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Today we have Jeremy LaDuke with us on the show. This interview is, in part, about Jeremy's journey starting a boutique marketing firm, but it's also an opportunity for him to share advice that could help anyone improve their do-it-yourself marketing. Jeremy is the founder CEO of Epic Nine Marketing Outfitters, a 15-person boutique marketing firm with two goals in mind to help great local businesses thrive and to create a wonderful workplace for creative people. Jeremy is also the author of Climb, a how-to book for local businesses to navigate the world of marketing. He is a board member for the Sky City Entrepreneur Center and the Loudoun County Education Foundation. His business, epic Nine, won Pigeon Forge Chambers 2023 Best Non-Tourism Business of the Year Award and has been nominated for the Best of Blount County's 2024 Small Business of the Year. Subscribe on Apple Podcast , Spotify or other major streaming platforms.If you have a comment, a question you wish I'd asked, an idea for an episode or want to say hi, I'd love to hear from you! For inquiring guests, please keep in mind that this podcast is for the benefit of listeners and I am not interested in any “puff pieces.” Thank you for understanding!Let's connect!Website: https://www.annemcginty.com/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/annemcgintyInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/annemcgintyhost
**In this Episode of the Becoming a Badass Pharmacy Owner Podcast; Dr. Lisa Faast with guest Jeremy LaDuke will talk about foundational marketing for local businesses** **Show Notes:** 1. **Jeremy Introduction** [2:39] 2. **Marketing Strategies** [4:30] 3. **Branding And Marketing For Pharmacies** [12:32] 4. **SWOT Analysis** [16:20] 5. **Revies, Social Media, Video Content** [22:06] Websites Mentioned: https://theclimb.guide/ ----- #### **Becoming a Badass Pharmacy Owner Podcast is a Proud to be Apart of the Pharmacy Podcast Network**
The Human Subjects Protection Program (HSPP) Office at the University of Louisville supports researchers and provides educational resources and compliance reviews to ensure research meets federal and university policies. Unlike the IRB, which approves research to ensure ethical standards, the office assists with the research proposal preparation and submission process. They also clarify whether projects qualify as research and help with submissions involving human subjects. They encourage faculty to reach out early in their planning stages and utilize available templates and tools. Regular updates and resources are provided through their website and listserv to facilitate research processes and maintain compliance. Do you have comments or questions about Faculty Feed? Contact us at FacFeed@louisville.edu. We look forward to hearing from you. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hscfacdev/message
Bruce LaDuke discusses Artificial Innovation, Artificial Reasoning, Artificial Intelligence, and how The Powers That Be are interested in harnessing AI for a control grid rather than to empower humanity. A lot of these things such as AI, nanotechnology, and even cryptocurrencies were already preplanned and worked out in the 1980s. They are likely to tokenize […]
Cody LaDuke from the Cents of Life podcast joins me for a Halloween special. We're talking ghost stories, specifically Henry James' classic, The Turn of the Screw, the 1961 film version The Innocents, and the 2001 film The Others starring Nicole Kidman.Subscribe to Cents of Life: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/cents-of-life/id1701292933Follow Cody on X (FKA Twitter): https://twitter.com/cladu33
Winona LaDuke recalls “Salsa Tuesdays” outside the old Carnegie Library in Park Rapids. In 2021, water protector activists and members of the community would dance — salsa, macarena — in protest against Enbridge, the building's then occupant, the Canadian conglomerate behind the controversial Line 3 pipeline.“We would stand out there with little signs that said, ‘Water is life, protect the water, stop Line 3,'” LaDuke says. “We would always look at the building and hope that one day something would be different there.”On Thursday, Giiwedinong: The Anishinaabe Museum of Treaties and Culture opened on the spot. The museum sits just off the main drag of a downtown lined with candy shops, bars and an old cinema. Now, the stone building, built in 1908, is striped with red, white, yellow and black, the medicine wheel colors representing the four directions. It is the first museum in Minnesota devoted to the Indigenous perspective on treaty rights, environmental justice and culture.“This is not a tribal museum,” explains LaDuke, a member of the Mississippi Band of Ashinaabeg. “This is an Indigenous museum, but it is off the reservation. It received no state funding, it's entirely independent. We think of ourselves as the little museum that could.”In Oct. 2022, the building was purchased for the museum by Akiing, an Anishinaabe community nonprofit based on the nearby White Earth Indian Reservation. “It's being put in a place that's so ironic,” says Frank Bibeau, a museum board member and the Akiing executive director.Bibeau is an enrolled member of the Minnesota Chippewa Tribe at White Earth and a treaty rights attorney. Park Rapids is in the heart of ceded treaty territory, explains Bibeau. Enbridge placed the Line 3 pipeline across Northern Minnesota despite public opposition. Water protector activists, including Native and climate advocates, warned it could pollute waterways. With the museum, Bibeau says they are correcting the actions of the building's past occupants, Carnegie and Enbridge. Related Winona LaDuke resigns as Honor The Earth leader after sexual harassment case “So, the imperialist who took and raped our land and resources created that building in Park Rapids,” Bibeau says. “The next round of imperialists also were there, and so we're taking that space, and we're saying that's not the proper use of this space. That's been harmful to our area.”At the museum are interim executive director Jerry Lee Chilton, a member of the White Earth Band, and museum organizer Mary Crystal Goggleye, who is Anishinaabe and Pueblo. They stand in the entry, surrounded by a freshly painted mural. In jewel tones, Red Lake artist Brian Dow painted animals representing many Anishinaabe clans. “Giiwedinong” is Anishinaabe for “in the north,” says Chilton, who is also the executive director of the Anishinaabe Agricultural Institute.“It's a lot of cool artifacts, a lot of cool heritage,” Chilton says. He points to the ground and cites the 1855 Treaty. “This was all reservation at one point. So, we're just bringing that to light,” Chilton says. Goggleye walks among the maps and photographs.“We are fighting for our history to be told,” Goggleye says. “We are in society, you see us in society, and we will revitalize our own history.”The intimate galleries of Giiwedinong unfold with historical photos, treaty maps, and documents. Displays outline ceded territories defined by the Treaties of 1837, 1854, 1855 and 1867. They also show the rights to hunt, fish and gather in these territories, and tell the stories about how these rights have been breached. More displays depict agreements the Anishinaabe had with other indigenous nations, like One Dish One Spoon, the treaty about shared hunting rights that dates back to the 12th century.“It's a new concept, an important concept,” says museum board member Travis Zimmerman, a descendent of the Grand Portage Band of Lake Superior Chippewa. Zimmerman is also the site manager for the Mille Lacs Indian Museum and Trading Post, which is run by the Minnesota Historical Society. Giiwedinong is different, he says.“A museum run by an American Indian organization, having American Indian curators, and really having that Native voice come out, is something that you don't really see much of, anywhere really, much less in Minnesota.”The museum is an educational resource for Native and non-Native folk alike, Zimmerman says.“The thing that's really behind treaties, it's all about sovereignty, and I think that's what people don't realize and struggle with, that American Indians are sovereign nations,” Zimmerman says. “We always have been, and we always will be.”Giiwedinong also puts these treaty rights into a contemporary context. A special exhibit features photos and stories from the Line 3 protests, and the Dakota Access Pipeline at Standing Rock. A photo on display by Sarah (Miskwaa-ens Migiziwigwan) Kalmanson includes water protector activist Tania Aubid at Standing Rock in North Dakota. In September, Aitkin County judge Leslie Metzen dismissed charges related to a Line 3 protest against Aubid, LaDuke and fellow activist Dawn Goodwin.Metzen reasoned, “We moved them by force and power and violence off the land where they lived for thousands of years. To make peace, we signed treaties with them that promised many things they never received.”Kalmanson, an Anishinaabekwe descendant of White Earth, photographed many of these protests. She is also a curator and marketing director for the museum.“We had tens of thousands of people at Standing Rock. I was there. And I want to honor that. There were a lot of atrocities that happened,” she says.Curating the museum has been healing, she says.“It was pretty brutal, what we all went through, and I just feel really energized and I'm so happy to share and carry this on,” Kalmanson says. “I'm really excited to have folks come in and see how beautiful we are.”LaDuke says there will be another dance party at the opening tonight.
Each fall, the Ojibwe tribes of northern Minnesota harvest wild rice by hand. It's a long process that begins with families in canoes venturing into the tall grasses, where rice is poled and gently brushed with knockers into the bed of the canoe. We journey to White Earth Reservation, out onto Big Rice Lake in a canoe, to see how one tribe is supporting itself and changing the diet of its people through community kitchen projects. And we talk with the founder of White Earth Land Recovery Project, Ojibwe leader, Winona LaDuke, about the land, her fight to save wild rice, GMOs, her family, philosophy, and her candidacy for vice president of the United States on the Green Party ticket with Ralph Nader. LaDuke is an Ojibwe leader, writer, food activist, rural development economist, environmentalist, Harvard graduate —and a force to be reckoned with. She's the executive director of Honor the Earth, and most recently she was a leader at Standing Rock fighting the Dakota Access pipeline. When we visited Winona on the White Earth Reservation in 2004 for our Hidden Kitchens story Harvest on Big Rice Lake she spoke to us about her family, her life and work—and about how her Ojibwe father met her bohemian/artist/Jewish mother in New York City, how her dad went on to Hollywood to star in the Westerns and how he later became the New Age spiritual leader called Sun Bear. Born in Los Angeles and raised in Oregon, Winona moved to White Earth, her father's reservation, after she graduated from Harvard in 1982. When she first arrived, she worked as the principal of the Reservation's high school and became active in local issues. Seven years later, she started the non profit White Earth Land Recovery Project, dedicated to restoring the local economy and food systems and preserving wild rice. Today Winona LaDuke operates a 40-acre industrial hemp farm on the White Earth Indian Reservation with the idea of creating textiles for the people and the planet — of working towards a non petroleum based future. And she's started 8th Fire Solar, operated by Anishinaabe, manufacturing solar thermal panels. “According to Anishinaabe prophecies, we are in the time of the Seventh Fire. At this time, it is said we have a choice between a path that is well-worn and scorched, and a path that is green and unworn. If we move toward the green path, the Eighth Fire will be lit and people will come together to make a better future.”
10.31.2022 #RolandMartinUnfiltered: SCOTUS & Affirmative Action, KY Cop Kills Desman LaDuke, Internet Deals Disparities, Covid Variants The Supreme Court will kick off its November argument session with the highest-profile cases of that session: challenges to the consideration of race in the admissions process at Harvard and the University of North Carolina. We'll break down today's arguments. A recent report uncovers that poor, less white areas get the worst internet deals. I'll talk to one of the investigative reporters who discovered how some companies discriminate in providing Internet access. Desman LaDuke, the young black man having a mental health crisis shot by a police officer through a window of his home, was laid to rest on Saturday. Tonight, his aunt joins us to tell us about the investigation. The white officer who placed his gun on Patrick Lyoya's head and pulled the trigger will have to stand trial for his death. New York will pay millions to the men wrongfully convicted of killing Malcolm X. DNA exonerates a black man after 38 years in a California prison. And in our Fit, Live, Win segment, we're talking about bivalent Covid boosters and if it's a good idea to get them. Support RolandMartinUnfiltered and #BlackStarNetwork via the Cash App ☛ https://cash.app/$rmunfiltered PayPal ☛ https://www.paypal.me/rmartinunfiltered Venmo ☛https://venmo.com/rmunfiltered Zelle ☛ roland@rolandsmartin.com Annual or monthly recurring #BringTheFunk Fan Club membership via paypal ☛ https://rolandsmartin.com/rmu-paypal/ Download the #BlackStarNetwork app on iOS, AppleTV, Android, Android TV, Roku, FireTV, SamsungTV and XBox
10.28.2022 #RolandMartinUnfiltered: KY Cop Kills Desman LaDuke, UT Sheriff Deputy's Lasso, AZ Voter Threats, Dyslexia Awareness Month Another young black man in crisis is killed. This time a Nicholasville, Kentucky cop shot and killed 22-year-old Desman LaDuke after his family called for a wellness check believing he was suffering from a mental health crisis. In Utah, a sheriff's deputy walks the streets searching for Black shoplifting suspect with a lasso, and it's all on bodycam video. I'll talk to Black Lives Matter Utah Chapter Operating Chairperson about the incident that has folks in Grand County talking. As record-breaking early voting totals continue, we'll talk about how right-wing extremists are intimidating Arizona voters. Democratic Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer is caught with a hot mic expressing his concerns for the midterm election. Nancy Pelosi's husband gets viciously attacked by a man who authorities say was looking for the House Speaker. In our Education Matters segment, it's Dyslexia Awareness Month. We'll examine how proficient reading levels dictate who will and will not graduate from high school. RolandMartinUnfiltered and #BlackStarNetwork via the Cash App ☛ https://cash.app/$rmunfiltered PayPal ☛ https://www.paypal.me/rmartinunfiltered Venmo ☛https://venmo.com/rmunfiltered Zelle ☛ roland@rolandsmartin.com Annual or monthly recurring #BringTheFunk Fan Club membership via paypal ☛ https://rolandsmartin.com/rmu-paypal/ Download the #BlackStarNetwork app on iOS, AppleTV, Android, Android TV, Roku, FireTV, SamsungTV and XBox
Lance bids a fond farewell to the podcast and is joined by a cavalcade of stars! Become a Patron ► https://www.patreon.com/thebrassjunkies/ Show Notes ► https://www.pedalnotemedia.com/the-brass-junkies-podcast/ Facebook ► https://www.facebook.com/pray4jens/ Instagram ► https://www.instagram.com/pray4jens/ Twitter ► https://twitter.com/pray4jens The Brass Junkies is hosted by Andrew Hitz and Lance LaDuke and is produced one final time by Will Houchin for Pedal Note Media https://www.pedalnotemedia.com/ #BrassJunkies #AndrewHitz #LanceLaDuke
In this episode, Skye and Anthony discuss the first five men to serve time in the Territorial Prison from Ada County - Al Priest and John Stuart Black (Highway Robbery), Charles LaDuke (Grand Larceny), Jacob Drake (Assault with Intent to Murder), and Michael Donahue (Assault with Intent to Murder) - and dig into the county's role as a center for lumber and commerce.
Winona LaDuke is probably the most dedicated, smart and hilarious activist you will ever come across. She lives on the White Earth Indian Reservation in Northwestern Minnesota, with about 130,000 other Anishinaabe and Ojibwe people. Since founding the White Earth Land Recovery Project in 1989, and Honor the Earth in 1983, she's been fighting to preserve the indigenous sovereignty and environmental integrity of her land and people there. She also notably ran for Vice President with Ralph Nader for the Green Party in 1996 and 2000. LaDuke and her collaborators in Minnesota just waged a years-long battle against the Line 3 pipeline, which Canadian energy company Enbridge ultimately pushed through in 2021. That fight was building on her work against the Dakota Access Pipeline at Standing Rock, a watershed moment in anti-pipeline protest, and in building a new type of movement linking environmental, indigenous, and racial justice activists. In this wide-ranging interview for Protest & Survive, LaDuke discusses being present in her community, anti-colonialism land back, building local sustainable economies, and trying every tactic to win. Produced and hosted by Reed Dunlea, edited by Jason Halal, music by Jesse Crawford, and photography by Keri Picket. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/protest-and-survive/support
Welcome to the Missions to Movements Podcast, a show that highlights the digital strategies of organizations making a positive impact in the world. Ready to learn the latest trends, actionable tips, and the real stories behind the feed?In our first episode, you'll hear how New Story Charity went viral on TikTok (and no, the videos didn't involve any silly dance moves!)Social Media Manager Sierra LaDuke and I unpack how New Story creates their social media content strategy, behind the scenes of two of their viral TikTok videos, and how they redefined what social media success means to them. This conversation is sure to spark so many fun conversations for your organization. Enjoy!Notable Quote from Sierra“That's what I love about TikTok, is that raw, janky kind of edits that resonates with the audience. You can really throw something together and people enjoy it more than a super polished video.”Resources & LinksLearn more about New Story Charity and their mission to house 1 million people by 2030.Follow New Story Charity on Instagram, LinkedIn, TikTok, Twitter, and YouTube.Connect with Sierra LaDuke on LinkedIn.Learn about Seed Spot and their incubator programs for entrepreneurs.Check out Duolingo's TikTok account.Are you making costly mistakes with your social ads strategy? RSVP to my new masterclass, How To Attract Recurring Donors Without Social Media and learn my #1 secret for copy and content inspiration!Want to make Missions to Movements even better? Take a screenshot of this episode and share it on Instagram. Be sure to tag @positivequation so I can connect with you!
Recording Artists Spencer Kane and Caleb LaDuke drop by Sensibly Cynical to talk about their new hit single, the current state of the music industry, and more! "Numb" is now available for streaming everywhere!
"Tribes are discovering endless possibilities for Native communities whose time has come to move forward boldly."
All Around Classical: A Classical Music Podcast with World-Class Artists Over Coffee
Will LaDuke is the Executive Producer/Host - ACTIVE CULTURE at Riverwest Radio 104.1 WXRW. ACTIVE CULTURE is a weekly half-hour program highlighting various aspects of local culture from the artists' perspective. From actors to authors, musicians to artists, we'll bring you the lowdown on what's new in Milwaukee and Chicago. Will has had an extended and captivating career in and out of broadcasting. In this conversation, we learn about how he got into broadcasting, why he got out, and how the love of broadcasting lured him back in. The landscape of audio programming has changed with the rising of podcasting. It brings us back to the era where we appreciate listening to storytelling and using our imagination to fill in the blanks. So, instead of a visual podcast, this episode is released audio-only. Will LaDuke's Radio Program: http://www.riverwestradio.com/show/active-culture/?fbclid=IwAR0WAXVSyiIR9bWL2DHqGjPi6JSaGsD6KdHmohnz0JBU0kMqyjGq0IycR-Q Tuesday Conversation With Friends: Instagram: www.Instagram.com/Tuesday.Conversations Twitter: @Ms_Shirley_Wang Facebook: @TuesdayConversationWithFriends YouTube Channel: https://tinyurl.com/TuesdayConversationWithFriends --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/shirley-wang6/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/shirley-wang6/support
Ten years ago, I interviewed my mom, Carolyn LaDuke, for an on-air StoryCorps inspired celebration of Mother's Day. We recorded the interview on her 70th birthday in April 2011. Two years later, I recorded an interview with her again - after she'd recovered from a heart attack and while she was undergoing treatment for a second recurrence of breast cancer. This past April, she turned 80. The last time we went to Tennessee, Paul and I had a meeting with my parents, their priest and one of my brothers about funeral planning, my dog played with the dog my Dad got to keep him company when my mom dies, and I recorded a new conversation with my Mom.
For full episode notes including related episodes, research and reading links goto: https://Patreon.com/theLFShowAs Canadian oil giant Enbridge defies orders to shut down their dangerous Line 5 pipeline in Michigan, indigenous environmental activists gain momentum in their fight to end reliance on fossil fuels. In Minnesota, Enbridge plans to build another pipeline, violating treaties and threatening the Mississippi Watershed. The company says its new pipeline is essential to our energy system. That's big oil's vision for the future. What is the indigenous one? What would the world look like if community, ecology, and sustainability were the guiding principles of our energy sector? In this episode, Laura is joined by guest co-host Judith LeBlanc a citizen of the Caddo Tribe of Oklahoma and director of the Native Organizers Alliance. They speak with indigenous activists who have answers, and not just in theory: for years, they've been developing programs for solar power and sustainable resource management so that future generations can thrive. Released on Earth Day 2021 via Rock the Cause Records, Here's “No More Pipeline Blues (On this Land Where We Belong)”, produced and composed by Larry Long featuring the Indigo Girls, Winona LaDuke, Bonnie Raitt and First Native American poet laureate Joy Harjo. as well as Waubanewquay, Day Sisters, Mumu Fresh, Pura Fe, Soni Moreno, and Jennifer Kreisberg. Proceeds from this song go to Honor the Earth, a nonprofit founded by LaDuke with the Indigo Girls, fighting to stop Enbridge's Minnesota “Line 3” tar sands oil pipeline.GUESTS:Judith LeBlanc Director, Native Organizers AllianceWinona LaDuke, Executive Director, Honor the EarthTaysha Martineau, Anishinaabe Water Protector and Founder, Camp MigiziJason Goward, Anishinaabe Water Protector and Whistleblower, Former Enbridge Employee While mainstream media or money media keeps you in a bubble, we're committed to popping that bubble by continuing to bring you radical, intersectional media! Can we depend on you to chip in? Become a Patreon partner by committing to a monthly donation today, https://Patreon.com/theLFShow ...Thanks
Monday's decision by the Minnesota Court of Appeals to uphold the PUC's approval of Enbridge's Line 3 pipeline came as a blow to environmental activists like Winona LaDuke, who only three days before had joined a press call with other activists to celebrate the abandonment of the Keystone XL pipeline. But when asked when enough is enough, if there is a point where she will give up, LaDuke says, "I'm in it 'till the end."
From northern Minnesota to the metro area, protesters have mobilized this week against the construction of the Line 3 oil sands pipeline. The movement is led by Indigenous women; they emphasize the pipeline violates agreements upholding the Anishinaabe people's rights to fish, hunt and gather on treaty-protected land. --Tiffany Bui reports: From northern Minnesota to the metro area, protesters have mobilized this week against the construction of the Line 3 oil sands pipeline. The proposed pipeline expansion by Canadian company Enbridge would cross treaty-protected land. Activists say the pipeline poses an environmental risk to numerous bodies of water.On Thursday, over 120 protesters gathered in Gold Medal Park in Minneapolis to show solidarity with their northern counterparts. Winona LaDuke, director of Honor the Earth, spoke at the rally after weeks of camping with other activists at Shell City Campground.“I don't feel like our water, our land should go to a Canadian multinational trying to make a buck at the end of the fossil fuel era,” said LaDuke. “That's not right. That's not right.”The protesters main goal was to pressure state Senator Amy Klobuchar to denounce the pipeline. Speakers at the rally want Klobuchar to help convince the Biden administration to halt Line 3, just as it did the Keystone XL pipeline.Demonstrators linked the protests to Line 3 to other social justice movements. Beatrice Ogeh says she's concerned about the influx of male pipeline workers to areas where Indigenous women live on tribal reservations.“These pipelines really perpetuate a lot of sexual assault against Indigenous people. These man camps … put a lot of the women at risk,” said Ogeh.A coalition of groups called Treaty People Gathering have set up camp in northern Minnesota to resist pipeline construction. Some have even chained themselves to the construction equipment. Activists say this was their biggest move yet against the pipeline, with 2000 protesters attending and nearly 200 arrested.The movement is led by Indigenous women; they emphasize the pipeline violates agreements upholding the Anishinaabe people's rights to fish, hunt and gather on treaty-protected land.
For full episode notes including related episodes, research and reading links goto: https://Patreon.com/theLFShowAs Canadian oil giant Enbridge defies orders to shut down their dangerous Line 5 pipeline in Michigan, indigenous environmental activists gain momentum in their fight to end reliance on fossil fuels. In Minnesota, Enbridge plans to build another pipeline, violating treaties and threatening the Mississippi Watershed. The company says its new pipeline is essential to our energy system. That's big oil's vision for the future. What is the indigenous one? What would the world look like if community, ecology, and sustainability were the guiding principles of our energy sector? In this episode, Laura is joined by guest co-host Judith LeBlanc a citizen of the Caddo Tribe of Oklahoma and director of the Native Organizers Alliance. They speak with indigenous activists who have answers, and not just in theory: for years, they've been developing programs for solar power and sustainable resource management so that future generations can thrive. Released on Earth Day 2021 via Rock the Cause Records, Here's “No More Pipeline Blues (On this Land Where We Belong)”, produced and composed by Larry Long featuring the Indigo Girls, Winona LaDuke, Bonnie Raitt and First Native American poet laureate Joy Harjo. as well as Waubanewquay, Day Sisters, Mumu Fresh, Pura Fe, Soni Moreno, and Jennifer Kreisberg. Proceeds from this song go to Honor the Earth, a nonprofit founded by LaDuke with the Indigo Girls, fighting to stop Enbridge's Minnesota “Line 3” tar sands oil pipeline.GUESTS:Judith LeBlanc Director, Native Organizers AllianceWinona LaDuke, Executive Director, Honor the EarthTaysha Martineau, Anishinaabe Water Protector and Founder, Camp MigiziJason Goward, Anishinaabe Water Protector and Whistleblower, Former Enbridge Employee We are coming to the finish line of our May Day to Memorial Day fund drive to raise $25,000. While mainstream media or money media keeps you in a bubble, we're committed to popping that bubble by continuing to bring you radical, intersectional media! Can we depend on you to chip in? Go to LauraFlanders.org/donate and join our team by making a donation today. Thanks
www.lanceladuke.com www.pedalnotemedia.com Topics include: Carnegie Mellon University Virtual reality (VR) Creativity The Brass Junkies Live Performance In-person lessons Pedal Note Media Cultivation and curation Unfair advantage The future SUBSCRIBE at www.workingmusicianpodcast.libsyn.com Pay What You Want monthly subscribers get access to an exclusive blog feed with updates, bonus questions from podcast interviews, and subscriber-only episodes.
My good friend of many years Harumi LaDuke is here! Harumi interviews me on what it means to let shit/ identities go, listening to intuition, channeling (or not lol) different parts of ourselves in different contexts, getting validation from others, doing what you love, and lots and lots of Human Design (Harumi is literally an expert!) We also have a spontaneous moment where I interview Harumi’s intuition on her new projects! Listen to hear all of her amazing ambitions! Harumi LaDuke is an intuitive facilitator, educator, and 3/6 Manifesting Generator with Sacral Authority. She helps people who feel stuck about a decision or situation to access their intuition and move towards what they really want and need. Over the past ten years, she has trained and/or become certified in a variety of techniques, including: Emotion Code, Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT or “tapping”), muscle testing, PSYCH-K Advanced and Master Facilitation, Human Design, and other intuitive modalities. When working with clients, she’s not about just using a specific technique so much as them figuring out for themselves what might be the most impactful in any given moment. Ultimately, she works with people to release what needs to be released--trapped emotions, stress, and limiting beliefs--to unleash the power inside. Shownotes: Harumi’s Instagram charlotte@charlottekayecoach.com AFF 49: Human Design with Stacy Rowan Part 2 AFF 48: Human Design with Stacy Rowan Part 1 Connect with meInstagram: @charlottekayecoachFacebook groupCharlottekayecoach.com
Marie: This week on Minnesota Native News, a look at why many people in Indian Country oppose Line Three. I'm Marie Rock. Enbridge Energy says the new pipeline is needed to transport oil safely.Reporter Emma Needham has been talking with community members in Northern Minnesota Emma: The route has been clear cut, a trench has been dug, and Enbridge is now burying the pipe underground and under many major waterways. Many native community members say they do not want to see this pipeline completed. 8-year-old Water Protector, Jagger stands on a frozen lake near her home on the Fond Du Lac Reservation, singing the Nibi Song. She and her family hope the song inspires people to protect the water.[20 Seconds of Water Song covers the first round of words]Simone Senogles is also an activist. She is a member of Red Lake Nation and has worked with the Bemidji-based Indigenous Environmental Network for 20 years. Simone Senagles “So we understand that line three is part of the fossil fuel infrastructure, right? And I think particularly for Minnesota, we are called the land of 10,000 lakes, and it's true! You can't go very far without running into some water. And so, having pipelines that are known to leak, are known to fail, running through water-rich land, is preposterous. It's outrageous. Like who thought of that? Who thinks that's a good idea?!”.Emma: Back in 1991, the Line 3 pipeline ruptured near Grand Rapids, spilling over 1.7 million gallons of oil into the Prairie River, which connects to the Mississippi River. The only thing that saved both rivers was the 18 inches of ice covering the Prairie River that year. Pipeline opponents… like Simone… are worried about another Line 3 spill.. but they are also concerned with Tribal treaty rights. They say Construction and subsequent leaks in this pipeline would devastate hunting, fishing, wild rice harvest and that Native communities rely on these fruits of the earth to connect to their culture, and to feed their families. Simone Senagales: So we know this Line Three emissions are going to push us over the top of what we can come back from...this sort of predatory capitalism system that we all live under, combined with, you know, colonization, capitalism, colonization, gendered violence, racism, sexism, all of those things are connected. And so that when we fight something like line three, we have to be aware of those connections.”Emma: The fear of catastrophe, along with historical disrespect of culture and treaties, has fueled some Native people to take up “direct action” in the form of camps. There are 4 active camps along the new Line 3 Pipeline Corridor, with a 5th planned to launch this week. Many Water Protectors at the camps say they are concerned with the recent police mobilization against them. Winona LaDuke is a White Earth Tribal member and lead organizer for the camp on Great River Road north of Palisade. Late last week, LaDuke addressed a Minnesota House public safety committee about policing concerns. Winona LD: The reason that this is a deep concern to us is because of course, Enbridge has said that they will pay for the police costs in Minnesota associated with ensuring that they are enabled to put in Line Three and attended to that there's a lot of I believe civil rights problems that are associated with a Canadian multinational, paying the expenses of your police force in the state of Minnesota, to ensure that a project that they want to get through is able to happen. Now how that's unrolled so far as being very problematic to us. Enbridge Energy did not respond to my message asking for comment on previous oil spills in Minnesota, or for a statement about the camps. In a recent statement, the company said “Our first priority is the safety of all involved - our workers, men and women in law enforcement, and the protesters themselves. As a company, we recognize the rights of individuals and groups to express their views legally and peacefully. We don't tolerate illegal activities of any kind including trespassing, vandalism, or other mischief, and Enbridge will seek to prosecute those individuals to the fullest extent of the law.” For Minnesota Native News, I'm Emma Needham.
Winona LaDuke—an Anishinaabekwe (Ojibwe) member of the White Earth Nation—is an environmentalist, economist, author, and prominent Native American activist working to restore and preserve indigenous cultures and lands.She graduated from Harvard University in 1982 with a B.A. in economics (rural economic development) and from Antioch University with an M.A. in community economic development. While at Harvard, she came to understand that the problems besetting native nations were the result of centuries of governmental exploitation. At age 18 she became the youngest person to speak to the United Nations about Native American issues.In 1989 LaDuke founded the White Earth Land Recovery Project in Minnesota, focusing on the recovery, preservation, and restoration of land on the White Earth Reservation. This includes branding traditional foods through the Native Harvest label.In 1993 LaDuke gave the Annual E. F. Schumacher Lecture entitled “Voices from White Earth.” That same year she co-founded and is executive director of Honor the Earth, whose goal is to support Native environmental issues and to ensure the survival of sustainable Native communities. As executive director she travels nationally and internationally to work with Indigenous communities on climate justice, renewable energy, sustainable development, food sovereignty, environmental justice, and human rights.Among the books she has authored are All Our Relations: Native Struggles for Land and Life (1999, 2016); The Winona LaDuke Reader: A Collection of Essential Writings (2002); Recovering the Sacred: The Power of Naming and Claiming (2005); The Militarization of Indian Country (2013).LaDuke's many honors include nomination in 1994 by Time magazine as one of America's 50 most promising leaders under 40; the Thomas Merton Award in 1996, the Ann Bancroft Award for Women's Leadership in 1997, and the Reebok Human Rights Award in 1998. In 1998 Ms. Magazine named her Woman of the Year for her work with Honor the Earth. She was inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame in 2007, and in 2017 she received the Alice and Clifford Spendlove Prize in Social Justice, Diplomacy, and Tolerance.Winona LaDuke was an active leader as a Water Protector with the Dakota Access Pipeline protests in 2017 at Standing Rock, where the Sioux Nation and hundreds of their supporters fought to preserve the Nation's drinking water and sacred lands from the damage the pipeline would cause. Over the years her activism has not deviated from seeking justice and restoration for Indigenous peoples.Leah Penniman is an educator, farmer/peyizan, author, and food justice activist from Soul Fire Farm in Grafton, NY. She co-founded Soul Fire Farm in 2011 with the mission to end racism in the food system and reclaim our ancestral connection to land. Penniman is part of a team that facilitates powerful food sovereignty programs – including farmer trainings for Black & Brown people, a subsidized farm food distribution program for people living under food apartheid, and domestic and international organizing toward equity in the food system.Penniman holds an MA in Science Education and BA in Environmental Science and International Development from Clark University. She has been farming since 1996 and teaching since 2002. The work of Penniman and Soul Fire Farm has been recognized by the Soros Racial Justice Fellowship, Fulbright Program, Omega Sustainability Leadership Award, Presidential Award for Science Teaching, NYS Health Emerging Innovator Awards, and Andrew Goodman Foundation, among others. She is the author of Farming While Black: Soul Fire Farm's Practical Guide to Liberation on the Land (2018).
Winona LaDuke is angry, and she's not pulling any punches. Enbridge is prepared to begin construction on the controversial Line 3 project next Tuesday, and LaDuke, a longtime environmental activist and the executive director of Honor the Earth, is fed up. "This is a disaster for the environment, civil rights and the government," she says. "The least the governor could do is issue a stay. "We would like the dogs called off. Enbridge wants to push this through before the pandemic is over and in the middle of winter. And that's wrong."
Caleb LaDuke shares his experience in the concept behind his new album “R”. He also shares his story and how music has helped him get through the hardest of times.
Betty LaDuke has been making art that addresses the human condition for seven decades! Her current works address many of our current social, political, and environmental challenges; tall wooden panels depicting various abstract and representational human situations, presented with bright … More ... The post Betty LaDuke, Visual Artist – New Book “Migrants, Border Lands, And Social Justice” appeared first on Paradigms Podcast.
For Episode 7 of The Tone Dome, we are very honoured to welcome Andrew Hitz and Lance LaDuke, jointly known as "The Brass Junkies." In this memorable discussion, we discuss Lance's start in improv comedy, public speaking, podcasting, the ins and outs of podcasting, Sam's grammar/punctuation skills, and more.
Music Studio Startup: Helping music teachers thrive as entrepreneurs
I’m on summer break so this week I’m rebroadcasting a previously-aired episode of Music Studio Startup. Show notes from when this episode originally aired can be found at https://www.musicstudiostartup.com/episode016/
Winona LaDuke is feeling pretty good today. The longtime Native American activist and advocate for sustainable development, renewable energy and local food systems is getting some rain on her crops this morning, and Monday, a district court ruled that the Dakota Access Pipeline must be shut down and drained of oil by August 5th. LaDuke, also the executive director of the group Honor the Earth, has been battling the Dakota Access Pipeline project in North Dakota as well as the Enbridge Line 3 project in Northern Minnesota for years. She talks about the novelist Arundhati Roy's characterization of pandemic as portal . "Each time there's a pandemic in the history of the world, it forces society to change how it is," she says. "And this has forced us to our knees. And to transform our world."
TEM212: The challenge of standing out online and the importance of community building: A conversation with Lance LaDuke Lance LaDuke, my partner at Pedal Note Media, joined me as a guest speaker for one of the music business classes I teach at Shenandoah Conservatory. On Today's Episode of The Entrepreneurial Musician: How the world and music business might be different on the other side of this pandemic Now that Acapella App-style videos are ubiquitous, how do you stand out with recording yourself? The old performance models will come back in some form but in the meantime new models are slowly emerging While there's no rubric for you to be remarkable online it's important to remember that there's no rubric for anyone - no one knows what to do right now which is an opportunity for everyone People like us do things like this The value of building a community How to build a community while we are all apart Phish growing a community through their Dinner and a Movie events on Tuesdays during this pandemic The two things you need to get traction in the world today: excellence and authenticity Why anyone can offer a peak behind the creative curtain and monetize it if it's done right Links: Boston Brass as recent guests on The Brass Junkies Christopher Bill's YouTube Channel #sondheim90concert TEM210: Dana Fonteneau Phish's Dinner and a Movie Dinner with the Gaffigans The Mockingbird Foundation Taylor: Classical Music in Crisis Want to help the show? Here's a couple of ways you can do that! 1. Want to access exclusive bonus coverage while helping me get to my next goal of $100 per episode on Patreon by becoming a patron today: https://www.patreon.com/tempodcast 2. My next Apple Podcasts goal is 150 ratings and 75 reviews. Take just a minute to leave a rating and review on Apple Podcasts to help me get there. Thank you! And finally, a huge thank you to Parker Mouthpieces for providing the hosting for TEM. Produced by Andrew Hitz Show notes for all episodes of TEM including topics discussed, links to all books and websites referenced can be found at: http://www.tem.fm/shownotes
This is WLRN's four year anniversary edition! First up, hear Danielle Whitaker introduce the topic for this month's podcast: women's rights in the Green Party USA and in particular, what is happening to the Georgia Green Party because they decided to sign onto the Declaration for Women's Sex-based Rights. https://www.womensdeclaration.com/ Next, hear WLRN's Dana Vitalosova deliver our world news segment right before the song "Tell it Like it Is" by Tracy Chapman. Following the news, hear an excerpt of an interview Thistle did with Georgia Green Party Co-Chair, Denice Traina and then another excerpt with former Green Party member and candidate, Elaine Mastromatteo, pictured in our cover image for this month. Both women talk about their involvement in the Green Party and comment on the status of women's rights. Next, enjoy the song "Sleep to Dream" by Fiona Apple. Finally, don't miss WLRN's Sekhmet SheOwl's scathing commentary on the state of American electoral politics in general as it relates to women, and the particular situation facing the Georgia Green Party. To sign the Declaration on Women's Sex-based Rights go to: https://www.womensdeclaration.com/. To sign the statement and join the Dialogue Not Expulsion Caucus to support the Georgia Green Party go to: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSd3NBNll6DU4VBnWyMhofVZpl2hQiqzpF1K9LRVk5mNbHcVSg/viewform?fbclid=IwAR26Iefym7vUjrE8zaZHVHdz1JDzLagW9woo4W1KBhGVFAIGpki32OIakB4 CORRECTION: Denice Traina contacted us to tell us she was mistaken about Winona LaDuke still being a member of the Green Party. LaDuke ran with Ralph Nader as a Green in 2000 but has not since been a Green. Thank you for staying tuned to feminist community powered radio WLRN! If you'd like to donate to help keep us airborne, please visit our wordpress site and click on the donate button. https://wlrnmedia.wordpress.com/
Come take a listen as we discuss a love triangle gone wrong (Nicholas LaDuke), a partner who snapped and an elaborate cover up (Jerry Stomps). This episode is based on The Bachelor: Listen to Your Heart premiere (if you want to skip the bachelor talk, the first true crime story starts at 3:20, and the second at 25:21). Also, quarantine is hard, so are words and geography. Help us. Connect with us at linktr.ee/CrimeandRoses There you can see links to listen and share the podcast and connect with us on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook. Email: CrimeandRoses@gmail.com. Send us crime suggestions and any questions or comments you may have. Huge shoutout and thank you to our producer, David Velick! You can find him on Instagram @davidvelick --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/crimeandroses/support
Thomas LaDuke, host of "Bourbon on the Rocks" on FTRradio, joins Teri to talk about the shutdown shenanigans in Michigan and what residents can do to fight back.
Join Mark and guest host Dr. Tom Lukowicz as they speak with Lance LaDuke, who participated in the Department of Music's Guest Artist Series, about music business and entrepreneurship, as well as his previous lecture about "Becoming your own musician." We really hope you enjoy this episode as much as we enjoyed recording it!
A tribute to Coach LaDuke from his 8th grade girls basketball players.
In this episode Jack and Jay speak with Phil LaDuke about his experiences and insights in safety management and how technology can significantly improve how we can make our workplace a safer place. We also speak with Grant Simmons about his experience and work in the digital space at Homes.com and his experience in digital marketing with companies like GE Plastics and many others over the years. Both Phil and Grant are book authors, and have a lot to share with large and small organizations about applying best practices and technology to address business objectives. The Digital Dialog show offers a range of guests the opportunity to share their experiences, their work, their art, their ideas, and their messages with Jack & Jay, the other guests, and the world. This is a forum for feedback and expression. Show Notes & Transcript: https://standingonshouldersmedia.us/f/digital-dialog---featuring-phil-laduke-grant-simmons
The Vigils have gone vegetarian & it's a struggle! Then Amanda dives in on the incredible story of Winona LaDuke, who is still making headlines. Rita brings us the tale of Julie d'Aubigny, a 17th century swordswoman & opera singer. Join us for another week of women's history told with a little laughter & some friendship thrown in. Follow us! Tell your friends! FB: facebook.com/idkherpodcast Twitter: @IDKHerPodcast Insta: @idkher_podcast
TEM192: Don't let technology use you - A conversation on productivity with Lance LaDuke For this week's episode I am joined by my Pedal Note Media partner, Lance LaDuke, for a conversation on technology and productivity. ----- Did you know there are two episodes of TEM every single week? TEM Extra is a weekly episode available exclusively to patrons of the show. On Last Week's TEM Extra: A tweet by Dan Hockenmaier that exaggerates a point about how passion isn't everything but still hits on something incredibly important Making art that fills a need Some wisdom from Yoko Ono via fellow musician Alan Theisen about living on someone else's schedule Going against the grain of the many different cultures we are all engrained within (and why that's so hard sometimes) The career course corrections I am constantly experiencing by interviewing such brilliant people for TEM Listen to last week's TEM Extra here. ----- On Today's Episode of The Entrepreneurial Musician: If you make something for 90 days in a row and then don't on day 91, would anyone notice? Thinking of a social media platform as an infinity pool and realizing you are the product The entrepreneurial lessons you can learn from a trip to the grocery store The spirit behind minimalism and how it can apply to entrepreneurs Carving out time to be creative as an individual or as an organization Finding your creative rhythm and knowing when in the day to do your creative work and when to do your busy work The shifting collaborative schedule this fall for Pedal Note Media and how we finally seemed to have settled on a good rhythm Lance's trick to not waste hours a day on social media Having the self-awareness to know when it would be best for you to change a behavior or some aspect of your life A system that Lance used this summer to leverage a Sudoku game he was playing into regular productivity How good we both are at doing busy work done when we have important work to do Links: Free Seth Godin Book Creating the Revolutionary Artist by Mark Rabideau TEM144: Dale Trumbore When: The Scientific Secrets of Perfect Timing by Daniel Pink Want to help the show? Here's a couple of ways you can do that! 1. Help me get to my next goal of $100 per episode on Patreon by pledging as little as $1 per episode to support the show: https://www.patreon.com/tempodcast. 2. My next Apple Podcasts goal is 150 ratings and 75 reviews. Take just a minute to leave a rating and review on Apple Podcasts to help me get there. Thank you! And finally, a huge thank you to Parker Mouthpieces for providing the hosting for TEM. Produced by Andrew Hitz Show notes for all episodes of TEM including topics discussed, links to all books and websites referenced can be found at: http://www.andrewhitz.com/shownotes
On today's episode of the Dynamic Leaders podcast, Colin is joined by Dan LaDuke. Dan is a special education teacher at Liverpool High School (Liverpool, New York) and is also an assistant coach for the varsity baseball team. Dan won a Section III Championship as a player at Liverpool and then captured a State Title as a coach in 2017. Topics include: Dan's Who Are You segment (2:23), how athletics has impacted his life since childhood (3:15), when baseball took over as his full-time sport of choice (5:00), how his athletic relationships from childhood have formed his adult life (6:04), why his varsity baseball experience was one of the best of his life (7:45), where life took him after graduating high school (14:25), where he finds the most crossover in coaching and teaching (17:17), how he plays "the good cop" as an assistant baseball coach (18:21), is the game of baseball different than it was when he played? (21:47), how the culture experience differs at the varsity level from the lower levels (28:03), why they try to have everybody be a leader in some aspect for their team (32:51), the importance of developing life skills in addition to baseball ones (34:47), where he's improved most as a coach over the years, where he wants to still make improvements, and why technology is more important than ever for learning and communication (36:48), what his future coaching goals look like and advice for anyone looking to get into the coaching world (40:08), and who a Dynamic Leader is in his life (47:15). Get in Touch with Dan: dladuke@liverpool.k12.ny.us ------- Intro Music: Walk This Way - Aerosmith (August 28, 1975) "Who Are You" Segment: Who Are You - The Who (August 1978) Outro Music: Take It Easy - Eagles (Live: July 27, 1980 - Santa Monica, CA) ------- Take the Podcast Listener Survey and help us continue to improve the show for everyone! ------- **MAILBAG** Shoot your questions over to colin@talent409.com ------- At Talent 409, we help people discover their talent altitude through workshops and seminars while increasing their opportunities for success on and off the field. Talent altitude is the idea that player development is more than just physical. Learning traits and qualities related to leadership development will help you in competition on the field and also prepare you for life after sports. In addition to student-athletes, we work with coaches and administrators at the high school and collegiate level to enhance their education on how they can positively impact the performance of their teams and programs. Contact us today to see how we're helping today's team leaders become the community leaders of tomorrow. talent409.com Facebook, Instagram and LinkedIn: @talent409 Dynamic Leaders Facebook Group Email: colin@talent409.com ------- The show is sponsored by Sweat with Stodds. What a great sponsor she is. She’s been with the pod since day one and we love having her support. Sweat with Stodds offers a number of different options to get you on a path to improve your fitness future; everything from fitness, nutrition and simple healthy habits. So what are you waiting for? Head over to sweatwithstodds.com right now and when you buy a program enter the code DYNAMIC at checkout to receive a discount for being a loyal podcast listener.
Reno 1868 FC embarrassed Vegas last week (7:57). Local Beer Month kicks off with Matt Blagen of 10 Torr (18:05). Reno's next mega football recruit, Spanish Springs LB Jackson LaDuke, discusses his looming decision (44:48). Awards are given out in the First Annual Slanties and the brothers relive some brutal predictions they made in August (58:13). For slants, the Shoups talk NCAA Baseball Tournament, NBA Finals, Women's World Cup, Mountain West stripping and bodies in Lake Tahoe (1:18:02). To stay current everything on The Reno Slant, follow the brothers on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook or online at TheRenoSlant.com.
In this episode we sit down with a good friend of ours, CEO of Northridge 4x4 David Johnson. We get to hear David's story of how he built his company from a few fabricated Jeep bumpers to one of the biggest distributors of 4x4 parts in the nation. https://www.northridge4x4.com/
Lance LaDuke teaches Euphonium & Music Entrepreneurship at Carnegie Mellon and serves as a co-director of the Exploded Ensemble, an experimental electro-acoustic ensemble. He has traveled the globe as a professional musician, and now spends his days guiding the next batch of young musicians at CMU, working with VH1 Save the Music, and creating uninhibited arts experiences in Pittsburgh. In this episode, Lance discusses his drives in unleashing the possibilities of students, and shares deeply personal insights to his career success. www.lanceladuke.com/ music.cmu.edu www.pedalnotemedia.com/ Subsurface 2018: Site Specific Site and Sound www.patreon.com/ironcityincline
Music Studio Startup: Helping music teachers thrive as entrepreneurs
Today Lance LaDuke of Carnegie Mellon University shares the story of his winding career and how he created his dream job encouraging and mentoring music students who want to pursue entrepreneurial ideas. Full show notes available at musicstudiostartup.com/episode016
Nicholas Delair LaDuke (Nick) Birthdate August 25, 1984 (34) Born in Pleasanton, Ca Currently based out of Livermore, Ca Mother Sue McKinnon Father Jim McKinnon (step Father that raised me from 5) Born with Wolff Parkinson White Syndrome, 6 years old diagnosed with Epilepsy Graduate of Sociology from the University of Nevada Las Vegas -Two time West Coast Region champion NIRA 2005 and 2006 -Short Round Qualifier CNFR Mesquite series champ 2012 -California Circuit Champ 2017 -World standing 29th 2017 -Two time SoCal Pro Rodeo Series Champ -First Pro Rodeo Win Folsom, Ca in 2003 -Qualified for my first Rodeo Houston in 2008 PRCA’s Industry Outreach Department under Director Julie Jutten since 2013, speaker at camps and fundraisers from New York to Southern California. Part of 2009-2010 managed the Bottled Water Department for Ising’s Culligan Water Hit a record for route sales with my division in the heat of the recession in California. Rest of time spent riding horses on the English and Western side of things for World Champs on down to back yard horse owners (2004-2008, 2010-2015) Fun fact only got to be around horses 2 weeks out of the year from birth until I was 14. (Got on two calves when I was six, went on a medically forced break, and then did not get another opportunity to pursue my dream until I was 14) Trained Brazilian Jiu Jitsu under Travis Tooke, Houston and Darlynson Lira, California off and on since 2011 and have been cross trained in Combat Sports/Martial Arts off and on since I was 12 years old. Resources: Follow Nick https://www.instagram.com/nick_laduke/ (https://www.instagram.com/nick_laduke/) Show Music: “The Ropin Pen” (Live) by: Trent Willmon https://www.trentwillmon.com/ (https://www.trentwillmon.com/) MC Podcast Production & Editing: Matt Kirschner https://www.righttracmedia.com/ (https://www.righttracmedia.com/)
TEM147: Pivot, Persevere or Punt - A conversation with Lance LaDuke We all have three options when faced with adversity. The key is figuring out which is the best path forward for any given situation. This week's guest, Lance LaDuke, is my parter at Pedal Note Media, my former colleague with Boston Brass and the co-host of my other podcast, The Brass Junkies. What You'll Learn: The lesson Lance shares with every freshman at Carnegie Mellon right as they walk in the door Why I named it The Entrepreneurial Musician and not The Musical Entrepreneur The reason to try something now is because it will never go exactly how you think it's going to go (it might even go better!) The three options we have when faced with adversity Pivot (This wall is really tall and I'm going to keep going but in a different direction) Example #1: Lance learning trombone in order to win the Boston Brass audition Example #2: Boston Brass keeping up with the movement of the market by collaborating with both the T'ang Quartet and Imani Winds Persevere (You hit a wall and you just keep pedaling) Example #1: The beginning of Pedal Note Media when it was a ton of work and we were losing money (for a good long while) Example #2: How the Modern Musicking Center at Carnegie Mellon University took shape after years of Lance not quite figuring out exactly what it should look like Punt (I'm giving up on this task so I can spend my time on something else) Example #1: A group Lance formed 20 years ago that was great and well received in its short life but wasn't the right thing moving forward for a host of reasons Example #2: A show Lance produced called "Lance Learns to Play" (which was great and even got him a meeting at PBS!) that was far too much work for the return so he pulled the plug Links: Modern Musicking Podcast TEM134: The Dip by Seth Godin (TEM Book Report) 1. Help me get to my goal of $100 per episode on Patreon (only $20 to go!) by pledging as little as $1 per episode to support the show: https://www.patreon.com/tempodcast. 2. My next iTunes goal is 100 ratings and 75 reviews. Take just a minute to leave a rating and review on iTunes to help me get there. Thank you! And finally, a huge thank you to Parker Mouthpieces for providing the hosting for TEM. Produced by Andrew Hitz Show notes for all episodes of TEM including topics discussed, links to all books and websites referenced can be found at: http://www.andrewhitz.com/shownotes
This week we are honored to share our conversation with environmental activist, economist, writer and orator, Winona LaDuke. LaDuke is a living embodiment of earth activism and Indigenous sovereignty and a long-time inspiration to the For The Wild team. As the Founder and Executive Director of Honor the Earth, Winona is fighting against pipelines while simultaneously creating tangible solutions for oil independence. She is rooted in the White Earth Anishinaabe Nation located in Becker, Clearwater, and Mahnomen counties of north-central Minnesota and she’s the founding member of the Turtle Island Slow Food Association, the first Indigenous-led slow food association in the world.
Internationally renowned activist, environmentalist and economist, Winona LaDuke toured Canada speaking out against Enbridge’s Line 3 pipeline project. In this episode of Face To Face, LaDuke discusses Standing Rock, Donald Trump and the fight against approved pipelines in Canada.
Internationally renowned activist, environmentalist and economist, Winona LaDuke toured Canada speaking out against Enbridge’s Line 3 pipeline project. In this episode of Face To Face, LaDuke discusses Standing Rock, Donald Trump and the fight against approved pipelines in Canada.
The Business Model Canvas is a tool that every single person listening to this podcast should use and this talk with Lance LaDuke is a great place to start! Lance regularly teaches the Business Model Canvas to his Business of Music class at Carnegie Mellon University and does a great job of explaining why it is such a powerful tool. The Business Model Canvas will help get ideas out of your head and organized in an way that makes clear what your next steps need to be. I can't recommend the process any more highly for anyone. Show notes for all episodes of TEM including topics discussed, links to all books and websites referenced can be found at: http://www.andrewhitz.com/shownotes Want to help "keep the lights on" and make future episodes of TEM possible? Please visit our Patreon page to see how you can help: https://www.patreon.com/tempodcast Produced by Joey Santillo
TEM34: A Conversation with Lance LaDuke on marketing Fresh off of an appearance as a Thought Leader at the "Marketing Chamber Music: A Savvy Strategy for Success" event in New York City, Lance LaDuke joins the podcast to discuss all things marketing including a number of examples of groups who are crushing it. Show notes for all episodes of TEM including links to all books and websites referenced can be found at: http://www.andrewhitz.com/shownotes Want to help "keep the lights on" and make future episodes of TEM possible? Please visit our Patreon page to see how you can help: https://www.patreon.com/tempodcast Produced by Austin Boyer of FredBrass
Andrew sits down with The Brass Junkies co-host and longtime friend Lance LaDuke who discusses how his entrepreneurial endeavors have led him to a career in consulting, performance, media, and academia. Show notes for all episodes of TEM including topics discussed, links to all books and websites referenced can be found at: http://www.andrewhitz.com/shownotes Want to help "keep the lights on" and make future episodes of TEM possible? Please visit our Patreon page to see how you can help: https://www.patreon.com/tempodcast Produced by Austin Boyer of FredBrass
“I don’t think there’s a lot of excuses, frankly, for not doing the right thing.” Anishinaabe orator, author, economist and activist Winona LaDuke doesn’t mince words in her quest to light a path for us to “hang around another thousand years.” “Your ecosystem seems to be your mall,” LaDuke tell us. When I asked her where she comes from, her answer was “the real world. You can drink the water out of a lake!” Something to think about. Winona observes that we are “doing things only addicts would do,” including sedating ourselves with a lot of information and television. The author of Recovering the Sacred tells us we need a society that is “respectful, resilient, and ecologically and socially responsible.” Instead, “we have a society based on conquest, on consuming more than it needs.” We emphasize “quarterly profits over intergenerational responsibility.”
Andrew and Lance interview - themselves. No really. They give you a little bit of background on Pedal Note Media, the origins of this podcast, and their Pray For Jens campaign. You can help offset the costs of producing the show by making a small donation at https://www.patreon.com/thebrassjunkies. Your support is greatly appreciated!
Kevin Gebo joins Andrew and Lance for the latest episode of The Brass Junkies to discuss the many different aspects of his career. Kevin Gebo joins Andrew and Lance for the latest episode of The Brass Junkies to discuss the many different aspects of his career. Kevin is a trumpet player with the US Army Ceremonial Band in Arlington, VA. He is also a soloist, chamber musician, and entrepreneur. In this episode, he discusses his latest solo album, being a part of the first volume of the Brass Recording Project, and his collaborations with Paul Reiser (yes, THAT Paul Reiser.) Links: www.kevingebo.com Want to help the show? Take a minute to leave us a rating and a review on iTunes. You can help offset the costs of producing the show by making a small donation at https://www.patreon.com/thebrassjunkies. Your support is greatly appreciated! Produced by Austin Boyer and Buddy Deshler of FredBrass
THE BRASS JUNKIES EPISODE 3: MICHAEL PARKER OF PARKER MOUTHPIECES Michael Parker joins Andrew and Lance to discuss his line of mouthpieces, being an entrepreneur, and a special connection he feels through his mouthpiece manufacturing with his late father. Michael is an accomplished player, teacher, and entrepreneur. He is the tuba player for the Monumental Brass in Washington DC and teaches tuba and euphonium at Bloomsburg University. He is also the founder and owner of Parker Mouthpieces, a company that has seen a great deal of success in a very short period of time. You can help offset the costs of producing the show by making a small donation at https://www.patreon.com/thebrassjunkies. Your support is greatly appreciated!
Our former colleague from Boston Brass, horn player JD Shaw, joins us for this episode of The Brass Junkies. JD is currently Associate Professor of Horn at the University of South Carolina, musical arranger for Santa Clara Vanguard, and is frequently in demand as a soloist and clinician. This episode was actually recorded way back in January 2014 immediately following our recording session for the Brass Recording Project. We had planned to launch the podcast shortly thereafter but things like a baby ended up pushing that back until now! JD talked to us a lot about arranging: his process, what instrumentations he likes to write for, and how he got started. He has written extensively for brass quintet, drum corps, wind ensemble, orchestra, big band, and a bunch of other instrumentations. He also touches on his time with Boston Brass, his over 25-year history with drum corps, recording his arrangements with us for the Brass Recording Project, and much more! You can help offset the costs of producing the show by making a small donation at https://www.patreon.com/thebrassjunkies. Your support is greatly appreciated!
For the first ever episode of The Brass Junkies, Andrew Hitz and Lance LaDuke welcome one of the greatest brass players in the world, Ryan Anthony. Ryan is the former star of Canadian Brass and is currently the Principal Trumpet of the Dallas Symphony. On top of that he is a cancer survivor, the head of The Ryan Anthony Foundation, and one of the nicest human beings you could ever hope to meet. Ryan discusses with us his entire career from soloing with major symphonies at the age of 16 to the Cancer Blows event he is throwing later this month with the likes of Doc Severinsen, Arturo Sandoval and Phil Smith to raise money for cancer research. He also opens up about the phone call almost two years ago that changed his life forever. When you hear the positive attitude Ryan brings to the trumpet and to life, you'll know why we couldn't think of a better person to kick off this podcast! Note: We are aware there are some feedback issues in spots. We are new to this whole thing and in the spirit of the Minimum Viable Product that we are always preaching to our business students, we are launching and learning on the fly. Thanks for your patience! Links: Cancer Blows Want to help the show? Take a minute to leave us a rating and a review on iTunes. You can help offset the costs of producing the show by making a small donation at https://www.patreon.com/thebrassjunkies. Your support is greatly appreciated! Produced by Austin Boyer and Buddy Deshler of FredBrass
Purpose Rockstar: Daily Career Stories including Grammar Girl and Gretchen Rubin
Phil LaDuke is safety blogger and consultant that understands how to tell a story. We talk about his career in performance improvement, sales, and speaking in the safety industry. Continue Reading→
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