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National rubber ducky day. Entertainment from 1968. Oldest meteorite found, Oldest cave painting found, 1st country music tv show aired. Todays birthdays - Robert Stack, Liz Anderson, Frances Steinhagen, Richard Moll, Julia Louis-Drefus, Trace Adkins, Penelope Ann Miller, Patrick Dempsey, Nicole Eggert, Orlando Bloom, Liam Hemsworth. Wyatt Earp died.Intro - Pour some sugar on me - Def Leppard http://defleppard.com/Ernies rubber duckie - Sesame streetHello, Goodbye - The BeatlesFor loving you - Bill Anderson Jan HowardBirthdays - In da club - 50 Cent http://50cent.com/Clip from movie Airplane!Husband Hunging - Liz AndersonNight Court TV themeSeinfeld TV themeEvery light in the house - Trace AdkinsCharles in charge TV themeExit - It's not love - Dokken http://dokken.net/
Today on another encore edition of the Rarified Heir Podcast, we are talking to Lisa Sutton, daughter of singer Lynn Anderson & music producer Glenn Sutton. Lisa grew up in Nashville, home to her parents and their ‘Countrypolitan sound' they helped make famous. What's countrypolitan you ask? Good question. It's definitely country music but typically with lush string arrangements, an orchestra and a more stylized sound than what country music is known for prior. It's a sound her Nashville Songwriter Hall of Fame father and her mother Lynn made famous with the massive Joe South penned hit “I Never Promised You a Rose Garden.” We also talk to Lisa about her perhaps lesser known but perhaps more influential grandparents Casey Anderson and Liz Anderson whose roots in country music as songwriters, performers and connectors led them to a fortuitus meeting with the poet of the common man, Merle Haggard. He gave them their start. Of course we talk roses – it's a theme in Lisa's life that connects back to her mom's massive hit, horses, the National Enquirer and how her father's songs were recorded by everyone from The Louvin Brothers to Etta James. Fans of country music rejoice, we have a winner on this episode of the Rarified Heir Podcast with Lisa Sutten. Take a listen.
We have Liz Anderson back on the pod for another trip down memory lane! This time we are reviewing System of a Down's 2001 album Toxicity. Don't forget to buy the Jackbox Games pack releasing later this month. Liz worked on it!Want to support the show and get bonus eps in our off-week? Pay what you can at our PatreonWant to reach out? Follow us on Twitter and Instagram or email us at billbudspod@gmail.comLike the show? Leave us a review on iTunes!Theme by Arne Parrott! Go follow him on Soundcloud and Twitter
Liz Anderson directs the PreSales Collective Enablement programming, from PreSales Academy through leadership training, channeling her PreSales experience through to world-class programming and facilitation. Liz has well over a decade of experience and PreSales from organizations, large and small, from Slack to startups. Episode Takeaways Presales enablement is essential to prioritize and needs a balance between technical and soft skills. Learning is best done with others both for practice and for accountability. You are responsible for your own growth; create a plan that includes improving on things you're already good at. You can connect with Liz Anderson here: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lizandersonpresales/ PreSales Enablement Programming: https://www.presalescollective.com/programs/live-courses For team training - please reach out!! Thank you for tuning in.
The very special guest on this episode of The Mile High Podcast is absolutely extraordinary! Dr. Liz Anderson-Peacock was speaking at Mile High, when a fire alarm went off in the hotel, and everybody had to evacuate. Liz continued her presentation in the parking lot, standing on a chair! When people were allowed back inside the hotel, she continued her speech from the stage until the fire alarm went off again and everyone had to go back outside. Dr. Liz re-mounted her chair and finished her presentation. It was absolutely unforgettable, as is the content you'll hear from her on this episode! At the end of 2017 after a right below knee amputation Liz applied different approaches to find a new base of support. Openly sharing her experiences of how her choices dramatically and positively impacted her outcome with the hope that her insights inspire a reflective, proactive practice in how we listen to, care for and empower our patients. Beyond this experience, Dr. Liz is happily married and grandmother of 5 kiddos. She is an active meditator, traveler, scuba diver and paddle boarder. She continues to see patients, teach, write and volunteers in many capacities both in and outside the profession. An author, professional speaker and seasoned practitioner of 38 years, Liz brings a wealth of lifetime experience with her that can be applicable to anyone. Her clinical focus is on pediatrics and she was the first Canadian with a Diplomate in Chiropractic Pediatrics from the ICA. On this podcast you'll hear about: Dr. Liz's journey into chiropractic The Key Gifts of chiropractic The Tanner Model of clinical judgment How you must apply the principles to your own life And MUCH more! This year's Mile High Weekend is going to be tremendous, and Dr. Liza may be one of the presenters who will bless you September 26th – 29th in Denver! For now, enjoy listening to her wisdom and expertise on the podcast. Enjoy this episode, and if you haven't already, get Mile High XII: Mile High Noon tickets for yourself and your team at RiseUpToMileHigh.com right away. Dr. Liz has been invited to speak again at this year's Mile High, and you'll also get to hear from more than 25 other fabulous speakers. You don't want to miss this! Looking forward to seeing you in Denver in September! P.S. If you want to market your Chiropractic-based product or service to thousands of chiropractors, check out the opportunity to become a Mile High Podcast sponsor at bit.ly/BeAPodcastSponsor.
Episode 14 - Liz Anderson Liz Anderson can be found on Twitter @lizanderson___, and on her podcasts Paired and Campaign Podcast. Support us on Patreon Find us on Twitter @CultClassicPod Find us on Instagram @CultClassicCallbackLinsae Find more episodes at boardsalivepodcast.com/category/cult-classic-callback Theme song "Ghost Run" by Jean-Marc Giffin @JeanOfmArc
Liz Anderson from Lake County Soil and Water Conservation District, and Matt Santo from the 1854 Treaty Authority join Forest North to talk about Aquatic Invasive Species in our area waters and how to help stop their spread. Steve Robertson returns to talk about the arrival of summer on the Superior National Forest and some of the new baby critters making their appearance in the Northwoods.Time Stamps:(1:27) Liz Anderson and Matt Santo(36:00) Steve RobertsonShow Notes:Lake County AIS ProgramProject page for the spiny waterflea researchProject page for the rusty crayfish and wild rice researchMinnesota DNR's AIS homepage1854 Treaty Authority website
The RSB Show 3-10-24 - A Sunday Conversation with Dr. Liz Anderson Peacock
National rubber ducky day. Entertainment from 1968. Oldest meteorite found, Oldest cave painting found, 1st country music tv show aired. Todays birthdays - Robert Stack, Liz Anderson, Frances Steinhagen, Richard Moll, Julia Louis-Drefus, Trace Adkins, Penelope Ann Miller, Patrick Dempsey, Nicole Eggert, Orlando Bloom, Liam Hemsworth. Wyatt Earp died.Intro - Pour some sugar on me - Def Leppard http://defleppard.com/Ernies rubber duckie - Sesame streetHello, Goodbye - The BeatlesFor loving you - Bill Anderson Jan HowardBirthdays - In da club - 50 Cent http://50cent.com/ Clip from movie Airplane!Husband Hunging - Liz AndersonNight Court TV themeSeinfeld TV themeEvery light in the house - Trace AdkinsCharles in charge TV themeExit - It's not love - Dokken http://dokken.net/https://cooolmedia.com/
Related Links and Guest Info can be found at https://www.augforums.com/episode117
Liz Anderson is back to talk about My Chemical Romance's 2006 album The Black Parade. Will she turn us into MCR heads? (is that what MCR fans call themselves?) You can follow Liz on TwitterWant to support the show and get bonus eps in our off-week? Pay what you can at our PatreonWant to reach out? Follow us on Twitter and Instagram or email us at billbudspod@gmail.comLike the show? Leave us a review on iTunes!Theme by Arne Parrott! Go follow him on Soundcloud and Twitter
Liz Anderson: The PreSales Path Liz Anderson has extensive experience as a solutions engineering leader and is the founder of the PreSales Path. She's also an alum of the Coaching for Leaders Academy. In this SaturdayCast, Liz and I discuss the inflection points she's experienced in the past year, how intentional focus on her vision and identity helped move her forward, and the value of consistency through it all. Key Points Professional development is about finding the starting points and then adapting as you go. Once you decide on a new identity and direction, the indicators start to emerge on where to go next. When your heart and intention are in the right place, the tactical path is still not easy, but it is clearer. Resources Mentioned Liz Anderson Related Episodes How to Become the Person You Want to Be, with James Clear (episode 376) How to Nail a Job Transition, with Sukhinder Singh Cassidy (episode 555) How to Get Moving, with Gladys McGarey (episode 631) How to Get Traction With a New Habit (audio course) Discover More Activate your free membership for full access to the entire library of interviews since 2011, searchable by topic. To accelerate your learning, uncover more inside Coaching for Leaders Plus.
Liz Anderson, Executive Director at Set The Expectation, a nonprofit organization dedicated to ending sexual and interpersonal violence through prevention work with men, advocacy, and engagement with agencies serving survivors and their families joins Enterprise Radio. The post Set the expectation that sexual assault and physical violence are never okay appeared first on Enterprise Podcast Network - EPN.
Welcome to the Dakota Resource Council (DRC) podcast. In this episode, we have a special guest, Liz Anderson, DRC's lead organizer, joining us to discuss the urgent methane fight.Liz takes us on a journey as she recounts DRC's recent Eco Flight over Ft. Berthold?Bakken, providing a firsthand account of the alarming flaring situation. We explore the statistics surrounding flared gas and its far-reaching environmental, health, and economic impacts. Liz shares how DRC is at the forefront of monitoring and addressing the current flaring crisis in the Bakken region.Tune in to gain invaluable insights into the methane fight and discover how DRC is working tirelessly to protect our environment, promote sustainable energy solutions, and advocate for a cleaner and healthier future. Join us in this eye-opening conversation as we delve into the urgent issue of flaring and the critical steps we must take to effect positive change.Support the show
Mark interviews his partner Liz Anderson about her work as a Principal within education, as the better half of a writer, and also as a fellow procrastinator and creative collaborator. This episode is sponsored by the awesome Patrons of the Stark Reflections Podcast who support this podcast and receive additional audio, video, and text content. During the interview, Mark and Liz talk about: The elements of procrastination that bond the two of them together How Liz has learned to embrace procastination as a way to get the creativity flowing Liz's long-time practice of producing videos and short movies The "Last Minute Productions" Liz makes, leveraging the "L" and "A" of her initials into the branding The "show" (Isolation Station) that Liz started for the staff at her school during the pandemic and how that evolved into "Distance Daily" How these virtual shows allowed the staff to connect in a way that they never had been able to do before Mark's participation in Liz's "Distance Daily" show for a while during the time when she was without a Vice Principal The ongoing daily "Flair Fun" video announcements segment that initiated during the pandemic but continue to this day at Liz's school The value of the particupation from the entire school community in these daily videos that allows for a deeper sense of connection and being seen and heard and part of something bigger The way Liz practices the role of being an elementary school Principal The important revelation during a Grade 8 graduation that was an eye-opening moment for Liz The difference between being an auditory learner and a visual learner What it's like for Liz living with Mark the writer The "spies" Liz has watching for Mark to not engage in particular activities on social media How while Liz had long been creative and producing vidoes, it was a long time before she felt comfortable getting in front of a camera Mark and Liz's first creative collaboration, doing the "Stuck in This House Here with You" parody of the Steelers Wheel song "Stuck in the Middle with You" The way that we "paint" and fill spaces with things that tell a story or prompt people to see a space differently The decision fatigue that can happen for a reader and how Liz appreciates being able to just keep reading the next book in a series Liz's love of Joanna Penn's J.F. Penn thrillers and Kevin J. Anderson's "Dan Shamble" zombie P.I. novels Some of the creative endeavors Liz is interested in exploring this coming summer Then Liz turns the tables on Mark and asks him some reflective questions. Links of Interest: Parody Videos Stuck In This House Here With You (Parody Music Video with Liz) Kay-Tell Presents: Isolation Parody Songs (Parody Music Video with Liz) The 2022 Aurora Awards Opening Sequence (Hosted by Liz and Mark) The Full 2022 Aurora Awards Ceremony Mark's Tavern: Where Everybody Shares Your Name - Pilot (Cheers Parody) Mark's Tavern: Dad Jokes Matter Mark's Tavern: Tension Mark's Tavern: Mister Bright Side Mark's Tavern: Death by Coffee Buy Mark a Coffee Patreon for Stark Reflections Lovers Moon Podcast The Relaxed Author Buy eBook Direct Buy Audiobook Direct Publishing Pitfalls for Authors An Author's Guide to Working with Libraries & Bookstores Wide for the Win Mark's Canadian Werewolf Books This Time Around (Short Story) A Canadian Werewolf in New York Stowe Away (Novella) Fear and Longing in Los Angeles Fright Nights, Big City Lover's Moon Hex and the City The Canadian Mounted: A Trivia Guide to Planes, Trains and Automobiles The introductory, end, and bumper music for this podcast (“Laser Groove”) was composed and produced by Kevin MacLeod of www.incompetech.com and is Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
Everybody likes to feel good. For some people that's simply the absence of pain. For other it's chocolate cake. As consumers we all like to splurge from time to time. Even if we're pinching pennies, there's always going to be a special something we'll make an exception for because it makes us feel good, mentally, physically or emotionally. If you're that entrepreneur, who can intuit what customers need, you just might have hit on the secret to success. Liz Anderson is owner of Honey Hive Treats, a locally owned sweets boutique in baton rouge that specializes in homemade pastries and desserts, including cakes—and wedding cakes—cookies, pies and brownies. Condoleeza Semien is founder of Beluga Bliss a company that sells handcrafted blends of aromatherapy oils and products suffused with aromatherapy oils. The blends are all natural and are designed to help with insomnia, sinus issues and pain cause by a variety of conditions ranging from arthritis to autoimmune diseases. Beluga Bliss is getting a lot of publicity for a small baton rouge startup, not least because Condoleeza was just 14 when she founded the company! She is all of 17 now and is a senior at University View Academy, an online charter school, where she is also two years into her college degree. Out to Lunch is recorded live over lunch at Mansurs on the Boulevard. You can find photos from this show by Erik Otts at itsbatonrouge.la.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode, Kim Kleaveland, NP and Candi Zappia, CHES chat with Liz Anderson, RD about practical ways to boost our immunity through food.
National rubby duckie day. Pop culture from 2016. Oldest cave painting found, 1st Anglo-Afghan war, 1st tv hoedown. Todays birthdays - Robert Stack, Liz Anderson, Frances Steinhagen, Richard Moll, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Trace Adkins, Penelope Ann Miller, Patrick Dempsey, Nicole Eggert, Orlando Bloom, Liam Hemsworth. Wyatt Earp died.
Today on the Rarified Heir Podcast we are talking to country music royalty. We are talking to Lisa Sutton who's has not one but four musical legacies and estates to look after. Her mother, the great singer Lynn Anderson is best known for her iconic #1 hit, “Rose Garden” and released, count ‘em, 72 singles in her career. Lisa's father, was Nashville Songwriter Hall of Fame member Glenn Sutton who produced “Rose Garden” and wrote the Grammy winning David Huston hit “Almost Persuaded” as well as “What Made Milwaukee Famous (Made A Loser Out of Me)”, “Your Good Girls Gonna Go Bad” & countless other songs. The architecht of Countrypolitan sound of the 60s, Glenn's songs were recorded by everyone from Etta James to The Louvin Brothers to Jerry Lee Lewis and Rod Stewart. What's more, Lisa's grandparents were Casey Anderson and Liz Anderson. Liz wrote many country music hits in the 50s and 60s including “Wife of the Party” and “Mama Spank” and it was Casey who invited an iconic soon-to-be country music icon back to their house for pancakes after a show that led to Country music history. What's more Lynn talks to us about growing up in a household where being the ‘hero child' was something of the norm, where riding horses was a huge part of life. What's more, Lisa is so invested in her family legacy that the amateur Rosarian, even brought about the comeback of the world champion Lynn Anderson Hybrid Tea Rose. From songwriting credits, to intellectual property to memorabilia to following through on her parents and grandparents wishes, we don't think you will find anyone more dedicated to her family legacy than Lisa Sutton. And it's all next on the Rarified Heir Podcast.
Join us at twitch.tv/oneshotrpg for a special Halloween stream full of hungering eldritch beings and the secrets that feed them! Featuring special guest Liz Anderson!!
Dr. Liz Anderson Peacock is a master at living life with passion and purpose. If you want to learn what it takes to have a waiting list practice full of kids you will love today's episode. To learn more about Liz and the programs she teaches https://drliz.ca/about/ Register for DG 2.0 https://spinalresearch.com.au/get-involved/events/dynamic-growth/?fbclid=IwAR0c5RgpG9GLaAxxD7EkCTA2Lj6jO3WFzIBLRq8om5OOgTu7UhTEZQedGVQ To learn more about the Kids Summit https://www.thekidssummit.com/ --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/martin-harvey/message
We bring you a 36th MDS special co-hosted by Steve Diederich (MDS UK) and guest interviews with, James Hazeldene, Liz Anderson, Patrick Kennedy, Richard Bysouth and Tamsin Dobson.
It's anybody's game for Cesaro and plenty of other wrestlers! How did the Amazing Dragon fare at Black Label Pro? What was the gear like at Elimination Chamber? What is 4 Seasons Wrestling? All that and a whole lot more in a late night post-Liz Anderson birthday celebration. Let's Podcast!
Based in Minneapolis, Peace Catalyst staff Peter and Liz are equipping and empowering community peacemakers and collaborating alongside those who are already building peace and working for transformation in their community. They have experience in church youth ministry in Chicago as well as Christian-Muslim peacebuilding in London, and they are now involved in both community organizing and contemplative spirituality, seeking to help people develop holistic approaches to peacemaking on personal, interpersonal, and community levels. LINKS Donate to support Peter and Liz's work: https://www.peacecatalyst.org/andersons Chasing the Dragon: https://www.amazon.com/Chasing-Dragon-Struggle-Against-Darkness/dp/0800797035/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=chasing+the+dragon&qid=1633126023&sr=8-1 Be The Bridge organization: https://bethebridge.com Be The Bridge book by Latasha Morrison: https://www.amazon.com/Be-Bridge-Pursuing-Racial-Reconciliation/dp/0525652884 Edited and produced by Nicole Gibson Music: Shesh Pesh by JR Tundra
"Hello everyone, this Liz Anderson! I am the writer, creator, producer, and host of 'Paired: A Mini Comedy Podcast." Paired is a comedy audio fiction podcast about a difgital assistant much like Alexa or Siri that is having a series of adventures with the messy humans in its life. For your showcase today, this is Episode 13 of our third season, "Scanning 517 Fairweather Avenue." Hope you enjoy! Thank you for listening." Transcript can be found at: https://drive.google.com/file/d/12g-XXn3OAU5f8ljd2pfhlIlQ0qXuwCc8/view?usp=sharing http://www.pairedpodcast.com/ Twitter: @PairedPod
Beloved superhero COSMICMAN - who was once Dr. Hornet's rival - has written a tell-all memoir about his storied life. But Dr. Hornet is surprised to find that he's been left out of the book, despite terrorizing the man for almost 25 years. He suspects a conspiracy, and is lead down a rabbit hole he can never escape from...Guest starring: Jason Gore, Joey McCusty, Liz Anderson, Grayson Davis and Lara Unnerstall
Erected in 1914, the Chester County Jail is a hotbed of paranormal activity. In the past 12 years, administrator Liz Anderson has learned to work alongside several different ghosts who allegedly haunt the jail. When Liz invites members of the Charlotte Area Paranormal Society (CAPS) to investigate the ghostly activity, it comes as no surprise that they, too, have incredible experiences with the spirits. To find out more about this case visit: https://unsolved.com/podcasts/jailhouse-ghosts/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The Captain leads the crew on an expedition to find Beatrix – who has just stumbled on a mysterious building in the wilderness. Episode Transcript Starring: Tyra Banda, Kristi Boulton, Michael Divinski, Phil Johnston and Sean Howard, with special guest Liz Anderson! Sound design and music: Eli Hamada McIlveen Cover art: David Demaret Announcers: Marisa King and Michael Howie Content warning: Language! Jump scares! Find and support our sponsors at: fableandfolly.com/partners Do you love sharing our show? Would you like a special Civilized sticker or t-shirt? We got you! civilizedpod.com/share Join us on Patreon for early access to future episodes and bonus content at patreon.com/civilizedpod Play the interactive backstory at civilizedpod.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Thank you for listening to Paired Season Three! Make sure to leave us a review if you're enjoying the show - it really does help other listeners discover Paired!Creator/Writer/Producer/'Pairy' - Liz AndersonEditor/Composer - MJCover Art - Adrian TheumaTheme Music - Arne ParrotJess - Tracy GibbonsShane - Bee ZeldaRae - Victoria RogersKaye - Kristin Flemons Victoria Rogers is a social media witch living in SW Ontario, Canada. She is the producer and dungeon master for the award-winning podcast The Broadswords, and has produced several podcasting events for Dungeons and Dragons. You can find her in the kitchen cooking up a storm or making fruit wine.Bee Zelda is a performer on The Broadswords podcast, a & non-binary and women DnD 5e actual-play podcast. They are a regular TTRPG streamer and have produced a show on Roll20 called Indie Showcase. They can be found streaming on a variety of tabletop gaming channels. Tracy Gibbons is a performer on The Broadswords podcast, an all-woman & non-binary actual-play podcast, where she plays the character of Keilah. She hails from Toronto, Ontario, where she lives with her husband, two dogs, and two cats. She also enjoys powerlifting, horseback riding, skiing, and drumming. Kristin Flemons is one part healthcare researcher, one part games gremlin and ten parts dog parent, Kristin is holed up in the foothills of the Canadian Rockies. She plays the insufferable wizard/witch Yllairies on the Broadswords. When not behind the microphone, she has been spotted orchestrating overly complicated baking projects and scrambling up snowy mountain sides.
Thank you listening to Paired Season Three! Be sure to leave a review if you enjoyed this episode!--Credits:Creator/Writer/Producer - Liz AndersonEditor/Composer - MJCover Art - Adrian TheumaTheme Music - Arne Parrot
To learn more, head over to: https://drlizspeaker.com
Tonight, we report on why palliative care is crucial in rural communities from three different perspectives. Dr. Jennifer Blechman of Bend, Oregon, hospice and social worker Liz Anderson of Asheville, North Carolina, and patient Joanie Devine alongside her fiance David Keenan of Waynesville, North Carolina, join us with their Brief But Spectacular take on the issue. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders
Tonight, we report on why palliative care is crucial in rural communities from three different perspectives. Dr. Jennifer Blechman of Bend, Oregon, hospice and social worker Liz Anderson of Asheville, North Carolina, and patient Joanie Devine alongside her fiance David Keenan of Waynesville, North Carolina, join us with their Brief But Spectacular take on the issue. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders
Guest Expert - Dr Liz Anderson Peacock Liz is internationally recognized in the chiropractic profession for her clinical insights, teaching and speaking. Outside her profession she facilitates corporate groups working on transformative team building, motivation, and matching values with vision. She focuses on evoking empowered results that embraces self-leadership and responsibility over management. As a speaker, her topics range from "Move to mastery", "Master change so it does not master you", "Overcoming adversity in 5 steps", "Embracing stress and using it to your advantage", Transformational Leadership", "How your "Unsung Heros", "Living to 100: Ten steps towards greater vitality and sanity as we age", and "You're never to old for success."
Thank you for listening to Paired Season Three! Author's Note: Paired will be on a short hiatus for the next few weeks as we prepare for the last five episodes of Season Three. Make sure to leave us a review if you're enjoying the show - it really does help other listeners discover Paired!Creator/Writer/Producer/'Pairy' - Liz AndersonEditor/Composer - MJCover Art - Adrian TheumaTheme Music - Arne ParrotEddie - Aaron Catano-SaezAaron Catano-Saez is a Brooklyn-based voice actor, podcaster, and South Jersey Enthusiast. He is co-creator of the All My Fantasy Children podcast and a cast member on the all-ages actual play podcast, Skyjacks: Courier's Call. Listen to his demo and hire him for all of your VO needs! AaronCatano-Saez.com
Thank you for listening to Paired Season Three! Creator/Writer/Producer/'Pairy' - Liz AndersonErika - Symphony SandersEditor/Composer - MJCover Art - Adrian TheumaTheme Music - Arne ParrotSymphony Sanders is a Chicago based actor who voices Tamika Flynn on the podcast Welcome to Nightvale, cohosts Good Morning Nightvale, as well as being featured in numerous other podcasts (Unwell, Our Fair City, Pounded in the butt by my podcast , etc) and done regional theatre around Chicago (Chicago Shakespeare, The Goodman , raven theatre etc) when not acting or podcasting she is an aerialist and fitness instructor!
Thank you listening to Paired Season Three! Be sure to leave a review if you enjoyed this episode!--Credits:Creator/Writer/Producer - Liz AndersonUnnamed Scientist - Jonah CooperEditor/Composer - MJCover Art - Adrian TheumaTheme Music - Arne ParrotJonah Cooper is a queer comedian & artist whose work is focused primarily in the strange and uncanny. Her work has been featured on Cracked, FunnyorDie, Zach Braff's youtube channel and more! Follow her at @jonahformayor.
The wonderful and talented Liz Anderson joins the Billbuds on a walk down middle-school-memory lane as we review P!nk's 2001 album M!ssundaztood. This episode might set a new record for "number of audible sighs" in an episode of a podcast! Did we like this album? Did we maybe m!ssunderstand what P!nk was going for here? You'll have to listen to the ep to find out. Also go follow Liz on Twitter: https://twitter.com/lizanderson___And check out the next season of Paired Pod: https://twitter.com/PairedPodWant to support the show and get bonus eps in our off-week? Pay what you can at: https://www.patreon.com/billbudspodLike the show? Leave us a review on iTunes! Want to reach out? Follow us on social media @BillBudsPod or email us at billbudspod@gmail.com
Deals are happening, free agents are getting signed, but the Tampa Bay Rays seem to be content with where the team currently is. However, other teams in the AL East have gotten significantly better in the last week. Hear our thoughts and more in this newest episode of Rays The Roof, a unique one where we had on our first guest co-host with me, bringing back a former guest and a current member of the Rays The Roof Network, Brianna Gonzalez, and our special guest this week, Liz Anderson, better known as @lizaboth on Rays Twitter! Liz was a fantastic guest and we hope you enjoy listening to our discussion with her as much as we had fun recording it! Thanks so much for listening to this most recent episode and make sure to follow the Rays The Roof Network on Twitter @RaysTheRoofTB and instagram @raystherooftb. Our website, YouTube and Twitch channels will be up and running hopefully this week! As always, Rays Up! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
This week, James and Rob are joined by special guest Liz Anderson! They talk with Liz about her writing process, working for Jackbox Games, The Onion fellowship, territory battles, One Woman No Show, and quitting improv. Follow Liz on twitter @ lizanderson__ and listen to Paired Podcast Like what we do? Check out our PATREON. As always, rate, review, and subscribe.
We asked Empty Heaven to describe the thought process that went into the writing of "Shadowself": Jungian psychology purports that every human has a "Shadow Self," an unknown, unconscious side. It's mostly thought of as a receptacle for all of our negative feelings, although it's chaotic nature can often diffuse emotions as we understand them, replacing them with an incomprehensible mush.When I listen to "Paired," I am reminded that not only do our devices come equipped with a personality (however artificial), we also teach them our own. However, we don't teach them how to be us as we really think we are. We fill them with data points, search history, demands, private notes, and all sorts of other private things. If someone were to try to make a portrait of us based off of our devices, it would be an undoubtedly warped, sadly sterile, and sometimes disturbing one. I know mine would be weird for sure. I believe it's accidentally poetic that they even get little Apple IDs with our name."Shadowself" is about having a double, a doppelganger that follows you wherever you go, and it feeds you stressors, insecurity, and endless stimulation...the proverbial "devil on one's shoulder." But, you are slightly to blame, because you taught it everything it knows. I consider this to be the dark side to the concept of "Paired," a very funny and also sweet podcast that I love.Lyrics:When I move, so do youWhen I deviate, you see through every move i make like i was scriptedYou can feel when weight has shiftedWhen I look away, you disapproveWe are one in the sameWe play symmetrical party gamesWe dance together in the showerWe rise and fall at the same hoursBut when I sleep, you interrupt the dream I built myself a shadowself and always want to look at themand when I tell myself I don’tI spiral and I look again Am I sick? I am sickSeeing double and I’m second pickThey hold the things that I have hiddenAll the thoughts that are forbiddenTo keep their mouth shut, I’ve gotta pay a titheCall a priest, call a nunCall the ghost adventures hosts’s own sonI need an exorcismI need light without a prismThere’s a schism in my heart and it’s alive I built myself a shadowself and always want to look at themand when I tell myself I don’tI spiral and I look againIt’s horrible to hold themand it’s even worse to let them goIt’s horrible to keep from peopleeven worse to let them know It’s so hard to have me in my hands When the night turns its headThe lonely hours reveal what I had said to so and so sometimeit always feels like violent crimemy double will enunciate the wordsWhen I covet the faceof a man I want to have replace my visage in the mirror,my double draws the image nearer,and now I have to focus til I’m sureWhen I don’t know a thing,my own double starts to bring the fount of knowledge to my idle handsMy brain retracts, ennui expandsNow knowledge isn’t special anymore I built myself a shadowselfI taught it when it came to meI won’t be held responsibleBut I oughta be, I oughta beIt’s horrible to hold themand it’s even worse to let them goIt’s horrible to keep from peopleeven worse to let them knowIt’s so hard to have me in my hands
On this episode, Dr. Liz Anderson-Peacock shares her amputation journey; from acceptance of the changes her body was about to go through to her recovery and the mindset she used that set her up for success. She regularly speaks in corporate groups around the globe about mindset, motivation and matching values with vision to empower one's self.
I talk with Liz Anderson about her time working on the Howard Stern show and how she got her start in comedy in the Chicago comedy scene. Liz talks about the importance of making connections when trying to pursue a career in comedy. We also talk about her time in The Onion writers room and her work at Jackbox Games. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Thank you for listening to Paired Season Three! Creator/Writer/Producer/'Pairy' - Liz AndersonEditor/Composer - MJCover Art - Adrian TheumaTheme Music - Arne Parrot
In this week's episode we're featuring a 1969 album from prolific songwriting and singing talent Liz Anderson: "Country Style". After relocating from North Dakota, The Andersons moved to Southern California and by the end of the decade, demand was growing for Liz Anderson's songwriting. She'd routinely host many of The West Coast's greats in her living room for picking parties and song pitching opportunities and those connections paid off with her first real hit as a songwriter coming in 1961 when Del Reeves cut "Be Quiet Mind". She was an instrumental part of Merle Haggard's early career (Liz Anderson's "(My Friends Are Gonna Be) Strangers" proved the inspiration for The Hag's band name if you need any further proof of Anderson's importance), and Chet Atkins signed her to RCA in 1965. Liz Anderson enjoyed a few hits while at that label but was too often pushed towards fluffy semi-novelty material for sustained success. And while Anderson didn't possess the down-home twang of Loretta or the hurting of Tammy Wynette, to this reviewer's ears she did have some of Kitty Wells' plaintive stylings and her everywoman vocal is right at home on "Country Style".
In this week's episode we're featuring a 1969 album from prolific songwriting and singing talent Liz Anderson: "Country Style". After relocating from North Dakota, The Andersons moved to Southern California and by the end of the decade, demand was growing for Liz Anderson's songwriting. She'd routinely host many of The West Coast's greats in her living room for picking parties and song pitching opportunities and those connections paid off with her first real hit as a songwriter coming in 1961 when Del Reeves cut "Be Quiet Mind". She was an instrumental part of Merle Haggard's early career (Liz Anderson's "(My Friends Are Gonna Be) Strangers" proved the inspiration for The Hag's band name if you need any further proof of Anderson's importance), and Chet Atkins signed her to RCA in 1965. Liz Anderson enjoyed a few hits while at that label but was too often pushed towards fluffy semi-novelty material for sustained success. And while Anderson didn't possess the down-home twang of Loretta or the hurting of Tammy Wynette, to this reviewer's ears she did have some of Kitty Wells' plaintive stylings and her everywoman vocal is right at home on "Country Style".
Asher Mathew, Director of Strategic Alliances, and Liz Anderson, Senior Director of Partner Marketing at Avalara, join me, Jen Spencer, on The Allbound Podcast to discuss partner support and recruitment strategies. Asher, can you tell us a little bit about what you do specifically at Avalara as Director of Strategic Alliances. Explain a little bit about Avalara's channel program ASHER: My role at Avalara is to manage a group of our high performing partners. And Avalara is a little unique because our partner program is built around referring rather than reselling. We have a very very small number of partners who we allow to resell for different reasons, but most of our partners are all referral agents and so it will be interesting as we expand on some of the questions through this podcast around the model that we're using versus some of the other companies that may be listening to this podcast What is your role in particular? You're Director of Strategic Alliances, what does that really mean? ASHER: I have a group of 8 alliance managers who work very very closely with some of our highest performing partners. And we worked with them - we're basically account managers top to bottom in everything that we do with our partners. Liz, how about you? Tell us a little bit about your role on the partner marketing side? LIZ: As you mentioned I'm Senior Director of Partner Marketing at Avalara, and my team's focus is around creating programs that allow us to monetize our relationships with our partners and ultimately scale the channel and all of that is done through turn-key marketing. Great. Now, you're both really involved in partner marketing, sales enablement, partner development. You've both been involved in these areas for a while now. I'm curious about what are some of the biggest shifts you've seen over the years. Maybe even, what are you doing differently today than you were say 5 years ago? ASHER: As we look back at the channel, Liz and I have been in the channel almost over 10 years now, but as you look back at just the Avalara channel, we've narrowed it down to about 3 years of focus, one accountability, 2 automation, and 3 predictability. And accountability became the big focus for us, because just like other channel companies, we were asked, “hey what is the contribution of the partner business to our overall business” that forced us to look better at tracking and then look better at tools to help us analyze and prove that contribution, so ultimately where we ended up with that was we got away from anything influence oriented. So any metric, any report that had to do with anything partner influence, we got away with and we really started to focus on the source of that referral, and I know this is one of the hardest way, actually it's probably the hardest way to look at the data because you have to look at it very very closely to figure out what's happening with the dollars that you're spending and what's the outcome. So we had to take all of our dashboards, re-do them to track source of that opportunity and start stack ranking against our peers, start tracking progress towards our plan all through this lense of forced opportunity, versus influenced opportunity. Liz, your team manages tools Do you want to elaborate alittle on the automation side of things? LIZ: Yea, thanks Asher. As he mentioned we've both worked in the channel for some time, and my personal self, I've been in the channel in some capacity for over 15 years, and when I think back about how partners were managed when I entered the channel, it really was an act of god because automation tools just didn't exist to manage partners and help bridge that gap to ultimately allow us to scale programs. And so it was usually a one on one relationship, manage everything, you know Asher mentioned we have a team that manages these partner relationships, but in the past that's all we had. And today that's no longer the case. WE're really able to use automation tools that helps us, to not only to scale our program, but also keep our partners in the loop, 24/7, anytime they want to engage with us. When I think about what we've done differently with automation, today we're not only relying on those one on one relationships with those more strategic and top partners, but we also leverage this automation to scale those programs to reach what we call the long-tail partner. For example we have a partner portal, that is really the central hub of our current partner engagement, so that partners know they can go out there and get anything they need to engage with us. And when we first launched this portal, we only had information out there for how they referred a lead, and assets they could download. But there really wasn't anything compelling to draw our partners back to this portal, to want to come back often and many times over. And so, now, when we have continued to enhance that portal, we have everything from leads to opps to deals, commission information. Everything on the front is integrated with our CRM we even have campaign information out there, and demand gen tools that really allow our partners to co-brand campaigns in less than five clicks. We plan to continue to enhance the portal and make it that one stop shop and leverage automation with tools that are readily available today, to enhance that experience for our partner make it available for them when they want to engage with it, and ultimately make it a great user experience, and something they are going to want to come back to in the future. As we continue to build this it out, is in the near future online training and being able to track that. So we can better understand where our partners are and segment them so we can nurture them based on their engagement with us. To circle back around to the point that Asher made, and the last point on the big shift we're seeing around predictability Asher I'll turn it back over to you, to talk about how it's becoming more important to effectively manage and grow our channel. ASHER: Once we've tackled the accountability piece and moved over to the automation piece, the question really is asked of us was, “how do you predict what a partner is going to do for Avalara” and so we sat down thinking, man that's a tough one because, that requires us to go back and look at the data even more introspectively and then look at the behavior of those partners. So we came up with this methodology, that if our VP of Sales is building in Salesforce internally at Avalara, then we should go out and figure out how to build a virtual salesforce, and that required us to not really look at the account level, but look at the people level like, the nth level of that account and see what's happening at that level, what type of conversations are happening, what type of referrals are taking place, if people are stuck in having those conversations what are we doing about that. So to start off we had to start org-charting those partner organizations. We had to track who's trained and how many times were they trained. We had to track how many referrals we're getting and then how many of those referrals were going to be closed out as deals. And so, those are the three macro level shifts that we've seen at least at Avalara, and I know speaking with some of the colleagues in the industry that they're also tackling with some of these three things and to mainly accountability, automation, and then predictability. And, we're not done yet, because this is a costly inter-WHAT-process, so I'm pretty sure when we all meet at the Allbound conference next year, we'll actually talk about some other things that we're focusing on, but these are the big things we're focusing on today. What I've heard both of you really talk about is this tracking, but then also the knowledge transfer, making sure you get the right information out to partners, and then you're extracting the best information from them, so you can make better business decisions. And you're in a fairly technical business, really doing task management automation solutions, so, I imagine there's quite a bit of education that's going to come when you're onboarding a new partner. Can you share some of the strategies you've implemented for successfully onboarding partners? And even share with use the content you're creating to educate partners so they can be most effective and you're going to be able to get that ROI you're looking for. LIZ: Sure Jen, I can address that. You know, transactional task management, is very complex and because of that we think about our channels...referral channel, we strive to make it as easy as possible and as simple as possible for our partners to identify and refer prospects through our onboarding process. You know we don't want... Liz, I want to bring it back to you for a second, what are some of the strategies that you've implemented to help ensure that your team is actually building long-term relationships with those partners? Because you go through all of this work to get everyone onboarded, you're segmenting, there's so much going on. Just like a SaaS company worries about customers churning, that's a lot of work that you're putting in, a lot of resources you're putting in to bring on those new partners. What are you doing to make sure they're happy and staying with you? LIZ: ... Partners who are going to be successful are going to be happy. It comes down to well how do they determine success. I can see how you're going to be able to best figure that out through having authentic relationships with those partners. Can you share how you support partners? Are there any promotional campaigns, promotional programs, materials, any marketing tools, things you regularly create that you feel help partners be more successful and be happy? ASHER: We used to be a partner organization that believed in helping every partner all the time everywhere, and that model just didn't scale. And so, over time, we've learned to better support our highest performing partners and then provide a self service experience for the rest. And when we did that, it was really important to come up with a solid framework that we're going to operate against, and then Liz's team comes in and provides some of the materials and the marketing tools but the framework that we use here at Avalara is very simple. We have an incubation stage, we have a monetization stage, and we have a scale stage. And the differences between the three stages are that when you sign up as a partner, we'll go through preliminary marketing, preliminary sales enablement, preliminary value proposition matching and you'll be launched. Once you're launched you're in a monetization stage, because we want to see how much business you will naturally do with us. And so if you are matching up with some of the higher tier partners that we have, you'll automatically move into the “scale” segment and there you have a dedicated alliance manager (somebody on my team) that works diligently with you to be your single point of contact and we've seen some tremendous returns. We at Avalara worked off of the X to 3X to 10X model, and it's something that I remember even in the earlier days (about 5 years ago) that this is what we thought of, and we're like if we can just take a partner from X to 3X in revenue, and then if we could take them from 3X to 10X, how cool would that be? And it was an idea that we then took and we officially put a framework in place. Liz, do you want to share a little bit about the high quality partner promos you've put in place? I wanted to explain the framework so people understood what we're working in, and then how you support them. LIZ: When I think about the program's and tools that we create, we kind of put them into four buckets. Sales enablement being the first bucket. We create a lot of tools as I mentioned briefly throughout the conversation today, one of those tools is a battle card, which is how a partner identifies a prospect. We've taken that battle card one step further and taken it away from just asking customers if they have a sales technique to how do they naturally bring up sales tasks in their conversations, so they can ultimately position themselves as a thought leader. People buy from people they trust, and sales tasks can be a really tough topic to have a conversation around, and so we want to help our partners naturally have that conversation. We have also created objection handling documents and I haven't seen many of these created in the past in channels but they really do help our partners come up with how to respond to objections when they start having these conversations with their customers so that they know how to handle that prospect and get them on the right track again to having that conversation with us. We also create a lot of through-partner campaigns that are turnkey. You heard me mention early on that we have this demand gen tool through our partner portal, that our partners can essentially create campaigns in less than five clicks. And so, you know the second piece that I kind of bucket from the programs we create our turnkey partner marketing programs that partners can easily send out whether they're creating an email or sending out an email with a call to action that has a landing page where they can download an asset, or maybe they want to put some content on their website. We provide that all for them very easily through our turnkey marketing program. Thirdly, we also offer business development in marketing funds so that we can do custom campaigns with our partners, that are maybe more geared towards something they want to do that's different than our turnkey programs. One of these programs we do is something called easy as pie, where we literally will send and an apple pie to our prospects through our partners to essentially let the customer know that hey managing sales tasks can be as easy as pie. Take a call from us and we'll let you know more. So we used a lot of funds like that with our partners to help them get awareness out there and try and get that warm introduction with their customers. And last but not least, we do a lot of to-partner programs, and we've been talking a lot about segmenting our partner reps based on their interaction with us, who's been trained, who is referring leads, who has been closing deals. And we want to make sure that we nurture those partner reps based on their engagement with us, so that we're ultimately giving them content that's applicable to them and their sales cycle, or their sales engagement with us. And so we offer quarterly updates typically via webcast we offer online and in-person trainings, I also mentioned in the near future we're hoping to offer trainings through our portal that are on-demand, and we also close out those to-partner programs with incentives and SPIFS so that whatever we're teaching them, we're then ultimately motivating them to respond and ask now so that they apply what we're teaching them so that they can really get the most out of our partnership and provide the best value to their customers. When it comes to building a solid partner program, we know recruiting the right partners is definitely going to be key, what have you both found to be an effective recruiting tool or strategy? LIZ: If you read any book or talk to anybody who's had a really successful channel having a great product always helps the recruit the right partners, through more traditional tactics such as attending trade shows and feet on the street and door-knocking based on who you've identified you want to partner with and cold-calling. However, Avalara has really taken a recruitment to the next level through identifying which partners and customers are advocates for our brand and leveraging those relationships to amplify our message and ultimately recruit partners for us. Some of the ways we started to incorporate this into our recruitment strategy is first and foremost though events. Avalara attends hundreds of events every year. And we are starting to be more proactive about working with our partners who are also at these events and identifying mutual customers that we can promote their success with, as an example or finding a partner that's their that's had great success with us. Asking them to maybe be in our booth or wear a t-shirt that talks about automating sales tasks. This summer we had t-shirts made for some of our tradeshows that say “keep calm and automate sales tasks - #AvalaraCalm” and helping those people that are not Avalara employees but are advocates for us, amplify that message for us and do recruitment for us that way. Similar approach to webinars, we'll typically find customers that we can use to leverage on webinars to talk about our story to help them understand how easy we've made life for them since they've automated through our solution. We also are working on developing programs where we're showing more appreciation for our partner reps for being advocates of our brand. One of the the things that we haven't rolled out yet so I don't want to talk about it too much, is the concept of an A-Team which are these partner reps who are really going above and beyond and referring a ton of leads our way and talking about us every chance they can get, and closing a lot of deals with us and we want to make sure figuring out ways to call out special attention to them not only in our partner community but also in their organizations, so we'll continue to develop that program and roll that out. Those are some of the ways that we can use partners and customers to be advocates for us through our recruiting strategies. Strategically however we've also identified another recruiting approach that is near and dear to Asher's heart. ASHER: So this is basically going after the gold first, is what I call it and it's a syndrome because when ISPs like ourselves, they get into an ecosystem or a channel or an industry or a category, they look for the largest player in that space and say “we're going to go after that person with everything we've got, or that partner with everything we've got to recruit them and get them into our partner program.” While that works , it does show success, it takes a very long time. What we've done at Avalara is actually go after the emerging partners and keep an eye out for some characteristics like, for example, if you have an emerging partner whose employees are all ex-Oracle employees, then you know that that partner is ultimately going to do something well, and so, what we've done successfully at Avalara is look after emerging partners the same way we look after our larger partners, and then when we signed up those emerging partners and started to grow like 30-50% year over year, those larger partners that we hadn't signed up, also signed up with us too. And then that's a strategic mission that we had at Avalara that has worked really well.
Rob and James open the Rich family vault and let special guest Liz Anderson pick whatever she wants. Also we talk about the Macaulay Culkin movie RICHIE RICH. Remakes begin @ 49mins: Rob pitches a sequel of sorts; Dugan gives it a marvel spin; and Liz brings in Scorsese. Follow Liz on twitter @ liesanderson; See Liz live with ComedySportz and Baby Wants Candy and go see The Ghosttrakkers Ruin Christmas on Dec 9th @ the Bughouse Theater, 10pm. And please, someone tweet at Dugan.
In this episode, we have a heartfelt and deep journey with Dr. Liz Anderson Peacock. We'll discuss how she found chiropractic and through her work with the international chiropractic pediatric association, Larry Webster, D.C., Jeanne Ohm, D.C., and so many more. Dr. Peacock has been and continues to be an incredible leader in chiropractic both on the humanitarian front and legislatively in her region as well as education. During this in depth interview, Dan Lemberger asked her questions in regards to patient education strategies, how life is about connection, and so much more. Dr. Liz Peacock will be sharing a pediatric program at Mile High, August 18th through 21st that you do not want to miss. Registration is here: https://milehighchiro.org/milehigh-2016 I know from this interview you will learn in depth why chiropractic is an incredible opportunity for connection and enhancing potential and expand your vision for impacting your community and as well as touching the lives of people of all ages. Enjoy and please share with us your feedback in what things you learn from this podcast. Look forward to seeing you at Higher Ground.
Join AK and Deb as they chat with Liz Anderson, Founder of E.H. Anderson Public Relations. Liz is a member of the IFA (International Franchise Association) Supplier Forum and attends the annual convention faithfully. This year she and husband Bage developed a video marketing campaign. Liz will share her campaign strategies and how they use UStream as part of their social marketing toolkit. twitter: @ehandersonpr