Podcast appearances and mentions of josh josh

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Best podcasts about josh josh

Latest podcast episodes about josh josh

The E3Rehab Podcast
149. High vs Low Value Care w/ Josh Zadro

The E3Rehab Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2024 47:47


Chris Hughen sat down with Josh Zadro to talk about High vs Low Value Care in musculoskeletal rehab and medicine. We dive into a variety of topics including high and low value care in the context of imaging, injections, surgery, and physical therapy. Watch the full episode: https://youtu.be/7dyTQNOHbXA  Helpful Papers:  Zadro et al, 2020 Overcoming Overuse Parts 1-5 More about Josh: Josh's Twitter Josh's ResearchGate --- Follow Us: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/e3rehab  Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/e3rehab/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/E3Rehab --- Rehab & Performance Programs: https://store.e3rehab.com/  Newsletter: https://e3rehab.ck.page/19eae53ac1  Coaching & Consultations: https://e3rehab.com/coaching/  Articles: https://e3rehab.com/articles/  Apparel: https://store.e3rehab.com/collections/frontpage  --- Podcast Sponsors: Vivo Barefoot: Get 15% off all shoes! - https://www.vivobarefoot.com/e3rehab CSMi: https://humacnorm.com/e3rehab  --- @dr.surdykapt @tony.comella @dr.nicolept @chrishughen @nateh_24 --- This episode was produced by Matt Hunter  

Accelerated Investor Podcast
3 Types of Apartment Syndication with Josh Cantwell.

Accelerated Investor Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2024 14:50


In this episode, Josh discusses the different types of apartment syndications, focusing on value-add properties. He explains that value-add deals involve buildings that are not fully stabilized and have rents below market value. These properties require cosmetic updates, such as painting and flooring, but do not require major structural work. Josh emphasizes that value-add properties are typically located in B and C class markets, which offer great potential for growth. He also briefly touches on turnkey cash flow deals, which are properties that are already at market value and do not require significant renovations. Lastly, he mentions deep construction or distressed properties, which are not recommended for newer investors due to the high level of renovation and the need for bridge financing. Value-add properties are buildings that are not fully stabilized and have rents below market value. These properties require cosmetic updates, such as painting and flooring, but do not require major structural work. Notable Quotes: Value-add properties are typically located in B and C class markets, which offer great potential for growth. Turnkey cash flow deals are properties that are already at market value and do not require significant renovations. Deep construction or distressed properties require extensive renovations and are not recommended for newer investors. "Value add means the building is not stabilized, the rents are below market value, and it needs just cosmetic updates." - Josh "Turnkey cash flow deals are great if you have a 1031 exchange or limited partners with a longer time horizon." - Josh "Deep construction or distressed properties require a highly capable contractor and bridge financing." - Josh Josh's Website Fannie Mae Freddie Mac HUD Key Takeaways:Notable Quotes:Resources:

Empowered By Iron
Mallory Rowan & Josh Reyes - Episode 233

Empowered By Iron

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2023 55:21


In this episode, we are joined by inspiring guests Mallory Rowan & Josh Reyes. Listen in as they open up about running a business while competing in powerlifting meets, what lead to deciding to close the business, burnout and healing from it, and getting sober. Mallory and Josh are so warm and vulnerable and their story is relatable and hopefully comforting.      Connect with Mallory and Josh    Josh in IG @joshhreyes https://instagram.com/joshhreyes Mallory on IG @malloryrowan https://instagram.com/malloryrowan Website https://malloryrowan.com/   This episode is sponsored by Courage & Grace Body Care.  Visit them at CGBodyCare.com and use code STRENGTH for 15% off your first order.     Get coached by Kristin and her team on your nutrition and recovery at: https://fiercelyfueled.com/services/   To stay motivated by your training data, join Jen's training app here: https://thompsonsgym.programs.app   Sign up for The Strength Academy Membership & join LIVE us for our bi-weekly interactive podcast recordings.   Follow the hosts: Dr. Kristin Lander: @drkristinlander Jen Thompson: @jenthompson132 Follow us on Instagram 

That Kind of Nerd
Owen Gleiberman Is A Clown

That Kind of Nerd

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2023 48:14


It's nice to see you again! Who is Owen Gleiberman? CJ now has a growing media server (thanks to Josh) Josh is angry about another list! Brian found a list of blockbusters nobody remembers Don't forget to follow "That Kind of Nerd" on ⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Instagram⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Mastodon⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Thank you for tuning in to "That Kind of Nerd" and being a part of our nerdy community. Remember to subscribe, leave a review, and spread the word about the podcast. We appreciate your support! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thatkindofnerd/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thatkindofnerd/support

Black Diamond Guns and Gear - 76 Tuesday
76Tuesday Podcast 091 – JOSH, JOSH, AND BALL WAX

Black Diamond Guns and Gear - 76 Tuesday

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2023 72:53


Today we welcome Joe from Shooting Gallery formerly known as Shooting Gallery New England. You can find him on instagram @shootinggallery_official – YouTube at Shooting Gallery 1- and also check out his podcast The Shooting In The Woods Podcast! On this episode we discuss his moving from Massachusetts to Florida, strict gun laws, SilencerCo BOGO … 76Tuesday Podcast 091 – JOSH, JOSH, AND BALL WAX Read More »

Firearms Radio Network (All Shows)
76Tuesday Podcast 091 – JOSH, JOSH, AND BALL WAX

Firearms Radio Network (All Shows)

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2023 72:53


Today we welcome Joe from Shooting Gallery formerly known as Shooting Gallery New England. You can find him on instagram @shootinggallery_official – YouTube at Shooting Gallery 1- and also check out his podcast The Shooting In The Woods Podcast! On this episode we discuss his moving from Massachusetts to Florida, strict gun laws, SilencerCo BOGO … 76Tuesday Podcast 091 – JOSH, JOSH, AND BALL WAX Read More »

BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast
749: From DoorDasher to $1.5 MILLION in Real Estate (All at 22 Years Old!)

BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2023 62:10


Your DoorDash driver may be the world's next real estate mogul. If you ever had Josh Janus drop off food at your house, you may have been in the middle of him getting a deal done. That's right; between picking up and delivering food, Josh was cold-calling sellers, sourcing as many off-market real estate deals as possible. This type of serial side hustling led Josh to acquire $1,500,000 in real estate at age twenty-two, making $50,000 per month and building a business most entrepreneurs could only dream of. From a young age, Josh was already the king of multiple income streams. He was making duct tape wallets on the bus, flipping shoes online, and doing whatever he could to save more money. When he found BiggerPockets, he realized that real estate was the way to propel his dollars even further, allowing him to have money work for him instead of the other way around. So, Josh set out building a "hybrid wholesaling" model. He would contact off-market sellers, send their information to an agent, and get paid for his side of the deal. Once Josh got his real estate license, he started hustling even harder, selling $17,000,000 of real estate as an agent, making more in a month than many Americans make in a year. So what was Josh's quick key to success? How did he do all this in his early twenties without any experience? And how can you repeat the same system to skyrocket your wealth? Stick around; Josh will tell you how to do it too!  In This Episode We Cover: The "hybrid wholesale" model Josh uses to make serious commissions on off-market deals Side hustles, alternative income streams, and how to make more money in your free time Cold calling tips and getting your first off-market deal under contract (even with NO experience) How to use the BiggerPockets forums to get more deals, network with more investors, and build wealth  Mistakes you should avoid when hunting for your own off-market real estate deals Josh's nearly perfect BRRRR and the right way to do a deal that needs a renovation/rehab And So Much More! Links from the Show Find an Investor-Friendly Real Estate Agent BiggerPockets Youtube Channel BiggerPockets Forums BiggerPockets Pro Membership BiggerPockets Bookstore BiggerPockets Bootcamps BiggerPockets Podcast BiggerPockets Merch BPCON2023 Listen to All Your Favorite BiggerPockets Podcasts in One Place Learn About Real Estate, The Housing Market, and Money Management with The BiggerPockets Podcasts Get More Deals Done with The BiggerPockets Investing Tools Find a BiggerPockets Real Estate Meetup in Your Area David's BiggerPockets Profile David's Instagram David's YouTube Channel Work with David Rob's BiggerPockets Profile Rob's YouTube Rob's Instagram Rob's TikTok Rob's Twitter Hear Our Interview with Couch-Flipper Turned Investor, Ryan Pineda Build Your Off-Market List with PropStream Books Mentioned in the Show: Long-Distance Real Estate Investing by David Greene SCALE by David Greene Connect with Josh: Josh's BiggerPockets Profile Josh's Instagram Click here to listen to the full episode: https://www.biggerpockets.com/blog/real-estate-749 Interested in learning more about today's sponsors or becoming a BiggerPockets partner yourself? Email advertise@biggerpockets.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The CineMEH Podcast
S2E7- Super Mario Brothers, 1993 LIVE

The CineMEH Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2023 95:35


Coming to you LIVE, it's The CineMEH Podcast starring Josh Josh and Ryan Josh, and this week we are bringing you the greatest cultural achievement of the entire 20th century... Super Mario Brothers! This week on CineMEH Josh and Ryan and going down the pipes and checking every castle for the princess as we discuss the very first video game movie adaptation, 1993's Super Mario Brothers. Recorded live after our viewing, hear Josh and Ryan's candid thoughts on a befuddlingly dark, bizarrely eclectic, and head-scratchingly deviant adaptation of one of the world's most beloved video games. Stomp the turtles, and pound some shrooms- WE MEAN GOOMBAS- it's time to tangle with Koopa and dance with Big Bertha. It's time for the Mario Twins. The CineMEH Podcast is a production of Slyjack Media, LLC.

Pro Politics with Zac McCrary
Josh Wolf, Media Consultant & Founder of Warchest

Pro Politics with Zac McCrary

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2023 56:08


Josh Wolf managed his first race at age 19, spent 10 years on the road running top House, Governor, and Senate races before becoming a media consultant & partner at AL Media. He also is the founder of Warchest, the innovative campaign budgeting software that - in a few short years - has become omnipresent on Democratic campaigns. In this conversation, Josh talks managing races from Maryland to Massachussetts, Florida to California...as a media consultant, helping elect Governors Katie Hobbs and Dan McKee...plus his theories on effective campaign managers, impactful media, and smart campaign budgeting. IN THIS EPISODE…Josh's path to politics at a very young age from Baltimore MD…The story of Josh managing a competitive State Senate race at age 19…How Josh become an itinerant campaign manager on the road for nearly a decade…The 2012 Wisconsin Senate recalls become an inflection point for Josh…Josh's take on what makes an effective campaign manager…The 3 types of errors on campaigns & 2 most important things for a manager…Josh breaks down his work in campaigns in California, Massachusetts, and Florida…Josh's path into media consulting…Josh goes deep on how his client Katie Hobbs beat Kari Lake to win the high-profile AZ Gov race in 2022…Josh on the political trajectory of Arizona…Josh tells the story of one of the more memorable, effective ads from the '22 cycle in the Rhode Island Governor's race…Josh talks how and why he founded the innovative campaign budgeting software Warchest…Josh's best practices on how a campaign should decide to spend “early” or not…Josh's take on how traditional and digital media should integrate…Josh explains one his most controversial, heterodox opinions…Josh gives a travel hack and movie recommendation…AND Eric Adelstein, Andover caucus meetings, Ami Bera, the best spreadsheet, Joe Biden, John Bivona, broken formulas, budget gaps, cable-news parents, the campaign's fastest runner, James Carville, clusters of talent, Heather Colburn, comically early starts, Shelbi Dantic, Bob Dole, Dominican baseball prospects, Russ Feingold, friendly insiders, gas station TV ads, germaphobia, Steve Grossman, the Harvard Business Journal, high-leverage mistakes, important incubators, Conner Johnston, King Oscar, Kory Kozloski, Roger Lau, Kari Lake, Hannah Ledford,  Ann Liston, living in the minutia, Dan Lungren, the MAGA brand, Dan McKee, Matt McKee, Andy Meyer, moments of self-reflection, Mike Muir, Patrick Murphy, the Newport Gulls, Trey Nix, Pikesville, Robert Redford, Harry Reid, roaming the halls in Annapolis, sardine-heads, Bill Scher, throwing shirts out the window, toxic work cultures, Bobby Zirkin & more!

BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast
692: Fighting Cancer, Financial Freedom, and 20 Units in 2 Years

BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2022 61:57


Financial freedom isn't something that most Americans strive towards. For the most part, working at a job, getting a steady paycheck, and bringing home the bacon is enough. That is until something forcibly stops you from working. It could be a workplace injury, a family emergency, or even a cancer diagnosis. What do you do when you can't work or provide for your family, all while fighting a life-threatening disease?Josh Goldstein was in this exact situation in 2015 when doctors gave him a rough diagnosis—pancreatic cancer. Josh and his wife knew that he could make it through the treatments, but the financial problem still loomed largely. How would they be able to pay the bills, take care of their kids, or continue living the life they loved without any money coming in from Josh's work? The answer—real estate investing.After years of analysis paralysis and a deep obsession with BiggerPockets content (woohoo!), Josh bought his first property as the world was starting to shut down. But he didn't let the lockdowns stop his plan to hit financial freedom fast. Over the past two years, Josh has gone from zero to twenty units, some of which he's never laid eyes on before. This portfolio, which was built out of a life-threatening situation, is now bringing in hundreds of thousands a year for Josh's family, providing them well-earned financial independence.In This Episode We Cover:Solving life's hardest problems (even when they threaten to kill you!)Building your foundation for financial freedom today so you'll never be out of optionsKicking analysis paralysis to the curb and the simple way to start investing in real estateLong-distance real estate investing and why it isn't as scary as you may thinkShort-term rental saturation and what will happen as hosts buy more and more homesWhy you always want to double-check the battery life on your home's smart locks And So Much More!Links from the ShowFind an Investor-Friendly Real Estate AgentBiggerPockets Youtube ChannelBiggerPockets ForumsBiggerPockets Pro MembershipBiggerPockets BookstoreBiggerPockets BootcampsBiggerPockets PodcastBiggerPockets MerchListen to All Your Favorite BiggerPockets Podcasts in One PlaceLearn About Real Estate, The Housing Market, and Money Management with The BiggerPockets PodcastsGet More Deals Done with The BiggerPockets Investing ToolsFind a BiggerPockets Real Estate Meetup in Your AreaDavid's BiggerPockets ProfileDavid's InstagramHenry's BiggerPockets ProfileHenry's InstagramBiggerPockets Podcast 340 with Whitney HuttenBiggerPockets Podcast 364 with Avery CarlBooks Mentioned in the ShowRich Dad Poor Dad by Robert KiyosakiLong-Distance Real Estate Investing by David GreeneConnect with Josh:Josh's BiggerPockets ProfileJosh's InstagramJosh's EmailClick here to check the full show notes: https://www.biggerpockets.com/blog/real-estate-692Interested in learning more about today's sponsors or becoming a BiggerPockets partner yourself? Check out our sponsor page!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

The Uncommon Element
22. Building Wealth, Health, & A Great Mindset with Pedro Meneses

The Uncommon Element

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2022 55:00


This week your host Josh Meunier introduces you to Pedro Meneses, a Real Estate expert in home sales, investing, and AirBnB rentals.  In this episode you're going to learn…How building wealth isn't as hard as you think it is.Using leverage or equity to purchase additional assets is a way to work towards wealth for your future.  How the education system could be better at helping our kids with learning and independent thought.How you can get yourself into real estate. What is coming in the economy these days and how you can prepare yourself for it.Please enjoy this episode with The Modern Beast, Pedro Meneses.You can find Pedro & your host Josh Here…Pedro Meneses:Https://pedromeneses.onlineHttps://pedromenesespresskit.phonesites.com/@joshmeunierofficial@theuncommonelement@free.space.studioTwitter @josh_meunier_LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/josh-meunier-94026011Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1824903Website:www.uncommonelement.comwww.freespacestudio.comEmail:Coaching with Josh:Josh@winrateconsulting.comPodcast: theuncommonelementpodcast@gmail.comDesign Work: Freespacestudiotx@gmail.com

Ignite Your Passion with Bonnie Lang
Josh Grohman, Circus Performer/Instructor, The Limits We Imagine Don't Really Exist

Ignite Your Passion with Bonnie Lang

Play Episode Play 30 sec Highlight Listen Later Sep 6, 2022 31:54


In this inspiring interview get to know Josh Grohman. He's a  Circus Performer and Instructor. We had the opportunity to work with silks at Cirque Aria in San Antonio, Texas. It was so much fun and a great workout too!  I loved how he said "the limits we imagine don't really exist". I'm such a believer of this! You can do anything!Connect with Josh:Josh's WebsiteI'd Love to Hear From You!If you would like to hear about a profession or love what you do, I would love to hear from you! And if you're enjoying these podcasts, please send me a message!Connect with Bonnie: https://www.bonnielang.com/igniteConnect with Bonnie on Instagram: @bonnielang.com 

Elevate with Robert Glazer
Josh Linkner on Big Little Breakthroughs

Elevate with Robert Glazer

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2022 40:50


Josh Linkner is a brilliant expert on creativity and innovation. He is the founder and CEO of five tech companies that sold for a combined value of over $200 million. He is a highly respected business leader, venture capitalist, keynote speaker and even a gifted jazz guitarist. He is also the New York Times bestselling author of several books, including his latest, Big Little Breakthroughs. Josh joined host Robert Glazer on the Elevate Podcast to discuss his winding career path, how each of us can achieve daily creative breakthroughs, and how companies can unlock their collective creativity. Learn More about Josh Josh's Website Josh's Latest Book – Big Little Breakthroughs Josh's Other Books Book Josh to Speak Follow Josh: Twitter | Instagram| LinkedIn| Facebook

Gimmicks
DIGIMON does a Lovecraft homage

Gimmicks

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2022 109:10


Digimon Adventure 02: "His Master's Voice" / "The Call of Dagomon" Joshua Aaron Moore (sportswriter and author) dives into the dark ocean of this notorious and creepy episode, which uses H.P. Lovecraft's Cthulhu Mythos as a metaphor for depression. Find more from Josh: Josh on Twitter: @KentuckyJAM | Josh's sports Twitter: @JoshMooreHL | Josh's sports writing: kentucky.com | Josh's poetry collection: https://amzn.to/3PEQW1t Contact Gimmicks: Email: gimmickspodcast@gmail.com | Twitter: @gimmickspod | Instagram: @gimmickspod | Derek on Twitter: @DerekBGayle Theme song: "Swift Electric" by Cyberbear | Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Sources: Chiaki Konaka blog on DigiLab | Genki Yoshimura interview on DigiLab | Jeff Nimoy interview on Digipedia | DigimonWiki | Reddit | Den of Geek | Digimon System Restore

The Art of Bombing
Episode 227: Lee Bruns (HBO Max, Motorcycle Monthly)

The Art of Bombing

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2022 57:46


Episode 227: Making A Good Impression! In this episode, Dan and Josh (Josh is gone) are joined by Watertown, SD-based comedian Lee Bruns  (HBO Max, Motorcycle Monthly) who talks about bombing while trying to make a good impression on a booker. Lee talks about the obstacles of living in a small town and having to create his own stage time while curating comedy in a small market. He also shares his dream gig and it's not what you'd think - it's the. Art. of. Bombing! Plus more! Please rate and review. Lee BrunsLee Bruns is a 54-year-old father of three who never really got the hang of being an adult. Formally trained auctioneer,  writer for Many motorcycle magazines, Special Olympics coach, and nerd level motorcycle guy.  Website Instagram Twitter Art of Bombing:  Dead & Mellow: https://deadandmellow.com/  "Nobody Had a Podcast Called The Art of Bombing" Theme by John Hult  Bumpers provided by Joe Nicola Music  Website: https://www.artofbombingpod.com/    Merch: https://teespring.com/stores/blitzed-entertainment Leave us a voice message: https://podinbox.com/artofbombingpod Buy us a coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/dbubcomedy  Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/artofbombingpod  FB: https://www.facebook.com/artobpodcast/  Twitter: @artofbombingpod  Instagram: @artofbombingpod  Twitch: @artofbombingpod YouTube: Art of Bombing Podcast  Dan Bublitz Jr: http://www.danbublitz.com/  Josh Shirley: http://www.joshshirleycomedy.com ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

KRLV Morning Tailgate
H3 Carr Needs Josh, Josh Needs Carr and Sam and Ash Int

KRLV Morning Tailgate

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2022 38:39


Hella Meditated
Conversation with Buddhist teacher josh korda

Hella Meditated

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2022 78:37


Joe sits down with his good friend and mentor Josh Korda to talk about life, growing up in NY in the 70's, the NY punk and music scene, addiction, Dharma Punx NYC and more.More about Josh:Josh has been the dharma teacher at the New York and Brooklyn Dharmapunx meetings since 2005, has a large spiritual counseling private practice, and has written for the buddhist magazines Shambhala Sun, Tricycle and Buddhadharma. He is the author of the book 'Unsubscribe' and has been profiled by The New York Times, Village Voice and CBS News (interviewed by Dr. Jon LaPook). For over 10 years Josh has also given talks at ZenCare.org, a non-profit organization that trains hospice volunteersYou can find out more about Josh and his teachings Here -https://www.dharmapunxnyc.com/https://dharmapunxnyc.podbean.com/https://insighttimer.com/joshkordahttps://www.huffpost.com/author/korda-josh-141https://tricycle.org/author/joshkorda/

PTT廢文考察團
PTT廢文考察團_S2EP39 台南JOSH被家暴了?

PTT廢文考察團

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2022 89:25


本集內容: 台南JOSH被家暴了? 各種台南JOSH廢文 有沒有拿到身分證字號可以幹麻的八卦? 日本一男子墜樓 四人送醫 建中運動服星爆 粉絲專頁:https://reurl.cc/LdL1me Instagram:Pttforfun 合作邀約:qpb852qpb742@gamil.com 贊助團長:https://pay.soundon.fm/podcasts/5ccc3bd0-19f2-43fb-be3f-27591746ec99

Kinderpodcast
Baumhausgeschichten - Tacos Besuch

Kinderpodcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2022 13:37


In dieser Geschichte lädt Josh-Josh seinen Lieblingsfreund aus dem Kölner Zoo ein ihn in seinem Baumhaus zu besuchen. Da es keine Wegweiser im Wäldchen gibt, ist es für Taco garnicht mal so einfach ans Ziel zu kommen.

The Flourishing Entrepreneur Podcast
013 | Wholeness + Curiosity with Josh Haynam

The Flourishing Entrepreneur Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2022 39:32


What if I told you that you don't need to sacrifice your wholeness at the altar of busyness?    We have a tendency to compartmentalize ourselves. We often focus so much on one area of our lives—especially if we're entrepreneurs!—that we forget about everything else...or everything else suddenly becomes less attractive to us than our business. However, you should not sacrifice your wholeness on the altar of busyness!   In today's episode, we're joined by Josh Haynam, a lifelong entrepreneur who started his first company at age 15 and never looked back. He's the co-founder of Interact, a marketing tool used by 10,000 small businesses throughout the world. Josh bootstrapped the company with a small team to become a major brand name in the world of marketing.    In addition to the idea of wholeness, Josh talks about how to use quizzes to make that good hard cash and how to maintain great boundaries—even when you are spiraling down into burnout. Tune in!   In this episode, you'll learn:   The benefits of Interact, software for making marketing quizzes Why a lack of boundaries can lead to burnout Why you can't sacrifice your wholeness at the altar of busyness How to build curiosity for things you might not be curious about just yet How to maintain boundaries by having things you truly enjoy outside of work Here's a peek inside the episode:   [1:47] You are more than just the sum of your parts, and you're definitely more than just your business.   [3:26:] Mantra of the Day   [8:43] Burned out because of no boundaries.   [9:33] Josh took 18 months to reconstruct life.   [12:50] Maintaining boundaries by doing things outside of work that you truly enjoy.   [16:30] Quizzes as the "virtual you" on your website + Add an interactive element to content you create (polls, embed in articles, etc) + make interactive social media posts.   [19:29] Social media is tough—because you can get a lot of people or none at all.   [22:49] You don't own your social media list.   [28:37] Go slower, build slow.   [31:54] Talking to people who I am curious about.   [32:57] Throw yourself outside of your routine.   Connect with me!     Podcast Instagram: The Flourishing Entrepreneur FM Website: Flourish Marketing | Strategy, Copywriting & Coaching Schedule a Discovery Call: 30-Minute Discovery Call - ALEYA HARRIS Where to find more of Josh:   Josh's LinkedIn: Josh Haynam Josh's Website: Interact Quiz Maker This episode includes affiliate links:   Henry's House of Coffee Interact Quiz Maker: Create Your Own Quiz For Free Book: The Upward Spiral

THE BUNKER - Sports, Movies, TV, Tech
NFL - Week 9's Quick Hits - "Josh! Josh! Josh!"

THE BUNKER - Sports, Movies, TV, Tech

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2021 14:06


Was this past week an aberration, or should teams that have firmly led the first half of the 2021 season be concerned? 7 favorites crashed down to turf, exploding into flames in Week 9 of the NFL season, including two that were picked to win by more than 10 points. Let's get into it, in The Bunker's Quick Hits for the NFL's Week 9. #TheBunker #NFL #TennesseeTitans #JoshAllen #AFC

Lightweights Podcast
Ilya Confronts Josh (Josh Peck)

Lightweights Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2021 38:32


Josh Peck, world superstar and co-host of Joe's new other podcast MALE MODELS, comes by the studio. Do things get settled or only get worse? Spoiler alert, they love each other. Check out Josh's podcast MALE MODELS here: https://open.spotify.com/show/4dTts9FCtHizR28n7VRb9t Video Podcast Channel Here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCChM6tHqj-4FwbG_KdIjKUw follow us on Instagram @lightweightspod // @ilyafeddy // @ughitsjoe --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lightweights/support

The Candlestick Kids Fantasy Podcast
TNF Recap + Week 2 Previews + TCK Listener League (P)review) w/ Josh of Commish

The Candlestick Kids Fantasy Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2021 80:40


On this episode brought to you by BetOnline, Sky Guasco (@SkyGuasco) and Josh (@Josh_ff) recap TNF win for WFT, preview the Week 2 matchups and help set TCK Listener League rosters for both the Rookie and Veteran Leagues.Follow the TCK Crew:Sky's Twitter: @SkyGuasco ( https://twitter.com/tck_pod )TCK Instagram: @fantasyfootball_tckpod ( https://www.instagram.com/fantasyfootball_tckpod/ )TCK TikTok: @tckpod ( https://www.tiktok.com/@tckpod? )Bobby's Twitter: @BobbyLaMarco ( https://twitter.com/BobbyLamarco )Fantasy Football XFactor Instagram: ( https://www.instagram.com/fantasyfootballxfactor/ )SPONSORSBetOnline -- "Your Online Sportsbook Experts": https://betonline.ag/Visit the website today or use your mobile device to join and receive your 50% Welcome Bonus on your first depositPlay Action Pools -- "You new home for all your office sports pools": https://playactionpools.com/Go to the website and sign up for the Bleav Football Pick 'Em Challenge for weekly a chance to win Electric Sunglasses and a pair of DC Shoes!The Jersey Jungle: https://www.instagram.com/thejerseyjungle/Promo Code "TCK" for 10-15% OFF authentic sports jerseysBombanana Hot Sauce: https://seekthespice.com/Promo Code "TCK" for 10% off orderIntro/Outro Music: Shades of Green by Sol SeedPlease leave a 5 Star rating and review and subscribe on YouTube if we've brought you any value.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Interrogatories with Josh Camson
Episode 17 - Josh Baron

Interrogatories with Josh Camson

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2021 45:21


Welcome to the first Double Josh episode, featuring Host Josh (Camson) and Guest Josh (Baron)! Josh Baron is a criminal defense attorney in Utah and author of The Business of Criminal Law (available on Amazon or by clicking here).  Josh & Josh also talk LinkedIn, kids, and FONTS!  Look for Josh Baron's podcast, "The Business of Criminal Law," beginning in August on all major platforms and check him out on LinkedIn. As always, make sure to subscribe, rate, and review! 

The Bets & Quotes Podcast
Josh! Josh! Josh! Josh!

The Bets & Quotes Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2021 51:36


The guys return to Detroit Lakes this week where Rube Josh won Initials in one of the greatest moments in Initials history. We re-visit that day and talk about how great it is that live events with the PowerTrip are back. 

Ed Gamble & Matthew Crosby on Radio X
Episode 108 – Comedian Josh Josh Widdicombe, Friend of the Show

Ed Gamble & Matthew Crosby on Radio X

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2021 71:59


The country's leading Neighbours expert joined us this week and put his knowledge to the test. Keep each other safe. Thanks for downloading the podcast – remember, you can be an Early Worm and catch the show live on Radio X every Sunday 8am – 11am. Get in touch on sunday@radiox.co.uk @EdGambleComedy @matthewcrosby

Dream BIG & Co
Josh Cutler: To Create a Better World, It Starts with Education - Ep #93

Dream BIG & Co

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2021 60:14


Josh Cutler was a teacher for many, many years in New York City. During that time, he learned how to foster a great classroom environment and the details to the educational system. From there he went on to develop his knowledge in the educational realm and training space. He is now a Learning and Development/Training Strategy Consultant. Also, Josh is an Executive Coach at Teach the Trainer. This conversation has a deep pull on my life because proper education is super important to me. Josh Cutler is one of the most intellectually clear thinkers on this topic of education. If you watch and/or listen to this episode, I truly think you'll get great value out of it. Attached Things/Links Mentioned: Josh's Journey Education Education Reform Teaching Yuri Kruman Company Training “Education is the only industry where labor gets blamed for failures of management.” (Josh) Josh's LinkedIn #DreamBIG #ImproveYourselfImpactLives To see what we are up to and what is going on around the Dream BIG & Co community you can follow us on the following platforms: Website Instagram Twitter Facebook Vimeo Snapchat Tik Tok LinkedIn Medium Our Spotify Playlist Our Amazon Alexa Skill - Dream BIG Daily Our Amazon Alexa Skill - Dream BIG Quotes

Best Tech Practices For Small Organizations
Episode #3 - Law Firms & Technology Series - Using AI & Automation, Working Remotely And More (Guest: Joshua Freeman)

Best Tech Practices For Small Organizations

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2021 28:23


In this week's episode, we talked to Joshua Freeman. Josh is the co-founder and partner of Freeman Lovell PLLC. We discussed utilizing AI & automation, running a completely remote law firm, and much more! A little about Josh: Josh believes you deserve expert, an affordable representation that can help you understand and take the right risks as you build a scalable, sellable company. He has built his practice to help entrepreneurs navigate the complicated legal waters of business ownership to reach a successful exit. Learn more about his firm at www.freemanlovell.com

Bad Decisions Good Choices
Rihanna Umbrella-Ay Pon De Replay

Bad Decisions Good Choices

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2021 77:26


Does Houdini actually have a first name? Mac and Laura read a long lost love letter from 1999 from Heather to Josh – Josh’s are the worst but who is actually the villain here? We talk about dates gone wrong and EXPOSED this dude who wanted to wrestle Mac on a first date. He might as well have been named Josh. Anyways, enjoy and let us know what you thought of the episode. We love y’all! Like// Subscribe // Review // Contact Us at baddecisionsgoodchoices@gmail.com // Follow us on Instagram: @bdgc.podcast, Laura: @killerb_hensley, Mac: @macluvsyou // + MAJOR CREDITS + KUDOS TO: Mikey: @mikeyhevr | (BDGC Podcast Theme Song) Scott Taylor: @thatscotttaylor // @scottaylorartgallery // @colorpopartlab | (Logo) Madi Rae Jones: @madi.rae.jones | (Episode Cover Photo) --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/baddecisionsgoodchoices/message

mac exposed josh josh rihanna umbrella
Dynasty Addicts Podcast Network
Fantasy Timeline - Kacey & Josh Josh

Dynasty Addicts Podcast Network

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2021 78:16


Episode 70 is here and we have Kacey Kasem!! @thekaceykasem talk with the guys about Tua being a top 12 QB, WR and QB ranks, a George Kittle trade, and much more!!! Thank you for listening and remember to get those rates and reviews in. They help us so much and we appreciate them. Big thanks to @DMNDZMUZIK for use of "TRVP GOLD" and @BukuDatDude for use of "Front to Back" We are excited and proud to be a part of Dynasty Addicts Podcast Network. We will still have our regular podcast feed and the DAP Network's feed. As for the Wednesdays @9PM ET LIVE stream, we will now only be on the network's YouTube Channel: https://tinyurl.com/DAPNetwork. Be sure to subscribe to it!!

The Fantasy Timeline
Kacey & Josh Josh

The Fantasy Timeline

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2021 78:16


Episode 70 is here and we have Kacey Kasem!! @thekaceykasem talk with the guys about Tua being a top 12 QB, WR and QB ranks, a George Kittle trade, and much more!!! Thank you for listening and remember to get those rates and reviews in. They help us so much and we appreciate them. Big thanks to @DMNDZMUZIK for use of "TRVP GOLD" and @BukuDatDude for use of "Front to Back" We are excited and proud to be a part of Dynasty Addicts Podcast Network. We will still have our regular podcast feed and the DAP Network's feed. As for the Wednesdays @9PM ET LIVE stream, we will now only be on the network's YouTube Channel: https://tinyurl.com/DAPNetwork. Be sure to subscribe to it!!

Natural State Bikes
All In For Josh: Josh Fohner's Ride To Recovery

Natural State Bikes

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2021 39:52


Josh Fohner is just like the rest of us - he has plans for the future and loves to ride his bike, but Josh has one big difference - he suffered a traumatic brain injury as a result of being struck by a vehicle while riding his bike in 2016. Now Josh's days are filled with rehab and recovery. This is his story as he and his parents work hard toward recovery and a 900 mile bike ride in June.

Take Aim Outdoors
TAP-255 Josh Honeycutt's October Whitetail success

Take Aim Outdoors

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2020 58:25


This week excited to chat with Josh Honeycutt from Realtree and Midwest Whitetail. (TAP-247 early season hunting with Josh) Josh recently had success in his home state of Kentucky for a deer he called the Nine. We get to hear all about the hunt and If your looking to learn more about deer hunting & natural browse and identify bedding areas Josh shares some awesome information that is worthy of having in your deer data-banks.  You can find out more about Josh at www.realtree.com & www.midwestwhitetail.com Instagram Josh_Honeycutt Huntstand use the code TakeAim10 for a discount today on the Pro version  

Outdoor Podcast Channel
Take Aim Podcast -255 Josh Honeycutt's Kentucky October success

Outdoor Podcast Channel

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2020 58:25


This week excited to chat with Josh Honeycutt from Realtree and Midwest Whitetail. (TAP-247 early season hunting with Josh) Josh recently had success in his home state of Kentucky for a deer he called the Nine. We get to hear all about the hunt and If your looking to learn more about deer hunting & natural browse and identify bedding areas Josh shares some awesome information that is worthy of having in your deer data-banks.  You can find out more about Josh at www.realtree.com & www.midwestwhitetail.com Instagram Josh_Honeycutt Huntstand use the code TakeAim10 for a discount today on the Pro version  

The Rent Roll Radio Show
Breaking Out of a Middle Class Mindset

The Rent Roll Radio Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2020 24:06


“The right steps in the right order produces a good result.” In this episode of Rent Roll Radio, Sterling and his business partner Andrew Brough welcome Josh Roosen to the show. Josh is the Community Director at Jack and Gino. He shares his path into real estate investing, why he got into multi-family, and what he would do differently if he had it to do over again.   Connect with Josh:  Josh@jakeandgino.com 865-320-0655 Website

Untitled Joshcast
Episode 28 - A Modern Sorkin

Untitled Joshcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2020 83:46


Josh & Josh discuss Aaron Sorkin's latest works: the West Wing reunion special benefiting When We All Vote, and the film, The Trial of The Chicago 7 starring Sacha Baron Cohen and Eddie Redmayne; both of which were released last week on HBO Max and Netflix, respectively.

Disrupted with Credit Union Joe
Credit Union Joe is Disrupted with Josh-Featuring Josh Banta-ITMs

Disrupted with Credit Union Joe

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2020 20:30


Credit Union Joe talks with Josh Banta about the future of interactive teller machines.

Bricked | A Podcast For LEGO Fans
011: It's Been Far Too Long!

Bricked | A Podcast For LEGO Fans

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2020 26:54


It's been far too long! After a few weeks of hiatus due to that little thing we call life we are back! We touch base on the LEGO news, and dive into what we're excited about and what's coming up. The Bricked Podcast is a podcast built by LEGO fans, for LEGO fans. Hosted by Josh & Josh, our goal is to dive deep into the LEGO fandom while thinking outside the box on the seemingly endless potential of the LEGO System. Both longtime builders, fans of numerous fandoms, and essentially adults who are kids at heart. This is a place created to escape the average mundane life into the world of LEGO and pop culture. Follow us on the socials: Facebook: https://facebook.com/brickedpodcast/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brickedpodcast/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/bricked_podcast/

Bricked | A Podcast For LEGO Fans
010: LEGO is an International Language!

Bricked | A Podcast For LEGO Fans

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2020 36:17


This episode of Bricked is an extra special one! We hangout and chat with our friend, and fellow AFOL (Adult Fan Of LEGO) Marco from The Netherlands. Marco has an impressive and extensive collection of sets, and with him being such an avid builder we couldn't wait to chat with him. Being from The Netherlands, we were excited to see just how much we had in common with Marco and LEGO... Jump in and find out for yourself! The Bricked Podcast is a podcast built by LEGO fans, for LEGO fans. Hosted by Josh & Josh, our goal is to dive deep into the LEGO fandom while thinking outside the box on the seemingly endless potential of the LEGO System. Both longtime builders, fans of numerous fandoms, and essentially adults who are kids at heart. This is a place created to escape the average mundane life into the world of LEGO and pop culture. Follow us on the socials: Facebook: https://facebook.com/brickedpodcast/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brickedpodcast/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/bricked_podcast/

Flipping Miami
EP #49 Flip Hacking and How in 1 Click he can Beat your Best Call Center with Josh Gayman

Flipping Miami

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2020 57:51


Joshua got his Arizona Real Estate License in 2009 and Immediately Began Investing. He Wholesaled Over 50 transactions in His First Year and Began to Fix and Flip As Well.  In 2012, Josh Bought His First Rental Property. By 2015, Josh Shifted Focus to Wholesale & Long Term Passive Income Through Rentals. In 2016 Josh SHOCKED the Real Estate World With the Famous "Cold Calling On Steroids." This Product Revolutionized Real Estate Marketing Costs for Investors Around the Country. Josh was Recognized as One of the 100 Most Influential Real Estate Agents in 2017 for His Recognition in Wholesaling and Cold Calling. Key Takeaways: Josh specialises in something called "Cold Calling On Steroids." It’s just not cold calling but massive cold calling with multiple warm leads! Josh left his job as a car salesman in 2008 and was able to utilise his sales knowledge and scale his startup real estate business. However, it is almost impossible to scale business with sales and no marketing. After a few years, Josh decided to invest in marketing so he can gain enough leads and prevent his RE business avoid folding. How did Josh get into real estate? How did Josh kickstart his real estate business when it began to go downhill? What is Josh’s secret sauce as a wholesaler? How Josh has evolved his cold calling marketing strategies to achieve profitable leads? Why commitment is important to grow your real estate business. Commitment is the first step to ensure your real estate business does not fail. Josh shares what he thinks the future of wholesaling will be after the Covid-19. What’s next for Josh? Josh talks about the value of realtors and future Mentioned in this episode: Do you believe the right strategies can help you get your business to where you want to go? Learn more about Cold Calling On Strategies to see how we can help you scale your life and business! Connect with Josh: Website | Youtube | Instagram   Get Free Course on how to do your first deal using cold calling  Wanna Chat? Book a Call Subscribe RaulBolufe's Official YouTube Channel Follow Playlist - Flipping Houses Podcast Follow Playlist - Real Estate Investment Looking to Join the A-team?  The platform we Use to Hire top Team Members Get access to CRM we use Best Real Estate Websites Want to Buy Investment Properties in SoFlo Meetups Once per Month Follow me here: Instagram | Facebook | Personal Site | CRI Site | Youtube

Untitled Joshcast
Joshbites #1 - Liverpool Football Club Are Champions Of England

Untitled Joshcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2020 13:39


Joshbites is a new supplemental series from Josh & Josh of the Untitled Joshcast. In this first episode, Josh recounts Liverpool's path to Premiere League glory, and the many twists and turns it took to get there.

Bricked | A Podcast For LEGO Fans
009: NEW LEGO Ideas sets!? YES, PLEASE!

Bricked | A Podcast For LEGO Fans

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2020 37:22


We're totally here for the new LEGO Ideas sets that were announced! We chat about them, and so much more randomness on this week's episode of Bricked!  The Bricked Podcast is a podcast built by LEGO fans, for LEGO fans. Hosted by Josh & Josh, our goal is to dive deep into the LEGO fandom while thinking outside the box on the seemingly endless potential of the LEGO System. Both longtime builders, fans of numerous fandoms, and essentially adults who are kids at heart. This is a place created to escape the average mundane life into the world of LEGO and pop culture. Follow us on the socials: Facebook: https://facebook.com/brickedpodcast/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brickedpodcast/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/bricked_podcast/

Bricked | A Podcast For LEGO Fans
008: It's Just A Lot...

Bricked | A Podcast For LEGO Fans

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2020 41:44


So many LEGO sets were "officially" announced last week that week that we felt it appropriate to give them a whole episode. Some of the sets aren't necessarily our favorites, and some we love. We go over all of that and more on this weeks episode.  The Bricked Podcast is a podcast built by LEGO fans, for LEGO fans. Hosted by Josh & Josh, our goal is to dive deep into the LEGO fandom while thinking outside the box on the seemingly endless potential of the LEGO System. Both longtime builders, fans of numerous fandoms, and essentially adults who are kids at heart. This is a place created to escape the average mundane life into the world of LEGO and pop culture. Follow us on the socials: Facebook: https://facebook.com/brickedpodcast/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brickedpodcast/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/bricked_podcast/

Two For Three - A St. Louis Cardinals Podcast

The At Home Show broadcasts ALIVE this week from Bates Nursery & Garden Center's Green Room as we continue to adapt the show in the wake of the COVID-19 outbreak. Call with your questions and comments anytime at (615)499-6690. Watch us LIVE Saturday mornings at 8 AM on our Facebook page! https://www.facebook.com/athomeydontplaythat Bates Nursery & Garden Center: https://www.batesnursery.com (https://www.batesnursery.com/) EarthMix Garden Products: https://www.earthmix.net (https://www.earthmix.net/)

Bricked | A Podcast For LEGO Fans
007: Big Screens, Little Bricks | LEGO & Cinema

Bricked | A Podcast For LEGO Fans

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2020 39:16


Since this episode is episode 007, like James Bond. We thought it only appropriate to discuss LEGO and its relationship with cinema. Sets that are inspired by blockbuster films and Hollywood. Beyond the obvious Star Wars, Harry Potter, and Marvel sets. LEGO has put out sets inspired by Ghostbusters, Back To The Future, James Bond and more! Join us as we dive in to what we consider to be some of the best movie themed sets, and some that should probably make the cut in the future. The Bricked Podcast is a podcast built by LEGO fans, for LEGO fans. Hosted by Josh & Josh, our goal is to dive deep into the LEGO fandom while thinking outside the box on the seemingly endless potential of the LEGO System. Both longtime builders, fans of numerous fandoms, and essentially adults who are kids at heart. This is a place created to escape the average mundane life into the world of LEGO and pop culture. Follow us on the socials: Facebook: https://facebook.com/brickedpodcast/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brickedpodcast/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/bricked_podcast/

Bricked | A Podcast For LEGO Fans
006: Dreams, Ideas & LEGO Ideas!

Bricked | A Podcast For LEGO Fans

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2020 32:00


This is one of those hallowed blue sky episodes... Basically, that means that we are going to share some of our dream LEGO sets that we hope gets created by LEGO either by happenstance or through votes on LEGO Ideas! Each of us picked 3 ideas without telling the other and we share them with you guys, along with some honorable mentions. Fingers crossed some of them happen! The Bricked Podcast is a podcast built by LEGO fans, for LEGO fans. Hosted by Josh & Josh, our goal is to dive deep into the LEGO fandom while thinking outside the box on the seemingly endless potential of the LEGO System. Both longtime builders, fans of numerous fandoms, and essentially adults who are kids at heart. This is a place created to escape the average mundane life into the world of LEGO and pop culture. Follow us on the socials: Facebook: https://facebook.com/brickedpodcast/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brickedpodcast/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/bricked_podcast

Bricked | A Podcast For LEGO Fans
005: LEGO & SPACE | A Love Story

Bricked | A Podcast For LEGO Fans

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2020 30:32


Recorded on the day of the SpaceX Dragon Rocket Launch, we sat down to chat about LEGo's relationship with the great unknown – space! Call it what you will, The Final Frontier, A Galaxy Far, Far Away, or something else. Space is something that creates wonder in all of us. Which is why we think LEGO has such a history with it. You can find elements of outer space riddled throughout LEGO sets all throughout The LEGO Group's storied history. The Bricked Podcast is a podcast built by LEGO fans, for LEGO fans. Hosted by Josh & Josh, our goal is to dive deep into the LEGO fandom while thinking outside the box on the seemingly endless potential of the LEGO System. Both longtime builders, fans of numerous fandoms, and essentially adults who are kids at heart. This is a place created to escape the average mundane life into the world of LEGO and pop culture. Follow us on the socials Facebook: http://facebook.com/brickedpodcast Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brickedpodcast/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/bricked_podcast

Bricked | A Podcast For LEGO Fans
004: The Return of The LEGO Store!

Bricked | A Podcast For LEGO Fans

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2020 29:18


Our local LEGO Store opened for the first time in months and we were among the first ones there! In this episode we dive into what to expect from your local LEGO Store and Legoland on reopening after the extended closure. We're also discussing some of this weeks LEGO announcements and what we are building.   The Bricked Podcast is a podcast built by LEGO fans, for LEGO fans. Hosted by Josh & Josh, our goal is to dive deep into the LEGO fandom while thinking outside the box on the seemingly endless potential of the LEGO System. Both longtime builders, fans of numerous fandoms, and essentially adults who are kids at heart. This is a place created to escape the average mundane life into the world of LEGO and pop culture.  Follow us on the socials: Facebook: http://facebook.com/brickedpodcast Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brickedpodcast/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/bricked_podcast

Bricked | A Podcast For LEGO Fans
002: Why We Build LEGO, & Why You Should Too!

Bricked | A Podcast For LEGO Fans

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2020 44:46


In this episode we're diving into why we build LEGO, and the reasoning behind it. Is LEGO just a toy or is it more than that? We're also discussing some of the happenings around the LEGO world along with an update on current builds. The Bricked Podcast is a podcast built by LEGO fans, for LEGO fans. Hosted by Josh & Josh, our goal is to dive deep into the LEGO fandom while thinking outside the box on the seemingly endless potential of the LEGO System. Both longtime builders, fans of numerous fandoms, and essentially adults who are kids at heart. This is a place created to escape the average mundane life into the world of LEGO and pop culture. Follow us on the socials: Facebook: http://facebook.com/brickedpodcast Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brickedpodcast/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/bricked_podcast

Best of The Morning Wake-up
Leanna, Bjorn and Josh: Josh the Rapper

Best of The Morning Wake-up

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2020 51:03


Leanna, Bjorn and Josh chat to Nicola Gaze from Parenting place on teen withdrawal, and Joel from Loyal workshop India on forced quarantine plus we get to know Mikayla Inglis our first NZ Music month entry. All that and more...It's how we start our day!

Smark to Death
Why We Watch-Josh (Josh&Stu Podcast)

Smark to Death

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2020 54:22


Josh Plummer, one half of the Josh&Stu Podcast talks with Mags about his love of wrestling, how it influences his career and the unique content that he and Stu produces.

mags josh josh watch josh
Untitled Joshcast
After Dark Episode 1 - Drunk Trivia, Round 1

Untitled Joshcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2020 37:37


Please enjoy this bonus episode of Josh & Josh After Dark, the Untitled Joshcast's supplemental podcast exclusive to Patreon backers. On this episode, Josh & Josh, with the help of a cocktail or two, test their knowledge of Star Trek and Back to the Future.

Cancer Stories: The Art of Oncology

A doctor finds compromise with a patient for one last gamble. TRANSCRIPT The purpose of this podcast is to educate and to inform. This is not a substitute for professional medical care and is not intended for use in the diagnosis or treatment of individual conditions. Guests on this podcast express their own opinions, experience, and conclusions. The mention of any product, service, organization, activity, or therapy should not be construed as an ASCO endorsement. [MUSIC PLAYING] Welcome to JCO's Cancer Stories-- The Art of Oncology, brought to you by the ASCO Podcast Network, a collection of nine programs covering a range of educational and scientific content, and offering enriching insight into the world of cancer care. You can find all of the shows, including this one, at podcast.asco.org. "The Gambler," Katherine E. Reeder-Hayes. "All he wanted was to go to Vegas. I knew Josh only at the end of his life, far into his story, after an old man's cancer had already wreaked havoc on his young body. At the age of 29 years, he lay in an intensive care unit bed, tethered to the wall and to his many medical providers by high flow oxygen tubing and intermittent and continuous positive airway pressure to deliver as much oxygen as possible to his disease swamped lungs. His outpatient oncologist told me that like many adolescent and young adult patients with cancer, his attitude toward cancer treatment had been somewhat cavalier. He missed some appointments, declared he needed a day off on his birthday, and so on. But lately, he had been doing his best to make it to the clinic, and his oncologists had already tried two successive lines of therapy for his metastatic esophageal cancer. On his admission, scans showed striking progression of his disease in a short period of time. My oncology consult team was called in to assist with goals of care. One of our first orders of business was to deal with the question of his code status. As usual, I started the conversation by sharing what I had observed on his scans. My concern that his cancer was now at a point where more chemotherapy would not change its course, and my expectation that his lungs would soon become unable to take in enough oxygen, even with maximum external support. I explained that if our other best efforts failed, the only way to deliver more oxygen would be to intubate him and use a ventilator. This conversation is usually somewhat of an art form, a gradual process that can evolve over days as I answer questions, elicit the patient's goals and values, offer emotional support, and give the patient time to think. But in this case, my powers of persuasion had barely gotten warmed up when the patient interrupted me with a stern look. Doc, if you put me on a ventilator, am I going to die on a ventilator? I paused. This seemed to be a direct question that required a direct answer. Yes, Josh. I believe that you will. OK, there is no way that I'm going to die on a ventilator. Do not put me on one. A couple of days into his hospital stay, as we toyed with antibiotics and tried to optimize anything fixable that might affect his breathing, while discussing whether getting him even as far as an inpatient hospice unit was feasible, we got a call from the ICU team that the patient wanted to leave. At first it seemed ludicrous. I quizzed the unfortunate fellow leading our team. Leave? He's on 80 liters per minute. What do they mean leave? Did they make him mad or something? We sped to the bedside. The ensuing conversations were lengthy and many. Patient and palliative care team, patient and ICU team, patient and family, patient and oncology team. The upshot was pretty simple. Josh's big wish had been to go on a trip with his father. His dad had supported him a lot through his illness, and they had grown closer than before. The initial plan was to visit Las Vegas. However, flying was now out of the question. Instead, they had planned a weekend trip to Nashville to stay at a fancy hotel and visit the honky tonks. The trip was supposed to have taken place the week that Josh was hospitalized. After mulling it over, he had cooked up what he saw as a compromise. He would leave the hospital and drive to a casino town approximately three hours away for one last great weekend. He informed me that he had won $1,500 betting on basketball from his hospital bed to fund the trip. And a GoFundMe page was apparently doing well. This influx of cash, in his opinion, erased the major barrier to the feasibility of his weekend plans. As far as I could discern, there was no plan for Monday. I'd taken care of many patients near their end of life who decided to take gambles, wise and unwise, but I had never been faced with one who wanted to gamble in the literal sense. We discussed the many potential downsides to his plan. The amount of oxygen we could deliver through a portable tank was vastly less than his current need, meaning that he would rapidly become hypoxic. He might die in the car. He might feel so bad by the time he arrived that he would not be able to enjoy it anyway. The resort was at a higher altitude, and I had little idea whether that change would worsen his oxygenation. He might collapse in a public place, alarming strangers and traumatizing his family members. He might die alone in a hotel room. I couldn't guarantee that paramedics would honor a "do not resuscitate" form stapled to the shirt of a young, healthy looking man. I couldn't even guarantee that we had a stapler on the unit. Hospice does not, I am almost certain, serve casinos. I called a psychologist who had worked with Josh regularly in the past, hoping for some backup from someone who had an established rapport with him. I resorted to some dramatically nonmedical language in my attempts to describe the patient's state of mind. He basically has a mental image that he wants to go over the cliff, like the last scene of Thelma and Louise. But this isn't a movie. Patients with cancer don't die by driving off a cliff. He's going to scare some hotel manager out of their wits. He doesn't even have a plan for what to do if he makes it back. The kindly psychologist agreed to evaluate the patient, although it is possible he may have been evaluating the oncologist as well. I began my conversations with Josh assuming that either he had not thought of these things or that he was in denial about the severity of his illness. Thinking back to our ventilator talk, however, I gradually realized that he was not, generally speaking, that sort of patient. I began slowly to wrap my head around the fact that this patient was not afraid, at least not of the things that I feared on his behalf. It was not that he didn't believe the scenarios I presented. To him, dying on the floor of a casino after a great night out was not the worst possible scenario. Dying in a cage in our ICU, the last days of his life orchestrated by others and mimicking the death of a man three times his age, waiting around in the least fun place on earth for his time to die, that was what scared him. The things that I would want for myself at the end of life-- quiet and calmness, being surrounded by loved ones, help to ease my physical symptoms-- were not things that would comfort him. I was not going to make him a middle-aged man in the course of three days in the ICU. And quite quickly, I began to like him for it. One has to admire the spirit of someone who can hold out against such a large team of experts telling him how he ought to die. Slowly, with almost audible creaks from our collective old age, the team turned its focus to making the most of Josh's plan. An oxygen tank and wheelchair were procured. Several copies of a large yellow form with a "do not resuscitate" order were signed. The palliative care team provided oral morphine for air hunger. The primary oncologist and nurse urged Josh and his family to contact them immediately if he made it home so that they could mobilize hospice to keep him from returning to the hospital. We all wished him good luck. As I pressed the button to leave the ICU on the last day of Josh's stay, a thought occurred to me. I turned and walked back into the room. Hey, Josh, there is one more thing I want to ask you. His face took on a good humored but slightly exasperated look, the look of the teenage boy bracing himself to endure one more well-intended mom lecture. Doubtless he thought I'd come up with one more excellent reason why he should not carry out his plan. Yeah, he said. Well, I sometimes write stories about my patients. Usually I write about people I've taken care of who taught me something important or made me think about things in a different way. And I think that one day I might want to write about you. Would that be OK with you? He straightened up in the bed, pushing his hands under himself in the effort to be more upright. Yeah, I'd like that. But just one thing, you have to use my real name. No pseudonyms. And so I'm telling Josh's story, the story of a patient who is young enough and reckless enough to tell us all exactly how he wanted to live the rest of his life, even when his plans did not fit into his medical team's boxes. Josh made it to the casino. He sent our fellow picture of himself surrounded by what seemed to be groupies. I'm told that he won $1,100 and bought his father a ridiculously large television. He lived for six days, long enough to return home and die comfortably with hospice care. Somewhere I sense he's laughing at me. To the end, his gambles paid off. For our patients at the end of life, how often do we try to assign them a pseudonym, one that fits neatly into our medical boxes? And do we know how to listen when they ask us to acknowledge their real identities and to help them conclude their lives in the way that fits them, not in the way that would fit us? Perhaps we too can stand to take some risks. I am grateful that I got in one last gamble with Josh. That, believe me, is his real name." [MUSIC PLAYING] With me today is Dr. Katherine Reeder-Hayes, who is an assistant professor of medicine at the University of North Carolina, and the author of "The gambler published online July 30th of 2019. Welcome Katherine. Thank you. Thanks for asking me. You are most welcome. You are a masterful storyteller. "The Gambler" is such an incredible story of a young man with cancer who is so determined to live the end of his life the way he wants to, on his terms. And he sounds like he taught you a powerful lesson. Tell us a little bit about Josh. Sure. So I think Josh was challenging to me as a clinician for a reason that I think many of us identify with. I didn't know him very long. And sometimes I think, as impatient physicians, we are faced with situations where something dramatic is happening in a patient's life, and we are the provider who circumstantially needs to stand with them at that time. But we really don't know them. And we really don't have a relationship or a prior knowledge of them to draw from. And so I really felt like I spent the first few days that I was caring for Josh really just trying to figure out who he was. And particularly, as a younger patient, I think most of us as oncologists care for midlife and elderly patients a lot. And our skill sets at caring for younger patients, particularly those of us who care for solid tumors, are maybe not as honed, or not as sharp, or it's been a little bit longer time since we were in that person's shoes. So just by virtue of the fact that he was young and he was male, he wasn't a patient that I could necessarily put myself in his shoes or claim to be knowing where he stood, just from a demographic standpoint. But I think it's always easier in these difficult situations when they can be diffused with humor. And Josh was a very funny person. And so I think that was something that he and I had in common immediately. And I think that that initially helped to lighten a little bit what was otherwise, obviously, a very dark situation. One of the points you make in the essay is that Josh taught you to listen more deeply. And one of the themes in the essay, and one that you just alluded to, is the fact that his youth made him so special. Can you tell us a little bit more about what you learned about listening deeply and attentively to young patients who are faced with a horrible cancer and nearing the end of their lives? Sure. So I think as a 40-something myself, I hate to think that I am set in my ways, because I think of being set in my ways as something that describes an older person. But I think as physicians, we get set in our ways pretty quickly. There is a culture to our hospitals. There's a culture to the way that we take care of patients. There's a power dynamic where the physician or the provider in the hospital setting is the one in charge and the patient is the one taking advice. And I think one of the things that was good and challenging about Josh is that he didn't really sign up for that. So he didn't want to do things the way things are usually done in the hospital. And a patient who reacts like that, I think if we're at our best, makes us go back and question, well, why do we do this this way? Why do we have this rule? Why do we usually try to discharge the patient to hospice? Well, why couldn't he leave the hospital hypoxic? What would be so-- what would be bad about that, right? And thinking through not only what we usually do, but what could we do? And so I think that was one of the things that I enjoyed about taking care of Josh was that he pushed me to think about not only the way we usually do things, but the way that things could be done. And I think that had something to do with his youth and just how flexible his mind was as a 20-something. So let's go back to this theme of the power dynamic here that you just talked about and that also is clearly developed in your essay. You describe finding Josh sort of tethered to a wall. And then you describe to Josh what end of life looks like in a hospital and in intensive care settings and so on. And he basically rebels and begins to work on this power dynamic by saying, absolutely not. I will have none of this. What did it take for you, as the team leader and as the professional who did not have a long standing relationship with Josh, to absorb all this? And how did you respond? What did it do to you? So I think patients have two things on their side, or at least Josh had two things on his side in this power dynamic that were powerful. I think one of them is that the patient always has the power to refuse, right? So sometimes that's the only power patients have left to exercise is their autonomy, their ability to tell the team no, this is my body, and I'm not going to do that. And I think that's something that Josh was exercising to feel like he was regaining some control of the situation. And for patients in extreme situations like this, they also have the power to command attention as a dying person. I think as a society and as providers, we have some respect for the immense value of those last days of life. And so I think sometimes we're more prone to listen to a patient and to their wishes and preferences when they have that persuasive argument, that these are not just any five or 10 days of my life. These are the five or 10 days of my life. And so I think those were the things that Josh had on his side, at a point where perhaps we weren't on the same side-- although I like to think we ended up on the same side-- that were persuasive to me and to other people that we needed to think more carefully about how he wanted to do things. And whether the requests he was making really, really weren't feasible or whether we did just hadn't thought creatively enough about them. I think Josh was lucky that you were the attending, because sometimes what I've seen colleagues do is actually sort of get-- bear down on their position. And sometimes this could even rise to a confrontation. And it seems you absorbed the message, empathized with Josh, and then worked with him to help him get his way. Is that a correct understanding of what happened? I hope so. I hope that that's what I did. I think I was lucky in my team. And I say that to say, first of all, that I was paired with a fellow who was a very warm person, a person who is extroverted and just enjoys getting to know people. And she was, of course, younger and more of Josh's contemporary. And I think they had a good rapport. And so that kept the tone of the team's interactions with him more friendly and warm and collegial, as opposed to I think sometimes these things can get confrontational. Although I think we should always strive to not have them be confrontational. I think the fact that Josh was just a very likable person also helped. He was putting forth his requests in a forceful way, but he wasn't angry. He wasn't mean. He wasn't abusive to anyone who was taking care of him, even though he really had every right to be. And so I think his own attitude and personality made it easier for things not become confrontational. And then in the background, there was Josh's primary oncologist. And she was the person that I phoned up and said, oh, you have to let me get to know this person better. You have to tell me some background. Is he crazy? Has he been a rational decision maker in the past? Fill me in. And she was very supportive of us trying to do, to the extent that we could, what Josh wanted. And even to accept the responsibility for if he left the hospital and traveled and then found that he urgently needed to be plugged into hospice. When he made it back to his home, if he did, that she was willing to take on the downstream consequences after he left the hospital if he needed further care. As opposed to pushing me to definitively solve the problem in the hospital as though he were a problem. So I think I was fortunate in the whole team that was around me and was connected to him as well. So here's this young man who says to you, there is no way I'm going to die on a ventilator, and I want to gamble. And there he goes to gamble. So we have the two levels of gamble-- the gamble that this is going to work out and this young man who was in the hospital on 80 liters of oxygen is going to be able to take the trip, and then the literal gamble. So my question to you, and something I'm sure you've thought about is, what if his gamble had not paid off? What if he had had a horrible death someplace outside of the hospital or in the casino? How did you think about that? So I think I certainly did think about that. And I have had other patients who made decisions at the end of life that wouldn't have been my decisions, and that I was sad about. And it hasn't always worked out. And they have had deaths that I thought incorporated more suffering, either for themselves or for loved ones, than I was wishing for them. And I think although we were able to rejoice for Josh and be so happy for him that his gamble did work out for him, and that was certainly a happy ending to this story, we didn't know that at the time we were making the decisions. And so I think that is the hard part of truly letting patients have autonomy, is that we may be able to see a future, maybe not the definite future, but a future that isn't a happy ending. And that to truly respect people's choices means being able to let them go anyway, certainly with informed consent and with making sure that they understand your concerns. But I think that's part of listening to patients is that when we get answers we don't want to hear, if we're confident that the patient has listened to us and understands our side or our concerns about them, then we have to give them that same respect in return when they're telling us, yes, I've heard you. Yes, I understand your points. But that's not-- that's not me. That's not my decision. That's not what I want to do. And I think it's hard. It continues to be hard. Let me go back to this idea of Josh-- Josh's youth influencing this whole process. And in what ways do you think that being very young shaped these findings and these conversations? And how would you react to a middle-aged Josh? So I think being young made Josh courageous in a way that perhaps he wouldn't have been if he was middle-aged, in a few ways. I think even for a person who is physically very ill and has plenty of evidence that they have advanced disease, I think it is very difficult for a 20-year-old to truly imagine themselves dying. And that's appropriate in most circumstances to feel a little bit immortal when you're in your 20s. I think that can be a bad thing if it causes people to be in denial. But I think it also imparts a kind of bravery. I think the choice that Josh made was a courageous choice. I think also by being young, many times that's the time in our life when we don't have as many ties to people who are dependent on us, right? And part of what enabled Josh to make the choice he did, he did have some family members and he had some concern for them and their concerns and emotions, but he didn't have a spouse whom he had a commitment to and had to think about their feelings. He didn't have children who needed to be considered, whose mental health needed to be considered, their ability to say goodbye in a certain way or to witness or not witness certain things. So I think that gave him a freedom. So I think a middle-aged person might have different ties, different concerns, and also different kinds of fears about the end of their life. So those might make the story play out differently. But I've certainly had middle-aged patients who also didn't want some of the things that we would imagine they wanted at the end of life. And that's OK too. That's a deep reflection, and I thank you for that. How long ago did you look after Josh? I believe we're coming up on a year. And how long did it take you to process through it and turn it into this beautiful essay that's full of humor and respect and love for Josh, by the way? Thank you. I would say it happens in stages. I think anytime I lose a patient in a particularly memorable or emotional or even traumatic way, there are stages. In the immediate term, I think probably the most therapeutic thing for me almost always is talking to colleagues. And in this case, I think there was some joy and humor in the reflections with colleagues about taking care of him and about the things about him that had really stood out. I think that's one stage. Because being a writer, I often will put something on paper about an experience with a patient that's been particularly meaningful pretty quickly, I mean within weeks perhaps, but it's not usually a finished something. I kind of jot down what really struck me, or perhaps the outline of something, or a message that I got out of that situation. And then I sort of tuck it away and then go back to it later. And I think that's sort of the process I went through with this story over the course of a few months. That's incredibly helpful. Thank you for that. My final question is about your fellow. Was your fellow OK with how the story unfolded? I think she is. And I don't think she would mind my saying her story and his story intersected in an interesting way in that, at the same time that we were doing this end patient consultation together, she was making some hard decisions about changes in her career planning, and in the direction that some people were pushing her to go. And that she had been encouraged to develop her career and her future plans in a certain direction, and she was coming to feel that that wasn't the right direction for her. And really needed to pull the trigger on just saying that out loud and making some changes in her plans for training so that she could get back to a place where she really felt like she was doing something that was right for her. And so in a way, I think Josh was an inspiration in that sense to do something that is hard and may feel scary, but that ultimately is going to be true to who you are. So it was, I think, a good thing for us to all work through together in that sense. Well, thank you, Katherine. It's always a pleasure to read your work and a real pleasure to have a chance to have this conversation. Well, thank you so much. I really appreciate being invited. Thank you. You're very welcome. Until next time, thank you for listening to this JCO's Cancer Stories-- The Art of Oncology podcast. If you enjoyed what you heard today, don't forget to give us a rating or review on Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen. While you're there, be sure to subscribe so you never miss an episode. JCO's Cancer Stories-- The Art of Oncology podcast is just one of ASCO's many podcasts. You can find all of the shows at podcast.asco.org. [MUSIC PLAYING]

REI Rookies Podcast (Real Estate Investing Rookies)
Ep151 - 6 Revenue Pillars with Josh Cantwell

REI Rookies Podcast (Real Estate Investing Rookies)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2020 27:36


Josh is the top residential real estate investor in his community, has been a full-time investor since 2003. Josh has bought and sold over 700+ properties in 25 states since 2003. He is laser-focused on the distressed property niche, specifically on his 6 revenue pillars: Bank Foreclosures (REOs), Short Sales, Lease Options, Buyers, Marketing and Raising Capital. We chat about: How to leverage other people’s money How to generate $40k per house flip How surviving cancer changed Josh’s perspective on life and business How to build a massive buyer’s list Direct response marketing Sales negotiation strategies Deal structuring And more! Connect with Josh: Josh’s Websites: strategicrealestatecoach.com and joshcantwellcoaching.com Josh’s Facebook Private Facebook Group Josh’s YouTube Want to work with us? Head over to HouseDudes.com for more information. If you have any thoughts or questions shoot us an email at info@housedudes.com. You can also find us on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter @HouseDudes Please subscribe through iTunes or your favorite podcast app! If you like what you hear please give us a rating, like, and share. It really helps the show grow. Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/housedudes Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/HouseDudesPodcast/ iTunes: http://bit.ly/HouseDudesiTunes Google Play: http://bit.ly/HouseDudesGooglePlay YouTube: http://bit.ly/HouseDudesYouTube Stitcher: http://bit.ly/HouseDudesStitcher SoundCloud: http://bit.ly/HouseDudesSoundcloud Follow Josh Koth and Jack Hoss on their journey towards financial freedom using the power of Real Estate through the REI Rookies Podcast (Real Estate Investing Rookies Podcast). We share our experiences as we acquire rental properties, build net worth, and work towards financial freedom. We are focused on creating wealth through conventional and creative real estate investing while improving our financial education. If you are a fan of Rich Dad Poor Dad by Robert Kiyosaki and Millionaire Real Estate Investor by Gary Keller or are looking for an alternative to the Dave Ramsey, Jim Cramer, Motley Fool or Suze Orman shows we invite you to subscribe today!

Technically Religious
S2E1: Raise Your Glass

Technically Religious

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2020 30:20


Working in IT can often feel like long periods of soul-crushing depression and frustration as we work through a technical issue, punctuated by brief moments of insane euphoria when we find a solution, followed by yet another period of soul crushing depression and frustration when we move on to the next problem. In this light, learning to take time to celebrate and express gratitude is essential. In this episode, Leon, Josh, and Doug explore the habits we've developed as IT pros to get us through the hard parts of the job; and the lessons from our religious, moral, or ethical tradition can we bring to bear. Listen or read the transcript below. Doug: 00:00 Welcome to our podcast where we talk about the interesting, frustrating and inspiring experiences we have as people with strongly held religious views working in corporate IT. We're not here to preach or teach you our religion. We're here to explore ways we make our career as IT professionals mesh - or at least not conflict - with our religious life. This is Technically Religious. Leon: 00:24 I've often described working in IT like this: It's long periods of soul crushing depression and frustration as we work through a technical issue, punctuated by brief moments of insane euphoria when we find the solution followed by yet another period of soul crushing depression and frustration when we move on to the next problem. In this light, learning to take time to celebrate and express gratitude is essential. What happens have we developed as IT pros to get us through the hard parts of the job? What lessons from our religious, moral, or ethical tradition can we bring to bear? I'm Leon Adato, and the other voices you're going to hear on this episode are my partners in podcasting crime, Doug Johnson. Doug: 01:01 Hello, Leon: 01:02 and Josh Biggley. Josh: 01:04 Hello. Leon: 01:05 All right. As has become our habit. Let's go ahead and just dive into a moment of shameless self promotion. Doug, kick it off. Doug: 01:12 I'm Doug Johnson. I'm the chief technical officer of WaveRFID. We do really cool stuff with inventory and RFID and weird things like that. Leon: 01:23 He's waving his hands. Doug: 01:25 Wavy hand-waving. I'm an evangelical Christian and you can find information about what we do http://waverfid.net. Leon: 01:33 Great. Josh? Josh: 01:35 Uh, I'm Josh Biggley. I am a tech ops strategy consultant at NewRelic. Yay. You can find me on the Twitters @Jbiggley. You can also find me on LinkedIn @jbiggley. I don't have any other social media. Also Yay. Um, I am a post Mormon and as of a few weeks ago officially ex-Mormon Leon: 01:55 I still am not sure whether I'm supposed to say congratulations about that or not. Josh: 01:59 In my case. Yes. Congratulations. Leon: 02:01 Okay, great. Uh, and I'm Leon Adato. I'm a head geek at SolarWinds. SolarWinds is neither solar nor wind. It's a monitoring vendor. You can find me on the Twitters @LeonAdato. I pontificate on all things technical and sometimes religious at https://www.adatosystems.com and I identify as an Orthodox Jew. So before we dive into the solution, meaning how do we find ways to be more grateful or experience more gratitude in our technical lives? I want to elaborate on the problem that we're trying to solve a little bit because we're in IT and that's what we do best. Doug: 02:37 Start with the problem. New Speaker: 02:39 Yeah, let's, let's get our scope and then we'll go to the rest. So what is it about working in IT that causes that kind of frustration that I described or causes those moments of frustration to so frequently? Like what are the things that that keep dragging us down? Josh: 02:54 Scope creep. I mean you just talked about scope, right? Oh yeah. Doug: 02:58 Before we go ahead and I want to actually add something to this topic. Okay. I'm just kidding. (laughter) It's just like that, that scope creep people. Again, partial solutions, that's where we think we've got it. We have 80% of it done. It turns out we don't have the 20% that's important, but we've got the 80% done. Leon: 03:21 Right. The 80% that was really easy. And we got done on the first couple of days and then we've been slogging through the rest of it to get the 20th yeah, exactly. Um, I also want to talk about technical debt. It's just a concept that I, I love, I don't love technical debt. I just love the concept of it. It's a great way of describing it. But as it professionals, I think we are the ones who uncover it and then frequently are asked to just ignore it or cover it back up again. But we know it's going to bite us. We know that we've got to deal with it. And I think that that can become frustrating either knowing I have to deal with this and it wasn't on my list of things to do or knowing that it's still lurking out there waiting to rear its ugly head. Doug: 04:00 Right. Or even worse when you're developer doing that, I've got to get this thing done. I've got to get it in this amount of time. And I'm going to create new technical debt cause I can't, I don't have time to actually do this right. Because there may not be time to do it over. Oh, there's never time to do it. Right. But there's always time to do it over. Gee, that never seems to happen. Leon: 04:16 Yeah. You never do it over and there's always times you do it wrong though. Doug: 04:19 Exactly. Well there is, I mean, you know, sometimes you just know in any case I did. It's frustrating. There was, it's what we're talking about here. Right? Frustration. Right. So there you are. Josh: 04:31 I think one of the most soul crushing parts about technical debt, whether you've uncovered it or whether you are the one who is unfortunately having to put it in place is when you know that you have found or you're building technical debt, you take it out to your team or to the larger organization and nobody gives a damn. Yeah, okay. Technical debt's a reality. It's, there are scenarios where you're building something and you have to build an implement today even though you know, six months from now, something's going to change. That's going to make the thing you're doing obsolete. But the fact that nobody cares to talk about it again in six months, that that will open up your, your heart, it will reach in and pull your soul out and squish it and, Leon: 05:21 What a visceral example. Doug: 05:23 I was going to say. I wish I thought you were exaggerating, but I know you're not. You know, as the CTO, my team... And I work with my team on this all the time. It's like we go through the process without, you know, make it work, make it right, make it fast. And we do it in that order. I mean, we did, it's like we just tried to get it to work and we know we're probably, we do our best not to create a technical that while we're making it work, but sometimes you just got to get that sucker out there and then we, we always try to come back to the, "make it right" part and, and, and so I'm not your CTO, Josh, but trust me, if I, we would be, we would care about that technical debt. Josh: 06:01 Aw, I feel so loved. Leon: 06:02 I will say that the dev ops culture, if, if there's anything that, that, uh, can be lauded about the DevOps culture, it's raising the awareness of technical debt and also, um, raising new ways to approach and address it, you know, that the business will understand. But, okay. So another point that I think frustrates us is, you know, when, when you're working on something and especially in a hardware and operating system realm, this seems to come up, but something that goes wrong that according to the vendor or the owner, "well that's never happened before. " Doug: 06:38 Right? Right. Yeah, "it works on my machine. Leon: 06:42 "Works for me." Right. There's a great episode recently, this past week, um, at least as we record this from "Screaming in the Cloud," Corey Quinn, one of Corey Quinn's podcasts where he's talking about... Talking with the founders of Oxide, (which is a great name for a company by the way.) And they, they build sort of a prebuilt, um, rack based solutions. And they said one of their biggest frustrations is working with, with server vendors and being the only one who is having this problem with a GBIC or with memory modules dying too quickly or whatever it was. And they were at a conference talking about their solution and they brought that idea up and they said, you know, "nobody's had this problem" where or whatever, and 17 hands went up and it wasn't the 17 hands that went up of people who all had the problem that the vendors swore up and down the wall no one's ever had. It was as the hands were going up and 17 people were becoming simultaneously infuriated that they realized they weren't the only one having the problem. This was the first moment that they knew it. So that was, you know, again, that's, that's really just, it just again, sucks, sucks your soul right out. Josh: 07:56 I mean, I'll say the worst thing you can do and probably want to this, this same idea, the worst thing that you can do as a service provider is bullshit the people that are paying you for their service. Don't do it. Just don't do it cause they're gonna. They're going to have that moment where they stand in a crowd with 17 other people that are like, "Oh my goodness, I am not the only one." And they're going to, they're going to get really pissed off. Doug: 08:22 All right. And they're going to be at a conference where they can go talk to your competitors. Some of my worst moments were a fat fingering on a production server. I've only done it. I know, I know. I know. But sometimes there you are. I mean, one case, you know, I thought I wason one server, I was on a different server. I wiped out a database. What fun. You know, I don't do these things. Another time I thought it was not on the production server and I was cleaning things up while I was on the production server and the thing that I cleaned up made it stop working and that'll, that's an instant depression. Leon: 08:57 Been there, done that. Josh: 08:58 Yup. Yeah. Copy paste from the internet bad. Uh, don't, don't do it. Leon: 09:04 I will say right now, quotes are never your friend. When you copy paste it, there's, there's one, there's just one that's a smart quote and it's going to screw up everything. Josh: 09:13 Yeah. I'll also say that the reality is every engineer makes mistakes and the absolute worst thing you can do as an engineer is shame. Other engineers, I don't care if you, if you knew how to solve this problem, the moment you know, you sprung forth from your parents' loins. It doesn't matter. You don't shame other engineers. Nobody learns by being shamed. Leon: 09:41 One of the best things that I saw come out of, um, last year, 2019 with, uh, one of the Facebook crashes was in the middle of the crash. It was the, the 24 hour crash or, or whatever it was. It went on for a while and somebody said, "Can we all just understand that right now the Facebook SRS are going through hell and that when we are, when we are armchair quarterbacking, what might be wrong or whatever. We can hold off on the, 'I can't believe they didn't do blah, blah,' like we have all been there and it sucks. And although we have our own feelings about Facebook as a company, these engineers right now are not having a good time and let's just be a little supportive of them." Josh: 10:26 I am nodding emphatically. Doug: 10:28 Yep. The best thing that I ever learned as a senior engineer was basically how to go ahead and make my juniors feel better about the screw ups because... No, I'm serious. I mean the, the whole job of a senior engineer other than being good at what you do is to go ahead and make juniors into seniors and the only way to get a junior to be a senior is to make him not be so afraid to fail that he can't succeed. It's something that I'm good at. I mean, that's one of the few things that I've learned how to do over the years. I used to, used to be terrible at being good to other people, but over the years I've screwed up enough to be able to say to anybody now, "Hi, I've screwed up so much. You have no idea how many years you're going to have to work to even come close to screwing up as bad as I have." And as a result, you can make them feel better about what they're doing and become better engineers. Leon: 11:14 So Yechiel Kalmenson, another voice that that we've had on a few times, took a run at the concept of a 10x engineer. He said, the only valid version of a 10x engineer is an engineer who builds up the engineers around him until they are 10 other people who are just as good as he is. Doug: 11:31 Yup. That's a 10 X. Leon: 11:33 So what we've started to do is roll into the ways that we can create a habit of gratitude and thankfulness and positivity because we recognize as we just went over it. There's a lot of reasons to, you know, walk home, you know, walk to our car at the end of the day just feeling like garbage. Let's talk ways that, that from our professional point of view, I mean we've got, you know, we've got close to a hundred years of experience, sorry, but we have almost a hundred years of experience on this podcast right now. Josh: 12:05 You guys are old! Leon: 12:05 ...but right, exactly. It's just me and Doug. That's where we're carrying the load on that one. So what are some ways from both our professional and also our religious point of view that allow people to build a sense of gratitude about what they do? Because really, at the end of the day, I know that for 30 years I love working in IT. I really enjoy it. You know, I am excited to go to work every day (Most days.) I enjoy the things that I'm able to accomplish. And part of it is that I have a really cool job and all that stuff. But part of it is that I think you have to build the habit of finding those moments that you enjoy because that's what you hold onto. Um, and some of that, just, just to kick it off, is recognizing a success for what it is. I think in it, going back to my intro to this episode, that if you look at it as vast stretches of depression and frustration punctuated by very brief moments of excitement, and then going back to the salt mines, you're not going to be able to maintain a career - a happy career because the, the joy is so brief and the, the non joy is so long lived. I think we have to recognize successes whenever they occur and take a moment and, and appreciate those. You know, when we were little kids it was really clear. Like I spelled my name right, I tied my shoes, I put my pants on, not backward. I, you know, like whatever. Now, the bar's raised a slightly for some of us, uh, before the show started we were talking about why pants might or might not be necessary, you know, at work. Beyond coming to work dressed appropriately. I think there are moments when we need to recognize that that was really a success. You know, sometimes just getting the config change and not breaking that router, that is a success. Doug: 13:56 There's a whole way of doing dev now that actually gives you that the whole test driven development. Basically you, you, you go ahead and build a test that fails, and then you write code to make that test succeed. And so you actually are giving yourself a whole series of successes during the day. And when you get that little green light that's, you know, that's actually building successes in your days. Now you can't get up and go home after every green bar. But the reality is you can, you can at least get us, you can get smiles throughout the day that you wouldn't get otherwise. Leon: 14:28 Right? And, and my point is to take a longer moment to bask in that, just to appreciate that green dot. Just to take a moment and appreciate. Don't just like, "All right, finally, that one's done. Next!" No, take a second. Joss Whedon talked about his process as a writer and he said, I am. I'm like a little monkey. Like I am very reward driven. I wrote one good line of dialogue, have a cookie. Like he says, I do my best writing in a cafe for particularly a dessert cafe because I will go get another slice of chocolate cake. It's not good for my waist, but it is very good for, you know, like I am happy. Yay. I wrote another paragraph. So however you do it, take a longer moment to recognize that success. Josh: 15:15 I like to think to our success is that we enjoy the things that, that we need to spend time, um, pondering on. They don't have to be the same for everyone. Look for Joss Whedon. Maybe writing that paragraph is, that's a moment of joy for him. Leon, I happened to know that you can churn out a ridiculous amount of, uh, writing in a very short period of time. And so for you, a paragraph is like, "Okay, I just exercise my keyboard for 30 seconds, you know, let's crank this bad boy up to Mach speed." The reality is sometimes, and we talked a couple of episodes ago and then we talked in our wrap up episode last week about, you know, my admission that I suffer from depression sometimes just getting out of bed in the morning and I work from home like, like both of you. So pants are often optional, but just getting out of bed in the morning and sitting down in front of, um, my, my laptop, that can be a win and we need, we need to recognize how powerful that is. And when we look around the world and we're, and we say to ourselves, "Well, I haven't accomplished X, Y, or Z," or "I haven't done the things that, you know, my brother, my sister, my father, my best friend, some random person on Instagram," (which is why I'm not an Instagram or Facebook) that will sap us of the gratitude that, as a friend of mine who is, uh, in his eighties says, "I sat up and took nourishment today. It's a good day." And he's been saying that for decades. It's not because he's in his eighties, he's remarkably spry for being in his eighties. But for him it's, "I sat up, I put food in my mouth. It's a good day." Leon: 17:03 So again, just to circle back, I think that having that childlike, not childish sense of accomplishment, uh, Josh, to your point that you need to know where you are. You know, accomplishment for me is not the accomplishment for my siblings. Especially when you have different aged kids. You know, some can reach the top of the shelf and some, you know, need to get a step stool or whatever it is. But, uh, I think our accomplishments are the same way. Um, my, one of my bosses, Tiffany Nels is a famous around the office for saying "compare and despair". There's a video that was one of the inspiration pieces for this episode and it said that that social media is a big driver for people's sense of dissatisfaction. Uh, there's been studies that demonstrate that after 15 minutes of being on social media, people are measurably less happy about their lives. Now, I'm not saying everyone bail on Facebook, (although there's a lot of IT security reasons to bail on Facebook), but maybe remember that. And again, in the sense of having gratitude, maybe control limit, uh, put into context the amount of social media you consume and how you allow it to influence your life. Um, and also when other people at the office are getting things done, remember that their to do list is not your to do list. Your to do list, maybe get up, get to the keyboard, right? A couple of good emails and that that was your list for the day. That's, that's an accomplishment. Josh: 18:40 I have also really grateful when my coworkers are accomplishing really awesome things when, when, when they've hit their stride, I'm grateful we work together. There is not a competition. It's not about, you know, whether dog or Leon, whether you're doing more than I am. We're on this team together and if you're killing it and I'm having a really rough day executing it, that's okay. It's why we're not independent contractors. It's why we don't work as long walls. And even, I mean, the reality is even if you are an independent contractor, you're working with a team that's not you. Uh, this whole idea that there, and we've talked about this before on this, on this podcast, there is no rock star individual. There is no individual who you can hire and bring into your environment that is going to save your company. If you're looking for that person, your company was probably in trouble already. Doug: 19:43 You're done. Leon: 19:43 Yeah. Yeah. There's other bigger problems to to fix. Josh: 19:46 I just, I want to call out as well that Doug and I, we had this, we have a shared history here since we both come from a Christian backgrounds in Matthew 18 and the Bible, and I'm going to quote the King James version because that's the version I grew up with. It says, "Whosoever therefore shall humble himself as this little child, the same as the greatest in the kingdom of heaven." And Leon, that ties back to your very first comments when we're trying to figure out how to be grateful, how to be thankful is kids are, they are just overjoyed with the little things in life. You know how many times as a kid, and I remember doing this, you're laying on the grass on a warm summer day and you're like, this is good, and you'll look up and you'd like see clouds. You're like, Oh my goodness. That one looks like a rhinoceros. Like you're like, Oh, I saw a cloud. Or you find a four leaf clover, or you manage to ride your bike and not crash it. There's so many things as a kid you're just grateful for and take that for what it is. We really need to be like little children in our gratitude, have it be abundant. Doug: 20:53 The thing is, you can go ahead and get some gratitude by, by comparing yourself, because I have people all the time. They'll complain about their life and I'll go, okay, let's go to Wikipedia and let's look at the annual income, uh, of most countries. And half of them are below $1,000 a year. And I'm going, okay, so how bad is your life? Again, look at what you've got here in most of the first world and just stop complaining. Leon: 21:16 So again, in the video that that was the inspiration. They talked about people who have gone through some kind of trauma in the illness or an accident or whatever it is, and whose lives have returned to some form of normalcy after that event. And they're having the exact same experiences. They're eating breakfast and they're reading a book, whatever. But the, that experience has completely transformed for them into one of gratitude because they know how tenuous it is. They know what it's like to not have had that or not have been able to do it. And maybe even to think that they were never going to have that experience again and now they're having it. So again, same coffee, same cereal in the bowl, but a completely different thing. How much better would it be if we could contextualize that and say, wow, you know, it doesn't have to be like this. That, that for many of us, uh, the experiences that we're having are largely based on the zip code to which we were born. And you know, that's, that's why I'm here and just be, be grateful for it. I, I also think so there's a fairly famous story that goes around and, and I've heard the Jewish version of it, um, the story goes quickly like this. Leon: 22:34 "There was a queen who went to her counselors asking for a piece of wisdom. She said that she needed something, a phrase or an idea that was short, so short, that could be inscribed on a ring that would keep her humble in times of success, but also that same phrase would, uh, give her hope in times of trouble or, or sorrow. And so the scholars who worked for her came back after some thought and they gave her the phrase 'gam ze yaavo', which is Hebrew for 'This, too, shall pass.' " Leon: 23:10 Now, when you hear that story frequently, your first dot goes to the bat, right? Oh, something's really, really bad. But this too shall pass. It's only a minute. The hard drive crash. But trust me, next week this will be a distant memory. You're going to laugh about it, Leon. It's going to be okay. But I want to point out that equally true is that if something is going well, this phrase, this too shall pass not to, not to rain on your parade as a, well, you know, you think it's good now, but tomorrow is going to be crap again. No. Is that appreciate it while it's here, it's not going to be here forever. This is going to pass, so appreciate every moment of it that you have it. Doug: 23:50 There is so much that's a femoral in all of the highs or the lows. I mean a lot of it's kind of right in the middle and the, there's all kinds of studies that show that if things go really great after a little while they won't seem that great. Even if they're just as great as they were, they won't even seem that great anymore. So you need to go ahead and appreciate those moments when they happen both behind the low for that matter. I mean it did it even at the lows, you're feeling something. Leon: 24:16 Working in it in, in enterprises and really any business we can get caught up in the business mantra of, you know, "higher, better, faster, stronger. Next quarter has to be better than this one..."And I think that that's an unhealthy thing. It's healthy for the company. Obviously the company should always be on a growth, you know, a growth plan. But for IT, I think doing just as well today as you did yesterday is fan freaking tastic. And that if you do just as well tomorrow as you did today as you did yesterday as you did last week, still a win. Still totally 100% in the win column. Doug: 24:59 We're keeping the joint running. Leon: 25:01 Yes, exactly. Josh: 25:02 I am going to call out the, within religion there is a potentially toxic idea that you must always be progressing and that that continuous progression is the only thing that separates you from falling behind everybody else. It's that idea that everyone else around you is improving. If you're not improving, if you're not getting better every single day, then you're actually falling behind. You cannot stand stand still, and I've heard this many times, "if you are standing still, you are actually falling behind." Let's be honest, that in the game of life you are not competing against anybody else. It is you against you. It's who you are now versus who you were yesterday and who you want to be tomorrow. That's it. And have it doesn't matter how many toys do you have? It doesn't matter how many friends do you have. It doesn't matter. Okay. Maybe if they're really cool toys.. (laughter) No, no, it does not matter how many toys you have. It doesn't matter how much money you have, it doesn't matter. The only thing that matters is your competition against yourself. And once we set all of this ridiculous competition, and I am not a competitive person, I really, I make a great socialist. I really do. I yay Canada. Um, because I, I'm just, I'm not competitive. Once we set all of that aside, then we can get into some of the things that I think are really important around our authenticity to each other in the engagements that we have. And then we start doing things not because we're getting some sort of intrinsic reward or maybe we are getting an intrinsic reward, but we don't recognize it. We're, we're doing things because it makes other people feel better. And making other people feel better, helps us feel better. And that to me is how we show that, that real gratitude. So just want to call out that some people in religious context really take this whole, "I have to be better. Um, because if I'm not, if I'm not better, if I'm not making greater sacrifices, if I'm not doing whatever thing it is that your religion says you should do, then somehow I'm a bad person." That's just toxic. Leon: 27:11 Trying to take the concept of sins, which is a, uh, it can be very weird depending on your religious or ethical background, but saying, "well, I sinned. I failed on this and therefore I am points down" treating observance as a zero sum game. I'm 50 points up. I'm 25 points behind is really unhealthy. The Jewish idea is that your experience of that, your free will, your struggle is at a point, a particular point. And that's where your struggle is. And the comment from one of the really great rabbis of, of our time, Akiva Tatz where he talks about, you know, "do you remember this morning where you woke up and you really struggled with yourself not to go out on the street and mug an old lady and steal her purse?" Josh: 28:00 I do. Leon: 28:01 Yeah. No, you're Canadian. I know for many of us that doesn't even enter into our mind. So did we exercise free will in choosing not to mug an old lady and steal their purse? Of course we didn't. It's that, it's not even on the table. It's not even the list of things. That our point of like if you want to say the word sin or, or observance or whatever is wherever we're struggling. And that's a very personal thing. And it's again, not points up points behind. It's "how am I doing in that one area, in that area that I struggle with today?" Hopefully you are moving the bar up, but in the same way that I don't count my exercise regimen against Lance Armstrong (because I would be dead if I tried to keep up), I can't count myself against anyone else. Again, back to, you know, Tiffany Nels compare and despair. Doug: 28:54 Evangelical Christianity does the same thing when it, when it does it right in that there are sins and you acknowledge your sin and then you're forgiving of it and you move on and improve. Now, unfortunately in the toxic area of evangelical Christianity, as Josh notes, uh, we point out YOUR sins. And your sins are worse than my sin. So therefore you're really, really bad. And I'm just saying it's, it's, it's like when Christianity, real Christianity and I'm, you know, says it they're your sins and you deal with them and, and it gives you a way to go ahead and work, work through and become a better person. But boy it's your, it gets turned backwards an awful, awful lot of the times. Josh: 29:37 I was, I was worried Doug, I thought you were reading my emails cause I just emailing Leon about your sins. I was a weird, there you go. Doug: 29:47 And you accused Leon of writing too much stuff. Leon: 29:51 We know you can't listen to our podcast all day. So out of respect for your time, we've broken this particular conversation up. Come back next week and we'll continue our conversation. Josh: 30:01 Thanks for making time for us this week to hear more of Technically Religious visit our website, https://www.technicallyreligious.com where you can find our other episodes, leave us ideas for future discussions, and connect with us on social media. Speaker 1: 30:15 To quote Jacques Maritain "Gratitude is the most exquisite form of courtesy."  

No_Fan Podcast
Josh, Josh, Josh! PED's/Bonds???, The Cheat'n Patriots, I Asked For A Bud Not Bud Light!, My Man's Tony Harrison vs. Jermell Charlo 2!

No_Fan Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2019 30:32


Marijuana technically shouldn't even be considered a Stage 1 drug in the first place. (Politics & Money) But them PED's, now that's a whole nother story. Twinkie Tech and Ho-Ho State University Players perform well in, The System. (Patriots) Terrance Crawford gets off the canvas,that's right I said it, off the canvas and demolishes The Mean Machine? Superbad vs. The Cornball. --- 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/no-fan-podcast/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/no-fan-podcast/support

Patcast: The Beckman Baseball Podcast Show
Meet the Freshmen: Max, Josh, and Marcus

Patcast: The Beckman Baseball Podcast Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2019 14:50


Ryan Lavalle interviews Freshmen Max Lazaruk, Josh Shihara, and Marcus Zeigler. Follow them on social media! Max: @maxlazaruk Josh: Josh._.Shihara Marcus: Marcus_Z_14

Project Management for Small Business
Anthoney Pavelich with Philip Brossy and Josh Josh Weiner

Project Management for Small Business

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2019 25:09


Anthoney Pavelich, PMP hosts our next episode with Philip Brossy and Josh Weiner of Oh Shoot Repairs. These two amazing young entrepreneurs have created a national business serving college students with cell phone repairs. They talk about the importance of pivoting and treating employees well. You can find them on most social media sites under Oh Shoot and Oh Shoot Repairs. You can check out their site or email them as well. You can reach me via email for questions or to be a guest. Check out our mention on Feedspot's Top 15 Project Management Audio Podcasts & Radio You Must Subscribe and Listen to in 2019

Deposit That
Bonus Episode - The Wizard of Opportunity Zones with Josh Burrell

Deposit That

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2019 38:03


Opportunity Zones are relatively new.Legislation has been around since Dec. 22nd, 2017,But only recently it has become clear as to the direction and the reason behind it.The Governors of each State had up to 25% of their State to designate as opportunity zones.Although most of them are not real estate/business people,If they were to listen to their communities,They could understand which ones need it the most and which other communities just need that additional spark.On today’s episode, we’re off to see the “Wizard of OZ”. Josh shares with us his knowledge about the opportunity zones and the concerns people have regarding them.Josh Burrell is Managing Partner at Activated Capital. He received his education from Harvard University, with a core focus in real estate. Beginning his career at Moody’s Investor Services, Josh honed his analytical ability to pinpoint undervalued assets and went on to work in London, Paris, Hong Kong, and Singapore offices. He had worked as a Senior Analyst at Colonial Consulting, where he evaluated and underwrote investment transactions and focused his time designated to socially responsible investment (SRI) opportunities, formulating investment decisions and tactical asset allocation strategies for endowment and foundations. Before holding the current position, he was the Director of Investments for Midas Capital, a private-equity real estate firm with a primary focus in hospitality assets located in the mid-west and southeast regions of the United States.So, listen to this Bonus Episode of Deposit That, to find out what the legislation says about opportunity zones and who can benefit from them.Questions I ask:What is the legal definition of an opportunity zone? (03:36)Are people coming to you, saying, "Hey, you're the expert, we have $60 million. What do we do with it?" (10:54)Are you getting any type of negative feedback from people? (13:00)Do you feel like you, guys, are actually setting the bar for the rest of the opportunity zones players? (14:12)What's one thing you want to leave the listeners with, from your 30 years of experience? (36:25)In this episode, you will learn:What an opportunity zone is. (01:01)Josh’s background and experience. (05:33)One of Josh’s big goals, with his company. (14:47)Who is now playing at the opportunity zones investing table. (23:28)The minimum investment required for his fund. (24:46)Connect with Josh:Josh’s LinkedInOther resources:WebsiteLinkedIn – Activated Capital See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Atheist Vanguard
Spit Hot Fire | Atheist Vanguard with Eric Bunch, Ben Estavill, & Josh Josh Zweifler

Atheist Vanguard

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2019 18:06


JUST THE TIP-STERS
70. Kevin Cooper Part 1 - Sounds Like Mass Murder And Mass Confusion

JUST THE TIP-STERS

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2019 43:14


In June 1983, two separate stories met at a ranch house in Chino Hills, California.  The first story is the brutal stabbing/axing/icepicking mass murder of Doug Ryen, his wife Peggy, their daughter Jessica and Christopher Hughes, the 11 year-old best friend of the Ryans' son, Josh - Josh himself was near death, but eventually survived.  The second story is that of one Kevin Cooper. a full-time convicted burglar and part-time convicted rapist, just escaped from the California Institution for Men - also known as the Chino Hills Men's Prison.  Cooper, who had holed up in a house just a few hundred feet away from the Ryen home before (he claims) he headed for Mexico the night before the Ryen murders took place, was convicted of the slayings and sentenced to death.  Seems like an open and shut case.  Until one takes even a cursory look at how the case was handled.  In this first of two parts on Kevin Cooper and the murder conviction that has him sitting on death row today, Melissa examines Cooper's history of burglary, his various name changes and escapes, including the escape from Chino Men's Prison that led him to his fate.

The Stacks
Ep. 44 Rap Dad by Juan Vidal — The Stacks Books Club (Josh Segarra)

The Stacks

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2019 58:47


We are joined again today by actor, Josh Segarra (Arrow, Sirens, Orange is the New Black) to discuss Rap Dad by Juan Vidal. A sort of a coming of age story rooted in becoming a parent in the hip-hop culture, Rap Dad is part memoir and part commentary on society. We talk redefining success in relationship to parenthood, intellectualizing religion, and Rap music as teacher. There isn't a lot to spoil this week, so listen and enjoy. You can also hear Juan Vidal talk about writing Rap Dad on The Short Stacks Episode 4. Everything we talk about on today's episode can be found below in the show notes. The Stacks participates in affiliate programs, and shopping through the links below (mostly Amazon) helps support the show, at no cost to you. Rap Dad by Juan VidalThe Short Stacks 4: Juan Vidal//Rap DadChance the RapperAndy MineoThe Reckonings by Lacy M. JohnsonJay-Z"The Ten Crack Commandments" (The Notorious B.I.G., 1997)"Brenda's Got A Baby" (Tupac Shakur, 1991)Coloring Book (Chance the Rapper, 2016)Shea Serrano Connect with Josh: Josh's Instagram Connect with The Stacks: Instagram | The Stacks Website | Facebook | Twitter | Subscribe | Patreon | Goodreads | Traci's Instagram To contribute to The Stacks, join The Stacks Pack, and get exclusive perks, check out our Patreon page. We are beyond grateful for anything you're able to give to support the production of this show. If you prefer to do a one time contribution go to paypal.me/thestackspod. Sponsors Audible- to get your FREE audiobook download and FREE 30 day trial go to audibletrial.com/thestacks. My Mentor Book Club - for 50% off your first month of new nonfiction from My Mentor Book Club go to mymentorbookclub.com/thestacks The Stacks participates in affiliate programs. We receive a small commission when products are purchased through links on this website, and this comes at no cost to you. Shopping through these links helps support the show, but does not effect opinions on books and products. For more information click here. The Stacks received Rap Dad from the publisher in exchange for an honest review. For more information click here.

The Stacks
Ep. 43 Life as an Actor with Josh Segarra

The Stacks

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2019 60:41


Josh Segarra is an actor of both the stage (On Your Feet) and screen (Arrow, Orange is the New Black, Sirens), and today he is our guest on The Stacks. Josh talks with us about acting, how reading fits into his life as a dad, and we go off on a tangent into sports biographies. Get ready for some good book recommendations and a lot a laughs. Everything we talk about on today's episode can be found below in the show notes. The Stacks participates in affiliate programs, and shopping through the links below (mostly Amazon) helps support the show, at no cost to you. Books Rap Dad by Juan VidalSo You've Been Publicly Shamed by Jon RonsonThe Psychopath Test by Jon RonsonWild at Heart by John EldredgeMans Search by Meaning by Viktor E. FranklLamb: The Gospel According to Biff by Christopher MooreBroken Bananah by Ross AsdourianThe Power of Habit by Charles DuhiggSick in the Head by Judd ApatowThe 48 Laws of Power by Robert Greene The Art of Seduction by Robert GreeneThe Game by Neil StraussThe Four Agreements by Don Miguel RuizThe Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay by Michael ChabonEleven Rings by Phil JacksonThe Last Season by Phil JacksonSacred Hoops by Phil JacksonHave a Nice Day by Mick FoleyShaq Uncut by Shaquille O'NealThe Mamba Mentality by Kobe BryantThose Guys Have all the Fun by James Andrew MillerThe Book of Basketball by Bill SimmonsJunot DíazDrown by Junot DíazThis is How You Lose Her by Junot DíazThe Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot DíazMalcolm GladwellThe Tipping Point by Malcolm GladwellBlink by Malcolm GladwellWhat the Dog Saw by Malcolm GladwellDavid and Goliath by Malcolm GladwellNeil deGrasse TysonGoosebumps Classic (Series 1) by R. L. SteinTo Kill A Mocking Bird by Harper LeeOne Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest by Ken KeseyThe Bible (The New King James)Seven Sundays by Alec PenixOh, the Places You'll Go by Dr. SeussSmall Fry by Lisa Brennan-JobsNeil SimonLaughter on the 23rd Floor by Neil SimonThe Odd Couple by Neil SimonMartin McDonaghThe Pillowman by Martin McDonaghTake Me Out by Richard GreenbergRomeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare Pimps, Hos, Playa Hatas, and All the Rest of My Hollywood Friends by John LeguizamoThe Works of John Leguizamo: Freak, Spic-o-rama, Mambo Mouth, and Sexaholix by John Leguizamo Everything Else The Other Two (Comedy Central)Arrow (The CW)Sirens (USA)Orange is the New Black (Netflix)On Your FeetAJ and the Queen (Netflix)RuPaulMichael Patrick KingSex and the City (HBO)Two Broke Girls (CBS)The Comeback (HBO)Izzy GasperszThe World's Best (CBS)RuPaul's Drag Race (VH1)Emilio EstefanGloria EstefanAndrea BurnsSongs for a New WorldJosh BrolinChristian BaleLittle Women (Columbia Pictures)The Machinist (Paramount Classics)Stranger Things (Netflix)The Umbrella Academy (Netflix)This Is Us (NBC)Parenthood (NBC)"The Art of the Pan: What's the Point of a Bad Review in 2019?" (Rob Harvilla, The Ringer)John KrasinskiThe Office (NBC)Tyler Perry MoviesWhite Chicks (Columbia Pictures)The Hangover: Part III (Warner Bros. Pictures)"Ep. 13 Writing Your Book with Ross Asdourian" (The Stacks)"Ep. 14 The Power of Habit by Charles Duhigg -- The Stacks Book Club" (The Stacks)Lebron JamesThe Shop (HBO)More than an Athlete (ESPN)Maverick CarterSerena WilliamsKevin DurantJ.J. WattThe Offseason: Kevin Durant (HBO)Michael JacksonRevisionist History (Malcolm Gladwell/Pushkin)"McDonalds Broke My Heart" (Revisionist History)GodspellRomeo + Juliet (20th Century Fox)Claire DanesLeonardo DiCaprioHarold PerrineauOz (HBO)Zero Dark Thirty (Columbia Pictures)John LeguizamoHomeland (Showtime)The Ministers (Allumbra Pictures)"The Short Stacks 4: Juan Vidal//Rap Dad" (The Stacks) Connect with Josh: Josh's Instagram Connect with The Stacks: Instagram | The Stacks Website | Facebook | Twitter | Subscribe | Patreon | Goodreads | Traci's Instagram To contribute to The Stacks, join The Stacks Pack,...

Motorsport Coaching Podcast
Kart driver to Team Owner

Motorsport Coaching Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2018 42:23


Welcome to Episode #23   JOSH HUNT – RACE CAR DRIVER / TEAM OWNER – VOLANTE ROSSO   Who is Josh? Josh has returned from three years in South East Asia where he placed third in the Asian Le Mans Series alongside setting up a young drivers development program. Having driven in almost every category available in Australia in his formative years, Josh has now returned to Australia where he has teamed up with Volante Rosso Motorsport to take on the Carrera Cup. Josh commenced his successful career in motorsport at age 11, and further demonstrated enormous commitment to his motorsport career to leave family and friends behind to join a factory go-kart team in Europe at 16. Competing at the highest level of world karting in Italy, Josh’s abilities earned him a spot in the American scene as he progressed into car racing in the USF2000 series. This led to Josh competing in the 2004 Toyota Atlantic Championship with the support of ChampCar owner Kevin Kalkhoven.       This show you’ll learn: Josh’s career journey nationally and internally Dealing with living away from home at 16 yrs Becoming a team owner   If you would like to connect with Josh; ▶ Email: josh@circuitmotorsport.com.au ▶ Website: www.circuitmotorsport.com.au ▶ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/joshhuntracedriver/ ▶ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Volante-Rosso-902080193223112/?ref=bookmarks ▶ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jo_shunt/?hl=en ▶ Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/josh-hunt-a53315126/   THIS WEEK’S SPECIALS: Download our Career Development ebook – motiv8training.com.au/career     Reviews: Do you have any feedback on the show? Please leave a review on itunes / stitcher / spotify and I will read them out on next show, good or bad! Every review will go in the draw to win a prize.     Recommend a guest: Is there someone you would love to hear from? Is there story inspiring to you? If so, please let us know who, so we can try and get them onboard! Email win@motiv8training.com.au   Thank you again for taking the time to listen to the podcast!

The Film Riot Podcast
Making Short Films & Getting them Seen with Josh Tanner

The Film Riot Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2018 56:19


Josh Tanner is a writer/director from Australia with some amazing short films like The Landing, The Rizzle, and Reverse. Today Ryan and Josh talk about directing horror, the transition between low budget shorts and larger productions, and getting their films seen by the right people.   Connect with Josh:Josh on IMDB Josh on Instagram Connect with Ryan Connolly:Ryan on TwitterRyan on InstagramRyan on FacebookRyan on IMDBRyan's Website

The Film Riot Podcast
Film Riot was my Film School with Josh Connolly

The Film Riot Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2018 53:16


Josh Connolly joins the podcast today to talk about Film Riot and how he found his way into filmmaking.   Connect with Josh:Josh on IMDB Josh on Instagram Josh on Twitter Connect with Ryan Connolly:Ryan on TwitterRyan on InstagramRyan on FacebookRyan on IMDBRyan's Website

Hell's Kitchen Reviews and After Show - AfterBuzz TV
Hell’s Kitchen S:17 | Josh Josh Josh E:5 | AfterBuzz TV AfterShow

Hell's Kitchen Reviews and After Show - AfterBuzz TV

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2017 47:07


AFTERBUZZ TV -- A weekly series that dissects episodes of cooking shows such as MasterChef, Hell’s Kitchen and others. In addition our hosts will deliver news and announcements pertaining to these shows during the TV hiatus weeks. Throughout the series we'll bring in guests to join in on the fun! Today, hosts Lem Gonsalves, Ashley Chaney, Rhavin McSweeney, and Frank Moran discuss Hell's Kitchen Episode 5. Subscribe to our NEW YouTube Channels: Drama - https://www.youtube.com/afterbuzztvdrama Comedy - http://www.youtube.com/c/AfterBuzzTVComedy Animation - http://www.youtube.com/c/AfterBuzzTVAnimation Featured & Original - http://youtube.com/afterbuzztv Reality TV - http://www.youtube.com/c/AfterBuzzTVReality Wrestling & Sports - http://www.youtube.com/c/AfterBuzzTVWrestlingAndSports Reality TV Competition - http://www.youtube.com/c/AfterBuzzTVRealityCompetition

Oh No! Video Games!
EPISODE 141: The Triangle That We Put In You

Oh No! Video Games!

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2015 97:18


Mat's got some things to say about when your job is accidentally a video game. Laura's been thinking about the price of fame. Josh? Josh is here too. All your favs.  PLAY ATTENTION: UplinkClicker HeroesLindsay Lohan: The Price Of FameKeep Talking And Nobody ExplodesNintendolandJust A Whole Bunch Of Suda51 GamesMario MakerYoshi's Wooly WorldMetal Gear Solid V RAD LINKS: Mat Wrote A Thing For ViceWaluigi Mario Maker LevelMark Brown's / Mario Maker LevelsThe Idea Channel Video About Over EnthusiasmThe Death And Return Of Superman Music Credits:Quiz ThemePatreon Theme

Josh~Josh
The Pilot: "A Toast to Long Podcasting...??"

Josh~Josh

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2014 93:48


The very first episode of Josh and Josh's podcast, typicallyuninteresting a.k.a. Josh~Josh a.k.a. Josh HyphenJosh; We discuss POWs and childhood and bertolli frozen dinners