Podcast appearances and mentions of Joseph Goodman

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  • 75EPISODES
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Best podcasts about Joseph Goodman

Latest podcast episodes about Joseph Goodman

Fringe Element
Iron Bowl SOTU: Who is closer to the Playoff?

Fringe Element

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2025 30:58


Braden is joined by Joseph Goodman of AL.com to talk Alabama and Auburn football. The Iron Bowl could decide a playoff spot in 2025? What have Hugh Freeze and Kalen Deboer learned from last year? Which team will have the better QB? Are both rosters better this year? Who is closer to the Playoff? Watch the show ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠on YouTube⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. In Nashville? Be sure to check out ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠M.L. Rose Craft Beer and Burgers.⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Music by The Wild Feathers

Weird Games and Weirder People
68 Joseph Goodman

Weird Games and Weirder People

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2024 121:55


Joseph Goodman runs Goodman Games. He has written a number of RPG titles, including DCC RPG, DragonMech, and many dungeon crawl adventures. His best work, though, is mentoring the amazing group of creators who have come to publish their work through Goodman Games. Joseph is also well known within the DCC RPG community as the Dark Lord, but in a very dear way. I had the pleasure to work with Goodman Games a few times, but I've always been an admirer of not only their work with games, but especially in the way they ciultivate creativity and community. In this chat we talk about many great topics, including game design, doing business as a game, creativity, nature as inspiration, the famous Appendix N, and parenthood. This was a fantastic chat, Joseph is always very generous with his wisdom so I recommend you listen to this one closely! So, listen up, and get weird with us! Check out Jospeh's links! https://goodman-games.com Thank you for listening to Weird Games & Weirder People! Please subscribe to the show to keep up with new episodes! If you would like to support the show, leave a review and/or head to our ko-fi page and pay us a coffee! It will help keep the podcast going! It will really help us!  ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://ko-fi.com/wgnwp⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ You can also support me buy buying one of my games! Kosmosaurs just got released in print, and it is my new RPG inspired by Saturday morning cartoons about Space Dinosaur Rangers defending the galaxy from evildoers!   Get your copy right here: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠bit.ly/kosmosaurs⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠  Get other games of mine on Exalted Funeral: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.exaltedfuneral.com/search?q=Diogo+nogueira⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Or buy anything at DriveThruRPG using this link: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.drivethrurpg.com/?affiliate_id=338514⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Or buy something from my itch store: ⁠⁠⁠⁠https://diogo-old-skull.itch.io⁠⁠⁠⁠ SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER! This is super new and I am trying a new thing! I share offers, news, behind the scenes, articles, curiosities, and rants about being me! Fun, right? RIGHT!? Check out our latest post:⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ https://diogonogueira.substack.com/⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Stuff mentioned in the Episode: Dinosaur Planet: https://goodman-games.com/store/product/dinosaur-planet-broncosaurus-rex/ DragonMech: https://goodman-games.com/store/product/dragonmech-pdf/ Appendix N: https://goodman-games.com/blog/2018/03/26/what-is-appendix-n/ Watch Life in Color with David Attenborough: https://www.netflix.com/title/81036559 50 Fantastic Functions for the D50: https://goodman-games.com/store/product/50-fantastic-functions-for-the-d50-pdf/ Howard Andrew Jones: https://www.howardandrewjones.com Harold Lamb: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harold_Lamb Algernon Blackwood: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Algernon_Blackwood Carcassonne: https://www.zmangames.com/en/products/carcassonne/ Puerto Rico: https://www.riograndegames.com/games/puerto-rico/ California Extreme: https://caextreme.org

Bald Faced Truth with John Canzano
BFT Interview: Joseph Goodman Jr.

Bald Faced Truth with John Canzano

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2024 26:58


John Canzano talks to Joseph Goodman Jr., lead columnist at AL.com, about Kalen DeBoer's early days taking over for Nick Saban at Alabama, if Saban will have any role or influence on the program, and his book "We Want Bama." Subscribe for great content.

Bald Faced Truth with John Canzano
BFT Show: Maury Brown, Joseph Goodman, Jr.

Bald Faced Truth with John Canzano

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2024 135:05


John Canzano returns to the conversation around Damian Lillard's return to Portland and why it comes with conflicting feelings in Rip City. Maury Brown of Forbes stops by with his MLB to PDX thoughts after the news earlier in the week of the group planning to make an offer to purchase the 164-acre property at RedTail Golf Course. Canzano also talks Alabama football with Joseph Goodman Jr., and gives his thoughts on the Seahawks hiring of Mike Macdonald as head coach. Subscribe for great content.

Mad Dungeon
MD 241 Season Two #Dungeon23 Finale (Part 2) w/ Marc Miller, Shanna Germain, Chris Lindsay, Sean K. Reynolds

Mad Dungeon

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2023 55:03


For part two of our grand season 2 mega dungeon finale, this week we talk with:Marc Miller, legendary creator behind Game Designers' Workshop (GDW), Traveller and owner of Far Future Enterprises.Shanna Germain, award-winning author, editor, game designer and co-founder of Monte Cook Games.  We talk The Magnus Archives and her next novel. Follow Shanna: Website - Patreon - Instagram - Twitter - FacebookChris Lindsay, product Marketing Manager at Wizards of the Coast, head Dungeon Master for the D&D Adventurers League, D&D in a Castle and The Deck of Many Things (2023). Follow Chris: InstagramSean K. Reynolds, designer/developer at Monte Cook Games. It's Only Magic. Follow Sean: Instagram - Twitter - Patreon—The Mad Dungeon season 2 #dungeon23 Mega Dungeon is complete! Wizard Tower of Love w/ Monte Cook.The Gas Top w/ Mike Mason.Grand Master Lucille's Skip-Kick w/ Skip Williams.Flying Crimson Chaos Beaver w/ Jeff Richard.Col. Cybercop w/ Joseph Goodman.Laser Sword Assembly w/ Marc Miller.Skedaddle: The Mice Prison Rodeo w/ Shanna Germain.Anfernee, Dealer of Anthropomorphic Antiquities w/ Chris Lindsay.Yorin, Broomstick Custodian w/ Sean K. Reynolds.—ANNOUNCEMENTSDungeon Cats pre-launch page is now live on the Epic Level's Kickstarter! JOIN OUR MAILING LIST by clicking the newsletter button on epiclevelsrapgods.comNew Erol Otus poster adventure map at Exalted Funeral.—Epic Levels Mad Dungeon podcast, where Epic Levels and a guest create a playable dungeon room using improv, comedy, and lifetimes wasted on roleplaying games.Patreon & website HEREMad Dungeon is hosted by Andrew Bellury, Steve Albertson, and produced by Zach Cowan.Theme song by Epic Levels. Beat by Inner Resting.© 2024 Epic Levels. All characters in this adventure–even those based on real people–are entirely fictional.

Mad Dungeon
MD 240 Season Two #Dungeon23 Finale (Part 1) w/ Monte Cook, Mike Mason, Skip Williams, Jeff Richard, Joseph Goodman

Mad Dungeon

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2023 64:35


For part one of our grand season 2 mega dungeon finale, this week we talk with:Monte Cook of Monte Cook Games talks about D&D 3E, Numenera, Cypher System, Old Gods of Appalachia RPG and his upcoming The Magnus Archives. Follow Monte Cook: Website - Twitter - Facebook Mike Mason of Chaosium  talks Call of Cthulhu, Alone Against the Static, Arkham Unveiled, the upcoming/updated Cthulhu By Gaslight and his podcast Eldritch Stories. Follow Chaosium: Website - Instagram - Twitter - YouTube - Facebook Skip Williams "The Sage" talks D&D 3E,  Dragon Magazine, Gary Con & Founders and Legends  for D&D's 50th anniversary. Find Skip on Facebook and at Gary Con: Co-Event Manager & Honored GuestJeff Richard, creative director of Chaosium talks Call of Cthulhu, Pendragon, and upcoming RuneQuest projects: Cults of RuneQuest: The Lunar Way, the Solar cult book and more. Follow Jeff on Facebook.Joseph Goodman of Goodman Games talks Dungeon Crawl Classic, Grimtooth, Adventures on the Purple Planet and Appendix N. Follow Goodman Games: Website - Instagram - Twitter - YouTube - Facebook—The season finale super room will be revealed next week along with the final mega-dungeon that we spent a year creating with all our friends!—Dungeon Cats  pre-launch page is now live on the Epic Level's Kickstarter!JOIN OUR MAILING LIST by clicking the newsletter button on epiclevelsrapgods.comNew poster adventure maps are now available for purchase at Exalted Funeral.—You can support us via Patreon.Mad Dungeon is hosted by Andrew Bellury, Steve Albertson, and produced by Zach Cowan.Theme song by Epic Levels and beat by Inner Resting.© 2023 Epic Levels. All characters in this adventure–even those based on real people–are entirely fictional.

Weird Games and Weirder People
24 Jen Brinkman

Weird Games and Weirder People

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2023 139:49


Jen Brinkman is the Operations Manager of Goodman Games, but she is also so much more than that. Host of the award-winning Spellburn podcast, co-creator of the Sanctum-Securum podcast and the legendary Brinkmanicon, the spiritual mother of the DCC RPG community, Jen is an inspiration to us all. I met Jen in 2014 when I went to Gen Con for the first time and I was immediately welcomed by the DCC RPG community. The kindness and warmth from the community and especially from her was remarkable. And it's like this for everyone. The Order of Sheena is there to prover that, and Jen talks a bit about this on the episode. We also talk about her journey in the RPG space, how she doesn't see herself as weird (but I think I convinced her), how she drinks quite a bit of coffee, how balance is so important in life, how we need to remind ourselves from time to time why we do all this... We also talked about a lot of RPG related stuff, like the Indie RPG Summit that will happen in January and how she will be a speaker. We talked about the people in the community that inspires us, the people we learned from, GEN CON, and so much more. We had a great time and we left the conversation with a lot to think about and I hope you all do too! So listen up and let's get weird with Jen Brinkman! Check out Jen's links! Spellburn: https://spellburn.net/ Sanctum Secorum: http://sanctum.media/blog/ Indie RPG Creator Summit Thank you for listening! Please subscribe to the show to keep up with new episodes!  If you would like to support the show, leave a reviewand/or head to our ko-fi page and pay us a coffee! It will help keep the podcast going! It would really help!  ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://ko-fi.com/wgnwp⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ You can also support me buy buying one of my games! Kosmosaurs just got released in print, and it is my new RPG inspired by Saturday morning cartoons about Space Dinosaur Rangers defending the galaxy from evildoers!   Get your copy right here: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠bit.ly/kosmosaurs⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠ Join our Discord Server: https://discord.gg/Sa5BTrWR (this link is only valid for 7 days from the day the episode is released - always look for a new link in the newest episode). Stuff mentioned in the Episode: Goodman Games: https://goodman-games.com/ Michael Moorcock: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Moorcock Harley Stroh: https://goodman-games.com/store/product-category/harley-stroh/ Gary Con: https://garycon.com/ Brendan LaSalle: https://goodman-games.com/store/product-category/brendan-lasalle/ Joseph Goodman: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Goodman_(game_designer) Joey Royale's Pizza Party: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLjotbAxDry2Isz0_7S2o5Qs4f3_Qrial_

Being Roman with Mary Beard
3: Rome's Got Talent

Being Roman with Mary Beard

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2023 28:00


Imagine the feeling in the pit of your stomach as you take to the stage in front of 7000 people to recite a complex poem you've just made up on the spot. 11 year old Sulpicius Maximus knows that the Emperor is in the front row and his parents are counting on his success in Rome's premier festival of the arts.Mary Beard tracks down the clues behind an extraordinary story of Roman life, revealing the reality of Roman childhood and the desperate attempts of the poet's parents to escape the shadow of their slave roots and rise through the ranks of Roman society.Producer: Alasdair CrossExpert Contributors: Valentina Garulli, Bologna University and Kathleen Coleman, Harvard UniversityPoetry Translation: Barbara Graziosi Cast: Sulpicius played by Joseph Goodman and oration read by Tyler CameronSpecial thanks to Barbara Nobiloni at the Centrale Montemartini Museum, Rome

That SEC Football Podcast
Joseph Goodman AL.com lead Columnist In Studio

That SEC Football Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2023 33:03


SEC Mike Bratton (@MichaelWBratton) is joined by Joseph Goodman (@JoeGoodmanJr) the senior columnist for AL.com from RCA Studio in downtown Nashville!Discussing Alabama freezing him out during an Alabama-Auburn press conference (2:30), walking a tightrope of being a columnist in the most college sports-obsessed state in the country (4:30), the shifting landscape of some media shifting towards working for the teams they cover (6:00), favorite memories covering the Iron Bowl (8:30), thoughts on Auburn hiring Hugh Freeze? (14:45), what is Nick Saban going to complain about next? (16:30), discussion on the new SEC schedule (18:00), how angry is Nick Saban that Georgia is currently the dominant program in the country? (21:00), how NIL is changing college football (26:00), Texas and Oklahoma joining the SEC, how does that affect the SEC and college football (30:00)Advertising inquiries: thatsecpodcast@gmail.comAll show music comes via Nashville band Crimson Calamity; check out their work by clicking the link below: https://open.spotify.com/artist/29HGeJEcYHBJlyt4xIcLBw?si=GJoEOr0YSoeqWkrjhCc0UgDonate to cousin Shane's beer fund via CashApp: $thatSECpodcastWe have t-shirts for sale! Check out our merchandise store featuring shirts, hoodies, stickers, coffee mugs, pillows, phone cases and more:https://www.teepublic.com/stores/thatsecpodcast?ref_id=19055

That SEC Football Podcast
Joseph Goodman AL.com lead Columnist In Studio Interview

That SEC Football Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2023 35:48


SEC Mike Bratton (@MichaelWBratton) is joined by Joseph Goodman (@JoeGoodmanJr) the senior columnist for AL.com from RCA Studio in downtown Nashville! Discussing Alabama freezing him out during an Alabama-Auburn press conference (2:30), walking a tightrope of being a columnist in the most college sports-obsessed state in the country (4:30), the shifting landscape of some media shifting towards working for the teams they cover (6:00), favorite memories covering the Iron Bowl (8:30), thoughts on Auburn hiring Hugh Freeze? (14:45), what is Nick Saban going to complain about next? (16:30), discussion on the new SEC schedule (18:00), how angry is Nick Saban that Georgia is currently the dominant program in the country? (21:00), how NIL is changing college football (26:00), Texas and Oklahoma joining the SEC, how does that affect the SEC and college football (30:00) Advertising inquiries: thatsecpodcast@gmail.com All show music comes via Nashville band Crimson Calamity; check out their work by clicking the link below:  https://open.spotify.com/artist/29HGeJEcYHBJlyt4xIcLBw?si=GJoEOr0YSoeqWkrjhCc0Ug Donate to cousin Shane's beer fund via CashApp: $thatSECpodcast We have t-shirts for sale! Check out our merchandise store featuring shirts, hoodies, stickers, coffee mugs, pillows, phone cases and more: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/thatsecpodcast?ref_id=19055 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Slate Culture
Hang Up: Scandal in Alabama

Slate Culture

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2023 87:04


Stefan Fatsis and Josh Levin are joined by Joseph Goodman of AL.com to talk about the murder roiling the Alabama basketball program. They're also joined by Jeremy Woo to discuss his Sports Illustrated cover story on French basketball phenom Victor Wembanyama. Finally, CNBC's Alex Sherman comes on for a conversation about the death of regional sports networks.   Alabama (5:08): Why is star freshman Brandon Miller still playing?   Wembanyama (27:42): Inside the media rollout of the next NBA superstar.   RSNs (48:41): Is the sports TV business model dead?   Afterball (1:11:59): Stefan on a century of complaints about slow baseball games. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Hang Up and Listen
Scandal in Alabama

Hang Up and Listen

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2023 87:04


Stefan Fatsis and Josh Levin are joined by Joseph Goodman of AL.com to talk about the murder roiling the Alabama basketball program. They're also joined by Jeremy Woo to discuss his Sports Illustrated cover story on French basketball phenom Victor Wembanyama. Finally, CNBC's Alex Sherman comes on for a conversation about the death of regional sports networks.   Alabama (5:08): Why is star freshman Brandon Miller still playing?   Wembanyama (27:42): Inside the media rollout of the next NBA superstar.   RSNs (48:41): Is the sports TV business model dead?   Afterball (1:11:59): Stefan on a century of complaints about slow baseball games. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Slate Daily Feed
Hang Up: Scandal in Alabama

Slate Daily Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2023 87:04


Stefan Fatsis and Josh Levin are joined by Joseph Goodman of AL.com to talk about the murder roiling the Alabama basketball program. They're also joined by Jeremy Woo to discuss his Sports Illustrated cover story on French basketball phenom Victor Wembanyama. Finally, CNBC's Alex Sherman comes on for a conversation about the death of regional sports networks.   Alabama (5:08): Why is star freshman Brandon Miller still playing?   Wembanyama (27:42): Inside the media rollout of the next NBA superstar.   RSNs (48:41): Is the sports TV business model dead?   Afterball (1:11:59): Stefan on a century of complaints about slow baseball games. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

That SEC Football Podcast
Barry Odom leaves Arkansas + Joseph Goodman joins to discuss Hugh Freeze's hire at Auburn, why Alabama's struggles this season are on Nick Saban & why Cadillac Williams deserved the head coaching job

That SEC Football Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2022 28:50


SEC Mike Bratton (@MichaelWBratton) is joined by AL.com senior columnist Joseph Goodman (@JoeGoodmanJr)Barry Odom leaves Arkansas to be new UNLV head coach (1:00), Dan Mullen says he will not be the next OC at South Carolina (3:30), transfer portal update (5:00), AL.com senior columnist Joseph Goodman joins the show! (8:00), why shadowing Cadillac Williams was one of the highlights of his career (11:00), did Auburn hire a changed man in Hugh Freeze? (14:00), why Alabama's issues this season are on Nick Saban's shoulders (22:00)Link to buy Goodman's book: "We Want Bama"Advertising inquiries: thatsecpodcast@gmail.comPlease help support the show by taking advantage of our sponsor's offers:GameTime SIDEKICKS: 15% off officially licensed NCAA team gear with promo: heybuddy GameTime SIDEKICKS Link: www.gametimesidekicks.com PRIZE PICKS - Daily Fantasy Sports (Matching initial deposit up to $100 with promo code: SECPRIZE PICKS Link https://app.prizepicks.com/sign-up?invite_code=SECAll show music comes via Nashville band Crimson Calamity; check out their work by clicking the link below: https://open.spotify.com/artist/29HGeJEcYHBJlyt4xIcLBw?si=GJoEOr0YSoeqWkrjhCc0UgDonate to cousin Shane's beer fund via CashApp: $thatSECpodcastWe have t-shirts for sale! Check out our merchandise store featuring shirts, hoodies, stickers, coffee mugs, pillows, phone cases and more:https://www.teepublic.com/stores/thatsecpodcast?ref_id=19055

That SEC Football Podcast
Barry Odom leaves Arkansas + Joseph Goodman joins to discuss Hugh Freeze's hire at Auburn, why Alabama's struggles this season are on Nick Saban & why Cadillac Williams deserved the head coaching job

That SEC Football Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2022 30:35


SEC Mike Bratton (@MichaelWBratton) is joined by AL.com senior columnist Joseph Goodman (@JoeGoodmanJr) Barry Odom leaves Arkansas to be new UNLV head coach (1:00), Dan Mullen says he will not be the next OC at South Carolina (3:30), transfer portal update (5:00), AL.com senior columnist Joseph Goodman joins the show! (8:00), why shadowing Cadillac Williams was one of the highlights of his career (11:00), did Auburn hire a changed man in Hugh Freeze? (14:00), why Alabama's issues this season are on Nick Saban's shoulders (22:00) Link to buy Goodman's book: "We Want Bama" Advertising inquiries: thatsecpodcast@gmail.com Please help support the show by taking advantage of our sponsor's offers: GameTime SIDEKICKS: 15% off officially licensed NCAA team gear with promo: heybuddy  GameTime SIDEKICKS Link: www.gametimesidekicks.com  PRIZE PICKS - Daily Fantasy Sports (Matching initial deposit up to $100 with promo code: SEC PRIZE PICKS Link https://app.prizepicks.com/sign-up?invite_code=SEC All show music comes via Nashville band Crimson Calamity; check out their work by clicking the link below:  https://open.spotify.com/artist/29HGeJEcYHBJlyt4xIcLBw?si=GJoEOr0YSoeqWkrjhCc0Ug Donate to cousin Shane's beer fund via CashApp: $thatSECpodcast We have t-shirts for sale! Check out our merchandise store featuring shirts, hoodies, stickers, coffee mugs, pillows, phone cases and more: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/thatsecpodcast?ref_id=19055 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Sports Radio 105.5 WNSP
The Game Plan HR 1 11.22.22 - Lane Kiffin, Joseph Goodman (AL.com) on Iron Bowl

Sports Radio 105.5 WNSP

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2022 41:30


Catch up on hour one of a Tuesday afternoon Game Plan. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/wnsp/support

Fringe Element
Megacast: Top 10 games, Auburn drama with Seth Emerson and Joseph Goodman

Fringe Element

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2022 106:10


Erin Dugan and Braden Gall talk SEC football, brought to you by JE Dunn The Secret SEC deep state! Tennessee's amazing journey Why Kirby Smart LOVED the first rankings Why should Bama be ahead of TCU? Two key match-ups for Tennessee-Georgia The Seth Emerson from TheAthletic.com joins us to preview the Tennessee-Georgia game (26:00). Why did Auburn finally make this move now? Stealing an Athletic Director the week of the game? Who should Auburn be targeting at head coach? Why Lane Kiffin won't take the job? Could Hugh Freeze actually work? Joseph Goodman from AL.com joins to talk about Bryan Harsin's tenure, why it didn't work and where Auburn goes from here. (1:00:00) What about that tiny game in Baton Rouge? Alabama can be beaten but can LSU do it? Ole Miss is pretty damn good. Texas A&M found a QB Kentucky, Mizzou, South Carolina, Arkansas Want a fulfilling career working for a company that cares as much about your success as you do? Visit JEDunn.com and start your new journey. Subscribe to the 440 YouTube page.

Open Mike
Alabama Sports Writer Joseph Goodman Says Nick Saban is Trying to Turn College Football Into the Pros

Open Mike

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2022 11:17


Alabama Sports Writer Joseph Goodman stops by the show to discuss Nick Saban's sentiments that the current state of NIL is bad for college football.

Nomberg Law Live
NOMBERG LAW LIVE: Joseph Goodman - Storyboard, Schedule and Seclusion.

Nomberg Law Live

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2022 38:51


Things that are important in the South … Family. Faith. Football. Sometime not always in in that order. As a lifelong Alabamian, journalist Joseph Goodman gets it. He recently penned a book that will make you think Family, Faith and Football. Goodman's first published book, We Want ‘Bama: A Season of Hope and the Making of Nick Saban's “Ultimate Team” entertains and educates. Join us as we look into Bama's 2020 national title season with cultural and societal history lessons along the way. Fascinating read. Great conversation! #NombergLawLive #JosephGoodman #WeWantBama #CrimsonTide #NickSaban #Pandemic #History #Alabama #NombergLawFirm Lawyers Representing the Injured Men and Women of Alabama Since 1967. If you have any questions or concerns about this issue or other issues on the law, please call the Nomberg Law Firm at 205-930-6900. Our website is www.NombergLaw.com. Follow us on Twitter https://bit.ly/3gObVwS or like us on Facebook https://bit.ly/322csqy. Alabama State Bar, Rules of Professional conduct, Rule 7.2 (e), requires the following language in all attorney communications: No representation is made that the quality of the legal services to be performed is greater than the quality of legal services performed by other lawyers. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/nomberg-law-firm/message

Sports Radio 105.5 WNSP
The Opening Kickoff 2.11.22 HR.3 - Auburn, Harsin, High School Sports

Sports Radio 105.5 WNSP

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2022 40:02


Mark Heim and Lee Shirvanian talk Auburn and Bryan Harsin with Joseph Goodman and local high school hoops with Murphy coach Andre Epps! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/wnsp/support

Two Writers Slinging Yang
Joseph Goodman: AL.com sports columnist, author of "We Want Bama: A Season of Hope and the Making of Nick Saban's 'Ultimate Team'"

Two Writers Slinging Yang

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2022 43:54


On locking himself in a cabin, living off of noodles and energy drinks while writing 8,000 words per day; on embracing the unique joy of shitty Amazon reviews; on why Urban Meyer is the world's biggest douche.

Inside OU
The Joseph Goodman Jr. Interview!

Inside OU

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2021 52:40


Through the Keyhole is joined by Joseph Goodman Jr. to discuss his AL.com article highlighting Brent Venables "shot" at Auburn during his introductory press conference. Follow Joseph on Twitter @joegoodmanjr and check out his book We Want Bama: A season of hope and the making of Nick Saban's 'ultimate team' Go check out our sponsor Anytime Fitness Uptown OKC on Facebook! www.facebook.com/anytimefitnessuptownokc If you want more OU content (written posts, more podcasts and film reviews with Kegan) check out our Patreon page! www.patreon.com/throughthekeyhole Don't forget to follow us on social media! Facebook: www.facebook.com/KeyholePod Twitter: www.twitter.com/KeyholePod

Climate Correction Podcast
Invest in the Future of Climate Change - Chris Tullar_Joseph Goodman_VoLo Earth

Climate Correction Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2021 26:59


Sports Radio 105.5 WNSP
The Opening Kickoff 11/15/21

Sports Radio 105.5 WNSP

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2021 116:11


Monday Morning Disappointment. Feat. Kane Wommack, Andrew Spivey, Rodney Orr, Joseph Goodman, Jack French and Mike Hoss --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/wnsp/support

Saturday Down South Podcast
Week 11 SEC Preview, Joseph Goodman on Auburn & Bama, SEC Hoops w/ Adam Spencer (ep. 422)

Saturday Down South Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2021 119:43


Week 11 is here and the guys have a full preview of that, as well as some reactions to the second Playoff rankings. AL.com's Joseph Goodman joined the show to talk about his new book "We Want Bama" as well as all things Saban and Auburn. Plus, SDS hoops expert Adam Spencer joined the show to answer SEC basketball questions.

Sports Radio 105.5 WNSP
The Game Plan 11.11.21

Sports Radio 105.5 WNSP

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2021 117:28


Dave Schultz and Stephen Root talk to Joseph Goodman about his new book on the 2020 Alabama football team, Kevin Payne gives Fantasy Football advice, Brice Marhshall gives his picks, Matt Hayes talks Gators and Jaguars then it's the Tide and Tiger Report with Mike Rodak talking Tide and Mark Murphy talking Auburn! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/wnsp/support

I'd Rather Be Reading
Joseph Goodman on Nick Saban and the Alabama Football Dynasty

I'd Rather Be Reading

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2021 17:31


To kickstart season three, Rachel would rather be reading about Alabama football. It is football season, after all! We Want Bama: A Season of Hope and the Making of Nick Saban's Ultimate Team by Joseph Goodman

Locked On SEC Football
AL.com's Joseph Goodman Talks SEC & His New Book 'We Want Bama', Around The Conference Tidbits

Locked On SEC Football

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2021 32:32


On today's show, Joseph Goodman from AL.com joins us to talk about his new book, “We Want Bama”, and we get his thoughts on some of the other teams around the SEC. Also, we see who he thinks LSU should hire as its next head coach.And we go Around The Conference and catch you up to date on the latest across the SEC. Follow Chris on Twitter @ChrisGordy and @LockedOnSECSupport Us By Supporting Our Sponsors!Built BarBuilt Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKED15,” and you'll get 15% off your next order.BetOnline AGThere is only 1 place that has you covered and 1 place we trust. Betonline.ag! Sign up today for a free account at betonline.ag and use that promocode: LOCKEDON for your 50% welcome bonus.PrizePicksDon't hesitate, check out PrizePicks.com and use promo code: “LOCKEDON” or go to your app store and download the app today. PrizePicks is daily fantasy made easy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Locked On SEC Football
AL.com's Joseph Goodman Talks SEC & His New Book 'We Want Bama', Around The Conference Tidbits

Locked On SEC Football

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2021 36:16


On today's show, Joseph Goodman from AL.com joins us to talk about his new book, “We Want Bama”, and we get his thoughts on some of the other teams around the SEC. Also, we see who he thinks LSU should hire as its next head coach. And we go Around The Conference and catch you up to date on the latest across the SEC.  Follow Chris on Twitter @ChrisGordy and @LockedOnSEC Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors! Built Bar Built Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKED15,” and you'll get 15% off your next order. BetOnline AG There is only 1 place that has you covered and 1 place we trust. Betonline.ag! Sign up today for a free account at betonline.ag and use that promocode: LOCKEDON for your 50% welcome bonus. PrizePicks Don't hesitate, check out PrizePicks.com and use promo code: “LOCKEDON” or go to your app store and download the app today. PrizePicks is daily fantasy made easy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Lamestream Sports
Joe Goodman wants Bama and Nashville TV ratings

Lamestream Sports

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2021 54:17


NashvilleBanner.com Steve Cavendish and Braden Gall talk Nashville sports, media and business. Our guest today is AL.com Joseph Goodman. His new book "We Want Bama" is out Nov. 9. Writing in small town papers in Alabama Making a move to Florida to cover NBA, Gators Heat fans, Florida fans, high school fans Why the '20 Bama team so important to write about? Writing a book WHILE also being a full-time columnist Being scared of failure, learning work ethic The goal of writing the book - more than a story about a football team Why he loves the state of Alabama? What did leaving Alabama for a decade teach him about Alabama? What is Bryan Harsin trying to accomplish? How does this impact recruiting? Trying to bridge a gap to the audience The guys talk NFL and college football TV ratings in Nashville: Bama-Tennessee scores big numbers Different things Nashville cares about Great news for Vols administrators How Titans-Jets beat Titans-Chiefs Best college game compared to worst Titans games? Lamestream Sports is BTYB Jasper's on West End.

Sports Radio 105.5 WNSP
The Game Plan 8.23.21

Sports Radio 105.5 WNSP

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2021 120:50


Dave Schultz and Stephen Root preview the Saints on Monday Night Football with John Hendrix, talks South Alabama and high school football with Simone Eli, Joseph Goodman talk about how Auburn and the SEC is going about getting vaccinated, Zac Blackerby talks all things Auburn and Nick Kelly talks Alabama! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/wnsp/support

Outbreak Alabama: Stories from a Pandemic
Proof of Vaccination for College Football?

Outbreak Alabama: Stories from a Pandemic

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2021 14:30


AL.com sports columnist Joseph Goodman on why he wants to see proof of vaccination or negative COVID tests required at football games this fall, why football has to take a backseat to slowing the spread and why SEC schools must play a role in it. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

The Paul Finebaum Show
Hour 4: Joseph Goodman

The Paul Finebaum Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2021 36:40


Paul is joined by Joseph Goodman, columnist for AL.com, who wrote, what some people deem, a controversial article regarding COVID-19 & the upcoming College Football season. Paul takes on callers as well.

The Paul Finebaum Show
Hour 4: Roman Harper, Brent Zwerneman, Joseph Goodman & John Talty

The Paul Finebaum Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2021 32:21


Paul is LIVE at SEC media day. It's Day 3, and Paul has a host of guests on to react to the news that Texas and Oklahoma could be joining the SEC. Paul talks with the man who broke the story, Houston Chronicle's Brent Zwerneman, about what could happen next. SEC Network's Roman Harper and AL.com's Joseph Goodman and John Talty also join the show.

The Paul Finebaum Show
Hour 4: Joseph Goodman

The Paul Finebaum Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2021 36:14


Peter Burns, filling in for Paul, talks with AL.com's Joseph Goodman about Alabama football. Cam the producer, with the help of Peter and the Finebaum callers, decides on a CFB team to adopt and root for.

The Paul Finebaum Show
Hour 4: Joseph Goodman

The Paul Finebaum Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2021 37:30


Paul is joined by Joseph Goodman of AL.com to talk about NIL and how it impacts college sports. Paul also talks to callers before the holiday weekend.

Mix 102.9 Podcasts
WKXX Live: Joseph Goodman, AL.com

Mix 102.9 Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2021 11:47


Mix 102.9 Podcasts
WKXX Live: Joseph Goodman, AL.com

Mix 102.9 Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2021 11:47


The Paul Finebaum Show
Hour 4: Joseph Goodman

The Paul Finebaum Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2021 37:36


AL.com's Joseph Goodman, joins the show to talk about how he thinks that the CFP expansion will be nothing but beneficial for College Football. He thinks that it'll help bring the sport more out west as well as keep recruits in the states where they live.

PRISM
From BECOS to Psychedelics, Here comes a wild future with James Wallman

PRISM

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2021 74:23


Dan Harden deliberates with futurist and Stuffocation Author James Wallman on what matters most in design today. They dissect a range of issues, from how the pandemic pushed us into an experience economy to how we can design more meaningful experience-driven innovations that value time above materialism. Episode TranscriptDan Harden 0:06Hello, and welcome to PRISM. PRISM is a design-oriented podcast hosted by me Dan Harden, like a glass prism that reveals the color hidden inside white light, this podcast will reveal the inside story behind innovation, especially the people that make it happen. My aim is to uncover each guest's unique point of view, their insights, their methods or their own secret motivator, perhaps, that fuels their creative genius.Dan Harden 0:34Today, I'm talking with James Wallman. It's such a pleasure to have you, thank you so much. You are a best-selling author, entrepreneur, futurist, keynote speaker and government advisor. That's interesting. I'd like to hear about that. I'm gonna say government, right?James Wallman 0:49Yeah, I'm also a dog walker.Dan Harden 0:50You're a dog walker! Why is this not the first thing on your bio?James Wallman 0:55It didn't used to be my thing. But you know, and also pick up dog poo therefore. But as you know, I gave a talk yesterday. And you know, when someone introduces you, and you always hear these kind of list of things that you've done, and you always think, oh, wow, listen to that. That sounds good. And then you kind of have, especially, you know, since we've entered the kind of zoom world of working from home, you know, during this COVID time, you think, Well, actually, I'm at home, and we're all at home during our days, trying to get through this thing.Dan Harden 1:23It's so good to bring it down to a human level. Isn't that?James Wallman 1:26Yeah, yeah, that's why. But I do do those other things as well. That's true.Dan Harden 1:30Okay. You have done some significant things, that's why we wanted you on this program. You've also written two best selling books about the experience economy,James Wallman 1:39YesDan Harden 1:40Stuffocation, which I read, when I met you; and Time And How To Spend It, which the Financial Times named one of the must read books of 2019. You also run this strategy, innovation and futures consultancy, The Future is Here. It'll be interesting talk about that. And your opinions have appeared in so many different places, New York Times, Financial Times, The Economist, Wired etc. And let's see what else here. You advise the British government and your role as sector specialists for the experience economy. There's a lot of interesting stuff to unpack here with you.Dan Harden 2:18And the reason I invited you is the things that you think about are things that I think industrial designers like me and the people that will be listening to this should hear about, you know, it's like, why are we designing? What is the context of our work? What is the definition of prosperity? You know, ever since the founding of industrial design, over 100 years ago, its primary business objective has been to sell more product, because the corporate rationale was that if you made your products better looking back, then they would be more marketable. And they were, you know, those early industrial designers, they proved that, and their design help to catapult these companies like General Electric, and John Deere, and IBM, and all these amazing companies that they, you know, became. But since then, design has certainly evolved into a much more sophisticated and multi dimensional professional that considers not only product appearance, but the entire user experience. Where we're really just trying to optimize, you know, starting with the initial brand exposure all the way to product disposal. So nowadays, almost every aspect of the product is researched and tailor made for a desired market effect.Dan Harden 3:39But one key and I'm coming to your major question here, one key factor remains the same. The core purpose of especially industrial design is to sell more product and fuel prosperity. Specifically, its purpose is to fuel prosperity as defined by our capitalist model, which means making more money. And it's all about profit, cost reduction, shareholder value, and going in number one, right? But what about what about people? You know, what if? What about experience design? And how can we evolve this model of prosperity to be more of a humanistic nature? What about wellbeing? What about happiness? What about the things that you write in your book? What are your opinions about this? And then even, maybe, maybe insert some of your more recent thoughts because I think in regards to what we now consider prosperity, I think after the pandemic, maybe we would all question, What does prosperity mean to me? What do you think about these things?Dan Harden 4:48I think a lot about these things. I think that is an incredible, an incredibly good, rich question. I feel like I feel like you set me up here to kind of, I could riff from what you've just said for probably three to four hours.Dan Harden 5:03I love it.James Wallman 5:06Nobody wants to listen for that long and that's, that's fair. But it's such a it's such a rich point that you've been I've been thinking about. In fact, I was really looking at. I don't know here, you're probably a fan of the Atlantic.Dan Harden 5:17Of courseJames Wallman 5:18In 1927, you may or may not know this, there was a wonderful essay published by a guy called Earnest Elmo Calkins called Beauty the New Business Tool. Have you come across that is that? Is that like a famous piece that people know about? Because it's such an important, important turning point is exactly what you were talking about there, in terms of what first came out. So actually you can see it in cars as much as anything. So first of all, you have, you know, the Industrial Revolution produces these, Henry Ford produces these cars. And he makes that crazy statement about how once somebody has one of his cars, they should never need to buy another one, I can't remember they've about verbatim quote or something like that. Okay. And that seems to him like a good idea because he keeps selling cars. And then along comes Alfred Sloan, and others like Alfred Sloan, in particular, General Motors, who does something incredibly simple, he sort of changes a few details and some colors. By season, he borrows an idea which originated back with Louis the 14th, actually, in the time of Louis the 14th, in the luxury industry, with the idea of the seasons, which is where we will borrow these ideas from. Right, so you can go way back to Louis the 14th for this, but the people that really got it right. They were of course, the Americans, and you can see this in the car thing.James Wallman 6:35And so in the 1920s, you had this wonderful situation where the problems of making stuff that was good, had sorted now. I mean, of course, we've evolved since then. But you know, there were good toasters, there were washing machines that were cars that worked. But in order to, what you needed to do is to get people to buy more and to keep buying. And there was a debate at the time about whether this was the problem of overproduction, or as it also was seen as under consumption. So this was the real moment.James Wallman 7:05The 1920s was the flex point, the shift from an industrial economy to a consumer economy. And for the first time ever, we saw of rising standards of living, that have been sustained over pretty much a century, which is incredible. And of course, the Americans did it first. And then the Brits, the other countries copied it, because what this led to was this consumer driven materialistic economy where people would buy more stuff than they need. And of course, consumer engineering was both in terms of not changing the the function of the product but is the aesthetic of the product, exactly as you're talking about there in terms of industrial design, or one at one element of it, but also consumer engineering in terms of credit.James Wallman 7:53Well, the thing is, if people don't have money to buy a car, they won't buy a car. But if you loan them the money to buy a car, if you give them credit card, they will go and buy that car, and they will buy these houses, etc. And what that does is it fuels the economy. And what that's led to is an incredible, unprecedented rise in standards of living that humans didn't have till then. It's really easy.James Wallman 8:18You know, lots of these millennials today. Now I'm sounding old, but will really kind of be cross about what's happened, you know, obviously, what's going on the environment is terrible. We have, we have real problems. But they forget that until, from the point of the 1920s, really, that the masses for the first time, got a chance to have really good standards of living.James Wallman 8:39I've given talks where I stood up at the beginning and said, who's had a shower here today? Yeah, and of course, you know, yeah, you have a few people that go, you can see them that maybe this in the UK that go a bit red, but generally everyone laughs and then I say, okay. Imagine, think about Queen Victoria for a moment. Now, you know, geographically the British Empire was the most successful ever. I think you covered about 20 something percent of the world's mass. You could you could go around the world pretty much without leaving. Was it Queen Victoria? Yeah, Queen Victoria. Yeah, without leaving Queen Victoria's land. There's a very wealthy woman and I say to people, what do you think her shower was like? Okay, do you think she had a good shower? Now think about the shower that you used this morning? Who's shower do you think was better now? Now not in terms , of course, she probably had some pretty amazing mosaics, right? In her shower. But think about the ability to choose the water temperature and the water pressure that you had. Chances are, Dan, you had a better shower this morning than Queen Victoria had for the whole of her life.Dan Harden 9:39Is all, everything you just talked about, you know, the rise of consumerism and product and materiality and conveniences. Yes, they make our life. We feel better, perhaps in the moment. Do you think it makes us happier? All this consumption and stuff and materiality and even design? I mean, I think it does. It's so hard for me to like, place myself back in like 1880. Would I be as happy as I am now in 1880? Or how much of what we have done with after the industrial revolution has contributed to my happiness?James Wallman 10:15Yeah. Hey, I'd say it's a brilliant philosophical question. The thing is living that, you know, we go back to Aristotle, for the idea of living the unconsidered life is not worth living, and consideration is design. So whether you're thinking about the design in the design is choices, right? So whether it's the design of a car design of a home design of a life, design of how you spend your time, this is designed design is about choices, I think. So therefore, yeah, there's loads of stuff that's come with materialistic consumerism and the Industrial Revolution, which I think has been terrible for us. But one of the things that's come with it is the ability to have health care, which means that we live longer lives. So we've got a lot of, we've got a lot more time to be miserable in, at which point, we can make some choices. And I think that too many people have got caught up in the bad sides.James Wallman 11:05There's a wonderful book by a guy called, oh, forgive my memory for a moment. But the book is called The High Price of Materialism. And he's at Knox University, it's a brilliant book. And the problem with being materialistic is really bad for your well being. If you think you're going to find happiness in stuff outside of you. And this is one of the problems that came with materialistic consumerism was that we ended up thinking that if you get the girl the guy, the car, we'll say the job right? There was a there was an incredible shift in the 20th century from ideas that were internal, and thinking that happiness was about being honest. And, you know, having integrity to being much more the culture of personality rather than character. So everything is about outside and you'll find happiness outside of you. And that is, has been really negative. So and that's when my work comes in.James Wallman 12:01I refer to Earnest Elmo Calkins piece, partly because I think that in the same way that that essay of his, Beauty is the New Design Tool, I want to write a piece of the Atlantic called Experience, the New Design Tool, The New Business Tool, forgive me. Because I think that we're at a point today where products are good, services are good. If you go with the concepts in the book, The Experience Economy, about the progression of economic value. Of how we've risen from agrarian to industrial to service, and now to experience economy. All those things that have come before have become commoditized. And the great example for this reason, and this is borrowing from Joe Pine, and Jim Gilmore, who wrote this book is coffee. If you think about the value of coffee beans. They're not worth so much, right? If you think about the service, industrial goods, so you think about buying. You guys have Nescafe?Dan Harden 12:58Yes.James Wallman 12:59Right. Okay. So you know, if you buy Nescafe, you know, instant coffee from your local store, that's I don't know what that costs about $4 or something. But per cup, it's probably like 25 cents a cup. And then you get a coffee, service good in a local cafe, maybe that's where that's going to be like 3, $4 per cup, right? And then you go to Starbucks, when you go to you go to Starbucks, it's probably gonna be what, five $6 for a venti, latte, no real milk, you know, some sort of special thing, you can spend six $7 on a coffer. Or you go to a speciality place and pay even more as well, right. So you can see each level here, what's happened is the previous incarnation of the economy, the the previous thing, in terms of the progression of economic value has less and less value, and it's become commoditized.Dan Harden 13:54SureJames Wallman 13:54And so if, as a designer, if as a business, you want to stand out, if you want to connect with customers, and where customers are seeing value, and you want to move beyond being commoditized. So you can charge a premium to be successful, you need to think about the next level here. So you can't make money from commodities. It's hard to make money from products, it's hard to make money from services, and really where you need to play where you'll make creating the greatest amount of value and therefore putting yourself in a position to capture the most value is through the experience.Dan Harden 14:29Absolutely. I think even what we're doing right now, you know, I have a lot of hardware around me, these commoditized products, they're good ones. But what we're doing now is something far more than that. It's the services and the software. It's enabling us to communicate that we are the way that we are. This is the experience economy happening right now. What we're doing right now.James Wallman 14:51Yeah, I saw this in China actually statistic and it said that something like 93% of people there said that it was a choice between their iPhone or Wechat. They ditched the iPhone.Dan Harden 15:02Yeah. Ironically, there's a parallel drive happening because there's still this insatiable desire to consume amazing design, right? We're seeing this everywhere. design has become commoditized. Yes. But more people appreciate it. More people see it, they want that identity, they want the brand association. But what I'm seeing is this insatiable drive is creating this disposable economy, of course. People are consuming product, the way that they watch TikTok, it's so fast. You know, people will buy something and look at my cool new headphones. And, and yet, it becomes a fad. And they might put it down after a month. And it's, it's, it's gone. They're on to the next thing. So how do we reconcile this dichotomy of Yes, we understand the experience economy one up, but we also want more hardware, there's a lot of want, isn't there in society today?James Wallman 16:05Well that's funny. I mean, again, this comes back to the structure of the design. And I think it was Victor Lablow, who wrote fantastically on this in the 1950s. And at the heart of the consumer project is consumer dissatisfaction. Somebody has to think what they have isn't as good as the next thing that comes along. And I'm not anti that because that's, that's also called progress. And the fact that so many people not just have this insatiable desire to have better things, but that it is available to them that it's possible to them. And this just wasn't possible for our ancestors in the masses. But I'm not going to fully agree with you that this insatiable drive exists for more and more products. And it is about the brands because take these headphones that you can see I'm wearing here, these are their Sony's ones, and I've got them in New York when I was there just before the pandemic, and they are awesome. I did some research. But my brother did some research, he got a pair by it wasn't Sony, it was some other firm. But you know, they're the great noise cancelling headphones, they work, they do a really good job. Of course, what happens here, you know, somebody figures out a way to do this, like Tesla, for example of how to do, you know, electric cars, and it's amazing, and you get that innovator, and then someone else figures out how to do it too. And then it becomes not quite commoditize yet, but that will happen.James Wallman 17:26My work as a trend forecast I've been doing since 2004 is understanding how things change through our societies. And this is data that I may have told you this when we were drunk in Vegas that time. So stop me here if this is too much. But the way this works, and this is based on work originally by a sociologist at the University of Iowa in 1962. And it's something called the Diffusion of Innovations. It was originally the back end of his PhD thesis, but it became this book. And this observes how ideas spread through any community and it works. It works everywhere. It's also people call it the Technology Adoption Curve. Nowadays, I've seen it called that. But it's all borrowed from Everett Rogers, the sociologist to figure this out, it basically works in a way that you've seen. It's it's this smooth S curve of adoption, you get the innovators who try something first, early adopters, early majority, late majority. And then the laggards the ones who you know, the people that still have landline phones.Dan Harden 18:24Right, rightJames Wallman 18:25Actually. Yeah, my mom still has on but not many people have them anymore.Dan Harden 18:29Yeah, you're almost extinct. Yeah, yeah. Right. Or the classic adoption curve, that we're all, especially as designers are all familiar with that. That we try to extend lengthen and elevate that curve. We try to control that curve, that adoption curve. But we're not very good at it. I would argue.James Wallman 18:53When you say control it surely as a designer, the idea is to push it steep as possible to get as many people as buy your product. Yeah, okay, fine. We, you know, you're you're an expert.Dan Harden 19:03For a more timeless experience. And we really seek that. The opposing force, of course, is technology because even those headphones that you're wearing now, as good as they are, and I think you were trying to convince me that that no, I'm that is a good product that is lasting, and I am satisfied, and I'm gonna stick with it. But I'm gonna guess it in a year or something better is gonna come along and you're gonna want that. So the technology is working against that curve. So maybe it's okay to have cyclical adoption curves where you have a wonderful experience with a product and then you have another one after that.James Wallman 19:43Just I know that this is for a podcast, but you can see me on this screen. Can you see how old this iPhone is?Dan Harden 19:50Oh my gosh, you actually have a real button on the bottom.James Wallman 19:54It does what I needed to do. And I also don't have email on my phone. So I make it I don't have email on my phone. I don't have Twitter on my phone, because I've done the research on what you should do in order to be happy. And this is partly this thing about to about this, this move. I'm not talking about it yet. But this move I believe from materialism to experiential ism is to do with the fact that we've reached it. It's not anti materialism, it's more kind of Super. And I mean, super with the Latin term on top of materialism.James Wallman 20:22Now we have enough things. What we should look for. The smart person who's just stopped for a moment. And let's use, Ferris Bueller as the great philosopher. Life knows pretty fast, you should stop and look around him once a while otherwise, you're gonna miss it. What you want out of life is not to die as the person with the most toys in the graveyard.James Wallman 20:46Winning nowadays, I think is changing. You want to get the most out of the existence you have you want to live a long and healthful life. Look at look at the push towards healthiness. I mean, in the old days, you live a certain time you do your job, you get your gold watch, and you'd have a short retirement and die. And that's why all those systems made sense. But now people are living longer. And we're much more conscious of of what life is going to be like when we're in our 70s and 80s in our 90s. Because obviously, there's just been a knock to our life expectancy expectancy because of this pandemic.James Wallman 21:22But I think it's not just about gathering things, but thinking, Okay, I've got this four score years and 10, and hopefully, you know, more kind of thing. But I want to live a healthy, fulfilling life, and I want to have this sense of life satisfaction. And within a consensus, I think a consumer society gives us that opportunity. We're lucky one of the magical things is spare money spent on healthcare.Dan Harden 21:48But how do you retool our description of what gain in one's life means, you know. It just seems like society is on this, this drive to consume all the time. And I agree with you, we don't need all that stuff, you really don't when you think about it. I even have to force myself at the end of the day, you're probably around eight o'clock at night, I just decided I'm not going to look at my phone anymore. I will listen to music, play the guitar, do some art. And I feel this pull. You know, I feel the pull that I really should be in contact or what if I miss this? And I have to just tell myself? No, you don't need to do that. But what if you know, I think there are a lot of people that maybe don't realize that they have these choices, and are we conditioned? Are we conditioned as as people to, to over consume? I think I think we are. And how do we deal with that?James Wallman 22:48That's a superb question. I think we are conditioned to consume. The problem is no one tells us how to stop because that's what the system is based around. And that's the reason for the success of our system. And I think this is why this book Time and How to Spend it has had some resonance and caught on with some people. The FT liked it because one of the things that it looks at is that we've taught to consume, but we're not taught how to spend our time. Everyone want everyone wants to learn the skills of production. But you know, we want to get an MBA, you want to learn how to do social media, you want to learn how to code, but no one wants to learn the skills of consumption of how to manage your time. It's interesting that you have that pulled down as someone who's really successful when you talk about listening to music. I'm guessing you've got a record player, you got record player or no?James Wallman 23:34I do yes. Ah, nice. And the joy, right?Dan Harden 23:38The crackle, the pops. Yeah. Listening to some old albums. You know from when I was 16.James Wallman 23:47My kids just got into the Fresh Prince of Bel Air or my daughter, she's just about to turn 10. And I'm like, you know, I've got a record of that guy's, before he was on the TV. She is like super impressed. Now what we need to do is not just think about the skills of production, but the skills of consumption, the skills of living. A friend of mine, a guy called Brian Hill is at Brigham Young University in I guess it's in Salt Lake City, but it's in Utah. And his is the most popular class. He has, like 700 people come to his class, and he's an experienced design professor. And he takes the learnings from how to design experiences and translate that for people into so this is what you should do with how you spend your time. And I'm nudging him actually, I think he's gonna write a book, which is great news. And that's what I did with Time and How to Spend it.James Wallman 24:40I talked to people much smarter than me at places like BYU and Stanford and MIT and LSE in London and Oxford and Cambridge, in Tokyo. And I took their ideas and I sort of formed it into something simple that people can use to think about how they spend their time. And the same structure, Dan, I'm sure I've pitched this too many times. So forgive me, but can be used for any designer who's designing somebody's time when you think about designing experience. Your design is quite responsibility because you're designing, when you design experience, you're designing somebody's time my first book Stuffocation, looked at how should you spend on how should we spend our money? And the answer was, spend less on stuff, spend more on experiences, it will make you happier. And the follow up was a was a response to the question that people would say to me, this is great James. Spend on experiences. Great. So what kind of experiences should I choose? I didn't know the answer. And the answer, when you think about it is okay these are the experiences you should choose, which is really saying, this is how you should spend your time. And if you think of the currency of the first book, Stuffocation was money, how you spend your money, stuff, or experiences, the currency of experiences, yes, it's money. Yes, if you fly to Vegas for the weekend, if you you know, go to Hawaii, if you I don't know, you know, go to an amazing restaurant, or you go to a theme park or whatever you do with your time. But the most important thing you're spending his time because you can go get more money, you can get a higher paid job and getting other clients. And you can stretch your time a little bit. If you restrict the calories, if you go jogging, if you do weight training, you know, these things will make you live a little bit longer. But you're going to die. And you won't you can't buy another week very much. But you can get more money. So when you think about your experiences, you really ought to make the right decisions. Because I'm borrowing from the American writer Annie Dillard, how we spend our days is, she says, of course, how we spend our days is how we spend our lives. And so from a personal point of view, knowing how to spend your time, if you don't know how to do that you're a full. From a designer's point of view, if you're designing sometyhing to suck time. If you're designing an experience, and that could be EX for employee experience, it could be a product because a product will come with the time you spend with it. It could be the experience at a theme park, it could be the experience in a restaurant, in a in an airport, it could be in a retail store, in a mall, wherever. That's one a hell of a responsibility actually.Dan Harden 24:40You bet.James Wallman 24:40Especially the more successful you are, the more people you reach, the more that your product scales, you have a responsibility to those people, I think. But you have an opportunity, you can help them live a better life. Or you can waste their time and drain it away in a negative way. And then you can wake up the next day thinking I sell cigarettes, or I do something that's good for people.Dan Harden 27:33Do you have advice for designers on on how they can absolutely make sure that they are imbuing these qualities of time in their solution? In other words, should designers build in affordances in a design that make people aware that they are consuming their time on something of value? Or should a product have more of an ambient presence so that you can think more about just the general experience and the product? The thing, the materiality, it's just there. I wrote something called the Disappearing Act of Good Design. Because sometimes, you know, like, well, I'm sitting on an Aeron chair, when I look at the chair, it's a very beautiful thing, right? Well, it's not beautiful. I don't think it's beautiful. But it there's a function.James Wallman 28:27Functionally it's amazing.Dan Harden 28:28Yeah, it is. But when I'm using it, I'm not thinking about it, because it's supporting me, and it's doing its job. But when I step away from it, I look at it, then I start to appreciate it for what it is. But during the consumption, it's ambient. So that's related to my question. So how should designers design in this element of time, in your opinion. Because we all need to be a little bit more consciously aware, especially when I see kids like on video games, now there's something that's design presenting something to them. They're enjoying it, they're engrossed in it. But how does that apply to more everyday consumer products?James Wallman 29:14Such a deep and interesting question, I want to come back to what you're saying about affordances. And whether a product is good or bad for you, I'm going to wander a little bit, if you don't mind. First, though, is the difference between a service and there's a distinction between a service and an experience as an economic offering, but also as a thing. And what I mean by that is in terms of, there are certain things that should be seamless and get out of your way. Like booking an airline ticket, like going through an airport, or you know, if you're flying commercial rather than flying private, right? You want it to be as smooth and you don't want to notice it. Or managing your taxes. Guy on the call yesterday from Sweden, but a British guy, actually. Brilliant UX designer. You come across some guy called Joe McLeod. He's written this wonderful cool stuff on engineering about the design of the endings of things. Super interesting.Dan Harden 30:05Yes. I've heard of him.James Wallman 30:07Okay. He was saying that so taxes. I don't know how painful taxes are for you in the in the US, but taxes in the UK are a real pain, right?Dan Harden 30:17I can guarantee you there. They're more painful here.James Wallman 30:20Okay. So you know, there are companies that have come in to try and make it easier for us because we all have our, you know, yeah, we have accountants to help us, etc. But apparently, in Sweden, it's a joyful experience. I don't even understand what that means yet, okay, I'll be absolutely honest. But we get to investigate it. And one of my writers is going to speak to him, we're going to get a piece together on this, although he's a great writer, too. That said, of course, in during the pandemic, because we had the NHS, I feel very happy to pay my taxes, because it kept us all alive, lovely people.Dan Harden 30:54Paying taxes can be joyful, that gives me hope that many things in this world can be solved.James Wallman 31:01And that's where great design count. And it's a really good example, you know, I think good design is really good design, you often don't notice it, because it's so damn good. Right? As you say, you mentioned your chair, you just don't don't, I mean, that's the point of that chair.James Wallman 31:14But then an experience is different in that you should notice it because a service should be intangible, and seamless and simple. But experience. Now there's a difference between every day. But you know, big experiences should be noticeable because they should be memorable, meaningful and possibly transformational. So there are different moments in the journey of a person might have with a product or with a service or with an experience that has different. And I'm borrowing it from a guy called Mike Lai, who is run something called Tango, Tango, UX or something. I should know that in Shanghai, but he's like an American Chinese guy. And he was talking about the journey of any kind of experience through something and there are different moments where you want it to be perfectly smooth or really good service, and you want the product to work. And there are other moments where you need it to be a really amazing experience that is meaningful for you.Dan Harden 32:15That's an interesting point. In some ways I want I want my service to be minimal. And my experience to be maximal.James Wallman 32:23Yeah, okay, thank you, I'll borrow that.Dan Harden 32:27But I don't even know if maximal was a word.James Wallman 32:30Oh, no it is. Yeah, yeah. We, you know, we talked about omega Mart. Omega Mart, the new thing from Weow Wolf that's just opened in Vegas. And those guys come from Santa Fe. And they talk about maximalism and being maximalist because they want their stuff to be noticed in a world that has been homogenized. A world that's been commoditized. And but everyone's like, artists be minimal, which is all about exactly what you said. Maximum. Welcome back. Man. maximalism in the right place.Dan Harden 32:59Yeah, but the service what I mean by service thing minimal is, you know, something like Amazon, for example, comes to mind, you know, five years ago, when you bought something on Amazon's Oh my God, I gotta get my credit card out. And though they didn't remember me from the last time dot dot dot. Now I just load things in my cart, and I press buy now, and it's all automated. Right? That's a service that works well, for me. Then even receiving it lands on my porch. It's minimal.James Wallman 33:28That's a great example of a service. I would describe that as a service, not an experience. Would you mind if I come back to that affordances point you're asking them? It's very interesting, I think, from the point of view of the designer, is, you know, the starting point is the end of what's the impact this is going to have on a person's existence and their time. And I'm going to borrow here from a guy called Michael Brown, Gardner Brown, who's the guy who came up with the concept of the circle to circle and the circular economy. Michael Brown Gaught the chemist. And I remember talking, we were both giving talks at some conference in Belgium or Luxembourg or something, he talks about how everyone talks about the idea of reducing their carbon footprint, reducing their footprint. And he said, let's just flip that around, why not increase your footprint, but have a positive footprint instead? So instead of thinking about your products, let's say I mean, you know, you can think about what Tristan Harris has done here in terms of technology. And, you know, the ethical point of view that lots of these things are designed to keep us on our phone and you know, they talk about TOD, time on device, which is obviously where they can make money and this is what's happening in Vegas with the slot machines, etc. And that's what these things have become their skinner boxes, of course for people, right, they're designed to keep us there again and again and again. And of course, when you're doing that, you know that you have a negative Human footprint, you're having a negative footprint on that person's existence. So if you look at the product you're making and you recognize that it has that you have to maybe look at yourself in the mirror and think okay, am I basically a tobacco seller? Am I one of these people and can I go to bed and I feel okay, that's what I'm doing to people in which case you go ahead. You know, mine the planet, destroy the place and see if you can look your children in the face and be happy with what you do. Or, maybe if you recognize that this is fun, but only so much fun. Let's take alcohol is a great example. Right? There's a difference use and abuse. It's exactly the same technology, the addiction stuff, if you look at Adam Outers, you know, Adam Outers of NYU, with it, fantastic. He's work he's done most recent book Irresistible, and he compares addiction to devices exactly like addiction to drugs like alcohol. You know, having a drink is great. Using alcohol is fantastic. There's data that shows that a bit of alcohol makes you happy. Who doesn't love a beer on a Friday afternoon. Who doesn't enjoy that first glass of champagne or, you know, or mojito on a beach or whatever. But there is a point of diminishing returns, you know, it's go back to Jeremy Bentham, when he talks about his first cup of coffee in the morning gave him this much pleasure. And then the next less pleasure, etc. It's the same with so many things, right? So if your product. If the diminishing returns kicks in soon, and it ends up being really negative for a person. Gambling, drinking, maybe you know certain games on your phone or whatever, maybe the responsible thing to do is go Okay, fine. Let's try and figure out a way to make money. Because this is addictive and well done to us ensure these people have a good time, but do it in a way that supports them to like. You know, let's drink some beer and some champagne. But let's not do it for taste and taste fine, because that's bad for us. And then if you flip that around, so instead of being concerned that your product or service or whatever thing you produce, has a has the potential to have a negative human footprint, if it has a positive human footprint. Let's take running as a great example. Let's take the, you know the Spartan Race or something like this, if you know it's got a positive for people, go for it. Get them hooked. Think about sports, sports is fantastic. Whether people are playing sports or watching sports, the positives that are associated with sport. Why not turn those people into sports addicts? They're called fans, which fans is another word for consumers. But it's a word for consumers who love it so much. They keep coming back, you know?Dan Harden 37:47Yeah, I love the idea of building in these mechanisms within a product solution, a design solution where it can be responsive. So if there is a waning of the experience, if the experience is falling off, if that third cup of coffee isn't doing it for you anymore, you know, as an analogy to a product to have something in that product, and some software does this, where the where the product begins to adjust itself for a changing condition. There's something interesting there.James Wallman 38:21That's so awesome. Are you designing something like that at the moment? Is that something you're working on? Or is it just I love it?Dan Harden 38:28No, it's just more of a thought picking up on what you just said. And certainly in software, you know, we tried to do that, you know, good, good UX design does that automatically. But in product, it's harder to do, because so many things are, you know, these tangible, material requirements and functionalities, you know, it's like you can't expect your drill to change. And for the contractor that has carpal tunnel syndrome.Dan Harden 38:59I also want to come back to this thing you said, about the starting point is the end. And I think more industrial designers need to think about that. First of all, as an industrial designer, you are automatically a futurist, because you're trying to do is think about, okay, I'm drawing something now I'm CADing something now. But what you need to do is project out into the future, and place your product in the hands and minds of that end user. And will it have the desired effect a year from now or two or five years from now when this finally hits the market? That I think it should have now when you're designing it? And too many designers are designing for the now like they make themselves feel good. They sometimes even feed their ego by creating some something that is satisfying to them. Without thinking about that endpoint. That endpoint is so far in the future sometimes, and the future keeps changing. By the time your design hits the market, it might be irrelevant. It might be like, Oh my gosh. And some designers are often surprised, like, Well, I didn't expect it to be received like that. And it could be either negative or positive. You know, sometimes you just get it right by luck. But the starting point, being the end, there's something there's something really fascinating there.James Wallman 40:22As a trend forecaster and futurist this is the moment I try and pitch my services. Well telling the future, to figure out what's going to happen is, of course, it's the great unknown. There are things you can do. You know, if you think about Schumpeter, the idea of destroying, you know, creative destruction, or you think about the magic of the marketplace means that all sorts of people create all sorts of things, and some of those things flop and fail terribly, and some of them fly and take off. And, and who knew and, you know, it's not when something's created, when someone's created a business model around it that makes it work, you know, innovation is, you know, I guess it gets taught nowadays, and people get it, it's not just having a great idea. It's everything that comes with it. And you know, sometimes people just miss that point so badly. You think about flight is a wonderful example. It wasn't until 1903 that flying literally took off. It was the 80s that has started to reach the masses. You know, it took a long time to affect war, you know. First of all, but wasn't particularly impacted by flying. But of course, the Second World War was crucially around flying. So, I mean, when I try and advise people on doing this, so the way that the way that I work in terms of thinking about what the future is going to look like, it's using this diffusion of innovations. So it's looking at what the actually the structure that I use, it's about the seed in the soil. And the seed is the innovations that I see happening around and the soil is the macro environmental factors that exist. And I mentioned diffusion of innovations, I base my work around Everett Rogers his work, but also using what the RAND Corporation came up with in the 60s and stuff that I've added to this over time. But one of the things that's really interesting, I think is here is that if you look at Everett Rogers would look at five different things to figure out if a innovation was likely to take off.James Wallman 42:22And you can remember there's because BECOS, and the B is for is it better? And better, just to be really clear, is a really moot point. Better could be functionally better, it could be economically better. You need to understand the target market very well.James Wallman 42:41The E though, is it easy to understand? Because things that are complex, just throw people overseas. Is it compatible with how we do things now? So you can think about the ideas that people have for new versions of transport back in the 80s, there was something in the UK called the Sinclair c five, which is this sort of like cross between us a go kart and a car, and it made all sorts of sense for the city. But it was so far removed from what people thought about, it just didn't make any sense.Dan Harden 43:11The segway is a good example. But it was supposed to change our lives. It wasn't compatible with sidewalks.James Wallman 43:18Okay. I mean, it also makes you look like an absolute idiot, which is the O. The O is it observable Now, the thing about the Segway, what's kind of interesting actually is observable because we've all seen tourists looking like idiots on Segway. So segway found the nice, but observable a really good example. Is those city bikes or you have lime scooters where you are presumablyDan Harden 43:41Yes, yeah.James Wallman 43:42Okay. So we don't, we don't really have them so much around here, because they're illegal in the UK. I used when I was in Bordeaux awhile back. The reason that scooters are taken off for adults. I mean, I'm old enough to think that it makes people look silly, but still, is they sold the last mile problem so well. I know last mile is in terms of delivery, but they sold that kind of, you know, if you live in a city, you want to get a short distance away. But you see other people on it, you see that it's convenient way to get about it looks kind of handy and easy.James Wallman 44:13Okay, we're coming to the S actually I got the E and the S are quite simple. The E is easy to try. And the S is simple to understand. So forgive me, the S is simple to understand the E is easy to try, is it right there. And then if you think about Lime, for example, is you put your credit card in and you can take it you can have a go. It's a really easy way to try things. Where this is kind of interesting, I think so Everett Rogers identified these factors. Back in the 60s. And a guy called BJ Fogg at Stanford. He may come across, he's the guy who's known for his tiny habits. He set up the behavioral design practice at Stanford. He's fairly famous for one of his classes that became known as I think the Facebook class because from about 2006 or 7 or something a bunch of people that were in his class used everything he was teaching they about behavioral psychology, and they went on to become, you know, like the growth marketing person at LinkedIn and, and the head of this at Facebook and the head of that, and one of the people in his class set up Instagram, you know. So basically, they took all his tools on how to design behavior, and they used it on humans. It turns out, you can create very addictive products and BJ likes to distance himself from that work as well. And if you've come across Neil's work so Neil studied with him, you know, the guy who wrote Hooked. If you look at PJ focusing, which is B equals M A T, so behavior equals motivation, plus or times ability, and the tears triggers and the A about ability as he talks about the six simplicity factors. So, you know, motivation, we all know what that means. But simplicity factors are the stuff that makes it either easy or hard for you to do something and the six map almost precisely with the BECOS stuff that Everett Rogers figures for ideas that take off.James Wallman 46:12And the six simplicity factors, if I remember them are one is what's the cost, and the cost can be the, the the actual price cost. But it could also be the physical effort involved, or the mental effort involved. He talks about I'll be non deviant, which is like compatible. So for the sake of argument, there was a time when sending somebody a message on LinkedIn or set or looking somebody up on LinkedIn was considered a weird, but now it's fine to do that. He talks about are they simple to understand? Are they easy to train and all these things that might get between you and actually trying this thing? A non routine is one thing that he talks about as well. So if we are not in the habit of doing something you may not do again? Is it better? So you know, is it easy to try? Is it simple to understand? Is it compatible? Is it observable? Do you see what I mean? You can, you can look at the thing that you are creating, and you can run it through this mill. And you can compare it to like I say, this is the seed. So we're analyzing the innovation, the product, the thing that you're making, and you compare that with the soil. I talk about the seed in the soil, because if you can imagine, I don't know how much gardening you do Dan. But if you put a sunflower seedDan Harden 47:31I'm a terrible gardenerJames Wallman 47:32Okay, most of us are nowadays right? We buy plants, we buy seeds. But imagine in those old days you'd buy a sunflower seed, you'd want to get a decent sunflower seed that wasn't dried out and cracked and you know, a week saved from poor stock or whatever. And then you want to put it in to rich alluvial soil, you know, decent compost and then you've watered well etc. And it's exactly the same with any innovation. So any innovation needs to be a decent seed in the first place, but the soil it lands and needs to be appropriate for it as well. So instead of it being dry desert like soil it needs to be rich alluvial soil. And so the way I remember this is BECOS. And the structure here is das steeple is I remember it because there's a dust boat, the German movie, there's a fantastic movie. But DAS is kind of my addition steepness standards. UYou may have come across Pest or Pestle or Steeple, classic at business schools. You probably come across you know, this is about socio cultural trends and economic trends and technology and environment, politics, legal. So you can think about the takeoff of marijuana here. Or you can think about actually what's going to happen with the takeoff of psychedelics in the States. You can see that the innovators, you can see is it better? Maybe I'll come back to this. And that is demographics, aesthetics, and science, which I think have been overlooked in the in the classic Pest Vessel Steeple way of thinking about things. Science is a great example. Until 1964, the consumption of cigarettes in the United States. You can see the graphs, it's amazing. We went up and up and up and up and up and up and up. In 1964, the US Surgeon General made the very clear statement that smoking leads to cancer and then what's happened is smoking is going down and down and down and down.James Wallman 49:18And you can see this in marijuana. It turns out that people that smoke marijuana Do not turn into murderous crazies they just sit around and end up eating a lot of food or whatever right. You can see this is psychedelic so I'm a real believer in that psychedelics will follow a similar path to marijuana. Even though it st seems really weird for people that have never, you know, taken LSD or DMT or whatever and you know, they are quite weird things to take. But if you look at the BECOS side of this. So are they better? Well, they're really good for post traumatic stress disorder. Research in the UK and the States. In the UK, a guy called Robin Carhartt Harris has found that for people with really bad depression, it's really hard to solve people with depression, particularly people with basically on their way to dying. It turns out that this has an impact. It's like 85%, successful, insane numbers. If they could put this in the water. They would you know, it's incredible. So is it better? Is it easy to try? I mean, he's gonna take, yeah, it's scary. It's scary for people, which is holding people back. But yes, it's easy. But it's not that difficult. And it's, you know, there are ways, you know, obviously, it's illegal at the moment too. Is it compatible with how we do things now? Well, we take drugs. Drugs are a thing that people take to make them better, both legal ones and illegal ones. There's the O, is it observable? What's really interesting here, is once you know, somebody who has, I've got a very good friend of mine who used psychedelics to go from having major alcohol and cocaine issues and being a really depressive person. And he, through somebody else, I can't remember who he, he ended up taking it, and he's become happy. Wow, this stuff, you know, it's amazing.James Wallman 51:16And you know, so you guys got the problems of fentanyl in the States. Yeah, that stuff is really bad. So this stuff is actually positive. And then is it simple to understand. Well here's how it works, you take it, in a controlled environment. Michael Pollan's written that fantastic book, how to change your mind about this as well. So you can see how the viewing on this is changing, and why it makes sense. And a few counties in the states are kind of legalizing to make it possible. There are countries that do it too, anyway. And then you can compare and think about, so I mentioned, it was a science that was talking about. So you can take this kind of BECOS structure and the star steeple competitor and think, is my product service experience likely to be relevant in the future? Yes, especially if you use the diffusion of innovations curve, to look at what the innovators are doing today. And maybe even the early adopters, and you can point the ways to the future.Dan Harden 52:12You know, you just said in the last 10 minutes, so many fascinating things that I didn't want to interrupt you. But this BECOS, seed to soil, your notions of simplicity, dos. You know, so many designers, innovators, entrepreneurs, etc, we're looking for, we're looking for tools of understanding, I think, you know, and how do how can we ensure that we're going to create something successful and meaningful and impactful to society and individuals and sustainable. All these values that we always try to instill in our creations?Dan Harden 52:16In foretelling the future, do use something like the BECOS better, easy, compatible, observable, simple as kind of a filter to know whether or not something is more likely to either take hold, like, like your analysis of psychedelic drugs, for example.James Wallman 53:17Yeah.Dan Harden 53:22I love that. And so many things like seed the soil, you know, to designer, the seed would be, you know, the innovation itself, and the soil would be the consumption model. And like, in our case, you know, the construct of capitalism and consumerism, that's our soil, right? So we don't necessarily think see the soil, but it's happening. It's a really great way to think about it.Dan Harden 53:48And simplicity, and your descriptions of simplicity, and breaking it down into cost and effort and being non deviant and non routine. Simplicity to designers is, it's kind of like one of our, our doctrines. You know, we strive for it, it's hard to achieve. Sometimes it's it's so elusive, because the harder you try as a creator, sometimes you're adding complexity, not simplicity. It's so hard to get back to the root of what's really good and really meaningful. And sometimes it is something just utterly simple. And the simplicity. Why is simplicity so beautiful? I don't know what is that? What is that? What's going on psychologically about simplicity? Do humans crave simplicity? Why is something simple beautiful?James Wallman 54:02Wow, I wish I knew the answer to that. I'll be honest, I don't. My wife will quote to me, I'm trying to think of the British philosopher who'd said that beauty always has something strange within it, which I think has a truth in it, because then you remember thinking about that idea of experience versus service. But in terms of simplicity, I think about the Coco Chanel thing about when just before you go out, you take one thing off, you know. What can you remove? But there's research conducted by is it Joseph Goodman, that's shown that people want their stuff. And there's actually a guy called David Robson. He's a science writer and a friend of mine. And he's written something for the BBC the other day about innovators and the great innovators. What you're saying, though, is interesting is the ones that keep going. That we believe that after while going through brainstorming or coming up with ideas that after all, our ideas will tail off. And actually, the research shows the opposite is true. I think about a quote, I used to use talking about this kind of stuff from Johnny Ive about how hard it is to create simplicity. And I think that Dan, I can't. I don't know how many people have you interviewed for jobs with your firm through the years, which is, insane.Dan Harden 55:11Oh god, hundreds, probably thousands you knowJames Wallman 56:04And how many try to impress you with designs, and you just feel Oh, my God, it's too much. And it's only going to be those who can boil it. Think about Jacques Rometty, you know, the, you know, the artist. How he takes away everything that it isn't. And I think maybe that's one of the things we should do with life. And maybe that's one of the problems with consumerism is because all these all this noise, you know, all this incoming noise. With ideas, and this stuff that people are trying to sell us and trying to be this, be that, be the other thing. Maybe that's why Zen Buddhism, and that kind of approach to things and simplicity and minimalism appeals to people. But just to be really clear, I'm not a minimalist at all. Because if you're a maximalist. And this is from a design point, I'm going to borrow what you said there about I want my services to be minimal. And I want my experiences to be maximal. I think we want our lives to be maximal, but in the right ways.James Wallman 57:08So I want complex, interesting conversations with sophisticated interesting people. Yeah, you know, I was looking at hiring someone the other day, and it ended up being really complicated. And it was that moment, I said, Oh, this is a red flag. I sent a really nice, as nice of an email as I could to say, Let's leave this. But I want complex, challenging. You've made me think of so many things that I haven't pulled out of the back of my mind for ages. So thank you for that.James Wallman 57:35But I think he may maximalism in our, you know, in our weekends, in our vacations, in our products. But only the stuff that's really good. If you think about a meal, really simple food cooked really well, is good. I think about some of the best restaurants, the most successful restaurants don't do the fancy food, they don't do the El Bulli kind of you know, crazy stuff. There's a restaurant in London called Jay Shiki. That just does simple food really well.Dan Harden 58:14I think there's a lot to be said about essence. Essence of experience. Essence of expression. You know, it reminds me of Roi Ku, you know, just like so few words. So few intonations so much meaning. And in today's society, it just seems like so many people are distracted with so much stuff. People sometimes lose sight of the fact that some of these simple essential things that life has to offer, they're there for the taking. But it's it's almost like it's so ever present these opportunities to experience the goodness of life. And yet you can't see it. It's almost like radio waves passing through us right now. I can't see it. But there's so much of it coming through us right now even as we speak. Why is that? Maybe there's just so much offered. And it's hard to get the attention of people to really understand Hey, you know what, it's okay to experience the essence. It might be a simple meal. It might be taking 10 minutes to look at a single painting where you start to feel something after not not 10 seconds because everybody wants that that instant, like Hey, where is it? Where's the punch line? You know, like a Rothko. It does not connect with you until you're sitting in a dark room with a Rothko, in a dim light. And after about 10 minutes, all of a sudden you realize oh my god, I'm feeling something. This almost like a deep vibration and understanding of visual vibration. turns into an intellectual vibration. All of a sudden, so much more is offered to you. That's what I find, to be the real meaning of essence. And it's so hard for people to absorb, to first see the essence. And to truly feel it and benefit from it.James Wallman 1:00:21I like what you said. I agree with you. I think that we are essentially tick box travelers. And there are many people who are tick box travelers through life. Who just want to get that thing. And they've done it. You know, if you talk to those people that do a two week, I guess you probably get to do a two week vacation in Europe. And they kind of go to Spain, Italy, Greece. And they're like, yeah, I think the other people that went into our country, they say I did that.Dan Harden 1:00:47Yeah, well, they step out of the tour bus. They take the pictures they get back on the tour bus. It's not the picture, it's experience.James Wallman 1:00:57Yeah, yeah. And maybe it's not their fault. It's definitely not their fault. But the problem is, if you watch too much TV, and you spend too much time online, and you're one of those people who's like, you think about a pinball machine. I think lots of people live their lives like they're in a pinball machine. And they're getting knocked here and pushed there. And, you know, maybe this is about like being on the ocean and pushed by the waves. Yeah, let's go to surfing as a way of thinking. You know, those people just get pushed around, they'll just go wherever. And then there are those people that would fighting against maybe the wave to get out. And then they'll get in there, right? The thing and maybe that's the… I'm warming to this idea of surfing as a metaphor for life. And I'm going to play here. You know, you know, the guys…Dan Harden 1:01:07Play with that for a minute.James Wallman 1:01:43Yeah, because maybe those people haven't learned that if you stop. The way you describe that Rothko picture. And obviously, you have a few in your home, Dan, who doesn't, right?Dan Harden 1:01:59Um, not real Rothko's. Those are all like 40 million a pieceJames Wallman 1:02:04Yeah, but too many people just want to see something and have been there done that tick the box. They think that's life. But the problem with that approach is because you've not paused long enough to appreciate something. And realize…Dan Harden 1:02:22I got to interrupt you because I love this idea of surfing because a surfer knows that that wave is here for about 20 seconds, you know. The good part of the wave. They appreciate that and they see it coming. They nail it. They ride it. The joy is, they know, it's very temporary. And if more people would view life like that, that it is very temporary. There is impermanence everywhere. Certainly in a wave. And every condition around it. You don't know if you're going to hit a rock. You don't know if you're going to be bitten by a shark. Yeah, life is the same way.James Wallman 1:03:05Yeah, there's a guy that taught me to surf. I was in Byron Bay, Australia, writing a piece for a magazine. I think it was not GQ, Esquire magazine. And he taught Elle Macpherson on the same board I was learning on for Elle, I have been in the same place not at the same time, regrettably, but laying down and then standing up. And I remember he said, When a wave would come in, and I am a pretty poor surfer. He was like, right, you know, I caught the first wave. He was like Oh, wow, okay, you're, you're British. And yet, you can actually do this a little. Big surprise. And I jumped off the wave, because I caught the good venues. Like, hold on, that wave has come all the way from the middle of the Pacific. Where was I? Oh, yeah. So that's the Atlantic. Come from the middle of the ocean, you ride it till you can't ride it anymore. And I thought that was a really interesting idea. But I'm totally with you.James Wallman 1:04:02When I give talks about this, this book time and how to spend it, I'll often start by by pointing out. I used to say, I can't think how many seconds it is now. I think it's only 64,000. Whatever it is, there's this idea of the time bank through a French guy. And if somebody gave you $64,000 every day, and at the end of the day, your bank account went to zero. What would you do is the question and the numbers not exactly that. And the answer, then I don't want to jump in is you;d spend as much as you could. Because otherwise, the money's gone. And that's what life is like. You get these 24 hours every day and it's gone. So how you spend it. It's not just about… I guess it's not just about the quantity of that time, but it's the quality of that time. And I think what you're talking about there is about focusing. And you know, Joseph Campbell, who wrote the book, The hero with 1000 faces about the hero's journey, really. He moved From the hero's journey, I think much more into this idea of being the vitality and a bit of feeling alive. And I think way too many people is that what is that wonderful zombie movie from like, late like late 70s, early 80s about that kind of that uses zombies as a kind of as a metaphor for consumerism. Dawn of the living dead, I think it is.Dan Harden 1:05:24Right, right.James Wallman 1:05:26And, you know, too many people are basically living their lives as they've been, you know, turn on the TV, go to work, drink coffee, come home…buy the things you're supposed to buy, you get your better time off. And we, of course, we are alive in moments, but we're too often asleep. And the key is to use our short window that we have to do something and to think about what we're doing.Dan Harden 1:05:51Yeah.James Wallman 1:05:52And that involves stopping in enjoying those moments, rather than moving on to the next moment.Dan Harden 1:05:57James, we've just come out of probably, well, definitely in the last 100 years, one of the strangest periods of time. With this pandemic, and all the fear and uncertainty in our society. And all this discussion about the future and maybe rethinking the ways that w

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Locked On SEC Football
AL.com's Joseph Goodman Talks Saban vs Former Assistants, Auburn Picks Up UAB D-Lineman, Kentucky Adds a PG

Locked On SEC Football

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2021 32:53


 On today's show, we catch up with AL.com columnist Joseph Goodman, as we talk about the landscape of the SEC heading following spring ball, and he says Jimbo Fisher may want to back off his baiting Nick Saban as of late, and talks about what he's looking forward to most being back in SEC stadiums this fall with a return to normalcy.And we go Around The Conference, as Ole Miss baseball loses one of its best arms, Kentucky hoops picks up a big time recruit, increased capacity coming for Tennessee and Georgia baseball, and Auburn football picks up a big transfer from down the road at UAB.Follow Chris on Twitter @ChrisGordy and @LockedOnSECSupport Us By Supporting Our Sponsors!Built BarBuilt Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKED15,” and you'll get 15% off your next order.BetOnline AGThere is only 1 place that has you covered and 1 place we trust. Betonline.ag! Sign up today for a free account at betonline.ag and use that promocode: LOCKEDON for your 50% welcome bonus.Rock AutoAmazing selection. Reliably low prices. All the parts your car will ever need. Visit RockAuto.com and tell them Locked On sent you. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Locked On SEC Football
AL.com's Joseph Goodman Talks Saban vs Former Assistants, Auburn Picks Up UAB D-Lineman, Kentucky Adds a PG

Locked On SEC Football

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2021 34:53


 On today's show, we catch up with AL.com columnist Joseph Goodman, as we talk about the landscape of the SEC heading following spring ball, and he says Jimbo Fisher may want to back off his baiting Nick Saban as of late, and talks about what he's looking forward to most being back in SEC stadiums this fall with a return to normalcy. And we go Around The Conference, as Ole Miss baseball loses one of its best arms, Kentucky hoops picks up a big time recruit, increased capacity coming for Tennessee and Georgia baseball, and Auburn football picks up a big transfer from down the road at UAB. Follow Chris on Twitter @ChrisGordy and @LockedOnSEC Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors! Built Bar Built Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKED15,” and you’ll get 15% off your next order. BetOnline AG There is only 1 place that has you covered and 1 place we trust. Betonline.ag! Sign up today for a free account at betonline.ag and use that promocode: LOCKEDON for your 50% welcome bonus. Rock Auto Amazing selection. Reliably low prices. All the parts your car will ever need. Visit RockAuto.com and tell them Locked On sent you. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

1DA Woman Inc.
Spotlight on Author Ingrid Brown and her book Miss Sadie's Song

1DA Woman Inc.

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2021 11:22


Sadie Wise is a spirited teenager with an eye for older men. When she sees a handsome, newly discharged soldier, the young girl immediately decides he will be her husband. Joe Goodman is intrigued with the beautiful, redheaded vivacious woman-child but is well aware due to their age difference, any involvement with her could be disastrous. Nevertheless, the two find themselves together and at sixteen years old, Sadie becomes Mrs. Joseph Goodman, Jr. For many years the could thrives, prospers and loves each other until a totally unexpected occurence threatens to rock their seemingly unbreakable bond.

Outbreak Alabama: Stories from a Pandemic
Covering COVID: How We've Changed

Outbreak Alabama: Stories from a Pandemic

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2021 22:35


A year into the pandemic, AL.com journalists reflect on how they and their outlook on COVID-19 have changed.Guests: Ramsey Archibald, Trisha Powell Crain, J.D. Crowe, Greg Garrison, Joseph Goodman, Leada Gore, Ivana Hrynkiw, Roy Johnson, Dennis Pillion, Carol Robinson, Sarah Whites-Koditschek, Amy Yurkanin. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Outbreak Alabama: Stories from a Pandemic
Covering COVID: The Hardest Part

Outbreak Alabama: Stories from a Pandemic

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2021 32:30


Alabama journalists reflect on the pandemic after dedicating a calendar year to getting vital information about COVID-19 and the state's response to the public. AL.com reporters talk about the most difficult aspect of covering COVID in Alabama. A pandemic that has so far killed half a million people in the country is inherently dark, and it's challenging work to put it all into context for readers who want as much information as they can get as quickly as they can get it.Guests: Ramsey Archibald, Trisha Powell Crain, J.D. Crowe, Greg Garrison, Joseph Goodman, Leada Gore, Ivana Hrynkiw, Roy Johnson, Dennis Pillion, Carol Robinson, Joe Songer, Sarah Whites-Koditschek, Amy Yurkanin. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Outbreak Alabama: Stories from a Pandemic
Covering COVID: What Gave Us Hope

Outbreak Alabama: Stories from a Pandemic

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2021 17:23


Alabama journalists reflect on the pandemic after dedicating a calendar year to reporting on COVID-19. While they were faced with telling difficult stories about death and struggle, AL.com reporters also found tremendous humanity and inspiring moments that gave them hope about the direction the pandemic was headed in Alabama.Guests: Ramsey Archibald, Trisha Powell Crain, J.D. Crowe, Greg Garrison, Joseph Goodman, Leada Gore, Ivana Hrynkiw, Roy Johnson, Dennis Pillion, Carol Robinson, Joe Songer, Sarah Whites-Koditschek, Amy Yurkanin. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Sports Radio 105.5 WNSP
The Game Plan 11.24.20

Sports Radio 105.5 WNSP

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2020 80:38


Dave Schultz and Stephen Root discuss all things Iron Bowl! Joseph Goodman gives his take on the game, Mike Nabors talks Saints and Michael Wayne Bratton talks SEC and Iron Bowl! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/david-schultz/support

The Paul Finebaum Show
Hour 1: Joseph Goodman & Callers

The Paul Finebaum Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2020 39:17


AL.com's Joseph Goodman joins the show about the track meet against Ole Miss this weekend. Plus, calls throughout the hour.

Sports Radio 105.5 WNSP
The Game Plan 9.4.20

Sports Radio 105.5 WNSP

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2020 118:06


Live from Daphne High School before their game against the Fairhope Pirates! Dave Schultz and Stephen Root talk high school football with Ben Thomas, Saints with Luke Johnson, Kentucky Derby with Kurt Becker, South Alabama's huge first win of the year with Doug Konkel and UAB and Alabama with Joseph Goodman! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/david-schultz/support

Bald Faced Truth with John Canzano
BFT Interview: Joseph Goodman

Bald Faced Truth with John Canzano

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2020 15:35


Guest: Joseph Goodman - al.com Columnist John Canzano talks with Joseph Goodman about how the postponing of the Big Ten and Pac-12 football season affect the SEC and and Big 12, arguments being made by players and coaches to play through the fall, and the likelihood of a safe spring football season. Subscribe NOW to this podcast for more great content. Follow @JohnCanzanoBFT on Twitter.

Bald Faced Truth with John Canzano
BFT SHOW: Austin Meek, Joseph Goodman, Anna Canzano

Bald Faced Truth with John Canzano

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2020 137:55


Guests: Austin Meek, Joseph Goodman, Anna Canzano John Canzano talks with these guests about the postponing of the Big Ten and Pac-12 football seasons, how this may affect the sport in the future, and how much this decision has to do with liability. Plus, The Big Splash, Punch It! Audio, the Culligan Water Cooler Report, and 2@2. Subscribe NOW to this podcast for more great content. Follow @JohnCanzanoBFT on Twitter.

The Paul Finebaum Show
Hour 2: Joseph Goodman & Calls

The Paul Finebaum Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2020 41:23


Paul is joined by AL.com's Joseph Goodman plus more calls.

FrontPage305
Interview: AL.com columnist Joseph Goodman (2 of 2)

FrontPage305

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2020 24:58


We wrap up our conversation with Joe by talking about Miami and Alabama's 2021 season opener, the great Willie Mays, an Alabama native, and how in today's age he might have been a quarterback and not a Hall of Fame outfielder, and why former Crimson Tide quarterback Tua Tagovailoa will not be a bust for the Dolphins. Part 2 of 2. 24 minutes.  --- 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/frontpage305/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/frontpage305/support

FrontPage305
Episode 4: We Fixed Sports. So, listen up

FrontPage305

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2020 60:56


Manny Navarro (The Athletic) and Miami-based sportswriters Walter Villa and Andre C. Fernandez discuss if baseball might be better served by this new 60-game season it is about to start and Walter pitches his idea to make the NBA better, which could make Shaq happy. We tackle Patrick Mahomes' new $500 million contract, share stories about losing our virginity (in journalism) and highlight our interviews with Florida State basketball coach Leonard Hamilton and AL.com columnist Joseph Goodman. 60 minutes. --- 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/frontpage305/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/frontpage305/support

FrontPage305
Interview: AL.com columnist Joseph Goodman (1 of 2)

FrontPage305

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2020 28:04


@JoeGoodmanJr covered the Miami Heat during the Big 3 era with LeBron James, the Florida Gators when they won two national titles with Tim Tebow and Urban Meyer, and now he's the man who drives Nick Saban up a wall at Alabama. We caught up with Joe on Thursday, July 9, 2020 to talk about why he was wearing a Birmingham Black Barons hat on our Zoom call (hint: He's showing support for Negro League baseball), his fondest memories of covering the Heat despite not knowing a thing about the NBA when he got the job, his battle with COVID-19, and why Alabama keeps taking great wide receivers from Miami's backyard. Part 1 of 2. 27 minutes. --- 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/frontpage305/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/frontpage305/support

Bald Faced Truth with John Canzano
BFT SHOW: Matt Prehm, Joseph Goodman, Anna Canzano

Bald Faced Truth with John Canzano

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2020 138:19


Guests: Matt Prehm, Joseph Goodman, Anna Canzano John Canzano talks with these guests about whether or not Oregon should have proactively handled their parting of ways with Luke Hill, the NCAA lifting the ban on voluntary training, trouble at Bryant-Denny Stadium, and scams. Plus, The Big Splash, Punch It! Audio, and 2@2. Subscribe NOW to this podcast for more great content. It’s free. Why wouldn’t you? Follow @JohnCanzanoBFT on Twitter.

Bald Faced Truth with John Canzano
BFT Interview: Joseph Goodman

Bald Faced Truth with John Canzano

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2020 23:52


Guest: Joseph Goodman - Columnist, al.com John Canzano talks with Joseph Goodman about his experience having Coronavirus, the construction delay caused by COVID-19 at Bryant-Denny Stadium, the importance of protecting vulnerable populations, and how the state of Alabama is handling the quarantine. Subscribe NOW to this podcast for more great content. It’s free. Why wouldn’t you? Follow @JohnCanzanoBFT on Twitter.

The Paul Finebaum Show
Hour 1: 2/25/20

The Paul Finebaum Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2020 36:55


Calls plus Joseph Goodman of AL.com.

Appendix N Book Club
Episode 45 - A. Merritt's "The Moon Pool" with special guest Joseph Goodman

Appendix N Book Club

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2019 59:19


Hoi and Jeff discuss lost worlds, adventuring parties, and Lovecraftian gaming in A. Merritt's "The Moon Pool" with special guest Joseph Goodman

Around The World with the He and She Show
Joseph Goodman Travels to Romania

Around The World with the He and She Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2018 40:58


Special guest Joseph Goodman (HR Professor, Indiana State University) tells us great travel stories from Romania, tips, and travel hacks See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Geeks' Boutique
Gen Con Bonus Episode - Bonus edition of Geeks' Boutique Podcast

Geeks' Boutique

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2017 107:29


GenCon for Those Who Gen-Can’t! Zack and Jason bring you all of the exciting news and reveals from GenCon 2017! Exclusive interviews with: Phil Kelly, Lead Designer and Writer for Warhammer 40K, 8th edition by Games Workshop https://www.games-workshop.com Ross Watson, ( https://twitter.com/therosswatson ) Head Writer of Wrath and Glory, the upcoming Warhammer 40K roleplay game by Ulisses North America http://www.ulisses-us.com/ Aaron Darland, Game Developer for Wyrd Games https://www.wyrd-games.net/ Mike Chenault, Game Developer for Cool Mini Or Not’s Song of Ice and Fire miniatures game https://cmon.com/ Joseph Goodman of Goodman Games http://goodman-games.com/ …and many more! All the plastic crack news in one show!

Podcast – Spellburn
Gencon 2016: What’s New at Goodman Games

Podcast – Spellburn

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2016


Podcast – Spellburn
Gencon 2016: What's New at Goodman Games

Podcast – Spellburn

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2016


Joseph Goodman and his minions discuss the exciting new releases coming from Goodman Games in 2016, including the long-awaited DCC Annual, Grimtooth's Trapsylvania, Erol Otus-inspired adventures, this year's Halloween module, Music of the Spheres, Xcrawl Classics, more Mutant Crawl Classics, Lankhmar, and the official announcement of the Dying Earth RPG! This is an audio dump […]

Podcast – Spellburn
NTRPG Con 2015: What’s New at Goodman Games

Podcast – Spellburn

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2015


Joseph Goodman and his minions – plus special guest Robert Bledsaw II – preview and discuss the exciting new releases coming from Goodman Games in 2015, including new Judges Guild reprints, DCC Lankhmar Patrons, Against the Atomic Overlord, Road Crew 2015 info, Metamorphosis Alpha: Epsilon City, and the official announcement of Mutant Crawl Classics RPG! […]

Podcast – Spellburn
NTRPG Con 2015: What's New at Goodman Games

Podcast – Spellburn

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2015


Joseph Goodman and his minions – plus special guest Robert Bledsaw II – preview and discuss the exciting new releases coming from Goodman Games in 2015, including new Judges Guild reprints, DCC Lankhmar Patrons, Against the Atomic Overlord, Road Crew 2015 info, Metamorphosis Alpha: Epsilon City, and the official announcement of Mutant Crawl Classics RPG! […]

Podcast – Spellburn
Episode 32: Invoke Joseph Goodman

Podcast – Spellburn

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2014


This is it, Burners! It took us to 1 and 1/2 years to make our spellcheck, but we’ve finally summoned Goodman Games head honcho and the creator of the Dungeon Crawl Classics RPG, Joseph Goodman to the podcast! Join us for a candid conversation with the canny creative force behind the fantasy role playing game […]

Podcast – Spellburn
Episode 32: Invoke Joseph Goodman

Podcast – Spellburn

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2014


This is it, Burners! It took us to 1 and 1/2 years to make our spellcheck, but we've finally summoned Goodman Games head honcho and the creator of the Dungeon Crawl Classics RPG, Joseph Goodman to the podcast! Join us for a candid conversation with the canny creative force behind the fantasy role playing game […]

Podcast – Spellburn
Gen Con Special Report: What's New at Goodman Games in 2014

Podcast – Spellburn

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2014 97:22


Joseph Goodman and crew – plus special guests – preview and discuss the exciting new releases coming from Goodman Games in 2014 and 2015, including official DCC RPG dice, new adventures, the DCC Annual, and lots of other old school gaming goodness! Don't have time to watch the video? Here's an audio-only version (please note: […]

Podcast – Spellburn
Gen Con Special Report: What’s New at Goodman Games in 2014

Podcast – Spellburn

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2014


Joseph Goodman and crew – plus special guests – preview and discuss the exciting new releases coming from Goodman Games in 2014 and 2015, including official DCC RPG dice, new adventures, the DCC Annual, and lots of other old school gaming goodness!   Don’t have time to watch the video? Here’s an audio-only version (please […]

Black & Blue Report
Black & Blue Report - October 23, 2013

Black & Blue Report

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2013 34:48


076-10.23.2013New Orleans Pelicans & SaintsOnline radio show focused on Pelicans and Saints news.Today's special guests include Pelicans TV analyst David Wesley and Joseph Goodman of the Miami Herald.34

Club Podcasts
Mad About Futbol vol. 46 - From Miami To Barcelona

Club Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 23, 2013


On this edition of the Mad About Futbol Show, the guys were joined by Uncle Ed of the Miami Ultras as well as from the Miami Chapter of the American Outlaws to talk about the prospect of Miami in MLS. We also scheduled Joseph Goodman of the Miami Herald but he refused to come on the show to talk about his article on South Beach and David Beckham. Ed spoke about the latest goings on in this never-ending saga to bring an MLS team back to South Florida as well as a chance to help convince Juan and George about the prospects a little more. We were also joined by SB Nation columnist Xoel Cárdenas to talk about the biggest news of the day- the hiring of Gerardo Martino as coach of FC Barcelona. Xoel expressed his initial skepticism about the hiring of the former Paraguayan national team and Newell's Old Boys coach as well as what "Tata" will offer his new team. Xoel also points out that this squad will have some major issues to deal with, especially on defense this coming season. Surely lots of interesting topics that are dealt with by Xoel in this episode. That plus George's preview of next year's Miss Bum Bum contest all on the Mad About Futbol Show. You can follow Uncle Ed (@UncleEd69) and Xoel Cárdenas (@XoelCardenas) on Twitter.

Leafs Lunch
TSN 1050 Toronto: The Bryan Hayes Show with Bryan Hates- Hour 4: March 14th

Leafs Lunch

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2013 53:13


The Tome Show
The Tome Ep 114: Cordell and Collins GenCon09

The Tome Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2009 36:37


Benton and Jason from Fist Full of Comics and Games represented the Vorpal Network at GenCon 2009 and talked to Bruce Cordell and Andy Collins of Wizards of the Coast for me. They also talked to some other folks at WotC and Green Ronin and you can find that interview at Fist Full of Comics. Likewise, Gamer's Haven just released an episode with an interview with Joseph Goodman of Goodman Games Sponsor RPGNow.com RPGNow pick of the episode - Clever Classes: Explorer

The Tome Show
The Tome Ep 114: Cordell and Collins GenCon09

The Tome Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2009 36:37


Benton and Jason from Fist Full of Comics and Games represented the Vorpal Network at GenCon 2009 and talked to Bruce Cordell and Andy Collins of Wizards of the Coast for me. They also talked to some other folks at WotC and Green Ronin and you can find that interview at Fist Full of Comics. Likewise, Gamer's Haven just released an episode with an interview with Joseph Goodman of Goodman Games Sponsor RPGNow.com RPGNow pick of the episode - Clever Classes: Explorer

The Tome Show
The Tome Ep 114: Cordell and Collins GenCon09

The Tome Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2009 36:37


Benton and Jason from Fist Full of Comics and Games represented the Vorpal Network at GenCon 2009 and talked to Bruce Cordell and Andy Collins of Wizards of the Coast for me. They also talked to some other folks at WotC and Green Ronin and you can find that interview at Fist Full of Comics. Likewise, Gamer's Haven just released an episode with an interview with Joseph Goodman of Goodman Games Sponsor RPGNow.com RPGNow pick of the episode - Clever Classes: Explorer