington Commanders front office, and a valid will discovered within the couch of Aretha Franklin! GUESTS Rick Mirer | Former Seahawks QB, 1993 2nd overall pick John Hawkins | SI.com Morning Read Sally Jenkins | The Right Call: What Sports Teach Us About Work and Life TABLE OF CONTENTS 1:54 | Deion Sanders' son Shedeur is raking in the cash and hasn't even played a snap for Colorado. 4:30 | Frank in Fife wasn't pleased about no show released last Monday. 26:54 | Will the 2022 Issaquah Little Leaguers run it back in 2023? 29:51 | Do you buy "Trader Jerry's" remarks that the M's won't be big buyers at the trade deadline? 33:48 | There is only one circumstance that the Angels shouldn't deal Shohei Ohtani to a contender. 44:35 | GUEST: Rick Mirer joins the show to chat about his rise through college football at Notre Dame to his time in Seattle and beyond. 1:15:39 | GUEST: "The Hawk" John Hawkins returns to recap The Open Championship won by Brian Harman in emphatic fashion. 1:36:45 | GUEST: The Washington Post sports columnist Sally Jenkins previews her latest book The Right Call: What Sports Teach Us About Work and Life. 1:59:36 | The “Other Stuff” segment includes discussion about the Golden Tate rumors about affairs with Russell Wilson's ex-wife, a potential name change to the Washington football team again, and a will found in Aretha Franklin's couch cushions!
RUNDOWN To kick things off, Mitch tells Groz about his dinner in cozy Redmond on Friday night that involved gunshots. Next, the guys spend the full first segment to chat about the Mariners that continue to hover around .500 and have major roster and payroll considerations ahead. Featured guests are SI.com golf writer John Hawkins, a follow-up with Kevin Maginnis from Nashville after his 100-day McDonalds diet, and Lindsay Berra, granddaughter of Yogi. The "Other Stuff" segment features topics such as Bob Huggins' DUI and Groz' related story, Deion Sanders' health issues at Colorado, and a Stump the Band question about Wheel of Fortune! GUESTS Kevin Maginnis | Nashville-based business coach John Hawkins | SI.com golf writer Lindsay Berra | Yogi Berra Museum board member & granddaughter of Yogi TABLE OF CONTENTS 4:54 | Gunfire rang out during a Levy dinner in Redmond on Friday night. 16:24 | Can the Mariners string together a run in the second half and are there some big roster moves that are worth taking a look at? 37:55 | GUEST: Kevin Maginnis is back to report on his results from the 100 day McDonalds-only diet challenge to lose weight. 56:09 | GUEST: John Hawkins returns to the show for instant reaction to the US Open captured by Wyndham Clark. 1:13:03 | GUEST: Lindsay Berra joins the show to chat about her indelible grandfather Yogi including his legacy on and off the ballfield. 1:35:00 | The “Other Stuff” segment features topics such as Dave's story about Bob Huggins, Neon Deion possibly needing his foot amputated, and a Wheel of Fortune daytime edition trivia question.
In the first of our special episodes in the run up to the Coronation of King Charles III, jewellery specialist John Hawkins speaks to Carol from his home in Tasmania. They discuss Queen Victoria's role in the makeup of the current Crown Jewels, including John's controversial theory about the origin of one of the sapphires.This episode is brought to you by @fuligemstonesPlease see: www.carolwoolton.comFollow Carol Woolton: @carolwooltonProduced by Natasha Cowan @tashonfashMusic & editing by Tim Thornton @timwthorntonCreative direction by Scott Bentley @bentleycreativeIllustrations Jordi Labanda @jordilabandaRead Carol Woolton in Vogue magazine – vogue.co.uk/fashion/jewellery and carolwoolton.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Guest speaker John Hawkins reveals some lessons he's collected from his 52 years of quiet time. April 6th, 2023 Recorded in SGM101
#JohnHawkins #slavery #americanhistory https://cash.app/$BlackConsciousness Cant wait? Go to the podcast and listen now: https://spotifyanchor-web.app.link/e/hYFyIv2Vtyb Blog: https://realblackconsciousnessesforum387099824.wordpress.com/ Email the podcast: rbcforum313@yahoo.com Join us as we have a conversation about things in American History that does not make sense! We take a deep dive into the transatlantic slave trade in which we discuss the ship, human resources, and the severity of crossing the Atlantic in chains. Tap in and hang out with us as we cover a whole host of topics for angles that you may have not heard before. Be sure to like, share, and comment! Also, take part in our Spotify poll, we love to know what the listener is thinking. Thanks! RBCF! Hashtags: #ushistory #history #americanhistory #worldhistory #ww #usa #historymemes #memes #historyfacts #apush #america #war #historylover #americanrevolution #blackhistory #historynerd #ushistorymemes #s #worldwar #civilwar #historylovers #education #onthisday #apushmemes #vintage #historybuff #historyteacher #politics #unitedstates #funhistory #africanhistory #blackhistory #africa #panafrican #africanculture #kemet #panafricanism #history #african #blackknowledge #ancientegypt #blackexcellence #knowthyself #africandiaspora #afrocentric #ancientkemet #kemetic #blackconsciousness #blackpower #blackhistorymonth #hotep #maat #buyblack #kemeticscience #blackowned #theblackwomanisgod #ankh #kemeticyoga #melanin #horus --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/realblackforum/message
In 1567, a young English sailor named David Ingram signed up to work on a ship captained by English privateer John Hawkins. They would travel up and down the coasts of Africa and Mexico raiding and trading goods. In November of 1567, Ingram found himself and close to a hundred of his fellow crewmates stranded off the coast of Mexico, in a city called Tampico, just south of the present day Texas/Mexico border. Seeking to avoid capture by the Spanish, Ingram and close to two dozen of his shipmates started walking North. By October of 1568, a French fishing vessel picked up Ingram and just two of his original party of travellers off the coast of Nova Scotia. 13 years later, Ingram's account of what happened to himself and those travellers from Tampico to Nova Scotia was written down by Sir Francis Walsingham and published by Richard Hakluyt in his bookThe Principall Navigations Voiages and Discoveries of the English Nation of 1589. Since then, the veracity of Ingram's story has been debated by scholars across the globe. Today, our guest, Dean Snow, is here to share his research into Ingram and the famous walk from Mexico to Nova Scotia that defends Ingram's journey as accurate, all of which is cataloged in Dean's latest book, The Extraordinary Journey of David Ingram. Get bonus content on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Tune in to today's NKY Spotlight Podcast, presented by CVG! NKY Chamber Board Chair and MPI Consulting - Management Performance Inc President and CEO John Hawkins shares how the NKY Chamber is supporting strong businesses, a vibrant economy, and an inclusive region for all. On NKY @ Work, AGNT Founding Partner, Justin Tucker highlights his upcoming presentation "Misfits to Masters: Building Empowered Design Teams," which is a part of the 5th Annual GROW NKY Talent Strategies Symposium happening on March 8. Thank you to our sponsors Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport, CKREU Consulting and HORAN.
RUNDOWN To kick off the show, the guys attempt to answer Roger's email about Mitch's personality. Then, Scott and Mitch provide an end-to-end recap of the Super Bowl including the commercials, key plays, and halftime show. A trio of guest segments include UW receiver Rome Odunze, PAC12 hoops analyst & NBA veteran Eldridge Recasner, and longtime SI.com golf writer John Hawkins. The “Other Stuff” segment features topics such as the NBA greatest of all time argument, Russell Wilson's charity under the microscope for financial wrongdoings, and lawsuits involving Pat McAfee and Michael Irvin! GUESTS Rome Odunze | UW wide receiver Eldridge Recasner | PAC12 Network basketball analyst John Hawkins | SI.com golf writer TABLE OF CONTENTS 4:22 | Hotshot plays amateur psychologist as he tries to break down the email sent to Mitch by a listener of the show. 21:56 | Scott finally found a haircut spot that gets him in and out with no small talk and a good price! 24:57 | The guys share their observations and lingering questions from the Super Bowl from soup to nuts including the ads, Mahomes magic ankle, and critical holding call. 48:54 | GUEST: Rome Odunze joins the show to chat about his choice to stay at UW another season after considering opting for the NFL Draft! 1:14:25 | GUEST: Eldridge Recasner is back to provide his opinion on the argument between MJ and LeBron James as the greatest basketball player of all time. 1:31:59 | GUEST: John Hawkins returns to provide a golf update as the Phoenix Open is in the books and all eyes are on Tiger, LIV golf, and young stars. 1:50:28 | “Other Stuff” topics range from the reignited debate between Michael & LeBron, allegations about Russell Wilson's foundation, and a pair of legal battles facing Pat McAfee and Michael Irvin.
As the digital landscape evolves, privacy concerns and regulations are becoming increasingly important for advertisers. With the decline of third-party cookies and the rise of individual data usage consent, measuring advertising attention is more crucial than ever. One of the biggest challenges for advertisers in a cookie-less world is being able to accurately measure the effectiveness of their campaigns. Without cookies, it's harder to track user behaviour and understand how their ads are performing. However, measuring advertising attention through alternative methods such as viewability, brand lift studies, and surveys can be helpful, but they provide vague and delayed signals about advertising effectiveness. How can advertisers measure the attention and effectiveness of their advertising in real-time? To answer this question, I recently spoke to John Hawkins, Chief Scientist at Playground XYZ. Playground XYZ provides a machine learning-based platform for measuring and maximising attention on digital ads. The company's Attention Intelligence Platform is a unique technology that uses over 40 different signals to track user attention as it happens. In this episode of Leaders of Analytics, we discuss: How Playground's attention measurement platform works in practice The importance of attention time in a world without cookies, where privacy and consent are increasingly of mandated importance Dealing with the complexities of multi-layered machine learning pipelines and convincing stakeholders of their value How data science professionals can foster the right non-data science skills that will make them true unicorns, and much more. John on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hawkinsjohnc/ John's book, Getting Data Science Done.
As the digital landscape evolves, privacy concerns and regulations are becoming increasingly important for advertisers. With the decline of third-party cookies and the rise of individual data usage consent, measuring advertising attention is more crucial than ever. One of the biggest challenges for advertisers in a cookie-less world is being able to accurately measure the effectiveness of their campaigns. Without cookies, it's harder to track user behaviour and understand how their ads are performing. However, measuring advertising attention through alternative methods such as viewability, brand lift studies, and surveys can be helpful, but they provide vague and delayed signals about advertising effectiveness. How can advertisers measure the attention and effectiveness of their advertising in real-time? To answer this question, I recently spoke to John Hawkins, Chief Scientist at Playground XYZ. Playground XYZ provides a machine learning-based platform for measuring and maximising attention on digital ads. The company's Attention Intelligence Platform is a unique technology that uses over 40 different signals to track user attention as it happens. In this episode of Leaders of Analytics, we discuss: How Playground's attention measurement platform works in practice The importance of attention time in a world without cookies, where privacy and consent are increasingly of mandated importance Dealing with the complexities of multi-layered machine learning pipelines and convincing stakeholders of their value How data science professionals can foster the right non-data science skills that will make them true unicorns, and much more. John on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hawkinsjohnc/ John's book, Getting Data Science Done.
Los piratas modernos continúan aterrorizando las rutas marítimas del mundo, al igual que lo hicieron los históricos piratas de hace varios siglos. A pesar de que su imagen ha sido suavizada e incluso romantizada en películas y libros, el pirata clásico era tan temido como los que actualmente protagonizan los titulares de algunos periódicos. Muchos comenzaron en el 'oficio' de pirata como corsarios, marineros contratados por los gobiernos para actuar como buques de guerra de tiempo parcial y merodeadores contra barcos comerciales enemigos en zonas designadas (como el famoso John Hawkins que participó en la Armada Invencible), pero descubrieron que las incursiones eran tan lucrativas que decidieron ir por libre, trabajar por su cuenta. Algunos piratas eran hombres sedientos de sangre, otros simplemente codiciosos, y algunos tan exitosos o memorables que sus nombres todavía se recuerdan después de todo este tiempo. Si tenemos en cuenta que la mayor parte de ellos eran simples maleantes, y ladrones que en su mayoría no sabían ni leer ni escribir, ¿Cómo sabemos tanto de ellos? Pues gracias a un hugonote francés llamado Alexandre O. Exquemelin que sirvió durante años como cirujano de bucaneros, y que narró de primera mano sus aventuras en el sorprendente libro "Piratas de la América" escrito en 1678. Traducido al castellano en el ambiente de los sefarditas de Ámsterdam (1681), y luego a otras lenguas, fue un inmediato best-seller que circuló por toda Europa. Influyó decisivamente en la literatura de piratas con su estilo directo y sin pretensiones, que mezcla pasajes de acción trepidante y de curiosidades sobre la naturaleza americana. En él encontraron los lectores las bárbaras costumbres de los bucaneros, y también las sangrientas, pero audaces hazañas de los más destacados piratas del Caribe: por aquí desfilan Rock Brasiliano, Bartolomé Portugués o el celebre Henry Morgan, impenitentes azotes del Caribe hispano con hazañas como los saqueos de Maracaibo o Panamá. Si quieres saber todo acerca de la vida de este magnífico personaje que nos dio a conocer las costumbres y hazañas de los piratas más grandes de la época, quédate con nosotros y embarcarte en una nueva aventura de BFYM de la mano de nuestro capitán JF. Juntos surcaremos los mares del caribe para contar la historia de Alexandre O. Exquemelin, el pirata escritor. Como siempre, esperamos que os guste el episodio y no dudéis en dejar vuestros comentarios en nuestras redes.
Subscribe to Youtube for exclusive NEW videos and free meditations https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC4a5jGXZ0-qzPINAspnLwPwVideo Description:Trauma Recovery is tricky work, and it's easy in everyday life and when we're doing healing work with a therapist or on our own to unintentionally retraumatize ourselves through no fault of our own. Knowing what works and doesn't work is vital to trauma recovery. Most people don't understand the nature of trauma recovery, and even many well-meaning experts can cause more harm than good when trying to help you. Often, we don't even know that certain events, healing strategies, or circumstances can retraumatize us. This video discusses ten specific ways we inadvertently become retraumatized and then ten solutions to avoid retraumatizing ourselves when doing healing work. We go into detail about why retraumatization happens in these situations and specific techniques that will help you move forward with healing work, while protecting yourself from further trauma. With the right education and tools, you CAN move forward instead of backward in your recovery journey and achieve Healing That Sticks! Resources: A.C.O.R.N Meditation I've linked the playlist to all four versions here. I mentioned this meditation in 18:30 of the video as one way to begin to see the difference between your initial trauma and layering more trauma, and it will help you with the other nine strategies as well.How Not to Get Retraumatized by Trauma Therapy in Gateway Counseling by John Hawkins, Jr., M.S., L.M.H.C., M.C.A.P.Are You Retraumatizing Yourself? 16 Self-Defeating Behaviors Common in Childhood PTSD by the Crappy Childhood Fairy--This is a video.PTSD Treatment and Why You Might Stay in It for So Long by Roland Bal Complex PTSD Treatment and Can You Fully Recover by Roland BalWhile I didn't refer to these sources individually in the video, these are the sources that gave me ideas, along with my own, for the list, credited here. The above articles are also great resources that will give you more context on the ten strategies and further ways to avoid being retraumatized. I mentioned Roland Bal in the video, and how his meditations have helped me. These aren't free meditations, but they are helpful. I've linked Roland Bal's webpage and meditation videos below. https://rolandbal.com/https://rolandbal.com/trauma-care/Further Resources:Podcast Website, subscribe to podcast, free resource, email list. https://christianemotionalrecovery.comFree visual ACORN resource for healing difficult emotions https://christianemotionalrecovery.com/free-resourceTo join free Facebook community https://www.facebook.com/groups/christianemotionalrecovery Subscribe to Instagram for weekly encouragement: https://www.instagram.com/christianemotionalrecovery/
In 1988, 55 year-old, Yale educated Dr. Richard Boggs and business partners 46 year-old, Melvin Eugene Hanson, and 25 year-old John Hawkins joined together in an insurance scam that would net them a million dollars. The only problem was, in order to get the money someone would have to die. The victim of the scheme, 36 year-old Ellis Greene was in the wrong place at the wrong time. In order to bring the suspects to justice law enforcement would reach across the Atlantic ending in four ruined lives and a kind and loving man murdered for financial gain. Join me for Scammed: Dr. Richard Boggs and the murder of Ellis Greene To watch this episode join me on Youtube: https://youtu.be/3c8ciclJQIE
RUNDOWN Today's show begins with a long-awaited playing of Wild Rover to celebrate the M's winning streak before the guys share their takeaways from the interviews during Episode 197 and play Stump the Band. Then, Mitch describes a story from the weekend that is still weighing on his mind. A trio of guests are Steve Phillips, Vanderbilt professor Thomas Schwartz, and golf writer John Hawkins. The episode wraps up with the “Other Stuff” segment to chat about Jody Allen's announcement about the family estate, Hotshot's greatest strip club story, and some notable RIPs from last week. GUESTS Steve Phillips | Former Mets GM and current MLB analyst Thomas Schwartz | Professor of History and Political Science at Vanderbilt University John Hawkins | Morning Read golf writer TABLE OF CONTENTS 0:00 | It's high time that we begin the show with some "No Nay Never" as the Mariners continue to win! 7:11 | The interviews in Episode 197 ran the gamut and the guys reflect on the three guest segments. 16:46 | Today's edition of Stump the Band features two questions by Mitch and one from Hotshot. 30:34 | Mitch observed a child being left inside a vehicle over the weekend and was unsure of how to handle the situation. 45:56 | GUEST: Steve Phillips is back to share his general manager perspective on how the M's front office should approach a long-term deal with Julio Rodriguez. 1:02:32 | GUEST: Professor of History and Political Science at Vanderbilt University joins the show to discuss the current situation and possible outcomes for Brittney Griner's detention in Russia. 1:37:18 | GUEST: John Hawkins is back to preview The Open Championship at St. Andrews for the 150th edition of the tournament. 2:12:57 | Today's “Other Stuff” stories include news on the sale of Hawks & Blazers, an unforgettable strip club memory of Scott's, and some recent celebrity passings.
Admiral Sir John Hawkins was an Elizabethan shipbuilder, naval administrator and commander, merchant, navigator, privateer and slave trader. One of the foremost seamen of 16th-century England, he was the chief architect of the Elizabethan navy and was one of the many Buccaneers that roamed the shores of North America on behalf of Queen Elizabeth the First in the 1560s. Mark welcomes guest podcaster Eric Yanis of The Other States of America. Check out the YouTube version of this episode at https://youtu.be/5ABe6xFqnkM which has accompanying visuals including maps, charts, timelines, photos, illustrations, and diagrams. Support our channel by watching and clicking on the ads in this video. It costs you nothing and by doing so gives us extra credit and encourages, supports & helps us to create more quality content. Thanks! Visit our sponsor https://athleticgreens.com/EMERGING to take ownership over your health and get a FREE 1 year supply of immune-supporting Vitamin D and 5 FREE travel packs with your first purchase! Get exclusive access to Bonus episodes, Ad-Free content, and Extra materials when joining our growing community on Patreon at https://patreon.com/markvinet or Donate on PayPal at https://bit.ly/3cx9OOL and receive an eBook welcome GIFT by Mark Vinet. THE DEAD LETTER by Mark Vinet (Elizabethan Novel) is available at https://amzn.to/3oxZaNw Denary Novels by Mark Vinet are available at https://amzn.to/33evMUj Mark Vinet's TIMELINE video channel at https://youtube.com/c/TIMELINE_MarkVinet Website: https://markvinet.com/podcast Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/denarynovels Twitter: https://twitter.com/TIMELINEchannel Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mark.vinet.9 YouTube Podcast Playlist: https://www.bit.ly/34tBizu Podcast: https://anchor.fm/mark-vinet TikTok: tiktok.com/@historyofnorthamerica Linktree: https://linktr.ee/WadeOrganization
Pulse of the Planet Podcast with Jim Metzner | Science | Nature | Environment | Technology
Everything you notice in the natural world can point you toward another change happening at the same time of year. Think of it as keeping your appointments with nature. John Hawkins recorded the bird sound as part of this interview. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Dust off those treasure maps, grab your metal detector and brush up on your code cracking because this week's episode will have you aching for a good ‘ol treasure hunt and hankering for a Charleston Chew.Britt starts the audio adventure with the story of the Fenn Treasure, a real life treasure hunt straight from the pages of a storybook that led hunters on a sometimes deadly quest for a chest full of gold and jewels. She also tells the tale of a family that stumbles upon a cache of gold coins on their California property and story about a pirate called Firefart.Alissa put the haunted in this week's episode with the story of the Haunted Treasure of High House in Cary, North Carolina where a ghostly spirit tries to tip off the home inhabitants to the whereabout of a hidden treasure. She then tells the story of the buried treasure of Talequah where a man named John Hawkins died and took with him the location of his buried loot.As always, thank for listening and Haunt Y'all Later!Please send us your stories, review, like and share!https://linktr.ee/SkeletalesSupport the show
Few reporters have been closer to Tiger Woods than John Hawkins. In the latest Fire Drill podcast, Hawk joins Michael Bamberger and Alan Shipnuck on the eve of the PGA Championship to riff on how Woods has (and hasn't) evolved through the years. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Infamous pirate John Hawkins, was one of the many Buccaneers that roamed the territory of French Florida in the early 1560s. Mark is joined by The Other States of America's Eric Yanis. Check out the YouTube version of this episode at https://youtu.be/rtq-ZrUPvTM which has accompanying visuals including maps, charts, timelines, photos, illustrations, and diagrams. Support our channel by watching and clicking on the ads in this video. It costs you nothing and by doing so gives us extra credit and encourages, supports & helps us to create more quality content. Thanks! Thanks for the many wonderful comments, messages, ratings and reviews, which are regularly posted for your reading pleasure on https://patreon.com/markvinet Get exclusive access to Bonus episodes, Ad-Free content, and Extra materials when joining our growing community on Patreon at www.patreon.com/markvinet and receive an eBook welcome GIFT of The Maesta Panels by Mark Vinet, or Donate on PayPal at https://bit.ly/3cx9OOL Mark Vinet's TIMELINE video channel at https://youtube.com/c/TIMELINE_MarkVinet Denary Novels by Mark Vinet are available at https://amzn.to/33evMUj Website: https://markvinet.com/podcast Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/denarynovels Twitter: https://twitter.com/TIMELINEchannel Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mark.vinet.9 YouTube Podcast Playlist: https://www.bit.ly/34tBizu Podcast: https://anchor.fm/mark-vinet Linktree: https://linktr.ee/WadeOrganization
In the early morning hours of April 16, 1988, Dr. Richard Boggs, a neurologist called 911, stating a patient of his had died in his office of a heart attack. Boggs identified the patient as Melvin Eugene Hanson, who was a businessman from Ohio. The police came, coroner took away the body, which was complete with identification and birth certificate for Mr. Hanson, and the case was closed. Hanson's business partner John Hawkins flew in to identify the body, which he did, promptly having it cremated. Case closed, right? Well, what fun would that be?Be sure to follow us on Instagram @Medimesspod. Send an email to medimesspod@gmail.com for any case ideas or just to say Hey!Sources:Richard Boggs - WikipediaJohn Hawkins, Gene Hanson: 'Killer Couples' Highlights Richard Boggs Insurance Fraud Death Case - InquisitrFraud, Murder, Bike Shorts: A Just Sweats Timeline – Forensic Files NowNotorious Swindler Recounts Notorious ‘Just Sweats' Case, Including His Mysterious Vanishing Act | 10tv.comhttps://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2014/11/03/released-from-prison-after-20-years-local-man-finds-calling-in-counseling-troubled-teens/Killer in Fraud Case Draws Life Sentence : Courts: No chance of parole for businessman Melvin Hanson, who murdered bookkeeper in plan to fake his own death. - Los Angeles Times (latimes.com)The Murder Hustle Part II — BardachReports
John Hawkins, conservative author and content creator, enters The Bullpen to discuss Joe Rogan getting cancelled on Indisputable with Dr. Rashad Richey.Debate Guest: John Hawkins See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Sunday Coffee with John Hawkins Band 1-23-2022 Premier at 4pm ESTSunday Coffee with Leerecs' Friends - Sundays at 4pm ESTTalk show interview with the best independent musicians about their original alternative music.
John and I have been working on this interview for some time now. But when life it happens it happens. 2020 was a the best worst year as John would mention from fitting or the top spot on stage to fight for his life battling covid. Check out todays interview with one of Indiana's newest IFBB Classic Pros John Hawkins. Welcome to the league sir. Give the podcast a listen and follow John @j_hawk_ifbb_pro on IG and support his business @hawkfit85 Other Bodybuilding shows focus on the pros from back in the day and there is nothing wrong with that. The Next Up is different though. We give light to the awesome athletes making there ways through the ranks of the NPC and IFBB Pro League. We will have every guest imaginable from classic physique guys, men's bodybuilding, bikini or as some call it men's physique and even their coaches. Like, comment, subscribe and tell us why you think you're Next Up and we'll feature you on the show. Follow us on instagram @thenextuppodcast. David, IFBB Pr Mens Physique @ifbbsteakncake Daniel, NQ Mens Physique @bodybymcgee --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app