Podcast appearances and mentions of johnny johnny

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Best podcasts about johnny johnny

Latest podcast episodes about johnny johnny

Book Vs Movie Podcast
Holiday (1938) Katharine Hepburn, Cary Grant, George Cukor, & Philp Barry

Book Vs Movie Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2024 71:23


Book Vs. Movie: HolidayThe 1928 Play Vs. the 1938 FilmThe Margos celebrate the holiday season with the classic 1938 film "Holiday," directed by George Cukor and starring Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant. Based on the 1928 play by Philip Barry, the story follows an adventure-seeking playboy (played by Grant) who engages in a battle of wits with his fiancée's sister (played by Hepburn) during the New Year's holiday in upper-class New York City. So, between the play and the film, which did the Margos prefer? Listen to find out!In this ep, the Margos discuss:How the play and 1938 movie differThe setting of 1928 vs 1938 change the tone of the workTheater TCU Play 2023The Movie Cast: Katharine Hepburn (Linda Seton,) Cary Grant (Johnny Case,) Doris Nolan (Julia Seton,) Lew Ayres (Ned Seaton,) Henry Kolker (Edward Seton Sr.,) Edward Everett Horton (Professor Nick Potter,) Jean Dixon (Susan Potter,) Binnie Barnes (Laura Cram) and Henry Daniell as Seton Cram. Margo's upcoming book on Saturday Night Fever (pre-order!) Clips used:“New Year's Eve Waltz”TCM Pre-Show for Holiday (1938)“Julia, Johnny, and Linda”Johny asks Linda, “Why work?” “Julia and Johnny disagree”“Ned, Julia and Johnny”“Johnny and Linda do acrobatics”Music by Sidney CutnerFollow us on the socials!Join our Patreon page “Book Vs. Movie podcast”You can find us on Facebook at Book Vs. Movie Podcast GroupInstagram: Book Versus Movie @bookversusmoviebookversusmoviepodcast@gmail.com Margo D's Blog: Brooklynfitchick.comMargo D's Instagram “Brooklyn Fit Chick”Margo D's TikTok Margo D's YouTube: @MargoDonohueMargo P's Instagram: @shesnachomama Margo P's Blog : coloniabook.comMargo P's YouTube Channel: @shesnachomamaOur logo was designed by Madeleine Gainey/Studio 39 Marketing Follow on Instagram @Studio39Marketing & @musicalmadeleine 

Book Vs Movie Podcast
Holiday (1938) Katharine Hepburn, Cary Grant, George Cukor, & Philp Barry

Book Vs Movie Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2024 71:23


Book Vs. Movie: HolidayThe 1928 Play Vs. the 1938 FilmThe Margos celebrate the holiday season with the classic 1938 film "Holiday," directed by George Cukor and starring Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant. Based on the 1928 play by Philip Barry, the story follows an adventure-seeking playboy (played by Grant) who engages in a battle of wits with his fiancée's sister (played by Hepburn) during the New Year's holiday in upper-class New York City. So, between the play and the film, which did the Margos prefer? Listen to find out!In this ep, the Margos discuss:How the play and 1938 movie differThe setting of 1928 vs 1938 change the tone of the workTheater TCU Play 2023The Movie Cast: Katharine Hepburn (Linda Seton,) Cary Grant (Johnny Case,) Doris Nolan (Julia Seton,) Lew Ayres (Ned Seaton,) Henry Kolker (Edward Seton Sr.,) Edward Everett Horton (Professor Nick Potter,) Jean Dixon (Susan Potter,) Binnie Barnes (Laura Cram) and Henry Daniell as Seton Cram. Margo's upcoming book on Saturday Night Fever (pre-order!) Clips used:“New Year's Eve Waltz”TCM Pre-Show for Holiday (1938)“Julia, Johnny, and Linda”Johny asks Linda, “Why work?” “Julia and Johnny disagree”“Ned, Julia and Johnny”“Johnny and Linda do acrobatics”Music by Sidney CutnerFollow us on the socials!Join our Patreon page “Book Vs. Movie podcast”You can find us on Facebook at Book Vs. Movie Podcast GroupInstagram: Book Versus Movie @bookversusmoviebookversusmoviepodcast@gmail.com Margo D's Blog: Brooklynfitchick.comMargo D's Instagram “Brooklyn Fit Chick”Margo D's TikTok Margo D's YouTube: @MargoDonohueMargo P's Instagram: @shesnachomama Margo P's Blog : coloniabook.comMargo P's YouTube Channel: @shesnachomamaOur logo was designed by Madeleine Gainey/Studio 39 Marketing Follow on Instagram @Studio39Marketing & @musicalmadeleine 

Bailey & Johnny: The Podcast
Toy Mountain Is Next Week!

Bailey & Johnny: The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2024 26:35


Today on Bailey & Johnny: Johnny's back from getting his wisdom teeth out on Friday and we made him jealous with all the Studio 2 stories from Friday! We also talked about non-chocolate advent calendars plus we let you know that our favourite fundraiser is coming up next week! Advent Calendar ideas - (00:02:06) Johnny's teeth and Canada's Drag Race recap (00:08:29) The More You Novak - (00:11:56) Classified Studio Session - (00:13:56)  TL;DR - (00:18:40) Toy Mountain - (00:21:38) Movember update - (00:23:38) Have a funny story to share? Voice memo us on social media and you could be included in the next episode.  You can support Johnny's Movember campaign HERE Listen live weekdays 530 -10 am PST on the iHeartRadio app and 1073virginradio.ca

Bailey & Johnny: The Podcast
Only 108 Days Until Halloween + Vacay A Day Keywords

Bailey & Johnny: The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2024 21:22


Today on Bailey & Johnny: Johnny's back but Bailey's away now! We had some big soccer news in the TL;DR, a feel good story from right here on Vancouver Island for Tell Me Something Good plus find out how you can win $100 to Shopper's Drug Mart this week in this episode. It also contains some keywords for Virgin Radio's Vacay a Day if you missed them this morning at 7:00 and 9:00! Have a funny story to share? Voice memo us on social media and you could be included in the next episode.  Listen live weekdays 530 -10 am PST on the iHeartRadio app and 1073virginradio.ca

Bailey & Johnny: The Podcast
Chicken McNuggets: Good for you!

Bailey & Johnny: The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2024 18:59


Today on Bailey & Johnny: Johnny pretty much convinced us that chicken nuggets are a health food in The More You Novak, we had some horrible parking news in The More You Novak and we have Phillips Backyard Music Festival tickets to giveaway all week long! Have a funny story to share? Voice memo us on social media and you could be included in the next episode.  Listen live weekdays 530 -10 am PST on the iHeartRadio app and 1073virginradio.ca

QWERTZ - RTS
Entretien avec Frédéric Rossignol, auteur de "Johnny Johnny"

QWERTZ - RTS

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2024 23:08


« Johnny Johnny » n'est pas seulement le roman d'une vie exceptionnelle, celle de Johnny Weissmuller, c'est aussi celui du rêve américain où tout devient possible. Enchaînant les médailles et les records, le nageur le plus rapide du monde prendra la lumière sur les plateaux de cinéma où il incarnera Tarzan. Hollywood fera de lui un dieu puis finira par l'oublier. Champion olympique de natation à Paris en 1924, acteur célèbre, séducteur invétéré, Johnny Weissmuller fera résonner pour toujours l'écho de son incroyable force vitale. Par Ellen Ichters

Bailey & Johnny: The Podcast
Succession Nightmares

Bailey & Johnny: The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2024 28:25


Today on Bailey & Johnny: Johnny shared the unusual TV show that was giving him nightmares and we chatted with Tasha in Green Talks with Tasha where she went all scientific on us! Also, we chatted with Tyler Stock about the Reynolds Reybots robotics team about their upcoming fundraiser!  Have a funny story to share? Voice memo us on social media and you could be included in the next episode.  Listen live weekdays 530 -10 am PST on the iHeartRadio app and 1073virginradio.ca

Saturday Morning Tuesdays
Giant Robots Part III - Everybody Loves Jet Scrander

Saturday Morning Tuesdays

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2024 84:11


It was an extremely good idea to abandon GoBots in the proverbial parking lot of history, because it led us to 1972's Mazinger Z, and more specifically to Mazinger Z's flying belt with its own theme song. This is now exclusively a Jet Scrander podcast.Today's Episode Sponsor: Justice for Johnny (Johnny's a Clam)™THIS WEEK'S EPISODESMazinger Z Episode 46, “The Ninja Twin Mechanical Beasts Appear!”Gunbuster Episode 3, “First Love☆First Sortie” Join our Discord! https://discord.gg/umq7Rms Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/satamtuesdays Our Website: http://www.satamtuesdays.com/The Hosts: Andrew Eric Davison, Austin Bridges, Rory VoieAudio Production: Andrew Eric Davison

Intaresu Podcast
Intaresu Podcast 384 - Jacque Saravanté

Intaresu Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2023 61:24


Hailing from Glasgow, Scotland, Jacque Saravanté is a rising talent in the electronic music scene. With a string of releases on esteemed labels like Deep Tech Records, Johnny Johnny, Nite Moves, and DTD Records, he's quickly making a name for himself within the global electronic music community. When he's not in the studio crafting his own productions or experimenting under his aliases (Lauter & Jshacou), Jacque holds two coveted residencies with Glasgow-based labels Johnny Johnny and SKapade. He's a regular fixture on their weekly live streams, attracting viewers from around the world. Jacque's talent truly shines behind the DJ booth, where he seamlessly blends twisted house and minimal gems. His sets have graced venues where he's supported acclaimed acts like Elliot Adamson, Luigi Madonna, Lee Webster, and an array of other top-tier artists. Keep an eye out for this emerging artist as he continues to leave his mark on the electronic music landscape. Keep an eye on Jacque Saravanté: https://soundcloud.com/saravante https://instagram.com/jacque_saravante https://facebook.com/JSaravante1 https://linktr.ee/jacque_saravante Listen to more electronic music on Intaresu https://intaresu.com

The You Project
#1355 We Love Johnny - Johnny Ruffo

The You Project

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2023 54:40


Hi Team. Over the last two weeks, lots of people have spoken to me about Johhny and more than a few have asked about re-sharing his TYP episode as a kind-of tribute. To be honest, I wasn't really sold on the idea because I didn't want to seem disrespectful or inappropriate in any way. So as always, I did some self-examination and considered my intention. And that was to once again share with you a beautiful, funny, courageous and brilliant young man who made ten lifetimes of impact, in his one brief stint here on Planet Earth. So enjoy our all-time most cheeky guest. Love and hugs to you all. Craig. xxSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Retro Pop Hits by Hache
80s Everyday is Like Sunday (Compilated by Hache)

Retro Pop Hits by Hache

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2023 65:54


A pesar que el termino Indie no se comenzó a utilizar muchos años después. En los 80s un centenar de artistas hoy podrían ser considerados como o cercanos al Indie-Pop a pesar de que tuvieran singles de gran éxito mundial. Hoy son de gran influencia para todas las nuevas generaciones de artistas, los cuales mencionan en reportajes. Arrancamos con los maravillosos Talk Talk.” I Don't Believe in You”, single extraido de su tercer álbum “The Colour of Spring” de 1986. Aztec Camera, “How Men Are”. Single de su tercer álbum publicado en 1987, “Love” Everything but the Girl, “Cross My Heart”. Canción extraída de su álbum “Baby, The Stars Shine Bright” de 1986 pero no se publicó como single, a pesar de figurar en un par de recopilatorios de la banda. The Adventures, “Don't Tell Me”. Canción extraída de su álbum debut “Theodore And Friends“ editado en 1985. Deacon Blue, “When Will You (Make My Telephone Ring)”. Single editado en 1987, extraído del álbum debut del grupo escoces “Raintown”. Aquí escuchareis la versión de 12 pulgadas. The Blow Monkeys, “Out With Her”. Se lanzó como single solo en el Reino Unido y Alemania en 1987. Pertenece al tercer disco del proyecto de Dr. Robert, “She Was Only a Grocer's Daughter”. The Blue Nile, “Over The Hillside”. La canción abre el segundo álbum de la banda escocesa “Hats”, publicado en 1989. Roxy Music, “Avalon”. Single y título de su octavo y último álbum de estudio, publicado en 1982. Immaculate Fools, “Tragic Comedy”. Uno de sus singles más exitosos, extraído del disco “Dumb Poet” del año 87. Fra Lippo Lippi, “Everytime I See You”. Canción editada originalmente como single por el grupo noruego. Se incorporó en la edición europea de su disco “Songs” de 1986, aunque una versión diferente. Morrissey, “Everyday is Like Sunday”. Al año de la disolución de The Smiths, Morrissey publica en 1988 su primer álbum como solista. Su segundo single, el primero fue “Suedehead”, fue este “Everyday is Like Sunday”. Cock Robin, “The Promise You Made”. Single perteneciente al álbum debut de la banda americana, publicado en 1985. Tears for Fears, “Advice For The Young at Heart”. Extraído de su tercer álbum “The Seeds of Love” de 1989, el single se publicó en 1990. Prefab Sprout,”Goodbye Lucille #1”. Editado en 1985 bajo el nombre de “Johnny Johnny”, extraído del aclamadísimo segundo álbum del grupo “Steve McQueen”. China Crisis, “Wishful Thiunking”. Single extraído del segundo álbum de la banda de Liverpool, “Working With Fire & Steel (Possible Pop Song Vol.2)”, publicado en 1983. The Dream Academy, “The Love Parede”. Luego del exitoso primer single “Life in a Northem Town”, extraen un segundo sencillo de su álbum debut, en 1985.

80s Music by Hache
80s Everyday is Like Sunday (Compilated by Hache)

80s Music by Hache

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2023 65:54


A pesar que el termino Indie no se comenzó a utilizar muchos años después. En los 80s un centenar de artistas hoy podrían ser considerados como o cercanos al Indie-Pop a pesar de que tuvieran singles de gran éxito mundial. Hoy son de gran influencia para todas las nuevas generaciones de artistas, los cuales mencionan en reportajes. Arrancamos con los maravillosos Talk Talk.” I Don't Believe in You”, single extraido de su tercer álbum “The Colour of Spring” de 1986. Aztec Camera, “How Men Are”. Single de su tercer álbum publicado en 1987, “Love” Everything but the Girl, “Cross My Heart”. Canción extraída de su álbum “Baby, The Stars Shine Bright” de 1986 pero no se publicó como single, a pesar de figurar en un par de recopilatorios de la banda. The Adventures, “Don't Tell Me”. Canción extraída de su álbum debut “Theodore And Friends“ editado en 1985. Deacon Blue, “When Will You (Make My Telephone Ring)”. Single editado en 1987, extraído del álbum debut del grupo escoces “Raintown”. Aquí escuchareis la versión de 12 pulgadas. The Blow Monkeys, “Out With Her”. Se lanzó como single solo en el Reino Unido y Alemania en 1987. Pertenece al tercer disco del proyecto de Dr. Robert, “She Was Only a Grocer's Daughter”. The Blue Nile, “Over The Hillside”. La canción abre el segundo álbum de la banda escocesa “Hats”, publicado en 1989. Roxy Music, “Avalon”. Single y título de su octavo y último álbum de estudio, publicado en 1982. Immaculate Fools, “Tragic Comedy”. Uno de sus singles más exitosos, extraído del disco “Dumb Poet” del año 87. Fra Lippo Lippi, “Everytime I See You”. Canción editada originalmente como single por el grupo noruego. Se incorporó en la edición europea de su disco “Songs” de 1986, aunque una versión diferente. Morrissey, “Everyday is Like Sunday”. Al año de la disolución de The Smiths, Morrissey publica en 1988 su primer álbum como solista. Su segundo single, el primero fue “Suedehead”, fue este “Everyday is Like Sunday”. Cock Robin, “The Promise You Made”. Single perteneciente al álbum debut de la banda americana, publicado en 1985. Tears for Fears, “Advice For The Young at Heart”. Extraído de su tercer álbum “The Seeds of Love” de 1989, el single se publicó en 1990. Prefab Sprout,”Goodbye Lucille #1”. Editado en 1985 bajo el nombre de “Johnny Johnny”, extraído del aclamadísimo segundo álbum del grupo “Steve McQueen”. China Crisis, “Wishful Thiunking”. Single extraído del segundo álbum de la banda de Liverpool, “Working With Fire & Steel (Possible Pop Song Vol.2)”, publicado en 1983. The Dream Academy, “The Love Parede”. Luego del exitoso primer single “Life in a Northem Town”, extraen un segundo sencillo de su álbum debut, en 1985.

Edge Game
78 - Kill Real Estate Agents (feat. Jeffrey Doussan of Keller Williams New Orleans)

Edge Game

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2023 300:00


this is a comedy ""podcast"" btw believe it or not. It is a joke, it is parody, it is satire. It is not serious; it is not meant to be taken seriously. I do not condone the physical harming or even light harassment of real estate agents in any way shape or form. Do not call, text, or email Jeffrey Doussan or Keller Williams of New Orleans. Do not write funny bad reviews on yelp or google or furnished finder. Do not send pipe bombs or bomb threats to his house or any of his listed properties. I mean it! If you do any of these things you will be banned from podcasts forever. Thank you enjoy the show. Looking at rentals is really fun cuz real estate agents and property managers are some of the most redacted and oblivious people you have to trust with your livelihood. Recently I had scheduled to see a place and the guy no showed, no contact I messaged and emailed him multiple times and 3 days later he texted "apologies out of town." He then proceeds to try to reschedule immediately for the next day at 11am I say can we do 2pm he says no we can't let's do Monday 2pm I say okay Monday 2pm he says great I say great and then he says actually we can do tomorrow Friday 2pm i say perfect cool then Friday at 11am he says you must think we're crazy but we're actually just short-handed can you do monday 2pm and then i showed up today Monday at 2pm and the guy is 10 minutes late, I text the guy and he said "oh Philip's not there?" Philip the minion shows up within 1 minute of me texting, Philip says haha it's good thing our office is right around the corner and he points to a building literally right behind the rental and gives me the dorkiest fcking smile and I want to drown Philip in a puddle. We go to open the door and he doesn't have the right keypad code. I stand around in the rain for about 5 minutes while he calls and texts people and then he's like oh we can just try the other side of the duplex and I asked if the other side is the same layout and price and furnishings and he said no so I said no and so we sat in the rain for another 5 minutes and he finally gets the code and we go in. It looks like the last tenant had just left, all the lights and tvs are on and trash cans full, poop splatters on the toilet and it smells like cat piss. Despite this, I message the property manager that I am interested and would like to move forward with my application and he likes my message and says nothing else. $1400/month. a few years ago, a property manager was stunned that I requested to inspect the house before signing a legal document that said we conducted an inspection and told me I was the first person to ever do so. He addressed me as "Gay bro" in a text and it was never acknowledged $1754/month 440 sq feet #italiano #realestateagent #propertymanagement When you were investing in real estate, I studied the blade. When you were having open houses, I mastered the blockchain. While you wasted your days at the bank in pursuit of equity, I cultivated inner strength. And now that the world is on fire and the barbarians are at the gate you have the audacity to come to me for rent.   It's free! Real estate! We're giving you land! It's free. We're giving you a house. It's real estate. Free. It's a free house for you, Jim. This is free real estate! You gotta bring furniture, but the house is free! Two bedrooms, no rugs. It's free! You unlock the door to your free house, we got you the real estate! It's a two bedroom house, its free, its got a pool in the back. I'm not carrying this around all day! It's for your house! Free real estate, I'll pee my pants. Jim, come get your damn land. It's a free house! Jim, I got real estate. Jim, does it get better than this? Jim! The house is free! Jim! The house is free! It's a free fucking house. It's free real estate!   Dis shitpost is conquered by Naily, along with Wacky Workbench, UmbraSnivy, whose ego will ensure this will stay near the top, Monster Jam: Urban Assault, Taco, because youtube is where the poop is, All character userboxes, Vsauce, people who wear band t-shirts thinking it's a brand, Palm Tree Panic Will Venable busting a move on top of the dougout with Mr. Met, the letters Q, A, K, H, P, and Y, Work That Sucker To Death by Xavier (ft. George Clinton and Bootsy Collins), George W. Bush, Jeb Bush, Crazy Hand, Ampullae of Lorenzini, my sword, my bow, and my axe, The Onion, Gregorio's Tightie Whities Company, Flipnote Hatena, The 1997 World Series, Jet fuel, someone who should have been the one to fill your dark soul with LIGH-GHT! That one annoying Mets fan who interfered with a live ball and gloated by waving his mitt at David Dahl, ʎɥdʎlƃnɹəɔ Cameradancer100 singing "Hit me baby one more time," George Carlin saves President Obama from bad Indie Mu sic, Lazytown, Mother 3, Quadrupedal Dolphins, The Miami Dolphins, Miami Heat, Miami Marlins, University of Miami's Basketball Team, 2001: A Space Odyssey, Space Jam, Guitar Hero Encore: Rocks the 80's, Samsung, Six Flags, Laffy Taffys, Donald Trump, Italian people who live in Japan and have the last name Baldelli, the italian knock off of baldis basics called baldellis basics, the real Baldi's Basics in Education and Learning, Supreme, LemonMouthTheCat, Flamer, "Don't You Evah" by Spoon, Carlos Guevara's Tweets that say "It's a good night" 90 percent of the time, the rest of Carlos Guevara's Tweets including the one where he got really really really mad because his food at Chili's was too cold or something (he even put a picture of his food with a caption saying "this angers me every time"), a runabout (She stole it! NO ONE WILL EVER KNOW!!!!!!!!!!!!) Toontown Online, ShamWow, Derpyunikitty, All of MrFlamerBoy's OCs, Ruhmoat, Tubbybloxian the robloxian teletubby, Reater the Cheater, Bomby, Tim Lincecum's hair, Taylor Swift's hit single "Delicate", Houses, Tanline666 and his blog post announcing he is unblocked, asdfmovie, pineapples, Thunderstruck by ACDC Other Real Estates, The creator Takeo Ischi singing about chickens, Geno, People who release boring songs as their debut singles, Hypseleotris compressa, That spider you killed back when you were 8, A fruit fly corpse, Mr. Moseby's lobby, Flying Battery Zone, r/softwaregore, Paul Blart Mall Cop 2, bruv moment, Steel beams, laser beams, pretty much every other kind of beam there is, "Counting Stars" by OneRepublic, Katajrocker, Dehumidifiers, Kayayayayayayayayayayayayayayayayayayayayayayayayayayayayayayayayayayayayayday AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAkamatsu, XXXTentacion's Death P.A.C.T, Tzipi Shavit, Yogurtslavia, Hiccory, Benny No, Cavendish Bananas, LeAlgae, octahedrons, Crash Twinsanity, F-Zero, Io, SpongeBob SquarePants (The Show), people who put anything before Wacky Workbench, Coiny, your pests, Super Smash Bros Brawl, Bruce Lee, Jackie Chan, An electric guitar made out of acryllic and is filled with liquid and glitter to make a cool snow globe, two Number 9's, a Number 9 Large, a Number 6 with extra Dip, a Number 7, Two Number 45's, one with Cheese, and a large Soda. squid eyeballs, Eraser, Svalbard, Nickelodeon, Game Shakers, Oshawott, Snivy (And Tepig) SNSD Gee, Dante Bichette Sr., Dante Bichette Jr., and Bo Bichette, An Oxi Clean Container autographed by Billy Mays, My absence from this wiki, Vsauce, Nappa, The UK, KarateMario4Life, the Illuminati, Windows 10 Shop, The Battlecats, All of the squirrels in the universe, the color Amaranth, Warioware Gold, people who follow every page they edit, Mario Kart Wii, Bothus the flounder, Joanna Newsom, SammyNWIKI (and all sockpuppets thereof), a heckin y e l l o w house, Asian Carps, 8-Ball's Fumes, Some Firey hater or something, USERNAME Template, Selene vomer, Fartnut Bottle Royalty, The muffin that wants to die die die, Spicy Af Roblox Memes, The Impractical Jokers, the people who are wai --I HATE YOU (talk) 00:56, November 15, 2019 (UTC)--I HATE YOU (talk) 00:56, November 15, 2019 (UTC)--I HATE YOU (talk) 00:56, November 15, 2019 (UTC)ting for BFB 13, People who believe that this might be offensive and want it deleted but are actually good people that mean well but please listen to me we just want to make a funny joke and we aren't trying to be offensive, Giorno Giovanna, Fake Smash ultimate Leaks, 4 dozen eggs, A crazy Asian guy by the name of Kenji Johjima who is on the loose trying to steal mashed potatoes from your local Popeye's, Foxtrot comics, Chiaotzu's death scene, The now closed trollpasta wiki,Roblox Creepypasta, DANK MEMES,scrampled egg, phyllo dough, Greg Heffley's nickname "Bubby", Picross 3d Round 2, Tide pods, The Safety Dance by Men Without Hats, the ugliest myna bird in existence, PediaSure, Super Mario Odyssey, Gay People, Puzzle Body: Beware! Invading bigs! Yag People, The Elite Beat Gaents sequel that has yet to release, various kinds of loach (including but not limited to Pangio incognito, Nemacheilus selangoricus, and Chromobotia macracanthus), The numbers 47, 99, 519, 24, 963, 8, 69, 658, and 82, Nokia, Rude Buster, ₯, その言語のエスペラント, Some really dumb joke, Yuri's death scene, Three Nights At Harry's, Sony Pictures, SMG4, doggo's of all sizes, ppl who write him/her instead of them, Autism, Swordfish antlers, The people that have made Despacito a meme, The fact that i barely protect the meme from straying too far from my vision, The Disrespectoids, "You Say Run" from My Hero Acadamia, badly coded Minecraft mods, Pen Island (no spaces all caps), the Cat-Bear-Burger, Schaffrilas Productions, this mailbox, this triagonal sign, Fries' fries, whatever the heck is on top of Bell's string, Despacito, Despacito 2, Despacito (Justin Bieber remix), Despacito (Mini Pop Kids version), Johnny Johnny, Everything Firey and Leafy own, Baconator, Son of Baconator, Baconator Fries, Crocs, Princess Stapy, Become Woody from Roblox, Leafy, Evil Leafy, Metal Leafy, FOOTBALL, people who use the

university world learning donald trump google hollywood kids uk disney education internet man mother japan spoilers real land club miami africa story football chaos green rich italian putting alabama barack obama fake adventure new orleans taylor swift asian hong kong tree sweden shop cats basics cat large dutch names doom nations world series sugar cheese lol pirates autism windows losers rock and roll dungeons and dragons all star fortnite steel north korea pants flip samsung houses supreme new york mets scratch minecraft nickelodeon buzzfeed taco bell butter pepsi bts user bean space jam tweets freestyle tumblr george w bush leaks elf miami dolphins tide ding miami heat shrek chili illuminati cheaters annoying taco io bruce lee one piece squeeze jet chipotle real estate agents soda nokia toto onion somalia gmo atheism reliable popeye fries spoon exploding swag sag kool aid abandonment crocs shiny roblox micheal doritos jackie chan yuri detective pikachu goofy tack pikachu nano mountain dew dip linus dis bright side boulevard geno nickelback george carlin space odyssey idk attack of the clones ps2 gorillaz goku miami marlins knuckles fluffy gamecube beeps tramp six flags sony pictures basketball team limp fireflies keller williams smash mouth logitech xxxtentacion rhyme cloudy french fries delicate kleenex holders super mario odyssey thicc invading biggie smalls svalbard gregorio vampire weekend ocs utc george clinton macaroni scp yeet impractical jokers despacito one republic everybody loves raymond broken dreams jeb bush fairy godmother normies foxtrot f zero thunderstruck luffy cheez fumes animorphs pancreas fnaf ow eraser bee movie yanny flappy bird macarons fidget spinners swordfish super saiyan bootsy collins florence the machine danganronpa spread the word guile yo mama teapot nutz bo bichette leafy vaporwave squidward owl city bullwinkle safety dance wikihow bleh boto paul blart mall cop echidna skylanders fiddy patrick corbin osmosis jones bubby tv tropes homestar runner monsta x flat earth society joanna newsom men without hats woody woodpecker never gonna give you up amaranth baldi shamwow angry birds movie high fructose corn syrup billy mays bubsy rock lobster picross eggy hopsin baconator oxford comma ljn dendy tim lincecum macaroons speedy gonzales yuli gurriel activison mad catz fco i hate you patapon lorenzini david dahl saw 3d counting stars bomby nappa imvu sherk boco lazytown vsauce 2k sports tomodachi life mario kart wii cool spot orion nebula lionhearted baldelli flamer dank memes dehumidifiers diesel engine mars needs moms tectoy super smash bros brawl sonichu bfb darude sandstorm funk volume emuparadise warioware gold johnny johnny tin cans tambourines greg fisher game shakers sonic advance pokemon crystal hatsune picross 3d my hero acadamia funky kong furaffinity moto moto awesome possum life after people ytp perfect cell battlecats starclan twow smeargle carlos guevara chiaotzu oganesson eddsworld cyriak evantubehd cloudchaser
MARIJUANA HAPPY HOUR
The Nikki and Johnny show

MARIJUANA HAPPY HOUR

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2023 58:00


It's the Nikki and Johnny show featuring Nicki and Johnny Nikki and Johnny are doing a show a show about Nikki and Johnny with Nikki and Johnny Johnny and Nikki and Nikki and Johnny are here to answer all of your questions call now get involved

Between Two Posts
B2P 44: Moyser in Your Head Rent Free - Johnny "Johnny DropIn" Lethemon

Between Two Posts

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2022 89:38


We're back, you're back, and Kyle's on an absolute heater on takes. The Leafs are crumbling, Evan's windows are falling from the sky, and we're chugging along. Anyways, Leth was signed with the Ontario Reign the last two years playing most of his time in Greenville with the ECHL affiliate. This year he's signed with Grand Rapids hoping to make a huge push to spend more time in the AHL. The coolest part of John's story is where he came from and where he's going. He's a product of Michigan High School hockey, and after two years he made a huge jump to the Chicago Steel. After playing for a struggling Michigan State, Leth was able to sign a nice pro deal with the Ontario Reign, which if you know hockey that's a huge step and rather impressive. Stay tuned every Wednesday! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/betweentwoposts/support

Laughingmonkeymusic
Ep 252 Edgar Winter: We talk the new album "Brother Johnny". Johnny stories plus guests on the album.

Laughingmonkeymusic

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2022 64:44


https://edgarwinter.com/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/shawn-ratches/support

Wrestle Think
13. The Return of C.M. Punk in AEW, Here's Johnny! Johnny Gargano returns to WWE. Seamus for the IC

Wrestle Think

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2022 29:03


In this episode we thank Jacob Reddy for his time and wonderful performances on our last show. What a pleasure it was to welcome Jacob and his father to our house and an absolute privilege to have them playing live in our lounge. This episode returns to our core subject matter of wrestling. A resident wrestling expert Luke keeps us up-to-date with the latest goings on in the world of wrestling. Subjects include Johnny Gargano returning to WWE, CM punk returning from injury in AEW and immediately entering into a feud with Hangman. Also we discussed Seamus winning the right to challenge for the Intercontinental championship belt against Guenther at clash at the castle. This episode contains buildup to the big paper view event in Cardiff. As ever, please remember that this podcast is primarily a father and son talking about the things that the son loves. We are not professional broadcasters and it is a Father and a Son, pursuing something they love doing together. Sending you all best wishes.

Regular Episodes
899?BC Porta-Johnny; Johnny Smith, Blake Scala, Jared Helfer

Regular Episodes

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2022 99:04


Music King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard Magenta Mountain

Lawyer Talk Off The Record
Lawyer Talk Q & A on The Blitz - Oh Johnny, Johnny Depp

Lawyer Talk Off The Record

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2022 14:12 Transcription Available


Oh Johnny, Johnny Depp. Plus questions about... Can a driving record be sealed? Can you sue your mechanic for additional damage done to your auto? Background checks and record sealing. What can you do about threatening email? Got a question you want answered on the podcast? Call 614-859-2119 and leave us a voicemail. Steve will answer your question on the next podcast! Submit your questions to http://www.lawyertalkpodcast.com/ (www.lawyertalkpodcast.com). Recorded at Channel 511, a production of 511 South High Media LLC. Stephen E. Palmer, Esq. has been practicing criminal defense almost exclusively since 1995. He has represented people in federal, state, and local courts in Ohio and elsewhere. Though he focuses on all areas of criminal defense, he particularly enjoys complex cases in state and federal courts. He has unique experience handling and assembling top defense teams of attorneys and experts in cases involving allegations of child abuse (false sexual allegations, false physical abuse allegations), complex scientific cases involving allegations of DUI and vehicular homicide cases with blood alcohol tests, and any other criminal cases that demand jury trial experience. Steve has unique experience handling numerous high publicity cases that have garnered national attention. For more information about Steve and his law firm, visit https://www.ohiolegaldefense.com/ (Yavitch & Palmer Co., L.P.A.)  You can also find Lawyer Talk on these platforms: Rumble: LawyerTalkPodcast Brighteon: LawyerTalkPodcast Gab: @LawyerTalkPodcast GETTR: @LawyerTalk Copyright 2022 Stephen E. Palmer - Attorney At Law

CHARGE Podcast
Ep: 217 Johnny Eaker

CHARGE Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2022 31:47


Johnny Eaker is the founder and chief strategist for Cosmic Sauce, a video marketing agency in Columbia, Missouri, where he helps clients craft video marketing campaigns that drive results. Prior to founding the agency, he was a video director for State Farm Insurance, a Fortune 50 brand with one of the largest in-house creative agencies in the nation, where he worked with high-profile partners like the NBA, helped lead national social media campaigns and helped grow the brand's social media presence to more than two million followers. Today, Johnny speaks to various organizations on the topics of video marketing and social media. His agency helps brands develop winning video marketing and social media strategies that generate measurable results. Introducing Johnny Eaker What problem do you solve? He helps you understand how to use video to get measurable results for your business. What three questions are you going to answer for us today? What are ways you can use video in your business or for your brand? How do you get started? How do you get results - especially on social media? Show Notes: Every business has different video needs. Video does have a place somewhere in your organization. What does that first impression need to be when someone is getting to know your brand? Short videos may intrigue someone just enough to make that extra click. Your audience will dictate what kind of content you need to create. Testimonial videos are the lowest hanging fruit. Get at that authenticity. Think about the sections of your website when thinking about what videos to create. Who are we? Who's the customer? Have your videos front and center. A FAQ like video can help explain your business to customers. You've got to be willing to pay attention to your audience. Start with something of a plan. Look for opportunities. You can turn one video into several months of content. Be able to measure what you're doing. Johnny Eaker's Recharge Round What habit do you think has led to success in your life? Johnny's biggest habit is creating a plan. If you had one do-over, what would it be? He would've started what he's doing a lot sooner than he did. Just jump in. Connect with Johnny: Johnny's website: cosmicsauce.agency Facebook Instagram Learn more about Gary's Mastermind group at goascend.biz/mastermind/

The Macbeef-Banquet Podcast
Ep. 115: Johnny Johnny Meets the Matrix

The Macbeef-Banquet Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2021 26:05


The real title is much cooler, but it's encoded inside Johnny's brain. That jerk. Home Sweet Home Alone is on Disney+. More like Disney minus if you ask me. Welcome to the third season of our show. We talk about movies. Podcast Links: https://linktr.ee/MacbeefBanquetProductions Intro/Outro Music: End of the Road by Anthem of Rain Licensed under: Attribution 4.0 International License https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode Source: Free Music Archive https://freemusicarchive.org/music/anthem-of-rain/freedom/end-of-the-road

Wealth Matters By Alpesh Parmar
179: Investing in Coliving Properties with Johnny Wolff

Wealth Matters By Alpesh Parmar

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2021 32:40


CEO and Founder of HomeRoom Coliving. He is excited to partner with real estate investors to bring Coliving to the Midwest & Texas. He has over a decade of real estate investment and remote property management experience from building and managing his personal real estate portfolios (currently located in Austin, Houston & Kansas City) - and love using that accumulated experience to find awesome properties for our investors. (00:02 - 2:01) Opening Segment - Introduction of the host into the show - Alpesh introduces the guest of the show, Johnny - Johnny shares something interesting about himself (2:01 - 28:36) Corporate America to 100+ Rental Units -What was your very first real estate investment - How did that first investment work out for you? - Is now a good time to invest in real estate? What do you think? - What does HomeRoom do? -How do you identify properties that will generate average returns? -What kind of data does your data scientist look at? -Can you share the number on one property let's say Dallas, how it was acquired, what was the price paid, and what it's rented now? -Is there a minimum bedroom, bathroom size that you look for in a home, or if it's not there you look into converting? -Does the investor needs to deal with the contractors -What does your property management or the coliving management fee -What does that 15% include? -How did you get this idea about HomeRoom? What was your journey? -What kind of insurance requirement will investors have? - Have you been through some horror stories? -What kind of rules do you put in place? Are the rules similar for the Dallas market, to Austin, to Kansas City? or do you have to differentiate for another market? -How does the contract between you and the landlord work? and how does it work between you and tenants? -Are you looking into other markets other than these three markets you are in? (28:36 - 29:05) Break - Welcoming listeners and guest back to the show (29:05 - 32:01) Fire Round - Will Johnny change the business strategy after Coronavirus? – Johnny's favorite real estate, finance, or other related books – Tools or website Johnny recommends – How does Johnny give back? – How can Wealth Matters Podcast listeners reach out to Johnny? (32:01 - 32:22) Closing Segment -If you want to learn more about the discussion, you can watch the podcast on Wealth Matter's YouTube channel and you can reach out to Alpesh using this link. Facebook: @wealthmatrs IG: @wealthmatrs.ig Tiktok: @wealthmatrs

Destined To Be
A Strong Man's Guide to Supporting a Successful Woman - EP176

Destined To Be

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2021 79:30


My powerhouse wife, Mallory, just keeps achieving higher levels of success. And before my awakening this past summer, that success scared me.  I saw her growing independence as a threat. If I wasn't the provider in our marriage, where did my worth come from? Patrick Kennedy, Johnny Elsasser and Mark Gustafson are all in committed relationships with extremely successful women entrepreneurs. So, how are they growing stronger as men while they support their partners' dreams? On this episode of Destined to Be, Pat, Johnny and Mark join me to discuss the difference between being a provider and being of service to your significant other, describing how a true king provides his partner with a sense of safety—regardless of who brings in more money. We explain what differentiates codependency from an interdependent relationship, sharing what it looks like to hold space for your partner and how to respond when she puts her work first. Listen in for insight on navigating the masculine energy of a powerful woman and learn how to do the inner work it takes to stay connected with your partner and grow together. Key Takeaways   The AHA moment when Pat realized he needed to grow to stay connected with his wife What women can do to introduce their partners to personal development The difference between being a provider and being of service to your partner How a true king provides his partner with a sense of safety (regardless of who makes more money) Johnny's insight on navigating the masculine energy of a powerful woman What differentiates codependency from an interdependent relationship Mark's advice on not taking it personally when your partner puts her work first Johnny's challenge to men to do the inner work and evolve to support your partner's dreams Pat's insight on what it looks like to hold space for your partner The 3 questions Mark asks himself before he speaks up (i.e.: his verbal ‘unsend' button) Connect with Pat Pat on Instagram The House Kennedy on Instagram The Path of Curiosity Podcast Connect with Johnny Johnny on Instagram Johnny's Website The Art of Masculinity Podcast Connect with Mark Mark on Instagram Samantha on Instagram Connect with Jeremiah Jeremiah on Instagram Destined to Be Podcast Destined to Be on Instagram Level Up Entourage Facebook Group Text VIP to 586-600-8492 Resources Patrick & Jenn Kennedy on Destined to Be EP087 Johnny Elsasser & Taylor Simpson on Destined to Be EP079 The Wild Man Experience Traction: Get a Grip on Your Business by Gino Wickman In the Flo by Alisa Vitti Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus by John Gray

Mare latinu
Mare latinu : « Johnny Johnny » film fiction tourné en Corse avec un sosie autour de la légende du chanteur .

Mare latinu

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2021 2:23


durée : 00:02:23 - Mare latinu - Angélique Muller est une réalisatrice qui vit à Malte, son dernier court métrage « Johnny Johnny » a été tourné en Corse, il était présenté lors du Festival Nuits Med à Porto-Vecchio. Avons nous tous quelque chose en nous de Johnny Halliday ?

The Mark Hastings Experience
Episode #142: "Con Air" (1997 Film)

The Mark Hastings Experience

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2021 36:55


In this episode Mark talks about the 1997 action thriller film "Con Air" directed by Simon West, written by Scott Rosenberg and produced by Jerry Bruckheimer. The film stars Nicholas Cage as Cameron Poe, an honourably discharged Army Ranger Sergeant who was sentenced to prison for unintentionally killing one of three men trying to attack him and his wife, Tricia (played by Monica Potter), who was pregnant with his unborn daughter, Casey Poe (played by Landry Allbright). After spending 8 years in prison Cameron Poe is eventually paroled and boards the "Jailbird" flying prison transport aircraft, along with his diabetic friend, Mike "Baby-O" O'Dell (played by Mykelti Williamson) - however he finds himself having to contend with and survive the hijacking of the plane by several other inmates, including Cyrus "The Virus" Grissom (played by John Malkovich), Nathan "Diamond Dog" Jones (played by Ving Rhames, Johnny "Johnny 23" Baca (played by Danny Trejo), and Garland "The Marietta Mangler" Greene (played by Steve Buscemi) - and while secretly working with U.S. Marshall Vince Larkin (played John Cusack) and attempting to not be killed along with the other convicts by DEA agent Duncan Malloy (played by Colm Meaney), all that Cameron Poe wants is to finally be reunited with his wife, Tricia, and meet his daughter, Casey, for the first time... but in this throughly enjoyable, action-packed and bombastic film nothing turns out as simple as anybody wants them too. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/markthepoet/message

Business of Betting Podcast
Ep: 152 - AP and Co-Founder of Betstamp

Business of Betting Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2021 81:03


Episode 152 - Johnny Johnny makes his living betting and recently launched betstamp. We talk about how gamblers can improve their betting and what things can be done to have less recreational gamblers and more advanced players.

Alright Shut Up
Here's Johnny! Johnny Football returns to the gridiron in new bold league

Alright Shut Up

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2020 42:43


Johnny Manziel is back! the former heisman winning "Money Manziel" is looking cash in the worlds, newest, most innovative, interactive, bold, psychotic, and gosh darn genius football league. In this new league you can control your favorite football heros, 4th down? Go for it! onside kick? why not? all out blitz? you betcha! Anything goes as the fans have the final say on this gridiron!

Nur noch einen...
Folge 20 – Weltenbummler III: Mit Milan Janik nach Norwegen (Jubiläumsfolge)

Nur noch einen...

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2020 85:04


Moin, heute begrüßen wir Dich zur unserer 20ten Folge. Wir feiern heute also ein kleines Jubiläum, da darf zur Feier des Tages natürlich unser Lieblingsgast Milan Janik nicht fehlen. In unserer Rubrik Weltenbummler berichtet Milan über seine „kleine Reise“ nach Norwegen. Er ist über Oslo nach Senja, auf die Versteralen und die Lofoten gereist, um schließlich am Ende der Welt am Nordkapp zu stehen. Wir sprechen über das Reisen in Norwegen, Foto-Locations und schwärmen über den besonderen Charme, den dieses Land versprüht. Dabei verlieren wir uns in Nebensächlichkeiten, wie Vakuumiergeräte oder warum man als Camper seinen Schlauch nicht verleihen sollte. Bevor du jetzt auf Play klickst und an unser „Braveheart-artigen“ Folge teilnimmst, möchten wir uns herzlich bei Dir bedanken, dass du uns regelmäßig zuhörst. Wir freuen uns auf Dich. Johnny & Johannes --- Hier findest du unseren Gast : Milans Website | Milan auf Instagram Hier findest du Johannes: Johannes auf Instagram | Johannes Website Hier findest du Johnny: Johnny auf Instagram Hier findest du NNE: NNE auf Instagram --- Rezept für Pastéìs de Nata (8 - 12 Stück) Wie versprochen findest du hier das Rezept, um diese kleine Leckerei selbst backen zu können. Als erstes, den Backofen auf 260° vorheizen. Dann alle Zutaten für die Creme in einem Topf gut miteinander verrühren. Auf dem Herd unter ständigem Rühren kurz aufkochen und eindicken lassen. Im Anschluss die Creme abkühlen lassen und zwischendurch immer wieder mal durchrühren, damit sich keine Haut bildet. Während die Creme abkühlt kannst du die Böden vorbereiten. Den Blätterteig ausrollen und Kreise ausstechen, die groß genug sind, um die Muffinformen bis zum Rand auszufüllen. Nach dem Ausstechen die Kreise in die Muffinformen geben und am Boden und Rand festdrücken. Jetzt kommt die leckere Creme Esslöffelweise in die Böden. Achten beim befüllen darauf, dass ein cm zum Rand frei bleibt. Nun das Blech in den Ofen und so 8 bis 12 Minuten backen. Schau ab Minute acht unbedingt beim backen zu. Die Oberfläche muss sehr dunkel werden, der Zucker der Creme soll karamellisieren aber nicht verbrennen. Nach dem backen die Pastéìs de Nata aus der Form nehmen, und auskühlen lassen, mit Zimt und/oder Puderzucker bestreuen. Tja und am Ende einfach reinbeißen und genießen. Lass es dir schmecken. Für die Creme benötigst du: 200g Zucker, 2 EL Mehl, 8 Eigelb, 1/2l Sahne, 1 Prise Salz, Schale einer Zitrone am Stück Für die Böden benötigst du: 450g Blätterteig aus dem Kühlregal, Muffinform, Zimt & Puderzucker zum bestreuen Falls du die Creme Vegan machen möchtest benötigst du: 500 ml Hafermilch, 40 g Speisestärke, 40 g Zucker, 1 Vanilleschote, 1 Prise Kurkuma

Ugly By Nature Podcast
Here's Johnny! Johnny Depp is losing as much as Donald Trump, Kentucky is weird af, and much more!!!

Ugly By Nature Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2020 32:55


Johnny Depp situation seems to worsen as big companies back away from him, a segment of Don't be an afterthot(afterthought), Kentucky elects a dog as mayor??? And lets talk about legal marijuana and what that means for some. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/uglybynaturepod/support

JAIM (Jagongan Imaos)
Eps:#19 Kok Johnny - Johnny "Yes Papa" bukan "yes Mama

JAIM (Jagongan Imaos)

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2020 33:42


Jagongan Imaos Podcast kembali lagi!!! kali ini membahas tentang lagu anak. salah satu bahasannya kenapa kok johnny-johnny yes papa bukan yes mama?? adakah pesan tersembunyi dalam lagu tersebut?? selanjutnya di Jagongan Imaos Podcast eps 19

Le Disque du Matin France Bleu Cotentin
Jeannne Mas - Johnny Johnny

Le Disque du Matin France Bleu Cotentin

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2020 4:40


durée : 00:04:40 - La Chanson qui fait du bien France Bleu Cotentin

la chanson johnny johnny france bleu cotentin
Streetwise Hebrew
#303 Last Boarding Call for Flight #303 to Hebrewville

Streetwise Hebrew

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2020 12:38


In this episode, Guy covers the different words and meanings derived from the root ק.ר.א, like how to say, “Call an ambulance”, “Let’s call a spade a spade,” and perhaps most useful sentence of all, “Let me read to you the text he sent me.” He’ll also introduce you to the girl who currently holds the record for the youngest, most prolific reader of the city of Tel Aviv-Jaffa. Listen to the All-Hebrew Episode New Words and Expressions: Colloquial names of Hebrew letters – Daled, Hey, Yud, Pei, Tsadik, Kuf, Taf – ד, ה, י, פ, צ, ק, ת Si’anit ha-kri’a ha-tseira shel tel aviv-yafo – The youngest record holder reader of the city of Tel Aviv-Jaffa – שיאנית הקריאה הצעירה של תל אביב יפו Kef li likro sifrei fantazia, aval ani ohevet gam sifrei mada bidyoni – Reading fantasy books is fun, but I also like science fiction – כיף לי לקרוא ספרי פנטזיה, אבל אני אוהבת גם ספרי מדע בדיוני Structure: Kef le + mishehu + Inf.  Hi koret be-chelek gadol me-ha-zman she-hi era – She reads during a big part of the time in which she’s awake – היא קוראת בחלק גדול מהזמן שהיא ערה Tsarich likro la kama pe’amim le-aruchat erev – We need to call her a few times for dinner – צריך לקרוא לה כמה פעמים לארוחת ערב Mi-ma’amakim – Out of the depth – ממעמקים Mikra – Bible – מקרא Kri’ah achrona – Last call (airport) – קריאה אחרונה Kibalnu kri’ah – We (the call center) got a call for help – קיבלנו קריאה Tikre’u le-ambulans – Call an ambulance – תקראו לאמבולנס Tikre’u la-mishtara – Call the police – תקראו למשטרה Kri’ah le-ezra – A call for help – קריאה לעזרה Karata li mami sheli – You called me “mami sheli” (my darling) – קראת לי מאמי שלי Karati lecha nishmati – I called you “nishmati” (my soul) – קראתי לך נשמתי Kara le mishehu X – He called someone X – קרא למישהו + שם Kor’im li ba-shchuna malkat ha-shoshanim – They call me in the neighborhood the rose queen – קוראים לי בשכונה מלכת השושנים “Lo be’emet kor’im li Johnny” – Johnny is not my real name – לא באמת קוראים לי ג’וני Ha-horim sheli kar’u li Yonatan Binyamin – My parents called me Yonatan Binyamin – ההורים שלי קראו לי יונתן בנימין Eich kor’im lecha/lach – What’s your name? – ?איך קוראים לך Ma shimcha/shmech? – What’s your name? (formal) – ?מה שמך Likro le-mishehu al shem mishehu – To name someone after someone – לקרוא למישהו על שם מישהו Kar’u la al shem ha-savta – They named her after her grandmother – קראו לה על שם הסבתא Kor’im la ya’el al shem ha-savta – She’s called Yael after her grandmother – קוראים לה יעל על שם הסבתא Al shem – Called after, in the name of – על שם, ע”ש Hi kruya al shem ha-savta – She’s called after her grandmother – היא קרויה על שם הסבתא Hu karuy al shem ha-saba – He’s called after his grandfather – הוא קרוי על שם הסבא Kar’u lecha al shem mishehu? – Did they name you after someone? – ?קראו לך על שם מישהו Al shem mi kar’u lecha/lach? – After whom did they name you? – ?על שם מי קראו לך Eich ze nikra be’ivrit – How is it called – איך זה נקרא Eich kor’im le-ze be’ivrit – How do you call it in Hebrew – איך קוראים לזה בעברית “This is what I call globalization” – Le-ze ani kore globalizatsia / ze ma she-nikra globalizatsia – לזה אני קורא גלובליזציה / זה מה שנקרא גלובליזציה Lehakri sipur – To read aloud a story to someone – להקריא סיפור Lehakri sipur lifnei ha-shena – To read a story before bedtime – להקריא סיפור לפני השינה “Bo ani akri lecha ma hu katav” – Let me read to you what he wrote – בוא אני אקריא לך מה הוא כתב Takri/Takri-ee li rega et ha-hoda’a – Read me the message for a sec. – תקריא/תקריאי לי רגע את ההודעה Bo nikra la-yeled bi-shmo – Let’s call a spade a spade – בוא נקרא לילד בשמו   Playlist and Clips: Ynet – Si’anit hash’alot ha-sfarim Idan Raichel’s Project – Mi-ma’amakim (lyrics) Kri’ah achrona – Last Call (commercial) Eden Ben Zaken – Mexico (lyrics under Youtube clip) Eden Ben Zaken – Malkat Ha-shoshanim (lyrics)  KAN TV – Eich Bocharim Shem Chiba? – How do you choose a nickname? Eich lehakri sipur la-yeladim – Commercial Mecha’at ha-michnasayim ha-ktsarim – “The shorts protest” Ep. no. 22

Paired Weapons Podcast
Episode 21 - Here's Johnny!!!!!! Johnny Crass Talks SE

Paired Weapons Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2020 115:10


Mat and Kev are joined by Californian and US Masters Qualifier, Johnny Crass, ostensibly to discuss the SE but this quickly descends into a Ninth Free For All as we cover topics as incongruous as the location of Ohio, why Feldraks belong in Kev's Box of Broken Crap and the pain of broken minis. More commonly to be found pushing about VC, Johhny blows the lads minds with his fresh take on SE and adds a new term to our lexicon - 'blocks and bros.' We consider the USA meta and end up concluding that running a 1300 pt model is, in fact, entirely sensible. It's fair to say that the podcast has made a new friend... Enjoy.

Episode #10 - Johnny Osborne (Johnny on the Trail)

"Jester" Section Hiker

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2020 59:20


Here comes "Johnny" - "Johnny on the Trail" that is. In this episode of the "Jester" Section Hiker podcast Jester has a conversation with Johnny Osborne about his Section Hike on the AT for his Birthday, the GSMNP 900 miler, and the SB6K Challenge. Johnny seeks out hiking adventures and loves the challenge of planning for them just as much as the actual hiking. Please check out Johnny's Facebook Group Page Titled: "Hiking The Smokies." "Let's Talk Gear" w/ Steve Kammeyer: Jester and Steve continue to learn more about Steve and his hiking adventures. Steve wanted to bring on a guest who went with him on his most recent hike of the Black Mountain Crest Trail in North Carolina so we did! Today you will hear from Steve and Greg Bell as they talk trail and gear recommendations! Thanks, Greg for joining us on the podcast! Connect with Johnny on the Trail: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgpUSAEkDEARff6V-7sCNIw Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/johnnyonthetrail/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/JohnnyontheTrail/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/606937769492136/ Resources Mentioned: Brown Book - "Hiking Trails of the Smokies" Elizabeth Eitner - "Day Hikers Guide to all the trails in the Smokies" GSMNP 900 Club - http://900miler.smhclub.org/ SB6K Challenge - www.carolinamountainclub.org Thanks for listening and Happy Section Hiking! Connect with Julie "Jester" Gayheart: Email: jesternc2212@gmail.com Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jesterhikes/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jesterhikes Music provided for this Podcast by The Okee Dokee Brothers "Through The Woods" www.okeedokee.org Connect with Greg Bell: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/greg.outdoors/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/greg.bell.9619 Connect with Steve "Ki-Ki" Kammeyer: Email: stevekammeyer@gmail.com Facebook: www.facebook.com/groups/BackpackingGearFleaMarket

Something Ventured -- Silicon Valley Podcast
125 Jeff Macpherson: Tiki Bar TV's Dr. Tiki Explains Why We Stream Video But Download Podcasts

Something Ventured -- Silicon Valley Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2020 67:48


Do you know why we download podcasts, but stream video?  This is the podcast that tells the story. Jeff Macpherson is founder of AR/VR training company Motive.io.  But before that – he created and acted in “Tiki Bar TV”. If you don’t know what that is, you can -- and should -- find it at TikiBarTV.com.  Tiki Bar TV was at the red-hot center of the early video wars – which were at one point a knife-fight between Apple and YouTube. “Tiki Bar TV” caught the eye of Steve Jobs, and ended up being featured in one of Jobs’ famous onstage product unveilings. In this episode we talk about the arc of video on the Internet, what it’s like getting the call that Steve Jobs wants to include you in his presentation, and what it’s like to collaborate with Tosca Musk, Lala and Johnny Johnny.  We also discuss how web series have changed, and early BBS culture. www.motive.io www.somethingventured.us @drtiki on Twitter

Cast Conversations
Episode 52- Johnny (Johnny Reviews)

Cast Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2020 36:00


Join Phil and Jeremy as they talk to Johnny of Johnny Reviews! Johnny was a parking cast member during his DCP and is currently a merch cast member! Give Johnny a follow at johnnybgood_13 and on youtube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCX9K3C1NnCr0zSTuBdY3yyQ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app · The Colin and Samir Podcast: The Colin and Samir Podcast hosted by LA - based friends and filmmakers Colin and Samir takes a look into what it’s like to make creativity your career. https://open.spotify.com/show/5QaSbbv2eD4SFrlFR6IyY7?si=Dj3roVoJTZmOime94xhjng Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/castconversations/support

Pushing The Limits
Ep 124: How a first timer cracked a 100km ultramarathon with Matt Scrafton

Pushing The Limits

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2019 64:11


This week Lisa interviews one of her athletes from our Running Hot Coaching Tribe, Matt Scrafton. Matt joined Running Hot with the goal to run a 100km trail race at Taupo in New Zealand.  Previously he had successfully run a couple of 50km events and really wanted to push himself but as a Dad, husband and having a full on career he wanted to do this challenge without breaking himself.   Matt shares his triumphs and struggles on his road to 100km glory in this no holds barred honest and raw account of what it takes to run 100km when you have a full on life and you don't have the luxury of being a full time athlete or having all the talent of a Scott Jurek or Dean Karnazes. Many will relate and find inspiration in this story.  Matt describes himself as “An incurable dreamer. An unapologetic introvert. A Husband and father. Just a guy who loves life and running long distances. Since moving to New Zealand 14 years ago, Matt has swapped the rugby boots for endurance sport. He’s completed Coast to Coast, cycling round Taupo and and a few ultra races.”   You can follow Matt on instagram at https://www.instagram.com/mattscrafton/   We would like to thank our sponsors Running Hot - By Lisa Tamati & Neil Wagstaff If you want to run faster, longer and be stronger without burnout and injuries then check out and TRY our Running Club for FREE on a 7 day FREE TRIAL Complete holistic running programmes for distances from 5km to ultramarathon and for beginners to advanced runners.   All include Run training sessions, mobility workouts daily, strength workouts specific for runners, nutrition guidance and mindset help Plus injury prevention series, foundational plans, running drill series and a huge library of videos, articles, podcasts, clean eating recipes and more.   www.runninghotcoaching.com/info and don't forget to subscribe to our youtube channel at Lisa's Youtube channel  www.yotube.com/user/lisatamat and come visit us on our facebook group   www.facebook.com/groups/lisatamati Epigenetics Testing Program by Lisa Tamati & Neil Wagstaff. Wouldn’t it be great if your body came with a user manual? Which foods should you eat, and which ones should you avoid? When, and how often should you be eating? What type of exercise does your body respond best to, and when is it best to exercise? These are just some of the questions you’ll uncover the answers to in the Epigenetics Testing Program along with many others. There’s a good reason why epigenetics is being hailed as the “future of personalised health”, as it unlocks the user manual you’ll wish you’d been born with! No more guess work. The program, developed by an international team of independent doctors, researchers, and technology programmers for over 15 years, uses a powerful epigenetics analysis platform informed by 100% evidenced-based medical research. The platform uses over 500 algorithms and 10,000 data points per user, to analyse body measurement and lifestyle stress data, that can all be captured from the comfort of your own home Find out more about our  Epigenetics Program and how it can change your life and help you reach optimal health, happiness and potential at: https://runninghotcoaching.com/epigenetics You can find all our programs, courses, live seminars and more at www.lisatamati.com    Transcript of interview: Speaker 1: (00:01) Welcome to pushing the limits, the show that helps you reach your full potential with your host, Lisa Tamati brought to you by LisaTamati.com. Speaker 2: (00:14) Well, hi everybody. Lisa Tamati here at pushing the limits. Fantastic to have you back again. I really appreciate your naughty checking in on the show every week. Today. We've got a little something special for you. I've got actually one of our athletes it running hot coaching has agreed to come on and share his story. So it's a little bit of a debrief, a little bit of a coaching call. Hopefully you guys will pick up some gems of wisdom. We're gonna, she's gonna. She has insights and the journey that he went all to get to a hundred K, which was his ultimate race recently. So welcome to the show Matt Scrafton how are you? Morning, I'm good. How are you? Very, very good. So I met his sitting in Wellington. You got to sunny day down there. Speaker 3: (00:56) Yeah, it's beautiful and it's, there's no wind for once. So yeah, really nice. Speaker 2: (01:01) That's unusual. So I met let's step back at the beginning. So tell us a little bit about yourself, where you come from and then we'll get into the running side of it. Speaker 3: (01:13) Alrighty, Um so I'm British. And I've be, I moved to New Zealand in 2005 where I met my now wife. So I grew up in, in the UK and political Brighton by the sea. And we live in the mighty Waikato in Cambridge and we've been all over the place. You know, Alton, Wellington, Melbourne, but Cambridge is home and some my wife and I have a baby girl, Darcy's four, and we have a crazy eight months old poodle, Daisy. So life is pretty full. But yeah, no, I've been, I'm, I found running probably about six or seven years ago. I've been doing endurance sports or Madi sports, probably longer. But as time went on, it got harder to balance all three disciplines. And then I decided that I really wanted to do something that had an endurance element to it and trail running or running was the easiest, you know, put on your shoes, get out the door and go. Speaker 3: (02:07) So yeah, so I got into sort of trail running proper about six or seven years ago and set myself the goal as I kind of do with, with life of, of running a 50. And and we were living in Melbourne at the time and the North face 50 was a, an annual event in may of each year around the blue mountains. It's just outside of Sydney. Gorgeous rice. Yeah. And so I spent probably about a year building up for that with a few feeder events. But the big goal of running the 50 yeah. And did that eight hours, 39. And that was really tough. It was quite a hard race. But yeah, I was surprised that what I now understand to be that mental state that you there are so important to an athlete. That went, that race went really well mentally for me. Speaker 3: (03:02) So I thought, yep, this is definitely not a one off. So a couple of months later, Darcy arrived and, and life changed. So took a while. Yeah. Yeah. It took a while to find that, that rhythm. We moved back to New Zealand and I then locked in the terror wearer this year, actually, 2019 and so spent it about, you know, another year building up for that. But I was kind of, yeah, so doing the, I'm doing the 50, I did have aspirations to run further, but my wife said, no, no, get another 50 under your belt before you, before you go further. You know, that it definitely wasn't a one off. So yeah, spent about a year building up for the 50 and did that in I think it's February of this year. So came home in about seven hours and yeah, it was just a really hot day. Speaker 3: (03:55) And I thought there's no way I'm running and as our ultra in the middle of summer, it's just crazy times. Which probably discounts the marathon disabler but there we go. But the it was, it was pretty cool race fantastic atmosphere and some really great support crew and aid station folk that rock up and make it a really memorable day. And then I woke up, I got home, woke up the next day and I had this, this kind of overwhelming feeling that it wasn't, you know, it wasn't a sense of mission accomplished. I had done that, but there was more. And I didn't quite know what it looked like. So before everyone else got up, I was looking online for big events or things to do, you know, huge running goals to chase and telco was on in October, so it was always, Speaker 2: (04:45) Let's back up a little bit. So you ran 50 Ks, paid him some seven hours or something and the tank wasn't in thi the next day. Like most people get to the finish line on any race and go, never again. Well that's it. Unless a very experienced one or something, they know that that's, that's going to be temporary. But you in the very next day started looking online. Usually it takes at least five days. Speaker 3: (05:11) Yeah, no, I think I'm really like goal-orientated I I think I, you know, you, we do what we do during the hours of nine to five to make ends meet and pay the bills, et cetera. But running is I've come to learn that it's a, my thing, it gives me that time and space. And it's, you have a, there's a fantastic mental feeling that goes with running. And if you marry that for me with huge, big, hairy audacious goals it gives me that balance. And if I don't have that big hairy audacious goal on the horizon or near, then I start, I start to struggle. Yeah. And my life is a bit out of balance. So I think it was physically I was, I was a bit poked, you know, my legs hurt and you know, I had a few tight muscle groups. Speaker 3: (06:09) But there was definitely a sense of there's more in the tank. And for me it was a case of you've got this base, you've legs, you've come through, okay, yeah, they're gonna hurt, but whose legs wouldn't after running 50 a day and let's use that base as a launching pad for the next big hairy audacious goal. And the counsel or guidance from my, from my wife was find a 70 or 80 K wise woman. This lady, she is, yeah, very, very wise. She's my CEO, my CFO and everything else. But to ignore that, no, she's a lovely lady. See no, I, I did ignore it and as I tend to do with some guidance and I thought, no, let's go a hundred now. Let's lock it in because there was nothing else on the horizon that was closer and telcos on our doorstep and yeah, it was on. Yeah. Speaker 2: (07:05) Well, so Topo 100 K for people who, let's see, from overseas. So taco is universal part of the country in the North Island of New Zealand, and I have a hundred K of the year, which is, can be a muddy, muddy, and hilly fee. So you signed up for that already straight after, straight out of the gate after Tyler WEDA. And what happened then? Speaker 3: (07:28) Literally I text my brother in law and said, what are you doing on the 12th of October? I have a deal for you. And I, then you came back and said, yep, nothing. What have you got in mind? I said, Oh, would you like to be my support crew for 'em a hundred K? It's like, are you sure? It's crazy idea, but let's do it. When Shelly and Darcy woke up, I kinda very casually dropped in conversation and yeah, it, you know, I gave myself a good few weeks to recover. Possibly from what I've learned from Neil subsequent after the a hundred possibly digging it myself long enough to recover which then is how I, I met you Lisa. So yeah, so I started training and, and literally followed the same sort of process and build up that I'd been doing for the 50, but obviously slightly longer distances for the a hundred. And I think it was around may or June of this year that I started to realize that what had got me through the 50 wasn't necessarily gonna get me through the a hundred. And that's when I, yeah, that's when the world changed. Speaker 2: (08:35) And that's when you found us. Speaker 3: (08:37) Yeah. So I was looking for not only coaching but a community that I could connect with. Cause I think when we run, we do a lot of this stuff in isolation. And I think I was looking for more than just a frequent, frequent contact the coach. I wanted to understand how everyone else was doing the trials and tribulations irrespective of distance and just share that knowledge. And yeah, I did my research and I think you and I had a phone call and yeah, gave it a go and yeah. Jumped on board Speaker 2: (09:11) And yeah, so we were, we were start the heavy onboard and we've now got this 100 K goal. And you said, I think it's what's important is a lot of people stand out on their own and they, they, they do fine for a little while. And then you start to either run into injuries or you go weeks bigger or you start to have troubles in some way, shape or form. I begin a bit burned out, maybe lose your motivation. And that is some people often come to us and say, Oh, I need a bit of structure. And it's an, it's not like probably 90% of people who join us have hit the wall in some way or hit a big, big, big scary goal that they know they need to take a little bit more seriously. So it's one or the other. Or they're just starting out that that's another thing and they want some really good guidance and structure. So what was the main difference like when you came to running hot coaching and jumped into our planes, what was the major difference that you found campaign to say and screeching off the internet? Speaker 3: (10:17) Yeah. So I think the catalyst for looking beyond our training in isolation on my own was I wanted a more rounded approach to the a hundred. I realized that I wasn't spending enough time on core strength for example. And I also knew that my own knowledge and experience wasn't enough and that there were people out there who had years of experience and I'd be daft not to tap into that. So recognizing that I had my own limitations. So from a knowledge perspective and actually I, the biggest thing for me is that I was starting to get a sense that I wasn't approaching my long runs fresh. Yup. So I was going into the weekend quite fatigued and I wanted a more, I wanted to know if there was a way to balance training for a hundred so that you didn't feel you know, shot all the time and fatigued. Speaker 3: (11:11) So that was the catalyst. And and then the conversation with yourself and then actually working with Neil, it's on pick the a hundred K plan. I was like, wow, the longest run in the week, mid week is actually shorter than my current longest midweek run. So automatically the, I'm going to start feeling a little bit fresher. Yeah. And then I started getting actually the first core strength session I did, I probably couldn't walk proper for about a day or two. I remember doing the lunges and I was like, Oh wow, I'm going to, yeah, this is, there's a reason why I'm doing this. Speaker 2: (11:46) Oh, that's fine. So, and like [inaudible] that is a key thing. Like you don't know what, you don't sometimes how weak you've gotten to, like when you run, it's a catabolic exercise. So it starts at eight, you eat away at your muscles. And so if you're not counteracting that with strength training, with a, also with your mobility and for, for different reasons then over time you're going to get weaker and more flacid than the, in the, in the core for example, you'll have strong leaks, but that's what, you know, run isn't going to have strong links obviously, but the rest of you will, will suffer from. And that's when things can come unstuck as well, especially if you're not 20 anymore, you know, you need to start thinking about muscle max loss, which is, which we sort of lose around 200 grams a year after the age of 40 on average. So let's say they say so we want to be counteracting that as well as the fact that you are in a catabolic sport that is actually eating away at you and you want to be able to maintain. So, okay. You started into the strength program is think, well this is, this is different. Yeah. And how, how, how was it for you when the mileage, like a lot of people think, okay, I've gone from 50 to a hundred, I have to double the mileage. Doesn't work, does it? Speaker 3: (13:00) Absolutely not. No. So the a hundred, the leap from 50 to a hundred was for me, surprisingly manageable. I'm working in within the a hundred K plan that you guys gave me. So midweek run automatically shorter. So there's some gains there. And actually the, the longest run was actually comparable to my 50 K. Yeah. And I think we added maybe another hour onto it just because I was questioning, well, if I'm going to take 15 or 14 hours, then you know, do I need to run a little bit longer than what I've been doing? 50. And then it was like, you know, if you want to run a little bit longer, that's okay. But there isn't a one size fits all. You've got to just make it work for you. Speaker 2: (13:42) Yeah. Yup. And this is a, the thing that's like, I've said to people sometimes when they think, how the hell am I going to double that? And, and I'm not actually doubling the distance and I say to them like, when I'm running or set of 200 K race or two 50K race, I don't double it again, because you can't double it. You can't keep doubling that. You're training distance to suit your and with, we've come from, you know, most people have come from maybe a marathon,udistance training. We are, you know, from half marathon, two marathon, you steeping up your mileage a lot more and your long run does get a lot bigger and you're doing sort of three quarters, you know, 32, 33 K run as your longer time before Marisol. So people extrapolate that and think that that's what happens when you're doing a 200. Okay. And it isn't, you can't, you cannot physically recover from training intents on this. You kept choking or somewhat [inaudible]. Speaker 2: (14:39) But generally you can't recover. And that's where the wheels start to come off. People if they start to try to do this high mileage, so we're not high mileage coaches. And we get a lot of people coming to us who've come from high mileage coaches and that approach would work at the beginning and it will work when you're younger. When you've got kids in careers and you're getting a little bit older, they had approached that to unravel. If you're a lady, you can often start getting hormone problems as well. And so both sixes adrenal exhaustion is on the horizon too. So those are things that we always very aware of and you're trying to keep you from tipping over there. It's a very fine line to walk sometimes. Okay. So walk us through the next part of the process. Speaker 3: (15:23) So I think we're just on that around the longest run. So I training was going really well. You know, mobilization work, strength work, and then I got through what I turned my apex weekend, the longest run weekend. Yep. And I run it as per the schedule where I may be through one half an hour for mental confidence and yeah, it's about 43 K I think in total. Five and a half hours in the Hills. Yeah. And then that the following week is when it all came crashing down, fell off. The wheels did come off big time. Yeah. Yeah. I, I'm Speaker 2: (16:03) You run into an injury problem. Speaker 3: (16:05) I did. I had basically an absolute awful pain sensation in my left ankle tendonitis. They turned out and that, yeah, that happened literally on the Wednesday after my long run. I could feel it. You know, in the sort of the Tuesday morning and then I went for another run on the Wednesday, which I shouldn't have done. And it was hurting like never, like no other pain I'd had before. So I knew something wasn't quite right. And managed to get to see my awesome physio in Cambridge and and she said, yeah, you've got some, some tendonitis. And we basically worked up a plan where I would, and I, I think at that point, if I don't take it back a step, there was a day, I think it was a Thursday where I was sitting in my office in Cambridge and I was literally in tears because I thought, how am I, how am I going to get to the start line, let alone the finish line and put all this effort in. And you know, I spoke about the balance or the need to have balance in professional life and personal life. Suddenly I could see the Seesaw completely, you know, mounted as broken for overseas friends. And I I was just learning bits because I thought, I can't run. How the, what am I going to do? I can't walk this thing. So I think I flipped you guys a note and said, how do I typo? Speaker 2: (17:35) You were in immediately black spice and you, you reached out and I could tell from the, you know, you asking about specifically about the, the injury I think, which was part of the same, but the what, what, where I jumped in was more the, the meaningful side of it because you were, you were taking the deep dive. So when you've put your heart and soul into something massive and then it starts to unravel and then you're thinking you're fearing not being, because it's not along to the race now that you're not going to get there. And every decision that you're missing in this is very, you know, normal things that though it still starts crashing down around your ears. So how did they, so I, I jumped on a call with you and we started to work through some of the, the mental stuff. How did that help you? Speaker 3: (18:18) Yeah, it was, it was really interesting cause I, I went straight to the physical side. So how do I taper? How do I still do these sessions? You know, I've got an internal session tomorrow. How do I run that with an ankle that I can't run them? And you're like, no, no, no, no, no. Take a step back here. This is you, you, I think you actually said you've got this your legs have got all the miles they need to do to do the a hundred is now about the upstairs. How do you mentally stay, stay in the fight to get yourself to the start line and through the race. And I was, I was actually quite taken aback about that because I thought, well, I'm missing all these sessions or I'm going to be missing all these sessions. Speaker 3: (18:59) And I'm generally fairly confident person, but I guess susceptible to blows from life as, as anyone is. Yeah. And I couldn't, I wasn't listening to you, I think at first. And then you followed up in an email and it, I actually, it took me three or four attempts to reread what you'd written. And then we communicated over the next 48 hours. And you said over the weekend, I want you to read a book if you can. And the book is the biology of belief. Yeah. Bruce Lipton. Yeah. And it was a little too it took me way beyond my, my scoring. Yeah. School level science around biology, but it was the last section that really knitted it all together, which is about how your perception and beliefs influence your physiology or can influence your physiology. And I think that's when the penny dropped for me that this is all about the mind going into these next three and a half weeks. Speaker 2: (20:06) Yup. And that's the key point because the situations happen, the injuries happen. Speaker 3: (20:12) Yup. Speaker 2: (20:13) What we've got, we can, we can, the, the, the, the thing that you're going to do wrong is to keep training over that injury and to try and fight through it when you've got a rise at the other rains. So the panic is that I'm not going to be fit enough when the reality is if you, if you get through 70, 80% of your total training malls, you're going to be fine. And I, and as a coach, you don't, you, you trying to get your people, I'm a bit more than that, but if something happens, you, you will get there. The best race I've ever had in my life, one of the most amazing races put that way, let have, was that one that I did in the Himalaya's, which I shared with you, that 222 K rice. So of the two highest mountain passes and in the world mudroom bubble passes and I ripped the ligaments off my league team weeks out from the rice. Speaker 2: (21:01) I couldn't run for seven weeks and I had a hypoxic brain concussion from doing altitude training. So I didn't have enough oxygen in my body. So of course all these evictions and so on. Some of the listeners would have heard this story, but eh, when I, and I was either I'm going to pull out or I'm going to carry on. And I decided I'm carrying on because I'm put in so much. If it as you know, the effort that goes into training for something like this, we need alone the sponsorship, the foam, the documentary that, you know, the whole works just made that I couldn't just pull out. And so I had to try and face it with only a couple of weeks training at the end of that seven week. So not being able to train on my foot. So I did cross train, I didn't want to cook with my body and I spent the rest of that time on my mindset. Speaker 2: (21:44) And when I got to the stat line, my body was actually in better shape than if I'd smashed it right till the end because I'd actually given my, my body hadn't had a recipe years putting it, you know, mildly. And so this actually was the best thing that could've happened and it was fit. And I did the 222K race mind do like a really hard, tough, long at altitude, extremely dangerous race and, and killed it, you know, was, was briefly had, I've got documentary if anyone was walked,uI'm slightly simplifying it, but the point was you didn't need to do every one of those training sessions that you think you need to do. And when you don't have the choice, it's either you change your mindset to the whole thing and you stay on board with it and you better, or you give up and you pull out or you keep trying and you and yourself even more, and then you might be out for six months, you know? Speaker 3: (22:37) Yeah. And I think the, the biggest thing as human beings, we often always easy to do, is to, is to not learn from the mistakes as we go through life. You know, to the definition of madness is to repeat the same action and keep expecting the same or different outcome. Okay. And, yeah. So, so I think you know, when I spoke to you in that scenario that you described around that, that race, you said to me, the one thing you did do was you asked your support crew and those around you on that day or leading up to the event and through it to be 100% positive that you didn't want any negativity around you. So when I was going through this over that weekend I said to my wife, you know, do I pull out? She said, well, you can't because you, there's no point. Speaker 3: (23:20) You missed the withdrawal date. Yup. No, you might as well just take each day as it comes, see where you are. We're going to go down, everyone's booked in to come down and stay, et cetera. So that's just do it and just see what happens. My wife is a Kiwi. She's her world view is inherently positive. I'm, I'm British and naturally cynical about most things in life. So glass half full glass half, we kind of marry each other out. But yeah, so, so I I got through that weekend and I jumped in the pool and on the bike and I was having physio, physio sessions and I wasn't running and it was a really weird sensation. Weight in the sense I felt like I was getting behind. So that's when I, little things like, you know, I did that accountability mirror exercise where I took post-its and wrote down in a motivational statements or words on a mirror and I took a wee picture and I know it's a silly thing I did just to hold myself accountable going through the next three and a half weeks to do towel pose. Speaker 2: (24:28) And that is not silly. That is really, really good. Anything, any positivity that you can surround yourself with is, is the mental game, is everything in ultra? Speaker 3: (24:37) Oh, it is totally. And this is the biggest, you know, you do these events in life and I've, the one thing I've learnt this time round is that it is all mental. It is a hundred. I mean you're also, you're palsy, you know, needs to be conditioned. [inaudible] Speaker 2: (24:52) Healthy and you need my foot. But the rest is in your head. And Oh man, I'll say next weights, you know, finish races that they shouldn't have been running cause they went far enough to do it, but mentally they were strong enough to get through it. We don't recommend doing that because you're going to scroll your body in the long run, but it is about this up here. How much, how much pain can you suffer, how much can you overcome, how much, what's your why and how big is that? Why and how strong is that? Why you really, really want this? And then you find ways around obstacles. And, and I think having seen what I've seen in other athletes, I've seen people with incredibly bad injuries survive races. I've seen you know, people who are blind run across the Sahara. And I've seen this before. People with, with one leg run across your belly. And a whole bunch of people who carry kids who had cerebral palsy is to give them a cross them a mouth on the Saturdays, you know incredible stories. People who really believed in saving the rhinoceroses and addresses the rhinoceros the entire time across the Sahara. You know, absolutely crazy things that physically shouldn't be now able to do. But they did. Speaker 3: (26:05) But because of their why and their purpose, they did. Yeah, absolutely. Speaker 2: (26:08) In a very, very strong why. And there has to be the, the ultimate. OK. So you, you started to tune your mindset around, so this positivity and surrounding yourself with positive people and your wife's telling you, you could, you know, you got this, we started, we just starting and that is the thing. Get to the stat line, start, see what happens. Speaker 3: (26:24) Yeah. And I think the biggest thing they have along the way, I was training with a guy it lives in Oakland and we've done a few training runs together and I sent him a text set, ah, you know, with start together, but we'll be finishing separately. I don't know if I'm going to finish in my current state. And he phoned me and he, he's a really happy go lucky guy, positive outlook. He said, no, no, we will walk this out together if we have to. And I thought, wow, okay. That's, that's pretty cool. So yeah. Speaker 2: (26:58) Oh yeah. This guy gives us his name. Give them a shout out. Speaker 3: (27:01) Johnny. Johnny, Denise. Yeah. Nice. Good guy. So yeah, so Johnny and I were, we ended up training separately of those last couple of weeks. And I was trying not to look at Strava and you know, get envy about long runs that he was putting in. And I was in the poll in my Emma Speedos. It wasn't good. But anyway yeah, no, so sorry, go on. Yeah, it worked. It worked. Yeah. So we got through that through those last few weeks. I'm in the pool and on the bike and having some fun on the mountain bike. And actually it was really nice just to get out in the Hills and just turn around. And then I remembered actually coming down one single track in, in Cambridge that I was actually doing a race the following weekend, so I should probably take it easy and not go too fast in case it came off. But yeah, no. So I, I started just to test the run walk literally the Monday before the race on the Saturday and that was the first time I'd got back on my feet and it was a really tentative run walk. And then I did another one the next day. And then the final one I think was on the Wednesday and no reactions from the ankle. So I thought, well, yeah, big, big mental hurdle cleared. You know, we're locked in to do this and we're going to do it. And yeah. Speaker 2: (28:18) And that's pretty like, it's pretty ballsy to be fair. You know, like it is hard when you're facing a hundred K and you haven't been able to try and fill the last few weeks and you're in the last phone a week, people before the race and you're like, can I even walk, run, walk, run in a couple of days you can change it. We'll be trying this out. And you're standing on the start line and said, and the morning it a hundred K, you know, it takes a lot of mental strength. So well done. Thank you Chuck it all in. Speaker 3: (28:44) No, definitely not. And I think at that point even I think my physio had said to me you are doing this, you can do this. And that you will break, you will not break anything in your ankle if you do this. And it hurts. It's just, it's not just ligaments, tendons, just tendons and they will recover. And I think that hearing that actually, I was like, okay, so if my body hurts, it's going to have to live with it and my mind is going to tell it. And that was the process I was going through. I think I spoke to you in the buildup and you said to me that this could be the body's way of trying to tell your mind that this isn't a great thing to do. Let's just sit back and watch some Netflix on the Saturday. Speaker 2: (29:20) Yes. Let's dive into that for a sec. The, in my experience in nearly every big race that I've done and the week before or two weeks before, something goes wrong on my body. Like I get sick, I'll get a cold, I get the flu, I get something, some, some single play out. And I, and I S I think it's the subconscious we aiming already actually body because it knows that you've got this big race coming up and it's trying to stop you. We'll throw everything at you. Just stop you. Speaker 3: (29:50) Yep. And that book I mentioned earlier yeah, a lot of it was about using your conscious mind, so not drifting off into unconscious thinking, focusing on the now using your conscious mind. And there's a lot more power in, in, in potential, in the using your conscious mind rather than the subconscious mind. So if you play it forward, then my subconscious was trying to tell me not to do the race because it's going to be tough. It's going to hurt. But my conscious mind was going, no, you've got this, you can do this. It's going to hurt, but it's gonna be fine. Yeah, yeah. We are doing this. Absolutely. Yeah. Yeah. So we got through that last week and you're headed off to Topo and it was just a really interesting segue the night before Johnny and I, we've got a big house in our families came down and my, my mother and father who I love them to bits and my father in law was chatting away with Johnny who was really laid back and Johnny was having a, just the odd beer, one beer before the race. Speaker 3: (30:55) And I'm quite serious about my prep. I was not talking to anyone. I was going through my mental checklist and all that stuff. And my father in law said to me, man, why aren't you more like Johnny lay back and relax? I was just like, nah, we're all different. You know, everyone's got a little different around different ways of preparing. So yeah. So there's nothing wrong. Speaker 2: (31:17) And by the way, cause I mean, I talked to me the night before you know, I'm in the zone, you're in the zone and, but there are people who are just totally chilled out and whatever happens happens when that, the different personality types, unless I wasn't really be confused because everyone has their own way of preparing for such a battle because it is going into Epic bed already. Speaker 3: (31:37) Yeah. I think physically I'd appreciated the difference prior to this race around ultras and running and athletes, you know, we all come from different shapes and walks of life, but mentally as well, I was seeing some really interesting sides of people and athletes. So yeah. So yeah, John and I were up the next day about I think four o'clock got to the start line half five. It was absolutely freezing and telco. And I actually, I've never done this before, but I fell asleep again in the car on the way to the style line is about a 40 minute journey. But for me it was a sign of just how relaxed I was and whatever was going to want to fold was going to one fold, but it was going to do so in a way that was going to have a positive outcome. I was, I was quite relaxed about it. Which was really bizarre. So Speaker 2: (32:27) Thanks. Turn around to the T is three weeks before and the Speaker 3: (32:31) Oh, chalk and cheese. Yeah. Chalk and cheese. Yeah. I yeah, so there's, so we got going and Johnny had forgotten his headlight as usual, so I let us out and I said to John, look, we're going to run, run what I call fifteens, which is you run 10 minutes and maybe walk for five minutes. And I think I said to Johnny that it's going to be the pattern for me throughout the race. And he was like, yep, sweet. I'll run with you would walk this together. You just set the pace you, you'd be mr timekeeper. And we go so we we started off and are we running really comfortably? I think we ran the first 20 miles you know, I don't know, roundabout, just under four hours or something. Yeah. and at one point we were, Johnny was leading in and we were running up the Hill, then we were running down a Hill and he said, Oh, I probably ran that a bit hard. Speaker 3: (33:21) How's that? Yep. So but we were trying not to get too excited and carried away with ourselves. So to got to that first checkpoint, all good. And then I think it, it started to hit home around the, you know, you get into the race and we were running this sort of 15 thing where you run 10 and walk five. And I had this little checklist in my head where I'd come up with four things to think about on a rotation deliberately so that I could focus on the now using my conscious mind. Does that make sense? Yup. Yup. Yeah. So I, I'd ran through this little cycle where I'd go you know, what's my effort? Am I running comfortably? Am I running too fast or too slow check. My nutrition you know, have I eaten in the last half an hour? Have I taken some water in fuel? Speaker 2: (34:11) It's called association. I call that association where you're associating, you're actually checking in with your body. Yeah. And then another strategy, which is just association, when you're in pain that you're actually go off and do your heavy place and might be visualizing, may swimming with whales or something like that, that I'm in somewhere else or I'm renovating my house or I'm doing something like that and I'm taking my mind somewhere else. So these two strategies are really, really good to open to your practice. Speaker 3: (34:37) So now I know that I was doing the disassociation thing around the ADK Mark, but the yeah, so I was, and the other thing I deliberately, I was checking, you know, am I in touch with my environment? Can I feel with my feet and in whatever, my body, the physical environment, just to make sure that I was using my conscious mind. And I would go through this little checklist again, every 20 minutes or so. And so we got through the first 20 miles, it felt quite, quite quickly. And we hit the farm lands, which is a really monotonous physical environment, more walking or hiking than it is running. And it's not fun. It's not inspiring. But we got through that, hit the first major aid station, I think it was around the 50 K Mark. And I said to Johnny I'm now running into territory unknown territory from a distance perspective, even though I've technically run longer time on feet, this is going to be your ground. Yeah. so they'll talk about the different approaches. Johnny and I Johnny got to that big ice station and he had a white bike fritter. And I was like, no, I cannot stand that stuff. Speaker 3: (35:53) So yeah, so I, as, as we left the ice station, my wife said, how you feeling? And I said, honey, I'm really suffering. She said, well, you're halfway. This is all upstairs now. I see the neck see you at 75 K or whatever it was. I was like, Holy moly. So here we go. I'm sorry. It literally felt like I was stepping off an area called comfort and known into the unknown and uncomfortable, and this is going to hurt. It's gonna hurt. And this is where growth happens. Yeah. Yeah. So and we were running together, but we were always about, I don't know, three or four meters apart just because that's how you find yourself. And I think I got to about 65 K in Kinlock or something like that. And I said, I was crying behind my glasses, my sunglasses, because I was going through this dark patch where I was like, if I stop, I'm going to stop and I'm going to let all these people down and I will have this sense of underachievement pressure, yeah. Speaker 3: (36:59) For hanging around my neck. And as we approached, or one of the mini stations, I said to Johnny, Oh, you run on now, I'm I'm close to DNS thing. I'm gonna work through this. He said, no, no, no. We are, we're going to walk. We start if we have to together. Wow. He's doing. Yeah, he is. He's a really good dude. So so then our run at that point became a shuffle and you know, you're tired, you're physically tired. You can't run at that same pace. So we're still running, but it was just a, a shuffle and yeah, Johnny dragged us into the into the Kinlock aid station where we picked up our pacer. And my wife's friend who's training for coast Hannah, so she she signed up to be a pacer and yeah, my my wife took a video. Speaker 3: (37:48) She she asked me a question and she was videoing the response at the, at the 74 K line and a station, sorry. And she said, how do you feel? And I said explicative tired. And she said, Oh do you want to do a another hundred or on 160 after this? And there were a few more expletives that followed. And she she's kept the video and I've, it's a nice reminder, but so then we, yeah, we Johnny had another white bite fritter and I was just like, my God, he's going to suffer in a minute. And yeah, so we hit the Hill behind Kinloch and off we went. And that's, I think when the disassociation came in for me, cause my, my body was really hurt and my feet were really broken, like listers, toenails, just feet were sliding all over the place in my shoes. And it got through Kinlock with a reduced shuffle. And then I think we popped out around the 90 K Mark and into the, off the Hill. And I think that's when I th I finally felt that I was going to do this or sort of finish it. Yeah. Speaker 2: (38:58) That's a good feeling when you think, yeah, I've got this now. Like, Speaker 3: (39:01) Yeah. I mean I think we are our pacer was really good. She, you know, was checking in and if you're pacing someone that you've, you, you know, haven't done that sort of distance with, it's you've got to find your rhythm. And when we got to that last day station, I think, you know, eight K to go or whatever it was that's when we all thought, yeah, this is this, we're on the home stretch here. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. And across the finish line and yeah, happy days Speaker 2: (39:30) Come back to like be like you've been in the, in the hurt locker for a good city. K so 25 Ks or something, which is an awful long time by the way. And I always say to people, the rice doesn't really step from Sydney. [inaudible] Usually that's when you know, when you pace yourself, right, with you hydrated, right. Whether your nutrition was right up until that point. And there's always going to be a time in those big long races and that can laugh for hours when you're absolutely miserable and you just want to die every second and give out. And if you can get through that, sometimes what happens is very often as you come into another space where suddenly it's all good again, you don't know how or why, but you, Bonnie sort of comes back. Did you experience that? Speaker 3: (40:09) Yeah, I think so. I took the, I spoke about in that 60 K Mark, you know, where I was close to DNF thing and you know, when Johnny said to me no, we're going to walk this out if we have to. So let's just keep going. I think what I now understand a little bit more about, I was going through a battle with my body and mind and what my body was going. Now let's just stop, you know, there's an aid station, there should, it can come pick you up. We'd go home and my mind was like, no, no, you were going to do this. And it was, it was like there's a little war going on between the two. Totally. Yeah. And Speaker 2: (40:39) Welcome to the, I enjoy the devil, the lion and the snake. Yeah. Louder. And it gets more and more frantic up there. Right. Speaker 3: (40:46) And I, I'd, I'd heard about it from, from you and others around in that war, your, your mind is telling your body, no, we're going to do this. So just shut up and just live with the pain. And that pain that I was experiencing physically actually reached a point and it didn't go any further. It just settled, it dissipated. And and then I got into a happy, happy place where I thought, yeah, I've got a shuffle going on. I'm not gonna run this full bore, full bore. I can't, but I'm moving forward and I'm getting closer to the next stage station and we're going to pick up HANA, you know, 74K and then we're going to do the same from there, up and over. Kinlock. Uand even with my, you know, like going through that,uI found a way to keep moving. Speaker 3: (41:39) It was almost as if the blisters, they were just blisters, they were going to go away. Toddlers grow back. And that's how I kind of quickly processed it. But it was just keep, even if you have to walk up the Hill, walk up the Hill, yeah, it's fine. Cool. so yeah, we got to, you know, from the 63 to Kinlock, which is a 74 and I think I mentally was getting into happy site. You know, like I, my body had quiet and down. The pain had kind of reached a point but hadn't got worse. And mentally I was I was over, you know, picking up the pace of 74 was a significant milestone. And we were, I think I could see the end you know, it was, we were close and it was just a case of getting through it. Yeah. And I was, I was still trying to bring myself back to the now going through my little checklist I mentioned earlier. And it was a way of just kind of putting into a little box the different pains or feelings I was experiencing. Discomfort around my feet, discomfort around my legs, you know, it got worse or sorry I've got bad, but it wasn't gonna get any worse. Speaker 2: (42:58) It's quite funny on that point. That yeah, when the body starts to scream at you, it's a bit like when it does pre-race, you know, when it throws it, you know, a sickness that you at the cold or some something that or try and stop you doing it and also does it arise. We are getting to the point where you like, the pain is so bad. You're thinking, how the hell am I going to carry on? And then when you do persevere, once again, the brain seems to go, Oh well she's not stopping. We've got to keep going. So I better stop putting those signals out. I don't know how it works. And I'd be interesting to see if other athletes have experienced the same thing, but it doesn't actually get any worse than bad. It's already bad, but keep getting worse. Speaker 3: (43:40) Yeah. And you know, it's, I don't know whether it was a combination of you know, mental fortitude or whatever word you wanna use or we'd reached a significant milestone. So getting up and over Kinlock Hill was huge cause it in 90 K there's two little eight stations and hitting the eight, the ice station at 90 K, as soon as you turn the corner off the ice station, it was like a wall of noise from the finish area had made its way up to up. You could hear it. And it was like, wow, we are so close. So any, it was like another wave just picked you up and was going to carry you down this, this fricking mountain. And you know, you could just, where that point, we were kind of walking shuffling and it was in the dark and it was quite wet. Speaker 3: (44:30) So you'd probably didn't have any other choice to be honest. And it was just, you know, you could feel the end. So we just made our way down the mountain. And we were joking amongst the three of us, you know, pace from Johnny about, you know, what we're going to have to, we was our favorite post race mill, just really silly crabs that was just getting us through the finish to the finish. And yeah, so yeah, we, we, we hit that last cause like a sty that you've got to climb over and it's like a physical barrier where you're leaving the trials to a four wheel drive tack that literally throws you out at the finish line and climbed over that STI. And it was just, we've done it. We know we're almost there. Speaker 2: (45:20) And you can see, you know, you can see that you can hear the people and you can feel that you're getting near and you can light at the end of the tunnel after a very dark long tunnel. Speaker 3: (45:29) Yeah. And it was, it was funny. It's like, wow. You know, you crossed the line, we crossed the line together. I had a big of a bit of a hug and you know, like we've, I think it was a realization for me that, wow, we'd, we'd just done this. There's a huge achievement personally, yeah, Speaker 2: (45:48) It is a huge achievement. What did you feel at the finish line? Because some, sometimes in sunrises I felt like, you know, I've just broken down in tears, absolutely with relief and I can actually stop because you dream about being able to stop and other times it's just no emotion because you just like numb. You sort of wanted that beyond anything. What was your reaction? Speaker 3: (46:10) So what I didn't mentioned is on that way up and over Kinlock Hill towards the 80 and 90 K stations, I, I was going through a real roller coaster of emotion, you know, just trying to get to that final eight station. When I'd, I was on the home stretch, I was, I'm really struggling to hold back the tears. And Johnny was in front of me. My pace was behind me, so they had no idea what my facial expression was. But so, so I thought, and I actually Johnny Johnny and I said, look, there's going to be some tears at the finish line, Hannah pacer be prepared across the finish line. And my overall overwhelming feeling was done it job done. And yeah, it was just satisfaction. I think it was w with no tears at the finish line because I think that emotion had passed and I think it was just sheer bloody relief. Yeah. Keep going. And I think it was excitement of now being able to eat real food like chips or dip or pizza or just something other than you know, a gel or you know, the equivalent paleo equivalent. Yeah, Speaker 2: (47:27) Yeah, yeah, yeah. All the horrible stuff. You're sick to death of what in and you thought EEG and it starts really, really interesting. The emotions that you go through. I did a a hundred K rice with Neil, you know, my, my offsider running hot coaching and it was his face on hundred and I mentioned this before, but he got, you know, he's a, he's a strong, tough med, but it's 70 Ks. He was in tears. He was in so much pain and he couldn't see his way to the finish line. You know, when you get into that deep dark space of absolute despair. And it also, and I cried pretty much every race, you know there's this, I don't think there's ever been an ultra where I haven't balled my eyes out somewhere. It's just part of the thing. And what happens is that when you get, when you have given everything at your body, you are so raw and you're so emotional, like everything is like any little thing can sit you off. Speaker 2: (48:27) Hello D and I was like 180 Kazan or something into death Valley, 270 K the same thing guys. And I was in such a world of pain and there was a 60 kilometer strike road that was just blowing my mind. And Neo was running behind me and he exited. We hit my ankle when he was running, just, just a couple of steps behind. And he hit my ankle and he tripped me up. And the adrenaline rush of being tripped and falling just opened the floodgates of the emotions. Like, cause I was holding it together desperately. And when I fell on the drill and came out, I was just bawling for the next hour, still running up, polling my eyes out and just could not control myself, you know. And he was like mortified. I swapped people who are, who are cruising for me. And it wasn't, it wasn't about him. Just that shock of falling just released everything that you are holding on so tightly toe. It's a ultra marathon and doing something like this huge achievement that you've just done is really it's life squeezed into a 50 an hour or 50 narrow or whatever it was, timeframe. Speaker 3: (49:46) It's, yeah, every emotion that you can possibly feel you in a, in a human lifetime, you can, you know, you just go through a roller coaster of emotions. And I think for me that, you know, from 60 K through two sort of 80, 85 when we crossed that last day station that was probably mentally quite tough, you know, just to keep moving one step after another. And then you, it was just sheer, utter relief. Yeah. Job done. Yeah. Speaker 2: (50:21) Yeah. So now you've done your Europe year in the hundred K club, you're an ultra marathon now done, you've done a few FFTs already in this, your first hundred. How are you feeling? You're three weeks out, have you, what w what often happens with runners, and I won't free that with you, but how did you go through a bit of a elation stage and then a ho down the other side stage and a bit of a depression before you started coming out the other end? Are you still in that roller coaster of a post race situation? How are you keeping now? Oh, we lost you there for a sec. [inaudible] Yup, yup, yup. We know on the pool was sorry about that people. So yeah. Did you F what are you going through now? Emotionally? Speaker 3: (51:16) So I I think I, I probably relaxed too quickly post race. I, I'm is my wife's 40th birthday, a couple of days after. So you know, that new, that normal discipline around diet and hydration probably relaxed a bit too quickly. And I suffered that first week not only with like aching niggles and blistered feet, but I had a, a really heavy, bad, nasty cold. So my immune system was absolutely smashed from the race I think. And just my body going, I think know, thank God that's over. But I, I started walking you know, daily on the Monday. So I had Sunday off, started walking and then walk, running again by Wednesday just to keep the body moving. And I got through the cold and I'm back running. But I've, I've seen some advice in the group around from Neal around, you know, try and keep that long, run to no more than an hour. Speaker 3: (52:14) First month I had a chat with Neil actually around you know, what is my recovery looking like? And I wanted to I, I S I swore during the race I would never do this, but I've started to look at what next and I actually, I'm getting itchy feet around. Myla so 160 K so but it's not for, it's not for cause North burn really appeals to me from a sheer physical challenge. I don't think I wanna go back to Tara [inaudible] and do the a hundred or the 160, because the environments are similar to telco. Yeah. So I'm drawn to really challenging races, physically challenging, like really gnarly mountainous, hilly, tight races. So North really appeals to me. Yeah. So that's a 20, 21 goal, I think. I want to, somebody said to me the other day, take some time to smell the roses. And I'm just going to enjoy running and just mountain biking. You're having fun, but my body's coming. Right. yeah, I I'm just gonna still run absolutely by just, I just wanna run for the enjoyment Speaker 2: (53:26) Of it at the moment for my, for my 2 cents as, as when, when after a race, you often do have an immune system because you have knocked the hell out of your immune system. Really. You've, you've used that point every, a lot of your hormones, like your endorphins and serotonin. So you can go into it at depression about usually 10 days out seeming to teen dies yet is when you usually have a bit of a mental job. You can be on a high for a couple of days straight after the race because you're, you saw you're tired, but just so stuck with yourself and you're on this adrenaline. Your body's been in a fight or flight state during that race. And so it's still in that fight or flight state often for a good couple of days. And then you start to come down from it and that's when you can start to get sick. Speaker 2: (54:10) And you also usually ravenously hungry at this time. So you just pigging out like no tomorrow. And your body is actually goes into a repair state after, you know, a couple of days and you come down and often that can be quite a Rocky road for people. Not always, but it is number one, you've lost the big goal that you had that is now achieved and done and there's a bit of an empty space in your life and then you're, you're also, you've had a bit of a trauma, you've gone through some trauma, so there's some post-traumatic sort of stuff going on. Some you're still working through. What the hell was that that I just experienced, especially when you do overseas races and you are out of your actual cultural environment on top of it all. And then after team dies, you might start to come out of it. Speaker 2: (55:01) That sort of adept, which often happens and then is when your mind starts to go, what next? Because you've got a big hole and you sort of need something to be aiming towards again. Yeah. Thing is, and this phase is, it's great to have and I'm glad you say 2021 because that means that you're being like sensible in, in, you're going to let your body get over this experience and then build yourself up again. And you have some other races, no doubt along the way that will build you to Wallington northbound 2021 and North burners approach little tasks a hundred mater. Like if you, if, if you wanted an easy a hundred water, that ain't it, you know, I bet any easy a hundred motto cause a hundred most soccer balls. But that one is a particularly tough, tough, tough one. But super exciting and an amazing, have been really lovely family. Speaker 2: (55:54) I was cofounder of that race and loved it and I sold it last year to the guys teary and Tom and, and they, they've done a fantastic job with it. And it's really a special special event and it's a small family event as opposed to the big Tyler widow. I'll post that. It's a lot more this corporate feel. It's a lot more intimate. And I also think for me that I wanna quite life is so precious. I want to, I want to spend time being as well and not just getting lost, chasing massive goals all the time. Oh, you're so wise. Honestly, like honestly the, a lot of people go into this phase because I've seen it like, you know, after having trained so many people and gone through this process with so many people, you get to camps, you get the ones who say on never even want to do that to myself again. Speaker 2: (56:44) And then they gone out of, out of it. Hopefully if you've prepared people well, like don't actually fall off completely, but often they need a really decent break or you get other ones who go, that's totally lost without the next huge thing. And I, and I fell into that camp for many, many years on this hamster wheel of having to do events because I didn't know what the hell else to do with myself if I wasn't completely, this was my identity and it was very tied up with who I was and my self esteem and my confidence. And so when, like three years ago, and I actually retired from the long staff because my mom but it was overdue, it was overdue to have a break, you know, at least a break if not, you know feminine. Like, because I was just in this hamster wheel of, of trying to outdo myself all the time. Speaker 2: (57:39) And you can't, you know, there comes a point where you can't do more than you did. You know, you can't keep topping it and keep trying and you just blowing yourself out completely and you're not allowing yourself that recovery time in between. And I can even see it in some of the top, top elite, you know, famous super crazy ultra runners out there that I'm friends with who are still doing it as they're getting older and older and older and this like the fifties and sixties, but that, that they, they the obsessive, you know, and then not as healthy as I could be if they actually took a step back now and I'm going to take some time out for a year or two and just reassessed where my body's at. And it's really hard to do that to step away for a while because you know that to get back to that level, why are we're out now and do a hundred K or something. Speaker 2: (58:36) I couldn't go and just do it because I haven't been trained to get back there would be in your mind, the hard part is when you've done so many is that you expect yourself still to be there even when you are not there. And it really hard one for people coming back from injuries for older runners, people who have retired and then we'll come back out or then I they did to get I've got a lady at the moment who's been struggling with a really bad illness and was comparing herself to how she was two or three years ago as to how she is now and rebuilding and keeping and being very disappointed in herself because she still thinks she's back there instead of going, starting from scratch again in moving forward in what was, is gone and not comparing yourself to who you used to be. Speaker 3: (59:27) Yeah, I think, yeah. And I think you know, when I did coast 10 years ago, coast to coast I started and stopped very abruptly, the whole endurance small sport journey and it took a few years to reconnect with running. I don't want to stop running, but I, there's no way I could do why I probably could, but I, I would just, I wouldn't be best prepared. Do you know what I mean? Speaker 2: (59:53) Wouldn't be the best husband and you wouldn't be the best father, the best person you are at work. You know, so it these things and this is what I try to get across to people is that when you take on these message goals, you are sacrificing some other part of your life and it's, it's and that's fine if that's what you've decided you're going to do, but to understand the impact that it's going to have on your husband and wife and your children, what impact, you know, for positive infinitive it can, but if you are doing it back to back to back to back, it can actually have a negative effect on your family and your friends on it. So what's weighing all that sort of stuff up and understanding where we are as my focus going now? It's something I battle with constantly because part of me wants to go back and do all that crazy stuff right now when I have other priorities, it's just life. Sometimes it's very hard to, to knock it down on yourself and to feel guilty cause you're not doing everything. Speaker 3: (01:00:54) Yes. Yeah. And, and life's important, you've gotta enjoy it as you go through it. And if, yeah, I dunno. That's so I, I, yeah, I finished and I'm happy, but I'm actually at peace now with the fact that next year is some smaller races. But the big one is me potentially in 2021. Speaker 2: (01:01:12) Yeah. And you've done this one and what your friends said celebrate and smell the roses. That is a fantastic principal to take away. And it's something that someone told me at the end of a big race when I just went, Oh, what, you know, I wasn't as fast as so-and-so and I didn't, you know, I bet it's a bit a longer race and they went for goodness sake, you know, after I'd just run a mess. Okay. Right. They just said, you know, cannot, can you not just congratulate yourself, celebrate your wins, integrated into your psyche and who you are before you go chasing the next goal. Yeah. Actually type this hundred K telco run and put it in your hat and go, I fricking did that in our religion for doing that. And I'm gonna, I'm gonna suck this, I'm gonna suck this one dry before I go and chase the next. Speaker 3: (01:02:04) Oh, totally. Yeah. So I think I think with the the English get into the rugby world cup final thing, I'm going to have a little beer or two this weekend. Speaker 2: (01:02:14) Yes. I was saved and then I apply. Well they were, they were absolutely amazing. And, and hits off their guys too. You know, you, you can always be no. So, Hey man, thank you very much for sharing your story. I hope this is empowered and lots of other people listening to this. I hope it's made you think maybe I can do it if Matt can do it. And to understand the journey that you go through and then it isn't or you know, roses, it is difficult along the way, but that you can overcome any final words that you'd want to. If you were talking to you two years ago, what sort of advice would you give Mitt Speaker 3: (01:02:57) If you believe in yourself and believe in others around you? And Oh yeah, just if you want something, go after it and, and no, no distance, no goal is too big, if you know what I mean. Life is, you get one lap in life and you've got to make the most of it Speaker 2: (01:03:17) I made to that one. Speaker 3: (01:03:19) Yeah. So thank you Lisa. I really appreciate the opportunity. Speaker 2: (01:03:22) No, it's been absolutely fantastic. It's wonderful to have you in a running hot coaching tribe in. If anyone else wants to join us, of course we'd love to have you come and join us and check us out. I'm sure Matt will agree it's been a a good journey with, with having a bit of structure to your training and having some goals and someone to, to ask questions to and to make sure that you're doing things right. So Matt, congratulations once again on your huge success and your mess of victory. And we'll talk to you again so no doubt. Awesome. Thanks Lisa. Speaker 4: (01:03:55) [Inaudible] Speaker 1: (01:03:55) That's it this week for pushing the limits. We showed her write, review, and share with your friends and head over and visit Lisa and her team, at least at www.lisatamati.com.

1000 Jahre Popkultur
1000 Jahre Popkultur - Episode 13 - Back to the 80s - Addendum Teil 1

1000 Jahre Popkultur

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2019 92:43


Im ersten Teil unseres Back to the 80s Addendums entführen wir euch in die Gefilde der ersten grossen Charitykonzerte, diskutieren unsere Lieblingspizzabeläge und die aufkeimende, unüberschaubare Palette von Fertiggerichten. Ausserdem nehmen wir eine weitere, große Band der 80er unter die Lupe, wie auch ein tragisches Ereignis, welches leider auch mit Abstand die größte Medienaufmerksamkeit in der deutschen Fernseh-Geschichte erlangte.

Church Planting Podcast
Johnny Hunt | Church Planting and Evangelism

Church Planting Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2019 42:45


On this episode, Josh Turansky sits down with Johnny Hunt to discuss evangelism and church planting. Pastor Johnny has recently taken a leadership role at the North American Missions Board. This new role emphasizes evangelism in the local church. Here the link to the “Where’s your one” campaign. Pastor Johnny Hunt is the pastor of First Baptist Church Woodstock in Woodstock, Georgia as well as the Senior Vice President of Evangelism and Leadership for the North American Mission Board.You can find all things Johny Hunt here: https://www.johnnyhunt.comTranscriptIntro: This is the Church Planting Podcast. Thank you for tuning in! Every week, we sit down with leaders who are shaping church planting efforts. Here's your host Josh Turansky and Clint Clifton.Josh Turansky: Hey, welcome to the Church Planting Podcast. My name is Josh Turansky and I'm joined here by Clint Clifton. Clint Clifton: Clint Clifton is here. Josh Turansky: In studio. Back in your office. Clint Clifton: Back in my office.. Josh Turansky: Hey, so uhmm.. I don't know what episode number this is. But every Wednesday, Clint Clifton: Yeah Josh Turansky: We have an episode that comes out and recently we refresh the website and launched the Facebook page. Clint Clifton: Yeah Josh Turansky: Uhmmm..Clint Clifton: You know in less than one week like 500 people have signed up for the Facebook page that like joined on Facebook page, is that right? Josh Turansky: Yep! Yeah. I paid my friends a lot..Clint Clifton: oh! Is that how it happened? Okay, that's good. And I knew you're rolling it. Josh Turansky: exactly exactly know. So but we would love to hear from peopleYeah, we'd love to hear there's a button at the top of the Facebook page that says email us people can go to the website which is ChurchPlantingPodcast.Org and there's a contact page there's links to the social. Or sites, but it's great to get feedback. Clint Clifton: Yeah, really like that. I mean this weekI got a few emails that were really encouraging and uhmm.. I'd like some feedback that's things you'd like to see more on the podcast or just kind of so advice suggestions. You know, when you do something like this is a one-sided conversation. We're putting a ton of content out and you get very little feedbackBack, so whatever we get back a really meaningful to us. So be sure to send an email that's just make a comment on something you heard or Josh Turansky: What could we cover more in? What questions do you have? Yep? Clint Clifton: Yeah Josh Turansky: good. So again ChurchPlantingPodcast.Org will is the website and then from there you can get to all of our different social rights goodClint Clifton: Yeah, thanks Josh Turansky: On this episode. We're going to be talking with Johnny hunt. Clint Clifton: Yeah, Johnny Hunt!Josh Turansky: the famous.. the Infamous Clint Clifton: Infamous Johnny Hunt. Yeah. He's a. Man, alive wire just you know, very rarely did I get to rub shoulders with somebody who has been in Ministry so long and had such a consistent impact over the years and Johnny's impact is in large part what he's done to develop pastoral leadersMenu system amazing. He's got in everywhere. You see him. He's rolling deep. He's got guys with him and he's had a long Ministry of mentoring young men and know where do I go around the country that I don't meet people that were his interns or that worked with him and they're doing incredible things in Ministry today, so, He's not just a ferocious evangelist and a great apologist and a good spokesman for the kingdomHe is he's a mentor to a lot of guys and that that says a lot to me. Josh Turansky: He is a yeah this interview that I had the conversation with him and you'll hear that in a second but he's very patient because he had a hard time finding where we were going to meet. Yeah, and I really appreciate his tenacity and chasing us down and Clint Clifton: he didn't have a hard time finding it as much as we kept changing itJosh Turansky: Oh, that's right. Clint Clifton: That's right. It wasn't that wasn't his fault. Let's make him make that clear was our fault. Yeah. Josh Turansky: Yeah and his he's got a great assistant that helped him find a way so. This is going to be this is this is a great topic where we touch a little bit on evangelism. We talked about the fact that he's got people that are following him around and being trained by himClint Clifton: Yeah Josh Turansky: uhmmm.. great. Great material anything else you want to highlight with Clint Clifton: I would just say some of the listeners some of the podcasts guests that we have here are not on the podcast because they have planted a great church themselves or anything like that, but they're on the podcast because they're a champion for the church at large and theyAre a fan and a champion of church planting and that's Johnny for sure. I mean his story is he pastored really large church for a really long time and led them to great ministry. He led that church to plant many churches. He's been, you know, not to real category. I mean the Pastor that.. Passion to me for church planting is never planted a church himself and I think that if you're a pastor and you're listening to this and you hear all the talk about church planting are just like that's not me, man.God may use you in a way to mobilize people and plant churches. That's far beyond what you could accomplish as a church planter yourself. So that's a real category one. You should embrace and that's Johnny's contribution to the church planting World Josh Turansky: Strong point. Excellent. Okay, let's jump right into the episode with Johnny Hunt.Johnny Hunt:So you want to lead your church to multiply, but in order to do that, you have to raise up new potential leaders from inside your congregation. But how in the world are you supposed to do that with all the other plate you have spinning? Well, the North American Mission board is created a tool to help you equip the Saints for the work of the ministryIt's called the multiplication Pipeline and it helps you identify and train missional leaders, potential church planters and potential church planting team members from right there inside your own congregation the pipeline starts with a simple assessment tool and a three-year online training system follows to equip missional leadersLearn more about the multiplication pipeline by visiting their website: namb.net/pipelineJosh Turansky: Alright! Here we are. At the SBC convention with Pastor Johnny Hunt you have been a pastor for years and you've got the best smile in the SBC convention. Johnny Hunt: They can't see it.Josh Turansky: and recently you made a transition of leading your church to in this leadership role with NAMB overseeing evangelism. You have this incredible history of raising up leaders, helping guys plant churchesSo let's let's talk a little bit about this recent transition help help people understand. What is your new role? And what what compelled you to take on this role? Johnny Hunt: Thanks Josh. At Woodstock until the end of the year. So I'm helping transition a new Young Pastor Jeremy Morton and it's going fabulousWe're seven or eight months in and I will leave their Lord willing to end of December. And so I've dreamed of year for years of what I'd like to do in the last quarter of my life and two major areas is pastoral leadership, which I've done through Timothy Barnabas for 25 years. I've also mentored two pastors a year at my office for the last 25 years. So that's been a given in my life. And then evangelism, our church is always in every church I've served in 43 years have been leaders in evangelism. So I would like to challenge Southern Baptists to once again put evangelism on the front burner. And so I'm doing dual roles because I'm trying to do less at Woodstock and then I'm doing more with NAMB, but then come January 1 it will be 1 job. Josh Turansky: Wow. Okay, so you were talking a little bit about your involvement interaction with church planting in LA some specific observations that you may tell us a little bit about that story Johnny Hunt: NAMB asked me a few years ago, if I would become lead Pastor for LA Initiative and Woodstock would become lead church so I did, so I began to work with some of our NAMB employees out there. And so what they would like me to do is to go out and bring about eight of the pastor's in close to us and I would take I took over 200 passengers out there to see the work asking to be involved. So we would have like Banquets Town meetings for lunches and we would or even go to the campuses and say to the young Church Planters,Tell us what God's doing how long you been here who you're trying to reach tell us about your ministry. Tell us about your needs because these guys were joining with them and I regret to say this but many of them had been there two and a half years. They went to you meet. We don't know. Sometimes we meet once a month sometimes as every other monthWe're not meeting regular right now and try to get together with the guys. And so so what is your core group like it, you know right now as far as what we can depend on we've got seven I'm thinking, you know, there's 19 million people out here 19 million second largest city next to New York proper and I'm thinking wow and you know, You there's a way to say itSomeone says you can't see the forest for the trees do a reverse play. You can't see a tree for the forest. Sometimes such a mass - that you don't see anybody and so God help me today to see what you see feel what you feel love who you love so I would see that but then when I meet when I say we tell me about you know, what you're doingI mean. Who are you witnessing to? Who is it your real passion about and it seemed like it turn more to demographics distances the people that live in that building, but it was it was all shaped in such a way that it was it was not personal and then on the other hand we would talk to those that were really on the move and it was, Hey pray!Well, we've got these three families in our neighborhood that we're after we've invited him into our home. We're praying. We're carrying through prayer. I shared the gospel of first time with this one, but they had names they were after people we're in the people business and like saying relationship, so, take Matt Lawson at our church there in BurbankI was just with him a few weeks ago. He had neighbors but he would be out in his yard and he would think Boyd a moment make it look I'm speaking and they just walked right by winning look, but then he began to think everyone's walking their dogs. So he took his children out in the yard and he put bowls of water and even some like dog biscuitsI thought it was so cool and in all the dogs would have go to and say, ‘Hey come and join”. I mean everybody around here's got a pet and while they were sitting and drinking the water and all then he would engage them or hey cute sun bear and they begin we've got a little boy and been engaging and they were always thinking of events they could do but to engage people to build relationship because I sent him out thereHe had only spent a half a day in LA in his life. So this is not like I've lived out there that visited their lot gots capture my heart. He Supernatural is called, you know plant Advanced Pittman in Las Vegas 17 years ago 18 now, but Vance was an associate pastor had left a pastoring and I was preaching but I had got it laid Las Vegas on my heart and it was the fastest growing city in America 18 years ago, and I thought we don't have a significant Southern Baptist work out thereOr not enough. Thanks some I shouldn't put it that way. They were some significant changes, but Ian we planted him with three families? That was it has three families from Alabama For Heaven's Sake move into to the. And now, they enjoyed over 3,000 on the weekend of started over 40 churches from that oneSo we have planted over a hundred church at Woodstock and we're not counting like he has to like say if we could there are grandbabies, but if we included those are Church plants probably pushing 300 well in others that we don't planted Paul godhardt out there. I mentored him for a year. So it's been encouraging but we've got to be in the people businessThere's an old song that says God love people more than anything. That's the truth. Josh Turansky: Wow. So just we're just having the numbers come out for the Southern Baptist in regards to baptisms confessions of faith, and the numbers are down and that's a trend that's been going on for almost a decade and you're stepping into this new role emphasizing evangelism and so tell me the story about the origins of this new role. Johnny Hunt: Basically, that is a problem last year to Southern Baptist convention. They were lots and way of resolutions on the floor about hey, let's hold them accountable. They ought to be leading out and evangelism and sometimes gotten a mixed signal owners life way lead this or this NAMB, but the bottom line is the pastor is going to have to lead it. But someone does need to be out beating the drum keeping it in front of us is. We do with I am be or any other Ministry before us so in that context JD Greer begin to talk about who's your one and I had written material back in like 2007 just entitled one and so it resonated in my heart the biblical text and all and I thought this will work and we really we really have itI shared it with 280 leaders yesterday, which was encouraging I was with our. Associational missionary strategist formerly the OMS and basically is the largest gathering they've ever had in the history of their movement. And so it really encouraged me hopefulness, but their boots on the ground across the convention and we've got a major major strategy, but here's what's going to have to happenWe got to stop the bleeding. We are bleeding. We're at a 1940 love. Oh in baptisms, so in continuing to get worse each year. The grace of God will stop the bleeding and then I really do believe we can turn it around and someone might say, well you really believe you can turn around. Oh, no, we can turn it aroundIt's going to be the pastor's of the Southern Baptist convention. So bottom line is I believe it all my heart they'll buy in and if they don't buy in we won't move the needle a moment, but if they do, I think we could see significant change just as we've seen significant change in the wrong directionJosh Turansky: Well, so you have this background of working with one-on-one with developing leaders, which I want to talk with you about in a second. But as you come into this role of leading this Initiative for evangelism, it seems like a very high-level role. But the example of your ministry is very is mentoring one-to-one. So how do you affect change from such a high level into across 4747 thousand churches?Johnny Hunt: Yeah. Yeah. That's a great question. So just like yesterday and really I thought about my message for a year to be with those guys yesterday and it's significant to be in that room because I got a text message last Sunday morning at like 5 o'clock in the morning said, pray for this pastor his mother just died and pray for this pastors follow just at who else knows that state execs can't know it national level can't know it sometimes pastors don't even know it but DOMs know what churches are open what churches are growing. I mean, they really are the boots on ground.They're the ones that are messaging thee local church. They're the ones that can pick up the phone, go worship with them, visit them. So we want to keep it personal so it's really bottom-up still. So if I get with them and convince them of something that's reality. Number one, I love you, I'm for you, You are importantI mean, I don't know that I've heard a lot of people trumping lately that Association missionary strategies were the DOMs are really important. But I believe they can be important to our movement then. Secondly, I've made it a Ministry of training pastors a platform where a lot of pastors come to my Timothy Barnabas schoolsSo I engage with them we say we don't have a green room. I'm always with them. So I'm messaging them, but I'm also there. You know, giving them details of how they can be involved. Then you certainly tomorrow on our platform will give more of a national challenge. But when we go to a city for instance in our Hoosier want or have great music the churches we go to really really are already on the move but want to go to a new level and then we will really message not just for that state but within a hundred-mile radius.My team at the name is going to really I mean just we're going to let those people know who should be in that room. And I'm of the conviction time will tell that will need our AV team to be set up for overflow and simulcast I believe everywhere we go the younger.Josh Turansky: well, can we talk about evangelism philosophicallySo there's a lot of different images that come to people's mind when they hear evangelism. You've got Crusades, you have Street evangelism. In my church. We kind of make a point of saying hey our primary means of evangelism is relational just being normal with people God's put around you. What are you emphasizing as you're talking with pastors? Obviously, one-to-one sounds highly relational.Johnny Hunt: right? Yeah. And really in a way if we're going to really change the trend it's going to be all of the above. But the truth is it is relational. For instance. When we have one of the most beautiful stories of five significant New Testament people converted and seven verses of scripture in 1st John chapter 1 verse 35 through 42, it's here that Jesus undoubtedly leads Andrew to the Lord Jesus leads Philip to the Lord, Andrews goes in his brother, we got to get back to being faithful to share the gospel with our family what we say across the country is families the hardest people in the world witness to that becomes a self-fulfilled prophecy, which they think is an excuse not to share the gospel with a family who under Heaven could love my mother, my father, my siblings more than me are so I want to I want to I want to speak into a live at needs to go back to hell where it came from.Number two, when Philip got converted he went for Nathanie,l who's Nathaniel his friend. So basically, I think it's friends, relatives, work associates, neighbors in the old days and seminary. It was the concentric circles. I'm at Starbucks regular have I ever shared a word we go on first name basis. I give them a gift at Christmas so that is it, it is a relationship, but then there's lots of people got put you in touch with I travel almost every day of my life. I'm on a plane, I'm engaged and I am engaging, sometimes I'm sleeping. But but I want to I want to be relational in our church the most effective witness and visits are somebody comes through and I say, hey stop by our connect desk.I wrote a new book believe it or not. It actually was good and I want to give you a copy of it. They go by and get its tangible expression of our love and appreciation for them, 99% of a give us all the information we want because we've engaged them there and hey first time whatever and then we take those cards and they certainly are the easiest either make an appointment with or to drop by and say hey we simply came by to say thank you for coming however, in my travels people are telling me that churches they go to and fill out cards eight out of 10 of them never follow up. So it don't matter to you have the information if you're not after it, but then we we at Woodstock still do door-to-door visitation and we but it's We Care through prayers exactly what we just did when over 10,000 homes here at crossoverSo it's both an it's Rick gauges and county seats that just had 8,000 people as crusading. 400 professions of faith in like three nights. It's not either/or. I mean we're going to focus on our local churches in different ones, but elect support all thank God for Franklin Graham Southern Baptist. Thank God for Rick. I mean Greg Laurie that we've partnered with and Southern Baptist life 3,000 professions of Faith last year in Dallas. It's a follow up. And we can pick and say 3000 who's going to follow up. I'd like to say this it is no greater burden that we call accountability follow up to 3000 and the fact that we follow it with the one that responds at our church somethingJosh Turansky: Okay. So let's. Get a little bit into the weeds just for the sake of listeners, okay? So in as I think about my congregation looking at people on Sunday, I have most of the people there have a relationship with the Lord. And they enjoy church, but my frustration is getting more people to translate their faith into the day-to-day.So we have a couple of things initiatives, but I just don't feel like I'm getting traction with my congregation. They love the Bible, they Love to Worship, but in terms of Monday morning living out their faith in an Evangelistic way on Mission just don't feel like I'm getting traction. What would what would you say if you stepped into that setting?Johnny Hunt: First of all, I commend you for sizing it up because sometimes people don't even know where their church is. And if you're going to lead them to where you feel they need to be, you need to know where they are and then secondly, the commendation is, you're not satisfied with that. I think we have fallen into lethargy in our denomination because if I were to say to a congregation. Pray about God laying a soloing heart the way we used to pray it is this Lord lay some poor soul upon my heart and love that Soul through me.So it's like Jesus when he talks about we need more workers in the Harvest. He said pray to the Lord of the Harvest that he would send more into his Harvest. Well, if I'm the one praying about Harvest, I think he's going to send me, I mean is it likes going burden somebody else if I've got the burden. Josh Turansky: Right. Yeah.Johnny Hunt: You know, so I'm going to God. If I were in your church right now, I would magnify the Hoosier one. I mean number one, you got our prayer God. Why did we do a prayer guide? Because it's not resources as much as they need a change of heart. Think about this if I stand up and just what you described and I would describe a lot of that it would stock.All right, so I know where they are and they're not really engaging if I were to say to them. I want you to pray over the next week about not just anyone but Hoosier one. Is there somebody God's laying on your heart actually burdened about not just hey, that would be neat if I could witness that person and wind them, but somebody you really burdened about is it a sibling, is it a parent, a grandparent, a cousin, is it somebody you work with, somebody go to school with? All right, so they but the fact that they have to think for week or two to even think of a critical witness to who are they by passing? Really not being ugly, but maybe we need to be jolted in the jolt needs to be you don't know your neighbors, you know, yeah, make it an effort who lives in front of you who lives on either side of you who lives on your street.Have you ever done anything? To engage the people in your street or your neighborhood. So the fact that they don't even have anyone on the radar. It just shows where we are. Josh Turansky: Yeah.Johnny Hunt: How can we turn the trend? We were not even thinking lostness and I someone's asked me to think about it and it is it's good fault in that.Are we even messaging wrong? Like hey, we got so many unreached people. Yes, they are unreached. But guess what? Jesus said they're lost. If you want to go step father. Jesus said that he that believeth not is condemned already. Not that they're going to be condemned. There are t in the state of being condemned just waiting to be cut off so that helped me with my father when I thought you know, if I don't get to Dad soon debt that's going to be condemned one day now dad already has condemned. He's in a state of of headed hell right now instead of he's going to go to hell he is going to hell. There's a difference so it really caught more. So you do the journal and then we give out the card and then we begin to really pray and you know, if they want to put with his first names you can put them on a board, have different prayer meetings where people come and then really celebrate when they come. So what if every one of your congregation was encouraged and listen to this, Josh? When I'm trying to cast this Vision, I'll talk about it tomorrow Lord, Wellington whole convention. When I try to cast this Vision we baptized west of 450,000 people this year. We average in southern Baptists Life 5 million 2000 people and some change in our morning worships average in southern Baptists lifeIf 10% of your congregation 10% of mine 10% of our denomination only 10 Baldy in the Hoosier one just just use that and say we're going after one and be able to say, hey, I'm averaging a hundred. I've got 10 of my people and they were to be successful and win one this year. Not only will be double baptisms in one year.We would baptize morning. We baptized in any given year since we were Southern Baptist convention since 1845 that is not rocket science. If only one-tenth how often do I want a cast vision and be satisfied but only 1/10, you know, hey, I would like you all to be here tonight. I'm casting Vision.How did it go? Hey 10% of them came back. You'd be you'd be home crying asking. Your family too, you know pat you on the back rub your head. Josh Turansky: Yeah. No man, that's powerful.So it sounds like you're referencing some tools and resources are those things on a website or how do people connect with this initiative.Johnny Hunt: WhosYourOne.com Only sees to tour where I'm going to go to the cities all across America over the next two to three years. Lord willing. And we'll be in major cities in a close to hopefully everybody when it's all said and done we're encouraging to come in for. First of all, I think we're not even inspired to win people to Christ. There's something to be said about inspiration but also instruction, so I'll travel would say new song Charles Billingsley or alikes. And they all saying 1520's engage everybody in the congregation and worship and then I'll bring a message of real clear biblical message about where we are. And then the next morning feed you great breakfast all name and then at about 8:30 to 12:00 that we're going to have four in different cities different people some of the best instructors they are, that are doing it that will not only give you material whether it's a Jimmy Scroggins and he says, here’s 3 circles. Or whether it's James Merritt were putting together his four questions. So we're going to give resources but we do still know this, If God does it do a work in the heart give us a passion resources is not the answer but for those who are already passionately doing what they can with what they have. We're going to give them, encouraging resource stand with them. Steve Gaines has put together a three-hour teaching session that he can teach in about an hour. Just flying through it to give you a gist because guys are thinking when I get back home like say for instance if you said you were going to do your, who's your one, we will encourage over about five weeks? Whether it be some testimonies of people that have led people to Christ, messages challenging messages of God, aligning our hearts with his, he came to seek and to save that which was lost. What is the Great Commission these statements? The gospel is good news only if it gets there in time, you know, I don't want the people in the community to not be warned.He's he killed three Ezekiel 33 all the various reasons we ought to. But the main thing is, you know, God break her heart for what breaks yours what breaks his he went every time he wept it was over Nations people. So we think that we can not only give a Clear Vision of how to get there and what we want to do but resource you to do it as well.So we feel like we've answered all the questions but there you can download the devotions free, you can download the the Who’s your one cards. Testimonies there provide videos for you to just share in your church to just really emphasize them. Like one by JD, one by me. This 45 seconds is just emphasizing just one just one and then we're already hearing the stories of a.. in three weeks, I got focused. God’s turned my heart and one one one young pastor called the other day and said alright going to give my testimony. I'm not would not baptize anybody for years. He said in the last three months we baptized. That will turn the trend because most of our churches are small the vast majority have of our church is about vocational but good leaders.Josh Turansky: Yeah,men great. Okay, so we'll link to those resources also in the show notes when this goes out. Let's let's turn to leadership development because this is another passion that you have. And you've been doing this for years. It's not just something that you're talking about from an ivory Tower, but it's something that you've practiced and modeled years and years and years.. Why is this something you care about? Johnny Hunt: Yeah, you know, basically, I am what others have invested in me. I mean when you look back over your life, you know, they say the older you get the more you reflect. The lips love to read the Psalms the Psalms are very reflective and oftentimes, it's David telling a story of his tough time but how he won the victory. I mean, they really are Psalms of ascent. I mean it's once he got out of it, but it tells what he went through so I reflect a lot and I look back on it, I think I can, I'm 23 years old. I don't even have money to go to school and raised by single mom. Dad checked out when I was seven, raised in a project, you know High School Dropout and then God saved me and here comes a guy named Alfred Joiner and I've got a question and he's got an answer. I've got a Bible but it's brand new to me. And he begins to teach me the Bible, he begins to take me out and I'm able to observe him witnessing but he did something I need to do better and he threw me in threw me and he just be out talking to some rough guy and he'd say hey, I'm glad Johnny's with me because Johnny Johnny wants to take a moment to tell you what happened to him three weeks ago.And that really is what witnesses doing is telling what happened to you how you fit into this is God's story. So I look back on that. And so three years,I went never mentioned anything about Alfred now. I hardly ever preached a sermon especially in discipleship. Don't talk about Alfred investing in me and we're still connected even though we're in different states and all and then the person God raises up to say, hey the Lord laid it on my heart to pay for your education, buy you some clothes. I mean, God's met me just like you met Elijah with bread and the water flowed in the brook and God provided for him sent Ravens to feed him with these are the Ravens of my life. They just two legged and. In skin so I mean the develop me so I look back on it and at every point somebody was there pouring into me.So I wrote a lesson out of my heart entitled, The Stewardship of Influence. So here's what I ask five questions. And fifth question is why I lead? who influenced you? when? why? how? Here’s the question? What have you done with the influence? Have I allowed that to be a deposit in me that's given this given a return and so basically I feel that I need to take what they put in me and then do the same thing for others.So my wife and I have practice helping someone to stay in seminary a college ever since we got on our feet because someone did the same thing for us. So we want to do for others what has been done for us. So we did that and then I look at that and I think most people research it shows does not have someone to believe in them.Most don't believe in themselves. If you do believe in someone they will know it and know what they know it. They'll do everything they can to make you proud of them. So I have taking young pastors. Some people always ask me, what did you Santana just teach him. No? Jesus and his discipleship, the key word is he was with them.So I just let them go with me. They got a deacons meeting with me then go to a finance committee. We got my staff meetings. My staff retreats, travel overseas with me. I do some pretty decent expenditure in library that I say you need to read these books or are there some books you want to read and I want to purchase.And then it's as they hear me in daily life. Then when we're together by herself. They begin to say Hey, you made a decision there and I just knew when they asked you to question you were going to say this, but why did you say this? You know how I make decisions? They're able to see how if I do practice Grace in dealing with some hard situations that are brought up and staff.So they learn that way. So after this meeting today, I'm entered a guy probably 10 years ago. He's now Seminary graduate been pastoring for years. So I'm in the gym this morning. Oh my God, I can't believe I ran into you. So we're going to meet after my meeting here and to again continue your mentoring so it goes on and on and on. So these guys, you know remembered her over 50 some years, I did three because I did International students just an international student just graduated from Southwestern Seminary, but when I trained him that was not on the scope, so it's helped them to believe in themselves and which most don't and they know I believe in them. And so I've kept an open line so my phone's inbox always full of emails. Answer calls or texts in from what guys say. Most people won't return your call. Most people don't answer your emails. I personally answer all of my own emails. And so that's why I can't sleep late late at night. And so but I really stayed engaged with them and I think that may be why God helps to platform.I've done so much. I've traveled so many years. I've done State evangelism, Pastors conference, convention, led to Convention, led to pass camera. I've been there but I've been there on a level of knowing them and I'll give you this piece when God began to bless me Jimmy Draper in his 80s now and he just wrote a bookI wrote the forward to it is entitled. Don't quit before you finish great great book, but basically he said to me when I was in my 30s late 30s God. Seems to really be blessing you. Would you really pray about bringing Next Generation with you? But it just kind of like, okay, what the hell does that mean.So I had to make my mind up? Today, I could be in some significant meetings, you know special meetings of the large Church round table or whatever, but I may choose to be with the guys in the two hundred churches for lunch and that type thing the younger leaders and I've done that for so many years.Well, now those young leaders are becoming the nationally known leaders. So now I can continue to network with them and maybe even influence them to be effective in the ones coming behind them. But I've watched God raise people up people can say boy that Jeff Crook is quite a leader in my heart. I can say I've been mentoring him over 20 years. Boy, look how God is using John Cross been with him for over 20 years. Wow, the Devon's done well. Spend a year with him, we continue to mentor the young man that is becoming the map and the pastor of my church. He's started following me and he was 17, 20 years ago, 10 years ago started coming almost schools. Three years ago started saying, well I meet with him like on a monthly basis or so to speak into his life.I didn't know he was going to be the one to follow me. I mean, so yeah, God was raising them up. Josh Turansky: so the push back your get you probably get is I'm a pastor. I'm so busy. How do I have time for that? Johnny Hunt: Yeah. Number one. We all have the same amount of time and it really and I write in this area in leadership is time management and a lot of people just aren't managing their time well.We really have time to do everything, we consider important. I encourage guys that if you got someone you less you always I really really want to do this, but I'm just so busy. I can't get to it. I said you're really frustrating yourself take it off the list because it's not important that you would have done it.You know, I'm date my wife every week. It's important. I'm going to have special times with my children and grandchildren. It's important. I know I need to meet my staff. I want to be very prepared when I preach so you got to do that. So I sleep. I'm not a six and a half seven our guidance all I require but I go to bed at 10:00 and I'm normally up about five so I get into the day people need to know their best time today.My best time today is in the morning. So I give my mornings to the Lord to my research. And that type thing. So this year, I'm producing three books different areas help with a lot of help with some of them, but you can do it, you know if it's a priority and you know how to work with deadlines and yet I want to learn to really practice margins.So when I leave here, got some couple speaking engagements, a week away when my wife next week, speaking engagements.Take July off. But what I do in July I think a lot of reflecting a lot of, write a lot but but only in the margins of the day, you know, I'm an early riser. My wife is a night owl. So I got me a good three or four hours and one for she gets up.So go to work and when she gets up, Hooo! Just been waiting on you.Josh Turansky: So listening to you talk about this. It sounds like you have no regrets of mentoring guys for years and it's been really rewarding. Johnny Hunt: Yeah, 90 year olds were asked recently. If you could do life over again, what would you do different and though we get the more you think about it? Wow, what would I do differently.Here's what they said. I take greater risk. I would reflect more but I would invest more in that which will outlast me. How could you possibly when you talk about your church and how you can leave them? The greatest investment you'll ever make is in them because the day will come that you have a generation your age and you will be much older.And they will continue.. able Hebrews 11:4 through his dad yet. He speaks people will still be speaking that we invested in. I love to quote my dead friends. I mean honestly like to say I want to say it Adrian Rogers said it forever and I want to say it for him now that he's with the Lord. And I quote him I do the same thing with Ron Dan with Ben Hafner, with John Phillips.You know, I heard John so many times when I'd say, I'll never forget here. John saying it hear John say it again through me, you know, so Josh Turansky: awesome. Well Pastor Johnny, thank you so much for giving us 30 minutes of your time investing in future Church Planters current Church Planters on both these things evangelism leadership development those..That's that's right where the rubber meets the road for these guys that are out there. So Johnny Hunt: The real Joy, thank you very much.Josh Turansky: Appreciate it. Narrator: I want to let you know about another incredible podcast that's hosted by today's guest Johnny Hunt. Building a culture of personal evangelism in your church begins with the leader on the evangelism podcast Pastor Johnny aims to equip pastors so that they can equip their churches to share the hope of the Gospel with the world tips and tools and encouragement of a lifetime a lifetime of personal evangelism training you can find the evangelism podcast with Johnny hunt anywhere you find podcasts Apple, Google Play, Spotify. That's evangelism with Johnny Hunt. Narrator: Thank you for listening to the church planning podcast. Don't forget to subscribe and leave a review of your favorite podcast.Josh Turansky: Today’s episode of the church planting podcast is sponsored by New City Network, the Church Planting Ministry of MacLean Bible. A special thanks to today's guest Johnny Hunt and for taking the time to join us Josh Turansky produced Today Show Zuki Bastion was our Runner and her husband Nick was our editor Thanks to Hudson Sharansky and Marvin more Who provided administrative and web support and last but not least thanks to you for listening all the way through the end of the church planting podcast. Hey, if you'd like more information about the show, feel free to visit our brand new website at www.traknetpm.com cast dot-org thereYou can find all of our past episodes as well as notes and links. From today's show. Be sure to tune in next week to the podcast. We will be talking with John Mark Clifton.

Sur la route du Junior
Saison 2 Épisode 18 - Sur la route du Junior

Sur la route du Junior

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2019 27:44


Saison 2 Épisode 18 - Sur la route du Junior COMMANDITAIRE DE L’ÉPISODE – Épicerie Frenette •Revue de la LHJMQ•Joueurs de la semaine dans la LCH•Nos joueurs de la semaine•Craig’s List de janvier•La revue Midget avec Johnny•Johnny nous jase du Moose du Nord•Résultat du sondage de la semaine Musique: Daniel Roy Audio

Night Call
44: Spider-man Elsa Truck Stevens

Night Call

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2018 50:59


The Moonlight All-Nighters discuss the strange companies BroPastures, Giggling Eye, and Little Martin's Drawer, delve into some deep sea creatures, and sulk about aughts nostalgia. PLUS a Night Call about magic streetlight powers!  This episode is sponsored by: [Canvas People](https://www.canvaspeople.com/) (text CALL to 484848) [Zola](https://welcome.zola.com/call) [Simple Contacts](https://www.simplecontacts.com/call)(Code: CALL) Call in to Night Call at 240-46-NIGHT Articles and media mentioned this episode: Music Video, ["Thank U, Next"](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gl1aHhXnN1k) by Ariana Grande Film, [Mean Girls](https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0377092/?ref_=nv_sr_1) Music Video, ["Fancy"](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O-zpOMYRi0w) by Iggy Azalea Music Video, ["No Tears Left to Cry"](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ffxKSjUwKdU) by Ariana Grande Music Video,["God is a Woman"](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kHLHSlExFis) by Ariana Grande TV Show, [Stranger Things](https://www.imdb.com/title/tt4574334/) Film, [Bring it On](https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0204946/?ref_=nv_sr_1) Film, [13 Going on 30](https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0337563/?ref_=nv_sr_1) Film, [In the Cut](https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0199626/?ref_=nv_sr_1) Article, NY Times, ["A Business with No End"](https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/11/27/style/what-is-inside-this-internet-rabbit-hole.html) William Gibson's Twitter: [@GreatDismal](https://twitter.com/GreatDismal) Youtube Video, ["Johnny Johnny"](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c5WBzlL-JRQ) Youtube Channel, [InsaneGaz](https://www.youtube.com/user/insanegaz) Podcast, [The Dream](https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/stitcher/the-dream) Roman Federtsov's Twitter: [@Rfedortsov](https://twitter.com/rfedortsov) Article, Popular Science, ["Don't Hate on Deep Sea Critters; They've Got to be Weird to Survive"](https://www.popsci.com/animals-deep-sea-fisherman-in-russia-tweeting-are-weird-looking) "Night Call" by [4aStables](https://www.4astables.com/). Sound effects by [uair01](https://freesound.org/people/uair01/sounds/65393/) from [freesound.org](https://freesound.org/). Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers

The Awkward Minority Podcast

This week on The Awkward Minority: Jesus Shuttlesworth & Lady Godiva speak on Shooting your eyes out, Bubble guts, Why is Patrick Star stupid?, Johnny Johnny the biggest liar in history, Lady Godiva hates CatDog, Am I a lesbian?, Is my girlfriend playing me? and much more. Free shipping on all Vans: bitly.com/awkwardvans THREE FREE MONTHS OF APPLE MUSIC:apple.co/2qcc9Iv This episode is also sponsored by GoDaddy. Save 30% trygodaddy.com/awkwardminority Sanquon "Don't Hurt Yourself" collection: Sanquon.com Two Eggnog's For The Road (Slug Line Story): http://www.wordsbyladyg.com/2018/01/slug-line-story.html Be sure to use hashtag 'TheAwkwardMinority' to join the discussion about this episode. Stay Awkward: theawkwardminority.com Twitter.com/MinorityAwkward Instagram.com/theawkwardminority Facebook.com/theawkwardminority Lady Godiva Twitter.com/arabicdream Instagram.com/wordsbyladyg Facebook.com/wordsbyladyg Jesus Shuttlesworth Twitter.com/JavarisIsOnMars Instagram.com/thesquiretales SnapChat: ASquireTale

Time with Nick And Johnny
Ep 47: Time with Nick and Johnny - Johnny Skourtis joins Nick and Johnny and Rizo

Time with Nick And Johnny

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2018 44:46


Johnny Skourtis is a comedian and actor that has been in films with Denzel Washington and has been on a lot of commercials and works rooms all around Los Angeles including The Comedy Store, The Improv, and many more.Follow Nick (@NickComic), Johnny (@RoqueJohnny), and Comedy Pop-Up (@ComedyPopUp) for information on upcoming episodes and live shows.

Sudden Double Deep
25: JOHNNY (Johnny Guitar, Johnny Dangerously and Johnny Mnemonic)

Sudden Double Deep

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2017 85:25


The Triple Bill Title Word for Episode 25 is JOHNNY and we discuss Johnny Guitar, Johnny Dangerously and Johnny Mnemonic! 0:58 - Ben and Daryl's intro bits 12:18 - Johnny Guitar 33:19 - Johnny Dangerously 46:03 - Johnny Mnemonic Please review us over on Apple Podcasts. Got comments or suggestions for new episodes? Email: sddpod@gmail.com. Seek us out via Twitter and Instagram @ sddfilmpodcast Support our Patreon for $3 a month and get access to our exclusive show, Sudden Double Deep Cuts where we talk about our favourite movie soundtracks, scores and theme songs! Episode 26 launches on 29th June!

HMAC
HMAC - Ringside reality, CM punk, Wrestling, Johnny "Johnny Bomb" Lilly guests

HMAC

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2016 94:31


On this episode, Curtis is joined by long time friend Jonathon Lilly, co- host of the Ringside Reality Podcast. We talk wrestling, mma, games, podcasting and more.

La ligue des albums incompris
Ligue des Albums Incompris (Ep.40) Edith Nylon // 11.03.16

La ligue des albums incompris

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2016


Pour la 40ème, La Ligue accueille des oubliés —étonnant ! Oui, oubliés certes, comme les autres, mais du genre bien enterrés, cramés : bref, des croûtes, des vraies ! Les jeunes gens que vous voyez ci-dessous formaient le groupe Edith Nylon. Oui, déjà, ça sent la naphtaline, n'est-ce pas? Dans la foisonnante scène punk, post-punk et new wave Parisienne autour de 1980, il faut bien avouer qu'Edith Nylon fut sans doute le plus emblématique, le plus riche, travaillé, et aussi celui qui enfanta le plus de carrières.Découvrez avec le Dr Bro le nombre sans fin de formations issus de la cosmogonie Edith Nylon, le groupe punk Parisien par excellence. Découvrez aussi comment avec quelques titres bien sentis, des presque (oui, faut pas pousser) hits, on peut aussi se rendre compte que ceux de la mouvance qui ont atteint le firmament (les Rita Mitsouko) leur ont tout volé. Comète du genre, super-formation tentaculaire, Edith Nylon n'a pas eu la chance d'aller au bout de sa carrière : morte en 1982.Direction aujourd'hui le meilleur de leurs albums, celui qui a le moins vieilli : Johnny Johnny, sorti en 1980. Attention, épisode dense, plus long que d'habitude, mais à généalogie exceptionnelle, podcast exceptionnel ! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nWxJMu952Gs   

Toonami Faithful Podcast
Toonami Faithful Podcast #120 - Here's Johnny! - Featuring Johnny Yong Bosch

Toonami Faithful Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2014 115:10


Yep, we've got Johnny Yong Bosch on the show. We talk Power Rangers, Trigun, Eureka 7 and of course Bleach and Space Dandy. Before that, we recap the 2nd to last premiere episodes of Attack on Titan and Bleach and the sixth episode of Hellsing Ultimate in record time. During Attack on Titan Eren has trouble performing while everyone else tries to deal with Annie tranforming into a titan. Then on Bleach, Ginjo tries to drop a psychological bomb on Ichigo but Ichigo doesn't care about the sudden reveal. Finally Seras and the Wild Geese protect the home base on Hellsing Ultimate. We also have a boat load of news that we will likely discuss in greater length in our next episode and a sizable amount of listener mail. 00:00 - Intro 02:19 - Attack on Titan Recap 12:33 - Bleach Recap 20:00 - Toonami News 43:08 - Hellsing Ultimate Recap 53:00 - Interview with Johnny Yong Bosch 1:19:10 - Listerner Mail / Sign-Off DISCLAIMER: The views and opinions of the participants of this podcast are not the views of ToonamiFaithful.Com or it’s affiliates, nor are they the views of Toonami, [adult swim], Williams Street, Turner or any other Time Warner property. Remember, we use an AAC feed now, which means you can skip to chapters using controls on your mobile devices and media players! Your hosts this week are Sketch (Editor-In-Chief of ToonamiFaithful.com), Paul Pescrillo (Founder of ToonamiFaithful.com), Jim Nelson (Announcer of the podcast) and Darrell Maddox (Self-Proclaimed Head of the HR for ToonamiFaithful.com)

Tiki Bar TV
Episode 25 - Blue Hawaiian

Tiki Bar TV

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2007 5:38


Johnny Johnny's a little off colour.