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Aaron Wexler is an American beach volleyball coach, former indoor and beach standout, and the author of "The Inspired Athlete." He is a former player and assistant women's volleyball coach at UCLA (2001 champs). He was an active player on the AVP scene and is currently the program director of West Coast Volleyball. 02:35 - Lambourne and Patterson, and the magic they put together, appreciating the appreciation 07:05 - The Huntington Heritage series, 3 things we liked and 3 things we would like to see, my "down period" and how I came back from it, plus, spouses save all, and players who came to flat out ball 18:11 - the authenticity of Evan Cory and the fans who take their journey with him, communications between the AVP and the fans and the variables many do not see, understanding technology from an enthusiast perspective 30:47 - Revenue-sharing, passion vs opportunism and how two things can be true at the same time, persistency is victory, praise to the photographers, having a pulse on regional support 41:48 - The value of having a league, the upward movement of revenue sharing, if the male elite players keep their promises, then we will keep ours, players have done well promoting themselves, Kiraly tears down the net video 57:45 - The power of the antagonist, and how it plays its part in sports, drama sells, historically, fans know if a personality comes from an authentic place 1:11:02 - Jason Olive insisted I talk to him, so we called him, also, taking comments from the live chat, the fans caring about the characters 1:32:31 - Dana White's journey with the UFC, the red to the black, do not manufacture villains, let it happen on its own, loving the AVP taking big chances, great sponsor opportunities 1:51:01 - For me to care, I have a short list, the Crabbs and the journey they allow us to take with them, Taylor Crabb's MBO journey to the finals and "the moment" 2:11:52 - Franchising the league teams, should there be a draft 2:25:10 - Top 5 domestic female players, male domestic players
Step inside the mind of volleyball royalty as Karch Kiraly—widely considered the greatest volleyball player ever—reveals the hidden forces behind his extraordinary success. From beach dominance to Olympic gold, Kiraly pulls back the curtain on the mental battlefield where champions are truly made. The volleyball icon shares his most private techniques for mastering the voice inside your head—the same mental strategies that helped him perform flawlessly when millions were watching. Kiraly's journey from player to coach unfolds with surprising revelations about what truly matters in youth sports (hint: it's not what most parents think). His candid reflections on parenting, failure, and personal evolution offer a masterclass in how the lessons from elite athletics translate into exceptional living. This isn't just a conversation about volleyball—it's a roadmap for anyone seeking to perform at their highest level, whether on the court or in life's most challenging moments. SPONSORS STEMREGEN Sport: Reduced soreness, better recovery, and real support for my body's natural repair process. Go to Stemregen.co and use code GABBY20 for 20% off CHAPTERS 00:00 The Early Years: Foundations of a Champion 02:47 Mastering Mindset: The Key to Success 05:59 The Role of Team Dynamics in Performance 08:56 Overcoming Challenges: The Power of Resilience 12:03 The Influence of Coaching and Parenting 14:48 Navigating Pressure: Expectations vs. Reality 18:01 The Importance of Self-Talk and Mental Cues 21:11 Life Lessons from Sports: Parenting and Beyond 38:40 Exploring New Sports and Life Lessons 41:03 The Role of Parents in Youth Sports 42:33 The Importance of Variety in Sports 45:53 Coaching Through Challenges 49:10 Transitioning from Player to Coach 51:59 The Evolution of Volleyball and Personal Growth 01:01:03 The Journey from Player to Analyst 01:06:55 Coaching Philosophy and Life Lessons 01:11:54 The Rewarding Experience of Coaching 01:17:33 Coaching to Inspire: Balancing Performance and Burnout 01:21:45 The Longevity of an Athlete: Secrets to Sustaining Performance 01:26:21 Transitioning from Athlete to Coach: Navigating Identity and Purpose 01:30:43 Coaching Men vs. Women: Understanding Different Dynamics 01:44:06 Modern Challenges for Athletes: Navigating Pressure and Specialization For more Gabby: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/gabbyreece/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@gabbyreeceofficial The Gabby Reece Show Podcast on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCeEINLNlGvIceFOP7aAZk5A KEYWORDS Karch Kiraly, volleyball, mindset, teamwork, resilience, coaching, parenting, pressure, self-talk, sports psychology, youth sports, coaching, volleyball, parenting, athlete development, sports variety, coaching philosophy, Olympic success, personal growth, sports challenges, coaching, athlete longevity, volleyball, burnout, transition, gender dynamics, modern athletes, performance, hydration, identity Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This week, Ira spoke with Andrew Kiraly, founder and publisher of TheList.Vegas. In this episode of “Talk About Las Vegas With Ira,” Andrew talks about his long career in journalism in Las Vegas; the importance of arts and culture entertainment; providing events information in a timely matter; deciding to become an independent publisher; why it's fun and scary at the same time; the blessings of online publishing (“you can always fix it”); how TheList.com started out as solely a website, then changed to an all newsletter format; how he sees the new format as being invited into his readers' living rooms; “the cheese” part of the newsletter; why the grind is also a joy; and why culture off the Strip is underrated. (Also Watch Full Podcast Video)
SITES INTERNET : https://www.sarment.eu.com/ https://www.adi-france.fr/
SITES INTERNET : https://www.sarment.eu.com/ https://www.adi-france.fr/
Episode 2 of Season 13 on the Social Change Career Podcast features Dominic Kiraly, Director of Online and In-person Training at the United States Institute of Peace. He shares his journey from initial job search challenges to becoming a leading expert in education, training, and instructional design, highlighting the transformative power of unique skill sets and continuous learning. Why Take a Listen: - Navigating Career Transitions with Tech and Training Expertise: Discover how Dominic overcame initial career discouragement and leveraged opportunities at University for Peace to build a distinctive profile in distance learning, instructional design, and technical skills. Learn about his insights into aligning passion with marketable skills. - The Role of Non-Traditional Learning Paths: Gain valuable advice on the merits of online learning platforms like Coursera and the impact of specialized education and training tailored to career goals. Understand how Dominic's work including developing and leading USIP's Gandhi King Global Academy which offers globally accessible and scalable peacebuilding education. - Proactivity, Skill Proficiency, and AI in Career Development: Learn Dominic's practical tips for emerging professionals, including the significance of being proactive in job roles, developing strong applied skills and becoming fluent in AI for impact, and maintaining resilience and self-care to manage burnout and thrive in evolving career landscapes. Recommended Resources: Books: How to Know a Person: The Art of Seeing Others Deeply and Being Deeply Seen by David Brooks Learn More Online Learning Platforms: LinkedIn Learning Coursera edX MasterClass Courses from University for Peace (UPEACE), UNITAR, and United Nations System Staff College (UNSSC) Academies and Programs: USIP Gandhi-King Global Academy Social Change Career Podcast: Don't miss out on the wealth of knowledge shared in the 150+ episodes of our award-winning Social Change Career Podcast. Whether you're into finance, peacekeeping, humanitarian relief, technology, or advocacy, there's a story to spark your interest and passion. Bio: Dominic Kiraly pioneered an online training academy at the United States Institute of Peace. The academy has now become a premier training hub for civil society leaders, humanitarian workers, and foreign government officials worldwide working to prevent and manage violent conflicts. Over 130,000 practitioners have been trained worldwide and the learning community continues to expand rapidly to meet their needs and demands for more topics, languages, and different hybrid training modalities. Kiraly earned a master's in business administration in international economic development from Eastern University and a master's in international law and human rights from UPEACE in Costa Rica. He also completed coursework towards a doctorate in international politics at the University of Wales, Aberystwyth. Stay informed on PCDN and the podcast by signing up for our Free Weekly Impact Newsletter https://pcdn-impact.beehiiv.com/
Join us on iLLANOiZE Radio as Bekoe and PrettyRiot dive deep with Kiraly Payne! In this exclusive interview, Kiraly shares the fascinating story behind his unique name and the creative process behind his latest Album, "4 1 7." Plus, discover how his love for anime influences his music and life. Watch On YouTube https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL6L132q5UTcskJGyMsAQav4Nk9_K-7lN7 ---Connect With Us On Social Media ----- Instagram: www.instagram.com/illanoizeradio Twitter: https://twitter.com/illanoizeradio Facebook: www.facebook.com/illanoizeradio
Healing Through Harmony: Kiraly Payne on Music as Therapy, Competitive Drive, and New Album '417 In this episode of The Fresh Flowers Podcast, we sit down with the multifaceted Kiraly Payne, an artist whose music transcends mere entertainment to become a powerful tool for healing and motivation. Join us as Kiraly delves into the transformative power of music as therapy, sharing personal stories and insights on how melodies and rhythms have helped him and others cope with life's challenges. Discover how Kiraly's competitive spirit fuels his passion for music, pushing him to continually refine his craft and explore new creative horizons. We also get an exclusive look into the making of his highly anticipated new album, '417'. Kiraly discusses the inspirations behind the tracks, the creative process, and what fans can expect from this latest project. The Fresh Flowers Podcast is a platform where artists and music lovers come together to celebrate and appreciate Chicago's artistry and talent. Each episode brings you engaging conversations, exclusive interviews, and insightful discussions that showcase the diverse sounds and styles of the city's underground scene. Stay tuned to discover the stories behind the art, gain unique perspectives from industry insiders, and explore the exciting collaborations that shape the Chicago creative landscape. Don't miss out on our enlightening conversations with talented creatives. Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/tgf-project-podcast/id1435114130 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/1jaqB6RKffpzCvKHOC84GE?si=8UzvJTSgSHaI-tXn1RFLRg Subscribe to The Ghetto Flower on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_LSl0OB8zzkL-dJ3ZKqDvA Check out more of The Ghetto Flower here: https://www.theghettoflower.com https://www.twitter.com/TheGhettoFlower https://www.instagram.com/TheGhettoFlower The Ghetto Flower was founded in 2017. It is a leading online publication and marketing agency that dives deep into the underground arts surrounding them. On The Ghetto Flower, you'll find the latest in music news, in-depth interviews, and up-to-date content marketing focused on the subculture niche. Michael “Trill” Tayo instagram.com/trilltayo twitter.com/trilltayo Quinton “Q” Coleman instagram.com/qguapo_ twitter.com/iGot_That_Kudi --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/theghettoflower/message
This week on “At Home with Mark” we have Scott Kiraly from BMF Effects! I met Scott while wandering the floor at NAMM this year and was immediately impressed with his pedal lineup and generosity with his time. He's been building pedals for almost two decades and is a wealth of knowledge when it comes to harnessing great tone. I cannot wait to sit down and chat with this amazing human, you won't want to miss this one! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Kevin Kiraly is one of the most influential riders of our lifetime and he's been through the ups and downs of life like a lot of us have, myself included. So good to catch up with him and hear his story. Where he's been where he's goin and how he got here. So stoked to see him happy and healthy and back on the horse. Hope you enjoy this episode. Follow him on IG https://www.instagram.com/_kiraly Follow me https://www.instagram.com/bobbykanode Kanode Knows is brought to you by DIGBMX. www.digbmx.com Get your health right - rawrlife.com promo code "Kanode" for 15% off! See you next week nerds.
Join me on another amazing international episode where my dear friend and fellow team mate on The Voice and the winner of Hungary's largest vocal competition Megasztár, Viktor Kiraly joins me as we talk about singing, performing on the voice, dealing with criticisms, embracing your fears as an artist and the power of collaborations that has helped him land 65 million views on his last release. Viktor has made an incredible name for himself as an entertainer, creative, vocalist, host, entrepreneur and so much more. If you're looking to make it on TV, build a brand identity and learn how to embrace your fears then this is one episode that you want to lean into.
Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2023.04.20.537629v1?rss=1 Authors: Jasz, A., Biro, L., Buday, Z., Kiraly, B., Szalardy, O., Horvath, K., Komlosi, G., Bodizs, R., Kovacs, K. J., Diana, M. A., Hangya, B., Acsady, L. Abstract: Traumatic events can immediately lead to debilitating symptoms collectively called Acute Stress Disorder (ASD), however the mechanisms of ASD are poorly understood. Using a rodent model of ASD here we identify a crucial communication bottleneck between the brainstem and the forebrain, the calretinin-positive neurons in the paraventricular thalamus (PVT/CR+), that controls ASD. We show that following a single acute stress event, the pre-sleep behavior of the mice is altered for several days in parallel with a persistent increase in the firing rate of PVT/CR+ cells. Optogenetic inhibition of PVT/CR+ neuronal activity after the stress event for one hour was sufficient to rescue both the ASD symptoms and the prolonged increase in PVT/CR+ firing rate. Inhibition applied 5 days later was still able to ameliorate some of the symptoms. These data suggest that post-stress activity of PVT/CR+ neurons play a critical role in mediating the acute forms of stress-related affective dysfunctions. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info Podcast created by Paper Player, LLC
Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2023.03.22.533834v1?rss=1 Authors: Meckel, K. R., Simpson, S., Godino, A., Peck, E. G., George, O., Calipari, E. S., Hofford, R. S., Kiraly, D. Abstract: Cocaine use disorder represents a public health crisis with no FDA-approved medications for its treatment. A growing body of research has detailed the important connections between the brain and the resident population of bacteria in the gut, the gut microbiome in psychiatric disease models. Acute depletion of gut bacteria results in enhanced reward in a mouse cocaine place preference model, and repletion of bacterially-derived short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) metabolites reverses this effect. However, the role of the gut microbiome and its metabolites in modulating cocaine-seeking behavior after prolonged abstinence is unknown. Given that relapse prevention is the most clinically challenging issue in treating substance use disorders, studies examining the effects of microbiome manipulations in relapse-relevant models are critical. Here, Sprague-Dawley rats received either untreated water or antibiotics to deplete the gut microbiome and its metabolites. Rats were trained to self-administer cocaine and subjected to either within-session threshold testing to evaluate motivation for cocaine or 21 days of abstinence followed by a cue-induced cocaine-seeking task to model relapse behavior. Microbiome depletion did not affect cocaine acquisition on an FR1 schedule. However, microbiome-depleted subjects exhibited significantly enhanced motivation for low dose cocaine on a within-session threshold task. Similarly, microbiome depletion increased cue-induced cocaine-seeking following prolonged abstinence. In the absence of a normal microbiome, repletion of bacterially-derived SCFA metabolites reversed the behavioral and transcriptional changes associated with microbiome depletion. These findings suggest that gut bacteria, via their metabolites, are key regulators of drug-seeking behaviors, positioning the microbiome as a potential translational research target. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info Podcast created by Paper Player, LLC
#chicago #undergroundhiphop #artist TOINE HOUSTON STOPPED BY TO TALK ABOUT #spikelee DROPPING ONE OF HER #SONGS IN HIS #netflixseries AND HOW SHE STARTED AND GOT WHERE SHE IS NOW
V oddaji smo gostili perspektivnega mladega zdravnika, specialista oftalmologije Petra Kiralyja, ki ga je pot iz rodne Lendave najprej vodila na študij v Maribor, nato na delo v ljubljanski klinični center, pred približno letom in pol pa se je preselil v Veliko Britanijo in zaposlil na Očesni kliniki v Oxfordu, kjer deluje tudi raziskovalno. Spregovoril je o slovenskem in britanskem zdravstvenem sistemu, svojem delu v tujini, ter o tem, kako se je navadil na britanski način življenja.
V oddaji smo gostili perspektivnega mladega zdravnika, specialista oftalmologije Petra Kiralyja, ki ga je pot iz rodne Lendave najprej vodila na študij v Maribor, nato na delo v ljubljanski klinični center, pred približno letom in pol pa se je preselil v Veliko Britanijo in zaposlil na Očesni kliniki v Oxfordu, kjer deluje tudi raziskovalno. Spregovoril je o slovenskem in britanskem zdravstvenem sistemu, svojem delu v tujini, ter o tem, kako se je navadil na britanski način življenja.
This week, Ira spoke with Andrew Kiraly, founder and publisher of TheList.Vegas, a new Las Vegas events calendar created by locals and curated for locals. In this episode of Talk About Las Vegas, Andrew talks about why he wanted to create a website devoted to events in Las Vegas, especially in a post-COVID world; how he curates the information; why the key to the calendar is simplicity; the unique 24-hour nature of the town and the potential vibrant cultural life it offers; and future plans for the website.
Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2022.11.30.518531v1?rss=1 Authors: Hofford, R. S., Meckel, K. R., Wang, W., Kim, M., Godino, A., Lam, T. T., Kiraly, D. Abstract: Opioid use disorder (OUD) is a public health crisis currently being exacerbated by increased rates of use and overdose of synthetic opioids, primarily fentanyl. Therefore, the identification of novel biomarkers and treatment strategies to reduce problematic fentanyl use and relapse to fentanyl taking is critical. In recent years, there has been a growing body of work demonstrating that the gut microbiome can serve as a potent modulator of the behavioral and transcriptional responses to both stimulants and opioids. Here, we advance this work to define how manipulations of the microbiome drive fentanyl intake and fentanyl seeking in a translationally relevant drug self-administration model. Additionally, we utilize global proteomic analysis of the nucleus accumbens following microbiome manipulation and fentanyl administration to define how microbiome status alters the functional proteomic landscape in this key limbic substructure. These findings establish clear relevance for gut-brain signaling in OUD, and lay foundations for further translational work in this space. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info Podcast created by Paper Player, LLC
This episode of DROPPING IN we chat with a husband, father, a decorated Chief Petty Officer who enrolled in the Royal Canadian Navy in 1999 as a Naval Communicator, after being injured he now works for Soldier On. We chat about his time in the Navy, how he has been helping ill/injured Soldiers with the Soldier on program for 9 years and so much more, DROP IN NOW. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Overview Bill has written stories that reference real people. This is a hot topic for many authors. We discuss the best way to use real people and whether you should or not. YouTube https://youtu.be/LIkdIfRtmII Transcript All right, so let's talk some other stuff and we have an interesting topic that we've not. Discussed with anyone before. So before we get into that, let me ask you you've been writing most of your life. What are some things you've learned that you're doing different now than when you first got started or? When, not necessarily when you're doing the journalism, but when you were writing books and stuff, cuz that's two different writings. So what have you learned? What are you doing different from when you first started? [00:22:10] Bill: Yeah I'm gonna have to say that the stuff I've learned a lot, we talked about Dave's group, but there's also another group that meets on the west side that Mudcat who you had on as well as part of where we critique each other's work. And he's a great writer by the way, he'd be another one of my favorites. But just learning how to I tend to throw out too much stuff and they're teaching me and just as I go, I'm learning. Put all this stuff in the first draft and then tighten it up and cut it out and make put in. What's most important in there. I am learning also how bad an editor, personal editor I am. I have a guy who's helped me a great deal on that. And then I've also recently purchased in software that I hope will help with that as well. [00:22:55] Stephen: What's [00:22:55] Bill: the software, it just typos. I can write five sentences and. Five typos in there and not see [00:23:01] Stephen: them myself. That, that's pretty good though. I know some authors where there's more than five, so what's the software you're using? [00:23:07] Bill: I write in Scrivener. Okay. But I picked up one called boy, what is it called? Pro quality or writer? Gimme a second. I can actually, it should be it's on my computer. Pro writer aid. I think it is [00:23:21] Stephen: pro writing aid. [00:23:22] Bill: Yeah. Yeah. It's. It's like an AI software. Yeah. And I don't take everything it's it suggests, but it helps me with the commas and the punctuation. The thing I seem to do a lot is double words. Okay. Probably when I'm writing and then rewriting and deleting and stuff. And I just don't see the double word. It's so far in the short time I've been using, it's been helping me a lot on that. So I also use that and I've been using it to learn and hopefully getting better. It doesn't seem like I still go, man, how many MIS not mistakes, but how many things do I need to look at? Whether they need change or not every time. [00:23:58] Stephen: But it's not always the same things that I used to do. So it is a good learning tool. If you use it as such, you can't just blanket it except everything. [00:24:07] Bill: So yeah, my, my old editor back in one of the papers used to put a list of all the words I commonly misspelled in front of my typewriter. Nice. I learned all those and then she'd replace 'em and I'd have new one. [00:24:18] Stephen: Yeah. And I talked to teachers and parents and kids. In school they do a little bit of writing, but they really focus on the grammar, the structure, the spelling. And I'm sorry, that's not for writing necessarily your biggest focus. You lose the story, you lose the flow of the feel of the voice. And all of those things can be corrected with a couple button presses now, so that I understand it's school and that kids need to learn that. I think the kids should learn grammar and all that, but. It doesn't mean you can't write and write a good story. They're separate things. Okay. So your book, what are you doing to market it? I know it's on Amazon. [00:24:59] Bill: So far I'm trying to learn this because this is, I work for a marketing company. I work with a bunch of marketers.
Overview Bill and I met at a writer group - Finish, Polish, Publish - in Cleveland. He has written most of his life, but has had a web development career. Bill talks about his book and working with his daughter. We discuss the group also. Finish, Polish, Publish His Book https://www.amazon.com/Songs-Befuddled-Muse-Divergent-Inspiration-ebook/dp/B09RF78495?crid=14RTRSIBHZEJR&keywords=songs+of+a+befuddled+muse&qid=1659626768&sprefix=songs+of+a+befuddled+muse%2Caps%2C487&sr=8-1&linkCode=li2&tag=discoveredwordsmiths-20&linkId=5cad928c63ffc37fab7733cc84001ded&language=en_US&ref_=as_li_ss_il Favorites https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000SEIFGO?storeType=ebooks&qid=1659627083&sr=8-2&linkCode=li2&tag=discoveredwordsmiths-20&linkId=bd9da9099f08cced27455d91853b1e58&language=en_US&ref_=as_li_ss_il Website https://befuddledmuse.com/ YouTube https://youtu.be/ChcdelVu_Ss Transcript All right, bill. Welcome to today's. Discovered wordsmith. Good to have you on how you doing. I'm doing great. [00:00:25] Bill: It's a pleasure to be here. I've been listening to your podcast and really enjoying them. Oh, thanks. Great. I'm glad. Pretty [00:00:30] Stephen: inspirational. Oh, that was the whole idea. That's what I wanted to get out of it. I hope, and now you're up in the Cleveland area, so we're not too far apart. So you've enjoying the weather today. Oh, definitely. [00:00:41] Bill: Sure, sure. Beats last few days. [00:00:43] Stephen: Yes. I was just gonna say it's a lot nicer today. I got the window open, just a little. Last couple I had to close mine cuz there were trucks going by, so oh yeah. Yeah. That's always a problem, but all right I know you a little bit. We're in one of the same groups in Cleveland, we meet once a month with Dave van horn published Polish repeat or no published Polish. Something I keep getting them confused, publish, polishing, get the damn thing done. Yeah. That's basically it. Yeah. But why don't you tell everybody a little bit about you some of the hobbies and things you like to do in your life other than writing. [00:01:18] Bill: Okay. I'm all born and raised in Cleveland area. Moved away for quite a while. Never expected to come back, came back due to family matters, met my wife. Pretty much stayed. In my spare time there's a few things that I like to do. I like everybody else you have on your podcast. I like to hike, but I also like to kayak a lot. Nice. And more, more just recreationally than going crazy. I have a daughter who's a sea kayaker trains in sea. Kay. I don't do that. Quite to that level. The other kind of interesting thing I do is I've been a photographer for a lot of years. Slipped into this weird little niche of stereo photography. Oh, cool. So I'm doing primarily stereo stills. I belong to local group national group as part of a national group. And it's a lot of fun. It's harder than regular. Photography cuz you have two cameras that are always not going off at the same time. And two, two ways for things to go wrong, at least every time. I ha one of my daughters is an artist. In fact will talk about her when we get into the meat of things. But we do painting parties. That's kind of part of the way we've paid her way through Cleveland Institute of. Wow. So we do a lot of painting parties. My wife is the MC I'm the photographer. And they're just a blast to do. We do 'em on the kind of the valley scene railroad among other places, as well as the people's homes and clubs. Oh, cool. We always say, if you can paint, if you can paint a picture on a moving train, you can do it anywhere. [00:02:56] Stephen: And my stuff normally looks like it was painted on a moving train. So side fit right in . It, it actually improves a little bit with a couple glasses of wine, so [00:03:04] Bill: That's another one of our famous things the more wine you drink, the better [00:03:07] Stephen: you're painting. Yeah.
Tune this week for an artist interview with rapper, engineer, & Tekken champion Kiraly Payne! Follow for more updates on
Another week and another badass guest interview! We were pleased to have Todd Friedman, the New York-based Kiraly Marketing owner. Todd drops bombs and humor throughout the episode as we muse on all things digital marketing and entrepreneurship!
Ünnepeljetek velünk ti is ezen a szép májusi napon! Íme élőben, felvételről, Lali Király 75 éves szülinapi extravaganza! Jó Szórakozást!
Cette semaine, sur Grandir Ensemble, Alexandra a eu le plaisir de recevoir Anne Kiraly-Francoeur et Andréanne Quenneville, qui vivent toutes deux avec des différences. Anne est une personne de petite taille et elle travaille actuellement comme bibliothécaire. De son côté, Andréanne est étudiante en médecine à l'université et vit avec une douance jumelée à un TDAH (donc une double exceptionnalité). Dans cet épisode, elles nous parlent de leur parcours et nous partagent leur expérience tant dans leur scolarité que dans leur quotidien. Elles nous parlent également de l'importance de nommer leur différence et abordent l'acceptation de soi ainsi que leur relation avec les autres.Pour en savoir plus sur La Tournée Édu4tive :Site web ➡ https://www.tournee-edu4tive.ca/Facebook ➡ @Tournée-éducative-670041123138756 (https://www.facebook.com/Tournée-éducative-670041123138756/)Pour suivre Andréanne :YouTube ➡ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCsosru9QcTLdREuIefrNNCg/Pour suivre Placote :Site web ➡ placote.comFacebook ➡ @jeuxplacote (https://www.facebook.com/jeuxplacote/)Instagram ➡ @placote_jeux (https://www.instagram.com/placote_jeux/)
In this week's episode, Licensed Professional Counselor Beth Kiraly breaks down the parts of the brain, what happens when our kids are in meltdown mode, and ways to regulate our emotions/cope with our kids emotions. Taylor and Carly cannot wait for you to hear this one!Books Beth Referenced:The Body Keeps the Score Nonviolent CommunicationThe Whole Brain ChildConnect with us on Instagram || Email us at hello@spillmama.comThis episode is sponsored by BetterHelp.Without a healthy mind, being truly happy and at peace is HARD. The good news is, therapy works. BetterHelp is customized online therapy that offers video, phone and even live chat sessions with your therapist, so you don't have to see anyone on camera if you don't want to. It's much more affordable than in-person therapy and you can start communicating with your therapist in under 48 hours. Join the millions of people who are seeing what online therapy is really about. It's always a good time to invest in yourself, because you are your greatest asset. And, special offer to Spill, Mama listeners, you can get 10% off your first month of professional therapy at BetterHelp.com/spillmama.10% off your first month of professional therapy: BetterHelp.com/spillmama.Thank you BetterHelp for sponsoring this episode!*Some of these links are affiliate links and we may receive a commission if you use any links to make purchases*What Beth is loving:1. Burn Boot Camp2. Cometeer Coffee Produced by Klein Productions
Welcome to Cannabis Daily - Your daily guide to cannabis news, industry trends, and trade ideas in under 5 mins.Episode Summary:Alabama state senators approved decriminalization in an initial committee vote.New Hampshire lawmakers pass the bill through the first step here, but the bill for legalizing the sale of marijuana supports state-run marijuana shops.Cantor Fitzgerald takes a closer look at Florida. The Florida market has continued to slow in Q1 of 2022. Florida remains the industry leader with a 50% flower volume share in the sunshine state and 41% non-flower volumes.Tilray Brands(NASDAQ:TLRY)Columbia Care(OTCQX:CCHWF)Khiron Life Sciences(OTCQX:KHRNF)cbdMD (AMEX:YCBD)Curaleaf Holdings(OTCQX:CURLF)Hosted & Produced By:Elliot LaneAaron ThomasContact us at: cannabishour@benzinga.comFollow Benzinga Cannabis On Social MediaInstagramTwitterYouTubeLinkedInSubscribe to all Benzinga Podcasts at https://www.benzinga.com/podcastsSubscribe to the Cannabis Insider Newsletter to get more cannabis news and trending links delivered to your inbox.Tune in weekly to Cannabis Hour at 4 pm ET every Thursday for Cannabis News & Executive Interviews at bzcannabishour.comHit us up at https://www.benzinga.com/cannabis/ for more news today, tomorrow, and everyday.Access All The Cannabis Daily Episodes HereFor Top Gainers & Losers Cannabis stocks of the day check out https://www.benzinga.com/cannabis/stocksNOT FINANCIAL ADVICEThe Information Contained on this Podcast is not intended as, and shall not be understood or construed as, financial adviceUnedited Transcript:What is up people? It's Thursday. This is Elliot lane host of cannabis daily. Thanks so much for tuning in really happy to have you. We bring you your cannabis insights on the public markets on what's happening in the industry. Every single weekday, roundabouts 10:00 AM, maybe hit or miss by a couple of minutes, but we do this in five to six minutes.Let us know, rate, and review us. Keep us in mind. Hit us at bzcannabis.com. If you want to come meet benzinga.com/cannabis to stay updated throughout the day we post 40 -50 cannabis articles every single day. Let's dive into this morning. Lots of interesting things happening till rates. He L R Y on the NASDAQ, you all know it and potentially love it. They launched medical cannabis products in Malta. One of the earliest to legalize marijuana in the European union will say, or in Europe. So Tilray expanding their footprint even more this year. New Hampshire making some weird news today. Lawmakers pass the bill through the first step here, but the bill for legalizing the sale of marijuana supports state run marijuana shops. This would keep punishments for home cultivation and public consumption in tax. Question mark. This leaves New Hampshire open for federal prosecution by having state employees sell a federally prohibited drug. I'm just all around confused on this one. Somebody who's going to have to walk in and make sense of this for me. The state run marijuana shops, making it a government quote, unquote monopoly. This is a very interesting move. I would expect this to get a lot of pushback. Everywhere. All right. Alabama state senators approved decriminalization in a initial committee. So props to Alabama there, ideally they're not going to follow a New Hampshire footsteps.A new bill is being discussed in New Mexico, which is sparking some old debate over water usage. The latest version of Senate bill 100 would remove a requirement for producers to show proof of a valid water, right before receiving a cannabis license. Obviously the, without this amendment A barrier for entrance into the industry from small business owners and just business owners in general, for cannabis that does not exist for other crops.So right now, New Mexico lawmakers are looking to fight it out and get rid of that rule for cannabis growers specific. Columbia care. CC HWF brings award-winning cannabis brand to Brooklyn with the rebranding of its New York dispensary. So expanding cannabis in multiple states as they are leading MSO in this market tilt holdings, we haven't talked about Gary Santos team much recently, but they're always working hard behind the scenes T L LTF on the OTC enters a multi-state agreement.Toast to bring toast skews to Massachusetts, Ohio and Pennsylvania toast is an Aspen Colorado based cannabis brand. A very well known definitely a win for tilt Kyron life sciences. This is K H R N F adds another medical cannabis clinic in Peru through its partnership with pain clinic CDL. I think Kyron is definitely a watch list or I've said it all along. But if there's Latin American winners Kyron. Among them. And they are truly forming an international medical cannabis company right now with a presence in Europe as well. Pre-market movers. Speaking of international presence included why CBD was stolen NASDAQ today, gaining more than 16% pre market. After the fact we find out that they received validation of its novel food application from the UK F S a they expect European union validation in the coming weeks. Huge for why CBD props in the CBD MD team. I'm sure this has been a long process for them. Need them reaffirms their by rating on Kiraly.If I think that was a relatively easy call, Cura leaf is awesome. C U R L F on the OTC. If you are not familiar with the tier one growers and operators in the globe, they're definitely probably among the top three to five last but not least. Let's do a little update on the Florida. All right. So in a recent analyst note, Pablo's want it from Cantor.Fitzgerald takes a closer look at Florida's operators mainly regarding store trends and total sales growth. The Florida market has continued to slow in the first quarter of 2022. Truly it remains the industry leader with a 50% flower volume share in the sunshine state and 41% non flower volumes.They're just absolutely dominating their TC in an F on the OTs. The other players in the state of course are consortiums, fluent. You have air wellness. I ant this and Cresco to name a few of the big ones. The cure leaf is their med men, GTI Columbia care Verano. Most of your major tier one operators are there.Specifically air consortium. I ant this in Cresco, grew sequentially both in the last quarter of 2021 and the first quarter of 2022. So there is some competition coming for truly, but they got a long way to go with that being said, I hope this has been useful. Thank you so much for tuning in. Always happy to have you.We're going to do this one more time tomorrow rate and review us, let us know what you think. Share this with your friends. We want this news to be actionable for. Everybody makes money in cannabis. That's what we say here at Benzinga or what we want to say. Thanks again. Y'all we'll see you tomorrow.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/cannabis-daily/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Singer/songwriter Adam Kiraly of Follow the Compass talks about the latest release “Timing is Everything” featuring “Make It To Morning” and how the project began from living in a difficult world, featuring numerous talented musicians contributing to the music and FTC is part of the USA Florida Project! Adam talks about other music released including “Coconuts”, “South Beach”, “Skeleton Crew”, “The Redneck Song” plus his major influences including J.R.R. Tolkien and upcoming plans for 2022 and beyond! Check out the amazing Adam Kiraly of Follow The Compass on all streaming platforms and www.compassfollower.com! #adamkiraly #followthecompass #FTC #makeittomorning #USAFloridaproject #coconuts #southbeach #therednecksong #JRRTolkien #amazon #audible #iheartradio #spreaker #spotify #itunes #googleplay #applemusic #youtube #anchorfm #podbean #mikewagner #themikewagnershow #mikewagneradamkiraly #themikewagnershowadamkiraly #mikewagnerfollowthecompass #themikewagnershowfollowthecompass --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/themikewagnershow/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/themikewagnershow/support
Singer/songwriter Adam Kiraly of Follow the Compass talks about the latest release “Timing is Everything” featuring “Make It To Morning” and how the project began from living in a difficult world, featuring numerous talented musicians contributing to the music and FTC is part of the USA Florida Project! Adam talks about other music released including “Coconuts”, “South Beach”, “Skeleton Crew”, “The Redneck Song” plus his major influences including J.R.R. Tolkien and upcoming plans for 2022 and beyond! Check out the amazing Adam Kiraly of Follow The Compass on all streaming platforms and www.compassfollower.com ! #adamkiraly #followthecompass #FTC #makeittomorning #USAFloridaproject #coconuts #southbeach #therednecksong #JRRTolkien #amazon #audible #iheartradio #spreaker #spotify #itunes #googleplay #applemusic #youtube #anchorfm #podbean #mikewagner #themikewagnershow #mikewagneradamkiraly #themikewagnershowadamkiraly #mikewagnerfollowthecompass #themikewagnershowfollowthecompass
Kiraly Payne: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dlxeWURe7q4 Wayne Brady: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SpMkrtXr4b8 Youtube autotranscription for Kiraly:[Music]hey hey hey i remember this i'm gonnalook about them but i was back in the daynow my whole crew filled with stars[ __ ] make sure they people switch shadesit was enough for me to get a picturehad to go and readjust frames i've beenreally feeling like it's new editionwhere these hoes love a [ __ ] in the game buthey i been focused on some other [ __ ] myback been feeling like the mother [ __ ]the pressure only made me betterreaching high levels really all becauseof iti really do it for the fun of it ain'ttripping really cause i love this [ __ ]my soul be lighter than a feather likepuffin that is not feeling wonderfulhey[Music]my spiritual sin i just woke up to powerwithin ain't nothing unchanged for thehoes in the [ __ ] bankrollcould it be indications need to pay[Music]treating you like you changed you ain'teven know the namenow you wanna be faithful girl i've beenmaking plays you was just later turningon the gameall my peers so cold depression got a[ __ ] feel like exploding but don't fallfor this platform chosen i'm on goal hadto lie my goals and my big bro hereminded me ain't another [ __ ] quitelike you [ __ ] do you and [ __ ] stopfighting competition leo ass how youplay too much attention on what theydoinghey might hurt your movement it hurtsyour confidence just keep moving aspossibleyou can move obstacles go to impossibleplaces you thought was impossible justfocus on who you've been talking toand watch how quickly they ride for youstay on the road like a [ __ ]monstercause i had some down days depressioncome where you were always change habitstaught a [ __ ] blessed to come with allthe lessons that be coming your way gota message it was like you text me now itake advantage every day i'm on game nowflex the creatine[Music]
In this episode of the Epigenetics Podcast, we caught up with Catherine Jensen Peña from Princeton University to talk about her work on early life stress and its effects on behavior. The Laboratory of Catherine Peña focuses on how early life experiences are encoded and maintained into adulthood, with a long-lasting impact on behavior. Recent work showed, that child maltreatment and other forms of early life stress increase the lifetime risk of depression and other mood, anxiety, and drug disorders by 2-4 fold. The Peña Lab uses genome wide approaches to investigate key brain regions with a two-hit stress model. Using RNA-Seq, the Peña Lab has shown that depression-like gene expression patterns are programmed by early life stress, similar to observations in mice exhibiting depression-like behavior after adult stress and are visible even before behavioral changes. Furthermore, latent and unique transcriptional responses to adult stress among a subset of genes is programmed by early life stress. The role of chromatin modifications in regulating these processes are investigated using state of the art technologies like Mod-Spec or ATAC-Seq. References Kronman, H., Torres-Berrío, A., Sidoli, S., Issler, O., Godino, A., Ramakrishnan, A., Mews, P., Lardner, C. K., Parise, E. M., Walker, D. M., van der Zee, Y. Y., Browne, C. J., Boyce, B. F., Neve, R., Garcia, B. A., Shen, L., Peña, C. J., & Nestler, E. J. (2021). Long-term behavioral and cell-type-specific molecular effects of early life stress are mediated by H3K79me2 dynamics in medium spiny neurons. Nature Neuroscience, 24(5), 667–676. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41593-021-00814-8 Peña, C. J., Smith, M., Ramakrishnan, A., Cates, H. M., Bagot, R. C., Kronman, H. G., Patel, B., Chang, A. B., Purushothaman, I., Dudley, J., Morishita, H., Shen, L., & Nestler, E. J. (2019). Early life stress alters transcriptomic patterning across reward circuitry in male and female mice. Nature Communications, 10(1), 5098. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-13085-6 Peña, C. J., Kronman, H. G., Walker, D. M., Cates, H. M., Bagot, R. C., Purushothaman, I., Issler, O., Loh, Y.-H. E., Leong, T., Kiraly, D. D., Goodman, E., Neve, R. L., Shen, L., & Nestler, E. J. (2017). Early life stress confers lifelong stress susceptibility in mice via ventral tegmental area OTX2. Science, 356(6343), 1185–1188. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aan4491 Related Episodes Nutriepigenetics: The Effects of Diet on Behavior (Monica Dus) The Role of Small RNAs in Transgenerational Inheritance in C. elegans (Oded Rechavi) Epigenetic Influence on Memory Formation and Inheritance (Isabelle Mansuy) Contact Active Motif on Twitter Epigenetics Podcast on Twitter Active Motif on LinkedIn Active Motif on Facebook Email: podcast@activemotif.com
Do not forget to check out the previous episodes of the HogFBPodcast and as always keep an eye out for the return of the Monday night #Hogfbchat on Twitter. Make sure you like and subscribe to the Podcast. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/hogfbplt4m/support
La puntata 0 di Tunnel, un podcast di calcio internazionale. In questo episodio:- Presentazioni- La Top 5 delle notizie di calcio internazionale che ci sono piaciute di più- Focus sulla Bielorussia e sul calcio bielorusso- Cacciatori di contratti: la vita e la carriera di Otto Pfister- Quiz: Albi d'oro
Karch Kiraly had already won three individual Olympic Gold Medals as a competitor when he became the head coach of the USA Women's National Volleyball Team in 2012. In August, Kiraly led his team to the Gold Medal in Tokyo Olympics. Kiraly talks about his leadership group and the culture that was created that allowed the team to flourish despite several unforeseen challenges during the Olympics. Video Version https://youtu.be/rFV-Xqp8WTk
Nello scorso episodio, nel tentativo di offrirvi contenuti sempre originali, ma soprattutto di qualità, abbiamo deciso di proporvi una serie di massime, citazioni e racconti, legati alla pallavolo e allo sport in generale, che possano aiutare gli allenatori a risolvere un problema o a gestire una situazione complicata, ma anche a trasmettere un messaggio ai propri giocatori.È stato un vero successo, sicché non abbiamo potuto tirarci indietro dal preparare una nuova puntata, altrettanto ricca di spunti: Angelo Lorenzetti e “Sua Maestà” Karch Kiraly per la pallavolo, Gianmarco Pozzecco e Andrea Trinchieri per il basket, Massimiliano Allegri e Pelè per il calcio, Roger Federer per il tennis, Federica Pellegrini per il nuoto, Usain Bolt per l'atletica, ma anche la scena di un film cult per tutti gli sportivi e, in chiusura, ancora Marco Montemagno: ecco i nostri guru e i loro 10 (+1) segreti per essere un Allenatore Vincente (Vol. II)!Buon ascolto (e buona visione) a tutti!
Our guest today is Juliana Kiraly, Marketing Manager Europe at Embraer. Juliana has already enjoyed many years at Embraer working on several different positions. In the interview we covered several interesting topics such as the recent certification of the Embraer E2-190 for steep approach at London City Airport, project of the new turboprop aircraft which Embraer is developing and also how they approach sustainability at Embraer.
Anna Kiraly is a visual artist, set and video designer. Her collaborations include set design for CHEKHOV LIZARDBRAIN, ISABELLA, and PAY UP with the Pig Iron Theatre Company, set design for TIME'S JOURNEY THROUGH A ROOM with Dan Rothenberg/The Play Co., set and video for CITY OF NO ILLUSIONS, BURNISHED BY GRIEF, THE GOLDEN TOAD, MARCELLUS SHALE and FLIP SIDE with the Talking Band, set design for WALK ACROSS AMERICA (with Taylor Mac/The Talking Band) and MISALLIANCE, PARADISE PARK and THE CASTLE with Tina Brock/IRC. Other recent and past productions include set for THE SEAGULL at Colgate University, set/video for TRANSLATIONS and UBU (with S. Fogarty for Barnard College) and DOG AND WOLF (J. Randich at 59E59), installation design for 36 PEAKS (with S. Sunde at the Baryshnikov Arts Center), THE GARDEN (N. Canuso Dance Company), costumes for KAFKA FRAGMENTS (P. Sellars at Zankel Hall).She was awarded a NYSCA 2021 grant for set design for a Beckett collaboration with Sharon Fogarty (in progress). She is a recipient of the Arts Link Grant, the NEA/TCG Program for Designers and the TCG New Generations (with the Talking Band). Her "noir" multimedia pieces THE QUAKE (at Ideal Glass), SLOW ASCENT and UFO (St. Ann’s Warehouse) won the Jim Henson Foundation’s support. Anna has collaborated with universities and colleges such as Barnard/Columbia, Fordham, The New School, Smith, Montclair, Lehigh and Colgate and designed for opera productions (AOP, Hungarian Opera, Zankell Hall) and concerts (YPC/ New York Philharmonic). She is an adjunct lecturer teaching Scenic Design and Media at Barnard College/Columbia University.~~~~~~~To explore past episodes of Into the Absurd, visit our Facebook page:https://www.facebook.com/pg/Idiopathi...ORThe IRC's YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list...And while you’re there, be sure to SUBSCRIBE, so you don't miss any future episodes.
On this weeks episode, Kiraly Payne joins the guys to talk about his rise in the music industry, his inspirations in music, as well as what he's currently working on now and in the future. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
On this episode of Establishing Your Empire I host Adam Johnson and LJ Luciano. Adam Johnson is one of the winningest players in pro beach volleyball history. He has won over $1.6 million dollars in prize money with 44 event titles. Johnson and Karch Kiraly just missed qualifying for the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games when Kiraly suffered an injury in the final qualifying event. He won the King of the Beach in 1994, he was a member of the U. S. National Team, a three-time All-American at USC and is in the Hall of Fame. Also joining us is LJ Luciano who co-created the self-proclaimed ‘Coolest Group in the Sand’ The Sand Wannabes. The group has over 10,000 members and provides a medium for players of all levels to find where to play, meet other players and chat about volleyball.
Abgesehen von seiner grauen Schlabber-Jogginghose verbinden die meisten Fußball-Fans seinen Namen in erster Linie wohl mit Hertha BSC oder 1860 München. Doch in der langen Vita von Gábor Király taucht auch Bayer 04 Leverkusen als Station auf: Im Winter 2009 wurde der 108-fache ungarische Nationaltorhüter für den Rest der Spielzeit vom englischen Zweitligisten FC Burnley als Ersatztorwart für den damals aufstrebenden René Adler verpflichtet, weil sich Benedikt Fernandez am Knie verletzt hatte. Im „Werks11 Podcast“ spricht der 44-Jährige, dessen aktive Karriere nach insgesamt 26 Profi-Jahren erst vor zwei Jahren ein Ende fand, über sein Leben, seine Laufbahn, Rückschläge und über nicht zuletzt über ein „überragendes halbes Jahr in Leverkusen“ und damalige Weggefährten wie Rüdiger Vollborn, Rudi Völler, Simon Rolfes und Bruno Labbadia. Der Ungar, der bei der Europameisterschaft 2016 Deutschland Rekordnationalspieler Lothar Matthäus als ältesten Spieler ablöste, hat bereits während seiner aktiven Zeit in seiner Heimat einen Verein gegründet, mit dem er dem ungarischen Nachwuchs den Sprung ins Profi-Geschäft ermöglichen möchte. Zudem hat er in seiner Heimatstadt Szombathely ein eigenes Sportzentrum samt Jugend-Akademie etabliert, hat eine wohltätige Stiftung aufgebaut und arbeitet an Schulen oder für Unternehmen als Motivationstrainer. „Der Fußball hat mich zu einem besseren Menschen gemacht. Meine Erfahrungen möchte ich nun an andere weitergeben“, erklärt Gábor Kiraly. Während der unterhaltsamen knapp 80 Minuten blickt der zweifache Familienvater unter anderem auch zurück auf besondere Begegnungen mit Bayer 04 Legende Ulf Kirsten. „Mit ihm habe ich mich trotz aller Rivalität, die ein Torhüter mit einem Stürmer hat, auf dem Platz immer gut verstanden. Nach einem Spiel wollte er sogar mal meine Handschuhe für seinen Sohn Benny haben.“ Externe Fragen kommen diesmal von seinen ehemaligen Mitspielern Stefan Kießling und Roob Maas. Hört rein!
Gabor joins Callum for a fascinating chat into his career including life at Palace, playing at international tournaments and of course, why did he wear trousers in goal?
Nach Stationen bei Hertha BSC, Leverkusen und in England ist Gabor Kiraly im Sommer 2009 zu den Löwen gewechselt. Erst letztes Jahr -nach über 800 Profispielen, davon 107 A-Länderspielen für Ungarn, hat er seine Torwarthandschuhe an den Nagel gehängt. Der Ruhestand bedeutet für ihn allerdings vielmehr, dass er sich nun voll und ganz seinen Herzensprojekten widmen kann. Schon 2003 hat er einen eigenen Fußballclub gegründet, professionalisiert diesen Stück für Stück und setzt sich so für die Entwicklung des ungarischen Fußballs ein. In dieser Episode erzählt Gabor wie er als Kind zum Fußball gekommen ist und sowohl von seinen sportlichen Anfängen in Ungarn als auch von seiner Zeit beim Militär. Welche Unterschiede er zwischen dem deutschen und dem englischen Fußball sieht, welche schönen Erinnerungen er an die Zeit in München hat und weshalb seine graue Jogginghose wirklich Jeder zu jeder Zeit tragen kann, verrät Löwen-Legende Gabor Kiraly in dieser 46. Folge des offiziellen Löwen-Podcast. Gastgeber ist Jan Mauersberger. Der offizielle Löwen-Podcast wird präsentiert von die Bayerische. Folgt uns auch auf Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/tsv1860/), Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/TSV1860/), Löwen-TV (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKX6GeFLf7bsbQip-9EsCIA), Twitter (https://twitter.com/TSV1860) oder schaut auf tsv1860.de. Bei Fragen, Wünschen oder Anregungen - einfach eine kurze E-Mail an podcast@tsv1860.de! Werbehinweis: Es werden die Sponsoren des TSV 1860 München genannt
SANDCAST: Beach Volleyball with Tri Bourne and Travis Mewhirter
This episode of SANDCAST: Beach volleyball with Tri Bourne and Travis Mewhirter, features the GOAT, Karch Kiraly. Currently the coach of the U.S. Women's National Team, Kiraly has won three gold medals and could very well win another as a coach in the upcoming Tokyo Olympics. This podcast is absolute GOLD -- pun fully intended. We cover the full range of topics, including: - Kiraly's upbringing, and how competing against grown men at 11 years old galvanized his pursuit of finding answers to win, and quickly - His difficult decision to give up beach to compete on the United States National Team, which resulted in his first gold medal at the 1984 Olympics - His wildly successful partnership with Kent Steffes - How he has been able to adapt at every evolution the game, indoor or beach, and remain at the top - SO MUCH MORE If there's one episode y'all should listen to, it should be no surprise that this is the one. Share it out, tell your friends and fellow volleyball fans. This episode is, as always, brought to you by Wilson Volleyball. They make the best beach volleyballs in the game, hands down, and we’d love it if you could support them. Head over to Wison and use our discount code, Sandcast-20, to receive 20 percent off all purchases! Yes, we do get a kickback, but we see it as a win-win – you get a discount on the best balls in the game, we get a little extra love! This episode is also brought to you by Kamena Outdoor! Dave Kamena is a longtime beach volleyball enthusiast and has perfected his outdoor backpack over the previous 17 YEARS! It makes a great Christmas present, or just a great present for yourself. Head over to Kamena Outdoor to get your backpack today! We would also love it if you could check out our new YouTube channel! Bourne and Mewhirter are expanding the podcast, adding extra episodes and features on YouTube, so check us out and make sure to subscribe to get the latest updates! If you haven’t seen it yet, our book, Volleyball For Milkshakes, is for sale on Amazon! If you are a fan of the show, you’ll be a fan of this book, as it adds lessons and stories from our guests in a fictional tale based around the Outrigger Canoe Club, where Bourne learned how to play the game! Thank y’all so much for supporting the show. We couldn’t do it without you. SHOOTS!
PER BERNAL SHAWN SMITH THEO LEGUERRIER LASZLO KIRALY MD GLOBAL MUSCLE S3 E16 by MUSCULAR DEVELOPMENT PODCASTS
Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.10.10.334656v1?rss=1 Authors: Micheva, K. D., Kiraly, M., Perez, M. M., Madison, D. V. Abstract: Parvalbumin-containing (PV+) basket cells in mammalian neocortex are fast-spiking interneurons that regulate the activity of local neuronal circuits in multiple ways. Even though PV+ basket cells are locally projecting interneurons, their axons are myelinated. Can this myelination contribute in any significant way to the speed of action potential propagation along such short axons? We used dual whole cell recordings of synaptically connected PV+ interneurons and their postsynaptic target in acutely-prepared neocortical slices from adult mice to measure the amplitude and latency of single presynaptic action potential-evoked inhibitory postsynaptic currents (IPSCs). These same neurons were then imaged with immunofluorescent array tomography, the synaptic contacts between them identified and a precise map of the connections was generated, with the exact axonal length and extent of myelin coverage. Our results support that myelination of PV+ basket cells significantly increases conduction velocity, and does so to a degree that can be physiologically relevant. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info
Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.09.17.302570v1?rss=1 Authors: Hofford, R. S., Mervosh, N. L., Euston, T. J., Meckel, K. R., Orr, A. T., Kiraly, D. D. Abstract: Recent evidence has demonstrated that the gut microbiome has marked effects on neuronal function and behavior. Disturbances to microbial populations within the gut have been linked to myriad models of neuropsychiatric disorders. However, the role of the microbiome in substance use disorders remains understudied. Here we show that animals with their gut microbiome depleted by non-absorbable antibiotics (Abx) exhibit decreased formation of morphine conditioned place preference and demonstrate marked changes in gene expression within the nucleus accumbens (NAc) in response to morphine. Replacement of short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) metabolites, which are reduced by microbiome knockdown, reversed the behavioral and transcriptional effects of microbiome depletion. This identifies SCFA as the crucial mediators of microbiome-brain communication responsible for the effects on morphine reward caused by microbiome knockdown. These studies add important new behavioral, molecular, and mechanistic insight to the role of gut-brain signaling in substance use disorders. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info
The records no player wants... Adam Nicholas presents Every Premier League Club's Worst Ever Goalkeeper...ENJOY!Follow us on Twitter:@ItsAdamNicholas@WhatCultureFCFor more awesome content, check out: whatculture.com/sport See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Your familiar host and VLA play by play guy Rob St. Claire (@rstclaire1) goes solo for this show to talk about volleyball broadcasting. Just about everyone in the volleyball community knows what it's like to be frustrated by bad uneducated commentators while watching a match...Rob gets into why it's such a common problem, what it takes to be a better volleyball broadcaster, who are the best in the world, and more. He also breaks down an old USA men's national team match highlight video, looking at the play and Paul Sunderland's commentary. Highly recommend checking out the video version on the VLA YouTube channel, at least for the match analysis portion. Hope you enjoy the slightly different format! Normal episode with a guest coming Friday.
La puntata 0 di Tunnel, un podcast di calcio internazionale. In questo episodio:- Presentazioni- La Top 5 delle notizie di calcio internazionale che ci sono piaciute di più- Focus sulla Bielorussia e sul calcio bielorusso- Cacciatori di contratti: la vita e la carriera di Otto Pfister- Quiz: Albi d'oro
SANDCAST: Beach Volleyball with Tri Bourne and Travis Mewhirter
After a few minutes of cordial catching up and introductions, Mike Lambert paused, sitting in his office in Lucca, Italy, and wondered, on SANDCAST: Beach volleyball with Tri Bourne and Travis Mewhirter: “What should we talk about?” The conversation would be wide-ranging, covering a vast canvas of topics. Midway through, however, it became comically evident what Lambert didn’t want to talk about: himself. It is vintage Lambert. Though he may be nearly a decade since he last appeared in an AVP tournament, he is still very much the same man who, in his Beach Volleyball Hall of Fame write up – he was inducted in 2018 – was described as “a favorite of both fans and his fellow tour professionals, often bringing his guitar to the beach to play songs in-between matches and charming with an infectious smile. You would have to search far and wide to find someone with anything bad to say about Mike Lambert.” And, for that matter, you would likely have to search farther and wider to find a time Lambert said anything bad about anyone else. When he first posed the question of what we should discuss on the podcast, he immediately answered his own prompt: “Stein,” he said, referring to Stein Metzger, his childhood friend and partner for the 2006 season. “Let’s talk about that guy.” And then, unprompted, he sang the UCLA coach’s praises. “He was super special because he was so competitive, even back in the day,” Lambert said. “I think he would say that he’s not the most talented player, but he just wants to win more than the other guy. There’s so many memories of him, younger, and then in college and when he turned pro where he just wanted it more than the other player. That’s a fun guy to be partnered with. You get into battle and the trash talk starts going and he’s not going anywhere. He’s not backing down. He wants more of it.” He talked Metzger. He marveled at the discipline of John Hyden, with whom Lambert played on the 1996 and 2000 Olympic teams. Lambert, a Hawai’i native, complimented Bourne’s mother, Katy, a teacher on the Island. “Such a stud,” he said of the woman known for her penchant for excelling in long-distance events. Mostly, though, Lambert wanted to talk about Karch Kiraly. It was only Lambert’s second full-time year on the beach when he got the call from Kiraly, who by then was considered the greatest to ever play the game. Kiraly was in his early 40s, Lambert coming off a successful indoor career to win, improbably, both Rookie of the Year and Best Offensive Player in the same AVP season in 2002. Given that, “I thought I had played at a pretty high level,” Lambert said. “I had played in two Olympics and played against the best in the world indoor and on the beach but there are few people that are mentally just on a different level and they’ll never drop their game whether it’s practice or a game against a scrub team or a qualifier team or if he’s on center court against the best team. [Kiraly] keeps his level there. He never drops no matter who’s on the other side of the court or if he’s tired or where the sun is or what the wind is or this or that. He was always immovable. There were times where I was tired but I’d say ‘Look at my guy! He’s not tired so I’m gonna keep going.’ He was always there. Constant, just the north star. It was crazy.” To watch Lambert and Kiraly compete together – YouTube has plenty of fantastic match replays if you’d like to do so – is to witness exactly why Lambert is quick to praise others and slow to credit himself. If you were to only watch their celebrations, you’d never know who scored the point, who made the highlight, who put down the block or the big swing. When the ball hit the sand, they wouldn’t find the camera, or the crowd, but each other. That’s the point. There were occasions where Kiraly – 148-time winner, three-time Olympic gold medalist Karch Kiraly – would bow down to Lambert following a block. Dishing all the credit. Building up his teammate. “Any chance he had to throw the spotlight on me he did,” Lambert said. “It was because ‘Lambo did this’ and ‘Lambo started stuffing balls!’ He was always trying to put his partner in the spotlight. Not long ago, he asked me what he did well as a teammate, and I said he was always giving me props for everything we did, and not trying to take the spotlight from his teammate. When you do that, all of a sudden, I’m puffing out my chest, like ‘Yeah! I am the guy stuffing balls!’ And then I get more confident and become even more of what he wants. It’s almost like he’s feeding that. He was really good at that. He was really good at letting go of a great play and a terrible play because it was all about being in the moment. He had the same routine, whether he did something great or something terrible he’d either celebrate and move on or think about it and move on. He was always ready for the next play, which was super cool. “If you make a great play on the court, there’s a finite amount of seconds where you’ve got this crazy energy and what do you do with it? Do you keep it all or do you go to your guy, stare him in the eye and go ‘Ahhh!’ and share that moment. That stokes the other guy’s fire and it can become contagious. Anytime we did something great, we right away tried to share that with each other. That’s what you miss. I’m never out here going ‘Yeah! I did a sale! Whooo! Let’s do another one!’” Perhaps Lambert is not beating his chest, whooping after a successful digital marketing campaign. But he’s still the consummate teammate, dishing credit, building up those around him. Making sure to talk only the best of everyone who has partnered with Mike Lambert.
In our first episode we will be speaking to Designer / Model Vanessa Kiraly of VANIKA designs https://vanikadesign.com Vanessa has been part of the Startup Fashion Week family since the beginning in 2014. At the age of 16 she showcased an impressive collection at the inaugural SFW runway show and has been a model in our Toronto shows every year. She learned the trade from her mother and was inspired by a local creative to take her talent to the runway. Vanessa shares valuable intimate details on the thought process of a designer and model. She also talks about her success of getting published in notable magazines and shares how others can do the same. In the interview (which you will love), she shares candid moments, lessons and details about her personal and professional journey since we first put her in the spotlight at Startup Fashion Week. Follow @startupfashionweek E-mail: info@startupfashionweek.com Web: www.startupfashionweek.com
PUNTATA EVENTO: SUA MAESTÀ KARCH KIRALYProseguiamo con la pubblicazione degli straordinari incontri realizzati dallo staff di #IoStoACasaEParloDiPallavolo, generosamente condivisi con la Community di Coach Factor.Dopo l’incontro di ieri, con protagonisti Silvano Prandi e Ferdinando "Fefè" De Giorgi, oggi vi riproponiamo lo straordinario incontro con una delle Leggende del nostro sport: Karch Kiraly.Il suo palmares è talmente ampio che non è possibile elencare tutti i trofei di squadra e individuali vinti. Ma per rendere l’idea della grandezza del personaggio, è sufficiente far presente che è l'unico giocatore ad aver vinto la medaglia d'oro olimpica sia nella pallavolo indoor (Los Angeles 1984 e Seul 1988) sia nel beach volley (Atlanta 1996), che è stato nominato (insieme a Lorenzo Bernardi) "Miglior giocatore di pallavolo del XX secolo" e che da allenatore, ha guidato la nazionale USA femminile alla vittoria del Campionato Mondiale svoltosi in Italia nel 2014. In questo intenso e avvincente incontro, Karch Kiraly spiegherà i principi e la filosofia della pallavolo statunitense, le sue idee, le sue metodologie e le sue esperienze.Come di consueto, ringraziamo l’amico Maurizio Moretti (Direttore Tecnico Argentario Progetto VolLei a 360), coadiuvato da Rocco Bruni, e l’indispensabile supporto tecnico di Roque Stimpfl.Buon ascolto a tutti!
Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.04.29.065821v1?rss=1 Authors: Osman, A., Mervosh, N. L., Strat, A. N., Meckel, K. R., Euston, T. J., Zipursky, G. D., Drapeau, E., Buxbaum, J., Breen, M. S., Kiraly, D. D. Abstract: Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a serious neurodevelopmental disorder with a very high prevalence rate and a chronic disease course beginning in early childhood. Despite the tremendous burden of ASD, there are currently no disease-modifying treatments. Like many neuropsychiatric illnesses ASD has a complex pathophysiology driven by genetic and environmental factors. There is interest in identifying modifiable environmental factors as potential translational research strategies for development of therapeutics for ASD. A rapidly growing body of research demonstrates that the resident bacteria of the gastrointestinal tract, collectively the gut microbiome, have profound influence on brain and behavior. This gut-brain signaling pathway is highly relevant to ASD as the microbiome begins to form at birth, is heavily influenced by environmental factors throughout early life, and begins to stabilize at the same stage of development that symptoms of ASD begin to develop. To investigate potential gene x microbiome interactions in a model of ASD, we utilized mutant mice carrying a deletion of the ASD-associated Shank3 gene (Shank3KO), which clinically manifests as Phelan-McDermid syndrome, as a model for genetic risk of ASD. Analysis of the gut microbiome of Shank3KO mice demonstrated genotype effects on both microbiome composition and metabolite production. Behaviorally, Shank3KO mice demonstrate decreased social interactions and have altered anxiety and compulsive-like behaviors. Disruption of the microbiome with broad spectrum antibiotics lead to an exacerbation of all behavioral phenotypes in Shank3KO mice. Additionally, we found that Shank3KO mice had markedly increased changes in gene expression in the prefrontal cortex following microbiome depletion. Taken together, our results suggest a gene x microbiome interaction in this mouse model for ASD and raise the possibility that targeting the microbiome may be a valid translational research strategy in developing therapeutics for ASD. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info
Rapper Kiraly Payne joins Devonn and Vontrell to talk music, video games, his rap group the OUTERNET and more!! Kiraly Payne's music is available on major streaming platforms. IG: https://www.instagram.com/kiralypayne/?hl=en Twitter: https://twitter.com/KiralyPayne?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor In School Detention is a weekly podcast show hosted by Devonn Overstreet, Pierce Anderson and Vontrell Williams. Come sit down with us and listen to our views of life through the eyes of 20 somethings trying to figure out life as we go. As we grow and change, so will the podcast. Thank you! Devonn: Facebook- Devonn Overstreet Twitter- @Dstreetz815 IG-devonnalan Pierce: Facebook- Pierce Anderson Twitter- JUSTDIDIT2345 IG-pb00gs Vontrell IG:vontrellduh Snap:Vontrellduh
En el décimo episodio de Grindin' Radio os contamos un poco más de nosotros eligiendo las 25 canciones que más nos han marcado. Participan contándonos las suyas, Quaiko, Macías y Ohra Kiraly. Tenemos el estreno en exclusiva de la mano de Faldero y T. Bandito.
En el décimo episodio de Grindin' Radio os contamos un poco más de nosotros eligiendo las 25 canciones que más nos han marcado. Participan contándonos las suyas, Quaiko, Macías y Ohra Kiraly. Tenemos el estreno en exclusiva de la mano de Faldero y T. Bandito.
En el décimo episodio de Grindin' Radio os contamos un poco más de nosotros eligiendo las 25 canciones que más nos han marcado. Participan contándonos las suyas, Quaiko, Macías y Ohra Kiraly. Tenemos el estreno en exclusiva de la mano de Faldero y T. Bandito.
SANDCAST: Beach Volleyball with Tri Bourne and Travis Mewhirter
Dain Blanton is smiling. For almost an hour and a half straight, sitting in a room talking about beach volleyball and a life that has revolved around it for almost three decades now, he smiles. At some point in the conversation, it just becomes almost impossible to be in anything but a great mood, because you’re around Dain Blanton, and Dain Blanton is, at 48 years old, living his best life, and he’s really, really happy about it. “I got a 22-month-old son, my first kid, and that’s keeping me busy,” he said on SANDCAST: Beach volleyball with Tri Bourne and Travis Mewhirter. “I got the new head coaching job at USC and that’s about four months old, so that’s been really busy. But I was telling Tri before we began the show, when you’re doing something that you love and it’s fun, you’re fired up to get up and get into work. It’s been awesome. It’s been really great.” The more you talk to Blanton, the more you wonder if there has ever been anything that wasn’t great. A Laguna Beach kid, he grew up as a dual-sport athlete, good enough in basketball and volleyball that he garnered scholarships for both. He opted for Pepperdine volleyball, and in 1992, he led the Waves to a National Championship. Five years later, he became the first African American to win an AVP event, when he and Canyon Ceman won the Hermosa Beach Grand Slam. That in itself would be a fine career for anyone. A college education, an historic win, decent prize money. And yet Blanton was only getting started. The next year, in 1998, he and Eric Fonoimoana began a push for the 2000 Olympic Games, in a men’s field that was as wide open as any, competing against some of the biggest names in beach history, including two who top the all-time wins list in Karch Kiraly, who was partnered with Adam Johnson, and Sinjin Smith, who was attempting to qualify for a second straight Games with Carl Henkel. No matter. Blanton and Fonoimoana, against all odds and most anybody’s prediction, pulled it off. Then they saved their biggest magic trick for last when they stunned one Olympic opponent after the next, shocking Ricardo Santos and Ze Marco de Melo in the gold medal match. “I remember going down to the Olympics and people were like ‘Take a lot of pictures, have fun’ you know what I mean?” Blanton said. “And you’re like ‘I see what you’re saying.’ And we went down there and we really enjoyed it. And Eric and I said ‘Let’s really immerse ourselves, we’re going to take it all in.’ It was awesome. Sydney was prepared so far in advance. They were so fired up to have it. “Me and Eric always said ‘Let’s bring home some jewelry, let’s bring home a medal.’ Bronze, silver, gold, we didn’t care. You want to win gold, but if you can focus one point at a time, and one match at a time, and that’s what we were able to do. And it’s cliché, you hear it a lot, but to actually do it, ‘next point, next point,’ but if you watch, Eric stuffs a point and he turns around and tackles me, I’m almost in shock because I’m so locked in to ‘We got another point.’” By now in Blanton’s life story, which at the Sydney Olympics was just 28 years in its authoring, it would be impossible to doubt anything Blanton would set his mind to do. What had he tried and not accomplished? So when he began to see the writing on his metaphorical beach volleyball wall, and he was tired of the travel, and his body wasn’t quite responding like he was used to, and he set out to pursue a broadcasting career, Blanton began like he did everything else: At the bottom of the ladder. And he relished it. He reached out to an executive producer at Fox Sports West named Tom Feurer and requested not job or a shot or a gig, but just to shadow. It took an entire year for the gold medalist Olympian to get a call back – to shadow high school football. “I went and I shadowed and they said the next yea next year we need a high school football sideline reporter. It was a cool thing to do, and a lot of people say how did you get involved in broadcasting and it was interesting to take a step back. People think ‘Oh you’re an Olympic gold medalist, you’re all this’ and you go and broadcast high school football,” Blanton said. “You have to leave the ego on the side, you want to learn a new trait, you’re late to the game, and it was the greatest place because you could totally mess up.” Here it all begins to make sense, why everything Blanton touches turns to gold. Why he was able to win Hermosa Beach, one of the biggest events on the AVP schedule, as the seven seed. Why he and Fonoimoana were able to pull off what Blanton labels, and not incorrectly, as the biggest upset in Olympic beach volleyball history. Heck, just to qualify for Sydney – leaping Kiraly and Johnson for the final spot – in the last tournament of the qualification period, he had to beat Jose Loiola and Emanuel Rego and then, immediately after, Sinjin Smith and Carl Henkel. Once in, most didn’t give them a chance. “Once we got in, people were like, ‘You know, Karch should probably go. He won the gold medal in 96, c’mon, he’s Karch, he won ’84, 88, 96,’” Blanton recalled. “So that put a chip on our shoulder.” Not that he’s ever really needed a chip on his shoulder. Blanton’s found a way to earning everything he has in his remarkably decorated life. Which is why he had no problem shadowing a reporter for a high school football game, which led to a gig as a sideline reporter for high school football, which turned into a Clippers game, which turned into more Clippers games, which turned into five years of covering every single Clippers game, flying with the team, being the face of Los Angeles Clippers basketball media. “I remember I got on the [team plane] for the first time, and in the galley in the back there’s sushi, it’s a nice layout, and I’m just killing it,” Blanton said. “I’m thinking ‘Oh wow, this must be the food for the plane!’ So I’m grinding, feeling good, and I get in, no announcements, no anything, no one’s telling you to buckle up. Five minutes into the flight, the flight attendant says ‘What do you want to eat for lunch?’ And I’ve already killed it. But this was just appetizers. But then you land, you go to Four Seasons, the Ritz, you’re living the good life. It was a great experience.” And for five years, it was. But there was always a pull back to volleyball. Blanton knew it. Though the break away from the game was nice, at the back of his mind, it was always there. When he began entering the coaching ranks, he began – where else – at the bottom of the ladder: volunteering at USC, learning under Anna Collier. There, he’d win multiple national titles, coach the most dominant team in all of college sports in Sara Hughes and Kelly Claes, and observe Collier and how she ran the program. When Collier resigned, and the job opened up, Blanton, among dozens of others, jumped at the chance. By now you know what happened next: He succeeded. Because this is Dain Blanton we’re talking about here, and Dain Blanton is going to succeed. “It’s a totally different experience, being the assistant to being the head coach because every little detail, the buck kinda stops with you,” he said. “You can’t be like ‘Oh, what do you want to do?’ You need to be there and constantly be making decisions which is a lot of responsibility and you just want to create an awesome experience for the players, get them a good education and get them a couple of rings on their fingers because you know that’s what it’s all about. I’m having a blast so far for sure.” So Blanton is going to smile, because there really isn’t any reason for him to be doing anything else, is there? At 48 years old, Blanton’s still just living his best life.
SANDCAST: Beach Volleyball with Tri Bourne and Travis Mewhirter
Sinjin Smith knows the world is different now. That guys just can’t play volleyball for four hours, jump train for one, take a ride down to South Mission Beach and then play for another four. Jobs. Kids. Families and responsibilities and such. But he is curious. Curious as to why the beach volleyball culture has changed so much from his days. Days when he and the boys would put a ball down on center court and have at it for an entire day. No need for drills or simulated plays. You just played. And you never stopped playing. “You’d want to get on the No. 1 court, and you’d play all day,” Smith said on SANDCAST: Beach volleyball with Tri Bourne and Travis Mewhirter. “Eight hours! Imagine all those guys that set up matches, if they all went to Sorrento or Manhattan Beach. All of them. Or Santa Barbara. There’d be a group, and you’d be bummed out if you were third in line to get on center court. You wanted to be on the first court. You’d compete all day long.” And the guys who did that won. They won more than anybody in the history of beach volleyball has ever won. Mike Dodd, Karch Kiraly, Smith, Tim Hovland and Randy Stoklos – all members of the Hall of Fame, all of whom are proponents of the play all day ethos of training – combined to win 513 domestic tournaments in their careers. It might have been more difficult to get any of them to take a break from playing volleyball than it was to get them to lose. “If I won the tournament, I’d take Monday off. If I didn’t win, I’m going hard on Monday, all the way through,” Smith said. “We were winning quite a bit, and I’d feel bad sometimes. If it was an easy win, if I didn’t feel like I was totally torched, I’d go out on Monday anyway.” What Smith found was that the more he played, and the more he played, in particular, with Stoklos, the easier winning became. Why change? “He was a big 6-5,” Smith said of Stoklos, with whom he played 198 events and won nearly half. “He jumped so well for someone his size, and he played so much volleyball growing up that he had an incredible sense for the game. And of course, he had incredible hands, probably the best hands on the beach. He could set any ball from anywhere. We complemented each other very well. He was great at the net at a time when blocking was becoming more important for the game, and he could dig, but he was better as a blocker, and that freed me up to do in the backcourt to do what I do. We played to each other’s strengths. “Communication is so important, right? But it got to a point where we didn’t even have to talk. I knew what he was going to do in every situation, and he knew what I was going to do. When you play long enough together with somebody, that’s the beauty of it. You’re not running into each other. You know where he’s going to be, and you know where to go. And if he gets in trouble, I know exactly what to tell him and if I get in trouble he knows exactly what to do. “It didn’t seem like we had to do anything special or different. It was just natural for us to do what we did.” What they did was win more than any other partnership in American beach volleyball. When this point comes up, Smith shrugs. He doesn’t quite understand all the hype about the weight room, unless it’s to rehab an injury or work on a specific movement. He’s a proponent that you play on the beach, and the beach is therefore where you should train. He and Kiraly, with whom he played 14 events and also won a National Championship at UCLA, would put on weight belts when they played at South Mission. When Smith wanted to get a workout in, he’d just jump – jump with no approach, jump with a full approach, slide sideways for three shuffles, slide the other way for three, jump on one foot, jump on the other, then do it all over again. “We’d do that every day,” he said. “We couldn’t get enough volleyball, indoor, outdoor, it didn’t matter. We just wanted to play.” Not drill or lift or do yoga. Just play.
SANDCAST: Beach Volleyball with Tri Bourne and Travis Mewhirter
On April 10, 1995, Carl Henkel was studying for his law school finals when one of the strangest, most unpredictable and, at that time he would have likely surmised, miraculous phone calls rang in around four in the morning. “Hey,” said the voice on the other line. “I need you to play this weekend in Spain. Can you make it?” Henkel nearly dropped the phone. Was that Sinjin Smith on the other side of the line? That Sinjin Smith? Asking him to play? “How long do I have to think about it?” he asked. “Well,” Smith recalled telling him on SANDCAST: Beach volleyball with Tri Bourne and Travis Mewhirter. “You’ve got about ten seconds.” Ten seconds? Here was Henkel, a 25-year-old who had cobbled together a good but not great professional volleyball career. He had played in more than 30 AVPs, finishing in the top 10 twice, and was playing most of his volleyball on the four-man tour. Whittier Law School was, without question, the wiser career move. So Henkel did what anybody else would do when Sinjin Smith asked you to make a run at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics: “Of course!” Henkel recalled telling Smith, in an interview two winters ago. “Forget these finals. I don’t need these finals. I’ll meet you there!” Henkel called up his instructors and told them the situation. They worked out a plan to delay his finals. The next day, Henkel was on a plane bound for Marbella, to play a tournament with Smith, the man who had helped co-found both the AVP and FIVB tours and is still considered to be one of the greatest of all-time. You may, however, be wondering how Smith got here. From the late 1970s through the early 90s, until a bum knee began limiting him, Smith was arguably the best beach volleyball player in the world. Nobody had won more tournaments or more money than him, not even Karch Kiraly or Mike Dodd or Randy Stoklos or Tim Hovland. Nobody had done more for the game. So how did he end up with Carl Henkel, a guy who hadn’t finished better than ninth on the AVP Tour, who didn’t make the indoor national team, who had spent his most recent days in beach volleyball on the less-heralded four-man tour? Who was studying for a law school final, far away from a beach? The answer can be boiled down to one name: Ricci Luyties. A gold medalist on the 1988 indoor team in Seoul, Luyties was a sublime talent, a 6-foot-5 freak of an athlete out of Smith’s hometown, Pacific Palisades. He wasn’t quite the talent that Stoklos, Smith’s longtime partner and the first man to make $1 million in beach volleyball, was, but he had won seven AVPs. They had agreed to make a run for the 1996 Olympics, gunning for the berth that was guaranteed to the top American finishing team on the FIVB. He and Smith would be all but a lock. And then he pulled out with hardly any warning at all. On the morning of April 10, 1995, he simply left Smith a voicemail: The AVP had pressured him. He wasn’t going to play. He was sorry. That was the day they were supposed to leave for Spain. Smith had enough on his mind. His first son, Hagen, had just been born. And now he was supposed to find a partner to go to the Olympics? To give up the next year traveling the world on a tour that didn’t pay well? To drop everything and stay in hotels and planes and abandon whatever other responsibilities they had? And he was supposed to find him in a day? It was too late in the process to pluck someone from the AVP – which was perhaps the point of the AVP pressuring Luyties so late – so Smith turned to the emergency option: The four-man tour. “Carl was the first to call me back,” Smith said. The oddest team in beach volleyball, a legend and a clerk, was born. And they were going to make it. Smith laughs at all of this now, but still with a shake of the head. There was so much infighting then, just as there is now. It was Smith who, with the help of then-FIVB president Ruben Acosta, helped found the beach side of the FIVB Tour. And it was Smith who helped usher it to the Olympics, despite a heavy, though understandable, pushback from the AVP, a tour and union he also helped found. “We had an event alongside the ’92 Olympics in Barcelona, to showcase the sport for the IOC,” Smith said. “That’s the event that Randy and I were sanctioned $70,000 by the AVP for going [instead of competing at the AVP event in Seal Beach that weekend]. We happened to win that amount of money. And then the AVP kept us from playing in the biggest events of the season, events that we would win most of the time. “But from that, the sport became an Olympic sport, so it was all worthwhile in the end for us. They said ‘It’ll never be an Olympic sport, you’re just blowing in the wind.’ So it became an Olympic sport. It was awesome.” Smith and Henkel would go on to finish fifth at the Atlanta Games, though before they bowed out, they put on perhaps the greatest volleyball match of all-time, a 15-17 quarterfinal loss to Kiraly and Kent Steffes. “I remember that well,” Smith said. Some will. Some won’t. But nobody can argue the impact that Smith has had on the sport. The AVP continues to operate as the only domestic professional tour, with prize money that is now eclipsing all but three events on the world tour. The world, which lagged considerably in Smith’s days as a player, has caught up, with teams from Norway, Latvia, Germany, Brazil, Russia, Italy all populating the top-10 rankings. “It took a little while but players started adjusting to the beach,” Smith said. “We were so good because we had a tour. We had a place to compete, and when you have that tour and you can make money and travel around and you can make a lot competing, you have an advantage over any country that’s not competing.” Now they’re all competing. They’ve all either caught up or are catching up. And Smith still can’t get enough. “We couldn’t get enough volleyball, indoor, outdoor, it didn’t matter,” Smith said. “We just wanted to play. It was pretty awesome.”
No episódio 11, conversamos com Daniel Oller, que nos contou como sua jornada desde o jardim até o ensino médio em escola Waldorf impactou suas escolhas na vida adulta. Agora vamos conversar sobre o mesmo assunto, mas sob outra perspectiva, com Bruno Kiraly. Psicólogo, atuante como terapeuta, ele estudou do jardim até o final do ensino fundamental na Escola Waldorf Anabá, em Florianópolis. Hoje com 35 anos, ele revisita sua infância e mostra para a gente como a influência desse tipo de educação pode se dar através de ligações sutis com a vida adulta, quase inconsciente. Bruno trabalha com psicoterapia individual e cursos onde procura integrar a vivência desses saberes com diferentes formas de arte, especialmente a fala e a escrita. Desenvolve, também, programas de desenvolvimento socioemocional e orientação vocacional para adolescentes em escolas de Florianópolis. Comentários e sugestões: balaioantroposofico@gmail.com No Instagram: @balaioantroposofico
Email questions and comments: m@fashionleague.io Website: www.fashionleague.io Roger Federer is GQ's 'Most Stylish Man of the Decade' Rihanna is everyone's Most Stylish Everything Ever. Faux or Fashion: Beyonce's Favorite fine jewelry brand? Where is the 128 carat 'Tiffany Diamond'? Naomi Campbell v. Rihanna Mikahila Bloomfield here, recapping some of the big fashion moments of 2019 with Fine Jewelry Publicist Jessica Kiraly. I met Jessica back in May of 2014 at ELLE magazine when she was the incoming jewelry intern and I was the outgoing Jewelry intern. As a fine jewelry publicist, Jessica has worked for D'Orazio & Associates, DeBeers, and Mega Mega Projects.
Greg Kiraly is an accomplished senior executive with more than three decades experience in the utility sector in energy transmission, distribution and general operations. He has served in various executive leadership roles across four of the largest investor-owned utilities in the U.S and Canada: Hydro One, Pacific Gas and Electric (PG&E), Commonwealth Edison (ComEd), and Public Service Electric and Gas Company. Greg holds a B.Sc. in Industrial Engineering from the New Jersey Institute of Technology and a M.B.A. from Seton Hall.
SANDCAST: Beach Volleyball with Tri Bourne and Travis Mewhirter
It was almost as if Sean Rosenthal didn’t believe the words that had just come out of his mouth. “Leaving Jake [Gibb] for Phil [Dalhausser],” he said on SANDCAST: Beach Volleyball with Tri Bourne and Travis Mewhirter, “might have been the worst volleyball decision of my career.” He smiled, laughed. Then said it again, as if to cement it into reality what he had just admitted. Rosenthal’s partnership with Dalhausser was a fascinating one, though the reactions to it, including Rosenthal’s own, are complicated. By conventional standards, they were the best team in the world, winning their first event together in 2013, piling on two more Grand Slam golds. Rosenthal had never won that many tournaments on the world tour in a single year. And then he did it again, as he and Dalhausser tacked on three more FIVB golds during a run of four consecutive finals appearances in Navanger, Gstaad, The Hague and Long Beach. Less than a month later, they won the Manhattan Beach Open. For two straight seasons, they were the leading gold medalists on the world tour and also took home the biggest domestic tournament. By any human standard, the partnership was incredibly successful. But Rosenthal isn’t considered human. No, this is the Son of Jorel, the kid from krypton. This is Superman we’re talking about here, and Superman doesn’t live by the mortal standards the rest of us do. “For two years, we were the best team in the world,” Rosenthal said of his partnership with Dalhausser. “I think a little bit of it is because we didn’t win as many tournaments on the AVP as we were expected, but we won a lot on the world tour. Leaving Jake for Phil was the worst volleyball decision of my career. It’s crazy, it’s hard to say, but I think it might be true.” It might be true not because Rosenthal and Dalhausser were disappointing – they played together two years, they were the best team in the world for two years – but because Rosenthal and Gibb were just that good. They had just won the FIVB Team of the Year. Rosenthal, in an era of Emanuel Rego and Alison Cerutti, of Dalhausser and Todd Rogers, of Reinder Nummerdor and Richard Schuil, was named the best player in the world. Even after the FIVB season closed, they followed it up with a win in Santa Barbara during the AVP’s truncated, two-event revival season under Donald Sun. And then Rosenthal gave Gibb the call. He had already been in touch with Dalhausser. He knew, no matter what happened in Santa Barbara, he was going with Dalhausser for the next season. “[Phil] was just like, ‘What do you want to do? Do you want to play together next season?’” recalled Rosenthal. “And I was just like, ‘Uh, yeah.’ If your boss comes up to you and asks you, ‘Do you want a raise?’ It’s not like, ‘No, I’m good where I’m at.’ It’s kind of one of those things, not only from prize money but sponsor money, which went way up, too. Got RedBull and UnderArmour and a couple others, like SmartCar, which were basically through Phil.” But would he do it again? “I’d probably do it again,” Rosenthal said. He’d do it again because Dalhausser is a name that belongs in discussions with those of Kiraly and Smith and Stoklos and Steffes, the best the game has ever seen. He’d do it again because, even with a rash of injuries and awful timing to both Rosenthal and Dalhausser, they still finished as the best team in the world in consecutive years. Such is the standard of Sean Rosenthal. When finishing as the top on the world tour is cause for questioning a partnership change. We are now in the final act of Rosenthal’s brilliant career, one in which he has accumulated more than 20 wins, compiled a resume that will rank him amongst the all-time greats and won with a playing style that will immortalize him in the South Bay community. His focus is still on volleyball, yes, but it’s turned more to his kids, constant bundles of energy. It’s turned to taking some time off. Golfing. Enjoying beach volleyball for what it is – a wonderful sport, an incredible way to make a career. More important, a way to get the kids out of the house and spend some energy. “We all,” Rosenthal said, “need to get down to the beach and practice.” One generation of Rosenthal gradually fades out. The next charges in.
Bone Up Brewing in DA HOUSE!!!! Owners, Liz and Jared Kiraly, stop by the show to hang with us and share a glimpse into the life of what it's like to be a BADASS-BEER-BREWIN couple AND operate one of our favorite breweries in town! We play Craft or Fiction Reveal and taste some EXCLUSIVE beers Laugh. Learn. Share stories. and Drink... ALOT! CHEERS!
SANDCAST: Beach Volleyball with Tri Bourne and Travis Mewhirter
Travis Mewhirter published his book, We Were Kings, on December 5. You can order it on Amazon and Barnes and Noble! I’ll always remember the first interview. It was September of 2016. I was sitting on my bed in my studio in Newport Beach. That bed also doubled as my office, seeing as my apartment was roughly 600 square feet and had room for a bed, kitchen, and TV, all within arm’s length of each other. On the other end of the phone was Tri Bourne – Tri Bourne! The guy I watched roof John Mayer on match point of the 2015 AVP Huntington Beach Open on the first weekend I had moved to California. The guy I had dug deep into YouTube to watch virtually every snippet of film I could find. That Tri Bourne. And for an hour and a half, Tri talked about whatever it was that I wanted to talk about. You’re writing a book? Cool. What’s it on? It was a great question at the time, and it remained a great question over the next two years. The umbrella topic was easy enough: It was on beach volleyball. It was on beach volleyball because, when I had first picked up the game at a bar in Florida called Juana’s Pagodas, I had done what all good nerds do when assuming a new hobby: I went to Amazon and ordered every piece of literature I could on the topic. Which was nothing. There were drill books, sure, and instructional stuff. But I wanted to know about the game. I wanted its history, in all its rich detail. I wanted to know the players, the people, the events. I wanted to know everything. Only, in book form, there wasn’t much of anything to know. So my second interview was with a man named Kevin Cleary. My good friend, John Braunstein, set it up in a way. I told him I was working on writing a book o beach volleyball, and he told me Cleary was a guy I needed to talk to. So I sent Cleary a message on Facebook, waited a month or two for a reply, and when he did, we decided to play a AA CBVA in Manhattan Beach together. It wound up being an all-day affair, Cleary regaling me tales of beach volleyball’s past, how he became the AVP’s first president, how the AVP was formed in protest of rule changes, how things were done in the old-school days. Slowly, I began picking the contact lists of Bourne and Cleary. From Bourne’s list, I was digging into the modern player; from Cleary’s, the first generation of professionals. In a single week, I’d speak to Sinjin Smith and Carl Henkel, the 1996 Olympic team and the cause of so much unnecessary controversy, and also Riley and Maddison McKibbin. I’d talk to Karch Kiraly and Tim Hovland, followed up by Casey Patterson and Jake Gibb – the legends of past and present. Within a year, I had interviewed more than 100 players across various generations of beach volleyball, and when I sat down to look over the roughly 800 pages of notes, I still had absolutely no clue where to begin or what, exactly, I was doing with all of this information, which was pure, untainted beach volleyball gold. Becoming a player helped clarify that. To be clear, my name, in the context of playing beach volleyball, should not be mentioned in the same sentence as men like Bourne, Patterson, Gibb, Dalhausser, Lucena, all of whom have enormous roles in the book. But becoming a player, experiencing the wondrous grind of working up the ranks in beach volleyball as it stands today, illuminated exactly the project I wanted to publish: Why in the world do people spend so much time, energy and money and sacrifice so much of themselves to play beach volleyball? Financially, it makes no sense. The term fiscal responsibility is a paradox when spoken of in the realm of beach volleyball. In the mid-to-later playing days of Kiraly, Dodd, Smith, Stoklos – all the names you’ll see in the CBVA Hall of Fame – it wasn’t so incomprehensible, to be financially stable and a beach volleyball player. They could gross half a million in a single year. But over the years, with the AVP changing hands so frequently, from Leonard Armato to Jeff Dankworth to Jerry Solomon to Armato to Donald Sun with various hedge funds and financial institutions subbing intermittently in between, the game has struggled to find a firm footing. As such, it’s struggled to provide the type of consistency that its athletes could live off of, all of which served to create two fascinating questions for me: How do men even stumble into this game, and why do they continue to do it? I sent my first manuscript, a 120,000-word monster of a thing, to my wizard editor lady, Ann Maynard, who has overseen a number of New York Times bestsellers. The content was great, she said, and the stories captivating. But I covered too much ground too fast. She felt like she was in a literary drag race that was at once exhilarating and severely confusing. She gave me two options: Pick half the book and focus only on that, repurposing the other material for blogs, stories, magazines, whatever. Or just split the book in two – one digging into the modern player, the other detailing beach volleyball’s ascent to becoming an Olympic sport. It made sense to publish the former option first, seeing as the information was going to be dated very quickly, while the latter, being historical, has no expiration date or need for expediency. So the next year, that’s what I set out to do, separating the information, outlining, outlining again, outlining one more time, then another, before sending it to Ann. We settled on a structure, with each chapter being a stop in the 2016 season, each stop digging into a different facet of the game – the difficulty of qualifying, the difficulty of qualifying enough to be a consistent main draw player, the difficulty of sustaining being a main draw player while also holding enough side jobs to stay afloat, the difficulty of sustaining being a main draw player while also holding enough side jobs to stay afloat while also attempting to raise a family. Each chapter adds another layer, another dynamic of this game that, to me, is nothing short of fascinating. Throughout, you’ll read the stories of men who are at the top and the bottom, of the Dalhaussers of the world and the Chris Luerses – the legends and the constant qualifiers. You’ll read about men who have made it and men who are still trying and might never actually do it. And you’ll read about why – why they continue going for it, despite so much suggesting they should do otherwise, why they love the game that so rarely loves them back in any tangible way. Why they continue to push for just one more day at the beach.
SANDCAST: Beach Volleyball with Tri Bourne and Travis Mewhirter
Adam Johnson couldn’t believe it. He’d had some rough losses in his day, narrow losses with a lot on the line. Twice he had been the first team out of the Olympics, and twice it was because of a random, head-scratching injury. In 1996, when Johnson was partnered with Randy Stoklos in the Olympic trials in Baltimore, the two had to win just one of their next two matches, the first of which would come against the Mikes – Mike Whitmarsh and Mike Dodd. Thirty seconds before the match, Stoklos hit one final warm up jump serve, landed on a ball and sprained his ankle. Johnson and Stoklos would lose the next two matches, and their bid for the Olympic Games. Four years later, it was Johnson and Karch Kiraly, needing essentially only to qualify for one final tournament to seal their spot in the Athens Games – and then it was Kiraly who suffered an injury. Again, Johnson was the first team out. “Thanks for reminding me,” he said, wistfully, on SANDCAST: Beach Volleyball with Tri Bourne and Travis Mewhirter. Eighteen years have passed since just missing out on the 2000 Games, but stakes are still high for Johnson on the volleyball court. Now, he’s wagering In N Out burgers. “I’ve never lost to my girls,” he said. “Now I will say that with a little asterisk, because I am getting a little bit older, and I was up 22-10 when one of the girls shot the ball over on one and I turned to go get it and I heard my hammy go a little bit.” Johnson wanted to call it quits. The girls wouldn’t have it. He made a bet: Loser takes the winner out to In N Out. “They wanted to know when we were going,” he said, laughing. “I’m here going ‘I’m up 22-10, and you’re telling me you’re not giving me another shot?’ And they’re like ‘Well can you go right now? Or you forfeit.’ They are pretty ruthless.” A competitive edge, perhaps, gleaned from their coach. This was a man who, in his first full season on the beach after years playing on the indoor national team and overseas in Italy, won five tournaments and labeled that as being “kicked around.” From 1994-1999, Johnson, playing with an armada of partners who would cement themselves as some of the best in the game – Jose Loiola, Kent Steffes, Kiraly, Tim Hovland, Stoklos – won at least four tournaments per season, in fields that were stacked with one Hall of Famer after the next. That drive is still there. “I don’t know if I ever gave up on being a player,” said Johnson, who retired in 2000, made a brief reemergence in 2005, before retiring again. “I’m always still trying to get up a ball up on my girls who can’t get it up, just using my foot or putting it back in play if it’s over the bench or something. “I love coaching. I feel like I have a lot to offer. If they ask questions and want to learn, I feel like they can get better.” Perhaps even more important: They might be able to get some In N Out.
In this episode, hosts Keith Kirchoff and Greg Carlson visit Bone Up Brewery in Everett, MA and chat with the co-owners and co-brewers, Liz and Jared Kiraly. They listen to the music of composer Daniel T Lewis, and the Kiraly's design the perfect beer that embodies Lewis' music. Along the way are discussions about Teamaker hops, specialty grains, and thriving in the shadow of a much larger brewery.
Daniel Istvan Kiraly - „Tudósításaimban mindig volt egy két dolog, amire én is rácsodálkoztam”
Volleyball's greatest player shows why he's also the sport's greatest ambassador, discussing his position with the United States womens national team, re-emphasizing the importance of humility, and having a laugh about how he was introduced into coaching in the first place. Listen in for part two of Travis Mewhirter's conversation with Kiraly.
There has never been a point in which Karch Kiraly has not met success. In high school, he won a state championship. At UCLA, where he majored in, of all things, biochemistry, he won three national titles. As a member of the United States indoor national team, he won two gold medals. As a beach virtuoso, he won the inaugural gold medal and was fittingly named the FIVB Player of the Century. Kiraly is, simply, the GOAT. And yet, his prevailing message is an inspiring one: Humility. In spite of his many accomplishments, Kiraly remains grounded in a growth mindset. Listen in to his inspiring message.
This week: Dive into the depths of Sherwood Kiraly’s cardboard box of comics! We went on location for this one, to the home of novelist, screenwriter, and Cubs victim Sherwood Kiraly in Galesburg, IL. Sherwood takes us back in time to his own misadventures as a young fan of western comics, explains why Kang the Conqueror is like a slow-burn comic, and weighs in on whether the Vision and Scarlet Witch should think about having kids already. All with original music by Adam Bernstein!
Kolumbus entdeckte Amerika. Die Gebrüder Wright erfanden das Flugzeug. Rick Astley gab uns niemals auf. Was diese Dinge eint? Sie alle sind jünger als die letzte EM-Niederlage Spaniens. Zumindest gefühlt. Wir sprechen über DEN Aufreger es EM-Spieltags, auf den auch gleich DAS Achtelfinale der K.O.-Runde folgen wird: Italien - Spanien. Hat hier jemand was von Finale gesagt? Außerdem widmen wir uns den wieder hoffenden Türken, kümmern uns um merkwürdige Polen und blicken auf die letzten Gruppenspiele dieser Europameisterschaft 2016. All das tun wir mit Hendrik Buchheister (@h_buchheister, freier Sportjournalist) im aktuellen Rasenfunk Kurzpass.
Kolumbus entdeckte Amerika. Die Gebrüder Wright erfanden das Flugzeug. Rick Astley gab uns niemals auf. Was diese Dinge eint? Sie alle sind jünger als die letzte EM-Niederlage Spaniens. Zumindest gefühlt. Wir sprechen über DEN Aufreger es EM-Spieltags, auf den auch gleich DAS Achtelfinale der K.O.-Runde folgen wird: Italien - Spanien. Hat hier jemand was von Finale gesagt? Außerdem widmen wir uns den wieder hoffenden Türken, kümmern uns um merkwürdige Polen und blicken auf die letzten Gruppenspiele dieser Europameisterschaft 2016. All das tun wir mit Hendrik Buchheister (@h_buchheister, freier Sportjournalist) im aktuellen Rasenfunk Kurzpass.
Ronaldo's back with the ill behaviour as we pore over Euro 2016's finest offerings. Featuring an Irish drubbing, Kiraly's joggers and the return of Testicle Matt. Plus we look ahead to England's showdown with Slovakia. Visit us at thefootballramble.com, follow us on Twitter @footballramble and like us on Facebook at facebook.com/footballramble. This show is sponsored by bet365. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Vrei sa sponsorizezi acest show sau sa propui un invitat interesant? Scrie-ne pe contact@citypodcast.ro Cosmin Barzan a realizat un alt episod de podcast in limba engleza. De data asta cu Hunor Kiraly, expert de Fundraising la Foundation for Development of Democratic Rights din Ungaria. Hunor Kiraly poate fi gasit la hunor.kiraly@demnet.org.hu si pe www.demnet.hu. Ai idei, pareri despre acest show sau vrei sa ne spui ceva? Contacteaza-ne pe contact@citypodcast.ro, pe Twitter sau Facebook. Cosmin Barzan este pe Facebook sau la cosmin.barzan@gmail.com. Nu uita sa dai “Subscribe” in iTunes sau in aplicatia ta preferata de ascultat podcast-uri si sa ne dai un rating in cit mai bun in iTunes. Ne ajuta sa aparem si in fata altor ascultatori din Romania. Piesa de la inceputul show-ului este copyright OVERWERK - "Daybreak" (GoPro HERO3 Edit)
Suzanne Kiraly is the founder of AussieWriters.com.au; she's a speaker, book coach and digital consultant who helps writers market their books effectively and to negotiate the complex digital world of publishing. In this episode, Suzanne discusses what's involved in publishing and marketing your own book; we cover a range of topics, from developing the writing habit through to print-on-demand platforms, pricing strategies and marketing your book via Amazon.
In this episode, editor and fiction writer Andrew Kiraly reads from his novel Crit and discusses his life and career. The event was held November 29, 2011 in the Barrick Auditorium at UNLV in Las Vegas, NV.
Simple Progression - 06.18.10 - Tracklist: TRACKLIST AVAILABLE SOON
Simple Progression - 06.11.10 - Tracklist: WILL BE AVAILABLE SOON
Simple Progression - 06.04.10 - Tracklist: WILL BE AVAILABLE SOON
Simple Progression - 01.01.10 - Tracklist: 1. ALEX CAYTAS & ALEKS PATZ “BUNGAWE“ (UGLH & FEDERICO LOCCHI REMIX) - CARAMELLA RECORDS 2. SPIRITCHASER “DANCEFLOOR SCIENCE“ (ORIGINAL MIX) - GUESS RECORDS 3. MASUKI “BALLYMORE“ (BRADLER & DUALTON REMIX) - RESTART RECORDS 4. MAHER DANIEL “DILIGENCE“ (NIKITIN SEMIKASHEV REMIX) - HAREM RECORDS 5. CHARLES GUDAGAFVA “FLESHLIGHT“ (ORIGINAL MIX) - WEST RECORDINGS 6. EDDY KRUGER “YEAH MUM“ (ORIGINAL MIX) - TRANSALP 7. KEVIN GRIFFITHS & OKAIN “CUBAQUEST“ (ORIGINAL MIX) - FOUR:TWENTY RECORDINGS 8. LUETZENKIRCHEN “PROLLY RELAXED“ (ORIGINAL MIX) - KLING KLONG 9. RICARDO VILLALOBOS & LOS UPDATES “DRIVING NOWHERE“ (ORIGINAL MIX) - NICE CAT! RECORDS 10. RESET ROBOT “NW1“ (ORIGINAL MIX) - ROOMBA 11. HAKAN LIBDO “SELF SUPPORTING RHYTHM“ (ORIGINAL MIX) - 3RD WAVE MUSIC 12. GOSHVA & DRIVE D “TROPIQUE“ (HOMEBASE DA FUNK MIX) - BRANDNEWVIBE RECORDINGS 13. PELE “ECO“ (ORIGINAL MIX) - SUPERNATURE 14. LEMON POPSICLE “IN MY TREE HOUSE“ (ORIGINAL MIX) - TWO FACES 15. POLDER “SWEATSHOP“ (ORIGINAL MIX) - INTACTO RECORDS 16. CAPE “DESASTERS“ (NICO PURMAN REMIX PART 1) - AIRDROP RECORDS 17. PATCH PARK “CURB“ (PATCH PARK SIDEWALK DUB MIX) - VARIANCE RECORDINGS