American cartoonist and illustrator
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This week on the the Grainmaker Wrestling Podcast we've gone corporate, as joining me for this episode, the leader of the Cannon Corporation, the Mastermind Kevin Cannon. Kevin and I talk about the Winnipeg wrestling scene in the early 2000's, sharing some really incredible stories, including being a part of Paul Orndorffs last match, and so much more. We also talk about the training camps, and what new people can expect AND for the first time ever...mailbag!! Check it out!
In the journal Planetary and Space Science Dr. Kevin Cannon and his two coauthors analyze the potential of asteroid mining as a source of metals for manufacturing here on Earth as well as a repository of raw materials for space colonists.These authors find there are less precious metals in iron meteorites than was previous estimated. However there are a small number of precious metals whose concentration in asteroids is higher than any ores found on Earth. In the future Earthlings may be wearing jewelry made from asteroidal metals.
Doctrines of GracePresentations on the Doctrines of Grace as part of Reformation Day (Oct 31)Jacob Colby, Kevin Cannon, Aaron Davis, Seth Butler, Kevin Means, Jon Slater
Dr. Cannon returned as our guest to talk about his new association with Ethos Space, their plans for lunar launch and landing pads, infrastructure and down the for a sun shield space umbrella to protect Earth from warming. Also discussed was living on the Moon, Mars, lunar and space mining and resource usage and building large structures in space for in-living living/settlement. Please read the full summary of this program at www.thespaceshow.com for date, Tuesday, October 8, 2024.
An artist of the highest caliber, Zander Cannon broke into comics on The Tick spinoff, The Chainsaw Vigilante, and never looked back! He struck out on his own with The Replacement God series, then teamed up with Alan Moore and Gene Ha for Top 10, under Moore's America's Best Comics imprint. After the Top 10 spinoff Smax, Zander started a long-time partnership with Kevin Cannon (no relation) on creative and commercial endeavors. Then there was his own graphic novel Heck, followed by his hugely successful series Kaijumax! Sounds like he has a bright future in this industry. You can follow Zander on all the socials @zandercannon (@zander_cannon on X). * Apologies for technical issues with Mike's mic during the episode. Zander is clear as a bell!_________________Check out a video version of this episode on our YouTube channel: youtube.com/dollarbinbandits.If you like this podcast, please rate, review, and subscribe on Apple Podcasts. And if you really like this podcast, support what we do as a member of the Dollar Bin Boosters: buzzsprout.com/1817176/support.Looking for more ways to express your undying DBB love and devotion? Email us at dollarbinbandits@gmail.com. Follow us @dollarbinbandits on Facebook and Instagram, and @DBBandits on X._____________________Dollar Bin Bandits is the official podcast of TwoMorrows Publishing. Check out their fine publications at twomorrows.com.Support the Show.
NFL Big Five Games of the Week: Week 14 Edition- Beef Up Front Following a frustrating loss at the hands of the hands of the 49ers, the Philadelphia Eagles will look to pick themselves up off the map against the Dallas Cowboys. Ryan Coyle and Kevin Cannon return to break down this matchup and the other top games in the NFL. They give their takeaways and picks for each matchup before concluding with their best bets and lock of the week. #nfl #nflpicks #nflbetting 0:00-1:51 Intro 1:52-4:28 Falcons vs Buccaneers 4:29-6:52 Ravens vs Rams 6:53-9:59 Chiefs vs Bills 10:00-12:50 Chargers vs Broncos 12:51-17:50 Eagles vs Cowboys 17:51-20:21 Lock and Dog Buy some Pick Swap Merch: https://pick-swap-media.myshopify.com Check out our Twitter: @PickSwapMedia https://twitter.com/PickSwapMedia https://www.instagram.com/pickswapmedia1/ https://anchor.fm/pick-swap-media www.tiktok.com/@pickswapmedia
This is the 2023 Gaucho Baseball season preview podcast! We are joined by Head Coach Andrew Checketts to go over the schedule, talk recruiting landscape, and preview who will be in starting roles come February 17. Then pitcher's Carter Benbrook and Alex Schrier stop by to discuss surgery rehab, haircuts and the upcoming season. Games in Arizona will be streamed on flobaseball.tv and your host Kevin Cannon will have the radio play-by-play on ucsbgauchos.com, just hit the headphone link on the schedule page.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon and LSB to preview the Eagles vs Chiefs Super Bowl matchup and give some of their favorite bets for the game.
If humanity is to become a multi-planetary species, we can't forever remain dependent on Earth's resources. That's where space resource extraction comes in. So how would space mining work, what problems would it solve, and how long will we have to wait? To answer those questions, I'm joined in this episode by Kevin Cannon. Kevin is a professor of space resources and geology and geological engineering at Colorado School of Mines in Golden, Colorado. He's also author of the Planetary Intelligence newsletter on Substack.In This Episode* How mining in space could benefit Earth (1:13)* The basic economics of space mining (3:56)* Space resources and multi-planetary civilization (9:32)* Public and private sector space exploitation (14:00)* The next steps for space resource extraction (17:56)* The criticisms and hurdles facing space mining (26:15)Below is an edited transcript of our conversation.How mining in space could benefit EarthJames Pethokoukis: You've written that building a space-based civilization is all about raw materials. Given your academic specialty, these are raw materials out there, not down here. But if I am not interested in building a space-based civilization, do I care what's out there, what materials, what elements I can find out there?Kevin Cannon: Let me give you two examples of how this could kind of come back to Earth. One is something that's being talked about increasingly lately, and that's this idea of space-based solar power. We want to undergo this energy transition, switch to renewables. Solar power, the issue there is the scaling and the land that's available. You only have so much land that you can put up more solar panels on. So if we wanted to have a truly energy-abundant future, one way to do that is to actually put up structures, satellites, in orbit that collect solar power and beam it back to the Earth via microwaves. And it turns out the only way to really make this economic is to actually make those structures out of raw materials that are found in space, either from the Moon or from asteroids. If you try to launch everything that you need, it's just too expensive. It's too difficult. So that's one example.A second example related to that, there's obviously a lot of talk about climate in general, and there's still this idea out there that we can get through this climate issue by just reducing emissions. I think at a higher level, the discussions out there are that that's not going to be enough, that we're not drawing down those emissions fast enough, and that we may need to use different geoengineering techniques. There are different ways to do that. You can inject stuff into the atmosphere. You can put stuff into the ocean. Those are a little bit problematic politically. One alternative is to actually just block out a small fraction of the sun's radiation with something called a planetary sun shade. You put up a structure in space at the L-1, the Lagrangian point between the sun and the Earth, and that structure blocks out, say, 1 to 2 percent of the sunlight and cools the planet and helps as a mitigation effort. And again, that structure is so large that we could not possibly launch that into the space. We would have to build that out of materials that we find. So even if you don't want to leave the Earth, you're happy here, you still have problems on Earth. And there are solutions to those that could potentially be found by using raw material on the Moon or on asteroids.The basic economics of space miningYou're saying that even with the decline we've seen in launch costs in recent years, and even assuming some continued progress, it would be more affordable to build these two examples with the regolith — or the surface dirt from the Moon or Mars or from some other place, some asteroid — than just getting it out into space with a rocket, even if it's a rocket that goes up pretty cheaply compared to the rockets of the past.The thing you have to understand is that as those launch costs come down, it also becomes cheaper to put the factory on the Moon that makes the components, that assembles the structure in space. And it's also the case that we wouldn't build 100 percent of the structure. You would still be launching the intricate parts, the dopants for your solar panels, the wiring, things like that. It's kind of the bulk structure that we would make, what we call the “dumb mass” as opposed to the “smart mass.” But yes, as the launch costs come down, it's easier to put things in orbit, but it's also easier to put construction material and assembly material to do this kind of space-based construction effort.That's always the big concern: trying to make the economics work. I find that people aren't fully aware of what possibilities have been opened up because it's gotten a lot cheaper to launch rockets into space. And hopefully it will get a bit cheaper still.We're anticipating right now in the months ahead, the first orbital launch of the SpaceX Starship. SpaceX has brought the launch costs down dramatically just with the Falcon 9, through reuse, through the Falcon Heavy. But the possibility for Starship is really a step function. It's not just a continuation of that smooth decline, but really a potential leap in our ability to put massive amounts of stuff into space. If that design is proved out, then hopefully other competitors will start to copy that and improve on it and we'll see an even more dramatic reduction.People have a hard time understanding the economics of going and mining an asteroid to bring back to build things on Earth. Would that be economical versus using that material to build things out in space?There's only a very narrow case you could make for a certain class of materials. And specifically, that would be things like the platinum-group metals. Those meet a number of criteria: They're very expensive — for example, the metal rhodium sells for about $400,000 per kilogram — and we only mine a very small amount of those per year. It's measured in single-digit or double-digit tons: 20 or 30 tons of these materials per year. Possibly, you could make an economic case to bring back some of those platinum-group metals. But for something like copper, we mine millions of tons per year, and that's never going to make sense. That's kind of the big misnomer about space resources that's out there in the public perception: that what we're talking about is going out into space and bringing stuff back and selling it into existing commodity markets. And that's really not what the main focus is. The main focus is using local materials that we find to help expand civilization into space rather than bringing everything with us. But maybe, just maybe, you could make a case for something like some of these platinum-group metals.What you're doing is not speculative. This is something that you think will have practical application and you're graduating students who are getting hired to begin to think and do this, right?It's still in the early stages, but it's not science fiction and it's not theoretical. Let me give you a couple examples of what's been happening in the last few years. Last year on Mars, there's a small instrument on board the Mars Perseverance rover, the NASA rover, called MOXIE. And this is a demonstration that sucks up a little bit of the CO2 atmosphere of Mars and converts it into breathable oxygen. This is the first time in history we've taken a raw material on another planetary body and actually turned it into a valuable product. It's the first creation of a resource in space.Second example: A couple months ago, we had the launch of a private lander from the company ispace. This is going to be the first attempt at a commercial landing on the Moon. And as part of that mission, they're going to try to scoop up a small amount of the regolith. And NASA has already signed a contract to purchase that material. It's a very small dollar amount. The real point of that is to set a precedent that if you go out and mine material in space, that it is yours to then sell to someone else. So if that's successful, around April that will be the first sale of a resource in outer space. There are a wide variety of companies working on this. We have the Space Resources Program at Colorado School of Mines. And just an example there, Blue Origin — not a lot of people know about this — in the past year or so they've hired about 30 full-time employees working just on space resources [in situ resource utilization].Space resources and multi-planetary civilizationAs you've been talking, I've been trying to quickly dig up a quote from one of my favorite books and TV shows, The Expanse, which touches on this issue of the resources out there. Let me just quickly read it to you: “Platinum, iron, and titanium from the Belt. Water from Saturn, vegetables and beef from the big mirror-fed greenhouses on Ganymede and Europa, organics from Earth and Mars. Power cells from Io, Helium-3 from the refineries on Rhea and Iapetus. A river of wealth and power unrivaled in human history came through Ceres.” That's the big sci-fi dream, that there is this vast field of resources out there that we can tap into. And if we can tap into it, it will be primarily for creating this space civilization.Yeah, that's exactly right. The atoms are out there. We know all of the atoms in the periodic table are found on every planetary body. It's a matter of concentration, and it's a matter of having the energy to separate those out and turn them into useful products. As long as we can figure out how to do that, then we have the resources available, just in the solar system, to support a massive population of people to live at a very high level of well-being. The long-term promise is that we can expand into space and have a thriving civilization that is built on top of those resources.I love how you put it in one of your tweets. You wrote, “Space resources are optional to gain a foothold in space, but necessary to gain a stronghold.”If you look back at what we've done so far in human space exploration, we've landed 12 people on the Moon, they walked around for a few days, and then they came back. Since then, we've sent people up to low-Earth orbit to the International Space Station or the Chinese equivalent. They stay up there for a few months, and they come back. In those cases, it makes sense to bring everything that you need with you: all the food, all the water, all the oxygen. If we have greater ambitions than that, though — if we want to not just walk around on the Moon, but have a permanent installation, we want to start growing a city on Mars that becomes self-sufficient, we want to have these O'Neill cylinders — you simply just can't launch that material with you. And that's because we live in this deep gravity well. We can just barely get these small payloads off the surface with chemical rockets. It just economically, physically does not make sense to try to bring everything with you if you have these larger ambitions. The only way to enable that kind of future is to make use of the material that you find when you get to your destination.The question I always get is, why bother doing any of this? Is that a question you spend a lot of time trying to answer? Or are you convinced it's going to happen and you've just moved beyond the question?I think enough people have made the case for why we need to do this. You can look at it from different perspectives, from one of scientific discovery to one of existential risk to the planet that, if we stay here on Earth, eventually something is going to come along that presents an existential risk to civilization. What I'm trying to do is work with the people, with the companies who are actually trying to do this and help them using my perspective, this kind of unique perspective that's based around the science and the composition of these planetary bodies and how to make use of these resources. I don't concern myself too much with the question of why we should do that. I'll kind of leave that to more of the philosophers, the other people who have worked on that. I agree that I'm kind of past that and I am really deep in the nitty-gritty details of how to actually do this: how to turn the regolith into metals and ceramics; how to get rocket propellant out of ice at the pools of the Moon. That's what I spend my time focused on.Public and private sector space exploitationThere was a boom in some planetary resource startups a few years ago which didn't last. What has changed between now and back then? Is it just the drop in launch costs? The technology has gotten better? Up until very recently, we had very low interest rates, it was easy to finance things? We're in like a second wave of this. What is making this second wave possible?I think the launch costs and technology do make a difference. I think the other thing is the way that some of these newer companies are going about it. That first wave that started back around 2012, you had these two main companies, Planetary Resources and Deep Space Industries, and they tried to do this as kind of a typical venture capital–funded endeavor where they went through their seed round, their series A, series B. And that's pretty difficult to do if you want a return on your investment in five to seven years. So what we're seeing lately are companies coming into this space who have already amassed a lot of capital. They might have founders or backers who have the money to actually put up missions without first raising capital.I think that's what's going to start to make more of a difference and make this second wave last and have longer legs. Some of the companies that are coming into this: I mentioned one, of course, Blue Origin with Jeff Bezos, who is pumping in about a billion dollars a year, very active in this space, not talking about it a lot publicly. But there are some newcomers that have also shown up in the last couple of years. One that we're working with is called KarmanPlus. They are a new asteroid mining company who are going to be setting up shop here in Colorado. They have the money upfront to be able to make a splash without having to go through the typical kind of VC funding route at the very beginning.How supportive is NASA of this general concept of seeing space as a resource to be extracted or exploited, whether it's to do things here on Earth or build a space civilization? Are they all on board? Do they view this as, “This is a private sector thing; we're going to focus on exploration and doing science, and this is a different thing and we really don't care”?NASA historically has always put a little bit of money into this field and the field of space resources. They have kept it going even as interest has waxed and waned. What they've never done, though, is made it a critical part of their missions. For example, right now they're working towards the Artemis program: landing people back on the surface of the Moon. They're exploring ideas of prospecting for ice at the poles of the Moon. They have this upcoming VIPER mission. They're funding technology to extract oxygen from the lunar regolith. But what they're not doing is saying the Artemis astronauts are going to breathe that oxygen and that's going to be a critical part of the Artemis program. So they're funding it; they're bringing it along. They are supporting it to some extent, but they're not making it a key part of their missions. I think what we're going to see is continued activity in the private sector. And then what we're also seeing, though, is a lot more interest lately from the Space Force and from DARPA. Those government agencies are starting to get a lot more interested in these topics.The next steps for space resource extractionWhen you think about this, what is the timeline that is reasonable using space resources to create a permanent base on the Moon, on Mars, to go further out and extract resources, not from the regolith on the Moon, but from actual asteroids and using those resources? What is your loose timeline of how you think about it? You don't have to give months and days and dates. But just broadly.Right now we're in the phase where we're testing and developing the technology in the laboratory space and then just starting to deploy it as these kind of demonstrations on the Moon or on Mars. I mentioned the MOXIE experiment converting the atmosphere of Mars into oxygen. In the next couple years, there are going to be a lot of these small commercial landers going to the Moon. A lot of those have demonstration payloads where they're going to do things like trying to 3D print with the regolith or trying to extract oxygen from it. The next step, I'd say maybe three to five years from now, is to get to the point where we have kind of a pilot plant. Maybe we're extracting water from the poles of the Moon or oxygen from the regolith and we have something a little bit bigger than these tiny experiments. So we'd have something like a pilot plant. Maybe 10 years out, we have full-scale production of a simple resource like rocket propellant. And then I think we're in maybe the 15- to 20-year time scale for starting some of those larger efforts: starting to land supplies on Mars that would go towards this city that SpaceX has talked about, starting to 3D print a structure on the Moon that would be a permanent installation. That's kind of the timeline that I think about.And then in terms of the investment part of this, there is another piece to this in that a lot of the companies who are working on these technologies also have a component of it that's focused on Earth-based technologies. One example is a company in Texas called ICON Technologies. Their main business is actually on Earth, and it's to 3D print entire houses to address the housing crisis. But then they also have a segment where they're applying those same techniques to be able to 3D print structures on the Moon or Mars. So for investors looking to get into this, there are a set of companies that have those shorter-horizon terrestrial applications, but then those also feed into these longer-term space-based goals.In 2019, you co-wrote a piece, “Feeding One Million People on Mars.” That would certainly qualify as a pretty large space colony. Can you briefly tell me how you would do that, and are we talking that being possible this century?The thing that I think a lot of people get wrong about the food piece of this is that they assume we're going to keep this paradigm that we've had for 10,000 years of growing our food in the dirt. There's a lot of work out there that's being done — it's not always very good quality — of, “Let's try to grow plants in the regolith. Let's add fertilizer to these fake regolith samples and try to grow plants.” And that's simply not very efficient. I think that as we go into space, we're going to abandon this idea of growing all of our food in dirt. I think it's going to be all through bioreactors, through cellular agriculture. I think that's kind of the main way that we're going to produce food in space.In terms of the logistics to do that on Mars, the challenge there is, let's say your end goal is you want a city with a million people on Mars — and that's what Elon has stated is kind of the end goal — the question is, how do you get there? And what you eventually want is for that city to be self-sustaining so that if the ships stopped coming from Earth, it would be able to persist. What you have to do is you have to transition from that city or that base making zero percent of the calories that are being consumed on Mars to eventually 100 percent. The challenge is figuring out how you scale from that zero to 100 percent. It's going to involve a massive number of ships that are sending supplies. But the question is, do you try to switch to being 100 percent self-sufficient at the beginning, or do you kind of slowly ramp up over time? That's kind of the main problem with the logistics: When do you stop sending the material from Earth and when do you send the machine that makes the material on Mars? That's a tricky problem.I would assume you were pretty happy to hear about this nuclear fusion breakthrough, because I doubt any of this really works, probably, unless you have nuclear fusion reactors?In space, there are some advantages to solar panels. If you are in orbit or on the Moon or near an asteroid, you don't have clouds, you don't have an atmosphere to attenuate the solar radiation. But I think, eventually, we are going to have to make that transition to something like fusion. People have talked about the potential for helium-3 on the Moon. I'm not 100 percent sold on that. There are other roots to get to fusion. But I think certainly that extra energy, that ability to scale the energy, really opens up the resources that are available. One thing we find is that on Earth we have a lot of ore bodies where certain elements have become very concentrated relative to the rest of the crust of the Earth. And that's where we set up mines and extract these materials. On other planetary bodies, those processes haven't happened to the same extent. And so we don't really have a lot of good ores that we could mine. And so what we're going to have to do is actually figure out how to extract something like rare-earth elements or copper from a raw material that doesn't have very much of those elements, doesn't have those ore minerals. And that's going to take an enormous jump in energy. Something like fusion is probably necessary to really achieve that self-sufficiency, to be able to get every element of the periodic table we need from raw materials that don't have very high concentrations.Perhaps a question I should have asked earlier: What is there a lot of out there that there's just not very much of here? I imagine whatever that is, it's the stuff that we're going to focus on first or potentially bring here. Is there stuff that's particularly abundant that we just don't have very much here?If we think of this from the level of chemical elements the answer is, not really. I mean, you could make a case that Helium-3 falls into that. But that's only true if you go out to the outer planets, Neptune and Uranus, they have a lot more helium-3 than the tiny amount that's kind of sprinkled in the lunar soil. The thing that's most abundant in space in terms of solid material is just the dirt. Almost every planetary body — the Moon, Mars, asteroids — they're all covered in this layer of regolith or dirt. And that really is the raw material that is going to have to be the feedstock for all these things we're talking about: the metals, the ceramics…We're going to have to make a lot of aluminum.Fortunately, actually, that is one thing: If we look up at the Moon at night, you have the bright regions, those are the lunar highlands. Those are almost entirely made of a mineral called anorthite that has a lot of aluminum. So there are very good sources of those kind of light structural metals on the Moon in particular.The criticisms and hurdles facing space miningDo you anticipate somebody at some point saying, “We've already overexploited the Earth. Now we're going to ruin the Moon too? And we're going to ruin Mars and asteroids — is this our galactic heritage?”Those conversations are already happening. For example, last month there was a preprint published that made the case that we should declare a moratorium on the entire north pole of the Moon, that it should be set aside for only scientific activities. Those conversations are just starting. Right now, there's no kind of legal framework to prohibit this kind of activity. Certainly, people are free to express their concerns and to propose ideas like this. But as of yet, we don't have some kind of widely ratified agreement or framework for how to responsibly use resources in space. Certainly, the people in the field of space resources, we're conscious of this. And we're not proposing to go out and strip mine the entire solar system. But I think the argument is that the potential benefits, especially in terms of well-being, just how many people could be supported with those resources, that outweighs the concerns about disturbing these natural environments.Are there types of mining that we do here right now which are kind of proofs of concept or might resemble what we would do on the Moon or Mars or an asteroid? Or would it just be totally different and these are all new technologies that we would have to innovate?Yes, there is a very good analogy, and it's something called heavy mineral sands deposits. These are not like your typical open-pit mines or your underground mines. These are kind of vast areas of loose sand on the Earth that have some very valuable elements locked up in these dense minerals. And so what happens is you go out and just scoop up these loose sediments and then you're sifting them to sort out those dense minerals that you want. So because almost every planetary body is covered in this loose unconsolidated regolith, I think that is a pretty good analogy for what we'll be looking at. You'll have excavators that scoop up that loose material, they bring it back to a processing site, and then you're sorting the minerals. It's kind of like a needle in a haystack to get the ones you want. And then the ones you don't want, you could still use those for other applications. You can melt them down, turn them into bricks, and do other things with them. That's probably the best analogy on Earth, these heavy mineral sands depositsAre the biggest hurdles making the economics work? Is it getting the basic science and technology to work? Is it sort of political support, because, at least for a long time, I would imagine even if it's a private effort there's going to be a lot of government money floating around here?I'm not worried about the fundamental technology to take material in space and turn it into useful resources. I think that's been well demonstrated in the lab, and there's a lot of research being put into that right now. It's a tractable problem. I think on the technical side, the biggest challenge is getting Starship into orbit in the near term. The progress on that seems to have stalled a little bit. And that's getting a little bit concerning, because something like that, that kind of launch capability and the cadence that allows, is really going to be necessary to enable the kind of kinds of things we talked about. On the technology side, it's really just the launch piece of it.The economics: I think people have made some pretty good business cases for things like propellant mined from the poles of the Moon and, I think, with some of these ideas around things like space-based solar power, planetary sunshades. So that's not too concerning. I think it's the combination of the launch piece of it and then the political support for this. If that were to really take a turn for the worse, that would not be good for these kinds of ambitions. I do think, though, this emerging space race with China…As long as China's interested, we're going to be interested, right?Yes. That is what's drawing in the interest of the Space Force, of DARPA. I think that's going to kind of keep things going for at least the medium term, as long as we're in that competition. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit fasterplease.substack.com/subscribe
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview the NFL Conference Championship Games.
We're one month away from Opening Day and the Gaucho9 Podcast has returned from a 6 month hiatus! Our host Kevin Cannon shares his thoughts on the adventure that brought him back to Santa Barbara and Head Coach Andrew Checketts joins us to recap the Fall season for UCSB Baseball and check in on the status of the players (and Caesar Uyesaka Stadium) as they return from break.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview the NFL Wild Card Weekend.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview Week 18 in the NFL?
Host, Ryan Coyle breaks down the five biggest games in the NFL for Week 17 alongside Kevin Cannon.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview the big games in the NFL this weekend.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview Week 15 in the NFL.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview Week 13 in the NFL.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview week 12 in the NFL, including highlighting the Thanksiving games.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview Week 11 in the NFL.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview week ten in the NFL.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview week nine in the NFL.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview week six in the NFL.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview week five in the NFL.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview week four in the NFL.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon and Pat Mattes to preview the top games for week three and go over their best bets, as well as upset specials.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview Week 2 in the NFL!
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview the five biggest games in the NFL for week one.
The Info Booth Ladies are back and ready for another season of laughter and learning about the best state fair in the country!Click here for the link to our Patreon page - you can support the show & help us make more episodes of the Info Booth Ladies podcast! Thank you!Please find us on Instagram at: @infoboothladiesAnd Facebook at: @infoboothladiesWe'd love to hear from you! Send us an email at: infoboothladies@gmail.com---------We hope this podcast helps get you excited for the 12 best days of the year! Thanks for listening!Info Booth Ladies is an unofficial podcast - all views expressed are our own, and we do not speak on behalf of the Minnesota State Fair.---------Our theme song was written and performed by Sarah Morris! (Isn't it awesome?!)Please find her at www.sarahmorrismusic.com or on Instagram at @sarahmorrismusic
We finally have the SgrA* supermassive black hole image by the Event Horizon Telescope, China announces their plans to launch a space telescope, and Russia threatens to leave the ISS. 00:00 Intro 00:20 Milky Way's Supermassive Black Hole https://www.universetoday.com/155874/this-is-it-meet-the-supermassive-black-hole-at-the-heart-of-the-milky-way/ 03:48 China will launch a space telescope https://www.universetoday.com/155825/china-announces-its-new-flagship-space-telescope-mission/ 05:57 Another ISS bluff from Russia https://www.universetoday.com/155765/russia-says-itll-quit-the-international-space-station-over-sanctions-also-russia-says-a-lot-of-stuff-that-doesnt-happen/ 07:49 Support us on Patreon https://patreon.com/universetoday 08:46 Another test by Spinlaunch 09:52 Record marsquakes by Insight https://www.universetoday.com/155870/insight-just-detected-a-record-breaking-marsquake-magnitude-5/ 11:05 Ingenuity starts having problems https://www.universetoday.com/155864/martian-dust-is-starting-to-darken-ingenuitys-solar-panel/ 13:42 Total lunar eclipse https://www.universetoday.com/155691/our-complete-guide-to-this-weekends-total-lunar-eclipse/ 14:58 Starliner can finally launch on May 19th 17:16 Dreamchaser build timelapse 17:54 Channel news Fluidic Space Telescopes with Dr. Edward Balaban https://youtu.be/MJd6_-Ra6oY Dealing with Lunar Regolith with Dr. Kevin Cannon https://youtu.be/Jt8geyxhdu8 Messaging Extraterrestrials with Dr. Chris Impey https://youtu.be/1OqYanmc-4Y 19:01 Outro Join our Discord Server: https://discord.gg/bRxr4JTNqh Host: Fraser Cain Producer: Anton Pozdnyakov Editing: Artem Pozdnyakov
We finally have the SgrA* supermassive black hole image by the Event Horizon Telescope, China announces their plans to launch a space telescope, and Russia threatens to leave the ISS. 00:00 Intro 00:20 Milky Way's Supermassive Black Hole https://www.universetoday.com/155874/this-is-it-meet-the-supermassive-black-hole-at-the-heart-of-the-milky-way/ 03:48 China will launch a space telescope https://www.universetoday.com/155825/china-announces-its-new-flagship-space-telescope-mission/ 05:57 Another ISS bluff from Russia https://www.universetoday.com/155765/russia-says-itll-quit-the-international-space-station-over-sanctions-also-russia-says-a-lot-of-stuff-that-doesnt-happen/ 07:49 Support us on Patreon https://patreon.com/universetoday 08:46 Another test by Spinlaunch 09:52 Record marsquakes by Insight https://www.universetoday.com/155870/insight-just-detected-a-record-breaking-marsquake-magnitude-5/ 11:05 Ingenuity starts having problems https://www.universetoday.com/155864/martian-dust-is-starting-to-darken-ingenuitys-solar-panel/ 13:42 Total lunar eclipse https://www.universetoday.com/155691/our-complete-guide-to-this-weekends-total-lunar-eclipse/ 14:58 Starliner can finally launch on May 19th 17:16 Dreamchaser build timelapse 17:54 Channel news Fluidic Space Telescopes with Dr. Edward Balaban https://youtu.be/MJd6_-Ra6oY Dealing with Lunar Regolith with Dr. Kevin Cannon https://youtu.be/Jt8geyxhdu8 Messaging Extraterrestrials with Dr. Chris Impey https://youtu.be/1OqYanmc-4Y 19:01 Outro Join our Discord Server: https://discord.gg/bRxr4JTNqh Host: Fraser Cain Producer: Anton Pozdnyakov Editing: Artem Pozdnyakov
Dr. Kevin Cannon is an assistant professor of geology and geological engineering at the Colorado School of Mines. Dr. Cannon has been studying the properties of lunar regolith, developing techniques that could help to mitigate its dangers during long-duration lunar exploration missions. https://geology.mines.edu/project/cannon-kevin/
Dr. Kevin Cannon is an assistant professor of geology and geological engineering at the Colorado School of Mines. Dr. Cannon has been studying the properties of lunar regolith, developing techniques that could help to mitigate its dangers during long-duration lunar exploration missions. https://geology.mines.edu/project/cannon-kevin/
This week: the first photos from the James Webb space telescope, Mercury's diamond-rich surface, Brian Greene speaks with Biden's science advisor, Peter Singer speaks with Osher Gunsberg, and Russia creates its own Instagram.FIRST JWST PHOTOSIs this the best selfie ever?Yeah, I bet you take some great selfies, but they can't get better than this. This is a selfie of the James Webb space telescope's 18 mirrors, which are all collecting light from the same star at the same time.What star were they looking at? This beauty. And while it's a pretty run-of-the-mill star (Sorry mate), it's the centre stage for this first image taken by the telescope.See all the little dots around the star? That's not space dust on the lens, they're actually little galaxies.If this is just the start, we can't wait to see what other amazing photos this monumental telescope is going to take. I wonder… will it capture images of other lifeforms? Only time will tell!MERCURY'S DIAMONDSDo you love diamonds? Let's be real, who doesn't.The only thing that could make diamonds better would be GALACTIC DIAMONDS!Yes, scientists believe that Mercury may be encrusted with diamonds after billions of years of meteorite impacts. Planetary scientist Kevin Cannon has made computer simulations which predict that around one-third of the planet's crust is rich with a diamond stockpile far larger than Earth's. How'd they come to be? Well, as the saying goes,“A diamond is a chunk of coal that did well under pressure”, and there's no pressure quite like a meteor impact.Elon, if you're listening to this, don't rush out and start diamond mining on Mercury quite yet, because these are just predictions. The truth as to whether Mercury is like a DISCO BALL will be unveiled in 2025 when the BepiColombo mission reaches Mercury.Until then, this might just be wishful thinking.BRIAN GREENE & FRANCIS COLLINSCan you be scientist AND a devout Christian?This was one questions that came up in a fascinating new conversation between the new science advisor to President Biden, Francis Collins, and our favourite physicist, Brian Greene.The conversation is an insight into how Collins came to be one of the most influential scientists alive today, and how he went from being an atheist to a Christian, when it usually happens the other way round!Brian, on the other hand, is a pretty outspoken atheist, maybe not Dawko level, but definitely a known atheist. Atheists sometimes get a bad rap as being militant, but in this conversation you can see how it's possible to have an open discussion about creationism, without anyone getting offended. YES- IT IS POSSIBLE! This open discussion and respect for science is something we're all about at Think Inc.If you're the same, come join our fam. Don't miss your opportunity to come and see Brian Greene speak live in June this year. While it's going to be a pretty nerdy affair, Brian also loves discussing philosophy, art and culture- so there's going to be something for everyone. Tickets are at the link in our bio.PETER SINGER PODCASTSWho's the most influential philosopher alive today?Many people will tell you it's Peter Singer, a philosopher at Princeton who hails from Melbourne. Why's he so influential? Well before his 1975 book Animal Liberation, animal welfare wasn't really a “thing”. People saw animals like pieces of meat who didn't deserve any protection or help. Now, thankfully, there are laws in place that mean people can't torture or mistreat animals without risking jail. Also, his book put plant based diets on the map. Before Peter, plant based diets were reserved for rabbits only!Apart from animal rights, Peter has been extremely influential in the effective altruism movement, which is all about creating a better world by giving some of your disposable income to people who really need it.If you're interested in Peter's work, check out two new podcasts that that he recorded recently: one with Osher Gunsberg and one with Sarah Wilson. They're the perfect accompaniment to your afternoon stroll or morning commute.And of course, there's nothing like seeing someone talk in person. So come along to one of our shows in Sydney, Brisbane or Melbourne or at our virtual event next week! Tickets are at the link in our bio.RUSSIAN INSTAGRAMNow is not a great time to be an influencer in Russia.Instagram is the most popular social media app for young Russians, but on Monday people found themselves unable to use the app, leaving some influencers to search for other sources of income.To be clear, it wasn't Meta who blocked the app from being used in Russia. It was actually a Russian court, who banned it for “extremist activites” after Meta ignored government requests to remove what Russia argues is “fake news” about its invasion of Ukraine.While Instagram and Facebook have been blocked, WhatsApp, which is also owned by Meta, is still allowed to operate.Russian tech entrepreneurs are set to launch their own copy of Instagram. It will be called Rossgram, and is set to be launched on March 28. Let's wait and see how it catches on.-----That's all for this week! I will see you THIS SUNDAY at the Peter Singer show in Sydney, then in Brisbane on Tuesday, and Melbourne on the 3rd. Grab your last minute tickets at the link in our bio. Until then, peace out!Sign up to our newsletter → bit.ly/think-sign-up
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon as they preview the Super Bowl between the Rams and Bengals.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview this weekend's NFL Playoffs Divisional Round.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview Wild Card Weekend.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview all 13 meaningful games in the NFL this weekend.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview week 17 in the NFL.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview Week 16 in the NFL.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview Week 15 in the NFL.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview week fourteen in the NFL and discuss the locks/props from their behind the scenes contributors.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview week thirteen in the NFL.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview the three Thanksgiving games and the other five best games in the NFL this weekend. With the playoffs coming up, this is a big week for some teams. Tune in and Happy Thanksgiving!
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview week eleven in the NFL.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview week ten in the NFL.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview week ten in the NFL.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview the five biggest games in the NFL for week eight.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to discuss the five biggest games in the NFL this week.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to discuss the five biggest games in the NFL this week. The fellas also say goodbye to Tanner Herb and welcome in their new guests, John and Nick.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview the five biggest game on the NFL schedule for week five.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to discuss the five biggest games of the NFL in week four, highlighting Tom Brady's return to Tampa Bay.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to discuss and predict the five biggest games of the week in the NFL during week three.
This week's guest was Kevin Cannon of Kentucky. He's the host of Dixieland Bowhunter YouTube channel and Facebook page. He makes and sales after market attachments to elevate your saddle hunting system. The man drops some great knowledge for you out of state hunters trying to locate whitetail in the Kentucky woods. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/wildernesstamer/support
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to break down the five biggest games of the week and also discuss Tanner Herb's locks of the week for week two.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined again by Kevin Cannon for season two of their weekly show "NFL Big 5 Games of the Week" and Tanner Herb gives his three "Locks" of the week at the end of the episode. Ryan looks to get off to a hot start in week one as he looks to defend his crown from last year where he went 64-38 and Kevin went 62-40.
On this episode, President and CEO at Gilbane Building Company Mike McKelvy covers everything you need to know about Construction Safety Week 2021 – happening May 3rd through May 7th. Mike shares his excitement to be the chairman of this year’s event and his passion behind the “Holistic Safety” theme; walks through the wealth of planning resources and communication tools that firms can use to participate; and talks about lessons learned, future goals, and how he keeps him team engaged in safety initiatives. Also hear from some Construction Safety Week partners who are offering free training and resources. Kevin Cannon, head of AGC’s safety and health services, ties it all together with what you need to know about OSHA’s National Safety Stand-Down to Prevent Falls in Construction, which is happening the same week. Featured Guests: Michael E. McKelvy, President and Chief Executive Officer at Gilbane Building Company and Chairman of National Construction Safety Week 2021 -- https://www.gilbaneco.com/ Kevin Cannon, Senior Director of Safety & Health Services at AGC of America -- www.agc.org/safety (via email at safety@agc.org) Additional Resources- 1. Construction Safety Week: https://www.constructionsafetyweek.com/ a. Planning Resources: https://www.constructionsafetyweek.com/plan-for-safety-week/ b. Certificate of Participation (via AGC): https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/KYH2BD8 c. Media Coverage Request Form: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/H8RPZGZ 2. OSHA National Safety Stand-Down to Prevent Falls in Construction: https://www.osha.gov/StopFallsStandDown/ a. Resources: https://www.osha.gov/StopFallsStandDown/resources.html b. Certificate of Participation: https://www.osha.gov/StopFallsStandDown/index.html#cert c. Media Coverage Request Form: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/H8RPZGZ 3. AGC Construction Safety Week and OSHA Falls Stand-Down Webpage: https://www.agc.org/industry-priorities/safety-health/2021-osha-falls-stand-down-construction-safety-week Here you will find additional information to help you plan your event, including the resources referenced by Procore, Milwaukee and Fastenal in this episode.
On this episode of The Book Drop we celebrate National Library Week with tales of the heroes and villains of library world. We also share our librarian origin stories and talk about everyone's favorite OPL branch for query of the week. Check out the OPL events calendar for these upcoming events:OPL Reading Challenge Book Club on Tuesday, April 13th and Thursday, April 15th. Celebrate National Library Week with OPL by asking for an illustrated branch sticker at your local branch or when scheduling your next curbside pick-up appointment. OPL worked with Minnesota-based artist Kevin Cannon to capture the special characteristics of each of OPL's 12 branches. Then share your library love by posting a picture of your sticker to Facebook, Instagram, or Twitter, and tag @OmahaLibrary or include #OmahaLibrary in your post. All the books, movies, TV, resources and bookish items we talked about in this episode can be found here — http://bit.ly/TBDep46
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to discuss and preview everything surrounding Super Bowl 55. The duo run through position advantages, some prop bets, and some player props to look out for! Tanner Herb also throws his Super Bowl "locks" in as well, and gives a few player/game prop bets he likes. Thanks everyone for tuning in, and we will talk to you next season! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview the conference championship games, make predictions on anytime TD scorers, and get Tanner Herb's "locks" of the week. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to break down the upcoming divisional round in the playoffs. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview the upcoming NFL Wild Card weekend as they go through all six games and give their picks. Tanner Herb also contributes his locks of the week as well. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Host, Ryan Coyle and Kevin Cannon break down all the games in Week 17 that have playoff implications. Tanner Herb's locks are included at the end of the episode as well, in the last episode of 2020 for Beef Up Front! Happy New Year! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Host, Ryan Coyle and Kevin Cannon break down the upcoming best games in the NFL this weekend for a special Christmas edition! Happy Holidays to everyone, stay safe, and keep the Beef Up Front. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Host, Ryan Coyle and Kevin Cannon break down the upcoming action for the NFL's five biggest games of the week fifteen schedule. They also break down Tanner Herb's five locks of the week! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Host, Ryan Coyle and Kevin Cannon go through the best five games on the NFL schedule this weekend, and review Herb's locks of the week. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to go over the five biggest NFL games of the week, and go over Tanner Herb's five locks. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon for a special edition of the NFL Big 5 games of the Week, featuring all three Thanksgiving games, as well as five others. Tanner Herb gives his locks against the spread, including a special Thanksgiving parlay. You don't want to miss out on this episode! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Host, Ryan Coyle and Kevin Cannon run through the five biggest games this week in the NFL and go through Tanner Herb's "locks" of the week as well!
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to breakdown the biggest games this week in the NFL as the playoff race begins to heat up. Tanner Herb also gives his five "locks" at the end of the show as well. Tune in for some can't miss content!
Host, Ryan Coyle and guest Kevin Cannon breakdown the five biggest games on the NFL slate for the weekend, and go over Tanner Herb's "locks" against the spread.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to breakdown the five biggest games in the NFL this week, and as always go over Tanner Herb's five locks of the week against the spread.
Check out and support Kevin's projects!IG: @kmcannonphotoTwitter: @kmcannonphotoFB: facebook.com/VegasNationRJSupport the One Nation Foundation directly here:onenationfoundation.netSubscribe to our shows on the "Murf's Fan Cave” podcast network on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, iTunes, Stitcher, iHeart Radio, Spotify and more. All of your best emails and voicemails in the Sea of Fans Mailbag!#Oakland #LasVegas #RaiderNation #Mayock #Gruden #Carr #Flores #RAIDERS #Stabler
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to run thru the biggest games this upcoming week on the NFL schedule. Tanner Herb also gives his five "locks".
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined again by Kevin Cannon as they break down the five biggest games in the NFL for week six, as well run through Tanner Herb's five "locks" against the spread.
The 2021 competition is now open for one of the country’s most rigorous business safety competitions – AGC’s Construction Safety Excellence Awards (CSEA), sponsored by Willis Towers Watson. This episode highlights AGC-member Faith Technologies – the 2020 Grand Award Winner. Faith’s CEO Mike Jansen and their VP of Safety Rocky Rowlett talk about their safety program, their video series called Charged! and share some of their very own best safety practices. Also hear WTW’s Construction Safety and Risk Control Leader Mike Fredebeil discuss an incredible additional benefit of the safety excellence awards: the annual publication of a free document that includes hundreds of “Safety Management Best Practices” gathered from the competing companies’ submissions. AGC’s safety lead Kevin Cannon fills in all the details so you know how to get involved and benefit from the sharing of ideas and strategies. Guests: Mike Jansen, CEO at Faith Technologies Rocky Rowlett, Vice President of Safety at Faith Technologies Mike Fredebeil, North American Construction Safety and Risk Control Leader and certified safety professional with Willis Towers Watson Kevin Cannon, Senior Director of Safety and Health Services at AGC of America Additional Resources: • Faith Technologies – https://www.faithtechnologies.com/ • Faith Technologies “Charged!” Video Series – https://www.faithtechnologies.com/news/video-gallery/ The Charged! Videos can also be found on Faith’s company blog https://blog.faithtechnologies.com/ and social media channels, including Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter and YouTube. • Willis Towers Watson – https://www.willistowerswatson.com/en-US • AGC Construction Safety Excellence Awards – www.agc.org/csea o 2021 CSEA application o AGC WebEd: Overview of the 2021 CSEA – Thu, Oct. 22, 2020 at 2:00 PM ET - REGISTER: https://register.gotowebinar.com/register/3457861124914414094 o CSEA Safety Management Best Practices (see right sidebar for links to 2017 – 2020 reports)
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon, as the duo runs through the five biggest games in the NFL this week, and Tanner Herb gives his five weekly "locks".
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by guest Kevin Cannon as the duo breaks down the five biggest games in the NFL this week. Tanner Herb gives his five "locks" of the week at the end of the show!
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon to preview the five biggest matchups in the NFL this week. Tanner Herb also gives his five "locks" of the week.
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by Kevin Cannon as the duo goes through the five biggest games of the week in week two of the NFL season. At the end of the episode we go through Herb's five locks of the week, coming off his impressive 5-0 week one performance. Tune in to this weeks episode to hear our thoughts!
Host, Ryan Coyle is joined by recurring guest, Kevin Cannon as the duo breaks down the top five games in the NFL this week. At the end of the show, Beef Up Front's inside source gives his five "locks" of the week. Welcome back NFL!
On this special episode, AGC’s Senior Director of Safety and Health Services, Kevin Cannon and Director of Safety and Health Services, Nazia Shah, showcase the events scheduled for September 14-18, 2020, (Construction Safety Week and OSHA’s Fall Safety Stand-down) and how contractors and their partners can take this opportunity to recommit to sending every worker home safe each day. Find out how to participate, access online materials and best practice resources, and be recognized for your efforts. RESOURCES 1. Construction Safety Week: https://www.constructionsafetyweek.com/ • Resources: https://www.constructionsafetyweek.com/plan-for-safety-week/ • Certificate of Participation (via AGC): https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/2V7ZLP2 • Media Coverage Request Form: https://www.surveymonkey.com/summary/9bg7gA4eWUXCdgP_2BrNCDb3DF5ZYzqHnAjhb0Tvo9qF8A8obQFe9iQmazK1DWRREp 2. OSHA National Safety Stand-Down to Prevent Falls in Construction: https://www.osha.gov/StopFallsStandDown/ • Resources: https://www.osha.gov/StopFallsStandDown/resources.html • Certificate of Participation: https://www.osha.gov/StopFallsStandDown/index.html#cert If you have further questions about these two events, please email us at safety@agc.org.
WWE Thunderdome Talk, Interviews with Kevin Cannon and Austin Towers, news and more!!
Today on the show we are joined by Kentuckian Kevin Cannon. He loves to bowhunt and shares some great stories and information on todays show. We talk saddle hunting and the company Cruzr, self filming tips, and some hilarious hunting memories.If you enjoy the show and you're able, please leave me a review on the podcast platform you use. This helps others decide whether to listen or not when they come across the show. Thanks!
In this episode of the podcast host Ryan Coyle is joined by first time guest Kevin Cannon. Ryan and Kevin discuss some of the potential award winners, and statistical leaders for the upcoming NFL season. They also run through some hypothetical "true or false" scenarios.
This week’s pod features Kevin Cannon, UCSB’s Assistant Director of Baseball Operations, as we dig into the 2016 College World Series, upkeep at Caesar Uyesaka, and his journey to Santa Barbara.
This week: the latest in local politics, MN cartoonist Kevin Cannon selected to create 2020 State Fair commemorative art, MN CenturyFarms, tax season begins in MN.
Remember The Fallen Show goes live at Orlando Trump Rally with special guest Kevin Cannon and Steven Flanagan with Conservative Society For ActionProtesting Rashieda Talib special guest speaker for C.A.R.E.
Episodio navideño al canto, damas y caballeros; y si esto se puede considerar un regalo —estirando nuestra imaginación hasta sus límites más extravagantes—, entonces sería el regalo más triste de la historia.En este episodio, como juegos de «««la quincena»»», tenemos Brawl Stars [iOS, Android] (Supercell, 2018) y Tetris Effect [PS4, VR] (Monstars Inc., Resonair/Enhance, Inc., 2018), pero también hacemos (o hace Jaume) una breve comparativa entre las impresiones sobre Red Dead Redemption 2 y God of War.En una breve sección de cómic, recomiendo Filosofía en viñetas, de Michael F. Patton y Kevin Cannon, y después pasamos a hablar de alguna serie que otra, pero no es un análisis, así que aquí dejo con la intriga. ;)Aunque no se nos ocurrió decirlo en la grabación...¡¡Os deseamos felices fiestas a todos!!
Episodio navideño al canto, damas y caballeros; y si esto se puede considerar un regalo —estirando nuestra imaginación hasta sus límites más extravagantes—, entonces sería el regalo más triste de la historia. En este episodio, como juegos de «««la quincena»»», tenemos Brawl Stars [iOS, Android] (Supercell, 2018) y Tetris Effect [PS4, VR] (Monstars Inc., Resonair/Enhance, Inc., 2018), pero también hacemos (o hace Jaume) una breve comparativa entre las impresiones sobre Red Dead Redemption 2 y God of War. En una breve sección de cómic, recomiendo Filosofía en viñetas, de Michael F. Patton y Kevin Cannon, y después pasamos a hablar de alguna serie que otra, pero no es un análisis, así que aquí dejo con la intriga. ;) Aunque no se nos ocurrió decirlo en la grabación... ¡¡Os deseamos felices fiestas a todos!!
By and large our focus in recent times has been on websites and apps, but increasingly we are going to be asked to design things in physical contexts; terminals, IoT devices, lifts. We talk to Kevin Cannon about ergonomics and UX design – The meeting point of traditional UX and industrial design. One of the biggest things... The post #191 Ergonomics with Kevin Cannon appeared first on UX Podcast.
Guest Profile Matt Luna joins us from sunny San Diego, California. Growing up a baseball guy, fishing wasn’t his primary focus. Yet, Matt still loved getting out with his Dad for some fishing in their local SoCal waters whenever they could. After college and competitive baseball ended, Matt got the itch for a different type of competition. Bass tournament fishing. Now Matt is working his way up the ladder as a Wild West Bass Trail angler and trying to live the dream doing this fishing thing full time. But this episode takes us back to a National Bass West tournament he got to fish with his father. Everything came together for a day they will never forget … Guest Links Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mattlunafishing Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mattlunafishing YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJ9qjSvmA_KqPaPU_PFCwJg Fishing With: National Bass West – http://www.nationalbasswest.com/ Wild West Bass Trail – https://www.wildwestbasstrail.com/ Fishing experience Matt grew up trying to figure out largemouth bass in SoCal with his Dad. They would take the occasional excursion into the Pacific for calicos and other California ocean dwellers. But after college, Matt went all in on bass fishing. He has been soaking it in ever since, and is now a Wild West Bass Trail angler. Matt Luna with large and smallmouth bass from all over the Wild West Location This episode takes place at a National Best West tournament in San Diego, California. Catch of the Day Largemouth Bass Wild West Bass Trail angler Also catch the other episodes we talked about: Episode 65 with Don Eady (30+ lb. tournament bag!) and Episode 039 with Capt. Kevin Cannon (peacock bass fishing). Sponsor Brought to you by reelsandtackle.com, your small business, family-owned online tackle store with great products, great service, and great prices!!! Check them out for all of your tackle needs, and don’t forget to use code TellTaleFish10 for a 10% discount off any product! About TTF Podcast The Tell Tale Fisherman® podcast is the place for all avid anglers (not just guides and tournament professionals) to share their fishing story of a lifetime and become fishing legends. Fresh water or salt water, middle of the ocean or middle of a stream, on this fishing podcast we are on a quest to catch the most EPIC fishing adventures from around the world—to inspire yours! If you are an avid angler, we would LOVE to have you as a guest on the show. So, if you love to fish, and find yourself often sharing your fishing pictures or talking fishing with other anglers, then you are EXACTLY the type of guest (and listener!) this show is all about. On this fishing podcast we want to hear from ALL avid...
“We were like little pirates out there …” Guest Profile Pat Patterson is a tattoo artist in South Florida. But on his days off he loves to (you guessed it) fish. And boy does he have some great places to fish. These include the Lake Ida system for peacock bass and clown knife fish, and the Loxahatchee Wildlife Refuge for largemouth bass. But let’s not forget that there is always saltwater nearby in South Florida. In fact, down there the deep blue water comes very close to shore. So much so that some days you can forgo the 40′ sportfisher for the 13′ Boston Whaler. Pat did that. We’re talking small boat offshore trolling here. Let’s just say there was no place on that boat big enough to hold what was caught on the day he shares in this episode. And then of course there was a REALLY big finish … Guest Links Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/justanotherfishingguy/ Fishing experience As a South Florida native, Pat has fished for it all. His favorite target species are freshwater bass. In his neck of the woods, these include largemouth bass and peacock bass. But in recent years Pat has taken to small boat offshore trolling and bottom fishing. He did not have a lot of experience with that kind of fishing growing up, but decided to get out and get after it. He’s now getting that dialed in, and when the seas are not too sporty you can find Pat the Pirate chasing after offshore treasure. Pat Patterson with a peacock bass, clown knife fish, snake head, and the star of this show – wahoo! Location This episode takes place in the Atlantic Ocean out of Palm Beach County, Florida. Catch of the Day Wahoo Small Boat Offshore Trolling This episode is about small boat offshore trolling for wahoo in South Florida. Plus we talk about epic South Florida freshwater fishing for largemouth bass, peacock bass, snake heads, and clown knife fish. Be sure to check out our other episodes about epic Lake Ida peacock bass fishing: Episode 039 with Capt. Kevin Cannon, and Episode 045 with Chris O’Keefe. Sponsor Brought to you by reelsandtackle.com, your small business, family-owned online tackle store with great products, great service, and great prices!!! Check them out for all of your tackle needs, and don’t forget to use code TellTaleFish10 for a 10% discount off any product! About TTF Podcast The Tell Tale Fisherman® podcast is the place for all avid anglers (not just guides and tournament professionals) to share their fishing story of a lifetime and become fishing legends. Fresh water or
So what do peacocks, clowns, and fishing have in common? Guest Profile Captain Kevin Cannon from Peacock Bass Adventures grew up in Delaware, but decided it was a fisherman’s life he wanted to lead. So he headed south, all the way to Islamorada in the Florida Keys. It was there that he became an offshore fishing captain and learned to catch all of the big salty species. But after relocating to West Palm Beach, Florida, another fish caught his eye – peacock bass. Captain Kevin traded in the sportfisher for a bay boat, and now guides clients on Florida peacock bass fishing adventures. In this episode, he tells us all about his unique fishery and the exotic species he catches. Plus, he shares some epic fishing adventures that will make you want to head south to play with the peacocks! Guest Links Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/peacock_bass_adventures Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Peacock-Bass-Adventures-704864096314583/ Web: http://peacockbasspro.com/ Fishing experience When he was 22, Kevin moved to Islamorada where he was a first mate on an offshore boat for 7 years. He took the helm as captain of an offshore boat in Islamorada for a few more year. Then, he moved to West Palm Beach and did the offshore thing a few more years as well. But now he has transitioned to a full time Florida peacock bass fishing guide. But with Captain Kevin, you also can catch other awesome native and invasive/exotic species. These include largemouth bass, striped bass, and clown knife fish. Some happy clients of Captain Kevin Cannon sporting peacock bass, largemouth bass, striped bass, and clown knife fish. Location This episode takes place in Palm Beach County, Florida. Catch of the Day Peacock Bass/Largemouth Bass/Clown Knife Fish Florida Peacock Bass Fishing This episode is about Florida peacock bass fishing, plus other awesome South Florida native and invasive/exotic species. These include largemouth bass, striped bass, and clown knife fish. Sponsor Brought to you by reelsandtackle.com, your small business, family-owned online tackle store with great products, great service, and great prices!!! Check them out for all of your tackle needs, and don’t forget to use code TellTaleFish10 for a 10% discount off any product! About TTF Podcast The Tell Tale Fisherman podcast is the place for all avid anglers (not just guides and tournament professionals) to share their...
This weeks episode contains a backstage look at CWE. Our producer Kid Remington interviews over two dozen CWE stars about their time with CWE in the last 5 years. Who all sat down with Kid to talk about yesterday, today and tomorrow in the CWE? Here's the run sheet!! "The Rebel" Bobby Collins, "The Coach" Kelly Russell, Kevin Cannon, Big Cliff Corleone, Billy Blaze, Nate Hardy, Mike Mission, Cory Kincaid, "The Zombie Hunter" Mentallo, Scotty Raver, Mr. Incredible, Blake Broadway, "Beautiful" Bobby J, Squiggy McGee, "The Pissed off Pitbull" Robby Royce, Michael Draven, "The Blue Eyed Idol" Tyler Colton, Cannibal, Camikaze, Kevy Chevy, Stefan Epic, Alan Daniels, Dick Blood, "The Rabid Dog" Rob Stardom, JJ Sanchez and Moses Luke. Happy Anniversary CWE!
It's the last episode of 2013! Let's ask two dozen of our pod-guests for the favorite books that they read in the last year! (Here's the cheat-sheet, if you don't wanna write them all down...) Charles Blackstone Tampa - Alissa Nutting Lisa Borders All This Talk of Love: A Novel - Christopher Castellani Scott Edelman The Man from Mars: Ray Palmer's Amazing Pulp Journey - Fred Nadis Drew Friedman Super Boys: The Amazing Adventures of Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster--the Creators of Superman - Brad Ricca Kipp Friedman Blood Meridian: Or the Evening Redness in the West - Cormac McCarthy Craig Gidney A Stranger in Olondria - Sofia Samatar Ed Hermance Confronting the Classics: Traditions, Adventures, and Innovations - Mary Beard Nancy Hightower The Waking Engine - David Edison Sea Change - S.M. Wheeler Jonathan Hyman The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York - Robert Caro Maxim Jakubowski The Art of Disappearing - Ivy Pochoda Ian Kelley Skagboys - Irvine Welsh Roger Langridge Double Barrel - Zander Cannon, Kevin Cannon and Tim Sievert Phillip Lopate My Face for the World to See - Alfred Hayes Contempt - Alberto Moravia Hooman Majd After Visiting Friends: A Son's Story - Michael Hainey Zach Martin Anna Karenina - Tolstoy Ron Rosenbaum The Erotic Poems - Ovid (tr. Green) David Rothenberg The Woman Who Lost Her Soul - Bob Shacochis Willard Spiegelman All That Is - James Salter Necessary Errors - Caleb Crain Peter Trachtenberg The Patrick Melrose Novels: Never Mind, Bad News, Some Hope, and Mother's Milk - Edward St. Aubyn At Last - Edward St. Aubyn Wallis Wilde-Menozzi God's Hotel: A Doctor, a Hospital, and a Pilgrimage to the Heart of Medicine - Victoria Sweet Matt Wuerker River of Smoke - Amitav Ghosh Monsoon: The Indian Ocean and the Future of American Power - Robert Kaplan
Jake & Slim sat down via satellite with Kevin Cannon and Zander Cannon to talk Double Barrel, waiting for the trade, pricing, and what they're reading!
On this edition of the Word Balloon podcast, we wrap up our massive coverage of the c2e2 comics convention . In part 2 we talk with Mike Perkins, who talks about being at the halfway point drawing Stephen King's The Stand.. Raven Gregory writor/Editor of Zenescope talks about Grimm's Fairy Tales, and the new Charmed series. Don Kramer discusses taking over the art duties on Wonder Woman, collaborating with J. Michael Straczynski. ArtistChris Samnee talks Area 10 his Vertigo Crime Novel with Christos Gage, his upcoming new Marvel all ages book Thor: The Mighty Avenger written by Roger Langridge, and the origin of Comic Twart, the online artist jam blog, featuring many top illustrators. A massive Green Lantern creator conversation, with Doug Mahnke, Christian Allmay, Pete Tomasi and Patrick Gleason.Tom Stillwell talks about Honor Brigade and the new Toy Boy one shot. Zander Cannon discusses his work on Top 10 for Wildstorm and his book on the US-Soviet space race T-Minus with Kevin Cannon and Jim Ottaviani.Josh Elder talks about co-founding Reading With Pictures,a not for profit group trying to bring comics to the classroom, to help schools promote and encourage literacy . Andy Kuhn and Phil Hester tell us about the return of their Image Comics series Firebreather, and its coming debut as an anime film for Cartoon Network directed by Peter Chung.. Matt Kindt talks about the Super Spy The Lost Dossier for Top Shelf and his June Vertigo OGN Revolver. Web Comic creators Len Kody and Tony Maldanado talk Chicago 1968,. David Peterson talks Mouse Guard : Legends Of the Guard , and Janet Lee & Jim McCann discuss their childrenís book Return of The Dapper Men both from Archaia , Chris Burnam talks about Officer Downe his new collaboration with Joe Casey, and his work on Boomís Armory Wars with Peter David, and Tom Fowler wraps things up to talk about Mysterius The Unfathomable for Wildstorm, and his work for Mad