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This week Josh and Kevin sit down for a fireside chat. We start off discussing a little bit about the seasons, archery and rifle, and what cartridges are popular (meaning sales that Kevin has seen at his shop) specifically in terms of the .450 bushmaster and .350 legend for the limited rifle zone, where he has not seen a demand so far for the newer cartridges, the .350 seems to be leading the pack. We then get into discussing a bit about reloading, how small mistakes in terms of powder and failure to follow the manuals or other established data can be disastrous, we also talk a little about the differences between black powder and smokeless powder. Then we discuss Joshs most recent archery hunting experiences. The highs and lows, time at the new family cabin, and the value of having family together in a hunt camp. And to end we talk about the ATC charity event a bit and plans for the upcoming rifle season. Predator Thermal Optics code "ptothermal" for 10% off all Predator Thermal Optics brand Scopes and Monoculars www.predatorthermaloptics.com www.predatorhunteroutdoors.com code: tripod for 10% off tripods and mounts code: light for 20% off lighting products Predator Hunter Outdoors www.huntwise.com code: OVERDRIVE20 for 20% off an annual membership HuntWise Oak Ridge Customs ATN Prym1
This week's podcast is a fire side chat with Josh and Kevin. We recap Kevins recent coyote hunt in the woods at night, talking about using thermal in thick cover, being able to see brush and such. We talk about Joshs deer hunting early season with his Kids for both the youth season and early doe, we get into the .350 legend, how the kids handled it and how it performed on deer. We delve into using LRF and various range finding methods, talking about using built in laser range finders, vs handheld. We talk a bit about using "Mil-dot" systems and how they can be a very good tool, IF you know how to use them, and the details about using them. Along with various optics that use them or similar systems. Josh and Kevin both talk about deer camp, what it means to them, how just being at camp is such a comforting feeling, no matter where the camp is. Good times with folks you know doing what you love, successful or not. As always, THANK YOU FOR LISTENING. Predator Thermal Optics code "ptothermal" for 10% off all Predator Thermal Optics brand Scopes and Monoculars www.predatorhunteroutdoors.com code: tripod for 10% off tripods and mounts code: light for 20% off lighting products Predator Hunter Outdoors www.huntwise.com code: OVERDRIVE20 for 20% off an annual membership HuntWise Maniac Outdoors- Code OD15 for 15% off scent fuel products ORC Archery ATN Prym1
08 - 26 - 24 PTOWN BOOKING AND SHOUT OUT JOSHS MOM by Maine's Coast 93.1
Thank you all for tuning in for another week of The 580 Show! This week is the announcement of Puller Express 3 and talk about Joshs experience competing at PSL in Baltimore. Thank you all for the support! --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/580barbell/support
Kennt ihr das? Man ist auf eine Party eingeladen, macht sich stundenlang Gedanken, was man anzieht, stellt das perfekte Outfit zusammen, geht auf die Party und BOOM zwei weitere tragen das gleiche Outfit. Schlimm, oder? Doch es geht noch schlimmer. Stellt euch vor, es gibt noch andere, die denselben Namen haben wir ihr. Das ist wirklich schrecklich….so schrecklich, dass ein Mann aus Arizona sich gesagt hat: es kann nur einen geben…Es kann nur einen Josh geben
Joshua Knobel: Religious Calling Josh didn't see West Point as dramatically different from his other college options, but an overnight stay in 1997 caused him to reassess. Joshs' host (Class of 2000) stayed up late studying the night before and wasn't prepared for the upcoming day. His classmates in that moment bent over backwards to makes sure he was. Josh couldn't imagine that happening at any other college, and it sold him. Josh didn't participate much in sports before West Point, but he played football his senior year to prepare himself for the physical rigors of the Academy. Josh continued to push himself at West Point, but also sought refuge in his friends and in his faith. Joining the fencing team, participating in intramurals, and participating in events at the Jewish Chapel. Josh would graduate from West Point and join the Signal Corps, serving at Ft. Huachuca, Arizona and deploying to Iraq and Ft. Bragg, North Carolina and deploying to Afghanistan. Josh would push himself to accomplish the mission in both organizations, but more importantly he grew in his faith and his desire to be a part of something bigger than himself. In the Spring of 2008 Josh would redeploy from Afghanistan, hand off his Company Command, leave the military, and begin his journey to becoming a Rabbi. This is his story. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/joe-harrison0/support
If you missed the first and second episodes with thoughtbot Incubator Program partcipant and founder Josh Herzig-Marks of Knect, you can listen to Josh's first episode (https://www.giantrobots.fm/incubators3e1josh) and his second (https://www.giantrobots.fm/s3e3incubatorjosh) to catch up. In the third interview with Josh, Lindsey Christensen, head of Marketing at thoughtbot, and Jordyn Bonds, head of the Incubator Program at thoughtbot, discuss the progress of Knect in the thoughtbot Incubator Program. Most of the conversation involves identifying and focusing on the right target audience. Initially, they considered startup enthusiasts, but after exploring other segments like journalists, they returned to startup enthusiasts with a more refined focus. Josh also talks about developing a prototype and its usefulness in getting feedback and refining the product concept. The technical feasibility of integrating various communication platforms into their solution is a significant focus. They examined different platforms like email, LinkedIn, WhatsApp, Telegram, and SMS to determine which integrations were essential for the minimum viable product. Looking forward, Josh outlines the next steps for the program, which include finalizing high-quality prototypes and making strategic decisions about the scale and funding of the project. Transcript: LINDSEY: Hi, everyone. JORDYN: Hi. LINDSEY: Thanks for tuning in and joining. We're going to be checking in on one of our incubator program participants today. If you haven't joined us before, thoughtbot runs a startup incubator, about an eight-week program for the early, early, early-stage company, idea, founder project to validate that business, find the market, and start thinking about how you build that thing. So my name is Lindsey Christensen. I head up Marketing here at thoughtbot. And today, I am joined by Jordyn Bonds, who heads up the incubator program at thoughtbot. And our guest of honor checking in once again, Josh Herzig-Marks, Founder of Knect, the company going through the program. Thanks for joining. JOSH: Super excited. I'm always excited. LINDSEY: How's it going? How is your founder sentiment this week? JOSH: This -- LINDSEY: Are you on a high? Are you on a low? JOSH: I don't think I'm on a typically high-high. I'm a pretty even-keeled, chill founder. I think it's appropriately enthusiastic but not excessively so, and definitely not at a low trough. LINDSEY: All right, even-keeled. We love to [crosstalk 01:19]. JOSH: Appropriately enthusiastic because we're doing really cool stuff. And this is a lot of fun. LINDSEY: Well, that's great. So, I mean, [inaudible 01:25] that you're working on and especially the last time I checked in with you in the really early stages, trying to find that target niche audience or invalidate, like, the problem with them. How is that going? How's that search for the people with the problem going? JOSH: Yeah. So just to, like, rewind the clock for the folks who maybe haven't seen every one of these, you know, there's a few things that I was trying to figure out to validate whether this problem that I saw was an opportunity for business. And, Jordyn, help me out if I forget some of these. So, number one, is this a Josh problem, or is this problem more broad? Question number two is, could we find an audience of people who are reachable, who share the problem, and who'd be willing to actually pay for this thing? And those little asterisks after pay, right? People pay for things with money but also with time or with reputation. Generally, we're thinking about money here, ultimately. But do they pay for this thing even in time? Would they be able to do that? And the reason we're looking for that kind of a more narrow audience is because you got to build for somebody in the very beginning. This isn't, like, we're limiting ourselves to a narrow audience forever, but we wanted a set of people who we could design this thing for, have prototypes, share it, and hopefully get some consistent feedback so we can build a thing which they would find useful and use that from there. That was two things. And the third thing: is this actually technically feasible? You know, the first time I was a founder, incidental to building our business, we built the world's fastest online transaction processing database that was processing, like, billions and billions of retail records in, like, the time it takes you to, like, click and drag and change the query that we're doing, which is really cool to say out loud, and it demoed really, really well. But that isn't actually a business. And what I wanted is part of validating if this idea, if this problem was an opportunity or something that wasn't a science experiment. And I'd love to talk a little bit more about what we've been doing over the past week, maybe a little later on in this. Because I think it's been a big week for the science experiment or not validation stage of this thing. So, two things we've also done over the past week and a half, two weeks since the last time we chatted, we have a prototype, which looks pretty good, which we can now use to show to people who we think are our core starting audience, our core starting market, and we actually have a core starting market. Both of these things are pretty exciting. I mean, I'm always excited. But we're doing it, like, we're doing the thing that we're supposed to be doing, and I like that. LINDSEY: That's really exciting. So, core starting market is happening. Do you want to talk about maybe how you got there? JOSH: One of the reasons why I was excited about doing this program is Jordyn, and I share the understanding of its importance. But when you're, like, actually the founder, it's really hard to see this, right? Jordyn is like the...I don't know quite how to describe it, but Jordyn is the person who, like, made sure we stayed focused on this part of the effort. And, like, it's a really key part of the thoughtbot incubator. And it's one of the reasons why I'm really appreciative of having gone through the program. JORDYN: So, Josh walked into the program with a problem that he had, which is frequently how products get made and companies get founded. Like, that's fine. It's a great starting place. And as he listed, his question was, is this a Josh problem, or is this a problem for more than just Josh? Because Josh isn't a market segment. Josh is an individual human [laughs]. And a lot of us have product ideas that we would love to have exist so that we can use them, but that doesn't make them good market opportunities. I may or may not be speaking from experience in that regard, ahem. Anyway, so part of the programming here was to figure this out. And it's great to start with, like, okay, well, if Josh is our primary user, who is Josh? Is there a market of Joshs, right? So, we actually started off talking to those folks. And, you know, we're human beings, and we tend to hang out with people like ourselves. And so, Josh knew a lot of people like Josh. One of those people that he knew was me. I am like Josh in regard to this pain point. I also had it. And then I was connected to a bunch of people who had this pain point. So, we broadly spoke to a lot of those folks at first. I don't know that we really had a persona name for this. I don't know, how would you frame this? JOSH: As you know, I only have poor pejorative names for people like us. JORDYN: [laughs] Pejorative? JOSH: There's, you know, a class of people who are at tech companies and startups, and sometimes they start their own companies, and sometimes they work at companies. And sometimes they do coaching. And sometimes they do a little bit of an investment. And sometimes they're on advisory boards. And, you know, when you kind of smoothly move from one thing to the next, sort of often doing several of these things all at the same time. And there's not a really good name for them, but they're kind of people, like I might go so far to say the three of us, and maybe a lot of people who work at thoughtbot and a lot of people we've all worked with in the past and, hopefully, a lot of the people who are listening to this conversation because they, too, could slip into the founding a company stage of this business. JORDYN: So, we've kind of loosely called those people, most recently, startup enthusiasts is our nickname, and there are a lot of folks under that umbrella. But as we talked to those people at this kind of high level, it was very broad. That maybe sounds fairly specific to some of you out there listening, but it's not specific, nearly specific enough to address with a product. So, we were talking. We were listening, getting people to talk to us, "Hey, tell us about how you keep in touch with folks. How does that go? What do you do? Have you ever built your own spreadsheet to keep track of people you know? Tell us about that." Broad questions. And we were learning things and hearing about trends. It wasn't coming into focus. We weren't hearing enough repeatable things. And we certainly weren't hearing about red, hot pain points. It was like a, "Yeah, this is kind of a problem sometimes, but not all the time. My system works more or less [inaudible 07:11]. Then we kind of found this range of personas. Some folks were just like, "I'm awesome at this. It's not a problem. I don't know what to tell you." Okay, well, clearly, that person doesn't need a product because they're feeling good. Great. At the other end of the spectrum, you have people who are just like, "I don't even know what you're talking about [laughs]. Like, this isn't [laughs]..." There were people who were like, "I know what you're talking about, but I'm good at it." There were people who were like, "I don't know what you're talking about. I don't care to ever do this." And then, there was this broad set of people in the middle who were like, "Yeah, I have a problem with this." But we were hearing a lot of different things. In the course of that, Rami, one of the folks on the team, ended up talking to a journalist. And that conversation was very interesting because it did seem like way more of a red, hot pain point with, like, something on the line. And we were like, oh, maybe we've been barking up the entire wrong tree and, like, startup enthusiasts aren't our people; journalists are our people. So, then we did a whole sprint with journalists and realized that journalists is a very broad umbrella [laughs]. There's a lot of different kinds of journalists in a lot of different kinds of contexts. And they have widely varying pain points, habits, needs, wants. We were like, okay, we're hearing some really interesting things in here, but they don't seem like early adopters because they are not the kind of people that just try an app who are just like, "Sure, new app, cool. I'll try that." Startup enthusiasts are people who just, like, try stuff. They're, like, on Product Hunt. They're friends with a bunch of founders, and those founders are, like, "Try this." And then they're like, "Sure, okay. Sure, I'll try it. I'll login." Login to anything once, right? Is kind of the attitude of this group of people, journalists not so much. And so, it felt like it was going to be a really hard thing to address those folks. But we learned a ton. And we really ended up mapping the emotional train in a lot of detail. And as a group, like, we came to a lot of alignment. There was a lot of, like, really good understanding, deeper understanding having gone on that journey. But where we ended up back was like, okay, startup enthusiasts really actually seem like [laughs] a place to start. And it feels like there's enough of them that they could create some kind of early adopter market. But now, with the information that we had, the new information we had, we were like, let us sub-segment this group of people. It's not everybody in that umbrella. Doing that whole journey enabled us to kind of come back to the question with renewed focus, but, like, conviction about how valuable it was going to be to do that, right? And sometimes that's what it takes. You kind of have to do the wrong thing for a second to appreciate doing the right thing, and that's totally fine. The fact that we were able to do that in, what, five weeks is, like, fine. JOSH: And I think the way that we found the sub-segment that made sense was actually pretty simple, right? Once we understood what are the dimensions that are actually important, we did a quick brainstorming session. This wasn't actually a very long process at the end of it, a quick brainstorming session. What are the different kinds of people who fall into this segment? And we just scored them on all the easy things you'd expect to score people on, namely: are they easy to find and easy for us to reach? Do they advertise this quality of theirs someplace publicly, like, perhaps on LinkedIn? And are they easy to find? Like, do we have enough of them inside of our network so we could, like, search for these kinds of folks? And as it turns out, we've already spoken to a lot of these kinds of folks as well. And primarily, we're talking to repeat founders and/or chiefs of staff at startups. JORDYN: If you are one of those people, please reach out to us. We'd like to talk to you. JOSH: We would love it. LINDSEY: Call to action. So, Josh, you mentioned one of the benefits of the program has been Jordyn's ability to kind of laser-focus on finding the target market. Jordyn, how do you do that? How do you keep the team coming back to that? Especially as sometimes it maybe doesn't take that long—sometimes it might feel like you're kind of circling around and around and still aren't finding anyone—and keeping folks motivated to do that or understanding, you know, when are we going to say, "This is it, you know, we're not finding someone"? JORDYN: I'll talk about how it worked in this case. And every team is different and is motivated by different things. And this process is a little different every time, so it's hard to make generalizations. But in this case, what was interesting is that after we did our journalist sprint and we were like, we do want to refocus on startup enthusiasts, but we need to understand a little bit better what we're doing, we actually prototyped a little bit given what we knew, which seems like a bad idea [laughs] on the face of it. It seems premature. The purpose of doing that, then, was to really take a different path to drawing out of each of us what was in our lines. That's, like, so much of the work of a team at this stage is, like, making sure that we're externalizing the things that we're thinking and the assumptions that we have. And it's strange. You would think you would just be like, "Hey, tell me what's in your mind?" But minds don't work that way. You can't just be like, "Hey, mind, what's up?" And then articulate it perfectly in a way that everybody in this group is going to know what you mean. So, prototyping actually drew a bunch of that stuff out. It really...I think that was the moment...I don't know, Josh, how you feel about it. We had been kind of in the doldrums because we did get to the end of that journalists' sprint. And we were like, what are we doing? What have we learned? And prototyping at that moment enabled us to...it was a different way of understanding what we had learned and what we were all now thinking. And it really drew a bunch of dynamics out that it was super helpful. JOSH: It brought some real sharpness to what we thought we'd be able to...the kind of value we thought we could deliver in the early versions of this thing, right? Fast forward two years, who knows? But it brought some sharpness to the kinds of problems that we thought we'd be able to fix and the kinds of problems we thought we couldn't solve. And that also clarified for us, certainly for me, why, oh, here's why this isn't really landing with the journalists, right? And here's why this isn't really landing with some other kinds of folks we were talking to. And -- JORDYN: Biz dev folks. We talked to a bunch of biz dev folks. It wasn't going to land with them, but yeah -- JOSH: They weren't at all excited about it, and then we can kind of understand why. One of the ways that I think about a prototype and I talk about this a lot, and I love doing this. Somebody called this a Pinocchio prototype, the wooden child who wants to be a real boy. Once we had a prototype, we could actually put it onto our actual phones. And I'm not sure how many other people did this on the team besides me but, like, I would carry my phone around with a prototype on it. And every time I thought I might use it, I would pull the damn thing out of my pocket and, like, tap away on the phone. It gave me, again, a very clear sense of the kinds of things I thought we were moving towards solving and the kinds of things that we weren't really solving. LINDSEY: Yeah, Josh, you mentioned there were some exciting developments in the past week. Is that around the prototype? JOSH: This is one. Having the prototype on there was good. It's also really nice to have this be part of a larger team. I was having a hard time. I had been playing with, like, our design team's paper prototype. I was having a hard time communicating what I was trying to do inside of my head. So, I built my own parallel prototype in Google Slides, which was exactly as awesome looking and as functional as everybody listening is imagining it must have been. If you would like your own copy of my Google Slides app development template, please reach out. I will share it [laughs]. But it let me think a little bit, again, the same thing, like, here's how these things fit together. And then it started moving really, really fast. Once we were all putting things down in a way that we could play with, and touch, and talk about in a concrete way, it felt like that part of things started to move really fast. And the quality of our conversations improved with people we were talking to as well. I would say that's half of the things that are really exciting. LINDSEY: Just to continue on the prototype for a second, Jordyn mentioned a major outcome of starting to use the prototype; well, I guess [inaudible 14:37] that you all as a team got better aligned around what you were envisioning for the solution. And then, it also helped you, again, kind of identify the true target market. Are there other things you're already learning from using the prototype and getting it in front of people? JOSH: Yeah, I think there are. By the way, this shouldn't be surprising. This is, like, the classic diverge-converge model that I know thoughtbot uses all the time with not just startup clients when you're building something new. One of the things which, you know, rewind the clock six and a half weeks ago to when we started this thing. I didn't realize how much intelligence would be required behind the scenes to make this thing actually sensible to the final users. And the more we show it to people, the more we realize that, like, intelligence to make things look simple is going to equal people actually using the damn thing. I think we started to see that ourselves in playing with it. But it's really important to have that be validated by actual potential users who aren't, like, in this shit themselves. JORDYN: I mean, immediately, you know, we were able to start showing the prototype to the folks that we were having interviews with, and there's just nothing better than that because they're not going to pull their punches with you. And we got a lot of great immediate sort of spicy feedback [laughs] from people, especially if you're showing them to people who are, like, startup people [laughs], they're just not going to be nice. And so, there was a lot of [crosstalk 15:59]. JOSH: They're like, "Have you considered making this suck less?" JORDYN: Yeah, exactly. "I wouldn't use this at all [laughs]." You're just like, "Okay, thanks." Tell me how you really feel [laughs]. But it's great. I mean, like, there's nothing better than that. Like, I would way rather that than a bunch of people trying to be polite. JOSH: And it also prompts feedback that we wouldn't necessarily have thought of, which is the idea of this. We [inaudible 16:20] thought of this on our own. Like the idea that sometimes you might want to not take an action when you don't really care about a person. But sometimes you really, like, dislike a person so much who you've been talking to you want to never see them again, right? Never show me this person again. It's a thing that we never would have come to, I think, if we hadn't, like, actually been showing the prototype to end users. LINDSEY: Okay, what is the second half of the exciting thing that happened in the past week? JOSH: This is very much a thoughtbot thing. thoughtbot is full of really talented engineers. And over the past couple of days, we've been able to bring a lot of those folks to bear on the question of like, is this thing technically feasible or not? Which was one of my big concerns. And it turns out, that was probably too large a question for the team that we started with. And to be able to, like, do this, like, little discovery spike with, you know, going beyond the three-and-a-half thoughtboter team that we had to some of your most talented, most experienced engineering leads, not forever, but just for, like, a short moment is kind of, for me, at least, like, a real taste of, like, the thoughtbot value is, you know, Jordyn gets to put out a call for assistance, you know, across the company, and people raise their hands and put real-time in. And, you know, we're able to do something in a couple of days that we probably couldn't have done because we have enough people. And, you know, all those, like, network effects of people coming together that could have taken us, you know, weeks or longer just kind of toiling on our own. LINDSEY: For those technical challenges, maybe you don't want to get into specifics, but in broad strokes, can you talk about what some of those considerations are? And maybe at this point, maybe it makes sense to also talk a little bit about, like, how the solution, how you're thinking about the evolution of what the solution is and provides. JOSH: I have an Android phone. I live in the world as a green bubble in a world of blue bubbles. My partner and I are in an interfaith relationship. She has an iPhone. I have an Android phone. And forever, people are accidentally trying to hit up my, like, iMessage account tied to my email address, and the things don't come through. And, all of a sudden, this company someplace in the U.S. figured out some way to, like, reverse engineer the Apple messages iMessages protocol, so I can put iMessages onto my Android phone. They built this thing. It's been, like, all over the tech news recently. This is the problem, if you're trying to bring together all of somebody's social network, is that there is no, like, handy-dandy API for iMessages. There is no handy-dandy API for regular SMS or RCS or any of those other variations of that. There is no handy-dandy API for WhatsApp, for Telegram, sort of ish, kind of maybe for Slack, not really for Discord. It remains to be seen how mature it is for LinkedIn. By the way, email works great, right? If we just build our entire lives off of email, we'd have none of these problems, but we can't. And we had some hypotheses about ways that we could make connecting these other accounts easier. And we just took, like, an awful lot of hands, right? More than two hands. It took more than two hands to figure out if these things were possibilities if those things turn out to be true. And the answer is if they are true, which we're still working to figure out, though it's looking better and better, this isn't a science experiment, right? And if it's not true, then step one is an awful lot of engineer hours to go do what those Beeper Mini folks did and reverse engineer a whole bunch of protocols and systems that were never intended to be open in the first place. JORDYN: I would like to say -- JOSH: Which is why we should all donate to EFF and promote an open internet so that startups like mine don't need to exist. JORDYN: To loop back to your earlier question, Lindsey, about how to keep the team focused on who something is for, this conversation seems like it's not about that. But, to me, this conversation is also about that because we have a long list of messaging platforms that we have heard from folks, like from interviewing them would be useful to have brought into a single place. This was one of the key pain points that Josh has that we heard from other people, which is, like, you connect with people across platforms, right? You might be connected to some on LinkedIn, but you're also emailing with them. Your email history with them is not a complete history of your life with them. None of your online stuff is going to be a complete history because sometimes you actually interact with people [laughs] in reality, which is still, at this moment, not being recorded all the time, but probably not for long. JOSH: As little as possible. JORDYN: [laughs] But still, even within the online world, you're communicating with people across platforms. Maybe you text with someone, maybe you message on LinkedIn, whatever. And having complete context for your relationship with them in a way that makes it really easy to kind of, like, boot up that context in order to reach out to them for some reason, like, maybe you haven't talked in six months, and you just want to remember, where did I leave this relationship? What's going on with this person, right? You're like, where was I talking to them? Oh, I was talking to them in these four places that don't have very good protocols for being brought into the same interface, right? So, like, the stuff is, like, all connected. But to get back to the who question, we have this list of places we'd heard from people, like, in the early interviews and places that Josh was trying to do this connect with people, et cetera. So, it's, like, Slack DMs, and it's email, and it's LinkedIn, whatever. But we also heard Telegram, and we also heard other things. If we don't sufficiently focus on a narrow enough group of people, we risk making the MVP way too big because it needs to connect with every one of these things. And we can't go to market with something that doesn't connect with 12 platforms or something, right? But because we're sufficiently focused, we could actually do the thing where we're like, okay, well, out of this list of platforms, what are, like, the top five? Where is the line? Where's the minimum viability here with what we can connect with that will actually bring value? And I also am an Android user living in an iPhone world. And Josh and I at least have enough awareness to be like, you know what? Maybe Android isn't necessary, even though we would love [laughs] for it to be there. Nine times out of 10, the people that look like us are using iPhones, right? So great, cool. Let's just do the thing. JOSH: Obligatory iPhone test device. JORDYN: Right. I have one, too, but I don't know where it is. So, like, the question of who really matters. Who, like, really helps you focus? If your answer to "Who?" is anybody with a smartphone, well, like, it's going to be really tough to build an actual MVP that's buildable. So, this question that Josh brought in to us, which is, like, "What's technically feasible here?" really intersects very directly with this question of who are we building for? Because you really want to be able to start somewhere. And, you know, if you have a sufficiently red, hot need and it's not, like, to time travel or something that is, like, probably impossible given the laws of our universe, you can find a way, right? And so, the question was, like, why don't we find that so that we can focus on whether it's worth finding a way? And then that intersection of who it's for, what their pain points are, and what's possible with what amount of effort. It all fits together. No single one of those pieces is sufficient for figuring out a path forward. LINDSEY: And are you taking the, you know, okay, we've gotten really good sight on these startup enthusiasts, and these are their top four communication methods; let's try to solve them? Is that the approach? JORDYN: More or less, yeah. Yes. It's like, can we interface with those top...I think for us, it's like a top five, maybe six. JOSH: Five or six. JORDYN: But, like, the first one on there is email, and that's not a problem. Like, we don't...that's fine. LinkedIn is also not a problem; one and two are email, and LinkedIn: good. We're cool with that. That's okay. JOSH: Because every individual has their own thing. So, you know, you may be talking about long tail services, you know, but for the person who uses Telegram as their, like, daily driver, which isn't most people in the U.S., but there's a lot of people abroad, not having Telegram means it isn't useful. And I think that's one of the things hard about this, right? This is a hard business potentially, or it's really easy. We have no idea yet. And that's part of what I find exciting about this is because over the next, you know, week or so, we'll find out how hard a business this is actually, or at least where are the technically difficult parts? LINDSEY: Great segue. What does the next week look like as we've got market niche, prototype, technical feasibility intersectioning, figuring those things out? What exciting things are on the horizon? What's next? JOSH: So, we have about two weeks left, and at the end of two weeks, we're going to end up with a set of high-quality prototypes, which, you know, are easy for any of us to have on our phones, and to flash around to rando strangers we meet at the grocery store because there's no better way to make friends than product testing. And we'll have a good sense of how big and complicated, and complicated in what ways might it be to build this thing. And then, it's time for Josh to make some decisions around, you know, the whole goal of this was to figure out, like, how big of an opportunity is this just to go and do that? What could growth look like? What could pricing look like? Where might the costs be? What would the cost be to build this? Is this, like, a side gig scale thing? Is it a small, you know, angel-funded startup thing? Is this, like, a VC-size thing? I really hope it's not a VC-size thing. And then to think about, you know, what are the resources that would be required to build it, and where might those resources come from? So, at the end of this, two weeks out from now, I think we'll have all the information, you know, that we need. And then, I know a whole bunch of people inside of thoughtbot who are in a great place to provide their own thoughts and advice and experience and feedback on this. And I'll take this to my personal board of directors, including my family, but also, you know, other experienced entrepreneurs and investors I know, and we'll talk through this. And we'll have to go make some decisions, which is a little scary and a little bit fun, but a nice way to kick off 2024. JORDYN: And a lot easier to do after this program. JOSH: We'll have some real information, right? [laughs] JORDYN: Yes. LINDSEY: That's the goal, right? JOSH: Yeah. LINDSEY: Of the incubator to get you in that spot where you can make educated decisions and get others up to speed really quickly with all that research. JOSH: That's right. LINDSEY: That's great. All right. So, you had a call to action earlier. What was that? Oh, if startup enthusiasts are listening, we want to chat with them and talk to them about the solution. JOSH: If you're a founder, if you're a multi-time founder and either done it a couple of times in the past or you're still doing it, reach out. If you are a startup chief of staff and you can define that role for yourself, please reach out. We'd love to talk to you there as well. If you would like a copy of Josh's free wireframing template for mobile apps, please reach out, and I will be happy to provide you that as well. LINDSEY: Amazing. Thank you once again, Josh and Jordyn, for joining and catching us up. It definitely was an exciting update. I can't wait to hear what happens in the final stretch. JOSH: Me too. AD: Did you know thoughtbot has a referral program? If you introduce us to someone looking for a design or development partner, we will compensate you if they decide to work with us. More info on our website at: tbot.io/referral. Or you can email us at referrals@thoughtbot.com with any questions. Special Guests: Jordyn Bonds and Josh Herzig-Marx .
In this episode of Start, Sit, Cut, Knox and Jason discuss the weekend that was including: Accountability Sesh Lions, Vols, Bills, Jags How often we think about the Roman Empire Josh Allen, Josh Harris, Josh Dobbs won the weekend Alabama is broken... at least on offense but according to Lane Kiffin they are on defense too Colorado is a wagon but it was Colorado State CBS and NBC More bodyguard talk... Are we a pro bodyguard podcast now?! A revelation about 60 Minutes that is truly painful Thank you for listening and please leave us a 5 star rating and let us know your takes on X and Instragram! https://twitter.com/OUAchievers https://www.instagram.com/overunderachievers/
In this episode of Start, Sit, Cut, Knox and Jason discuss the weekend that was including: Accountability Sesh Lions, Vols, Bills, Jags How often we think about the Roman Empire Josh Allen, Josh Harris, Josh Dobbs won the weekend Alabama is broken... at least on offense but according to Lane Kiffin they are on defense too Colorado is a wagon but it was Colorado State CBS and NBC More bodyguard talk... Are we a pro bodyguard podcast now?! A revelation about 60 Minutes that is truly painful Thank you for listening and please leave us a 5 star rating and let us know your takes on X and Instagram! https://twitter.com/OUAchievers https://www.instagram.com/overunderachievers/ This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit knoxmccoy.substack.com/subscribe
On a Friday Drive, Josh explains how Hubert Davis is changing the math for UNC basketall, discusses the up close and personal access we're getting in the Netflix series, "Quarterback", radio broadcaster for the Carolina Panthers, Anish Shroff, joins the show ahead of Carolina Panthers training camp to discuss what's most impressive about Bryce Young at such a young age, voice of Charlotte FC, Will Palaszczuk, joins the show to discuss why Lionel Messi may not play when Inter Miami comes to Charlotte, and Josh lists off his "Top 10 Joshs".
In This Episode: We go over all of our favorite stories from the internet and our listeners. Josh also did some data crunching on the show's history This Episode is sponsored by: HelloFresh! Go to Hellofresh.com/Judgies16 and use code Judgies16 to get 16 free meals plus FREE shipping! Zocdoc! Go to Zocdoc.com/Judgies and download the Zocdoc app for FREE to find and book a top-rated doctor! Maev! Go to Meetmaev.com/JUDGIES to get $40 off of your first order! Get Judgies Merch Here: https://store.streamelements.com/judgiespod Our Patreon is officially open, if you want to see extra content go check it out! https://www.patreon.com/JudgiesPod Send us mail! (Addressed However You'd Like) P.O. Box 58 Ottawa, IL 61350 Leave a Review! https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-judgies/id1519741238 Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/judgiespod Follow us on Instagram: https://instagram.com/judgiespod Intro Music by: Iván https://open.spotify.com/artist/5gB2VvyqfnOlNv37PHKRNJ?si=f6TIYrLITkG2NZXGLm_Y-Q&dl_branch=1 Time Stamps: 0:00 Intro 5:52 Erika's Top Stories 9:30 Erika's Favorite: Pillars 25:08 Christian's Top Stories 27:21 Christian's Favorite: Soup Tube 33:06 Josh's Top Stories 35:35 Josh's Favorite: Cheating w/ Step Mom and Sister 46:54 CJ: 3 Year Review 1:15:52 Erika's Favorite LS 1:25:58 Christian's Favorite LS 1:33:55 Joshs' Favorite LS 1:41:57 Outro Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
We're back at Wonderfront Music and Arts Festival! This time sitting down with our new friend, Josh Murphy, who introduced us to his unique project called The Kaleidoscope Kid. With a unique songwriting approach and a multi-genre sound, Josh shares about how living off grid has influenced his writing style and the story behind his song, Mrs. Sinclair. For a fresh sound, check out Joshs' Sugarshack Pop-Up Session and give him a follow on social media.
The switch doesn't seem flickable and we threw the bathwater out two weeks ago. Is it the baby's turn to go? Have the wheels completely fallen off? Time to somehow pick up the pieces again and Restump Podcast today's massacre at the Crow Chateau. When you're struggling for form often the answer is you go back to the basics. The question is though what do you go back to when you're butchering the basics?Most players out there had mares today. However, Caleb Serong should be passing around the hat to pay for the extra physio he'll need on his shoulders from carrying the workload!It was actually a game of conflicting emotions and extreme emotional swings. There was the deep frustration at the lack of simple ball skills but then there was the somewhat neck saving from the noose realisation that despite the belting on the scoreboard, we each went inside 50, 51 times. Sure, it's obviously cold consolation, but a tad of finesse and composure and some sort of a functional forward line and we're in competitive territory, despite the issues across the board. Speaking of such a forward line, with two Joshs' Treacy and Corbett and a Sam Sturt hovering, will any of the trio get a look in? If we have a fit foot on a Fyfe, does he replace the struggling Matty Tabs? If nothing else it will be an interesting week at the selection table because surely a message has to be sent after a performance like that one today.But anyway the reality is we're one and three and probably one loss away from the 2023 curtains. It's a little disheartening and not the position we thought we would be in at the start of the year. However, as Bob Murphy mentioned on the recent pod, there are no certainties in footy because the ball is an oval shape and its unpredictable. At this point in time we're willing to put our faith in Bob's words.It was an uninspiring game and it probably makes for an uninspiring review. But Jojo has quite the analytical mind and sharp football brain so maybe he'll have some answers for us.If you can muster up the effort and intent that was lacking out there today, dig deep and put your head over the Restump podcast ball, then there are 40 minutes of pondering the whys, the how's, the what happened and the what happens next, right here.Support the show
Vi går igenom alla höjdpunkter från den andra batchen av Love is Blind-avsnitten (episoderna 6-8). Vi pratar om Chelseas ”Live Love Laugh”-affirmationer, vad Kwames stökiga lägenhet säger om honom och deras ojämna kompromisser. Vi diskuterar även den toxiska Jackelina, Marshalls kommentar om att hon är ”a project” och Joshs enda hjärncell. Sen snackar vi om Pauls skarriga soffor, Micahs hatande vänner, vilket par som har bäst sex, Zacks återkomst och frieri till Bliss och hur Brett och Tiffany fortsätter att vara det enda seriösa paret. Enjoy! Stötta oss på Patreon för regelbundna bonusavsnitt + mer! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Join Josh and Tom in the fifth episode of Double Trouble - The Twin Dad Podcast as they discuss their latest experiences as twin dads. In honor of UK Mother's Day, they share what Tom did to make the day extra special for his wife Jess. The dads also share updates on Joshs twins' progress, including their 12-month check-up and hitting important milestones. They discuss the social pressure to have twins walking by 12 months and provide their own insights on this common parenting challenge. In addition, Tom shares an update of his night out with the rugby team and if the hangover was worth it. Tune in for a relatable and humorous discussion on the joys and challenges of being a twin dad, as Josh and Tom provide insights and advice on navigating the milestones and social pressures of twin parenting. #TwinDadPodcast #DoubleTrouble #DadLife #ParentingMilestones #SportsAndParenting
In this podcast episode, the SIWIKE Stuff I Wish I Knew Earlier Podcast welcomes a new guest host, Josh Schachnow, an immigration lawyer and founder of Visto.ai. Josh shares his journey into law and how he fell into immigration law by chance but found it fascinating. He also talks about his experience starting his own firm and teaming up with techies to create Visto, a tech company that helps with immigration. The conversation also touches on law school experiences and expectations, fitting in as a "non-traditional" lawyer, and the growth of the immigration law field in Canada. Connect with Josh on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/joshschachnow/
Spilling the tea on what its like marrying a pro fighter and we talk about Joshs upcoming fight!!
Liz and Josh revist the Firefly family with Rob Zombies THE DEVILS REJECTS (2005). The two celebrate Joshs birthday by discussing skeletons with moustaches and try to find sympathy for anyone. And don't forget: Fried Chicken Watch. Follow BDN on twitter, instagram or facebook @BloodyDateNight Donate to our patreon https://www.patreon.com/bloodydatenight
Man how do I even hype this up more than it already is! Josh is a freaking rockstar and killing it in the game with only a fews years in! it just goes to show you with the right focus, mindset and people around you anything is possible. IN this episode of Outside the Clutch we talk about Joshs origins and how he gave up one gig that he loved to be more of a family man and have another passion that gives more time with family. Check it out leave some feedback and consider helping the show by becoming a supporter. find Josh here: https://www.morphmarket.com/stores/ballpythonshed/ https://www.facebook.com/BallPythonShed thanks for all you do dont forget to support usark and become a member today. https://usark.org/memberships/ huge shoutout to our sponsors.. the best sponsors in the game! https://vivtechproducts.com/ use code FCLUTCH0322 for 15% off your purchase dont forget to follow our other socials: https://www.facebook.com/jon.fealy https://www.instagram.com/jfealy/ #OUTSIDETHECLUTCH #BALLPYTHONSHED #REPTILEPODCAST #NEWPODCASTEPISODE #BALLPYTHONPODCAST #BALLPYTHONBREEDER --- 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/jon-fealy/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/jon-fealy/support
In which we discuss a dress worn by Judy Garland in "The Wizard of Oz" that may someday go on auction (legal battles ensuing) and The Battle of The Joshs.
Squiz Kids is an award-winning, free daily news podcast just for kids. Give us ten minutes, and we'll give you the world. A short podcast that gives kids the lowdown on the big news stories of the day, delivered without opinion, and with positivity and humour. ‘Kid-friendly news that keeps them up to date without all the nasties' (A Squiz Parent) This Australian podcast for kids easily fits into the daily routine - helping curious kids stay informed about the world around them. Fun. Free. Fresh. LINKS US gun control video explainerhttps://www.bbc.co.uk/newsround/41483003 Josh-inspired pool noodle fighthttps://apnews.com/article/josh-pool-noodle-fight-nebraska-e23282f8cd82d17926999c17b4c27d65Thor trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Go8nTmfrQd8 Skydiving salamanders https://www.sciencenews.org/article/wandering-salamanders-glide-trees Squiz Kids for Schools - Free 30 Day Trial: https://www.squizkids.com.au/squiz-kids-for-schools/Squiz Kids Apple Subscriber Content - Free 7 Day Trial: https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/squiz-kids/id1494238283 How To Become A Squiz Kids Correspondent: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1FH2HA28InnLU6UxE91wrLBAbCMT40Mua/viewSquiz Kids Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/squizkids/?hl=enGot a birthday coming up and you want a shout-out? Send us an email at squizkids@thesquiz.com.au See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The crew unpacks Joshs trip to New York to party with some reality TV stars before they talk through the most recent Survivor episode where we witnessed the blindside of the season so far!
Tonight lets dive into it and chat with Josh from @north_country_woodworking and see what his take is on these off the cuff questions. We reminisce a little bit about the early days when we started doing lives on IG and how it turned into the Sawdust Nation Podcast. After that we chat about some topics and get to hear Joshs take on them. It was a great time chatting with a great friend of mine! Hope you enjoy and let me know what you think!! You can send topic ideas and questions to Craftedinnj@gmail or DM me @Craftedinnj on Instagram If your listening on Apple Podcast please leave a review! Guest - Josh @North_Country_Woodworking https://www.instagram.com/north_country_woodworking/ Mentions: Ptreesworkshop - https://www.instagram.com/ptreesworkshop/ Bourbon Moth - https://www.instagram.com/bourbonmoth/ Jkatzmoses - instagram.com/jkatzmoses/ Crowcreekdesigns - https://www.instagram.com/crowcreekdesigns/ Salty_robin_uncut - https://www.instagram.com/salty_robin_uncut/ Craftswithdre - https://www.instagram.com/craftswithdre/
Devan, Josh & Adam talk about Elden Ring and open-world gaming, Kanye and his steam player and the Jeen-Yus doc, Adams review of Nightmare Alley & the latest this week on Bel Air & Pam/Tommy and Joshs blushing review of Maude Apatow and this week euphoria You can also email via freshtake42@gmail.com or Jawa31@gmail.com You can find Josh […] The post FTN-The Rundown(Elden Ring,Jeen-Yus,Bel Air,Nightmare Alley,Euphoria,Bel Air)2/27/22 appeared first on We Talk Podcasts.
When you meet someone who shares the same passion for discussion as you do, it's a great feeling.The first time I had a conversation with Josh, I knew we had similar views on many different topics, from mindset to relationships. He is a very intellectual individual, with balanced views on life and business.This episode goes deep into why we should prioritise memories and experiences now and how the Metaverse will change our life as we know it. Its also just a general catch up of two good friends!------------To get more information on the podcast contact me on:Instagram: @Olliehorton93Email: Strippingitbare@gmail.comTo find out more about Joshs work visit:@Joshua.patrick.ocallaghan@arete.menswww.aretemens.co.uk
Tesla volkswagen Kia… cyber quad, crab walking hummer ev, Tesla phone, ice cars Mercedes amg. @Joshs_vision @bearded_jdm_guy @zmillett --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
In this conversation we talk about Joshs personal story, how he ended up living on a sail boat in Hawaii as a Freedive instructor and underwater photographer. We dive into all the things, what the Ocean has tought him and why he's so passionate about free diving. He shares his very personal story of being diagnosed with cancer by the age of 12 years old, losing his friend and how it has changed his life. Why our health is our biggest blessing and why we should never take it for granted. We talk about taking the leap of faith and why you should DO IT, if you feel a calling and never allow your fear to hold you back. It's a very inspiring interview that's shows that everything is possible in this life, if you´re willing to take action. Why the leap of faith might be the most important step of your journey. Connect with us on instagram: @JoshMunoz & @iamtanjahirsch www.iamtanjahirsch.com
He has a beard ! & a instagram: its the @bearded_jdm_guy. We talk about the news of several manufacture's, make a call to a diehard Honda guy about his opinion on several cars... The guy in question is @joshs_vision check him out on social media.. Most importantly we give a shout out to one of our twitter followers ! ... O wait we only have one. lastly enjoy the episode follow us on social media. @tug_h1ll @this_is_exhaustin --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Josh wasn't feelin it today so you just get Dylan and Marco this time folks. Marco is sorry. #podcast #wannataste #wannatastepodcast #asmr #lgbt #comedy #whatyagottasayaboutthatjosh? #clip #fortnite #nahjustkiddingaboutfortnite #hashtag #talkingintoamicrophone #microphone #funny #notfunny #like #bdubs #cometobdubsjosh #please #animals #syke --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Happy Wednesday everyone!! Welcome back to the Otalku Podcast! This week your boys, Sam, Josh, and Jose talk about absolute garbage for a whole hour. Such wonderful garbage as: Joshs gig #2, Girls wanting to put things into holes where they don't belong, The worst order you could make at Taco Bell, Jose spoils everything, Sams first official date, and SO SO much more!Follow us: https://twitter.com/theweebsguild https://instagram.com/theweebsguildJoin our discord: https://discord.gg/cphjCsy8yDWelcome to the Otalku podcast the only podcast where three lifelong friends get together and brutally attack each other. Every week you can count on them to talk about behind-the-scenes of running the Weebs Guild youtube channel, Anime they're watching, Games they're playing, and any other shenanigans happening in their lives right now. So come brighten your day and hang out with the boys!
This week Josh Spears is back in the booth with Hollie talking all things FE English CPD and meeting the needs of FE English teachers development. Follow more of Joshs work over on twitter - @Worldsmith1680
This week: I will be away with Deb...Josh is preaching Text: selected Scriptures Theme: solid biblical exegesis on faith...very encouraging and challenging -I was definitely ministered to and encouraged as I read Joshs' passages and notes
In this episode Josh and I discuss: - the link between mental, social and physical health - how sometimes we can attach our health to our identity- how comparison affects our health journey - how your environment affects your health Feel free to DM me on Instagram/Twitter @kayfashquotes if you have any questions! http://www.instagram.com/kayfashquotes http://www.twitter.com/kayfashquotes Joshs' Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/joshchabala/https://www.instagram.com/menofvalorldn/And subscribe to his YT channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdcWp37uqzp_NOSUIZcPfSg
In this episode we have our first ever interview with Lauri Araki of The Middle Way Horse Sanctuary. They work with wild horses out west. You can find them on Facebook at The Middle Way Sanctuary, or check out their website at https://themiddlewaysanctuary.org/ If you care about horses make sure to donate to their organization! Interview lasts approximately the first 33 mins of the episode. Ben is back! After a tumultuous move to Austin from Boston he has finally settled and rejoined us. We discuss his horrible moving experience. We also try to pitch penny stocks to one another in hopes of finding a potential goldmine. Finally we discuss the gathering of Kyles in Kyle Texas to set a world record, and the infamous battle of the Joshs that happened earlier this year.
This week on Buckets of Duckets your heroes discuss just how easily they can get their feelings hurt (Chase broke Josh heart) & how they both use to love Rob & Big & now Chase wants to be a skatepark comedian, which is a real thing! Chase doesn't understand chopsticks or tipping & maybe Joshs' daughter should take it easy with the middle finger. Finally, NEW NEIGHBORHOOD WATTS!! Northshore Comedy show August 14, link for tix: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/northshore-comedy-presents-comedy-night-at-mandeville-social-tickets-163379629871 Subscribe, Share & Review!!! Hosted by: Chase Mayers & Josh Watts BucketsofDuckets.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Special guest Mary Anne Carter appears on the podcast to discuss Dumb and Dumber (1994) & Dixie Chicks: Shut Up and Sing (2006). How many stars did Megan give Win a Date with Tad Hamilton!? What airline do we want to sponsor our show? Which celebrity Joshs do Megan and Rob have crushes on? Does Mary Anne think Dumb and Dumber is the best movie in Jim Carrey's filmography? All of this and more!About Mary Anne Carter:Mary Anne Carter is a Seattle-based artist and curator. Her immersive installations and award-winning prints transport the viewer to a place where humor, self-expression, and social justice melt into a deliciously vibrant utopia.You can find Mary Anne at www.jesusmaryannejoseph.com.Follow I-5 Cinemabound on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook.
This week Josh sits down with the COO of his organization Katey Cernigliaro. Katey has worked with Josh for the last 10 years in various roles. She joined the Off Leash K9 Training team in 2016 as Joshs assistant where she quickly moved into a sales role, took on more leadership roles and now oversees the operations of his training locations across the country as well as Bay Rivers Boarding & Daycare. Katey is fiercely loyal and competitive and balances perfectly excellence and having a great time. Katey discusses with Josh the process they went through as they decided to open up Bay Rivers in late 2019 only to have covid hit in the middle of construction. As they reflect on the one year anniversary of Bay Rivers opening they share the challenges, funny stories & the mindset it took to overcome what the world was dishing out.
This week's NEWSa had Joe baffled with more NFT madness, leaving him more confused than ever. There were a couple world records to speak of, a couple of grown women acting a fool, and some organized silliness from Joshs around the world!LINKS TO LALAPANEWSA STORIESLate VHS leads to felony Uber drives into canalHand grenade in the fieldCNC Penis FactoryPayed for 15 years without going to work UPS driver helps kidDisaster girl NFTMad Dog Jones Replicator Woman stalks officer who arrested her for stalking Pennies in plane engine for good luckFrench cave campingWorld Record hoe balancingGronk catches world's longest pass Teacher gets busted with cocaine in her deskDrunk woman offers strangers lap dancesChewbacca suspect in stabbing Turtle flies through windshield Connor McGregor buy pub to ban patronSaudi man send Tik Tok videos from MarsIndian couple moves 18 times in 3 years Josh FightSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/talkstupid2me)
#tiktok #fyp #podcast On the 28th Episode of The MCM Podcast, Max sits down with viral Monmouth County TikTok and Social Media Influence Griffin Joshs. Griffin has been able to garner almost 500k followers on TikTok and 10k followers on Instagram through the use of his comedic yet witty socially aware content. Max and Griffin talk about tips on how to gain a large following through the use of For You Page related content. We also discuss the hypocrisy of the community guidelines on TikTok and how if you do not play by the rules you may get shadowbanned or kicked off the app. Check out this episode if you love TikTok or are just addicted to the app like everyone else LOL! Iffffffff you liked this episode, be sure to give it a thumbs up and comment below if you learned anything or wanna debate a topic we brought up. If you're not subscribed it would be SICK if you could hit that little sub button right about now. Don't be afraid to check out Griffin's content which is all linked below as well. Stay safe! @GriffinJoshs Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@griffinjoshs?lang=en Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/griffinjoshs/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCsgvrawx0Kv5nVMsdM2tNLQ Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/griffinjoshs @MonmouthCountyMemezhttps://linktr.ee/monmouthcountymemez Support the show (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJCZ7wzDYyjl25qz1wrPXSg?view_as=subscriber)
EPISODE 1 ! Today me and Josh sexton from J&J cabinets plus talk about our introduction of the company and some of Joshs and mine experiences that lead up to me creating the podcast and company. join us today !
Liebe Churchfamily... sind wir immer noch EXCITED ABOUT JESUS?!?!?! Die Predigtserie geht weiter. Der DRITTE Teil lautet: Frag nach Regen In dieser Folge erfahren wir endlich was Joshs lieblings Gebet ist, warum der Altar nicht aus der Mode ist, was DU und Reinhard Bonnke gemeinsam haben und wir klären warum Menschen, die in der Church aufgewachsen sind, die besten Sängerinnen und Sänger sind. Achso und hört die Folge bis zum Ende um Josh singen hören. Stay blessed and healthy
Tennessee Jed aired for the first time on ABC. The role of Tennessee was played by Johnny Thomas. In this old time radio program, Tennessee Jed began as a youth's show about a sure-shot westerner on his travels. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sherlock Holmes Radio Station Live 24/7 Click Here to Listen https://live365.com/station/Sherlock-Holmes-Classic-Radio--a91441 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Welcome to the StickinRink Podcast! Your home for Vancouver Canucks Talk, and everything else you need to know from three local Vancouver hockey boys. Proudly presented by The Hockey Podcast Network. Everything we say is fact-based. Joshs tangent (3:20 - 10:12) COVID hub cities (10:13 - 21:13) Hall of fame inductees (21:14 - 37:43) Baseball season (37:44 - 44:09) We talk art (44:10 - 55:06) BUY OUR MERCH: stickinrink.whatforapparel.com/ Follow us @stickinrinkpod @hockeypodnet Powered by: CoolHockey CoolHockey.com/THPN Promo Code: THPN for 30% Off
Welcome to the StickinRink Podcast! Your home for Vancouver Canucks Talk, and everything else you need to know from three local Vancouver hockey boys. Proudly presented by The Hockey Podcast Network. Everything we say is fact-based. Welcome, Michelle (7:51 - 9:02) Growing up with Josh (9:03 - 19:56) Josh and Allie (19:57 - 28:19) Michelle on Joshs personal life (28:20 - 31:22) Silver tongued Josh (31:23 - 34:09) Flying the nest (34:10 - 38:51) Stampede and friends (38:52 - 48:39) Pop Quiz (48:40 - 58:39), (1: 01:56 - 1:13:00) The roof story (50:32 - 58:39) Follow us @stickinrinkpod @hockeypodnet Sponsor: Southern Scholar Promo Code "THPN" southernscholar.com/?gclid=CjwKCAiA…3BoCW2sQAvD_BwE Manscapped.com Promo Code “THPN” ca.manscaped.com/?gclid=Cj0KCQjwj…KZ4aAhWkEALw_wcB Powered by: CoolHockey CoolHockey.com/THPN
Welcome to the StickinRink Podcast! Your home for Vancouver Canucks Talk, and everything else you need to know from three local Vancouver hockey boys. Proudly presented by The Hockey Podcast Network. Everything we say is fact-based. Joshs first (4:01 - 13:08) Kim Jung uh oh (13:09 - 19:49) Canadas Beijing 2022 Roster (19:50 - 29:52) Too hot 4 us (32:19 - 36:57) Meteoroligst Elijah (36:58 - 41:59) StickinRink Chel Rivalry (42:00 - 47:33) The hot, the cold, and the baked (47:48 - 54:29) Follow us @stickinrinkpod @hockeypodnet Sponsor: Southern Scholar Promo Code "THPN" southernscholar.com/?gclid=CjwKCAiA…3BoCW2sQAvD_BwE Manscapped.com Promo Code “THPN” ca.manscaped.com/?gclid=Cj0KCQjwj…KZ4aAhWkEALw_wcB Powered by: CoolHockey CoolHockey.com/THPN Sponsor: -Southern Scholar southernscholar.com/?gclid=CjwKCAiA…3BoCW2sQAvD_BwE Promo Code: THPN Powered by: -Manscaped - Promo Code THPN for 20% off your next purchase -CoolHockey CoolHockey.com/THPN
Welcome to the StickinRink Podcast! Your home for Vancouver Canucks Talk, and everything else you need to know from three local Vancouver hockey fans. Proudly presented by The Hockey Podcast Network. Joshs weekend plans (4:49 - 8:07) Brozzers (8:08 - 12:31) Welcome, Matt Brown (14:45 - 16:03) Growing up with Matt (16:04 - 23:19) His story (23:20 - 51:30) Quaran-time (54:55 - 58:14) Sports talk (58:15 - 1:06:30) Line Change and The Matt Brown Foundation (1:06:34 - 1:11:55) Follow us @stickinrinkpod @hockeypodnet Sponsor: Southern Scholar Promo Code "THPN" southernscholar.com/?gclid=CjwKCAiA…3BoCW2sQAvD_BwE Manscapped.com Promo Code “THPN” https://ca.manscaped.com/?gclid=Cj0KCQjwjoH0BRD6ARIsAEWO9DuKZmy3VndLGnlItfgCGalHykWz5HMu6ArX_1eafLdTvjQb7IL7KZ4aAhWkEALw_wcB Powered by: CoolHockey CoolHockey.com/THPN This podcast is hosted by ZenCast.fm
Josh just recently added a pup to his pack! So now it's Josh, Dolly and Juno! Listen to hear all about Joshs' ups and downs with one and now two pups, and how he almost didn't even get a dog! WE ARE NOW ON YOUTUBE! Youtube.com/WithTheWilkins If you have ever had a dog or met a dog that has changed your life, then this podcast is for you! Each episode will feature a story from someone about a dog that has changed their life. I hope you enjoy listening as much as I enjoy making the show! If you'd like to be a part of the show, email me at WhyILoveDogsPodcast@gmail.com, send me a message on Facebook at Facebook.com/WhyILoveDogsPodcast or on Instagram at WhyILoveDogsPodcast! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/whyilovedogspodcast/support