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Kevin and Kieran talk to Kevin Miles, Football Supporters' Association chief executive, about the independent football regulator, PSR, ticket prices and more. Follow Kevin on X - @kevinhunterday Follow Kieran on X - @KieranMaguire Follow Producer Guy on X - @guykilty Follow The Price of Football on X - @pof_pod Send in a question: questions@priceoffootball.com Join The Price of Football CLUB: https://priceoffootball.supportingcast.fm/ Check out the Price of Football merchandise store: https://the-price-of-football.backstreetmerch.com/ Visit the website: https://priceoffootball.com/ For sponsorship email - info@adelicious.fm The Price of Football is a Dap Dip production: https://dapdip.co.uk/ contact@dapdip.co.uk Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Remember When is broadcast live every Sunday evening from 9pm until midnight on 3AW in Melbourne - You can listen or watch live through www.3aw.com.au or on the old fashioned wireless on 693 AM : Bob Phillips is our Remember When Legend. : Rick Milne talks Antiques and Collectables : Philip and Kevin pay tribute to Kevin Miles and Barbara Taylor Bradford : Kevin Trask takes us to 1968 in Trask's Time Tunnel : Music montage of the hits of 1987. : Tony McManus previews Australia Overnight : Produced by Ben Davidson with Gayle Watson in the Newsroom See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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On today's Dan Patrick Show, DP talks to ESPN Writer Wright Thompson about what it was like to cover Caitlin Clark. The Athletic MLB Writer Andy McCollough gives the latest details on Shohei Ohtani's situation. FS1 NBA Analyst Jim Jackson reacts to another early exit from Kentucky under John Calipari. Plus, Kevin Miles tells us how his life changed after becoming Jake from State Farm.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
How old were you when you discovered urban planning? Maybe it was listening to our podcast, attending a community meeting for a proposed development change, or a class you took in school. In today's episode, Nimo and Jas interview Mr. Kevin Miles, a dynamic teacher and DEI facilitator based in Dallas, Texas. By using the Urban Land Institute's UrbanPlan curriculum, press play to hear how he cultivated a five-year education path for 8th-12th grade students at Dallas Townview School of Business and Management.Mr. Miles's lifelong mission is to establish a National Career and Technology Student Leadership Organization (CTSO) and a “feeder pattern” of skilled and diverse Student Leaders to positively impact the future of the built environment that includes the cultural needs of a place, rather than an outdated pipeline model.In addition to teaching, Mr. Miles serves as the Director of External Relations for Townview School of Business and Management. He is also Chair of the Urban Land Institute (ULI) Dallas Fort Worth Pathways to Inclusion (PTI) Committee and works closely with National ULI's DEI team to help promote and develop PTI and BIPOC members.Questions for Kevin Miles? Send him an email at epicc2030@gmail.com or connect with him on LinkedIn.To volunteer or add UrbanPlan to your school, contact urbanplan@uli.org.Thank you for listening and tune in every other Tuesday where Nimo and Jas keep it Four Degrees to the Streets.Follow us on X and Instagram @the4degreespod.Or send us an email to connect with us!
Kevin Miles Co-founder and CEO of EureekaBI shares his story of finding his first customer, navigating complex transportation pricing and managing relationships. Born to Jamaican immigrants, Kevin's journey is laced with the importance of education, love for science, and an innate entrepreneurial spirit. From his own eureka moment to building a working prototype in two weeks, Kevin's story highlights how tenacity, innovation and the power of data analysis can have an impact.Proudly sponsored by Rapido. How freight companies find freight talent.
On this episode Jonny Radcliff and Kevin Miles get the chance to chat with Barry St. Clair. Author of over 30 books, Barry has been on the cutting edge of youth ministry for over five decades. Through his leadership, thousands of churches have implemented Jesus-Focused Youth Ministry strategies. As founder and president of Reach Out Youth Solutions he currently serves as Vice-President of Global Youth Engagement with East-West Ministries. ------ To connect further with Barry or to discover resources as described in this podcast, click here. ------ We want to hear from you! Write us at podcast@nnym.org Help us grow the community! Please subscribe, share, and leave a review. For more information about the National Network of Youth Ministries (NNYM) or to find a community of leaders in your area: www.nnym.org
Join us on the ThinkFreight Podcast as we delve into freight bidding and RFPs with Kevin Miles, the Founder of Eureeka BI. Kevin shares the fascinating story of his journey, tracing back to his roots as a produce transportation manager. It was during this time that he discovered the glaring inefficiencies in the bidding processes for long-term projects, sparking the idea that led to the birth of Eureeka BI.During our conversation, Kevin sheds light on the challenges faced by brokers and brokerages when dealing with large-scale bids. He highlights the time-consuming nature of analyzing data from the previous year to make informed bidding decisions. Eureeka BI, with its innovative approach, empowers 3PLs to compete for RFPs more efficiently, enabling them to save time and improve their accuracy significantly.Tune in to discover Kevin's insights into revolutionizing the freight and logistics industry and how Eureeka BI is reshaping the landscape for 3PLs, bringing unprecedented efficiency and accuracy to the bidding process. This is an episode you don't want to miss!=================================================================Join our vibrant community of freight enthusiasts, and let's embark on this journey together
August 11, 2023 is the 50th anniversary of hip-hop. What started out mostly as a spoken word artform has become a worldwide juggernaut. Thanks to the moguls who pushed the genre forward, hip-hop went from 0 to 100.In this episode, we rank the 50 greatest moguls in hip-hop's history. We reached out to industry experts — from artists to execs to media personalities — to help us compile the list. Friend of the pod, Zack O'Malley Greenburg, joins me to count them down from No. 50 to No. 10:39 How do we define “mogul”7:06 Honorable mentions09:10 The “Don't overlook their influence” group (ranks 50-41)16:19 The “Playing chess not checkers” group (ranks 40-31)23:38 The “Our impact runs deep” group (ranks 30-21)33:47 No. 2035:37 No. 1937:56 No. 1841:32 No. 1744:27 No. 1647:21 No. 1551:22 No. 14 55:55 No. 1359:09 No. 121:00:46 No. 111:02:16 No. 101:04:39 No. 91:06:44 No. 81:10:20 No. 71:14:06 No. 61:15:37 No. 51:17:11 No. 41:20:53 No. 31:29:06 No. 21:30:34 No. 11:33:22 Who got snubbed?1:35:42 What trends stick out from the list?1:41:21 Who would you pick to run your empire?Listen: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | SoundCloud | Stitcher | Overcast | Amazon | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | RSSHost: Dan Runcie, @RuncieDan, trapital.coGuests: Zack O'Malley Greenburg, @zogblogThis episode is sponsored by DICE. Learn more about why artists, venues, and promoters love to partner with DICE for their ticketing needs. Visit dice.fmEnjoy this podcast? Rate and review the podcast here! ratethispodcast.com/trapitalTrapital is home for the business of music, media and culture. Learn more by reading Trapital's free memo.TRANSCRIPT[00:00:00] Zack Greenburg: ownership. Was just such an important thing for Nipsey. Such an important thing for Berner. And, you know, interviewing the two of them, I would say, their mindset around ownership was the closest I've ever seen to Jay Z.[00:00:13] Dan Runcie Intro Audio: Hey, welcome to the Trapital Podcast. I'm your host and the founder of Trapital, Dan Runcie. This podcast is your place to gain insights from the executives in music, media, entertainment, and more who are taking hip hop culture to the next level.[00:00:39] Dan Runcie Guest Intro: This episode is a celebration to hip hop's 50th anniversary. This is a countdown on the 50 greatest moguls ever in hip hop. I'm joined by Zack O'Malley Greenburg, friend of the pod, and we both reached out to. A bunch of label heads, executives, people in hip hop that would know best. And we put it together in an aggregate list.And we're here to break down that list today. We talk about what does it mean to be a mogul? What are some of the considerations we made when we were looking into this list ourselves, how the results looked, what surprised us? What were the snubs? What were the misses? And what can we learn from this overall?And if Zack and I were putting together our dream teams, what would that look like? This is a lot of fun. Really happy with how it turned out. So let's dive in.[00:01:25] Dan Runcie: All right, hip hop's 50th anniversary is right around the corner and we decided to celebrate it in the only way that we know best countdown hip hop's greatest moguls and I'm joined by Zack O'malley Greenburg, who reached out to me about this. I was really excited about it and we spent some time over the past couple of weeks, reaching out to people we know, making sure that we have the best insights looking through and making sure that we had all of the. Breakdowns to share. So Zack, I'm ready for this. How are you feeling?[00:01:55] Zack Greenburg: I am stoked. Yeah, I mean, you know, 50th anniversary of hip hop. We reached out to 50 different judges. amongst, you know, the sort of, the most respected folks from, you know, label heads to artists to entrepreneurs, you know, I think we've got half of them, roughly half of them replied since in their votes, we're going to keep their individual votes anonymous, but, you know, Dan could tell you about some of the judges.Yeah, and it was just really fun to kind of mix it up, you know, I think the thing about this list, a lot of these characters are just kind of an apples to oranges comparison as you'll see once we dive into it, but that's the beauty of it, right? I mean, how do you, you know, compare like a pioneering executive to like a modern day artist mogul? And we really kind of left it in the hands of the judges. And we just said, basically the only guidance was, this is a business focused list, but you know, you can rank artists, executives, people who are both. It just, whatever your definition of mogul is, that's how, you know, that's how you should rank them. And people submitted lists and obviously the higher they rank somebody, the more points we gave them and, you know, the lower they got, but, you know, so there's some people on there who are like accumulators. They ended up on everybody's list, but not so high, but, you know, as a result, they ended up on the top 50.And then there are some who were just like, not ranked at all by most people, but had a couple of really high ranks so that they made the list. So I think it's a pretty cool mix.[00:03:10] Dan Runcie: Right? It's kind of like how we look at artists. There's some artists that have just been consistent, steady through and through each year. You'll always get some reliable output from them, but then there are other artists too. They were the best for a certain amount of time. Maybe they cooled off for a bit.Maybe they came back and that's kind of the way music is too. One of the things that. I was asked whenever I was reaching out to people about this was the same thing that you posed earlier. People wanted to know, how are we defining mogul and we left it up to their interpretation. It is a term that means different things to different people, but maybe for the sake of this conversation, let's kick it off here.Zack, how do you define mogul? And how did you define it when creating your list?[00:03:51] Zack Greenburg: Yeah, I mean, to me a hip hop mogul, more general is just, you know, somebody who not only is a business person, but has some degree of ownership, in whatever it is that they're doing. that's not the only definition of it for me, but like, you know, when I was putting together my rankings, I thought, you know, who are the owners?the same time, you know, people who are executives who are in a decision making place. you know, that counts for something. And I think also, you know, if you're an artist, and you simply have some control over your own work, you maintain your copyrights, whatever, like that counts as being a mogul. So, you know, specifically when it comes to hip hop, you know, I'd say people who are, you know, definitely getting in charge of your own work, but also creating new lines of business, you know, influencing the culture. but you know, a way that they've got some skin in the game from a business perspective, you know, that, kind of thing.That's kind of how I looked at it. but you could see from the votes that, you know, everybody had a slightly different definition too.[00:04:47] Dan Runcie: Yeah, there was definitely a lot of correlation with the artists who tend to be the ones that are the wealthiest. They end up at the highest rankings in on some of those lists, too, but it wasn't exactly correlated because there's a difference. And these are some of the things I kept in mind, too, with the mogul definition, thinking specifically aboutinfluence and impact, were you having, or did you create opportunities for others around you? Were you able to be a bit of a kingmaker or queenmaker in your respective right? Was there a impact in terms of other generations that either looked and modeled how they're doing what they're doing and looking at you as some form of inspiration with that?So there's the indirect impact and influence, but also the, Indirect piece of it too. So there's the money piece as well, but then what do you do with that money? And then that's how I had went about it. And similarly, everyone had their own unique spin to it.[00:05:42] Zack Greenburg: Yeah, for sure. And, you know, and I think the definition changed over time, of what a mogul really is, but when I was putting my rankings together, I think the idea of starting something new, you know, that's also paramount, amongst all the criteria as well.[00:05:55] Dan Runcie: Right? So, of course, Zack and I had our list, but we reached out to a number of people and several other label heads, executives, and people that are in the game.So thank you all to your contributions. We couldn't have done this without you. And if anything, it helped add a variety beyond just you and I, getting and putting our list out there. It added a more full scope and like anything. Oh, this is how you look at it. Interesting and being able to pull unique insights there.[00:06:21] Zack Greenburg: Yeah, for sure. you know, one thing I think we probably ought to point out, on the list, you know, the list is, heavily male. but it's about only 20% women on the list. you know, we did everything we could obviously to make it more equitable, but, you know, the votes are the votes.And, you know, I think there is a bit of a reflection of sort of the state of affairs over the past half century, you know, unfortunately, like many parts of music business, hip hop has been, you know, heavily overindexing for males. So, you know, here's hoping that when 50 years to do a hundred years of hip hop, you know, we'll have even things out a bit or completely, let's say maybe even, you know, made up for lost time, but I think some of the spots on the list, you know, the rankings do kind of reflect an industry reality that we've seen, unfortunately for 50 years.[00:07:06] Dan Runcie: Right? And hopefully this gets better. We do feel and you'll see when we talk about some of the people here, glad about some of the names that got mentioned. Of course, there's always room to be able to have more and hopefully for hip hop's 100th anniversary. If when and people are breaking that down, there's hopefully even more representation there.So, with that, I think it's probably good for us to get started right before the list, but talk about some of the honorable mentions. So, there were people that didn't quite make the cut of 50, but we still wanted to highlight them and the work that they. Did here. So a few of those names here to give a shout out to.So we have Cindy Campbell, Jermaine Dupree, Audrey Harrell, Jay Cole, Damon John. What comes or what do you think about when you hear those names?[00:07:55] Zack Greenburg: Yeah, you know, I mean, Cindy Campbell, I think in many ways you could look at her as the first promoter in hip hop history, right? I mean, you know, we're talking about 50 years of hip hop. That's 50 years from that first party that. She and DJ Kool Herc through, you know, in the rec room on Cedric Avenue.And, I think the idea was that they were going to raise a little bit of cash so she could go get herself a new back to school wardrobe. Now, if that's not, you know, entrepreneurship and hip hop, you know, from the very beginning, I don't know what it is. And so I think Cindy deserves a ton of credit, for being there at the very beginning, you know, but I think on the honorable mentions to a lot of the folks that are on here, you know, or maybe like a little bit, you know, not exactly falling on the same radar, you know, for the list. So like, you know, Damon John, obviously he did with, you know, creating FUBU and, you know, everything he's done as an entrepreneur, it's incredible, but it, I think it's sort of like more of a national brand that is, you know, apart from hip hop and so is his personality, right? Like you see him on shark tank or, you know, whatever, like he sort of moved past, I wouldn't necessarily categorize him, as just hip hop, although he's had a tremendous impact on hip hop.So I think probably that's why, he wasn't on more lists. It's not to sort of ding him his impact, which is considerable.[00:09:10] Dan Runcie: Right, and I do think that of course, music is one element of hip hop. You do have fashion, you do have others. So music definitely got weighted heavily in this list, but Dave and John and his influence in fashion, and there's other people in fashion and we'll get into them in this list too, but we can't overlook everything he did there and some of the more unique and clever marketing tactics that came from food booth that other people did who will mention in this list as well. 1 person that I do want to highlight here from that list 2 people. So, Jermaine Dupri want to give him a shout out as well. Just everything he was able to do with.So, so Def records. He was part of that movement in the 90s, where you saw LaFace and then all these other groups in the South be able to come up, do their own. There was a so so deaf sound, a so so Def vibe and his ability to do it both in rap, but also have a bit of the soul there. Some of the epic production that he's been involved with, even outside of hip hop, thinking about albums like Mariah Carey's Emancipation of Mimi and others, even though he didn't always do everything in hip hop. I think that some of his influence can't go overstated there. And then the second person who's similar in that regard, I would say is Andre Harrell. We talked about him in past episodes, especially the bad boy one, but everything that he did from Uptown Records and then moving on to Motown Records and gave in many ways helped give Puff the blueprint for what he was able to do years later.[00:10:37] Zack Greenburg: Yeah, absolutely. And, you know, I think Andre had a lot of successes, also had a lot of failures, not necessarily, you know, through his own doing, the time, but definitely somebody who deserves, you know, a hat tip at the very least. And, you know, I'm sure Puff would agree about that too.[00:10:52] Dan Runcie: Agreed. Agreed. All right. We ready ready to get into it.[00:10:57] Zack Greenburg: Let's do it.[00:10:58] Dan Runcie: All right. So in the initial group here, which we're calling the don't overlook their influence group. This is people who are ranked 50 through 41. so in order we have Ethiopia have to Marion at 50. She was the former CEO of Motown. We have Top Dog, co founder and CEO of Top Dog Entertainment. We have Mona Scott Young from her work at Violators and more recently Love Hip Hop. And what she also has done with Hip Hop Homicides and some other multimedia projects. We have T.I. with everything he's done with Grand Hustle and Multimedia. We have Eazy E with Priority Records. Many ways pioneering so much of the stuff we saw.We have Todd Moskowitz, L. A. Reed, Craig Kalman, former CEO from Atlantic. We have Sylvia Roan and then tied for 40. We have Desiree Perez and Steve Stout. What are your thoughts on that group list?[00:11:55] Zack Greenburg: Oh, man, I don't know. Maybe we should just pick out a few here and there that we thought were particularly interesting. I mean, you know, I think Ethiopia is a good example of somebody who would be higher up if she were identified, you know, solely as a, you know, as a hip hop mogul, but she's had kind of like a pretty wide reach, you know, especially in R and B, and pop. I mean, some of the stuff she's done with Erykah Badu, NeYo, Stevie Wonder, you know, like over the years, you know, wouldn't be classified as hip hop, but it's worth it nonetheless. just think that, you know, being kind of like in between, in between genres, you know, resulted in her being down a little bit further on the list.But, you know, somebody who had a tremendous impact. you know, I would also, I would highlight TI here, you know, the self proclaimed King of the South, but, you know, in terms of, I remember the years when, you know, we were putting together the Forbes list and, you know, kind of looking at, you know, kind of regionally who is most important to me.Yeah, he was sort of like. The Jay Z of the South. And he was really, especially when he was having that moment, you know, getting a lot of songs on, you know, national radio and, kind of being in the public eye, I mean, had a tremendous business focus, you know, he was always interested in sort of like, what's the next thing that I can create?and you know, that kind of entrepreneurial energy, you know, I think, especially within the context of the South, like taking the blueprint, from guys like Jay Z, you know, I think he certainly deserves a mention. I kind of thought he'd end up higher here, but I guess he's been, not as, especially in the music front lately.and then I would definitely highlight, Desiree, you know, she's somebody who's been behind the scenes for a really long time, with Jay Z and rock nation, but like. she runs rock nation. And although Jay Z obviously has the final say in things, you know, a lot of things that you see, come out of that camp are, you know, her doing and have her fingerprints all over them.And I know some of y'all might have seen the Book of Hove exhibit at the Brooklyn Museum or the Brooklyn Public Library that was a Desiree Perez production and, you know, she said that it was like her emptying her 80, 000 square foot storage unit into the library, but, you know, but to have, you know, that kind of, impact at a place like Roc Nation and to help, you know, Jay Z do what he's done, you know, I think those are all worthy, of notation and, you know, I think she deserves her spot there for sure.[00:14:09] Dan Runcie: Yeah, Desiree is someone that has been working with Jay Z for a while now, and I feel like she deserved a shout out on Jay's verse in Pound Cake, the Drake song. You know where he's like, Dave made millions, Lyor made millions. I feel like Desiree should have gotten a shout out there too, but yeah.I'm glad that she got mentioned here. Two other names I'll run through quickly. Steve Stout, someone who I thought would have ended up higher, and I know that, you know, it was interesting to see how the results played out, but I do think that one of the best marketers that we've seen come through hip hop.He was ahead of the curve in a number of ways, dating back to the 90s with seeing the men in black sunglasses and everything that he's done there from his time working with Nas, everything that they've done, whether it was the firm or, him being a record executive himself and then showing as well, how he's able to do it in advertising and bringing a lot of these companies and brands that didn't necessarily align or think about being related with, you know, hip hop culture and those elements to be able to do it.You look at a company like State Farm and how we now look at what that company has done. And a lot of that is through his work and obviously with what he's done at United Masters. So shout out there and I also do want to give a shout out to Mona Scott Young mentioned her earlier, but she was a right hand to someone who will mention on the list as well coming up soon with everything she did in Violator, this is back when, you know, Q Tip and Busta Rhymes and that whole crew were doing their thing. And then later, I know people have a lot of polarizing opinions about love and hip hop, but if you look at the career opportunities that were created for people that have came through, and the longevity that she's granted, a lot of people that the record industry forgot about that she was able to continue to give opportunities for think about the trick daddies, Trina's and folks like that. I know people hate to see them arguing on camera, but would we have Cardi B where she is today? If it weren't for the platform of love and hip hop, and she's continued to do things with other vocals on the list that we'll get into. So I do want to give a shout out to her[00:16:08] Zack Greenburg: Yeah, definitely a worthy shout out. And we could probably go on and on about even just like the tent in this bracket here, but I suppose we ought to, we ought to move on to the next room before, before we run[00:16:19] Dan Runcie: indeed. Yep. So the next group is playing chest, not checkers. So at 39, we have Dave Mays, founder of the source 38. We have Irv Gotti, founder of Murder, Inc. 37, Cardi B 36, Lil Wayne 35, Nipsey Hussle, 34. Steve Rifkin, from Loud Records 33, Missy Elliot. 32 Birder from Cookies, 31 Kevin Lyles and 30 Chris Lighty.[00:16:47] Zack Greenburg: Oh man, this is a pretty stacked bracket, I must say. I think that, you know, there are a couple of names that stick out to me here. I'm going to go with Nipsey and Berner, because in a funny way, I think, they have like a sort of a similar, a sort of similar strategy, which is like, you have a very clear idea of what it is that you're going to do.You own it, and then you, you know, you continue to own it like ownership. Was just such an important thing for Nipsey. Such an important thing for Berner. And, you know, interviewing the two of them, I would say, their mindset around ownership was the closest I've ever seen to Jay Z. and they really understood from the beginning that they had to own all their music.Own all of their branding own, you know, the companies that create on the side and then they can monetize it later. And, you know, with Nipsey rest in peace. I mean, he was just on the cusp of, of kind of like becoming a mainstream superstar, you know, when, his life ended all too soon. So, I think what Berner is doing with cookies is really fascinating like Berner is, you know, you want to talk, lists. I mean, he's in the top five, probably the top four or three at this point, in terms of net worth for actual, hip hop artists. And that's because of the success of cookies and, you know, there's been, a lot of ups and downs in the cannabis business lately, but like the amount of ownership that he has, you know, I think it amounts to about one third still of cookies, which is, you know, a billion dollar brand. When we gets legalized, you know, like he's going to see the fruits of his labor and, that focus on ownership I think is really going to pay off on the longterm.So I would highlight those two guys, in this tier as the ones that, I think were the most impressive to me. That's not to shade anybody else, but,[00:18:25] Dan Runcie: Yeah, those two guys are also two of the few people who I see people still wearing their merchandise on a regular basis. Granted, I live in San Francisco. There's a cookie store here. So, I mean, I know there is a local connection for sure, but same with Nipsey Hussle. I mean, sadly, it's now been over 4 years since he passed away, and you still see Crenshaw shirts.He understood, Nipsey especially, understood exactly where everything's going. And it's just so sad that, you know, it was gone so soon. Two names, I'm going to shout out here. I'm going to shout. I'm going to shout out Cardi B and I want to shout out Chris Lighty. So Cardi B talked about her a little with the Mona Scott young piece, but she's entered and ran her rap career more uniquely than other artists that we've seen at her level have. And I think that speaks a lot to just where the game is now. It's been over six years since Bodak Yellow came out. And it's been over five years now since her debut album. This is someone who hasn't put out a studio album in over five years.And hasn't gone on tour in a traditional way, but it's still doing her thing. And I think this is one of the things that's unique. She finds interesting ways to monetize herself and to put herself on. She's like, Hey, I can do these private shows and they're going to pay me, you know, 1. 5 million or 3 million just to do a half an hour set.I'm going to do my thing. I'm going to be there at Super Bowl weekend. I may not be performing at the Super Bowl, but I'm going to go do these private shows for Bob craft or the fanatics event or all these things and collect the checks. it's very interesting to see younger artists to do that Lionel Richie playbook, but she is like, Hey, I don't necessarily have to do that. And even though people always do try to, you know, loop her into the Nicki Minaj versus Cardi B beef, she still has lended her hand and extended it to other young artists, especially women in the game, whether it's Ice Spice and others, whether she's doing it through her talents and others. So she's someone that I hope as she continues on, you know, into her thirties and into her forties can continue to rise up this list.And then Chris Lighty talked about a little bit with Mona Sky Young, co founder of Violator and everything they're able to do there. Sad that he was taken away so soon, but if you have not heard this yet and if you haven't listened to the podcast, I highly recommend the Mogul podcast series that was done several years ago on it.It was done by Reggie Yose, who is Combat Jack, who has since passed away as well, but I highly recommend that if you want a full breakdown on everything Chris Leite did. Violator and after that was truly one of the early ones looking at product partnerships and a lot of the things that we see now that are common in hip hop.[00:21:07] Zack Greenburg: And, you know, if we didn't have Chris Lighty, I don't think we would have had 50 Cent. I mean, at least not to the extent that we have him. you know, I mean, I remember writing my first story about 50 and like for Forbes, maybe 2008 and sitting down with Chris and just kind of like hearing him lay out the plan.And again, it's the emphasis on ownership, right? you know, Chris Leidy, I think was the one who really pushed, 50 to take the equity in vitamin water and his parent company, rather than just do an endorsement. And, you know, obviously that became a huge, deal and really like a model for so much, not only of hip hop, but like other parts of the entertainment industry, you know, I think Chris definitely deserves a spot, maybe even should be a little higher. and you know, probably also, there's, you know, again, all these folks deserve a shout out, but Kevin Lyles, I think is, got one of the most inspirational stories. you know, it's another person, I think we've both interviewed a bunch of times, but, you know, just his journey from intern to president of Def Jam and I think seven years. And he just did it by working harder than everybody else like he wasn't an artist that got put there because he had some hit, it wasn't some kind of like nepotism deal, you know, he just outworked everybody and, you know, he had the talent and, you know, the horsepower to just like get it done. And to make that journey within seven years. So I think it's, for people who are listening and, you know, want to do something like that with their own career, you know, study Kevin Miles because he was able to make it, without being, you know, some kind of like preternatural, singing talent or something like that he just did it on smarts and work ethic.[00:22:39] Dan Runcie: And one of the few people that co founded a record label and sold it a decade later for hundreds of millions of dollars, which is what he did 300 as well. Right? So of course, not 300 now underwater, but everything he did with Lyor and Todd, there, is impressive. There's not that many black founders in general. In tech, any sector that have built and exited companies for several hundred, a million dollars, the way that he was able to be a part of that. So, hats offhim.[00:23:09] Zack Greenburg: yeah, I think it takes a special kind of guts to be able to, you know, I mean, he was a well paid executive with a cushy music job, you know, to leave that world, start your own thing. I mean, I know they had, you know, big backers and everything, but like to take a risk once you've already experienced that level of success and to go out and start something, you know, as opposed to starting something from scratch when you have nothing anyway.I mean, it, takes a lot of gumption to do that. So, you know, again, yes, a pretty cool second act for Kevin miles.[00:23:38] Dan Runcie: Indeed, the next group here, our impact runs deep. It is Nicki Will Smith at 28, Swiss beats 27, LL Cool J, 26, Coach K and P, 25, Julie Greenwald, 24. The E40 23, Pharrell 22, and Rick Ross, 21.[00:24:01] Zack Greenburg: Yeah. I think, that's a pretty strong, deck there. And I think also, you know, here, you find some people who, you could argue should be higher or lower based on, you know, how much of their career was done in the hip hop music world, right? Like Queen Latifah, LL Cool J, Will Smith.Obviously those are huge crossover acts. but I think they all got a lot of points from some of the voters because, you know, that is in one way, the measure of a mogul, like you're diversifying your portfolio and whether that's by owning different things or, you know, by getting into, different types of performance, you know, on the silver screen, I think that's a viable path too.but just from like a purely musical entrepreneurial perspective, I would highlight, Swiss Beats and Pharrell, who I think, you know, the two of them are more influential than anybody in terms of like, I'd say Swizz in terms of art and Pharrell in terms of fashion. and you know, some of the things they've done around those two areas and, you know, Pharrell certainly, now with LVMH, but also before with Ice Cream, Billionaire Boys Club, you know, he was very active in starting his own things on the fashion side.And, you know, kind of inspiring artists to do that. you know, would we have had a Yeezy if we hadn't had Pharrell, you know, doing what he was doing and, you know, and even doing what he did with Adidas? you know, I don't know about that. And, Swiss beads certainly, you know, not only from the art side of things, but you know, it's a really impressive art collection.I did a story on him a few years ago and, you know, he's got like, Jeff Kuhn sculptures and Basquiat's and Warhol's and his, you know, like in his foyer. I mean, it's, pretty impressive stuff. but the way that he moves behind the scenes, as sort of like a corporate brand whisperer, at places, you know, like Bacardi, Lotus, you know, this goes on, you know, I think he, he's sort of like more quietlyinfluential than, some folks realize. And, you know, certainly has been earning, on par with, you know, with all the, you know, most of the names, if not higher than most of the names we've mentioned so far. and you know, what he's done on the, both of them, what they've done on the production side, also hard to top.So that must count for something as well. I kind of went more than one shout out there, didn't I? So[00:26:06] Dan Runcie: Yeah. No, that was good. That was good.I'm glad you mentioned the two of them though, because if you didn't, I probably would've called the other one out. The thing about Swiss as well, everything that he's done with versus specifically also embodies this idea and definition of a mogul because he was able to be.A kingmaker in the sense of creating opportunities for others. He did that through the equity that he was able to give all of those early participants in versus in trailer itself. And then additionally, with the careers that we're able to have a boost because of. everything that happened, with the matchups from versus specifically, you look at someone like Ashanti, who is now doing tours and pop it up every now and then she wasn't doing that before her versus and her battle versus Keisha Cole was one of the not, if not the most watched one that we've had.You look at Jadakiss and everything that he's been able to do since his epic showdown against, with Lox versus Dipset with that versus you look at Jeezy versus Gucci Mane. I know that versus definitely had its peak popularity during the pandemic, but that kind of stuff that he was able to do with Timbaland, I think also speaks so much to everything that he's been able to do there.And another person I want to mention to that was in this group as well that I think is similar is LL Cool J because I think similar to the way that. Swiss beets is Ella is also with someone that's been involved with multimedia with everything from the jump. He was the 1st artist to truly breakthrough from Def Jam and did it as a teenager.So, of course, he gets plenty of shout out for that, but he's also always been trying to find ways to look out for that next generation of artists. And he's been doing some of that more recently with rock the bells, and that's its own. Company and entity now where they have a festival coming up as well to celebrate things that are happening with hip hops anniversary.So it's been cool to see him do things as well. And I'll give a very brief shout out here to, coach K and P because they, similar to how I mentioned, Kevin Liles were able to build and grow a company and then sell it for, I believe, forget the exact sale price for, quality control. But they were able to do that thanks in part to a lot of the work that Ethiopia had done, helping to give quality control, the platform that it did, and especially in an era where I think it's harder for a record label to have a true brand, they were able to help give it a boost.[00:28:36] Zack Greenburg: That's true. And on that note of labels, I think Julie Greenwald, there's a mention, you know, she and Craig Kalman, who's mentioned, in an earlier grouping, you know, run Atlantic together. And there's a lot of, of music that we wouldn't have seen if it had been for the two of them, you know, running the show over there.So, shout out to Julie. I mean, the only one actually we haven't discussed here with E40 and Rick Ross. And I don't know, you know, probably get moving, but, do you think Rick Ross deserves to be number 21 on this entire list? Like ahead of Pharrell, ahead of, you know, some of the other names on here. I was surprised that he was ranked this high.[00:29:09] Dan Runcie: I love the spicy questions. Cause this is what people wanted to hear the podcast about, right? They wanted to hear one of us, you know, poke the bear a little bit.If Rick Ross was able to nail that dive in the pool, do you think you would have ranked him higher?[00:29:21] Zack Greenburg: Ha ha ha ha ha ha. No, no, I wouldn't. I mean, I still know. I mean, you know, like I get it, you know, he's called the boss that he must be a mogul, You know, and, some of the things he's done in terms of, you know, Bel Air and Maybach music and all that. Sure. But like, you know, when you put them up against like some of the other ones, did he really do something new or was he more just like following a, blueprint that had worked for others before and, you know, executing it to a degree success, but like, again, not, you know, not to the level of, let's say Pharrell.I think maybe I just, I'm salty that he ended up ahead of Pharrell. I think Pharrell is just way more influential and Mowgli, but, I don't know. What do you think?[00:29:59] Dan Runcie: So, I've read 2 of Ross's books and I interviewed him once on Trapital. I think that, to your point, he did follow the blueprint that we saw from others. I think he is smart about the types of partnerships he does, but it does feel like a ditty light. Type of playbook that he's been able to do and build.And I do think a lot of it makes sense. He may not necessarily have the large media entities the way that he does. Although I do think he's overdue for some type of comedy show or some type of reality show just following him around because I think he's hilarious. And anytime that he gets that, it could just generate something unique.And I'm sure he's been hit up about it. I do think that he's done well for himself. Just thinking about. Now, how his career is growing, I think it's been what, 16, 17 years since hustling 1st came out. I think in this range, there is some flexibility there in terms of like, where people are in certain ways.I get why he may not necessarily be as high. I'm sure if you looked at the net worth or the earnings, that some of the people that are lower than him may actually be higher. I think 1 of the knocks potentially is although Maybach music was cool. I wrote about this in Trapit as well. I think there was a missed opportunity.And part of that comes from, huh, did Ross do all the things that he probably could have done from a leadership perspective to especially like, when Meek Mill and Wally were beefing and stuff. And I think Ross had a bit more of a laissez faire approach to things, which in some ways is kind of the opposite of King making as we're talking about this, right?Can we really bring folks together and make something larger than it is. I think it was a bit tough in general for people to try to do everything themselves, try to be the boss of this label, which is signed to a different label because Rick Ross was signed to a different label than MNG was himself. And I think anytime you have that type of dynamic, it's just splitting the leadership interests. So I hear you.[00:32:00] Zack Greenburg: Yeah. So then how much of a mogul are you, if your label is really, you know, so I guess everybody's labels on somebody else's label and have you distributed by something, but you know, it's like when they're like multiple labels kind of, you know, intertwined with your label, it kind of causes the question.are you really the boss? If you have several bosses that you're answering to, but you know, I think actually though. in Rick Ross's defense, what he's done with Wingstop, I mean, that is pretty unique and, I don't know that anybody else on this list has something comparable in that space.So, you know, maybe that's why, I think, you know, by virtue of that, you could put them pretty high up. And maybe that's what some of the judges were thinking, you know, but he also ended up on a lot of lists, you know, so some of the judges just kind of like, maybe we're getting to some of the judges sent rank lists, and they're like, you know, this person is the top and they should get the most points and other people were like, here are my people.And you can just rank them evenly. and I think Rick Ross ended up on a lot of those lists. So, you know. I think again, maybe like I was alluding to earlier, he's a bit of a compiler, nothing wrong with that, you know, you can get into the hall of fame by compiling 3000 hits, but, it's interesting to see how, how the opinions differ. That's the whole fun of it.[00:33:06] Dan Runcie: He runs his business is almost like how a small business owner would in a number of ways where he has a bunch of car washes and, you know, his is 1 of the family members does that he has his wing stops, right? He has that. And it is a bit of this, like, mogul dumbness from that perspective in terms of like, okay, I have my hands in these things and I've hired people to have, you know, different roles within that that doesn't necessarily have things in aggregate. It's a bit more of the strip mall mentality as opposed to the, you know, building a skyscraper that could then build other skyscrapers, but it's something worth mentioning, but I hope we keep that up with a few of the other rankings we have coming up as we dig into the top 20, here.So, yeah, let's start with 20. So, 20, Queen Latifah, I think that she and, Ice Cube, who we'll get into in a minute, were one of the first that noticed, hey, I may not be able to do this rap thing forever, what are areas that I can expand this multimedia empire and everything I'm building.She was able to do this with Living Single, the show that was Friends before Friends was, and even the way that she was able to show young black people that were having, you know, highly sought after roles, but they still had their interpersonal dynamics. It was cool. It was refreshing. It was aspirational, which I do think that a lot of the black sitcoms were in the 90s.And she was able to do that, continue finding ways to put other people on as well through the work that she did. She was also willing to take risks. Like I remember when she was in set it off, people had a bunch of questions about, Oh, you're going to play a lesbian in this heist movie. What is this going to do for your career?And she was willing to do that. And I think she is always, you know, be willing to take risks. So, you know, shout out to her and I'm glad that several people have mentioned her[00:34:56] Zack Greenburg: Yeah. And I think she gets credit for, like you say, diversifying her portfolio. you know, into the acting world. it's worth noting, you know, she was barely ahead of Rick Ross. but you know, there is a big difference between 21 and 20. It's the top 20. So, again, I think, you know, she was a bit of a compiler, but there were a couple of people who ranked her in the top 10.and, you know, I think just like in terms of the breadth of her career, you know, the longevity, the diversity of the things that she's gotten into. you know, even if it's not as much ownership as somebody, even like a Rick Ross, it's just like, having your hands in a lot of pies and like that really counts for something as a mogul.So, I think it makes sense to see you there.[00:35:36] Dan Runcie: Agreed 19 is Eminem. So let's talk about it. How do we feel about Eminem in 19?[00:35:43] Zack Greenburg: You know, I think it's a weird one, honestly. you know, there's no doubting, his lyrical prowess and where, you know, where he kind of stacks up as part of like the pantheon of lyricists, like fine. But is he really a mogul? I mean, he's somebody who has been, you know, very reclusive at times. Who has, you know, kind of gotten in his own way at other times. I mean, I could see ranking him up here though, just by virtue of ownership of the music and sort of like the quality and quantity of his catalog. you know, what he did with D12, you know, he did have shady records and, you know, and all that.So again, you know, there, there is kind of a layer cake of a label situation, like some of the folks who mentioned earlier across, but, you know, that was at least important to him to set up, you know, as his continued ownership of, You know, his work and, you know, certainly when it comes to like raw commercial prowess, you know, Eminem, is one of the best selling hip hop artists of all time.If not the best, depending on how you look at it. And just, you know, simply by virtue of the amount of revenue he generated, you know, throughout the late 90s and early aughts at the peak of the sort of CD age there. you know, that deserves, some kind of something, even if he wasn't running around starting his own, you know, side businesses as much as some of these other folks[00:37:02] Dan Runcie: Best selling artist of the 2000s by a pretty strong amount, I believe, and has the most of any genre, right? And the most streamed song of the 2000s as well, at least on Spotify with Lose Yourself, and I'm pretty sure Till I Collapse and maybe a couple of others aren't too far. Behind as Will Page as Spotify's former chief economist said, anytime Eminem farts or burps or releases anything on a streaming service, it provides a huge bump to everything in this back catalog.So, I still laugh about that, but I do think that speaks to it there and. If, correct me if I'm wrong, but I think he was one of the first hip hop artists to have a Sirius XM channel himself.So that's something that's unique and obviously Sirius is still doing its thing. So, shout out to him there. A bit higher than I probably would have ranked him, but that's why it's interesting to get the group results here. Ah, this one's gonna be spicy. Number 18. Your boy, Suge Knight.[00:38:02] Zack Greenburg: Yeah, you know, I mean, I think this is one of the tougher ones on the entire list. You know, this is not like a list of, Ms. Congeniality or Mr. Congeniality, as you'll see, you know, some of the other names on here. Obviously, you know, Suge is in jail. he's been involved in the death of, you know, human beings that like that is, you know, not sort of like what you're after in a mogul here, but, enough people, you know, I guess felt that the business, if you just, you know, looking at it from a pure business perspective, was enough to put them up here. And, you know, there is no arguing that death row at its peak was one of the most influential record labels, you know, not just in hip hop, but of anything. I mean, any genre, when death row was at its hottest, I don't know any, kind of moment where any other, you know, you'd have to stack that up against peak Motown or, you know, Atlantic or something like that, but, you know, that was really like a, peak moment. So, you know, I think this is one of the things we run into on this list like if somebody exhibits, a level of, you know, sort of business ingenuity, you know, that counts for something and, you know, the other things that you do in your life and your career, you know, we'll detract from that, but, you know, what you did at your peak, I think will get you pretty far in a list like this when people kind of count, you know, we kind of count sort of like the ceiling as opposed to the average, in some cases. So, I don't know. What do you think?[00:39:27] Dan Runcie: These are the two most impressive business moves that Suge Knight has done. Number two is shaking down Vanilla Ice to get his points for everything that he did on the album that had Ice Ice Baby there. Because he was able to use that money to then start and co found Death Row with Dr. Dre. That's number two.Number one is at the 1995 Source Awards where he publicly makes his Call to attract Tupac to say, Hey, I know you're in jail, but we're riding with you. Tupac wasn't signed there at the time, but he knew that this was an opportunity. Tupac likely needed somewhere to call a home and he called his shot. He was able to make it happen.I know everyone talks about the diddy shot about, you know, being all in the video death row. And that, of course, is infamous in its own right. But I think the number one thing that should night did is that that said. those 2 things speak to what should night is, 1, it is that muscle and the prowess of being able to overpower a situation and then take advantage.And I think those were things that he was good at. That said, I don't think he was necessarily strong as a. Business leader, the company imploded in large part. And I don't think it imploded because of Dr. Dre, it imploded because of all of the things, all the shenanigans. And I think for what he was building, some of that just got a little too close to the sun, unfortunately. And, that's Chuck Knight[00:40:49] Zack Greenburg: And, I think that, you know, in some of the reporting I've done over the years, One of the things people say is that Shug and a lot of the guys around him, you know, it wasn't that they were necessarily like that. It's just they kind of had been watching too many bad gangster movies and the music business, didn't know what to do with somebody like Suge Knight.And so the more he kind of like played this role, the more he grew into it to where, to the point where he was actually living sort of a bad gangster movie. and sort of like created, turned himself into a monster. Yeah, so I think like the evolution. or the evolution, of somebody like Suge Knight is sort of fascinating in terms of like what you can, what sort of playing a role can do to you, over the course of time.[00:41:32] Dan Runcie: Agreed. And well said number 17 here is America's most wanted ice cube. I'll start here to kick things off. I think that Ice Cube, like Queen Latifah mentioned earlier, was one of the early ones who had said that he knew that living and doing everything off a raft wasn't gonna last forever. And I think a lot of it was because he experienced some of the brunt and ugliness of it.I mean, we've all seen the Straight Outta Compton movie. He goes into Jerry Heller's office. He starts smashing shit. He releases no Vaseline. There was definitely a no fucks given that carried through even after he was done with NWA, but he saw what this industry is like as well and then that's when he starts writing screenplays.And then that's how Friday because the thing becomes a thing. And then. His career just continues to take off after that he still dabbled in rap and did his thing, but he definitely became known early on for one of the people that took a risk with cube entertainment and everything that he was able to do there.And with any of the movies that he had, whether it was the movies with Mike Epps and plenty others, I do believe that most of these movies were pretty profitable. And he was able to. Do it work within the confines that he had and just continue to build everything he did from a career. We've seen him expand as well into everything that he's done with the big 3 specifically giving a home for basketball players that can still play, but maybe they can't make, you know, a 13 person NBA roster anymore.I do think that some of his more recent news highlights that are a bit more politically driven or him walking around with Tucker Carlson and probably take it away from some of the more prominent memories of Hugh Ice Cube is, but yeah, that's why I had had him or that's why he, I think deserves to be, you know, where he is, on the list.[00:43:27] Zack Greenburg: Yeah. And I think it's interesting, you know, you see, Eminem, Suge Knight, Ice Cube, all together, you know, they're all, inextricably connected to Dr. Dre. one way or the other. Right. and you know, would there, would Dre have been Dre without the three of them? you know, at different phases of his career, you know, I don't know, I mean, I think certainly what, Ice Cube did as part of NWA, you know, I wouldn't say that, that NWA was like.like a business first organization. But like that wasn't the point of NWA and if it hadn't been for NWA, I don't think you would have been able to have business first organizations come out of hip hop in the way that you did. and certainly, you know, somebody like Dr. Dre, so. I think he gets extra points for that.and, you know, this is probably why, you know, he was again, I don't know, was he compiler? He was, you know, he had like a lot of kind of middling, a lot of lists, a couple of top 10 votes, you know? So, you know, I think again, everybody has their favorite and he's up there for a lot of folks.[00:44:27] Dan Runcie: Agreed. Number 16 is Drake. Should we poke the bear again?[00:44:33] Zack Greenburg: Yeah. Does Drake deserve to be at number 16 on this list?[00:44:37] Dan Runcie: This one surprised me, I was very surprised at the number of people that had him on the list, because you can make a case for the opposite, right? It's similar to the M and M thing, but almost to the extreme because M and M, yes, most commercially successful artists, XYZ. There's other artists that are less commercially successful at M and M that did more in that mogul definition but for Drake, it's even bigger of a Delta between these two, because here you have the most streamed artists of all time. So clearly commercially successful on its own, but people believe that OVO. Records or OVO sound itself actually could hurt an artist's career. And when you think about that, you think about some of the other multimedia things that he's done.I know he's been active as an investor and I know that people like Nicki Minaj and others have said, Oh, you know, Drake's a low key billionaire. He just doesn't want you to know it personally. Again, he may be, I mean, I'm not sure what he may not disclose, but it isn't always just about wealth. It's like, what opportunities were you able to create for each other?I do think it's good. That drink has been able to have different people that have been working alongside that. I think did get a bit of that drink stimulus package. And I think that's something that is quite debated, but I do think that. I feel like 21 Savage has definitely benefited from it. I mean, he was already commercially successful, but for him and Drake to do a joint album together was huge.I think it was the same way that it was huge for Future and the same way that the Migos going on tour with Drake in 2018 was huge for them and anything else that Drake continues to do from that perspective. So I think it is, you know, debatable, but I mean, people do definitely add some weight to the artists themselves.[00:46:18] Zack Greenburg: Yeah. And, you know, I think he should be around Eminem and whether they're both too high is an open question, but, you know, there's no doubting the commercial viability of what he's done. He did start more side businesses in Eminem, right? With OVO, whether it's the label, the festival, the clothing line, you know, he started a whiskey brand called Virginia black, which I tried once.It tasted okay. but I don't think it's selling, you know, I don't know if he's even still doing it. yeah, he is definitely involved as a startup investor, so maybe, you know, we'll see some exits and we start to think of him differently at that point. But, yeah, you know, again, I think it's, some voters just kind of overweighted, you know, musical prowess and pop culture influence.And if you're talking about that, I, I don't know anybody who's been as influential in the past 15 years. I mean, he's, you know, he's the most streamed artist of all time and that's got to count for something.[00:47:08] Dan Runcie: Right. I know his cannabis line failed, but there's a lot of people, even people that we'll get to in this list that have also had failed or struggling cannabisbusinesses. And, there's a lot that we could discuss there, but moving on number 15 is Sylvia Robinson, the originator.[00:47:26] Zack Greenburg: I think she deserves to be in the top five, personally. because if there were no Sylvia Robinson, yeah, I mean, I don't know that we have hip hop and, you know, it's, you know, for those who don't know the story, she was running sugar hill records with her husband, Joe sylvia was actually a child star singer herself.And, you know, they kind of had this like middling existence with their label. And then all of a sudden she's at this birthday party that she didn't even want to go to in Harlem and she sees Lovebug Starsky up on the microphone. A hip hop hippie to the hippie to the hip hip hop. You know, this is early, early seventies.She's never heard anything like it. All the kids, you know, hands in the air, like you just don't care. And the whole thing. she tries to get Lovebug to sign. There's some kind of dispute, like with his management, never happens. And so she just goes to the pizzeria in New Jersey, finds three kids, get him, gets them to talk real fast over this record is how she described it.and that's, you know, that's Rapper's Delight. That's the first hip hop song on Wax. That's the first hit. you know, that sort of spawns the whole genre. So, you could certainly argue, that, you know, she, borrowed or she hired, hired people who borrowed or whatever to do this, you know, like the idea that, that the first hip hop, track on wax was like, you know, originated in a pizza shop in New Jersey is really unfortunate cause it started at the Bronx, but like, you know, Sylvia came from Harlem.She, you know, she, she knew that world. Like, you know, she was part of the music business and, for better or worse, she took hip hop from being, you know, just basically like spoken word in person kind of thing to being, you know, national events. Would it have happened eventually?Yeah, I think so. But you know, who knows? I mean, it could have taken years longer and if it took years longer, you know, are we going to have the eighties with like run DMC and Def Jam and all that? Like, you know, I don't know. I mean, it, could have taken a lot longer to get off the ground if she hadn't done what she'd done.And, you know, I don't think we, I don't think we should really be dinging Sylvia Robinson for her Machiavellian tactics, given some of the other people on this list, you know, we're talking like Suge Knight and whoever else, you know, there's quite nefarious characters, you know, as we get higher up too in this list.So, you know, I don't think anything she did was. remotely as bad as, as like a lot of the dudes on this list. and, you know, so, you know, let's, I think we give her her due and yeah, I would definitely put her higher, but, you know, I think that's part of the deal when, when you have somebody who's that early on.You know, people are going to say, Oh, well, you know, the total gross is not quite as much as so and so or whatever the case may be. And she wasn't as famous as some of the artists. So, but you know, she's up there, I mean, ahead of some pretty big names, Drake, Eminem, what have you. So, I think she's getting some flowers here[00:50:00] Dan Runcie: The total gross knock is always one that makes me roll my eyes a bit because even if you take out the inflation aspect and the amount of money that's now in the industry, this is something that happens with pioneers in any type of industry. They are the ones that take the early hits to make it possible.She and her work is what made it possible for rappers to like, she and her workers have made it possible for the message and anything else that we then see after that. Yes. Sugar Hill. records did have its struggles, afterward, like many other labels. But what do you think about broader context of the eighties being a very tough time in general for black music?And there were only a certain number of decision makers in power that could make that happen. Yeah. You have to take that into account. And then additionally, she did stuff outside of even just this record label itself. As you mentioned, she was a recording artist herself. She also owned a nightclub. So there were other mogul type things that she had her hands.And so shout out to Sylvia, who knows where this would be without her.[00:51:00] Zack Greenburg: And probably worth caveating also that, you know, she did have some, Disputes over paying artists, as the years went on. So did like really a lot of people on this list is we could do like a whole separate, you know, like has some kind of dispute on how they pay artists. So, you know, that, that's probably worth noting too, but yeah, I mean, so does everybody else.And, you know, I think she deserves her flowers.[00:51:22] Dan Runcie: Number 14, Dame Dash,[00:51:25] Zack Greenburg: Another, another hot one coming in. I mean, I think a lot of people would disagree with this, but you know, some people would put them even higher. I mean, I think he might be the most polarizing name on this entire list. Like some people had on top five, you know, some people didn't list them at all.you know, I think it kind of comes in. We've had this conversation before. Would there be a Jay Z without a Damon Dash? you know, I mean, I think so, but it's that part of the, you know, we've talked about him in the context of startups and do you, you know, you need a different kind of founder for your like pre seed days than you do for your series B.you know, if you're like a mafia, family, you need like a wartime Don, you know, versus like a peacetime Don or whatever it's called. But like, you know, I think, Dame Dash is a wartime Don. He's a seed stage startup founder. and he does it fair as well. You know, when it comes to like the growth stage and the corporate boardrooms and stuff, but, you know, there's no denying his brilliance.you know, I think what he did, you know, certainly with rock aware, you know, expanding, the Roc-A-Fella empire beyond music. you know, maybe he realized that Jay was eventually going to leave and that they just, it wasn't going to be forever. And so he wanted to get his hands into, you know, as many different areas as he could, but, you know, there's like a lot of pro and a fair bit of con, but, you know, I think again, he's one who, you know, the pro outweighed the con, he didn't kill anybody, you know, so there's some people on here who did.yeah, the con is only like so much con in my opinion.[00:52:56] Dan Runcie: This conversation makes me think about, that backstage documentary that. Roc-A-Fella had put out after the hard knock life tour. And there's that infamous scene of Dave dash yelling and swearing at Kevin Lyles, who was at Def Jam at the time about the jackets and where what logo was supposed to be, or something other than that.And thinking about that in context now of like, you know, how we talked about Kevin Lyles and everything he was able to do from that run and still can continue to do. And with where Dame Dash is, is in his career, Dame Dash doing his thing. I think he very much lived through and practice and preach the ownership standards that worked for him, where he has Dame Dash Studios, Dame Dash this, and he's been able to.Create exactly what he wanted to. We heard him on that infamous 2015 breakfast club interview where he's yelling at DJ Envy and Charlemagne about, Oh, well, if your son wants a job, can you get him a job here at power 105 or whatever? No. Well, I can do him at where I'm at. And as comic as the delivery was, there is some aspect of mogul dumb.That is a bit of that King making aspect of, okay, can you create opportunities for others around you? What those opportunities look like definitely vary. And I think that is a factor. So I do highlight that is something that Dame is able to do. And Dave is also similar to he's similar to a polarizing basketball player in the sense that the media may look and be like, why do you all fuck with this guy?Like, what's going on? But if you ask the people that are actually in it, a lot of that would be like, oh, well, you got to look at Dame dash, Dame dash is the guy. And when I have. Interviewed. I'm sure you've interviewed and talked to many of young artists, too, or young label executives, too. A lot of them will reference Dave Dash.A lot of them will look at what he was able to do alongside Roc-A-Fella, almost in the same way that, you know, players will swear by Kyrie or swear by James Harden or some other type of athlete that may be polarizing in their own right. And the media is like, Oh, why do you all like this guy? And it's like, Oh, well, no, you don't understand.So there's something about. The people, and obviously I say that being self aware is us as people more so on the media side, as opposed to being in it themselves. But there's something about these young artists and moguls as well that have always looked up and respected what Dame has built. And even though it may not resonate, like, personally, I acknowledge that.[00:55:23] Zack Greenburg: I would say, if you're going to make a basketball reference, Maybe not personality, but like basketball style, I'd almost liken him to Carmelo Anthony, you know, like he's an isolationist. He's a scorer, like, you know, he may not be very good at distributing the basketball, but like, you know, you throw him the ball in the corner and he's going to find a way to get it in.And, You know, like a lot of people wouldn't think that he belongs in the Hall of Fame at all, you know, but some people would, be insistent on it. So, you know, yeah, I think that sort of like singular focus, you know, you could definitely give him credit for that,[00:55:55] Dan Runcie: Agreed. Number 13, we are Cohen.[00:55:58] Zack Greenburg: man, another like bulldozer of a human being, but, you know, certainly somebody who, you know, maybe he has also got the finger roll, you know, like he, he can have a light touch when needed. you know, I think just like in terms of longevity, we talk about longevity with some of the names on this list, you know, Leroy was there in the very beginning of hip hop, you know, managing rappers, and it gives the road manager run DMC, taking the leader
Jane Miller Hitchcock, 78, died peacefully at her Montgomery home on July 8, 2023. Jane was born on March 5, 1945, and was the youngest child of Mabel Claire Sheffield Hitchcock and Matthew C. (Jack) Hitchcock, both of whom predeceased her. Her brother, Harry C. Hitchcock, also predeceased her. Jane is survived by her Brother, Matthew H. (Jack) Hitchcock, Sr., her nieces, Gwendolyn Hitchcock (Rod) Miles and Jennifer Hitchcock (Andrew) Hadley, her nephew, Matthew H. (Tabetha) Hitchcock, Jr., her great niece, Emerson Hadley, and her great nephews, River Hadley, Reid Miles, Kevin Miles, Rick Miles, Benjamin Hitchcock and Jacob Hitchcock....Article Link
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This week the guys welcome in Kevin Miles the Boys Soccer Team. Coach also brought some players with him. Tune into another exciting episode, all this and more on this weeks From Corner2Corner!! Podcast made for everyone. Sports, Wrestling, Movies, and much much more. As the Number One Podcast out of Mount Sterling every Saturday morning that drops at 3 am your missing out if you don't listen. Hosts - Sean Kiper, Neil Payne, Wes Crouch and Adam Muncy. Cash App: fromc2cpc if you would like to help the show!! Follow and Like us on the following Social Media Platforms. https://www.tiktok.com/@fromcorner2corner?lang=en https://twitter.com/corner2cornerpc https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCQ1CVW5JlWWXRJLUWzuJc6g www.fromcorner2corner.com
The biggest leagues in Europe may have taken a break this week – but it's been a busy time for the powerbrokers shaping the future of the world's most popular sport. Are the Premier League really willing to give more money to the football pyramid? And will they apply more scrutiny to foreign owners? Plus, find out why the expansion of the European Club Association could strengthen the influence of Paris Saint-Germain and the state of Qatar. Panel: Jane Dougall, Dan Roan, Miguel Delaney, Kevin Miles, Simon Stone Producer: Sam Sheringham
Max Rushden is joined by Barry Glendenning, Nicky Bandini and Jonathan Wilson after more Champions League knockout action, plus Kevin Miles from the FSA joins to discuss the new football white paper. Help support our independent journalism at theguardian.com/footballweeklypod
Welcome to episode 100 of Student Ministry Connection, a podcast for those who serve in student ministry, want to connect, and desire to grow. On this very special episode, we talk with Kevin Miles, a veteran youth worker about the importance of networking within student ministry; celebrate by giving a bunch of prizes; and announce some ways you can support the podcast moving forward! Links mentioned during this episode: Enter our big episode 100 giveaway (until March 10, 2023) at https://bit.ly/stuminconnect100 Enter to win a copy of Know Thy Gamer (until February 28, 2023) at https://bit.ly/gamer98 Find out more about NNYM at http://nnym.org Email Kevin at kmiles@nnym.org Read Steve's blog at https://stevecullum.com Follow Steve on Twitter: @stevecullum Follow Student Ministry Connection on Instagram: @studentministryconnection Follow Student Ministry Connection on Twitter: @stuminconnect Sponsor for this episode of podcast: G Shades - https://gshades.org (Use code CONNECTION to save $20 off your next order). Save 10% on your ticket(s) to Orange Conference 2023 by going to https://bit.ly/orange23 or using the promo code STEVE10 at check-out. Get your own copy of Cards Christians Like by using the link https://bit.ly/cardschristianslike and also support Student Ministry Connection. Note: Some of the links above are affiliate links. By clicking them, Steve may receive commission to support this ministry. Subscribe on your favorite podcast app, including these listed below: Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts YouTube Podbean Spotify Amazon Podcasts Pandora TuneIn Radio If you like what you hear, be sure to like, subscribe, share, and comment! Thanks, be sure to get connected, and may God bless your ministry!
Endlich wieder Stehplätze im Europapokal! Die Südtribüne kann auch bei internationalen Spielen wieder ihre volle Wucht entfachen. Und im Gästeblock werden sich einige Fans die Augen reiben, die aus der Heimat gar keine Stehplätze gewohnt sind. Wie kam es zum Umdenken der UEFA? In dieser Folge sprechen die Moderatoren Björn Hegemann und Christoph Bökamp mit dem Leiter der Stabstelle Strategie und Kultur beim BVB, Jan-Henrik Gruszecki, und Martin Endemann von den Football Supporters Europe. Beide waren maßgeblich an der Kampagne "Europe wants to stand" beteiligt. Zusätzlich schildert Kevin Miles von der Football Supporters Association aus Newcastle, welche Rolle das neu eingeführte "safe standing" in England in diesem Kontext gespielt haben könnte.
This week we have Special guest Kevin Miles on the show to talk about all things healing. Also we bring up a couple of camp stories, and Ryan (and I) respond to last weeks take over episode. Patreon: patreon.com/philosophyotc Insta: @philosophyotc Email: philosophyotc@gmail.com Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbjm0xsEFwSKNRTtrI8E95Q Support this podcast
Adam starts off this week's episode with the latest news around the league including the most recent comment from Julio Jones. Then, he is joined by the actor who plays Jake from State Farm, Kevin Miles, who details what it's like to work with athletes such as Patrick Mahomes and Aaron Rodgers. Lastly, Adam closes the show with what he believes is the biggest story from this weekend.
Max Rushden, Barry Glendenning, Jordan Jarrett-Bryan and Philippe Auclair discuss Manchester City’s win in Paris, and Kevin Miles from the FSA joins to discuss the ESL, fan power and the social media boycott. Help support our independent journalism at theguardian.com/footballweeklypod
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We're joined by actor Kevin Miles or as you might know him Jake From State Farm. Kevin shares some on set stories with Patrick Mahomes. He also fills us in on whether he roots for Mahomes or Rodgers. Lets also take a trip back to some of the doubters who have been proven wrong and we revisit the AFC Title game against the Patriots. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
It’s the final hour on Cody and Gold of St. Patrick Mahomes day and we’re discussing his biggest foes in the NFL right now and we think back to when we knew he had a chance to be special. We get back to What’s Trending and we hear from Kevin Miles, or as you know him Jake From State Farm one more time. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Kevin Miles aka Jake from State Farm tells Dan that yes he usually wears a large or extra large; but state farm gave him a medium to do the commercial in. Justin Herbert tells Dan what the Chargers tried to do against Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
On Today's Dan Patrick Show, we're joined by an eclectic group. The MMQB's Albert Breer says Matt Stafford could be moved before the Super Bowl. Pro Football Hall of Famer Jimmy joins us to discuss who he thinks is the most talented QB of all time. Kevin Miles aka Jake from State Farm talks his rise to fame and working with Mahomes/Rodgers. And Justin Herbert tells us what he learned in his rookie season. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
Conscious entrepreneur and innovator Kevin Miles joins Kay to talk about how life as an Army brat, preacher's kid, college athlete, and Morehouse College grad informed his non-traditional views of spirituality and his drive to create economic opportunities for the Black community. Kevin Miles, MBA, is a professional entrepreneur with a passion for developing the potential hidden in human beings and in what he calls “blue ocean” markets. He is the founder and CEO of Beach Logic Ventures. Find Kevin's podcasts What Problem Are You Solving? and New Earth 2020 on your favorite podcast app. View Howard Thurman's Address "What Do You Want, Really?" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cUsG4B8VKqQ&t=318sDiscover I Am The Word by Paul Selig https://paulselig.com/books/i-am-the-word/
What if the average tenure of a youth pastor at one church was almost a decade? What if every youth pastor in your city was part of a small group of other youth pastor's in their area for camaraderie, sharing of resources, and keeping one another from burnout? Kevin Miles joins Jeff to talk about the organization they are both a part of - the National Network of Youth Ministries - and how we are truly better together.Check out how you can support Kevin on his NNYM page.
Football Supporters' Association chief executive Kevin Miles joined Ady, Al and football finance expert and all-round dude Kieran Maguire for a discussion on a manic week off the football pitch.Project Big Picture, Pay Per View, Fans' Return to Stadia, broadcasters, the Premier League, the UK Government, The Football Association of Ireland, and a small team in Finland - all up for discussion.
Mendocino Farms is the perfect example of fast casual 2.0. Committed to big footprints with beautiful designs and activities like foosball and corn hole, the Los Angeles–based brand elevated the entire fast-casual experience and built significant buzz as a result, growing to 35 locations between California and Texas, with plans to scale nationally. Then came the COVID-19 pandemic. Mendocino Farms, which was so invested in a dine-in experience, had to quickly translate that in-store identity into something that would work just as well in its off-premises channels. CEO Kevin Miles joins the podcast to talk about what that translation looked like, how it will inform Mendo's future growth plans, and why the brick-and-mortar footprint is still critical to developing a brand. Subscribe to QSR at QSRmagazine.com/subscribeQSR Magazine informationFacebook | Twitter | Instagram | LinkedInQSRmagazine.com Have feedback or interview suggestions? Email us at sam@qsrmagazine.com.
Melissa Rudd is joined by Barry Glendenning, John Nicholson and Kevin Miles from the Football Supporters Association to look at the FSA’s Sustain the Game initiative, aiming to protect football clubs. How do we ensure football clubs are better able to survive the financial stress that saw Bury go under one year ago? And have top flight clubs really missed having fans in the stadium during lockdown? Meanwhile, Sid Lowe gives us the inside story on Lionel Messi’s transfer request, and reviews last night’s win for Lyon over PSG in the Women’s Champions League.. Help support our independent journalism at theguardian.com/footballweeklypod
This episode of the Process, Preparation and Performance Podcast is our conversation with Head Coach Kevin Miles of Palmyra High School (MO). Coach Miles talks about the Palmyra vs Monroe City rivalry and his Top 3 memories of the games, his military experience in the U.S. Navy, the tragic incident involving Monroe City coach Jamar White, his time working for a funeral home (which J.R. was fascinated by) and the community of Palmyra, MO. This was an extremely fun, entertaining and emotional conversation that you will enjoy!
We are back with more My Hero! This is our second part to our season 4 review and we are joined by Actor Kevin Miles! You probably will recognize Kevin's voice cause it pops up in every commercial break ever lately. We are some real fun times recording this one hope you guys enjoy! See you next week!
A Celtic State of Mind was named as the UK's Best Football Podcast at the prestigious Football Blogging Awards.In this latest episode, Paul John Dykes chats to Kevin Miles, where they discuss:* Being the frontman of Yashin;* Travelling Europe with some of his favourite bands;* The other side of the music industry;* Writing an entry into the modern Celtic songbook;* Celtic's domination of Scottish football;* Dealing with lockdown.A Celtic State of Mind has gone from strength-to-strength over the last couple of years, and there are many more guests lined up in the weeks ahead from the world of sport, music, film, art, broadcasting, literature and politics.Connect with A Celtic State of Mind @PaulDykes, @anorthernprose and @ACSOMPOD and subscribe to the podcast via iTunes or through your podcast player.
Rangez vos sourires émerveillés par la magie, et surtout, planquez vos gosses ! Cette semaine, ça va pas être l'éruption de pop-corn et de joie, on s'enfonce dans les méandres du cinéma de genre en se tournant vers Shadowz, la première plateforme de Screaming ! Site spécialisé dans le cinéma bis. Il a été difficile de vous faire une sélection représentative, mais on a pioché dans le rare, l'oublié, le culte de niche. Images, de l'immense Robert Altman, ouvre le bal avec son thriller psychologique classieux et épuré. En suite Les Voitures Qui Ont Mangé Paris du non moins immense Peter Weir vienne exploser le tout par sa décadence et sa représentation d'une violence singulière. Pour terminer, on a choisi de partir vers le trip sous adrénaline avec 68 Kill, un road trip déjanté dont les auteurs ne se lavent pas la bouche avec du savon. Pour nous accompagner, on a récupéré David de Plopcast, remis de ses émotions depuis notre épisode sur Mubi, et notre amie Jess, grande spécialiste du cinéma bis ! Bonne écoute ! Invités : David de Plopcast, réseau de podcasts traitant de la pop-culture. Jess Lordi Temporalité de l’épisode : 13:05 Images (1972), de Robert Altman, avec Susannah York, René Auberjonois, Marcel Bozzuffi... 27:50 Les Voitures Qui Ont Mangé Paris (The Cars That Ate Paris) (1974), de Peter Weir, avec John Meillon, Terry Camilleri, Kevin Miles... 41:10 68 Kill (2017), de Trent Haaga, avec Matthew Gray Gubler, AnnaLynne McCord, Alisha Boe.... 1:01:10 les recos Blue Ruin (2013) de Jeremy Saulnier The Doom Generation (1995) de Gregg Araki Trollhunter (2010) de André Øvredal L’Économie Mondiale, Un Monstre géant (This Giant Beast That Is Global Economy), série documentaire présentée par Kal Penn et produite par Adam McKay. La Planète Sauvage (1973) de René Laloux Je Vous Salue Sarajevo (1993) de Jean-Luc Godard Black Christmas (1974) de Bob Clark Les Bonnes Manières (2017) de Marco Dutra et Juliana Rojas Jack Brooks : Tueur de Monstres (Jack Brooks : Monster Slayer) (2008) de Jon Knautz Gagner La Guerre (2009), livre de Jean-Philippe Jaworski Deathgasm (2015) de Jason Lei Howden Raging Bull (1980) de Martin Scorsese Crédits : Émission animée par Thomas Bondon, Thierry de Pinsun, Hera Laskri, et Elie Bartin. Générique original : Kostia R. Yordanoff (tous droits réservés) Retrouvez aussi Certains l’aiment à chaud sur : Facebook : @claacpodcast Instagram : @claacpodcast Twitter: @CLAACpodcast Ausha Itunes / Apple Podcast Spotify Deezer Stitcher Podmust Podcloud Podinstall
WOW. The ladies went to see Face/Off in theaters and Marta finally feels like a whole woman. Didn’t know she was missing something from her life…but then John Travolta and Nic walked into her life. Joined by Kevin Mimms, talkin craziness about this FANTASTIC chaotic movie.Instagram: @goneinNICstysecondsTwitter: @GINSpodSUBSCRIBE: Apple | Google | Spotify | Stitcher | Other
Wouldn't it be cool if a law school and a business school could collaborate on issues of legal analytics, entrepreneurial opportunities in the law, and collaboration between the university and the local business and law firm industries? We talk with a couple of professors at Georgia Statue University (GSU) who are turning this 'cool idea' and making it a reality. Anne Tucker, Professor of Law, Legal Analytics & Innovation Initiative, and Ben Chapman, Executive Director, Legal Analytics and Innovation Initiative join us to discuss the details behind The Institute for Insight at GSU. The Institute brings together professors from different backgrounds of Engineering, Computer Science, and Statistics and with this type of cross-pollination with business and law, the professors are looking at applied analytics questions and bringing in their own unique skill sets to understand and solve these issues. This mashup of law, business, data science, risk management, statistics and more isn't a purely academic endeavor for the Institute. Following in the tradition of GSU being an urban school, the Institute works with well known players in the Atlanta business and legal community to put the ideas into real-world situations. This gives the Institute's professors and students the opportunity to work side-by-side with the business and legal leaders to help identify, study, analyze, and potentially solve issues facing the business and legal industry. This is one of the many values which Tucker and Chapman see for not just preparing students for the practice of law, but also for the business of law. Information Inspirations While Greg was busy playing guitar in his law firm's band, Marlene was speaking at the DLaw Summit in NYC last week. Competitive Intelligence guru, Kevin Miles from Norton Rose Fulbright gives us some nice checklists on different CI topics along with some templates designed in MS Word to help start you on the CI path at your law firm. The Financial Times came out with a 15 article report on the legal industry ranging from top legal business technologists, to the Big-Four's advancement in the legal industry, to both the promise, and the overwhelming nature of understanding legal tech processes. We hope that Google still follows the "Don't Be Evil" rule because they are now touting success in the Quantum Computing area. Google recently announce that its new Quantum Computer can computerate complex data in less than 3 minutes what it would take current supercomputers 10,000 years to do. We guess it's not a good or bad thing, but the future is definitely upon us. Northwestern Law's Daniel Rodriguez, and Legal Mosaic's Mark Cohen have a lengthy discussion on how to advance today's law school's teaching into the 21st Century. It's a great conversation. Listen, Subscribe, Comment Subscribe, rate, and comment on The Geek In Review on your favorite podcast platform.
Max Rushden, Barry Glendenning, Barney Ronay, Troy Townsend, Musa Okwonga, Elliot Ross and Kevin Miles come together to discuss the racist incidents during England’s 6-0 win in Bulgaria and to explore whether the response on and off the pitch is a watershed moment. Help support our independent journalism at theguardian.com/footballweeklypod
Full recording from Newcastle Labour Club on a night which featured key speakers Chi Onwurah MP, Ian Mearns MP and Kevin Miles from the FSF.
The Cars That Ate Paris (1973). Written and directed by Peter Weir. Starring Terry Camilleri, John Meillon, Bruce Spence, Chris Haywood, Max Phipps and Kevin Miles. The gang continue to ponder the nature of Ozploitation. Then, for tonight’s feature presentation, they watch the shy and awkward Arthur ‘invited’ to the strange small town of Paris, New South Wales. The Cars That Ate Paris at IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0071282/ The Cars That Ate Paris on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/au/movie/the-cars-that-ate-paris/id1297960408 Theme music by KeiloKaz: http://freemusicarchive.org/music/KieLoKaz/Jazzy_Lazy Additional music by AShamalueVmusic: https://www.ashamaluevmusic.com/ The Projection Booth #311 - The Cars That Ate Paris: http://www.projectionboothpodcast.com/2017/02/episode-311-cars-that-ate-paris.html (Apologies: there were some issues with Daria's microphone during this recording. Please bear with us.)
Co-founder of Proud Seagulls, Stuart came into the studio to chew over the fat with Al about the Spurs games, VAR, referees, train tickets, homophobia in men's football, Brighton Pride and much more. Meanwhile, Al chatted to Football Supporters' Federation Chief Executive Kevin Miles about the issues the organisation is taking up with the Premier League in two weeks' time.
The Louisville Cycling Podcast is dedicated to celebrating the people, rides, and events that make Louisville and the surrounding area a great place to be a cyclist! Today's Episode Episode 10 features Kevin Miles. Kevin is a bike mechanic and employee at Clarksville Schwinn in Clarksville, IN. Want to know how to maintain your drive train or keep from annoying your neighborhood mechanic? Kevin discusses that and more! Visit Clarksville Schwinn in person at 111 W. Lewis and Clark Parkway in Clarksville, Indiana or check out their newly revised website at www.clarksvilleschwinn.com. Either way you'll find a bargain and great service! Sponsorship The Louisville Cycling Podcast is sponsored by United Financial Group (UFG). If you or someone you know is considering a new home purchase or refinancing of a current home, there's no better group to work with than Team UFG. With UFG, get great rates and loan packages that fit your individual circumstances. You'll find no one with a bigger commitment to service and relationships, AND you'll close smoothly and on time. E-mail barry@ufglending.com and get pre-approved as soon as you start thinking about a purchase or refinance. Mention this podcast and get a $750 credit toward any closing costs as well! Nmls# 1582330 The Louisville Cycling Podcast Contact Information I would love to hear your feedback and comments. You can contact me at the following e-mail address: louisvillecycling@gmail.com You can also call or text to 502-593-4497 Social Media: Instagram: @louisvillecyclingpodcast Twitter: @lvillecycling
Show Notes On this Episode of Comeback hosts Nicholas West and Kelly Hammonds will have a Memorial to Kevin Miles, with Tony Luzio and Lori Davis. During the call we had a slight technical issue with our recorder that could not be corrected. Instead of doing a new interview we decided to use it anyways due to the genuineness of the phone call. Kelly and Nick will also discuss the previous episode of Comeback and what they have learned so far. We also have some news update on details in the Brian Shaffer case as well as a spoiler segment for upcoming episodes. You can find Comeback on our newly redesigned website at www.comebackpodcast.com We have new features such as a blog and a discussion board. You can also listen to all of our episodes and keep up on the latest news. We will be adding a timeline of Brian’s disappearance as well as pictures from the Ugly Tuna Saloona. Also on the website are links to our newly created Patreon and PayPal accounts. Comeback now has a Patreon Page with reward tiers. If you like our podcast and would like to help us record weekly episodes and upgrade our equipment please join our rewards today. All the money donated will be used to produce weekly episodes, purchase new equipment, and to raise awareness for Missing Persons. Our Patreon can be found at www.patreon.com/comeback We are on Twitter @podcastcomeback And you can find us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/FindBrianShaffer/ Don’t forget to join our Comeback Group Page on Facebook to discuss the case with us. Please sign our petition at https://www.change.org/p/the-president-of-central-ohio-crime-stoppers-for-crime-stoppers-of-central-ohio-to-honor-brian-shaffer-s-25-500-reward-for-1-year?recruiter=505437551&utm_source=share_petition&utm_medium=copylink&utm_campaign=share_petition For Central Ohio Crime Stoppers to honor Brian’s privately funded Reward for 1 year. You can listen to Comeback on iTunes, Google Play, Podbean, Stitcher, and many of the listening sites you enjoy. Remember to subscribe to our channel and leave us a review. If you like our podcast and the awareness we are raising please give us 5 Stars.
This debut episode of Comeback. In this episode host Nicholas West and Kelly Hammonds begin Thier investigation on the disappearence of Brian Shaffer by speaking with people closet to the case. We begin with close friend to Randy Shaffer and missing person advocate Lori Davis. Tim Shaffer, Brian's uncle and Randy's brother. Kevin Miles, Ex President of central Ohio Crime Stoppers and another close friend to Brian's father. Tune in all season while we attempt to speak to everyone close to this case and dig in deep to answer the questions that remain out there that puzzle's all of us. Join our discussion on FB by searching comeback, Twitter @PodcastComback. Also please sign the petition to have CrimeStoppers honor Brian's reward.
A Celtic State of Mind presents its 24th instalment of insightful discussion into the culture of Celtic Football Club, the city of Glasgow, and fans of the reigning invincible Scottish champions.In the first 'A Celtic State of Mind: In Session' show, Paul John Dykes and Kevin Graham are joined by former Yashin frontman, Kevin Miles.Kevin is supporting the Celtic Foundation's Christmas Campaign by releasing a charity single, 'Celtic, My Heart and My Soul', and he joined The CQN Podcast at The Tolbooth Studio in Stirling to play an exclusive acoustic rendition of his magnificent ballad.As well as playing a further three tracks, Kevin also speaks of his passion for Celtic Football Club, and explains why he wanted to support the Foundation this year.The CQN Podcast has gone from strength-to-strength over the last few months, and there are many more guests lined up in the months ahead from the world of sport, music, film, art, broadcasting, literature and politics.Connect with A Celtic State of Mind @PaulDykes, @anorthernprose and @CQNMagazine and subscribe to the podcast via iTunes or through your podcast player.
Retired agent Kevin Miles served 23 years with the FBI. As the FBI’s first officially assigned full-time Special Agent bomb technician (SABT), he spent more than 17 years acquiring extensive experience in the field of improvised explosive devices and post-blast investigations. In this episode of FBI Retired Case File Review, Kevin Miles reviews the duties of a post blast bomb technician processing and investigating explosive crime scenes, the bombing of Khobar Towers, Saudi Arabia in 1996, and the Maldives Al-Qaeda bombing in 2007. Kevin Miles is a past Executive Director of the International Association of Bomb Technicians and Investigators. He has travelled to 65 countries and 48 states, including multiple deployments to high threat areas such as Afghanistan and Pakistan, and has taught more than 9,000 students from all over the world on the intricacies involved with bombing investigations. In 2010, he was named as an FBI Master Special Agent Bomb Technician. He has published numerous articles and research papers on the topics above and has received numerous awards for his service to the first responder community. Currently, he is a lecturer at Eastern Kentucky University’s School of Safety, Security, and Emergency Management.
Bumper podcast this week. Index with timings of each section listed below. The Brentford team head to Newcastle this weekend - with 3000 Bees fans in tow - hoping to frustrate Newcastle and take at least one point - if not three - back South with them Fresh back from the international break, Brentford are hoping that our lack of international action may give us the advantage over our Tyneside Rivals. The Beesotted crew got together in the White Hart pub in Southwark with a plethora of things to discuss including views from Aston Villa, Newcastle and Norwich fans on how they are dealing with the drop to the Championship. Plus in light of the fact that Brentford fans will be placed in The Gods, we discuss atmosphere at football matches and follow up on last week's hilarious podcast where we recalled terrace songs of old (http://bit.ly/2dGy7fa). We chat to ex Brentford and Newcastle striker Joe Allon - who tells us about his time at Brentford and gives us the tune which reminds him of Brentford the most in our #HangTheBeeJay feature We discuss forthcoming The Beesotted Social Club - a series of live events in a decent pub near you .. bringing Bees fans together with the Beesotted crew providing the entertainment on the night - Live Music. Comedy. DJs. Ex Player Appearances. Food. Drink. You can subscribe to The Beesotted Social here - http://bit.ly/2dOKAQ4 Plus we chat to Newcastle fan Kevin Miles on his thoughts on the big match at the weekend. Timings: 0m - Intro 8m 26 sec - Kevin Miles (Newcastle), Jake Reeves (Talk Norwich City - Norwich) and Ryan Pitcher (The Heart Of Holt - Aston Villa) tell us how their teams are coping with life in The Championship 23m 26 sec - Beesotted crew chat Relegated Premier League teams - and do they really have a handle on life in the lower leagues? 40m 24 sec - Ex Brentford and Newcastle Striker Joe Allon tells is about life at Brentford and gives us the track that most reminds him of his time at the Bees 53m 37 sec - With Brentford being put up in the gods at Newcastle we discuss atmosphere, songs and away support - with Fulham and QPR only averaging just over 500 fans per match in their 1st 5 away matches (as opposed to Brentford who were just under 1000) 1hr 08 mins - The Beesotted Social Club - a series of live events coming to a pub near you. First day - Wed 2nd Nov in Brentford 1hr 24 min 33 sec - Interview with Kevin Miles from Newcastle on the big match on Saturday 1hr 38 min 29 sec - Beesotted crew chat Newcastle 1hr 47 mins 26 sec - END Sign up to get info on the Beesotted Socials (Music, Legends, Entertainment, Food, Drink plus more. Terry Evans, Ijah Anderson and Marcus Gayle penned in for our very first event. You can subscribe to The Beesotted Social here - http://bit.ly/2dOKAQ4 Wed 2nd Nov - the first social Fri 16th Dec - Xmas party Bank holiday Sun 30th Apr - end of season party In the pub: Billy Grant Dave Lane Liberal Nick Matt The Allard Relegated clubs interview: Ryan Pither - Heart of The Holt Aston Villa Blog Jake Reeve - Talk Norwich City Kevin Miles - Football Supporters Federation CEO talking strictly with his Newcastle Supporter hat on
Dr. Chris and his cohosts -- Fr. Andrew Dickinson, Renee Leach, Emily Hoffmann and Kevin Miles -- celebrate the 250th episode of Ignition by talking about their involvement in the show and about their own faith as Catholics The post https://www.sfcatholic.org/ignition-episode-250-why-are-you-catholic/ (Ignition Episode #250: Why Are You Catholic?) appeared first on https://www.sfcatholic.org (Catholic Diocese of Sioux Falls).
Dr. Chris and his cohosts -- Fr. Andrew Dickinson, Renee Leach, Emily Hoffmann and Kevin Miles -- celebrate the 250th episode of Ignition by talking about their involvement in the show and about their own faith as Catholics
Dr. Chris and guest cohost Kevin Miles discuss missionary activity and what it means to be a lay missionary today The post https://www.sfcatholic.org/ignition-episode-222-go-and-make-disciples/ (Ignition Episode #222: Go and Make Disciples…) appeared first on https://www.sfcatholic.org (Catholic Diocese of Sioux Falls).
Dr. Chris and guest cohost Kevin Miles discuss missionary activity and what it means to be a lay missionary today
Dr. Chris and guest cohost Kevin Miles take a closer look at the latest Avengers movie and some of its themes The post https://www.sfcatholic.org/ignition-episode-221-avengers-age-of-ultron-what-did-you-see/ (Ignition Episode #221: Avengers, Age of Ultron: What Did You See?) appeared first on https://www.sfcatholic.org (Catholic Diocese of Sioux Falls).
Dr. Chris and guest cohost Kevin Miles take a closer look at the latest Avengers movie and some of its themes
And this is part two of our travelling fans special. Kevin Miles, CEO of @The_FSF has run England Fan Embassies going all the way back to Italia 90, we talk to him about his work, the aims, benefits and logistics of this grand endeavour, put together to serve the travelling fan abroad. We also chat to committed #MUFC Steve Armstrong @sarm0161 (who also writes for the long running United We Stand fanzine) about the privilege of following Utd around not just Europe, but all over the world. A journey that first began in Eindhoven in 1984… ...when he was 13. Presented by @_ChrisDixon_ @OneEyeGrey and @sendvictorious
Dr. Chris and guest cohosts Renee Leach and Kevin Miles discuss the role of Catholic Christian faith in living a life full of passion, peace and purpose The post https://www.sfcatholic.org/ignition-episode-196-living-your-life-with-passion-peace-and-purpose/ (Ignition Episode #196: Living Your Life with Passion, Peace and Purpose) appeared first on https://www.sfcatholic.org (Catholic Diocese of Sioux Falls).
Dr. Chris and guest cohosts Renee Leach and Kevin Miles discuss the role of Catholic Christian faith in living a life full of passion, peace and purpose
Dr. Chris and guest co-hosts Renee Leach and Kevin Miles discuss the Acts of the Apostles and what the events of the early Church can mean for us in the twenty-first century The post https://www.sfcatholic.org/ignition-episode-179-the-acts-of-the-apostles/ (Ignition Episode #179: The Acts of the Apostles) appeared first on https://www.sfcatholic.org (Catholic Diocese of Sioux Falls).
Dr. Chris and guest co-hosts Renee Leach and Kevin Miles discuss the Acts of the Apostles and what the events of the early Church can mean for us in the twenty-first century
Dr. Chris and guest cohost Kevin Miles discuss Pope Francis' call that Catholics ask the Holy Spirit for the grace to be annoying The post https://www.sfcatholic.org/ignition-episode-135-how-to-become-an-annoying-catholic-in-eight-easy-steps/ (Ignition Episode #135: How to Become an Annoying Catholic (in Eight Easy Steps)) appeared first on https://www.sfcatholic.org (Catholic Diocese of Sioux Falls).
Dr. Chris and guest cohost Kevin Miles discuss Pope Francis' call that Catholics ask the Holy Spirit for the grace to be annoying
Dr. Chris and guest cohosts Renee Leach and Kevin Miles discuss the conclave to elect the next pope and the events leading up to it The post https://www.sfcatholic.org/ignition-episode-127-conclave-conversations/ (Ignition Episode #127: Conclave Conversations) appeared first on https://www.sfcatholic.org (Catholic Diocese of Sioux Falls).
Dr. Chris and guest cohosts Renee Leach and Kevin Miles discuss the conclave to elect the next pope and the events leading up to it
Dr. Chris and guest co-hosts Renee Leach and Kevin Miles discuss corruption and scandal in the Church and how to respond to it as faithful Catholics The post https://www.sfcatholic.org/prc-episode-98-did-the-butler-do-it-corruption-in-the-church/ (PRC Episode #98: Did the Butler Do It? Corruption in the Church) appeared first on https://www.sfcatholic.org (Catholic Diocese of Sioux Falls).
Dr. Chris and guest co-hosts Renee Leach and Kevin Miles discuss corruption and scandal in the Church and how to respond to it as faithful Catholics
Dr. Chris and guest co-hosts Renee Leach and Kevin Miles discuss the difference between being a practicing Catholic and an intentional Catholic The post https://www.sfcatholic.org/prc-episode-96-practicing-or-intentional/ (PRC Episode #96: Practicing or Intentional?) appeared first on https://www.sfcatholic.org (Catholic Diocese of Sioux Falls).
Dr. Chris and guest co-hosts Renee Leach and Kevin Miles discuss the difference between being a practicing Catholic and an intentional Catholic
Dr. Chris and guest co-hosts Renee Leach and Kevin Miles discuss Holy Week and the pinnacle of the Church year, the Sacred Triduum The post https://www.sfcatholic.org/prc-episode-91-tridium-triduum-whatever/ (PRC Episode #91: Tridium, Triduum… Whatever!) appeared first on https://www.sfcatholic.org (Catholic Diocese of Sioux Falls).
Dr. Chris and guest co-hosts Renee Leach and Kevin Miles discuss Holy Week and the pinnacle of the Church year, the Sacred Triduum
Dr. Chris and guest co-hosts Renee Leach and Kevin Miles discuss Catholic culture - what it is and how to build it The post https://www.sfcatholic.org/prc-episode-89-building-a-catholic-culture/ (PRC Episode #89: Building a Catholic Culture) appeared first on https://www.sfcatholic.org (Catholic Diocese of Sioux Falls).
Dr. Chris and guest co-hosts Renee Leach and Kevin Miles discuss Catholic culture - what it is and how to build it
Dr. Chris and guest co-hosts Renee Leach and Kevin Miles discuss some of the difficulties and struggles people face in being or become Catholic The post https://www.sfcatholic.org/prc-episode-86-struggles-and-obstacles-difficulties-in-being-catholic/ (PRC Episode #86: Struggles and Obstacles: Difficulties in Being Catholic) appeared first on https://www.sfcatholic.org (Catholic Diocese of Sioux Falls).
Dr. Chris and guest co-hosts Renee Leach and Kevin Miles discuss some of the difficulties and struggles people face in being or become Catholic
Dr. Chris and guest co-hosts Renee Leach and Kevin Miles talk about Pope Benedict's message for World Youth Day and its important for all of us The post https://www.sfcatholic.org/prc-episode-61-planted-and-built-up-in-jesus-christ-pope-benedicts-message-for-youth-and-all-of-us/ (PRC Episode #61: Planted And Built Up in Jesus Christ: Pope Benedict’s Message for Youth and All of Us) appeared first on https://www.sfcatholic.org (Catholic Diocese of Sioux Falls).
Dr. Chris and guest co-hosts Renee Leach and Kevin Miles talk about Pope Benedict's message for World Youth Day and its important for all of us
Dr. Chris and guest co-hosts Renee Leach and Kevin Miles discuss Catholics' struggles with evangelizing The post https://www.sfcatholic.org/prc-episode-43-salesmen-needed-apply-within/ (PRC Episode #43: Salesmen needed… Apply Within) appeared first on https://www.sfcatholic.org (Catholic Diocese of Sioux Falls).
Dr. Chris and guest co-hosts Renee Leach and Kevin Miles discuss Catholics' struggles with evangelizing
Dr. Chris and guest co-hosts Kevin Miles and Renee Leach talk about the importance and value of lifelong faith formation The post https://www.sfcatholic.org/prc-episode-39-catechesis-the-neverending-story/ (PRC Episode #39: Catechesis: The NeverEnding Story) appeared first on https://www.sfcatholic.org (Catholic Diocese of Sioux Falls).
Dr. Chris and guest co-hosts Kevin Miles and Renee Leach talk about the importance and value of lifelong faith formation
Dr. Chris and guest co-hosts Kevin Miles and Renee Leach talk about where and how they find God in the ordinariness of life The post https://www.sfcatholic.org/prc-episode-37-finding-god-in-ordinary-time/ (PRC Episode #37: Finding God in Ordinary Time) appeared first on https://www.sfcatholic.org (Catholic Diocese of Sioux Falls).
Dr. Chris and guest co-hosts Kevin Miles and Renee Leach talk about where and how they find God in the ordinariness of life
Dr. Chris and guest host Kevin Miles talk about the Catholic meaning of Stewardship The post https://www.sfcatholic.org/prc-episode-25-this-aint-your-grandfathers-stewardship/ (PRC Episode #25: This Ain’t Your Grandfather’s Stewardship) appeared first on https://www.sfcatholic.org (Catholic Diocese of Sioux Falls).
Dr. Chris and guest host Kevin Miles talk about the Catholic meaning of Stewardship