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Send us a textWatch the video!https://youtu.be/XvHn9nSfIiIIn the News blog post for March 28, 2025:https://www.iphonejd.com/iphone_jd/2025/03/in-the-news771.html 00:00 Man On the Cube07:42 TECHSHOW To You!10:37 RevampOS15:51 We Get More in 18.426:20 Built-In Productivity29:33 Fly Me To The Bluetooth33:00 Music To The Max37:22 In the Show! A Racing Studio43:00 Behind The Scenes Blowout!48:48 Jeff's Teaser for ABA TECHSHOW Ben Lovejoy | 9to5Mac: Apple provides iOS 19 clues as leakers battleJuli Clover | MacRumors: Top 5 New Features Coming in iOS 18.4Kanika Gogia | The Mac Observer: Hidden iOS 18.4 Features You Might Have MissedJuli Clover | MacRumors: watchOS 11.4 Will Make Sure You Don't Miss AlarmsLando Loic | Make Use Of: I Tried Using Only Apple Apps for Productivity—And I'm Never Going Back!Ed Hardy | Cult of Mac: AirFly Pro 2 makes your AirPods even better [Review]Jason Snell | Six Colors: AirPods Max gets lossless, low-latency, and an analog cableRyan Christoffel | 9to5Mac: Apple Music Classical adds three new features in latest updateDan Stevens | Slate: The Studio Is the Best New Comedy of 2025Jeff's Teaser for ABA TECHSHOW: iPhone tips - where it all started:https://www.iphonejd.com/iphone_jd/2008/11/my-favorite-sho.html Support the showBrett Burney from http://www.appsinlaw.comJeff Richardson from http://www.iphonejd.com
This is Play That Rock n' Roll's interview with Gary Graff, editor of "501 ESSENTIAL ALBUMS OF THE '90s: The Music Fan's Definitive Guide and the co-author of "TRAVELIN' MAN: On the Road & Behind the Scenes with Bob Seger"! In this conversation, we discuss both books. First we talk about how the ‘90s book came to be and what makes the albums included here *essential*. Gary also expands on a few Classic Rock albums that he wrote the reviews for, specifically albums from the Eagles, Meat Loaf, John Fogerty, and even the Trans-Siberian Orchestra. The second part of this interview is about Bob Seger. We discuss how TRAVELIN' MAN got put together and what makes this era of Bob's career so special. We also discuss why Bob did not make the cut for the ‘90s book, his old-school approach to the music business, and Gary also shares some of his favorite memories of seeing Bob in concert. Gary on facebook: https://www.facebook.com/GaryGraffonMusic Gary on Twitter: https://x.com/GraffonMusic Gary on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/realgraffonmusic Our Links: https://linktr.ee/playthatpodcast Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dennis is joined via Zoom by actor Marc Samuel to talk about his two new Netflix projects; the holiday film The Merry Gentlemen and the Ted Danson comedy series Man On the Inside. The Merry Gentleman is like a holiday twist on The Full Monty with Marc playing a reluctant male stripper who, along with his pals, puts on an exotic male review show to save their small town theater. Marc talks about performing the various dance numbers, working opposite male lead Chad Michael Murray, getting in shape for the role and what it's like to work for Netflix generally. He also talks about Man On the Inside and whether or not he felt pressure to be funny, giving that the show was created by Mike Shur of The Good Place and Parks and Recreation fame. Marc also recalls falling in love with acting at the age of five when he saw his father performing in a Chicago stage production of Fiddler on the Roof and how he experienced a full circle moment decades later when his dad got to see him act on stage in Miss Evers Boys in Portland. Other topics include: getting discovered by his commercial agent at the Mexican restaurant Marix in West Hollywood, how Hollywood has evolved in terms of its depictions of gay and black characters, how he's managed to stay positive and ride the ups and downs of the business, his long-time recurring role as Felix LaCroix on General Hospital, why he lives in the mountains instead of in LA proper and why he compares one very specific aspect of his acting career to holding in a fart.
It's absolute anarchy this week as we manage to begin the podcast first with a debate about proper podcast nomenclature and then with Kay and Boyd fighting over what does and does not constitute and illegal review. But bear with us and we promise the podcast proper does start eventually. And a good thing too, because Aldis Hodge and Ben Watkins join us to talk Cross (22:16) — though not to get cross — and Rebecca Hall drops by to talk The Listeners (49:12). Elsewhere, we give BBC1's The Listeners the full review treatment (1:06:36), plus spice things up with Dune: Prophecy on Sky Atlantic (1:15:48) and discover whether Michael Schur and Ted Danson's new comedy, A Man On the Inside (1:31:22), can hold a candle to The Good Place. Note: time stamps are approximate as the ads throw them out, so are only meant as a guide. If you want to avoid this and would like the podcast entirely ad-free (as well as 12 hours early, with a second weekly show, and spoiler specials) then sign up to Pilot+ at empire.supportingcast.fm.
Send us a text9:01 PM | Rustbelt | When I'm Feelin' Manic 9:04 PM | The Beatles | When I'm Sixty Four9:07 PM | dayaway | Lost on You 9:12 PM | ALVILDA | Paris Été 9:15 PM | Provoker | Demon Compass 9:18 PM | Christopher Owens | Beautiful Horses 9:26 PM | Eva Cassidy | Walkin' After Midnight 9:29 PM | Rubblebucket | Morning Glory Blanket 9:33 PM | Silverbacks | No Rivers Around Here 9:38 PM | The Dandy Warhols | Bohemian Like You 9:41 PM | R.E.M. | Man On the Moon 9:46 PM | Shower Curtain | Bedbugs 9:51 PM | Rod Stewart | What's Made Milwaukee Famous 9:54 PM | The Commitments | Mr. Pitiful9:57 PM | Khruangbin | Pon Pon (WBRS Bonus Track)
Within Brims Skin. Man On the Run #281. -- The gang is at it again. Brimstone is joined by his wing-man Alex DaPonte and his wife Danielle as they chat about the worst Halloween candy, how Necco Wafers are way worse than Candy Corn, why Circus Peanuts are even a thing and why it's good to have friends with different flavor profiles. They discuss the Halloween plans or lack thereof, ball shaving, Alex's love for burnt popcorn and how pickle juice drinking is actually a thing. They discuss the rancid tales of an Uber puker, and more pickle conversation. Brim explains what gets Within Brim's Skin.
Justin, Carlos & Peter who normal eschews all forms of physical exercise visit one of the CSE Trust projects "Man On!" a sports-based mental wellbeing programme designed to support men aged 18+ with their mental health through physical activity and a conversation café. The programme brings together a group of men who share the same interest in sport and have similar struggles and helps build positive relationships and support networks to grow and improve together.We speak with some of the coaches, facilitators and player participants about what we think is a fantastic initiative (amongst many) that shows the club remain the community club and find out that even this good work has to adapt whilst the club is out of the premier league and we hear about some of the great things that supporters, sponsors and others do to raise money to allow this and other fabulous community projects.If you are over 18 and might like to apply to attend "Man On!" fill out the online referral form at Man On! - Watford FC Community Sports & Education Trust (watfordfccsetrust.com)COYH!!!!This Podcast has been created and uploaded by Do Not Scratch Your Eyes. The views in this Podcast are not necessarily the views of talkSPORT.Huge thanks to all our Patreons:Chris Giannone,RichWFC2,Steve Holliman,Paul Fiander Turner,Sean Gourley,Lee Anselmo,John Parslow,Mark von Herkomer,Neil Silverstein,Steve Brown,Dave Lavender,Kasey Brown,Nipper Harrison,Boyd Mayover,Colin Payne,Paul Riley,Gary Wood,Karl Campion,Kevin Kremen,The Big Le – Bofski,Greg Theaker,Malcolm Williams,Bryan Edwards,Peter Ryan,Luka,John Thekanady - Ambassador of Dubai!!Jack Foster,Jason Rose,Michael Abrahams,Ian Bacon,Ken Green,Nick Nieuwland,Colin SmithAnt!!!!!Westlie WheelerRyan D!Dave Mullins,James McNamaraJim Cuthbert& PDF Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This week Jeremy interviews writer, artist, and musician Chris Norris aka SteakMtn of Combatwoundedveteran / Reversal of Man On this episode Jeremy and Chris talk New York City, Mondo Kim's Video, Misfits, death metal, Tampa, Extreme, playing guitar out of necessity, starting Combatwoundedveteran, Assück, recording at Morrisound Studios, the Locust, the art of not really having vocals, touring Europe, comic books relating to movies, being a visual artist as Steak Mtn, his fiction writing as a published author, and so much more! SUBSCRIBE TO THE PATREON for a bonus episode where Chris answers questions that were submitted by subscribers! Follow the show on INSTAGRAM and TWITTER
We're joined in the Centre Circle today by Callum McFadden, author of Behind The Curtain Of The Beautiful Game. Callum's first book features a string of fascinating interviews with characters involved in football, from players, coaches and managers through to referees, commentators and TV producers. Interviewees include Roy Hodgson, Martin O'Neill, Norman Whiteside, Matt Le Tissier, Les Ferdinand, Martin Tyler, Jeff Stelling and many more. Callum has generously donated the profits from the book to Man On! Inverclyde, a well-being and suicide prevention charity, so you can enjoy a good read and benefit a good cause at the same time.
We dive deep into the journey of self-discovery with our special guest, Erik Rock. In this powerful episode, Erik bares his soul as he recounts his past struggles with people-pleasing, daddy issues, and the relentless pursuit of validation. From yearning to be seen and loved to proving himself as the successful entrepreneur he is today, Erik takes us on a profound exploration of his innermost battles and triumphs. Join us as we uncover the transformative power of delving into the past, embracing the inner child, and uncovering one's mission and purpose. Erik's story is a raw and authentic testimony to the resilience of the human spirit, proving that even the darkest moments can be catalysts for personal growth and empowerment. Tune in as we witness the journey of turning pain into power, one revelation at a time. *****If this episode helped you, or you think it will help someone else, please share â¤ï¸ Erik Rock Links: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/erikrocklol/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/erikrocklol/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UChpaHgVNi0sIsl_OdRQGDjw LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/erik-rock-13b1a516b/ Man On a Mission: https://www.instagram.com/manonamission.podcast/ https://erikrock.net/about-me/ https://www.erikrockblueprint.com/ https://erikrock.net/ Watch this episode on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8ZHyCXpIhtQS1j2pGlVhpw Follow to stay updated: https://www.instagram.com/paintopowerpodcast/ Visit www.kaylacardona.com | https://linktr.ee/kaylacardona Join Kayla Cardonas 6 month coaching program BREAKTHROUGH every 2 weeks on Wednesday's @ 6PM PT. Also includes insights on everything real estate where you have access to her mentorship. Click link here: https://kaylacardona.thrivecart.com/breakthrough/
Siggi og Lovísa stóðu vaktina í Popplandi. Plata vikunnar var á sínum stað, Aska & Gull með Sváfni Sig, heimshornaflakk með Árna Matt, lög úr Söngvakeppninni, hitað upp fyrir Grammy verðlaunin, ný íslensk tónlist og margt fleira. Júlí Heiðar - Farfuglar. BLUR - Charmless Man. Bob Dylan - Gotta serve somebody. STEREOPHONICS - Handbags And Gladrags. FOUNDATIONS - Build Me Up Buttercup. Ariana Grande - Yes, and?. MADONNA - Vogue. Black Pumas - Mrs. Postman. Marlena Shaw - California Soul. SUPERSERIOUS - Bye Bye Honey. Atli - When It Hurts. DAFT PUNK - Lose Yourself To Dance. KATA - Og ég flýg. The Japanese House - Super Trouper. Á móti sól - Okkur líður samt vel. Flott - Með þér líður mér vel. Warmland - Voltage. ÁRNÝ MARGRÉT - I went outside. JONI MITCHELL - California. BILLY JOEL - She's always a woman. LAUFEY - Falling Behind. NINA SIMONE - Here Comes The Sun. MAMMÚT - Rauðilækur. Sváfnir Sigurðarson - Svarið. Kvikindi & Friðrik Dór - Úthverfi. Green Day - The American Dream Is Killing Me. SCOPE - Was That All It Was. JAIN - Makeba. TRÚBROT - To be Grateful. ZACK BRYAN & KACEY MUSGRAVES - I Remember Everything. EEE GEEE - More Than A Woman. LANA DEL REY - A&W. JADE BIRD - Uh-huh. SUNNY - Fiðrildi. R.E.M. - Man On the Moon. ALL AMERICAN REJECTS - Gives you Hell. ÚLFUR ÚLFUR - Sitt sýnist hverjum (feat. Herra Hnetusmjör) JULIAN CIVILIAN - Fyrirmyndarborgari. JÓN JÓNSSON - Spilaborg. GEORGE EZRA - Budapest. NOISETTES - Never Forget You. ÓLAFUR BJARKI - Yfirhafinn.
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Aloha friends, it's Robert Stehlik. Welcome to another episode of the Blue Planet Show. Today's interview is with none other than Jimmy Lewis, who is a legendary shaper. He got started at a young age shaping surfboards and then moved to Maui where he got into making windsurf boards. And at one point he was making windsurf speed needles for some of the fastest world record breaking sailors in the world at speed sailing events. And then he got into kite surfing and kite boards, and then standup paddle boards, and now foil boards. So he's a very versatile shaper. Some great stories to tell, and really interesting interview and entertaining as well. So you'll learn more about his design philosophy, board construction, and lots of good stories. So it's a longer interview, so take your time, re kick back and relax. Watch it here on YouTube with some visuals, or you can also listen to it as a podcast on your favorite podcast app. So without it further ado, here is Jimmy. Okay, Jimmy Lewis, it's a real honor to have you on the show. Thanks so much for making the time to talk to me and the guests. So I'm just stoked to be able to talk to you for extended period of time and ask you all the questions I have. And so yeah, thank you for coming to the show. Oh, I'm happy to be here finally. I've seen the other ones. I go, why doesn't he call me? I appreciate that. Thanks. So yeah, so we'll get into all this stuff that's currently going on, at eventually I want to talk about your board shapes and your foil boards and equipment and all that kind of stuff. But I, first of all, I wanna start with just going into some background, I know you have a long history in the sports of water sports Tell us a little bit about, start at the very beginning, like how you grew up, where, where were you born, how did you grow up and how did you get into water sports and how did you start shaping boards and all that stuff. Yeah. My dad was in the Air Force, so I was born in Canada, I think after World War ii. My mom and my dad moved around a lot. My dad met my mom after World War ii. My mom's brother was a Air Force buddy of his, and they he brought my dad over to their house after the war. And then he met my mom, and I guess we moved around. They moved around quite a few years. Eventually we moved to Redlands, California. I believe it was in 1956. So I was I was born in 51, so that would make me five years old. And went into kindergarten there, went to grade school and stuff. And then in I don't know if you're old enough to remember the sixties, but that's when the surfing craze really was going crazy in the early sixties and we lived inland. But my older brother, I have two older brothers, two years apart. So my older brother I think was, if I was like 11 or 12, he was 15 or 16. And he he had a transistor radio that my dad had brought back from Germany. And I remember listening to all the rock music and the surf music on the radio coming outta his room. And he started getting interested in surfing and so he bought a surfboard. And so naturally me and my other brother wanted to do what he did. So we all started surfing and I think I bought my first surfboard. It was a pop out vessy and it was like a pig board, that vessie pig shape. And started surfing, I think. In the summer of my sixth grade, and I remember my mom took us down, took me and a friend of mine, just us two, down to Cardiff, which was quite a ways from, we, like Newport Beach was 60 miles in away. Redlands was like 60 miles directly inland from Newport. And anyway, when we really started getting into surfing a lot, we would drive down to Cardiff, but I don't know why my mom brought us down to Cardiff that day. Me and a friend of mine, Hanson Surfboards, was across the street, not directly from Carter Reef, but just a little south of that. There was a restaurant on the beach there called Sea Barn. It was like a little old diner of those sixties type diners Okay. Where all the surfers would go in there and eat sometimes. And there was a, they called that beach break right across, right out from sea Barn, right across the street from there was Hanon Surfboards the shop. And me and my friend went and snooping around behind there. And there was this sha, this little shack, I think it was just a single standing shape room. But we went in there and this guy, John Price was in there. He was later on to own Surfboards Hawaii. He bought the franchise from Dick Brewer on in the Man On in California. But he was in there shaping. And I had forgotten. But this friend of mine from Redlands, who was at the beach with me that day, reminded me about a year or two ago that I had gotten a couple pieces of the rail cutoffs. And that's, I took 'em home and made two little surfboards. I think they were about a foot long. I shaped some longboards, glassed 'em, I can't remember where I even got the glass and resin, but I shaped them, glassed them, got some logos out of the magazine. I remember one was at Jacobs and one was at Dewey Weber. And I glassed them for boards. And I remember bringing 'em to school and showing people. And then this other friend of mine was so impressed. So just like small model shapes, model pieces threw away from, okay. Yeah. I remember this friend of mine was so impressed with one of 'em. I just gave it to 'em. I don't know why I did that. I wish I still had one of those, or both of 'em. But I think that's been a thing all my life. I like to give stuff away to people that like it, especially something I've made. Anyway, that's how I started surfing. And then we would, I remember my mom used to give us 50 cents a day for lunch to buy the lunch at school. And the guys that went surfing who had cars, I was still like 13, 14, and 15 years old in those junior high and high school years. Fortunately I was for some reason, guys that are 16 and 17 don't want to hang around with 13 and 14 year old kids, and but I was able to go with those guys surfing and we had to pay gas money to get down to the beach with these guys that had cars. So I'd save my 50 cents all week long to have $2 and 50 cents for the weekend to go surfing. And I'd starve at school for all week long, not having lunch. And then would go to the beach, pay a dollar 50 for gas, and then I'd have another dollar or a dollar 50 depending on who charged what for a bag of Dale Donuts from Speedy Mart, which was like a precursor to seven-eleven. Down in Cardiff and then whatever else food we'd get and would just, all I cared about was surfing. I didn't do very well in school. I didn't fail, but I got like seas, but I was naturally good at math, algebra, and geometry, so I didn't, that was, I hated reading. I hated reading history. I hated reading any of that stuff. Just couldn't concentrate. I'd read it, I'd re, when I'd be doing my homework, I'd be reading a paragraph over and over again thinking about surfing or something. And finally I just put the book away how I even passed. I can't, I don't remember how I could do that because I didn't really study. And like I said, na, the math stuff was semi-natural, so I got pretty good grades in algebra, geometry, math, stuff like that. And then my mom moved to Berkeley in 67. She wanted, she was working at the library in Redlands and then she wanted to become a librarian, so she needed to go to the university, moved up to Berkeley. And I remember my older brother was already in college and my other brother just graduated in 67, so it was just me and my mom and my sister. And I was thinking, shoot up in San Francisco area, there's icebergs in the water up there. I just had this impression. It's it's so cold. What a pi. I just hated moving up there because that was the end of my surfing career, and then once I got up there, after a little while, I think my oldest brother came and visited and we decided to drive down to Santa Cruz and Reali and found that it wasn't as cold as we thought and it was doable. And then I made a couple surfers there and we started going over to Belinas, which is north of the Golden Gate Bridge. And surfing over there. And then one day, it was probably in the late, it was like late 68 maybe. And we went to Belinas and I saw this homemade surfboard. And this is the time when short boards first started being made. And there were, there weren't, it wasn't longboard surfing anymore. Nat Young and Dick Brewer were making short boards, the first short boards in the late sixties there. And I saw this homemade surfboard there that this guy made on the beach. And I go, shoot, I could do that. And so I drove down to Santa Cruz to the O'Neill shop. They used to make surfboards, they, they had a surfboard brand as well as their wetsuit thing. And I bought a blank, a gallon of residence, some glass, and came back and turned one of the rooms in our apartment into the shaping room and shaped that board. And then out on the out on the, what do you call it? The roof of the house. I started glassing boards up there, and that's how I started making boards. And then we chopped down all our old classic long, long boards, stripped them, and I reshaped those and then started making boards. Okay. So that was like late sixties or early 1968 was the first full size board I made. Okay. I actually forgot to mention that when I got into seventh grade, I wanted to make a belly board, which is like a boogie board, but we used to call them belly boards and it was shaped like a surfboard, uhhuh, and a longboard. And so when I got into seventh grade wood shop, I told the teacher I wanted to, you could make, they give you assignments of what you have to make to teach you how to work with wood. But I had I wanted to make this belly board. It was four feet long, glued up, shaped with rocker and stuff, and. He said that's way too big of a project for a seventh grader. So for the, I had to wait till ninth grade. So the next two years, all I thought about was making that belly board. So when I got into ninth grade wood shop, I did it. I bought some balsa wood from the hot, we called 'em hobby shops back then with model airplanes and stuff. But they had these pieces of balsa wood that were three feet long. And I think I bought two of em and then glued on cuz they weren't long enough. I wanted it to be four feet long. So they were, I remember having to, to but 'em end on end to make it long enough. And I couldn't afford to buy all four pieces to make it wide enough. So the rails were solid pine. So the thing weighed a lot. But the, I remember the two pieces of wood that I bought were eight bucks, which was a fortune back then for me. And so that's why I couldn't make the whole thing balsa. And I shaped it and my plan was to take, and back then it was like we'd have wood shop Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, and the next week it was Tuesday and Wednesday. And so I made the board and I got it done shaped just before Christmas vacation. Back then we had two weeks off for Christmas vacation. My plan was to take it home, last it, and take it to the beach to ride over Christmas vacation. And the shop teacher said, oh, I want you to glass it. I want you to do it here and show the kids how you do that. And I go, this ain't a glass shop, it's a wood shop. And if I do it, if I had to wait till after Christmas, it would take two months to do it Monday, Wednesday and Friday, and then Tuesday and Thursday. And it's I was so pissed, and so what I did on the very last day before the Christmas vacation on Friday, I stuck it behind the shop door, leaning up behind the shop door. And then as I got outta school, I just went and grabbed it and took it home. The lead teacher was pissed. He failed me for that quarter. So I had an for the first quarter f for the next quarter. So my the semester grade was a c the average. And he was pissed, but that's what I did. So anyway, I glassed that and then it wasn't until I saw that board in Bess that I wanted to make real surfboards. Okay. And then other than your shop teacher which shop teacher, did you have any, anybody like showing you, like mentoring you or did you talk to any other shapers or watch anybody else? I didn't know what a shaper was. Yeah. Except that first experience when I was in summer of sixth grade looking at John Price and that shaping room. And then you just shaped it with like a surf form rasp or did you have a power cleaner or the blank? The first surfboard I made. Yeah. Yeah. It was they got, the surf forms are the 10 inch surf forms. Yeah. I don't know if they have a seven inch one, a small one, or six or seven inch one. Shaped the first 17 boards with that small surf form. Oh, wow. Big one existed. And I certainly didn't know what a planer was, I don't think, or had access to one. And have you ever tried to skin a blank with a Sure. Formm, the crust on the blank? I, yeah. I actually, the first board I shaped was the same way. I didn't have a planer or anything. I had to do it all by hand. But yeah it's very hard to get that the skin off right now. Yeah, it was, that was a nightmare. But for some reason though, I remember the boards. I've got one of my old board. One of the first surfboards I made down in my shop, this friend of mine from Berkeley Yeah. Told me he had it several years ago. And so I said send it to me and I'll send your son a new surfboard that I shaped him. But yeah, they're pretty clean, nice. Yeah. So that's how I started. I wasn't a very good Glasser until I saw somebody do it or shaping. I came to Hawaii in 69 right after high school. This friend, my brother had already moved to Maui in 68, I believe. So at, I graduated in 69 and a friend of mine got a job painting a friend of his family's house over the summer. So me and him painted that house to earn money to come to Hawaii. So we came to Maui in, in the fall of 69. And there was this sh guy that had a little shape and room in PA down here. And I was gonna shape a board and so he had a planer. And so I got the blank and I had no idea how to do, to walk around the board shaping it like you're mowing a lawn, right? I was making crazy s cuts down the middle of the blank and I did a few cuts and then I go, Jesus Christ, this is terrible. And then I asked him, Hey, can you come and show me how to, how you hold the plane or, so he did a few passes and I didn't really get it. And after I, I mean it used to take me like the 17 boards I had done with the Sure Form, it would take me a week to shape those cuz I would do a little bit every day after school or something. And you've shaped a board with the Sure. Form yourself so you know how long it takes. And doing it with this planner, I was done in a couple hours and I just felt. I'm never gonna learn this. This is terrible. I just was depressed and, what's it called? Dis disen, non en disenchanted, but what's the word? Yeah, discouraged. I just felt discouraged of ever learning to shape. But then I got a planner anyway I only stayed in Santa Cruz, sorry, Maui for three months cuz it was the first time I was away from home and it wasn't as easy living in Hawaii as I thought. I just imagine. Yeah, I'd find a house, a really cool house right near the beach or something for $50 a month and it wasn't like that, and so anyway, I moved back to Berkeley, stayed at my mom's house for a couple months, I think I shaped a surfboard there and then moved to Santa Cruz and I lived in Santa Cruz for a year. And in the house we lived in, there was this guy that had this back bedroom when he moved out, I turned that bedroom into a sh a shaping room, and then I was glassing up on the front porch. And I O'Neill, like I said, they had a shop where they made boards too, and they also had a showroom there. And so they had, they were gonna stop their making surfboards. They were gonna close down their shop. So I went over there and Mike O'Neill, who's Pat's brother, had this box with a planter in a bunch of pieces and he sold it to me for 10 bucks. So I hitchhiked up to San Francisco to the Skill factory and gave it to him and told 'em, put it together and fix it. So for 75 bucks, they put it all together and made it almost like brand new. And so now I had a planner for 85 bucks basically. And then I started shaping and learning how to use it, but my glassing wasn't very good. Every, the thing is I've gotten good at glassing because every board I shaped, I glance. So I'm just as good at glassing as I am at shaping still to this day. You glassed all the boards yourself? There's been long periods where I didn't glass 'em all right. But now I do everything. I glass 'em, sand 'em, everything. But yeah, so I wasn't a very good Glasser. I didn't know, I was okay. The finished product was okay sometimes, but sometimes the resident would go off on me because I didn't have a technique. And anyway, I went up to, to house surfboards and there was this guy Bob Kates, I think is his name. He was a super good Glasser, and I saw him, how he would squeegee nose detail. I was going middle out from the stringer out, and that just takes so much time. And I just saw how he did it. I go, man, that's so much different. And that's as soon as I just saw his technique, I could glass, I started glassing a lot better. And then but nobody ever sat with me and taught me anything. But I could definitely say watching Bob Kate's glass aboard was how I learned how to really, squeegee in the right directions and stuff. And then after it was just, sorry. Oh, I just wanted to ask you about using a, the planer cuz I mean I found that, yeah, going from the little hand tool to the planer, it's like easy to take off too much material and make, keeping it even and you can't hold it. You don't wanna hold it exactly square. You'll wanna hold it slightly diagonally. Can you give us, just give some pointers on like how, what your technique is with the planer when you're shaping? That's exactly, over the period of time you just, sometimes over the years I've showed people how to shape, a lot of people and when they get the planer, I mean it's I don't know how much shaping you've done, but to me it's just so natural. I can be walking down the board with the planter and I can trip, but it doesn't, the trip of my feet and the the movement of my body doesn't change my hands. I can trip almost fall down, but it doesn't my hands are still even, yeah, it's just something you get. It's like unbelievable surfers who never fall off. Whereas I'd fall off on a certain little soup hitting me or something, or kiting, windsurfing, whatever. It's just something from after shaping hundreds and hundreds of boards. But yeah, at first it wasn't easy, but watching people do it. And then a few people over my, mainly I would think Steve Licey showed me a couple things and I'm watching him in the early seventies when he came to Maui. Do you know who he ever heard of? Steve Scheyer? No, I don't think so. He was a super good surfer. He was, I think he rode for Bing back in the, in longboard days. And then he was still I think When short boards came out. He was a super good surfer, super good shaper, but he was always really open with me about techniques on shaping and stuff. He showed me some things to modify the front of my, where the depth adjuster is? He's got that slot. Do you have a scale? I don't have a anymore, but I used a planter before. Yeah. But anyway, the skill 100 planter is the best planter there is. It's got a depth adjuster in the front with a little lever that goes back and forth in this slot. When you're shaping boards, foam gets stuffed up into that shoe part. And then at the either end, the depth adjuster has a range of motion where it's a zero cut and it goes up to an eighth inch cut. Steve taught me to drill a big hole on the either end of that little slot so foam doesn't get packed in there. Cuz over the while, while you're shaping a board foam will get packed into either end and it won't allow the depth adjuster to come to zero. And it also doesn't allow it to get to an eighth inch because it's getting stuffed up. So he taught me, like on the open end where you wanna make it deeper, I drill a really big hole. So you can actually make the planer cut even deeper than a eighth inch, which was good. And then you put a cut, drill a hole in the other end so the foam doesn't get built up there, so you can actually close it onto a zero cut. And he also taught me one thing I don't know what the dynamics of this is. When you use, when you skin a blank, usually you skin it with a full cut on both sides. You go down one side. Working over to the stringer and then you plane the stringer down in a real clean cut and then you go to the other side with the exact same depth cut and work your way to the center again. And don't ask me why the cuts don't come out perfectly level. They're like this when you finally reach the center. And I used to always, and then I asked Steve, why is it like that? And he goes, I don't know, but all you do is back the planer off on your final cut instead of doing the full cut on the other side. And so ever since I learned that from Steve, the blank comes out perfectly flat after I've skinned it. Interesting. It's just little things like that Steve Licey showed me when I was, and I remember, you know how to, you, you change the depth of the cut as you're walking because like in the tail, when you're doing, when you're beveling your first cut on the rail, for example, you started a zero cut and then you increase the cut in the middle cuz the blank is usually thin in the tail, thicker in the middle and thinner in the nose. So you need to take more foam outta the middle. So you adjust the cut as you're walking. And so Steve, I saw how well he did that and I just copied it and then like shaping the v you don't start with an eighth inch cut and just start whacking away. You want a tapered cut. So you start with zero and then increase the cut as you go toward the tail that makes the V bottom cause you want more V in the back. Just little things like that. And then over and over you the shape it more and more. But anyway, like I, I was saying when I was showing other people, it's so natural for me to, and then also on the. You have the planter like this and the blades are right here. So you get a feel about where those blades are. So where you're gonna cut, it's not right in the middle, it's not in the front where it's like on a sure form you can go like that and shape what the front, the blades are here you have to learn where that cutting part is cuz you can't see it, it's underneath. And I would teach people how to shape and they would just like butcher the blank and I would get so frustrated thinking they should be able to do what I'm doing. But then I realized that it ain't easy to be able to learn that you gotta shape, you gotta take a long time to get the feel of the plant or where it cuts for sure. And yeah, I've just learned that from experience. It's nothing special about my skill. I think every shaper that's shaped a lot of boards. Matt Keena, he's a shaper here on Maui who does ka I've seen a lot of his videos on YouTube. He is unbelievable with his planer. Just really neat to watch him, his videos. And I've heard Timmy Patterson is good too. Unbelievable. With the planer. Yeah. That's so cool. All right you, so then you shaped your first surfboards and then what happened? People would see I was making surfboards, like for example, in Berkeley when I was making my first surfboards. And a couple of guys would get blanks and bring 'em over and I'd make their boards. And that was like in the late sixties when the backyard underground type shapers were coming into being and all the major manufacturers being Dewey Weber, Jacobs. Who else? Hansen. And back then, most of the boards used in the sixties were like kind of pop outs or whatever. Mo no, not pop outs, no vey. I was, the vey was the only one that I remember having a pop out board. Okay. It was a good board. It was just not cool to have a pop out. But I didn't know at the time and I didn't care, but all the other manufacturers were all custom handmade boards. Okay. And but anyway, in the sixties, I think it was partly the culture thing of, everybody was smoking pot every, and the music, the Stones, the Beatles and all that stuff. It was cool to be an underground shaper. And a lot of the bigger manufacturers I don't know if they struggled, but it wasn't quite the same as it was in the sixties, where in the mid sixties, during the golden era of surfboard making and long boarding where over the winter some of these manufacturers would produce 10, 10,000 boards, 5,000 boards for the summer rush to get ahead of it. They'd sell 'em all in the summertime. And in the sixties, I remember Dewey Weber had Nat Young on their team rider thing, and Nat was shaping a board. They called the ski and it had belly in the b in the nose, but with a down rail on the back like we do today. But nowadays the rails are down all the way front to back anyway, after a short period of time. Cuz things were evolving so quickly in the Shortboard era in the late sixties Dewey Weber produced a ton of those. Bei ski boards. And then a few months later, Nat realized that down rails were better. I think Mike Henson was the first guy to do a down rail board nose detail. And then Nat Young realized that was the best thing for its shaping. It was evolving. Dewey Weber wouldn't change cuz they already made a ton of them, it was economics. So by down, down rails, you mean the tucked under little edge, like below the, yeah. This is the shape of a longboard rail. Just rounded. Yeah. Yeah. Like they call it 50 50. So then when short boards came along, they tan, they turned like this shaping down and had more of a edge down here. I can't remember the they, it wasn't a total edge, but it was just down that's the expression we use by Unreal. Yeah. Down rail. Okay. And so what happened was, like in the rails, like even that board I got in my shop that I said I made a friend of mine in Berkeley that's in my shop, it's got a belly in the nose. And so we used to call it a high to low rail line low in the back. And then it got high in the front cuz of the belly in the nose. Then it got flatter and flatter in the back into a v in the ba in the back. And so then they changed to have the down rail all the way around. Mike Hanson was the first guy to do that. Okay. So when people saw that, how much better that was flat bottom nose with a down rail. Nat Young told Dewey, whoever, we gotta change 'em. And he goes, we can, we've already made thousands of these other ones and so he wasn't about to lose all that money, but that's just a little thing, yeah. That's here nor there as far as I'm concerned. Okay, so then people started asking you to make boards for them. You made underground boards for your friends or like how did you start? Yeah, just people that knew I made boards. It wasn't a lot. It was like three or four or five or six, I don't know, maybe it might have been 10 in Berkeley. And then and then Santa Cruz too when I moved to there. Anyway, I moved back to Maui in 71. I only lived in Santa Cruz for a year. And like I, I learned a lot in Santa Cruz cuz I'd go up to the house shop, watch guys use their planter, and and I'd learned that how to squeegee the glass and resin from Bob Kates watching him glass. And I also, there was a guy who did the gloss coats, I think, and mainly the pin lines at the out shop. I don't know, I, I can't remember his last name or even if I ever knew it, but his nickname was Nuclear Norman because his pin lines were so psychedelic. And that was right at that, it was in 1970 where, acid rock and all that stuff. He did the coolest pen lines I've ever seen and I've always tried to copy his style. Mainly it was how he tapered them. Everybody does a tapered pen line in the ends, but how he floated, he didn't do a narrow pin line and then a real quick taper at the very front. They were tapered really a long taper and do, he did all these little tape offs that were just so impressive. And I've always copied his style even to this day, pretty much Brian, I remember what the look of his pen lining was. And anyway, when I moved to, to back to Maui, 1971, I think it was early 71, I moved to Laina. And in the can Laina Cannery, there was a bunch of surf shops in there. There was a Maui Surfboards, which is where Les Pots shaped, and this guy Mike Carlson and Terry McCabe, I think they owned the shop. They were the Glasser. And then next door there was Jamie McLaughlin and Wally Bashard and Neil Norris had outer Island. I don't know if you remember the shop called Inner Island on Oahu. Anyway, that was just a take off of their name. Outer Island, right? So anyway, I went over to the Maui Surfboards shop where Les Work was shaping, and Mike Carlson and Terry McCabe had it, told them I could make boards and could I have a job. And so they hired me to sand cuz I could sand, I could do every step equally as well, cuz I did 'em all, every board I made up to that time, I did everything on it, shaped it, glassed it, I coated it, put the fin on, sanded it, glossed it. Never polished back then though. So anyway, I remember sanding a few boards, not very many, and then they just told me that they needed to work themselves and they couldn't have afford to pay me anymore. And it was something like five bucks a board back then, for sanding. Yeah. Anyway, so I just walked next door to Jamie's shop and told him yeah, I, they fired me or laid me off so I can make boards if you need anybody. And he goes, all right, we'll hire you to polish. Anyway, I never polished a board. I didn't know it at the time, but Jamie was doing a lot of coat and so I was in there one day and he was sitting there trying to do pen lines on a board. And I just loved hanging around surf shops, whether I was working or not. I loved the smell of resin and. He was jacked out of his brain. I had no idea what was happening, and what was, and he goes, Hey, can you do pin lines? And I go, yeah. He goes Here, he hands me the roll of tape. He goes, I gotta split anyway, he leaves and I do all the pin lines on a couple boards. And as I, like I said, I could do 'em really good. Even at that stage of my early career. And I, and obviously, copying Nuclear Norman's style, Jamie came back the next day and goes, Jesus Christ, these are unreal. You're hired. So now I was the pen liner at that shop. A couple days later he was jacked out of his mind again, trying to tape off a lamination to glass aboard. And he says hey, can you glass? I go, yeah, I can glass. He goes, here, do these boards. I gotta split. And I didn't know what, what was going on. All I know is shoot, I'm a glass. And so I glass those boards. He saw that I was a super good Glasser and now I was the Glasser there, the Glasser and the pin line. So back in the early seventies, I got known more as a Glasser because I was glasson not only those boards, but there was another shaper, Carl Hoke in LA more toward La Haina town who was making boards. But I was a better Glasser than most people. So I got to glass a lot of the boards around, and then even when Les Pots started shaping him in a different place, they'd send their glass jobs to me cuz I was a real good Glasser. I think Li Les gave me a nickname, Luigi Squeegee. And then some guys would call me Pin Line Louie. And I remember those two nicknames back in the seventies. Anyway there was a, we lived in this Filipino camp, which is just north of the cannery. There was four. Houses, there were U-shaped buildings with just seven rooms in each one. There was four of 'em down the street in the back. There was two kitchens and two showers and bathrooms out in the back, like old cane style houses, right? And in the back where I had her, I was renting a room in one of those places. I wanted to build a shaping room back there. So I did. And us howley guys, we were moving into those, that Filipino camp all, there was a lot of Filipino guys living there, older guys working in the, either the pineapple fields or the can fields. And they didn't like us cuz we were disrespectful, especially this one guy. And me and a couple of the guys. We weren't bad, but this one guy was a real dick to those guys and they hated us being there. They're, they work, they get up super early in the morning, they work all day and then they come home early. They want to sleep and work partying and stuff. And it was, thinking back on it, we were just those poor guys. But anyway, they were friends with this building inspector, some of those guys. So I built this shaping room and it was almost done. And so the building inspector come and told me, oh, you gotta have a permit for that. And so I applied for the permit, gave him $4 if I remember what it was. Super cheap, gave him the $4. And then he gave me the permit, but he said I had to cha fix the roof cuz it wasn't built sturdy enough. So I fixed that and then he came back again another week later, said I had to fix this. I fixed something else. And finally I told him, just tell me everything I need to fix one time. And and I'll. And then he came back a couple weeks later and said, Nope, you have to tear it down. You're too close to the property line and too close to the building, which I'm sure was true. But back then, nothing mattered. There was really no codes that anybody really needed to follow. And I just knew that some of the guys in the neighborhood told him to not to let me do that because that was just gonna be even more upsetting to their life. Their what was left of their peace and tranquility in their own house. So I had to take the thing down and I told gimme the goddamn $4 back. And he goes, Nope, you don't get your money back cuz you have to get a permit to tear it down too. And that cost $4. But anyway, that, but I still glass. I had a glassing rack I think up on the front porch or something, and a pin line room in the storage room. But I still did. Anyway, over in the cannery, I remember there was this the caretaker of the cannery was this old Hawaiian guy, and I think he was the father of the landlord of our house, and he was the caretaker of the cannery. And there was this single corrugated 10 building over there on the side over there. And I asked him, I was looking at it one day, I go, Hey, what is this? And he goes, just a room. I go, Hey, can I rent it? And he goes yeah. I go, how much? He goes, I'll tell you what, every once in a while, just gimme a case of beer. I goes, so I cleaned the place up and made a bitch and shaping room in there. And that was my shaping room for a long time. And then behind this building right next to mine, it was just a single building by itself. By itself, away from the main cannery part. Was this guy that we painted, I painted houses with this guy who owned, who had that workshop. He let me build a little lean to in the back of his shop that was next to my shaping room, the glass boards. I had a lock on the shaping room, but I remember the glass room was always open. Anybody could go back there and I would shape the boards and then leave 'em on the racks glass 'em, and never had any problems with theft or nothing. So anyway, yeah, I was, and then I started, I then I'd been making boards. I was getting pretty good at shaping and then really good at glassing. Cause I was glassing a lot more boards than I was shaping. And so I was, like I said, I was mainly more known as a Glasser. And so you basically went into business for yourself. You were basically just had your own glassing business. Other people would shape the blanks and give 'em to you and you would glass them, or you were also building. Yeah. Yeah. But also the thing is I'd also worked in hotels too. I was a busboy for a while and a waiter, and I also painted houses with this guy. That was my main thing, really. Painting houses and condos and working in the hotels. Surfboards were always, at least back then, a side thing. I never really thought of it as a main income, and partly was just because the irresponsibility, my, my life was so irresponsible back then it was all just surfing. And I tend to maybe put all surfers in that category, but I guess it's not necessarily true. But generally surfers aren't very reliable people and punctual, especially surfboard makers, surf good. You don't go to work. Yeah. Yeah. And our whole thing revolved around surfing. I remember one, me and this friend of mine, I was a little more what do you call it, responsible than him, but we were both bus boys up at the Royal Ohio. And there had been like a drought of surf in Laina that summer, like maybe a month or a month and a half with not even a ripple. And then one day it got two feet waist high or something like that at Laa Harbor. It was so small. Mala wasn't breaking or the, I don't need anything. The break wall was breaking. It was so small. And we go out and we have to be at thr at work at three o'clock to set up the restaurant cuz we're bus boys, right? And so we're out there surfing and then we go, okay, we better go in pretty soon to get to work at three. And they go, ah, let's get one more wave. And we kept doing it. He goes let's just go to work late. And so we'll get a couple more waves. And then finally we just said let's just not go today. Fuck it. Let's just quit. So we just stayed in the water till evening and quit and then a couple days later went and picked up our paychecks. That's how irresponsible I was. And my friend too. But that's, I never took surfboard making seriously as a job until windsurfing came along. Okay. So then, yeah. So what happened when windsurfing came along? It was like in the, actually in 1977, I think I moved to the mainland. I moved to Hermosa Beach and for a year, and Steve Licey was living back on the mainland at this time. And he was shaping in this one shaping room across the street from this glass shop called South Shore, I think. And this guy, Wayne Miata, was the Gloucester pin liner. And Mike, this guy, Mike Collins, owned the shop, I think. And I told, I asked Steve to introduce me to somebody so I can get a job in a glass shop or something, and he always was real hesitant about doing it and Steve was taking a lot of drugs back then, and he had a real bad reputation of, so he had told me later that was the reason he didn't want to introduce me to these guys because it would've looked bad for me if he walked, if I walked in with Steve. That's what a nice guy Steve was, even in his heavy drug use. He was considerate of what would happen with me. Finally, I bugged him enough that he finally went to that shop and, Hey Mike, you know this guy, he is a really good Glasser from Hawaii and he is a really good Glasser, the best. And then he walked out and then, so I don't know what that did, but I started going to that shop every day and just hanging around. And then finally one day I also was going to Santa Monica City College. I don't know why I was going there and I took weightlifting and I took PE or something, just, I dunno what I, why I even did that. But there was this guy in the weightlifting class, the teacher, in fact, I'm still in contact with that guy a little bit every few years when he comes to Maui, he emails me, but he wanted me to make, I told him I was a board maker and he, I had, he had me make him, I think a seven foot or a seven, six. Er, pintail, surfboard. So I, I got a blank shaped it for him. The place where Steve Licey was shaping, he introduced me to the guy and the guy was so nice to let me shape there too. So I shaped the board and then I told the guy in the glass shop, I got a board to glass. I can buy the materials from you. Let me glass it here and you can see what I do. And so I took that board in the sh in the glassing room. He let me do it really unbelievable now that I think about it for them to let me do that, and their shop where they're running a business. And so anyway, I pulled the, I taped the board off, pulled the glass out, and he sat there and he goes, okay, I'm gonna make you feel real nervous now, watching right over your shoulder. I didn't feel nervous cuz I was good, so I glassed the board. Perfect. He was stoked. I got hired the next day. Nice. So I was doing six boards a day. That no, maybe it was, yeah, only six, six or eight boards a day. They had five ranks. So they wanted you to They wanted me to do well, I was in the wintertime, I think so I think I was doing how many boards? Was it six or eight boards a day? I'd line up three or four, pull the glass out, laminate each one by the time they were done. And then we'd have lunch and then it was time to flip 'em over and do the decks. And I had to have 'em done for the evening for the guy to come and hot coat and put the fin boxes in. So I got so good at glassing, and doing all of those boards day after day where I'd mix up the. Right when I was finished glassing, and I don't know if you've ever seen anybody glass, you drip a drop a resin over the nose and tail to fill up the air holes. I had it down so well that right when I was finished glassing and dropping that drip a resin onto the nose, it was gelling every time I had it down, perfect. And to give you an example of how some people, how when I get, for example, how my, I feel like it's so natural and I, if I teach somebody, they should be able to do this too. This kid wanted to learn how to glass aboard. So I brought him in and like I said, there's five boards in a row, five boards on the rack. I'm masking taped off each one in a row. And I told him the exact same thing over and over again four times. So he'd get it in his head how to do it, and then I pulled out the fiberglass on all four boards, cut 'em, told him what I did four times in a row, and then I laminated all these boards four or five in a row with the resin. And then I said, okay, now you do your board. And he did it, set it up, took a while to set it up, and then when he mixed up the resin, he just froze. He didn't know what to do. And I just freaked. I go, sh the board, the resins gonna go off on him. If he doesn't move, I go move squeegee the resin. And he just started kinda doing it a little bit, but not much. And anyway, I just grabbed the squeegee out of his hand and finished it for him because he, his board would've been ruined. But Yeah. Yeah. The, it's so time sensitive, especially with the polyester rein. You only had so many minutes to get it done. So you had to have Exactly the timing down, yeah. Yeah. But I got real, real good at glassing. In those days, were you using respirators and all that kind of safety equipment? Yeah. Yeah. But not religiously, and yeah, I think I had a mask. My another thing I gotta mention about what Steve Slick Ameer taught me too, I used to wear my mask when I was planning. And when you plane the drum I have on my planter now is an abrasive drum. So it makes real fine dust. It doesn't make fits like so when you're planning with a regular blade, with a regular blades on your planter, it, it shoots off big chunks. Bigger chunks, right? And then when you're fine shaping with sandpaper, it makes real fine dust. I used to shape with my mask on with the planter, and after I was done with the planter, I'd take my mask off and shape with the sandpaper. And Steve said, Jesus, Jimmy, if you're gonna take your mask off at some stage, do it when you're abusing the planter. Those are big chunks. It's not gonna go on your nose and your lungs as easy as that fine shaping. So I've learned to, I'd learned to not take my mask off when I find shape, but still, it wasn't until like at least 20 or 25 years ago, but I started really paying attention to always wear my paper mask. And I always wear the ma respirator anytime I mix up any kind of resin. Mainly when I open up the acetone. Acetone is worse, I think, than resin on your nervous system than resin fumes. But I always am real, real vigilant about it now. Good. And I have been for years and years, specifically with the paper, You can't see it in the glassing room, but there's all these little diamond, you ever seen a reflection, sun reflection coming through a window and dust in the air. Glassing room. It's little sh shiny things. That's all the fiberglass dust in the glassing room that you don't see unless the a sun beam is coming through the window. So that's why I know I need to wear that paper mask every time I'm in that shop, in my shop. Okay. So you're in still 1977 Hermosa Beach. Like what made you go back to Maui in the first place, and then what made you go back to California? Like what motivated you to move back and forth? The first time I came to Maui was the first time I was away from home. Went back to, it was like right after high school. And then I moved back to Santa Cruz by the ti a year later. I was a year older, a year of living on my own already again in Santa Cruz, away from my mom's house. And then I wanted to be in Hawaii again. The same reason I wanted to be for the first time for surfing and for surfing. And my brother, he was the influence on that cuz he moved there first for surfing. Okay. So I moved back for surfing. I can't remember why I moved back to the mainland for a year, but did that. And then after a year I wanted to go back to Hawaii, but I think bef I was maybe in Hermosa for six months, then I moved back to Berkeley at my mom's house. And then I got a job this friend of my sisters was working with this rich guy, remodeling this big building. And so I got a job working there, construction, saved up a bunch of money, and then moved back to Maui. And where did I live? I think I moved to this side, the north side here, and got a job painting houses with a friend of mine. And then I was also shaping surfboards for this shop called Monte Surfboards. And I think it was in 1978 that Mike Walsh and this guy named Mark Robinson, who was a well known Florida windsurfer back when, windsurfer brand that was 12 foot plastic boards. That's, that was what the windsurfing sport was all about. Those boards. But Mike and a few other guys were starting to make shorter custom boards. And so when he came to Maui, Mike came by this shop cuz it was a surf shop. And where else would you go to get a custom board made? So I don't know why the owner of the shop, John Su let me shape the board cuz he was the owner and he was a shaper also. But somehow I, I shaped Mike's board and I think I had some pictures of that somewhere. But it was like a 12 foot race board. And then I made him maybe a nine foot, what they called a jump board back then, cuz they weren't really surfing on waves. They were going out and jumping over waves and then riding them straight off. They were, cause a lot of the boards back then, before they started making surfboard shape wind surfers were like boats or more like a boat than a surfboard. So I made those a couple boards there. And then at the house in KeHE, I that I lived at I thought windsurfing is gonna maybe be a big thing and maybe I can actually make a living making windsurfer. Shaping, right? So I was starting to build a a shaping room in the garage at my house, and the guy that was managing that house for a rental for us, told me, the landlord told me to take that down. I couldn't build a shaping room in the garage. So I had all this lumber. And then right at that time, Fred Haywood, Mike Walson, bill King started, had, were starting sail boards, Maui, I think in 1980. Fred had his old family house in Kalu there that they converted into a showroom. And there was an old garage in the back, a separate building. And Fred told me, why don't you bring all your lumber over here and build the shape and room in this garage here? So I did. And then right then was when the Windsurfer company, oil Schweitzer they wanted to make some short boards. And they made what the board, they called the Rocket 99, which was kinda like a pig shape, like the Vessy pig shape board, a narrower nose, a wide round, not round squi. It was a little squash tail with a real hippie back. And then another one, a nine one, and what was that called? The rocket? A Rocket 88. And I think it was a nine foot surfboard shape, round pin. Ainger Pintail, sorry, a Ainger Pintail. So the guy, this guy in California had the templates for those two boards. And so I, they had me shape them the plugs that Hoyle Schweitzer was gonna make the molds off of. And right at that time, there was this big windsurfing race on Oahu called the PanAm Cup. There was a big triangle race. I don't know if you know what the triangle race format is, where they have a buoy, straight up wind. So it's a lot of tacking to get up to that buoy. And then there's a broad reach and then a downwind leg. So it's a triangle course where all these guys on race boards, race around it. There was no wave surfing at that time, really Not much. And so Robbie Nash was pretty much starting to be the king at that time of racing. And so when the PanAm Cup was there one year, I think it was the same year we started making those two plugs at sail boards, Maui. And so people were coming to Maui because they were realizing that Maui was a much, much better spot for windsurfing than Oahu. Yeah, I guess at the time, like Diamond and Kailua were the epicenter of windsurfing in Hawaii, right? Bef Kailua was, I don't know so much about Diamond Head maybe, I can't remember cause I wasn't really even windsurfing. I was windsurf boards for a little bit before I even started windsurfing. But yeah, we made those boards and then I never stopped working. People would come and start ordering custom boards, so we made the glassing room and the shaping room was already there cuz I made the shaping room to, to shape those two boards for windsurfer surfer. And then we just started making boards and those were the, some of the first sinkers. And I think at that same time, Mike Walz had Jerry Lopez shape him a little, I think it was an eight foot board or something like that, 20 inches wide. Thin, thin for a windsurfer, but had three stringers in it. Jerry shaped it and then they brought it down and I glassed it. And that was one of the very first shortboard boards that they had to water start. And they were just learning to water start at that time. And then it just exploded for Maui because Maui was such a good spot. Sail boards, Maui was getting all the attention that it deserved, and we were in the epicenter of windsurfing in the world. And fortunately for me, I was there with Mike Wal and Fred Haywood, couple of the biggest stars in windsurfing at the time, and that was, that's the first time I ever made a living shaping, and I never did anything else. Actually, let's see. Yeah, I never did anything else after that. Shaped and glass boards and yeah, we made boards for three or two or three years before I went off on my own. All right. Yeah. So I remember those days when I was just trying to find some pictures here. I'm gonna screen share this real quick. Back then the the boards were like, yeah, he, you went to really small boards and then like the booms were longer than the board sometimes and stuff like that. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, there's that picture. See that picture on the right? Yeah. Top that's that first wind surfer I made for Mike Walz. Oh, okay. I guess it's not 12 feet. Maybe it was 10 feet. Because somebody, I posted that picture one time in that, on that Facebook page, I think it's old School Winds, surfers, it's called or something. Oh, windsurfing Hall of Fame is what I'm looking at here. Yeah. But I think there's a Facebook page called Old School Winds. Surfers. Okay. And I put that picture of that that one, that race board I made Mike. Yeah. Okay, cool. Some of these pictures are modern, more modern, you can see they got r a f sales, but there was one. See that one right where your mouse is right now? Yeah, that's, I know. Windsurfer logo. See how far the mass step is up there and stuff. Yeah. Really f close to the nose and stuff. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. So when, so sail boards, Maori became a well-known brand and people were ordering custom boards. I got known around the world because of windsurfing and anyway, how I got into speed was I was shaping this one wave board. It was an eight six, I don't know how wide they were back then. It was a three stringer board, and I was taking the stringer down with my block plane in the middle. And back at that time, and maybe a couple years before, Dick Brewer was making this little concave right under the wide point and the rocker part of the board of his surfboards. It was like a concave, I think it was about like five or four or five, six inches wide. And just a couple feet long, just a tear drop. And it was maybe a gimmick or whatever. I don't know what it really did. I don't know if I ever made him on a surfboard, but I gouged the foam when I was shaping this, taking the stringer down on this eight, six round pen board I was making. And so I go shoot, it had this big gouge in the foam and I go, oh, I'm just gonna do one of those little concaves, like Brewer did. So I taped it off and shaped a concave into it. That board was sitting on the shaper room I'm in, in the showroom floor. Pascal Market came and bought it off the showroom floor. And at the time, the only, there was, I think only two speed events in the world at the time. One in Weymouth and one in this town called Breast. In France. And so Pascal took that board to Weymouth and Wind Surfers were going to Weymouth and Breast for a few years already, and they were going like 22, 23 knots at the best. And at the time there was a boat called Crossbo, which was a big catamaran that these English guys made that had what we call the absolute world speed sailing record. That means the fastest sailing craft powered by a sale. Obviously powered by a sale regardless of sale size, board, boat size, anything. Whoever can sail the fastest has the world record. Now in these events, they had different classes of sale size, like they had a 10 square meter and then a, I don't know, on and up, depending on what size sale you had. But you could still have the absolute world speed sailing record regardless of what class you were in. It's whoever went the fastest. But then there were speed records for each class too. So anyway, Pascal took this board that had that little concave in it over to Weymouth, and I think in 1982, and he broke the windsurfing speed record. It wasn't a world record, it was like 27 point, I think eight two knots, and it was huge news. Yeah, I think that picture right there, Ellie Z, that might have been Weymouth. I don't know. Yeah, it says 1982, so it's probably, yeah, that was, that looks like Weymouth to me, but yeah. Interesting. Okay. But anyway, so Pascal made that record and so it was big news and I remember it was done on a Neil Pride. Maui sales. Barry Spanier and Jeff born were making Maui sales at the time. And it was just on a stock Neil Pride, Maui sales sale too. And so it was huge news in the windsurfing world and in the Windsurfing magazine, big articles on it. And so that put the focus on speed on my boards and on Neil Pride Sales, Maui sales specifically. And the next year Fred wanted to go to Weymouth and see about doing a speed trial seeing about going for the world record or whatever, or a speed record. Yeah. There's a picture of Fred on the board I made with a wing mask. That was 83. So I shaped Fred two boards. One was a nine footer, I think it could have been I don't know, 2021 inches wide. And then also that one that's in that picture you're showing, that was eight nine, I believe. And maybe it was 18 and a half or 18 inches wide. And I did that concave on the bottom, going into a double concave on the, on, in the back. But the concave was a lot wider. I think it was almost rail to rail and a lot more flowing all the way through the bottom of the board. Fred did 30 point something knots, which was even bigger news than what Pascal did cuz Fred broke the 30 knot barrier. And that was a front page picture of Windsurf Magazine. Yeah. See Fred Haywood Bus 30 knot. But that nine foot board, this is this is one of my claims to fame and claims. The geometry of my boards, Barry Span, span, you called it the imperceptible geometry of the shapes I was doing Fred had a nine foot board that he sold the nine I made him the eight, nine, and the nine footer. He wasn't going to use the nine footer cuz that eight nine was so good and it was smaller. So he sold the nine footer to Robert Terra to how I know you know who he was. Robert's a good surfer and he, back then, shoot, I think he was my 15 or 16 years old back at that Weymouth event. So on that world record, not the world record day, but that day Fred did 30 knots. Robert went from, I don't know what place he was in, but second place in the entire event when Fred sold him, my board, the board I shaped. So it was, it's pretty objective. It's pretty easily to say objectively that board helped Robert get that speed. Not his sale, nothing else because when he got that board I made, he went up to second place on it. But anyway, that really catapulted sail board's, Maui Neil Pride, Maui sales, and me into the big spotlight of windsurfing surfing. For the next several years, all I cared really, I was making wave boards too and but speed boards was our main thing. So the next year, 1984, I started traveling. I think that picture you showed of me holding that red board, might have been 84, maybe 85. But I started going to speed trials too, and I was okay, but I wasn. There was 60 people at each speed sailing event. They only allowed 60 people to enter. And I was always in all the events around 30, at the end of the event, I was right in the middle of the pack. I wasn't anything exceptional, but I had potential. But the the speed trials, the top people were only separated by tenths of a knot. Like 38.2 or 38.1, real minuscule amounts of speed. Would determine who was first, second, and third and fourth. So I was always in the middle of the pack. I wasn't like 10 knots slower than the first place people, but but anyway, each event I would go to mainly it was just Weymouth in France in those first few years. And I go to, people would order speed boards from me, from all over the world. And then the next event I would come, I'd bring four or five or six boards to people. Yeah. And then and then one year, this guy Julian Kendall had he had gone to the Canary Islands a lot and he said there was this one spot down there in Ford of Ventura that the average wind speed was like 25 or 30 knots a day during the summertime. And it was a killer place to have a speed trial. Like for speed sailing, you want offshore wind so you can sail right next to the beach and have it real smooth, cuz the farther out you get the choppier it gets. So ideally you want butter, smooth water. With a lot of wind. And this place in the Canaries, he said was just epic. So a lot of us went that in that June of 1986. And I remember Joey Cabbel was getting interested in speed sailing and unfortunately he did not go to that event. That was at the same time there was gonna have a slalom event in Hood River Gorge. And I remember talking to Joey and he goes, yeah, I'm not sure where I want to go, whether I want to go to the Gorge event or this Canary Islands event. And unfortunately for him, he didn't go, cuz I know he would've been good, at speed. And so anyway, we all went over there and then the, there was a week long the, at the time actually at one of the previous France speed events. Fred didn't want to go to that event for some reason. And this German guy named Michael Puer broke Fred's 30 knot record. He didn't break the world record, but he did 32 something. 32 knots. And so now there was a rivalry between Fred and this guy. Like they wanna, it was just for publicity, and they took some pictures of Fred and him looking at they wanted a fight, although they were friends, it was just a kind of a, what do you call, a publicity thing, right? And so anyway, we all go to the Canaries and the first week there was a trial period, there was a two week long event, a main event was a week long. And the first week was a trial event. So we were all there for the trial event. We could sail in the trial event. The trial event was to get other people qualified to be in the main event. And I think, I don't know how many people were already qualified. Me and most of the people that were on the speed circuit got seated. And then I don't know how many people there were gonna take from the qualifying rounds. New people that are on the speed sailing. So whoever got into that event that qualifying round and did a certain amount, the top, how many got to go in the man event? So during that first event the trial part, Reinhard Ishka, this friend of ours here on Maui, he was really a young guy too from Austria, who's been on the speed. He broke Michael's record. Meanwhile, Michael's on the north side of word of Venturas riding waves. He was seated in the main event. So now his record is broken by Reinhardt already, even though it's just the trial event. Anyway, the main event starts and we're all sailing and I'm as usual in the middle of the pack, like number 30 or 28 or 32, okay. Never up near the top. But all the top guys are writing your boards basically, right? A lot of people were. Yeah. There was a lot of people were. Yeah. Yeah. And I had a 13 inch wide board. In fact, it was interesting, Eric Beal is the first guy who started making narrow boards. I remember at one of those French events, he had me make him a 16 inch wide board, and we thought he was nuts. 16 inches wide, how are you gonna ride it? And Eric, I think won the event on that board. And anyway, when it came time to come to futa, we were all making, Eric was making 13, 12 inch wide boards. Eric was narrower than anybody all the time. Eric wasn't as, he was a little lighter than me, taller than me, but his technique. And was just incredible. And back then it was like, if you're not big, you're not gonna go fast. And Eric wasn't big. He was taller than me, but not thick and heavy. But it was just his technique. But, so anyway, when Pascal, at the last minute, he was riding other people's boards up until far of Ventura and not doing anything exceptional, and then he asked me, he says, okay, make me a board. And I said, okay, let's make it thir 13 and a half. I talked him into making it narrow and he didn't wanna make it narrow at the time, but anyway, I made him a 13 and a half inch wide. Eight, six. My board was an 8, 1 13. I forgot what Eric's were, but Fred was tired of carrying so much equipment with him to all these events. So he only brought one board, which was a nine foot, I believe, 19 inches wide board that I made him. And he only brought a Neil Pride, r a f sale. And we all had Canberra induced sales, right? And so one time on Maui before this event, Eric was riding asy sails and as he made this killer Canberra induced sail. And so I tried it one day down at the beach at SP freckles. And I couldn't believe the acceleration with that Canberra induced sale, right? And it was much better than the Neil Pride, r a f sales. And so I asked Barry if they were gonna make some Canberra induced sales, and Neil Pride didn't want to make 'em at that time because of the financial thing. They had already invested in the R a F. And I go, shoot, I wanna ride Canberra and do sales, So I contacted Jeff Magna from Gastra, who was Pascal. They were sponsoring Pascal and asked him if I could be get some sales. And they were stoked, even though they didn't, even though I wasn't one of the top riders, I just had the reputation of the board maker and they thought it'd be good if they gave me some sales. So they sent me a bunch of Canberra induced sales, and I was riding the five meter a lot on Maui. Then the day before the, we left on the plane to go to the Canaries. It was super windy and I had my 13 inch wide board down there and I rigged up the 4.3 gas sale for the first time. And I took off the beach and it's choppy there, but still you can feel your equipment. And I just was, couldn't believe the acceleration and the speed I was getting. And I came in and I go, Jesus Christ, if we have wind, I might have a chance. This is just night and day feeling that I've ever had of the acceleration of this sale. So anyway, we go to the Canaries and the whole event, everybody's sailing and doing what, and like I said, people are doing this and that. The record was already broken up to about 35 knots, I think already, but we hadn't broken cross ball's record of 36 knots. Not us, but anybody. But I think Reinhart and Pascal had already done 35 knots up till the second to the last day of the event. Anyway, the second to the last day of the event was ridiculously windy. Something like 40, 45 knots, just perfect direction. Butter smooth, not a ripple near the beach. And then it got super windy out, choppy outside, but it was just dead flat water, no surf, nothing. It was like those pictures you were just showing. But radical wind. And so we all knew something was gonna happen that day. So they also made a, they have a rescue boat. But anyway if you've ever b
A Signature Seriez Network Original Episode 9 - Let a Man, Be a Man On this episode, Mr Cooper talks about the pressure of society making it hard to exist as a Man. #mrcooper #therealmrcooper #iamtherealmrcooper #hokcertified #signatureseriez #certified #influencer #mogul #signatureserieznetwork #podcast #convoswmrcooper #convoswithmrcooper #maninasuit https://www.signatureseriezent.com Subscribe & Follow Mr Cooper on social media https://Instagram.com/iamtherealmrcooper https://twitter.com/therealmrcooper https://Facebook.com/therealmrcooper1 https://app.fanbase.app/therealmrcooper https://youtube.com/mrcoopertv Stream Music by Mr Cooper Spotify https://open.spotify.com/artist/4fhglL3wARHgwdDAGQgDh5?si=rwdLxXIuSZGAqMd91Vv1wA&utm_source=copy-link Apple Music https://music.apple.com/us/artist/mr-cooper/1470559706 Youtube Music https://music.youtube.com/channel/UCNSjACy6WEMj1Y7PN3oDLoQ?feature=share Pandora https://pandora.app.link/PQ68rp7TBwb Subscribe to the Network https://signatureserieznetworktv.com --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/therealmrcooper/message
This week on CLD Talks Conor and Ben travelled to Inverclyde to speak with Chris Paul. Chris is currently a 4th year student at the University of the West of Scotland and is the CEO of Man On! Man On! Is a is a suicide prevention & wellbeing charity for the adults & young people of Inverclyde & beyond. Through our lived-experience and trauma-informed model, we provide a wide range of group & individual services that are free of charge. Chris discuss's his career before Man On, the personal reasons why he decided to start the charity, challenges of being a CEO, the amazing work they do within Inverclyde and beyond! Some content of this conservation may be triggering to some listens, please be aware we discuss mental health and wellbeing subjects including suicide. Links for people to speak to if you are effected: Samaritans - https://www.samaritans.org/?nation=scotland Man On - https://manoninverclyde.co.uk/ Please follow us on Twitter @CLDTalks
In this exquisitely produced book, experience the extraordinary life and career of the original “shock rocker” through 75 key releases and events. Pythons, guillotines, stage blood…Alice Cooper is widely considered the godfather of shock rock thanks to his inventive concoction of vaudeville, horror film conceits, and three-chord rock 'n' roll. In Alice Cooper at 75, veteran rock journalist Gary Graff shows you this rock icon through the lens of 75 career accomplishments, events, and partnerships. This exquisite volume features: Slipcased hardcover format Stunning concert and candid offstage photography Images of memorabilia, including gig posters, vinyl record sleeves, ticket stubs, period adds, and more Gatefold Alice Cooper timeline Unpublished 8×10-inch photo Two pullout posters Through seven-and-a-half decades, Graff covers it all: Cooper's childhood in Detroit and Arizona and early garage bands the Earwigs and the Spiders All 28 studio albums, including those as front person of Alice Cooper the band A selection of his greatest singles, like the classic-rock standards “I'm Eighteen,” “School's Out,” and “Welcome to My Nightmare” Collaborations with artists including Slash, Dave Grohl, Johnny Depp, Wayne Kramer, and more Associations with notable guitarists, including Glen Buxton, Nita Strauss, Orianthi, and others Nonmusical passions like classic cars and, of course, golf His relationship with wife and entertainment accomplice Sheryl Tireless charity work Beginning with his1969 debut LP Pretties for You and continuing through his latestrelease, Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Alice Cooper is regarded as one of the most influential performers and musicians in hard rock and heavy metal, influencing countless acts both visually and musically. This book is your unprecedented retrospective of Cooper's career from teenage garage rocker to international star and celebrity. The result is a unique and lavishly produced celebration of the iconic and beloved rock star. Gary Graff is an award-winning music journalist based in Detroit. He is a regular contributor to the Billboard, the Cleveland Plain Dealer, Media News Group, Ultimate Classic Rock, Consequence, and other publications, as well as to radio stations in Detroit and Milwaukee. He is the co-author of Neil Young: Long May You Run, Rock 'n' roll Myths: The True Stories Behind the Most Famous Legends, and Travelin' Man: On the Road and Behind the Scenes with Bob Seger, editor of The Ties That Bind: Bruce Springsteen A to E to Z, and the series editor of the MusicHound Essential Album Guides. He is also co-founder and co-producer of the Emmy Award-winning Detroit Music Awards. Graff lives in Beverly Hills, Michigan. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/steve-richards/support
This week, [someone], [someone else] and [another person] cover [topic]..... Topics discussed: 12th Man (On the field) JJ28 The DAWG Texts Links mentioned in this episode: http://example.com http://second-example.com This podcast is hosted by ZenCast.fm
Show # 310: Author Jacob Donnenwirth on "An Officer and a Man" On today's Coffee with Rich, we will be joined by former Marine Corps Officer and author, Jacob Donnenwirth. Jacob Donnenwirth was born and raised outside of Utica, New York, in the foothills of the Adirondack Mountains. He graduated from Frankfort-Schuyler Central Schools and was awarded an NROTC Scholarship to the Rochester Institute of Technology. After receiving a Bachelor of Science in Criminal Justice, he commissioned as an Officer in the United States Marine Corps. Jacob served as an Engineer Officer for six years, and voluntarily exited the service as a Captain, having been a Platoon Commander, Company Executive Officer, and Company Commander. Jacob married his wife Alexandra in 2017, who is also a Marine and is still on active duty. They have two children, Ava and Nikolas. After exiting the Marine Corps Jacob wrote the book “An Officer and a Man” on his experiences in the Corps. Jacob works part time as an instructor for Eagle Eye International Protective Services, and as a consultant for the US Navy teaching firearms instructors. Jacob has been a self-defense and combatives instructor for over 15 years, and a firearms instructor for 5 years, teaching a blend of civilians, military personnel and private security agents. Coffee with Rich Youtube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/rhodieusmc/videos American Warrior Show: https://americanwarriorshow.com/index.html SWAG: https://shop.americanwarriorsociety.com/ American Warrior Society please visit: https://americanwarriorsociety.com/
On the eve of Opening Day, Joe Frisaro of Man On 2nd Baseball joins the show to recap a tumultuous offseason and set expectations for the Marlins' 2022 campaign.
1 choo choo ska llans thelwell and the celestials 03:20 llans plays it all2 Grandma's Hands Merry Clayton 03:34 Merry Clayton3 God's Radar The Dixie Hummingbirds 04:05 Diamond Jubilation: 75th Anniversary4 Stop Running Around Doreen Shaffer 02:46 Read Me Right5 02 - good golly Johnny Sayles 02:57 Man On the Inside6 Taking Inventory Danny White 02:15 A Deep Dip Into Memphis Soul Vol. 27 Games Ann Peebles 03:02 St. Louis Woman/Memphis Soul Disc 28 A6 Hooked, hogtied & collared Paul Kelly 02:40 Hooked, Hogtied & Collared (1974)9 Never Want to Be Kissed North Mississippi Allstars William Bell 03:43 Set Sail10 Into the Mystic Lavelle White 04:35 Into The Mystic11 Big John Is My Name The Undisputed Truth 04:42 Down To Earth12 Stealing Love Charlene Davis 04:42 Reggae For The Arena13 How Long Do I Have To Wait Sharon Jones And The Dap-Kings 04:05 Daptone Gold14 The Joneses Oscar Brown Jr. 04:09 Brother Where Are You15 Carnival Nwantiti A Ephram Aviles 03:14 16 Do It (This Time with Feeling) Cymande 04:49 Cymande A Simple Act of Faith17 Culture Bandits Fertile Ground 05:11 Seasons Change18 Commotion Ondatropica 02:56 Baile Bucanero19 California Love feat. Cory Henry Sly5thAve 06:23 The Invisible Man: An Orchestral Tribute To Dr. Dre20 Sorrow Tears & Blood Chico Mann 04:18 Double Life21 Round One Youngblood Brass Band 05:26 center : level : roar22 I Get A Groove Thomas East & The Fabulous Playboys 02:37 Soulin' Volume 223 Mr. Machine The Chefs 02:55 More Funky 45s24 Sizzler The Diplomats Of Solid Sound 02:23 Destination... Get Down25 Tell The People Sun 03:11 Live On, Dream On26 Step People Sound Experience 03:27 Don't Fight The Feeling27 Charge It Up, Baby Soul Chargers 02:25 Feeling Nice Vol 2 - A Collection Of Super Rare & Super Heavy Funk 45s From The Late 60s & Early 70s28 Just Want To Know Mutiny 03:43 How's Your Loose Booty?29 I Do What I Do Randa And The Soul Kingdom 03:17 Randa And The Soul Kingdom30 Callin' Soulive 04:08 No Place Like Soul
#CarabaoCup #LIVLEI #Anfield Gav and Kev bring you immediate match reaction to the Carabao Cup Quarter Final between Liverpool and Leicester City at Anfield. Merch - https://www.lfcdt.com/shop Sienna Campaign - https://www.gofundme.com/f/siennas-steps Make sure to subscribe to a new channel we launch in November called Man On! Football Show... You can subscribe to it here .... https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCg_0UsXy2iq4UxPdXZhJIdQ Subscribe, Like, Hit the bell icon and never miss another show from the worlds biggest, 100% free LFC Podcast. ** All views on the show are those of the individual and do not represent those of the LFC Daytrippers ** Twitter https://twitter.com/LFCDaytrippers Discord http://discord.gg/QvH6tzu4tq Spotify https://spoti.fi/3f8PVPG Apple pods https://apple.co/3cchQvY Youtube https://www.youtube.com/user/TheLFCDaytrippers Instagram https://www.instagram.com/lfcdaytrippers/ Intro Graphics done by Mohammed Jogee - Enquiries to mohjo33@gmail.com Don't forget to subscribe or follow, leave reviews if possible and turn notifications on!!! LFC - Liverpool FC - YNWA - LFC Family - Premier League - EPL - Klopp - Transfer News - Redmen News and Chat - Match Preview - Live Updates - Match Predictions - Match Reaction - Football - Soccer - Football Debate - Passion - Opinion - Laughter - Free Content - Competitions - Giveaways - Podcast - Unfiltered - LFC Daytrippers - Champions League - Football Daily - Euro Football Daily Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
#Christmas #Sport #LFCDaytrippers Kev and Chris bring you our final show before Christmas and open up the sports show to viewers and ask them to decide the topics!!!! Merch - https://www.lfcdt.com/shop Sienna Campaign - https://www.gofundme.com/f/siennas-steps Make sure to subscribe to a new channel we launch in November called Man On! Football Show... You can subscribe to it here .... https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCg_0UsXy2iq4UxPdXZhJIdQ Subscribe, Like, Hit the bell icon and never miss another show from the worlds biggest, 100% free LFC Podcast. ** All views on the show are those of the individual and do not represent those of the LFC Daytrippers ** Twitter https://twitter.com/LFCDaytrippers Discord http://discord.gg/QvH6tzu4tq Spotify https://spoti.fi/3f8PVPG Apple pods https://apple.co/3cchQvY Youtube https://www.youtube.com/user/TheLFCDaytrippers Instagram https://www.instagram.com/lfcdaytrippers/ Intro Graphics done by Mohammed Jogee - Enquiries to mohjo33@gmail.com Don't forget to subscribe or follow, leave reviews if possible and turn notifications on!!! LFC - Liverpool FC - YNWA - LFC Family - Premier League - EPL - Klopp - Transfer News - Redmen News and Chat - Match Preview - Live Updates - Match Predictions - Match Reaction - Football - Soccer - Football Debate - Passion - Opinion - Laughter - Free Content - Competitions - Giveaways - Podcast - Unfiltered - LFC Daytrippers - Champions League - Football Daily - Euro Football Daily Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
EPISODE 22 | 'I will not let you have my pants down after five seconds!' Not what you think! The lads are back for another week of footy, feelings and foolishness as Andy admits to becoming a Moth Mass Murderer. The lads have mastered the art of talking to themselves and Andy has a new watch. Time is the most valuable thing in life and your stories are the only thing you'll leave behind. This podcast isn't all fart noises and bum jokes you know! The Euro's are hot topic as England pick up a win. The lads reflect on the shocking scenes during the Denmark, Finland game where Christian Eriksen collapsed on live television. Tune into another episode of Man On! The Podcast hosted by Alex Medlicott and Andy Roberts.
This week Ali is wondering if Andy has become a serial moth murderer, you decide! Ali is shocked to find that not only does Andy not like beans and peas, he's also a prolific mouse catcher. The lads dive into another week of what's been going on in their lives and how that has been leaving them feeling, and they both have a fantastic conversation about their emotions and ask themselves...When was the last time you cried? And with Euro 2021 (2020) just around the corner the lads talk you through their predictions. Tune into another episode of Man On! The Podcast hosted by Alex Medlicott and Andy Roberts.
*One moth was harmed in the making of this episode This week the lads are in a very silly mood. Andy indulges in a Kenyan Roast coffee and Alex asks him the age old question of “would you rather be a bowling champion or a curling champion?”. The lads reflect on another week of normality and how their adjusting to getting back into work and life and with another exciting weekend football, the lads take you through their thoughts of the champions league final. Tune in to episode 20 of Man On! The Podcast hosted by Alex Medlicott and Andy Roberts.
EPISODE 19 | Marge Simpson makes a special guest appearance. Andy has lost his voice and Al has been banned from Facebook. What a week! After their viral video of Alisson Becker scoring a last minute header reached over 300,000 people, the Facebook gods punished Al for copyright infringements. Andy talks about how he has started eating lasagne with his bear hands and the Arts Bar is back open. The loads get pretty deep about how they are feeling about normality being restored and the struggles that come with is. But as usual, it is all fun and games at Man On HQ. The reds make top 4 and 10th place Everton get a roasting. As usual. Tune in for Episode 19 of Man On! The Podcast. Hosted by Alex Medlicott & Andy Roberts.
This week the lads catch up after a hectic few days for the both of them. Alex puts Andy to the test with questions designed for "Bae" much to Andy's dismay. The lads talk about how their feeling in the run-up to more lockdown measures being loosened and how that is having an effect on their lives, and with a jam packed weekend of football, the lads dive in and give you their thoughts. Tune in to Episode 18 of Man On! The Podcast hosted by Alex Medlicott and Andy Roberts.
EPISODE 17 | Another special episode. This week the lads are joined by their good friend Tom Armfield. Grandson of England & Blackpool legend Jimmy Armfield. Tom currently lives in Ho Chi Min City, Vietnam, working in the Predator product marketing team for Adidas. The lads talk to Tom about how it feels to live so far from home during the pandemic and how that has affected his mental health. They talk stories of times gone by, plans for the future and more. Tom shares some stories on what it was like growing up as the grandson of a World Cup winner and how excited he is to see Blackpool back in a good spot. Tune in for Episode 17 of Man On! The Podcast. Hosted by Alex Medlicott & Andy Roberts
EPISODE 16 | The lads are back in their usual setting, just the two of them. After a week off, they have clearly missed each other as they giggle their way through the episode. Plenty of silly, plenty of serious and a little tiny bit of footy. Al tells all about his visit to the Pilot event in Sefton Park last weekend and Andy discusses the time he got ‘Catfished'. (You don't want to miss that part) China now do anal Covid tests and Man United vs Liverpool got cancelled. Tune in for Episode 16 of Man On! The Podcast. Hosted by Alex Medlicott & Andy Roberts.
EPISODE 15 | This week the lads are joined by Gerard Brand, writer at Sky Sports, Samaritans volunteer, life coach and so much more. The lads really delved deep in to both subjects that they often talk about, football & mental health. Gerard shares his stories and expertise on both matters as the lads do their best to raise awareness for mental health and use football as a vehicle to do so. Recorded a few weeks back, the UK is still under harsher lockdown restrictions, so take yourself back to those times. Tune in for the special one, Episode 15 of Man On! The Podcast. Hosted by Alex Medlicott & Andy Roberts.
EPISODE 14 | The week fans saved football. On Sunday the plans for the proposed European Super League were announced. On Tuesday, it was finished. The lads let you know what they think. After what seems like a lifetime, the lads got to enjoy a nice cold pint together. However, Andy is enraged by the notion of ‘half a lager' and it is quickly thrown in to the return of Slander Hour. Leicester made it to the FA Cup final as the so called ‘Big Six' embarrassed the nation. Tune in for Episode 14 of Man On! The Podcast. Hosted by Alex Medlicott & Andy Roberts.
EPISODE 13 | The shops are back open, we can drink outside, normality is returning. This week Andy claims to have seen a 'nipple-less' T-Shirt in Zara as people queued up for Clintons Cards. Al found out that Andy uses ambient noise to help him sleep and in true 'Man On' fashion, took the mick. The Nation lost Prince Phillip, but Andy is not convinced. Liverpool win at the weekend but struggled in Europe and the Maltese Premier League is STILL locked down. Tune in to Episode 13 of Man On! The Podcast, hosted by Alex Medlicott and Andy Roberts.
EPISODE 12 | “Do you know how many calories are in that?” This week Andy takes a trip to ALDI only to be stopped by the newly appointed ‘Calorie Man'. As restrictions are lifted in the UK, the boys managed to get a game of 5-a-side in with their mates and we hear how that has helped them have a positive week. The lads have a smile on their faces as Liverpool are back to their winning ways and Big Sam did a job on Chelsea. Tune in to Episode 12 of Man On! The Podcast, hosted by Alex Medlicott and Andy Roberts.
EPISODE 11 | What is the strangest thing you have ever seen at a house party? It is the international break, so the lads discuss the current England news and pick their starting 11 for the Euros this summer. After what has been a positive week for both of the boys, we hear how excited they are to get out and enjoy a nice warm pint of Fosters together. Favourite kits, Line of Duty and Andy's arse also make the cut. Tune in to Episode 11 of Man On! The Podcast, hosted by Alex Medlicott and Andy Roberts.
EPISODE 10 | "Americans just love Jason Donovan don't they..." This week is an absolute corker, filled to the brim with silliness of the highest order (You can't get much sillier than trump noises). BUT, the lads bring it back with an open and honest chat about the recent Roman Kemp BBC Documentary. The Maltese Premier League has postponed for a whole month due to a COVID-19 outbreak, so Andy has decided to start an OnlyFans. A brief catch up on the weekend's FA Cup games and the lads chose their top 10 number 10's as of course, it is episode 10. Tune in to Episode 10 of Man On! The Podcast, hosted by Alex Medlicott and Andy Roberts.
EPISODE 9 | Things have got that strange in lockdown that Andy has decided to stick 'Call On Me', climbs into his lycra, gets in to 'Downward Facing Dog' and gets a raging hard-on. In a week filled with highs and lows, the lads discuss the growing concern of heartburn as you get older, falling off trampolines and snogging chickens at house parties. With little football news coming from the Maltese league, Al decided to share some songs he has written for the Hibernians fans to sing. The lads share some spoilers on the recent Netflix film on Pele that you don't want to miss and they quietly celebrate a 1-0 win for Liverpool. Tune in to Episode 9 of Man On! The Podcast, hosted by Alex Medlicott and Andy Roberts.
EPISODE 8 | "Tom Hanks boils kids!" You heard it here first. After a rough week for both the lads, they turn to Mr Demi Demi for some motivation. Hibernians FC miss the chance to close the gap in the Maltese Premier League and Valetta got stuffed. Andy has been writing some songs and Al still thinks Liverpool will sign Mbappe. Tune in to Episode 8 of Man On! The Podcast, hosted by Alex Medlicott and Andy Roberts.
EPISODE 7 | Watch out United fans, Harry Maguire is BANG AVERAGE. This week we find out that Ademola Lookman is a cheeky little sl*g and Gervinho has been selling lampshades. Hibernians carry on their strong run, much to Andy's dismay and after Roy Keane's Tottenham rant, the lads decide to put together their all-time AVERAGE Premier League starting 11. Tune in to Episode 7 of Man On! The Podcast, hosted by Alex Medlicott and Andy Roberts.
EPISODE 6 | Complete with some new Jingles from the 'Jingle King' this week the lads are in a very silly mood. Old school games like 'Would you rather' and 'Snog, Marry, Avoid' make an appearance. They reluctantly discuss Liverpool's 2-0 defeat to Everton and they catch up on a good week for both in the Maltese Premier League. Slander hour returns and as always Piers Morgan is a waste of blood and organs. Tune in to Episode 6 of Man On! The Podcast, hosted by Alex Medlicott and Andy Roberts.
EPISODE 5 | Have you ever been on Wish.com? This week the lads check out the hilarious reviews that customers leave on products online. They catch up on the Maltese Premier League and laugh a lot at some funny quotes by players and managers. As always, they give updates on how their weeks have gone as well as updating everyone on how good Man City look. Tune in to episode 5 of Man On! The Podcast, hosted by Alex Medlicott and Andy Roberts.
EPISODE 4 | On this weeks episode the lads talk you through the abysmal week they had in football (Especially Andy!) and a catch up of the Maltese Premier League. The boys about the weird things you can buy on Amazon and Alex is put through his paces with Andy's anagrams. And with a tough week for both the lads, they discuss how they have been dealing with it. Tune in to episode 4 of Man On! The Podcast, hosted by Alex Medlicott and Andy Roberts.
EPISODE 3 | You know the age-old argument; ‘Scholes, Lampard or Gerrard?' Well, have you ever thought who would win in a triple threat TLC match up? The lads have got you covered. A poor week for Andy as Valletta suffer 2 defeats in the Premier League but Hibernians keep up the title chase. In this episode, the lads discuss how they have been coping in lockdown, how alive Prince Phillip is and they pick their favourite commentary moments of all time. Tune in to episode 3 of Man On! The Podcast, hosted by Alex Medlicott & Andy Roberts.
EPISODE 2 | ‘Nuno Espírito Santo manages an all you can eat ‘meat' buffet, Burnley are the focus in slander hour, things are starting to heat up in the Maltese Premier League and of course, butt plugs in Paris. Tune in for episode 2 of Man On! The Podcast. Hosted by Alex Medlicott & Andy Roberts.
The world's most dangerous podcast is back for our first episode of 2021! Where continue with the Yadda Yadda talk which includes: -Reflecting on our first, "Yadda Yadda: Live In-Studio" -Our college experience -White supremacist rushing the capitol -The Man On the Moon returning -Playboi Carti becoming a vampire -And our top 5 projects to come out of Kansas City Plus more!
In this episode we review Jack Harlow's debut album "Thats What They All Say", Kid Cudi's "Man On the Moon III: The Chosen", And Young Thug's lead single "Take It to Trial" that is for his Label's Second Project "Slime Language 2". Also, we discussed topics like Swae Lee's stolen hard drive, Tay-K's music video taken off of YouTube. Instagram: https://twitter.com/halfazippod Twitter: https://www.instagram.com/halfazippod/ Leave A Message For Us: https://anchor.fm/halfazippod/message --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/halfazippod/support
In this episode of the music podcast, the boys chat with Kid Cudi superfan Evan to discuss Man On the Moon 3. Then Eddie, Billy, and Bo dive into the new Jack Harlow album, as well as some smaller storylines around the rap game. Come and join us for some fun banter between a few friends.
First ever upload! A brief introduction, followed by a light-hearted review of 2012 film, Man On a Ledge. I find my feet towards the end, I promise! Nice to meet you all!
Man on a bus is a touching story about love, lies and secrets. Eve always had the suspicion that there were untold stories and secrets in her family who survived the Holocaust. As a psychologist and filmmaker she unpacks her family history, discovering the incredible truth about her mother that [...] The post Eve Ash – Man On a Bus #JIFF2019 appeared first on Fred Film Radio.
America's Nationalist Awakening. Trump Advisor Stephen Miller battles Chris Wallace of Fox News. Racism, borders and the deeply Anti-American "Squad" of Democrats. Fireworks Galore. Space Suit Sexism. The Left proves unable to feel pride in the 50th Anniversary of the Apollo 11 Moon Landing. Sad! Notes on the commendable patriotism of astronaut Buzz Aldrin. Hip Hop Hooray. Man On the Moon. Highway Patrol. White Lies. Actual "weasel" sounds. With Listener Calls & Music via Junior Brown, Naughty By Nature, Inner Circle, R.E.M. and Cheri Knight.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.