Podcast appearances and mentions of josh get

  • 24PODCASTS
  • 38EPISODES
  • 52mAVG DURATION
  • ?INFREQUENT EPISODES
  • Mar 3, 2024LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about josh get

Latest podcast episodes about josh get

Beauty by Design
N° 284: Emotions in Human Design w/ Agent Rx Josh Maniscalco

Beauty by Design

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2024 65:29


Today I'm joined by my friend & fellow Aesthetician Josh Maniscalco in a deep dive discussion about emotions & emotional intelligence in Human Design.  ⁠Connect with Josh on Instagram⁠ ⁠Book a 1:1 Aesthetician Business Mentorship with Josh⁠ Get a FREE episode guide by leaving a 5 star rating & review on Apple Podcasts Email a screen shot of your review to: energeticaesthetics@icloud.com ⁠☆ BOOK WITH ME ☆⁠  ⁠New FREE Human Design Chart with extra details⁠ ⁠NEW! Energetic Beauty Sleep for *your* Human Design ⁠ ⁠FREE Energetic Aesthetics Guide to Human Design basics⁠ ⁠PURCHASE: $11 Human Design Aura Type Masterclasses⁠ ⁠My Course: Your Energetic Marketing Guide⁠ ⁠The Solo Esthetician Love Academy - Esoteric Education for Estheticians⁠ ⁠LILFOX ⁠ *This episode is part of my Human Design Gate series, with a little astrology & Gene Keys mixed in. *Be sure to subscribe for more HD education, plus fun beauty focused interviews & meditations.

GraceLife Audio
Ps Josh - Get off the fence | GLE

GraceLife Audio

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2023 45:39


Chord Progression
Why Shooting Your Shot As A Growing Band & Artist Matters with Sugar Spine's New Album Emerald

Chord Progression

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2023 58:14


Today's state of the world for new bands and artists in the music scene is rough. You have to do anything and everything to get noticed, and social media platforms aren't helping with so much noise.But we figured out what these artists must do in order to get noticed, and that is to SHOOT YOUR SHOT.Josh from Sugar Spine returns to the podcast after a year and a half, with a brand new album, Emerald, that is available NOW! So on this episode, we discuss:How taking risks and shooting his shot allowed Josh to have features with Bleed From Within and To The Grave on Emerald.What Josh did in the production of Emerald to make it sound like a band that has been there plenty of times before.An incredible idea that Tik Tok and Spotify can use to make music discovery even easier for bands & fans, and possibly advantageous for everyone involved.A great time catching up with an old friend, and a great way for you to discover new music. Hit that subscribe button and not miss out on more great music.Find Sugar Spine Online:Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sugarspineInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/sugar.spine/Tik Tok: https://www.tiktok.com/@sugar.spineYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@sugarspineWebsite: https://sugarspine.bandcamp.comMerch: https://sugarspine.bigcartel.comSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/2xevVC5j2Ink2VeA2wnwkR?si=AMgNqZ0tSKKWHLx8lwsk4gApple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/artist/sugar-spine/1587247860Check out our sponsor: DarkFusion Systems!Use code "CPPOD" for $100 off of your computer build!https://darkfusionsystems.comFollow us on social media!Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/chordprogressionpodcastTwitter:https://twitter.com/cppodofficialInstagram:https://www.instagram.com/chordprogressionpodcast/YouTube:https://youtube.com/channel/UCqRKZCDMcFHIYbJaLQMfDbQChord Progression Podcast (Spotify):https://open.spotify.com/show/53XWPGrIUvgavKF5Fm6SLkChord Progression Podcast (Apple Podcast):https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/chord-progression-podcast-the-gateway-to-new-rock-and-metal-music/id1454876657Chord Progression Podcast (Amazon): https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/b8dad803-444c-4a73-8aa5-67b4fc43f4baChord Progression Podcast (iHeart Radio):https://www.iheart.com/podcast/269-chord-progression-70632531/Podcast Webpage:https://mysongoftheday.com/my-song-of-the-day-rock-2000-today/chord-progression-podcast/Welcome: (0:00)What Sugar Spine Has Been Up to since Our Last Podcast: (0:59)Understanding Self-Sustainability is a Long Term Goal: (7:21)The Game Plan for Sugar Spine to be Self-Sustaining: (8:21)Social Media Exhaustion & The Great Spotify/Tik Tok Partnership Idea: (15:36)The Production and Mixing of Emerald, Reviewed: (22:53)You Don't Look Pretty Doing Unclean Vocals: (33:45)How did Josh Get his 3 Major Features?: (36:20)Why It's Important to Shoot Your Shot: (43:03)Josh Give 3 Dutch Metal Bands to Check Out: (48:53)Kevin's Final Thought; Musicians, Artists, Creatives, SHOOT YOUR SHOT: (54:28)

GraceLife Audio
Ps Josh - Get off the fence | GLM

GraceLife Audio

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2023 42:54


I Suck At Jiu Jitsu Show
#189 The Mental Battle of BJJ Tournaments: Kyle, Junior, and Josh Get Real (a little too real)

I Suck At Jiu Jitsu Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2023 169:39


Welcome to the most offensive episode of ISAJJ yet! In this episode, host Josh McKinney (@thejoshmckinney) sits down with Kyle Watson (@watson_martial_arts) and Junior Silva (@jr_jb_silva) for an entertaining, crazy, and insightful conversation about all things jiu-jitsu. They discuss their experiences running their own gyms in the same area while being affiliated with the same organization, share some of their favorite competition stories and tips, and of course, talk some good-natured trash about each other's gyms(special apology to anyone who trains at Watson Martial Arts) But that's not all -- in this episode, you'll also learn about Kyle's pet pig and how he manages to balance being a gym owner and a pig dad AND whether or not Josh and Junior can eat this pig. Plus, the trio delves into the mental and emotional aspects of competing in jiu-jitsu and shares their tips for staying focused and motivated. You will also learn about Kyle's latest instructional's .. Mastering the Knee Weeve: https://bjjfanatics.com/products/mastering-the-knee-weave-system-by-kyle-watson STD's for BJJ: https://www.simplifyingjiujitsu.com/takedowns (use promo code NEWSTUDIO) Be on the lookout for Kyle's new course "mastering the inverted cow nipple" Don't miss this hilarious and informative conversation with three of the most prominent voices in the jiu-jitsu community. Be sure to follow Josh (@thejoshmckinney), Kyle (@watson_martial_arts), and Junior (@jr_jb_silva) on Instagram for more insights, updates, and gym banter. Check out the ISAJJ/Imposed WIll no Gi Collab(available for presale until May 1st): https://imposedwill.com/collections/i-suck-at-jiu-jitsu-show Get Your FREE Copy of the 3 lenses: https://www.simplifyingjiujitsu.com/3 --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/isuckatjiujitsushow/support

The Mark Blazor Show
Mark and Josh get candid about their feelings over the Nashville shooting

The Mark Blazor Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2023 14:10


The Mark Blazor Show
Blazor and Josh get philosophical about cereal

The Mark Blazor Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2023 11:46


The Josh Innes Show
Did Josh Get A Bowl Cut?

The Josh Innes Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2022 76:29


Josh got a new haircut and listeners of the show ripped him for it, Battle added fuel to the fire by posting the photo of the haircut on social media.

battle bowl josh get
Ravel
[Patreon Teaser] Emily and Josh Get to Know Each Other

Ravel

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2022 11:11


[Teaser clip for Bonus Episode 3]They each have an episode featured on Know Normal People. They've made over 75 episodes of Ravel together. They've spent one afternoon together, in person, when they met in September. But otherwise, Josh and Emily don't know each other that well. So today, they start to change that!Join our community at patreon.com/ravelpod for as little as $3/mo! You can also connect with Ravel on Twitter and Instagram at @ravelpod. Follow the hosts on Twitter:  Josh: @joshlieuallen Emily: @RevRettinghouse Stephen: @stephenghenning Thank you to Louie Zong for use of his song In Full Color, off his album, Here. Find his work on Spotify and Bandcamp!Ravel is a proud founding member of the Highline Media Network, a collective of artist owned podcasts by normal people in normal places. Learn more at www.highline.network.

Let's Talk About Sex
6. Let's Talk About Porn "Let's Talk About Sex"

Let's Talk About Sex

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2021 28:15


Connect with Josh: Get early access to episodes on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/Tfcatl Join our Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/355251095657708 The Faith Community is a disruptive ministry built upon five keys: Greatest Commandment Theology, Anti-Racism, Women's Equity, LGBTQ+ Affirmation, and Bible Criticism. We are for the unchurched, the over-churched, and the under-churched; the weary and the wounded; the seeking and the cynical. For more inspiring content like this, check out our other platforms: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/tfcatl Instagram: @tfcatl Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/Tfcatl Website: https://www.thefaithcommunity.org

Ordway, Merloni & Fauria
M&F - Belichick praises McDaniels and compares him to Nick Saban, Is Bill trying to help Josh get a Job?

Ordway, Merloni & Fauria

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2021 45:17


Hour 2 - M&F - Are the Patriots overrated? Are they the best team in the AFC?, Fitzy would take The Patriots talent over the Chiefs talent, Belichick praises McDaniels and compares him to Nick Saban, Is Bill trying to help Josh get a Job? Ben Simmons believes the Philadelphia 76ers' recent actions are exacerbating his mental health issues See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Game Time with Nick Bahe
November 3 – Segment 9 – Should Producer Josh Get a Tattoo?

Game Time with Nick Bahe

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2021 3:51


Gary decides that he will force Producer Josh to get a tattoo.

231 GO!
34 - Kelly and Josh get spiritually religious

231 GO!

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2021 50:32


Josh and Kelly get into a back and forth between religion and spirituality. Did it end well? Listen and see! Check out Kelly's pod here; https://anchor.fm/thebusinessshowerpodcast/support Intro/Outro music; Positive Hiphop by MaxKoMusic --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/231go/message

Hosanna Ministry Podcast
6/27/21 Pastor Josh: Get Back Up

Hosanna Ministry Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2021 40:12


Thank you for listening. If you've been challenged or encouraged by what you've heard, be sure to share this podcast by taking a screen shot and sharing it on instagram or facebook and tag us @cvcmadera. If you really enjoyed the podcast, be sure to subscribe. If you'd like to contribute to the ministry of Central Valley Church, click here: cvcmadera.churchcenter.com/giving

FounderQuest
Understanding Bitcoin From a Developer's Perspective

FounderQuest

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2021 50:53


Show notes:Links:Mike MondragonCRDTShip of TheseusExceptional CreaturesShiba Inu Full Transcript:Ben:I'm just gonna dive on in there. I'm so eager. I'm so excited. It's actually weird because Starr is the one that typically starts us off. Josh:Yeah. I thought we were just going to start with our just general banter, and then not introduce the guest until 30 minutes later.Ben:By the way.Josh:It is also our tradition.Ben:Yeah. Well we're getting better at this thing.Josh:Where we say, "Oh, by the way, if Starr doesn't sound like Starr..."Ben:Right, yes. Today Starr doesn't sound like Starr because today's star is Mike Mondragon instead. Welcome Mike.Josh:Hey Mike.Mike:Hey.Ben:Mike is a long time friend of the show, and friend of the founders. Actually, Mike, how long have we known each other? It's been at least 10, maybe 15 years?Mike:Probably 2007 Seattle RB.Ben:Okay.Josh:Yeah. I was going to say you two have known each other much longer than I've even known Ben.Ben:Yeah.Josh:So you go back.Ben:Way back.Mike:Yep.Josh:Yeah.Ben:Yeah.Josh:Because I think Ben and I met in 2009.Ben:Mm-hmm (affirmative).Josh:Or something.Mike:Okay.Ben:Yeah, Mike and I have been hanging out for a long time.Mike:Yeah.Ben:We've known each other through many, many different jobs, and contracts, and so on. It's been awesome.Josh:Yeah, Mike, I feel like I've heard your name since... Yeah, for the last, at least, 10 years just working with Ben. You've always been in the background. And we've realized this is the first time we've actually met face to face, which is crazy. But it's great to... Yeah.Mike:Yeah.Josh:... have a face to put with the little... What is it, a cat avatar? Is a cat in your avatar? You've had that avatar for a really long time I feel like.Mike:Yeah, that's Wallace.Josh:Okay.Mike:So I'm Mond on GitHub and Twitter, and that cat avatar is our tuxedo cat, Wallace. And he is geriatric now. Hopefully he'll live another year. And if you remember in that era of Ruby, all of the Japanese Rubyists had cat icons. And so that was... I don't know. That's why Wallace is my icon.Josh:Yeah. Nice.Ben:So, so do Wallace and Goripav know each other?Mike:No, no, they don't. They're like best friends, right? They had to have met at Seattle RB.Ben:Yeah. Internet friends.Mike:Internet friends, yeah.Ben:Yeah. So, Mike is old school Ruby, way back, way back, yeah. But the other funny thing about the old Rubyists, all those Japanese Rubyists, I remember from RubyConf Denver... Was that 2007? Somewhere around there. I remember going to that and there were mats and a bunch of friends were sitting up at the front, and they all had these miniature laptops. I've never seen laptops so small. I don't know what they were, nine inch screens or something crazy.Mike:Mm-hmm (affirmative).Ben:I was like, "How do you even type on that thing?" But it's a thing. So I guess... I don't know. I haven't been to Japan.Mike:There are laptops that you could only get in Japan and they flash them with some sort of Linux probably.Ben:Yeah. Yeah.Mike:Mm-hmm (affirmative).Josh:Okay. I wonder how long it took them to compile C on there.Mike:Yeah. So, about the orbit with the founders. So, I think I'd put it in my notes that I... And I consider myself a sliver of a Honeybadger in that I did have a conversation with Ben about joining the company. And then in 2017, I did do a little contracting with you guys, which is ironic in that... So we're probably going to talk about cryptocurrencies and Bitcoin. So the Bitcoin protocol is, essentially, on a four-year timer. And in 2017 was the last time that we were building up to, I guess, an explosive end to that cycle. And I had just been working at Salesforce at Desk.com, And I left because of Bitcoin. And then this year, four years later, I, again, just left Salesforce, but I just left from Heroku. And I didn't leave so much because of Bitcoin, I just got a better opportunity, and I'm a principal engineer at Okta, and I'm in the developer experience working on SDKs, primarily, the Golang SDK.Mike:So I think one of the things that they were happy about was that I had experience carrying the pager, and knowing what that's like, and they wanted to have an experienced engineer that would have empathy for the engineers to main the SDK. So I'm really excited to be here, because I'm not going to be carrying the pager, and it is the fun programming. What I imagine, listening to the founders, about the kind of fun programming that you guys get to do, working with different languages and whatnot. So, obviously right now, I'm starting out with Golang. We don't have a Ruby SDK, because OmniAuth provider is the thing that most people use. But, there's also PHP, and some Java, so I'm just looking forward to being able to do a bunch of different languages.Josh:Yeah. That's awesome. Yeah. We don't know anything about SDK teams, Honeybadger. But yeah, it sounds like we have very similar jobs at the moment. So that's cool. We'll have to trade tips at some point. Yeah.Ben:Yeah, I'm excited that you're there, because I'm definitely going to hit you up on the SAML stuff, because SAML's a pain in the tuchus yeah, I'm sure you'll have some insights from your time there.Mike:Well, that was how I was even open-minded to talking to Okta, was the recruiter had contacted me and I think actually it was the recruiter... I don't know the structure of how this works, but a lot of companies have a prospecting recruiter. And I think that a veteran oriented prospecting recruiter contacted me. And so being a veteran, I'll usually entertain those cold calls. And so then when I was at Desk, I wrote... So Desk was a big Rails monolith. I wrote a microservice to break some of the SSO off of the monolith itself. And in writing the API documentation that was on desk.com, I actually used Okta as one of the examples as a SSO identity provider using SAML. So yeah, I have had a little bit of experience from the outside of Okta with SAML. And so maybe I'll have more experience here to answer your questions.Ben:Yeah. We'll have to have you back and we can just do a whole hour on that. It's a fun world.Josh:After we do an hour on SDKs.Ben:Yeah, and your code that you wrote for us still lives on in Honeybadger.Josh:Yeah. Was it the webpack? That was some of the work, right?Ben:Some of it, yeah.Mike:Yep.Josh:Yeah.Ben:And some GitHub integration work.Josh:And the integrations, yeah.Mike:Yeah, well if I remember correctly with the GitHub integration, I did do some GitHub integration, and it tickled your enthusiasm, Ben, and then I think you went in and like refactored that a little bit.Ben:Well, if you have a monolith like Redo that's been around for as long as ours has, things don't... It's like, what was that Theseus' ship, it's goes around the world but you replace things as it goes, and it's never the same app, right?Mike:Yeah, that's the thing, we had discussed this in the prelude around just software engineering in general and how hard it is to maintain a monolith, especially as a company grows and as developers come rolling into a project, you get all of these... Over time you get engineers with different goals, different techniques, different styles of touching your code base, to the point that it becomes very hard to maintain a project. And I think, I don't know if we're going to talk about Heroku at all, but I think that Heroku suffers from a little bit of that, where there's very few original Heroku that are involved in the runtime at least. And I just came from being on the runtime in the control plane. And, definitely, the code base there is... There's maybe one or two people that are still around that have touched that code base from the beginning.Ben:Yeah, let's dive into that, because that's fascinating to me. I know that there's been chatter on Twitter recently that people feel that Heroku is stagnated. That they haven't really brought a lot of innovative stuff to market recently. I remember, actually a funny story, I'm going to tell it myself. I can't remember what year this was, it were way... I don't know, I don't know, early 2000s. I was sitting as part of a focus group, and I can't reveal a lot of information because secrecy and stuff. But anyway, I was part of this focus group and I was asked as part of this group, what as a developer working on Ruby applications and Rails applications, what I thought about this new thing called Heroku. And had it explained to me, "Oh, you just get push", and "Blah, blah, blah", and I poo-pooed the idea. I was like, "Nah, I'm not interested", because I already know how to deploy stuff. I've got Mongrel, I got a DVS.Josh:Say Mongrel.Ben:I know how to use SEP, why do I need this? Like Math, never going to catch on. And so don't follow me for investing advice.Mike:Yeah, totally.Josh:I got my Linodes.Mike:Yeah. Or even back then, I wrote all of my own chef, so I got my own recipes I can-Ben:Right, exactly.Mike:... bare metal at will.Ben:Exactly. So, what do you think, you've been at Heroku, you've seen this process of people having to maintain this code base over a long period of time. What are some tips for people who might be a little earlier on the process? Looking down the road, what do you suggest people think about for having a more maintainable application?Mike:That's interesting. I really think that there is not one size fits all, and actually some of the things that are specific to Heroku, and actually to desk.com when I was there previously, that some of the issues actually stem from Salesforce culture and the way that Salesforce manages its businesses. And so, I guess the thing that I've always liked about Rails, specifically, is that the conventions that are used in Rails, you can drop an experienced Rails developer pretty much into any Rails app and they're going to know the basic conventions. And that saves you so much time to ramping up and bringing your experience into a project. Whereas when you get into bespoke software, then you run into well what were the architectural design patterns 10 years ago compared to now? How much drift has there been in libraries and the language, depending.Mike:And so that is... I don't... That's a very hard question to nail down in a specific way. I would just say in spit balling this, conventions are very important, I would say. So as long as you have a conventions using a framework, then I think that you'll get to go a long ways. However, if you start to use a framework, then you get the everything is a nail and I'm going to use my hammer framework on that. Which is its own thing that I've seen in Ruby, where if you start a project with Rails, I don't think everybody realizes this, but you are essentially going to be doing a type of software development that is in the mindset of Basecamp, right? And if you have an app that is not quite like Basecamp, and then you start to try to extending Rails to do something different, then you're going to start running into issues. And I think that... It makes me sad when I hear people talk poorly about Rails, because oftentimes people are just pushing it into a direction that it's not built to do. Whether they're, like in the old days, like monkey-patching libraries, or whatnot.Ben:Yeah, I think we saw that with the rise of Elixir and Phoenix, right? José just got frustrated with wanting to do some real time stuff. And that really wasn't the wheelhouse for Rails, right? And so he went and built Elixir and Phoenix, and built on top of that. And that became a better hammer for that particular nail than Rails, right? So now if you come into a new project and you're like, "Well, I'm going to do a lot of highly concurrent stuff", well, okay, maybe Rails isn't the best solution. Maybe you should go look at Elixir and Phoenix instead.Mike:Yeah. Yeah. So, with Heroku, I just want to say that it was so awesome to work at Heroku, and the day that I got a job offer to work there, it was like... I still, if I'm having a bad day, I still think about that, and the... I've never used hard drugs, but I would think that somebody that was cocaine high, that's probably what I was feeling when I got the offer from Heroku. I started using Heroku in 2009, and it has a story within our community, it's highly respected. And so I just want to say that I still think very highly of Heroku, and if I was to be doing just a throwaway project, and I just want to write some code and do git push main, or git push Heroku main, then I would definitely do that.Mike:And we were... And I'm not very experienced with the other kinds of competitors right now. I think, like you pointed him out, is it Vercel and Render?Ben:Render. Mm-hmm (affirmative).Mike:Yeah. So I can't really speak to them. I can really just speak to Heroku and some of the very specific things that go on there. I think one of the issues that Heroku suffers from is not the technology itself, but just the Salesforce environment. Because at Salesforce, everything eventually has to be blue, right? And so, Heroku, I don't think they ever could really figure out the right thing to do with Heroku. As well as, the other thing about enterprise software is that if I'm selling Salesforce service cloud or whatever, I'm selling, essentially, I'm selling seats of software licenses. And there's no big margin in selling Compute, because if I'm buying Compute, I expect to be using that.Mike:And so, as a salesperson, I'm not incented to sell Heroku that much because there's just not margins for me in the incentive structure that they have at sales within Salesforce. So I think that's the biggest thing that Heroku has going against it, is that it's living in a Salesforce environment. And as, I guess, a owner of Salesforce being that I have Salesforce stock, I would hope that they would maximize their profits and actually sell Heroku. Who knows, maybe a bunch of developers get together and actually buy the brand and spin that off. That would be the best thing, because I think that Salesforce would probably realize a lot more value out of Heroku just by doing that, even if there's some sort of profit sharing, and then not have to deal with all the other things.Ben:Yeah, that's really interesting. Yeah. The thing about billing, and then selling per user, versus the compute- That's definitely a different world. It's a totally different mindset. And I think Josh that we have now been given a directive step. We should acquire Heroku as part of Honeybadger.Josh:I was going to say, maybe we can acquire it with all of our Doge profits in five or 10 years from now.Mike:Well, yeah. Somebody spin a Heroku coin, a ERC20 token on Ethereum and get everybody to dump their Ethereum into this token.Josh:Mm-hmm (affirmative).Mike:Get that pot of money together. And then that is the Heroku Foundation. Yeah, exactly.Josh:Okay, yeah.Mike:The Heroku Foundation that buys the Heroku brand. I know that we're laughing about it, but actually this is what is possible today. And, I was telling Ben... Well, let me just say a couple of things about the FounderQuest and how it relates to me, is I've been listening to FounderQuest from the first episode, and I'm an only child, and I like to listen to podcasts. So I'll be on my afternoon walk, and I'll be hearing you guys talk, and I'm having this conversation along with you guys listening to the podcasts.Mike:And so, I think, in January, you guys were talking about, or maybe Ben was talking about, $30,000 Bitcoin, and you guys just had your yucks and laughs about it. And it actually made me think critically about this, because I've been involved with Bitcoin since about 2012, and it's like, "Do I have a tinfoil hat on?" Or what do I think? And so, I'm not joking about this, listening to you guys actually has helped me concretely come up with how I feel about this. And first off, I think, I'm bullish on technology. And this is the first epiphany that I had, is all of us have had a career close to Linux, close to Ruby, building backend services, close to virtualization and orchestration. Fortunately, that's been my interest, and fortunately that's been where our industry has gone. And so, when Bitcoin came out, as technologists, all you ever hear, if you don't know anything about Bitcoin, you just hear currency. And you're thinking internet money, you're not thinking about this as a technologist.Mike:And so that was the thing. I wish that Bitcoin had been talked about as a platform, or a framework.Josh:Mm-hmm (affirmative).Mike:And not even called it coin. Because that confuses the issue-Josh:The whole coin thing, just... Yeah.Mike:Yeah, totally. And mining the metaphors-Josh:That alone.Mike:... just totally throws everything off. Because we are talking, we're laughing about it, but this is really possible today. We could come up with a Foundation to buy Heroku with a cryptocurrency, and it would... Yeah. So that's one thing that Ben helped me realize in my thinking around Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies. And I think I'm just bullish on technology. And so to me, again, across our career, there's been so much change. And why would we look at Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies any differently than any other kind of technology? Even a hundred dollar bill with all the holograms on it, that is a kind of financial technology. And so we're just talking about a digital technology, we're not talking about coins I guess.Josh:That's the appeal, a lot of the Altcoins, right? They give everyone a way to invest in those companies, whereas before you would have to... Whatever, be an accredited investor or something to be able to get involved. Is that part of the appeal? I'm probably showing what I know about crypto, which is very little, but I'm excited to... Yeah, maybe you can...Mike:Yeah. Yeah, so I feel like these projects are... I'm not a VC, and I'm not an insider, but from what I can see from afar, in Silicon Valley there's a close group of people that have access to all of these ideas. And there's Angel clubs, and VC clubs, and whatnot, that are funding these startups. And to me, I feel like these crypto projects are the same kind of thing, except for they're just available to the public. And so, I think if I was speaking to another technologist that was interested in cryptocurrencies, is you probably need to get your hands on some of the technology in order to get experience with it.Mike:And so if that means you figure out how to maybe mine some coin on your laptop, or whatever, or you actually pay for it, you should at least have some in your possession, and at least learn about the custodial part of it. Also, there's different software libraries now to actually do programming against it, and platforms, I believe. So that'd be another way to at least tickle your curiosity, is by actually touching the technology and not thinking about the value. So yeah.Ben:Yeah. That, to me, that's one of the most interesting things about the whole coin thing. My younger son is really interested in the crypto space, in the coin and in the other parts of a distributed ledger, and what does that mean, and how does that work? And before I heard about NFTs, he was talking about NFTs. And so it's really interesting to me to see this coming from him. Just yesterday, we had a conversation about CRDTs, right? Because we're talking about how do you merge transactions that are happening in distributed fashion? Right? I was like, "Oh yeah", and it's so weird to have my teenage sons' world colliding with my world in this way.Josh:Yeah.Ben:But it's a lot of fun. And I've got to say, Mike, I got to give you back some credit, talking about the whole coin thing. As you've heard, we're pretty coin skeptical here at Honeybadger, the Founders, but you made a comment in our pre-show conversation. And maybe you didn't make this explicitly, but maybe it's just a way that I heard it. But I think... Well what I heard was, and maybe you actually said this, was basically think about this like an index fund, right? You put dollar cost to averaging, right? You put some money into coin, you put a little bit, it's not going to be your whole portfolio, right? But you don't treat it like a gamble, and you just treat it like an investment, like you would other things that may appreciate in value. And of course you may not.Ben:And so, as a result, I decided, "Okay, I can do that. I can put a little bit of my portfolio into coins". So just this week, and this is the funny part, just this week-Josh:I'm just finding this out now, by the way.Ben:Yeah, yeah. Josh is like... I told my wife about this last night and she was like, "What's Josh going to say?" "Like, I don't know". So anyway, just this week I put a little bit of money into Bitcoin and Ethereum. And that was... When did Elon do his thing about Bitcoin? Was that Thursday morning?Josh:Oh yeah.Ben:I bought, two hours before Elon did his thing, and Bitcoin lost 15% of its value.Mike:That's awesome.Ben:I'm like, "It's okay. It's okay, I'm just putting-Josh:Yeah, you don't sell, it doesn't matter.Mike:What was your emotion? What was your emotion?Ben:Yeah, totally. Yeah. In fact, my first buy, I used Coinbase. And Coinbase was like, "Oh, do you want to do this periodically?" I'm like, "Yes, I do. Every month". Boom.Mike:Oh.Ben:I went ahead and set that up like so, yeah.Mike:Oh, I did not know you could do that.Ben:I'm in it to win it, man.Mike:You should get a hardware wallet. That's the next thing, is you need to learn how to handle your own custody, so-Josh:Right, yeah. You got to... Yeah.Mike:Not leave it on the exchange. Interesting.Josh:Get those hard drives.Mike:Yeah.Josh:Yeah. Ben's a veteran indexer though. So you can handle some dips. Some volatility.Ben:Yeah. Yeah.Josh:I actually, I did make some money off of Bitcoin back in the day, and probably if I would've just held onto it, I would've made a lot more, of course.Mike:Same.Josh:So I accidentally... Back, I don't know when this was, it was maybe five years ago or something, when Bitcoin was going through one of its first early hype cycles, and I was like, "I'll check it". I was learning about it, of course. And so I went and bought some and I think I ran a blockchain Elixir app that someone made, to see how the transactions work and stuff. Read some books on Bitcoin. But I bought some Bitcoin, I can't remember how much, but just left it. I think this was after Coinbase had launched, I'm pretty sure I bought it through Coinbase. But yeah, I just left it, and then that was when it was in the first huge push of Bitcoin where it went up to 20,000 or something. And I remembered that I had it, and I went and looked and oh yeah, I made five grand or something. I put hardly anything into it initially. So I forget what I actually bought with that money. I just sold it and it's like cool, free money.Mike:So you just sold it this year? Or you sold it...Josh:No, I sold it back-Mike:In 17?Josh:I think I sold it at 20... Yeah, this would have been at 17 that I actually sold it, probably.Mike:Did you report it on your taxes, your capital gains?Josh:I did, yes. Yeah, I did.Ben:That's the benefit of having an accountant, because your accountant reminds you, "You know what? You did have some Bitcoin transactions, you should probably look at those".Josh:Can I say on here that I actually put some of it through a Bitcoin tumbler though, just to see how those work?Mike:Yeah, I mean...Josh:And that was a very small amount of money, but I didn't actually report that on my taxes. Because I think I actually forgot where it was or something.Ben:You'll have to explain what a Bitcoin tumbler is.Josh:So a Bitcoin tumbler... Well, I'll try, and then maybe Mike might explain it better, but a Bitcoin tumbler is basically how you anonymize your Bitcoin transaction. If you have some Bitcoin and you want to buy some drugs on the dark web or something, you go and you send your Bitcoin to this tumbler, and then it distributes it to a bunch of random Bitcoin addresses that it gives you. And then you have those addresses, and they're anonymized, because they've been sent through a bunch of peoples' wallets, or something like that.Mike:Yep. That's basically it.Ben:So it's basically money laundering.Josh:Yeah, it's laundering.Mike:Yeah. But if your privacy... I mean, okay-Josh:Yeah, no, I get it. Yeah. I mean, yeah. Because part of the appeal of Bitcoin is some people are just like, "Oh yeah, good money, credit card transactions are so... The governments are recording them and stuff, the NSA probably has a database of them". So Bitcoin is anonymous, but it's not. It's not anonymous. And yeah. So that's why people do this, right?Mike:Yeah. Well that, to me, that's if you want to... So the value of Bitcoin, if you want to get bullish on the value of Bitcoin, the traditional outlook is yeah, the silk road was going on and there's all this illegal stuff going on. Therefore it must be bad. But actually, to me, that's the thing, you know it's good if there's illicit stuff going on, because what's the number one currency that's used right now for illicit transactions? It's dirty US dollar bills. And if you're a drug dealer in central South America, you are collecting, dollar bills United States. You're paying some sort of transport probably at 10, 15% cost to get those dollars back to wherever you're going to hold them. And so, if you're using Bitcoin, you're probably not going to pay that fee. So, to me, it's like okay, that actually proves, at least in my mind, that there is value. That it's being used, right?Josh:Yeah. And you also, you don't want to see... Some people are fanatics about cash going away, even just because as more people move to digital transactions, whether it's just through, whatever, traditional networks, or through crypto. People are using less and less cash. And I feel like, whatever... Like Richard Stallman, he pays for everything in cash though, because he thinks that cash is going to go away someday. And that's a problem for privacy, because you do want a way to pay for things in private in some cases.Mike:Yep. I agree.Josh:Yeah.Ben:My only real beef with Bitcoin, well, aside from the whole requiring power plants just to do a transaction, is that there is Badger coin. This company that is named Honeybadger, it's all about Bitcoin. And they have these ATM's in Canada, and we constantly get support requests from people.Mike:Oh really?Josh:Is this the reason that we've been so down on cryptocurrencies in the past?Ben:I think so.Josh:Because ever since the beginning, since people started making coins, Badger coin came out and then it's been our primary exposure to be honest.Ben:It has been, yeah.Josh:Throughout the past... I don't know how many years it's been. Has it been six-Ben:Yeah, six-Josh:... to eight years?Ben:Yeah, something like that. It's been nuts.Josh:I'd say.Mike:You should send them an invoice, and they actually-Ben:Yeah, so what happens is they had these kiosks where you can buy Bitcoin, right? You put your real money in, and you get your fake money out, right? And the name on the top of the kiosk is Honeybadger. So, someone puts in some money, real money, and they don't get their fake money, then all of a sudden they're upset, right?Mike:Yeah.Ben:And so they... For whatever reason, it doesn't go through, right, I don't know how this works, I've never bought Bitcoin at a kiosk. But so, they're like, "Okay, Honeybadger". And so they Google Honeybadger, and the first result for Honeybadger is us. And so they're like, "Oh, here's a phone number I can call". And they call us. And they're like, "Where's my Bitcoin?" That's like, "Uh, I really can't help you with that".Josh:They do.Ben:"You stole my Bitcoin". It's like, "No, that's not us".Josh:Something just occurred to me. I wonder how many of them are just confused over the fact that Bitcoin transactions can take a while to arrive now, right? It's not always instantaneous, where it used to be a lot faster, but now I know that it can take a while to clear. So I wonder how many of those people are emailing us in the span... Maybe that's why they eventually always go away and we don't hear from them again. Maybe it's not that they're getting help, but it's just that their Bitcoins are arriving. Yeah. I have a feeling that there's some sort of... I'm guessing these are mostly regular normies using, and interacting with this very highly technical product and experience, and even if you're walking up to a kiosk, but there's still a highly technical aspect of it that, like you said Mike, people are thinking coin, they're thinking... The way this maps to their brain is it's like dollar bills. So they're looking at it like an ATM. Yep.Mike:Yeah. When it comes to cryptocurrency and the technology, I don't want to have to think about custody, or any of that other kinds of stuff. It'll be successful when it just is happening, I'm not thinking about it. They're already... In some... I don't know all of the different mobile devices, but I do carry out an iPhone. And so, the wallet on iPhone is pretty seamless now, right? And so I'm not thinking about how that technology is working. I had to associate an Amex with it originally, right? But once I've done that, then all I do is click my button to pay. And there you go. And so I do think that the cryptocurrency technology has a long way to go towards that, because if normal people, the non nerds, have to think about it, then it's not going to be useful. Because in the end-Josh:Yeah.Mike:... humans use tools, right? And so, whatever the tool is, they're going to use it especially if it's easy and it makes their life easier.Ben:So what I really want to know, Mike, is what are your feelings about Dogecoin? Are you bullish on Doge?Mike:Well, I'll answer that, but I wanted to come back to the bit about the NFT, and just talking about the possibilities with technology. And I think that you guys could profit from this.Ben:I like where it's going.Mike:You'll have to do some more research. But I think what you could do... See, I love the origin story of Honeybadger. And maybe not everybody knows about the Honeybadger meme from what is... When was this, two thousand...Ben:2012? 2011?Mike:Yeah, okay. So not everybody... Yeah, bot everybody knows about the meme. I guess, just go Google-Ben:I can link it in the show notes.Josh:It's long dead. This meme is long dead.Mike:Is it? Well it's still awesome. I still love it.Josh:It is.Mike:So, there's so many facets of this that I love. The first one is that... Can I name names on competitors-Ben:Of course.Mike:... in the origins? Okay. So the first one was is that Airbrake, an exception reporting service, was doing a poor job with their customer service. And you guys were like, "We're working on this project, we need exception reporting. It's not working". It's like, "Well, can we just take their library, and build our own backend?" Right? And to me, that is beautiful. And in thinking about this episode, in Heroku, the same opportunity lies for an aspiring developer out there where you could just take the Heroku CLI and point it at your own false backend until you figure out all of the API calls that happen. And I don't know, you have that backed by Kubernetes, or whatever orchestration framework is...Mike:There is the possibility that you could do the same Honeybadger story with Airbrake SDK, as there is with the Heroku CLI. So that's the first thing I love about the Honeybadger story, and the fact the name goes along with the fact that Airbrake had poor customer support, and you guys just were like, "F it, we're going to build our own exception reporting service". Now, in the modern context with NFTs is... I have old man experience with the NFTs in that GIFs, or GIFs, and JPEGs, this is BS that people are gouging for profit. However, the technology of the NFT... This is the thing that I think is beautiful, is that... And I'm not sure which of the NFTs does this, but there is the possibility that you could be the originator of a digital object, and then you sell that digital object. And then as that digital object is traded, then you, as the, I guess, the original creator, you can get a percentage of the sales for the lifetime of that digital asset.Ben:Yeah.Mike:And, I'm not sure which of the NFTs allows that, but that is one of the things, that's one of the value propositions in NFT. So what I was thinking is if you guys did an NFT on the shaw of the original Honeybadger Ruby SDK check-in, that this could be the thing that you guys have an experiment with, is you have real skin in the game, you're playing with the technology and see if that works. And, let me know if you do that, because I might try to buy it. So, we'll see.Josh:Well, we've already got a buyer, why wouldn't we?Mike:Yeah, so..Ben:Indeed, yeah.Josh:See I was thinking maybe you could own various errors or something in Honeybadger.Mike:Yeah, I mean... Whatever digital signature you want to... Whatever you want to sign, and then assign value to.Josh:Yeah, we could NFT our Exceptional Creatures.Mike:Yeah.Josh:Have you seen that, Mike? Have you seen that project?Mike:Yep, yep.Josh:Okay.Mike:I'm well aware of that. Yep.Ben:Yeah. I'm thinking what about open source maintainers, right? Let's say you have this project and someone really wants a particular feature, right? Or they're really happy about a particular feature that you've already done, right? You can sell them that shaw, that commit, that put it into name, right?Mike:Yeah, totally.Ben:You are the proud owner of this feature. Thank you.Mike:Yeah, totally. Yeah, I was hoping that I would come with some ideas. I hope someday in the future that I run into somebody and it's like, "Oh, we heard that podcasts were where ideas were free ideas that were worth a lot of money were thrown about. And I did this project, and now I'm retired. Thank you, Mike". Honeybadgers.Josh:Wait, so Ben are you saying that, so as a committer, so say I commit something to Rails, submit a PR, so then I own that PR once it's merged and it would be like I could sell that then to someone? Is that along the lines of what you're saying?Ben:No, I'm thinking the owner of the project. So, if you commit something to Rails, and you're really excited about it, and you for some reason want to have a trophy of that commit-Josh:Right.Ben:... on a plaque on the wall, right? Then the Rails core group could sell you that token.Josh:Okay. Gotcha.Ben:That trophy, that certificate, like, "Yep. This is your thing. Commissioned by..." It's like naming a star, right?Josh:Yeah.Ben:You buy the rights to a star, and it's fake stuff, right? We're naming stars. But that's the same idea.Josh:Yeah. So you could use that same idea to incentivize open-source contribution. So if you make the PR to Rails and it gets merged, you get this NFT for the PR merge, which you could then actually profit for if it was... Say it was, I don't know, turbo links or something, whatever. Years later, when it's a huge thing and everyone in Rails is using it, maybe Mike's going to come along and be like, "Hey, I'll buy... I want to own the PR for turbo links".Ben:Right.Josh:Yeah. And of course then, you, as the owner, would also profit from any sale between parties later on too. You'd get that little percentage.Mike:Yeah. Well, so when somebody comes up with committer coin, just remember me, I want to airdrop of some committer coin.Josh:We have a name. We've got a name for it. Commit coin.Ben:I've got a new weekend project ahead of me.Mike:Yeah.Josh:Cool. Well, that helps me understand NFTs.Ben:Yeah, I really like the idea of being able to sell ownership rights to a digital asset. That I think a good idea. I don't know that the current implementation that we see on the news is a great implementation of that idea. Buying the rights for a copy of a JPEG, it feels kind of sketchy to me. But maybe there's some sort of, I don't know, PDF document that has some sort of value for some reason. And you can give that, sell that to someone. And to me, it's not so much about the profit, or the transaction, it's the ownership. You can say I am the owner of this thing. Yeah, there can be copies all over the place, but I'm the person that has the ownership, quote unquote, of this thing.Josh:Yeah, yeah. But then you've got to define value Ben. What is value? Okay, so, what makes a PDF more valuable than a JPEG?Mike:Yeah. Yeah. Bring this back to Dogecoin, and value propositions, and whatnot. What is valuable? When you're talking about the value of a JPEG, this reminded me of a conversation I was having with my son. He's 10 years old and he wanted some money to buy, I don't know what it was, and old man voice came out of me and it's like, "That's BS. I don't think that's valuable". And he looked at me and he was like, "It's valuable to me". And it's like, "Oh, you just put a dagger in my heart. I'm killing your dream". And one person's value may not be another person's value. So, on the Dogecoin, that's interesting. Dogecoin is very interesting to me, because I feel like I'm in a quantum state with a Dogecoin where it is a joke, but at the same time it apparently it has value.Mike:And I don't know where I stand on that threshold. I know how to trade Dogecoin. And I know the behavior of Dogecoin, and the behaviors, from a trading standpoint, has changed substantially in the last six months. Before it was a pump and dump kind of thing. Well, actually, you know what? When Dogecoin was first created, its purpose was highlighted by the community. People in podcast land don't realize this, but I'm wearing a 2017 Dogecoin shirt from when the Dogecoin community sponsored the number 98 NASCAR. And the thing of the community was like, "Oh, we have all this money, and we're just being altruistic and we're giving it away". And so they were exercising their belief with this currency, right?Mike:And from then, till now, there was a bit of a cycle to Dogecoin where you could, if you acquired Dogecoin for say under a hundred Satoshis, this is the Dogecoin BTC pair, that was actually a good buy. Just wait for the next pump when somebody does something, and Dogecoin goes over 200, or 300 Satoshis, and then you dump it. And that's basically what I did on this in the last six months. I had a small bag of Dogecoin waiting for the next pump and dump. And I actually did that, but it kept on getting pumped, and then it would stabilize. And then now we're at the point where apparently Elon Musk and Mark Cuban are saying that there's value to it.Mike:And to me, I actually put a lot of credence to that, because these are two public persons that they cannot... If they're pumping things in the public domain, then they have risk, right? And so you can't be those two people, and be pumping, and not run the risk of the FTC of the United States government coming in and saying, "Hey, why were you doing this?" So there's the, I guess for me, a small bit of a guarantee that maybe there is something to Dogecoin.Josh:Yeah. See, the way I think, when you first started you were saying it is a joke, but you're in this dual state, and my initial or immediate thought was it is a joke, but this is the internet, and the internet loves to make silly things real.Mike:Yeah, yeah.Josh:Especially these days.Ben:Yeah. It's pretty funny for all those people that made a bunch of money on GameStop, right? Yeah.Mike:Yeah. Well that's the thing, is in Dogecoin, Doge is, of itself, from a meme from the same time period as Honeybadger, right? The Iba Shinu doggie, right? So, the other thing I don't understand, or the thing that I understand but I don't know how to quantify it for myself, is that, to me... So there's no pre-mine on Dogecoin. There's no one person that owns a lot of Dogecoin from the beginning. Whereas if we're talking about Ethereum, Vitalik Buterin, the founder, or one of the founders of Ethereum, they pre-mined Ethereum, and there's a ton of Ethereum that's owned by the founders. Whereas you compare that to, say, Litecoin, Charlie Lee cloned Bitcoin and created Litecoin. He sold all of his Litecoin. I believed in him when he said he's sold it all. He's a software engineer, just like us. He was Director of Engineering at Coinbase.Mike:He doesn't seem like he's wearing tinfoil hat out there, doing conspiracies. So when he says that he sold his coin in 2017, all of his Litecoin, I totally believe that. Yet today, he is the chairperson of the Litecoin foundation. And so, to me... I actually do have, I placed some value in the benevolence of Litecoin and Dogecoin, because there's not any one person that actually controls it. I guess Charlie Lee, he probably has a stronger voice than most. But he doesn't control the levers.Josh:Not financially.Mike:Yeah.Josh:Yeah.Mike:Yeah. And so then with Dogecoin... So Dogecoin, it'll be awesome if it gets above a dollar, but the structure of Dogecoin will be such as they cannot maintain that.Josh:Right.Mike:Because it's an inflation-Josh:There's no cap, right?Mike:Right.Josh:Yeah.Mike:It's inflation. And so, I don't know the number, I think it's a million Dogecoin are minted every day. So, 10 years from now, if Dogecoin is worth a dollar still, then that means Bitcoin will be worth a lot more than that. So I guess that'd be awesome if Dogecoin stays a dollar. However, the point I'm trying to make is actually there is value in having an inflationary currency, especially if we're talking about living in the structure of our current financial... The way that our current financial markets work, where there is an inflation.Mike:And so if I want to be transacting with a digital currency, I don't want to have to be, say, like having an Argentina kind of moment where my one Dogecoin is worth $5 American today, and then maybe only $3 American a week from now. So to me, I think there is value in Dogecoin in that it's inflationary, and that it will not be as susceptible to speculation bubbles as other currencies. And so, I don't know if that answers your questions on the value of Dogecoin, but those are a couple of reasons why I think that Dogecoin is valuable. Now, am I going to be holding a big bag of Dogecoin in 2022? Probably not. Just to be honest.Ben:We're all about honesty at Honeybadger. I love the episodes where we have to have a disclaimer, this is not financial advice. Please consult competent professionals before investing, et cetera, et cetera. Mike, it has been a delight to have you with us. We appreciate your counterbalance to our coin pessimism that we have amongst the Honeybadger fan base.Josh:Yeah, I think we needed this.Ben:Yeah.Josh:We really needed this.Ben:We really did.Josh:So thank you.Ben:It's been good.Mike:Yeah. Oh, I got one more idea out there. Hopefully, somebody can run with this, is I've been trying to get motivated to do some experimentation with the Bitcoin lightning network. We didn't really talk about these a layer two solutions for scaling, but I think that there is a lot of potential in coming up with an interesting project that lays within the Litecoin* network, it has its value in and of itself, but there's a secondary value of being a note on the Litecoin* network where if there's transactions going through your node, let's say, I don't know how you'd instrument this, but let's say that Honeybadger actually was... That you guys were taking your payments across your own lightning node, then all of the transactions that are going across the lightning network, you're getting a small fee, right? So I think that there's the possibility of a micropayments kind of play there, like for instance, paying by the exception. I mean, literally-*Editor's note from Mike - "in my excitement talking about the Lighting Network I slipped and said Litecoin a couple of times between Lightning Network. Lightning Network is a layer 2 protocol that is primarily intended for scaling Bitcoin and that was what I meant. However, Lightning can be implemented to run on top of Litecoin and Ethereum."Josh:That has come up that has come up in the past, I think at one point.Mike:You can't do micro payments on a credit card.Josh:Yeah.Mike:Right? But you can do micropayments on lightening network. And I'm not selling you guys on this, but I'm saying that there's going to be some nerd out there that it's like, "Oh my God micropayments are here, I can do micropayments on lighting network". And then they're going to do well on that product, but then they're also going to do well on the commission that they're earning on payments going through their node.Josh:This could be used for usage base software as a service billing model.Ben:Totally. And then you get the skim off the top, just like a good affiliate does.Mike:Yes.Ben:I love it.Mike:Yes.Ben:I love it. All right. All right, Mike, we're going to have to do some scheming together. Well, any final words, any parting words besides go by all the Dogecoin that you can?Mike:Yeah. Don't put all your money into the cryptocurrencies. Yeah.Josh:Seems like good advice.Ben:Be smart

Josh Cohen & The HomeTeam
4-20-21 HomeTeam HOUR TWO: Din and Josh get REAL on Race in America.

Josh Cohen & The HomeTeam

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2021 45:14


Cosmic Kickback
#049 - Cosmic Christmas: Nick and Josh Get Drunk Off Of Eggnog

Cosmic Kickback

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 25, 2020 43:57


In this holiday special of the Cosmic Kickback, the boys play "Guess That Movie" and get buzzed. Our Podcast is available to listen to on the go on Spotify, Apple Podcast, & pretty much everywhere else podcasts are! Be sure to go listen and follow us on your favorite podcasting platform! Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/76z6CRdpr3eaNR9i54QptU Apple Podcasts - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/cosmic-kickback/id1493788383?uo=4 Google Podcasts - https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy8xMjNjZDU3Yy9wb2RjYXN0L3Jzcw== Anchor - https://anchor.fm/cosmickickback Pocket Casts - https://pca.st/xhjlz59q Breaker - https://www.breaker.audio/cosmic-kickback Overcast - https://overcast.fm/itunes1493788383/cosmic-kickback Radio Public - https://radiopublic.com/cosmic-kickback-WkawOY Follow Cosmic Kickback on Instagram and Twitter! https://www.instagram.com/cosmickickback/ https://twitter.com/cosmickickback Subscribe to Nick & Josh Nick - https://www.youtube.com/nickbarrera Josh - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOVCy8sQkO8cafKxYpO-VVA Follow us on Letterboxd! Josh - https://letterboxd.com/JoshuaFowler/ Nick - https://letterboxd.com/nickbarrera/

Ultimate Drive Home
Did Josh get his OTW Bale?

Ultimate Drive Home

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2020 18:31


Josh reveals his OTW pull, and gives you some astute analysis of recent SBCs. --- 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/futdrivehome/message

Natty Nights: A National Sports Podcast
All Lefties are All Right. Bad Teammates. And Chicago Bears Preview

Natty Nights: A National Sports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2020 47:46


Powered by BUSR.com/Josh Get your sign up bonus today The Tampa Bay Rays are my second favorite team. All natural lefties for the first time in the modern era and it worked….because it was the Red Sox. Danuel House is a bad teammate for the Houston Rockets. A selfish move cost him the bubble. We then previewed the Chicago Bears Week 1 matchup with the Detroit Lions like every other podcast did. Cheers. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/joshbarlog/support

Natty Nights: A National Sports Podcast
Should the White Sox Trade James McCAnn? Sticking up for Dak Prescott, and DON'T extend Jeremy Colliton

Natty Nights: A National Sports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2020 48:58


Powered by BUSR.com/Josh Get your sign up bonus now! Josh Bellamy's fraud is hilarious. Our first impressions of the Kansas City Chiefs and Houston Texans. Skip Bayless talking bad about Dak Prescott is a joke. Skip sucks. After the break we talked about the Chicago White Sox and their catching situation. Should they trade James McCann? Free agent aces? Trevor Bauer on the south side? Then we discussed the Chicago Blackhawks extension topics of Corey Crawford and Jeremy Colliton. Word is that Crawford will receive an offer for 3.5M on a one year deal. Should the team bring Colliton back long term? All that and a little bit more --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/joshbarlog/support

Natty Nights: A National Sports Podcast
Toughest QB in the NFC North, Yankees-Rays is a Rivalry Now, and the Miami Heat are Real

Natty Nights: A National Sports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2020 45:42


Powered by BUSR.com/Josh Get your voicemails in: 815-714-9044 Minnesota Vikings QB Kirk Cousins says, “If I die, I die” about COVID19 and then retrases his steps. So we decided to talk about who the toughest QB is in the NFC North. The New York Yankees and Tampa Bay Rays should be the new rivalry in Major League Baseball. Throwing at the head isn't cool, though. Also discussed the NHL Playoffs and how wrong I was about the Colorado Avalanche and Philadelphia Flyers. The Miami Heat are putting everyone on notice and Jimmy Butler is not taking prisoners even in a game where he scores 13 points. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/joshbarlog/support

Natty Nights: A National Sports Podcast
What's Next: A Chicago Blackhawks Exclusive

Natty Nights: A National Sports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2020 85:36


Powered by BUSR.com/Josh - Get a sign up bonus and start winning. A Chicago Blackhawks exclusive show with Kyle Martin, @McBrooklyn48 on Twitter. We discussed a ton of different aspects of this team headed into the offseason. Will Corey Crawford return? What defensive changes need to be made, if any? What about the offense? Do the Blackhawks have enough scoring power to keep them relevant? It's evident that General Manager Stan Bowman has some tough decisions to make in the next few months, one of them being the coaching situation. Bruce Boudreau's name has been floating around the league for assistant coaching positions, but he is more known as a head coach. Either way, there are rumblings that the Blackhawks will make a coaching change. Jonathan Toews and Patrick Kane, along with other veterans don't seem to get along with Jeremy Colliton. One time donations: $JoshBarlog Ask about $4.99 Advertising --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/joshbarlog/support

Natty Nights: A National Sports Podcast
Blackhawks are in Trouble, White Sox Look-Ahead + MORE

Natty Nights: A National Sports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2020 65:39


Powered by BUSR.com/Josh Get yourself a sign up bonus! Natty Nights 8-13 @ThatPodGuyDuke joins the show as a guest co-host to talk about the #Blackhawks vs. Golden Knights Game 2. #Whitesox baseball headed into the weekend. Who has the advantage, the Cardinals or us? I'll also pick his brain about the #Bears and what we can expect moving into the season, bubble or not? Cleveland Indians' Zach Plesac and Mike Clevinger's costly night out in Chicago. George Kittle got an extension with the San Francisco 49ers, is he worth it? Seahawks cut rookie CB for trying to get some action. Cowboys and Jerry Jones plan to play in front of fans during the NFL season. twitter.com/JoshBarlog twitter.com/ThatPodGuyDuke twitter.com/OnTapSportsNet bit.ly/NattyAPL bit.ly/NattySpot --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/joshbarlog/support

Natty Nights: A National Sports Podcast
A Chicago Sports Question and Notre Dame's Independence is STUPID

Natty Nights: A National Sports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2020 40:32


Powered by BUSR.com/Josh - Get a sign up bonus and start playing! A question that'll spark a discussion surrounding the White Sox, Cubs, Blackhawks, Bulls and Bears. The SEC is doing the right thing but will they even play? Notre Dame being independent and able to choose their conferences per sport is a joke. It's “very dumb” Support the show with a one time donation: $JoshBarlog Ask about $4.99 advertising: --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/joshbarlog/support

Natty Nights: A National Sports Podcast
Marlins' Covid Outbreak Falls on Manfred, Cubs and Sox Reactions. Good news for the NHL + more

Natty Nights: A National Sports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2020 45:46


Powered by BUSR.com/Josh - Get yourself a sign up bonus on the most user-friendly gambling site out there! Reactions to the #Cubs and #Whitesox after Opening Weekend. The #Marlins' Covid outbreak falls at Rob Manfred's feet. What's in store for the #NFL moving forward? And some really great news for #Blackhawks fans + the #NHL Support the podcast directly: $JoshBarlog Ask about $4.99/month advertising! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/joshbarlog/support

Natty Nights: A National Sports Podcast
No preseason would screw Bears, Blackhawks' situation. Cubs and Sox Preview. James Harden knew what he was doing.

Natty Nights: A National Sports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2020 54:10


Powered by BUSR.com/Josh: Get ready for $400 worth of account cash starting Monday! Go make an account, get a sign up bonus so you can be entered to win!

Natty Nights: A National Sports Podcast
No More Crow? Readting to Kopech's Decision, and Orlando's Covid Boundaries

Natty Nights: A National Sports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2020 47:54


Powered by BUSR.com/Josh Get yourself a sign up bonus and get ready for a TON of giveaways to the site! Corey Crawford and the Chicago Blackhawks might be on the outs as he was “unfit to participate” which could mean a lot of things. We react and vocalize Michael Kopech's decision to opt out of the 2020 season for the Chicago White Sox. We do our part in talking about the Chicago Cubs too. Rishaun Holmes is in quarantine for a pretty funny reason. Russell Westbrook has Covid but let's not freak out. And we told you so, the Washington Redskins are changing their name. We're just hoping it's not Red Tails. $JoshBarlog to support the show. Ask about $4.99 advertising! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/joshbarlog/support

IT Career Energizer
Always Negotiate Job Offers But Never Name the First Number with Josh Doody

IT Career Energizer

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2019 27:03


Phil’s guest on this episode of the IT Career Energizer podcast is Josh Doody. He helps software developers to get more high-quality job offers and negotiate higher salaries.  He is also the author of the book “Fearless Salary Negotiation”, a step-by-step guide to getting paid what you’re worth.   In this episode, Phil and Josh discuss the right way to negotiate high salaries. He shows the audience how a few simple language changes will turn you into a better negotiator and self advocate.   Josh explains how to avoid weakening your negotiation position by using a number when answering the question, how much do you want to make? He also reveals the IT sector in which his highest paid coaching clients are involved and explains why you may want to switch career direction.   KEY TAKEAWAYS: (3.09) TOP CAREER TIP Always re-negotiate job offers, even if you think the offer is a really good one. Usually, you will have underestimated your value to that firm. They know this is likely to be the case. So, most firms, will only offer you what you consider to be a good salary, rather than what you are actually worth to them.   Josh also shares the best way to leverage the power you to get properly paid throughout your career. That includes when you move to new roles within a firm.  He also explains how to get your direct manager on your side.   (6.44) WORST CAREER MOMENT While Josh was still working for other people, he spent a year under a manager who had poor management skills. His manager had simply been promoted to the point where his salary level demanded that he had people report to him directly. This despite the fact he was not suitable for that role.   It was a situation that resulted in a very poor working environment. But, good came out of it. Josh realised that even if he left that firm, he could potentially find himself in the same situation again. It made him rethink his career and realise that he needed to find a way to work for himself.   (8.06) CAREER HIGHLIGHT At one point in his career, Josh got heavily involved in developing HR talent management and development software. This work was a highlight of his career.   He really enjoyed the creative process. Working on blue sky ideas, building systems people were actually able to use was engaging and exciting. Josh particularly liked being able to combine using his existing skills to the full while learning new ones.   (9.40) THE FUTURE OF CAREERS IN I.T Machine learning and AI are the top fields to work in. That will be the case for many years to come. Unsurprisingly, the people who have this type of experience are being extremely well paid, right now.   The future for IT is bright and very exciting. Over the past year, more of Josh’s clients have started to receive multiple work offers. Many have taken advantage of this fact and chosen to do the work that looks to be the most interesting and fulfilling. The role that offers the most opportunities for the future.   (13.37) THE REVEAL What first attracted you to a career in I.T.? – The first time Josh used a DOS computer; he saw the magic and was immediately hooked. What’s the best career advice you received? – His first boss taught him to be more purposeful about the way he approached his work. Not to just focus on the financial reward. What’s the worst career advice you received? – Slow down, you are progressing too fast. What would you do if you started your career now? – Josh would focus on machine learning and AI. The work is fascinating and Josh’s clients who work in that field are earning big. What are your current career objectives? – In the short term, Josh’s focus is on offering good coaching services. But, he is an entrepreneur, so expects to, switch focus, at some point. What’s your number one non-technical skill? – Diplomatic communication. This skill enables Josh to stand up for himself and his ideas without putting the other party off. During the podcast, he shares a clever language trick he uses to do that. How do you keep your own career energized? – Experimenting and trying new things in his business. Josh is not afraid to take risks. What do you do away from technology? – Josh has a close group of friends that he spends a lot of time with. He is also active in his community.   (23.39) FINAL CAREER TIP When a prospective employer asks you how much you expect to make, if they were to offer you the job, never reply with a number. Josh explains what to say instead, so you do not alienate the other person or weaken your negotiating position.   BEST MOMENTS (3.13) – Josh - “Always negotiate job offers, even if you think the offer is really good.” (3.52) – Josh - “Get your pay as high as you can at the beginning, using tactful negotiation techniques.” (16.57) – Josh - “Of the people I coach, the ones involved in AI are the ones that are making the big money.” (17.07) – Josh - “For the next 20 or 30 years, AI is going to be huge.” (24.39) – Josh - “Don’t be the one to name the first number in wage negotiation.” (24.41) – Josh - “The wage negotiation process starts in the interview. Not, when you are offered the job. ”   ABOUT THE HOST – PHIL BURGESS Phil Burgess is an independent IT consultant who has spent the last 20 years helping organisations to design, develop and implement software solutions.  Phil has always had an interest in helping others to develop and advance their careers.  And in 2017 Phil started the I.T. Career Energizer podcast to try to help as many people as possible to learn from the career advice and experiences of those that have been, and still are, on that same career journey.   CONTACT THE HOST – PHIL BURGESS Phil can be contacted through the following Social Media platforms:   Twitter: https://twitter.com/philtechcareer LinkedIn: https://uk.linkedin.com/in/philburgess Facebook: https://facebook.com/philtechcareer Instagram: https://instagram.com/philtechcareer Website: https://itcareerenergizer.com/contact   Phil is also reachable by email at phil@itcareerenergizer.com and via the podcast’s website, https://itcareerenergizer.com Join the I.T. Career Energizer Community on Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/groups/ITCareerEnergizer   ABOUT THE GUEST – JOSH DOODY My guest on today’s show helps software developers to get more high-quality job offers and negotiate higher salaries.  He is also the author of the book “Fearless Salary Negotiation”, a step-by-step guide to getting paid what you’re worth.   CONTACT THE GUEST – JOSH DOODY Josh Doody can be contacted through the following Social Media platforms:   Twitter: https://twitter.com/JoshDoody LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/joshdoody/ Personal Website: https://www.joshdoody.com Company Website: https://fearlesssalarynegotiation.com/ Coaching Page: https://fearlesssalarynegotiation.com/coach Article: https://fearlesssalarynegotiation.com/the-dreaded-salary-question/

The Inner Tube: Answering Your Content Creation Questions!
255: Reacting to the new Spider-Man Trailer; Kevin & Josh get vulnerable about their struggles

The Inner Tube: Answering Your Content Creation Questions!

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2019 69:38


Why does Kevin talk so much? Why can't Josh read instruction manuals? Things get REALLY real on this week's episode of the show! Plus, Kevin watches the new Spider-Man: Far from Home trailer and reacts in REAL TIME! And we answer some questions about audio and getting a dog!

AttractionPros Podcast
AP Podcast - Episode 70: Matt and Josh get all resolutionary as they look back on 2018 and ahead to 2019

AttractionPros Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2019 62:15


It happens every year. As the calendar turns, we reflect on what was in the last year and what we'd like to see in the new year.  2018 marked the first full year of the AttractionPros podcast, so Matt and Josh ring in 2019 with a bit of a look back, as well as a look forward. Look for more cool stuff from AttractionPros in 2019! Also mentioned in this episode: ALL CLEAR -Private Learning Community for Attractions Leaders This episode is brought to you by FetchRev.  With hundreds of FECs and Attractions across the US and Canada on their platform, FetchRev can increase your foot traffic, book more parties and events, and capture more revenue.  FetchRev’s software collects your customer contact information and then automatically sends out targeted digital promotions to get them back in the door or through your gates.  Their platform can book you up to 50% more birthday parties and even increase your per visit spend through real-time triggered promotions!  FetchRev has an exclusive offer for AttractionPros listeners.  To learn more about this offer, visit fetchrev.com/attractionspros.

canada look back attractions resolutionary ap podcast josh get fecs
PC Perspective Podcast Video
PC Perspective Podcast 509 - 08/16/18

PC Perspective Podcast Video

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2018 95:17


PC Perspective Podcast #509 - 08/16/18 Join us this week for discussion on Modded Thinkpads, EVGA SuperNOVA PSUs, and more! You can subscribe to us through iTunes and you can still access it directly through the RSS page HERE. The URL for the podcast is: http://pcper.com/podcast - Share with your friends! iTunes - Subscribe to the podcast directly through the iTunes Store (audio only) Video version on iTunes Google Play - Subscribe to our audio podcast directly through Google Play! RSS - Subscribe through your regular RSS reader (audio only) Video version RSS feed MP3 - Direct download link to the MP3 file Hosts: Ryan Shrout, Jeremy Hellstrom, Josh Walrath, Allyn Malventano Peanut Gallery: Ken Addison, Alex Lustenberg Program length: 1:35:10 Podcast topics of discussion: Join our spam list to get notified when we go live! Patreon There is no 3 Merch! http://joshtekk.com/ Week in Review: 0:04:00 The AMD Ryzen Threadripper 2950X and 2990WX Review: Moving Forward 0:29:00 ASUS ProArt PA32UC 32" Monitor: 4K UHD HDR for the Professionals 0:32:50 Intel SSD 660p 1TB SSD Review - QLC Goes Mainstream News items of interest: 0:46:10 NVIDIA Officially Announces Turing GPU Architecture at SIGGRAPH 2018 Real time ray tracing in still life 1:00:30 AMD builds semi-custom SoC with Zen and Vega for Chinese gaming market 1:04:50 Intel Shows Latest Xeon Roadmap at Data Centric Innovation Summit 1:11:05 Samsung Begins Mass Production of QLC SATA SSDs for Consumers 1:15:15 DOOM Eternal Gameplay at QuakeCon 2018 1:17:00 Coffee Lake S will be released along with the pumpkin spice Other stuff 1:18:45 Intel teases graphics stuff 1:22:35 Intel foreshadow / L1TF Picks of the Week: 1:26:45 Ryan: Gigabyte AORUS RGB Demo Memory 1:29:50 Jeremy: A Canadian AMD Ryzen 7 1800X 1:31:00 Josh: Get it quick! Fast NVME SSD! 1:32:45 Allyn: Get it cheaper! (Reasonably) Fast NVMe SSD! http://pcper.com/podcast http://twitter.com/ryanshrout and http://twitter.com/pcper Closing/outro

Bitten by a Radioactive Podcast
Episode 5: Fantasy Name Extreme Generator

Bitten by a Radioactive Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2017 58:57


It's an episode of envelope-pushing, as the hosts talk about moving pictures as inspiration before Dean conjures not just a fantasy name, but an extreme fantasy name! What makes it so extreme? Well, the hero it creates certainly pushes themselves to the limit. Literally. Please drink responsibly. Got any ideas about this week's hero, or just wanna talk comics with Dean, Jade and Josh? Get in touch — follow @BBR_Podcast on Twitter. Theme music is "Fearless First" by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

Bitten by a Radioactive Podcast
Episode 4: RV Name Generator

Bitten by a Radioactive Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2017 58:03


Dean takes his travel analogies to the next level by making the whole episode transport-based! The hosts ride on the bumpy road of copyright infringement with their next superhero, with a name created from the RV Name Generator. Keep an open mind; not every recreational vehicle is called “The Beast.” And we can’t touch that name, anyway. Thanks, Marvel. "Also some dog turns up again that no one cares about." - Dean Got any ideas about this week's hero, or just wanna talk comics with Dean, Jade and Josh? Get in touch — follow @BBR_Podcast on Twitter. Theme music is "Fearless First" by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

Bitten by a Radioactive Podcast
Episode 3: Childhood Pet Names and Greatest Fears

Bitten by a Radioactive Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2017 74:33


After creating a broken starlet and brothers who grind villains to literal dust, it’s time to make a “pure” hero. So, of course, the hosts’ childhood pet names combined with their greatest fear should do the trick. What a trick it did, though – three whole characters get the treatment this episode! If Josh had’ve got his way, this episode would’ve been “Cherrypicker Johnson: Dark Origins.” Even had to make him gritty, didn’t you? Got any ideas about this week's hero, or just wanna talk comics with Dean, Jade and Josh? Get in touch — follow @BBR_Podcast on Twitter. Theme music is "Fearless First" by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

Bitten by a Radioactive Podcast
Episode 2: Tool and Surname

Bitten by a Radioactive Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2017 60:17


It's time for the biggest challenge they've ever faced, as Dean takes Josh's favourite ever film in the world and distills a prompt from it: a tool name and a surname. "This'll sound badass.” Dean thought. “I hope to God we don’t get ‘hammer’” Jade hopes. They soon find out there's a whole lotta tools with creatively-poisonous names… Got any ideas about this week's hero, or just wanna talk comics with Dean, Jade and Josh? Get in touch — follow @BBR_Podcast on Twitter. Theme music is "Fearless First" by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

Bitten by a Radioactive Podcast
Episode 1: Colour and Animal

Bitten by a Radioactive Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2017 58:41


Dean, Jade & Josh tell us their hopes, dreams and recent comic reads, before the main event: creating a superhero from scratch. Episode 1 means keeping it simple, with a classic colour and animal combination. From this, a hero (and podcast) is born! Got any ideas about this week's hero, or just wanna talk comics with Dean, Jade and Josh? Get in touch — follow @BBR_Podcast on Twitter. Theme music is "Fearless First" by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

March of the Pigs
#213 - Joe DeRosa (@joederosacomedy) and Josh get Beer Bellied

March of the Pigs

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2017 70:51


We’re finally back in the UnPops studio with Adam Tod Brown after a few months off. Comedian Joe DeRosa joins us after eating a ton of food with Josh at a Korea-town favorite known as Beer Belly. Joe is struggling with the carb-load right out of the gate. Joe finds out that Adam and Josh are the worst people to discuss moderation with. Joe talks TV writing with us, and we all share our nightmares of crappy network notes. We share stories of adjusting to West Coast food after growing up on the east coast, and share our favorite gravy recipes. Joe hates unnecessary sex scenes in movies, and Josh surprisingly agrees because airplanes. This one is all over the place (aren’t they all?) so enjoy!

Tomorrow with Joshua Topolsky
Episode 8: John Gruber & Josh Get 2gether 4 an Apple Chat

Tomorrow with Joshua Topolsky

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2015 71:02


ALERT. John Gruber is one of the world's foremost experts on Apple. Josh is one of the world's foremost experts on experts. Unsurprisingly, things get very nerdy when Josh and John sit down to discuss the past, present, and future of the company, as well as how it compares to the competition. But don't worry — Woodrow Wilson, James Bond, and the New York Yankees all pop up in the discussion as well. You've been warned. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices