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Functional movement disorders are a common clinical concern for neurologists. The principle of “rule-in” diagnosis, which involves demonstrating the difference between voluntary and automatic movement, can be carried through to explanation, triage, and evidence-based multidisciplinary rehabilitation therapy. In this episode, Gordon Smith, MD, FAAN speaks Jon Stone, PhD, MB, ChB, FRCP, an author of the article “Multidisciplinary Treatment for Functional Movement Disorder” in the Continuum® August 2025 Movement Disorders issue. Dr. Smith is a Continuum® Audio interviewer and a professor and chair of neurology at Kenneth and Dianne Wright Distinguished Chair in Clinical and Translational Research at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, Virginia. Dr. Stone is a consultant neurologist and honorary professor of neurology at the Centre for Clinical Brain Sciences at the University of Edinburgh in Edinburgh, United Kingdom. Additional Resources Read the article: Multidisciplinary Treatment for Functional Movement Disorder Subscribe to Continuum®: shop.lww.com/Continuum Continuum® Aloud (verbatim audio-book style recordings of articles available only to Continuum® subscribers): continpub.com/Aloud More about the American Academy of Neurology: aan.com Social Media facebook.com/continuumcme @ContinuumAAN Host: @gordonsmithMD Guest: @jonstoneneuro Full episode transcript available here Dr Jones: This is Dr Lyell Jones, Editor-in-Chief of Continuum. This exclusive Continuum Audio interview is available only to you, our subscribers. We hope you enjoy it. Thank you for listening. Dr Smith: Hello, this is Dr Gordon Smith. Today I've got the great pleasure of interviewing Dr Johnstone about his article on the multidisciplinary treatment for functional neurologic disorder, which he wrote with Dr Alan Carson. This article will appear in the August 2025 Continuum issue on movement disorders. I will say, Jon, that as a Continuum Audio interviewer, I usually take the interviews that come my way, and I'm happy about it. I learn something every time. They're all a lot of fun. But there have been two instances where I go out and actively seek to interview someone, and you are one of them. So, I'm super excited that they allowed me to talk with you today. For those of our listeners who understand or are familiar with FND, Dr Stone is a true luminary and a leader in this, both in clinical care and research. He's also a true humanist. And I have a bit of a bias here, but he was the first awardee of the Ted Burns Humanism in Neurology award, which is a real honor and reflective of your great work. So welcome to the podcast, Jon. Maybe you can introduce yourself to our audience. Dr Stone: Well, thank you so much, Gordon. It was such a pleasure to get that award, the Ted Burns Award, because Ted was such a great character. I think the spirit of his podcasts is seen in the spirit of these podcasts as well. So, I'm a neurologist in Edinburgh in Scotland. I'm from England originally. I'm very much a general neurologist still. I still work full-time. I do general neurology, acute neurology, and I do two FND clinics a week. I have a research group with Alan Carson, who you mentioned; a very clinical research group, and we've been doing that for about 25 years. Dr Smith: I really want to hear more about your clinical approach and how you run the clinic, but I wonder if it would be helpful for you to maybe provide a definition. What's the definition of a functional movement disorder? I mean, I think all of us see these patients, but it's actually nice to have a definition. Dr Stone: You know, that's one of the hardest things to do in any paper on FND. And I'm involved with the FND society, and we're trying to get together a definition. It's very hard to get an overarching definition. But from a movement disorder point of view, I think you're looking at a disorder where there is an impairment of voluntary movement, where you can demonstrate that there is an automatic movement, which is normal in the same movement. I mean, that's a very clumsy way of saying it. Ultimately, it's a disorder that's defined by the clinical features it has; a bit like saying, what is migraine? You know? Or, what is MS? You know, it's very hard to actually say that in a sentence. I think these are disorders of brain function at a very broad level, and particularly with FND disorders, of a sort of higher control of voluntary movement, I would say. Dr Smith: There's so many pearls in this article and others that you've written. One that I really like is that this isn't a diagnosis of exclusion, that this is an affirmative diagnosis that have clear diagnostic signs. And I wonder if you can talk a little bit about the diagnostic process, arriving at an FND diagnosis for a patient. Dr Stone: I think this is probably the most important sort of “switch-around” in the last fifteen, twenty years since I've been involved. It's not new information. You know, all of these diagnostic signs were well known in the 19th century; and in fact, many of them were described then as well. But they were kind of lost knowledge, so that by the time we got to the late nineties, this area---which was called conversion disorder then---it was written down. This is a diagnosis of exclusion that you make when you've ruled everything out. But in fact, we have lots of rule in signs, which I hope most listeners are familiar with. So, if you've got someone with a functional tremor, you would do a tremor entrainment test where you do rhythmic movements of your thumb and forefinger, ask the patient to copy them. It's very important that they copy you rather than make their own movements. And see if their tremor stops briefly, or perhaps entrains to the same rhythm that you're making, or perhaps they just can't make the movement. That might be one example. There's many examples for limb weakness and dystonia. There's a whole lot of stuff to learn there, basically, clinical skills. Dr Smith: You make a really interesting point early on in your article about the importance of the neurological assessment as part of the treatment of the patient. I wonder if you could talk to our listeners about that. Dr Stone: So, I think, you know, there's a perception that- certainly, there was a perception that that the neurologist is there to make a diagnosis. When I was training, the neurologist was there to tell the patient that they didn't have the kind of neurological problem and to go somewhere else. But in fact, that treatment process, when it goes well, I think begins from the moment you greet the patient in the waiting room, shake their hand, look at them. Things like asking the patient about all their symptoms, being the first doctor who's ever been interested in their, you know, horrendous exhaustion or their dizziness. You know, questions that many patients are aware that doctors often aren't very interested in. These are therapeutic opportunities, you know, as well as just taking the history that enable the patient to feel relaxed. They start thinking, oh, this person's actually interested in me. They're more likely to listen to what you've got to say if they get that feeling off you. So, I'd spend a lot of time going through physical symptoms. I go through time asking the patient what they do, and the patients will often tell you what they don't do. They say, I used to do this, I used to go running. Okay, you need to know that, but what do they actually do? Because that's such valuable information for their treatment plan. You know, they list a whole lot of TV shows that they really enjoy, they're probably not depressed. So that's kind of useful information. I also spend a lot of time talking to them about what they think is wrong. Be careful, that they can annoy patients, you know. Well, I've come to you because you're going to tell me what's wrong. But what sort of ideas had you had about what was wrong? I need to know so that I can deal with those ideas that you've had. Is there a particular reason that you're in my clinic today? Were you sent here? Was it your idea? Are there particular treatments that you think would really help you? These all set the scene for what's going to come later in terms of your explanation. And, more importantly, your triaging of the patient. Is this somebody where it's the right time to be embarking on treatment, which is a question we don't always ask yourself, I think. Dr Smith: That's a really great point and kind of segues to my next question, which is- you talked a little bit about this, right? Generally speaking, we have come up with this is a likely diagnosis earlier, midway through the encounter. And you talked a little bit about how to frame the encounter, knowing what's coming up. And then what's coming up is sharing with the patient our opinion. In your article, you point out this should be no different than telling someone they have Parkinson's disease, for instance. What pearls do you have and what pitfalls do you have in how to give the diagnosis? And, you know, a lot of us really weren't trained to do this. What's the right way, and what are the most common land mines that folks step on when they're trying to share this information with patients? Dr Stone: I've been thinking about this for a long time, and I've come to the conclusion that all we need to do with this disorder is stop being weird. What goes wrong? The main pitfall is that people think, oh God, this is FND, this is something a bit weird. It's in a different box to all of the other things and I have to do something weird. And people end up blurting out things like, well, your scan was normal or, you haven't got epilepsy or, you haven't got Parkinson's disease. That's not what you normally do. It's weird. What you normally do is you take a deep breath and you say, I'm sorry to tell you've got Parkinson's disease or, you have this type of dystonia. That's what you normally say. If you follow the normal- what goes wrong is that people don't follow the normal rules. The patient picks up on this. What's going on here? This doctor's telling me what I don't have and then they're starting to talk about some reason why I've got this, like stress, even though I don't- haven't been told what it is yet. You do the normal rules, give it a name, a name that you're comfortable with, preferably as specific as possible: functional tremor, functional dystonia. And then do what you normally do, which is explain to the patient why you think it's this. So, if someone's got Parkinson's, you say, I think you've got Parkinson's because I noticed that you're walking very slowly and you've got a tremor. And these are typical features of Parkinson. And so, you're talking about the features. This is where I think it's the most useful thing that you can do. And the thing that I do when it goes really well and it's gone badly somewhere else, the thing I probably do best, what was most useful, is showing the patient their signs. I don't know if you do that, Gordon, but it's maybe not something that we're used to doing. Dr Smith: Wait, maybe you can talk more about that, and maybe, perhaps, give an example? Talk about how that impacts treatment. I was really impressed about the approach to physical therapy, and treatment of patients really leverages the physical examination findings that we're all well-trained to look for. So maybe explore that a little bit. Dr Stone: Yeah, I think absolutely it does. And I think we've been evolving these thoughts over the last ten or fifteen years. But I started, you know, maybe about twenty years ago, started to show people their tremor entrainment tests. Or their Hoover sign, for example; if you don't know Hoover sign, weakness of hip extension, that comes back to normal when the person's flexing their normal leg, their normal hip. These are sort of diagnostic tricks that we had. Ahen I started writing articles about FND, various senior neurologists said to me, are you sure you should write this stuff down? Patients will find out. I wrote an article with Marc Edwards called “Trick or Treat in Neurology” about fifteen years ago to say that actually, although they're they might seem like tricks, there really are treats for patients because you're bringing the diagnosis into the clinic room. It's not about the normal scan. You can have FND and MS. It's not about the normal scan. It's about what you're seeing in front of you. If you show that patient, yes, you can't move your leg. The more you try, the worse it gets. I can see that. But look, lift up your other leg. Let me show you. Can you see now how strong your leg is? It's such a powerful way of communicating to the patient what's wrong with them diagnostically, giving them that confidence. What it's also doing is showing them the potential for improvement. It's giving them some hope, which they badly need. And, as we'll perhaps talk about, the physio treatment uses that as well because we have to use a different kind of physio for many forms of functional movement disorder, which relies on just glimpsing these little moments of normal function and promoting them, promoting the automatic movement, squashing down that abnormal pattern of voluntary movement that people have got with FND. Dr Smith: So, maybe we can talk about that now. You know, I've got a bunch of other questions to ask you about mechanism and stuff, but let's talk about the approach to physical therapy because it's such a good lead-in and I always worry that our physical therapists aren't knowledgeable about this. So, maybe some examples, you have some really great ones in the article. And then words of wisdom for us as we're engaging physical therapists who may not be familiar with FND, how to kind of build that competency and relationship with the therapist with whom you work. Dr Stone: Some of the stuff is the same. Some of the rehabilitation ideas are similar, thinking about boom and bust activity, which is very common in these patients, or grading activity. That's similar, but some of them are really different. So, if you have a patient with a stroke, the physiotherapist might be very used to getting that person to think and look at their leg to try and help them move, which is part of their rehabilitation. In FND, that makes things worse. That's what's happening in Hoover sign and tremor entrainment sign. Attention towards the limb is making it worse. But if the patient's on board with the diagnosis and understands it, they'll also see what you need to do, then, in the physio is actively use distraction in a very transparent way and say to the patient, look, I think if I get you to do that movement, and I'll film you, I think your movement's going to look better. Wouldn't that be great if we could demonstrate that? And the patient says, yeah, that would be great. We're kind of actively using distraction. We're doing things that would seem a bit strange for someone with other forms of movement disorder. So, the patients, for example, with functional gait disorders who you discover can jog quite well on a treadmill. In fact, that's another diagnostic test. Or they can walk backwards, or they can dance or pretend that they're ice skating, and they have much more fluid movements because their ice skating program in their brain is not corrupted, but their normal walking program is. So, can you then turn ice skating or jogging into normal walking? It's not that complicated, I think. The basic ideas are pretty simple, but it does require some creativity from whoever's doing the therapy because you have to use what the patient's into. So, if the patient used to be a dancer- we had a patient who was a, she was really into ballet dancing. Her ballet was great, but her walking was terrible. So, they used ballet to help her walk again. And that's incredibly satisfying for the therapist as well. So, if you have a therapist who's not sure, there are consensus recommendations. There are videos. One really good success often makes a therapist want to do that again and think, oh, that's interesting. I really helped that patient get better. Dr Smith: For a long time, this has been framed as a mental health issue, conversion disorder, and maybe we can talk a little bit about early life of trauma as a risk factor. But, you know, listening to you talk, it sounds like a brain network problem. Even the word “functional”, to me, it seems a little judgmental. I don't know if this is the best term, but is this really a network problem? Dr Stone: The word “functional”, for most neurologists, sounds judgmental because of what you associate it with. If you think about what the word actually is, it's- it does what it says on the tin. There's a disordered brain function. I mean, it's not a great word. It's the least worst term, in my view. And yes, of course it's a brain network problem, because what other organ is it going to be? You know, that's gone wrong? When software brains go wrong, they go wrong in networks. But I think we have to be careful not to swing that pendulum too far to the other side because the problem here, when we say asking the question, is this a mental health problem or a neurological one, we're just asking the wrong question. We're asking a question that makes no sense. However you try and answer that, you're going to get a stupid answer because the question doesn't make sense. We shouldn't have those categories. It's one organ. And what's so fascinating about FND---and I hope what can incite your sort of curiosity about it---is this disorder which defies this categorization. You see some patients with it, they say, oh, they've got a brain network disorder. Then you meet another patient who was sexually abused for five years by their uncle when they were nine, between nine and fourteen; they developed an incredibly strong dissociative threat response into that experience. They have crippling anxiety, PTSD, interpersonal problems, and their FND is sort of somehow a part of that; part of that experience that they've had. So, to ignore that or to deny or dismiss psychological, psychiatric aspects, is just as bad and just as much a mistake as to dismiss the kind of neurological aspects as well. Dr Smith: I wonder if this would be a good time to go back and talk a little bit about a concept that I found really interesting, and that is FND as a prodromal syndrome before a different neurological problem. So, for instance, FND prodromal to Parkinson's disease. Can you talk to us a little bit about that? I mean, obviously I was familiar with the fact that patients who have nonepileptic seizurelike events often have epileptic seizures, but the idea of FND ahead of Parkinson's was new to me. Dr Stone: So, this is definitely a thing that happens. It's interesting because previously, perhaps, if you saw someone who was referred with a functional tremor---this has happened to me and my colleagues. They send me some with a functional tremor. By the time I see them, it's obvious they've got Parkinson's because it's been a little gap. But it turns out that the diagnosis of functional tremor was wrong. It was just that they've developed that in the prodrome of Parkinson's disease. And if you think about it, it's what you'd expect, really, especially with Parkinson's disease. We know people develop anxiety in the prodrome of Parkinson's for ten, fifteen years before it's part of the prodrome. Anxiety is a very strong risk factor for FND, and they're already developing abnormalities in their brain predisposing them to tremor. So, you put those two things together, why wouldn't people get FND? It is interesting to think about how that's the opposite of seizures, because most people with comorbidity of functional seizures and epilepsy, 99% of the time the epilepsy came first. They had the experience of an epileptic seizure, which is frightening, which evokes strong threat response and has somehow then led to a recapitulation of that experience in a functional seizure. So yeah, it's really interesting how these disorders overlap. We're seeing something similar in early MS where, I think, there's a slight excess of functional symptoms; but as the disease progresses, they often become less, actually. Dr Smith: What is the prognosis with the types of physical therapy? And we haven't really talked about psychological therapy, but what's the success rate? And then what's the relapse rate or risk? Dr Stone: Well, it does depend who they're seeing, because I think---as you said---you're finding difficult to get people in your institution who you feel are comfortable with this. Well, that's a real problem. You know, you want your therapists to know about this condition, so that matters. But I think with a team with a multidisciplinary approach, which might include psychological therapy, physio, OT, I think the message is you can get really good outcomes. You don't want to oversell this to patients, because these treatments are not that good yet. You can get spectacular outcomes. And of course, people always show the videos of those. But in published studies, what you're seeing is that most studies of- case series of rehabilitation, people generally improve. And I think it's reasonable to say to a patient, that we have these treatments, there's a good chance it's going to help you. I can't guarantee it's going to help you. It's going to take a lot of work and this is something we have to do together. So, this is not something you're going to do to the patient, they're going to do it with you. Which is why it's so important to find out, hey, do they agree with you with the diagnosis? And check they do. And is it the right time? It's like when someone needs to lose weight or change any sort of behavior that they've just become ingrained. It's not easy to do. So, I don't know if that helps answer the question. Dr Smith: No, that's great. And you actually got right where I was wanting to go next, which is the idea of timing and acceptance. You brought this up earlier on, right? So, sometimes patients are excited and accepting of having an affirmative diagnosis, but sometimes there's some resistance. How do you manage the situation where you're making this diagnosis, but a patient's resistant to it? Maybe they're fixating on a different disease they think they have, or for whatever reason. How do you handle that in terms of initiating therapy of the overall diagnostic process? Dr Stone: We should, you know, respect people's rights to have whatever views they want about what's wrong with them. And I don't see my job as- I'm not there to change everyone's mind, but I think my job is to present the information to them in a kind of neutral way and say, look, here it is. This is what I think. My experience is, if you do that, most people are willing to listen. There are a few who are not, but most people are. And most of the time when it goes wrong, I have to say it's us and not the patients. But I think you do need to find out if they can have some hope. You can't do rehabilitation without hope, really. That's what you're looking for. I sometimes say to patients, where are you at with this? You know, I know this is a really hard thing to get your head around, you've never heard of it before. It's your own brain going wrong. I know that's weird. How much do you agree with it on a scale of naught to ten? Are you ten like completely agreeing, zero definitely don't? I might say, are you about a three? You know, just to make it easy for them to say, no, I really don't agree with you. Patients are often reluctant to tell you exactly what they're thinking. So, make it easy for them to disagree and then see where they're at. If they're about seven, say, that's good. But you know, it'd be great if you were nine or ten because this is going to be hard. It's painful and difficult, and you need to know that you're not damaging your body. Those sort of conversations are helpful. And even more importantly, is it the right time? Because again, if you explore that with people, if a single mother with four kids and, you know, huge debts and- you know, it's going to be very difficult for them to engage with rehab. So, you have to be realistic about whether it's the right time, too; but keep that hope going regardless. Dr Smith: So, Jon, there's so many things I want to talk to you about, but maybe rather than let me drive it, let me ask you, what's the most important thing that our listeners need to know that I haven't asked you about? Dr Stone: Oh God. I think when people come and visit me, they sometimes, let's go and see this guy who does a lot of FND, and surely, it'll be so easy for him, you know? And I think some of the feedback I've had from visitors is, it's been helpful to watch, to see that it's difficult for me too. You know, this is quite hard work. Patients have lots of things to talk about. Often you don't have enough time to do it in. It's a complicated scenario that you're unravelling. So, it's okay if you find it difficult work. Personally, I think it's very rewarding work, and it's worth doing. It's worth spending the time. I think you only need to have a few patients where they've improved. And sometimes that encounter with the neurologist made a huge difference. Think about whether that is worth it. You know, if you do that with five patients and one or two of them have that amazing, really good response, well, that's probably worth it. It's worth getting out of bed in the morning. I think reflecting on, is this something you want to do and put time and effort into, is worthwhile because I recognize it is challenging at times, and that's okay. Dr Smith: That's a great number needed to treat, five or six. Dr Stone: Exactly. I think it's probably less than that, but… Dr Smith: You're being conservative. Dr Stone: I think deliberately pessimistic; but I think it's more like two or three, yeah. Dr Smith: Let me ask one other question. There's so much more for our listeners in the article. This should be required reading, in my opinion. I think that of most Continuum, but this, I really truly mean it. But I think you've probably inspired a lot of listeners, right? What's the next step? We have a general or comprehensive neurologist working in a community practice who's inspired and wants to engage in the proactive care of the FND patients they see. What's the next step or advice you have for them as they embark on this? It strikes me, like- and I think you said this in the article, it's hard work and it's hard to do by yourself. So, what's the advice for someone to kind of get started? Dr Stone: Yeah, find some friends pretty quick. Though, yeah, your own enthusiasm can take you a long way, you know, especially with we've got much better resources than we have. But it can only take you so far. It's really particularly important, I think, to find somebody, a psychiatrist or psychologist, you can share patients with and have help with. In Edinburgh, that's been very important. I've done all this work with the neuropsychiatrist, Alan Carson. It might be difficult to do that, but just find someone, send them an easy patient, talk to them, teach them some of this stuff about how to manage FND. It turns out it's not that different to what they're already doing. You know, the management of functional seizures, for example, is- or episodic functional movement disorders is very close to managing panic disorder in terms of the principles. If you know a bit about that, you can encourage people around you. And then therapists just love seeing these patients. So, yeah, you can build up slowly, but don't- try not to do it all on your own, I would say. There's a risk of burnout there. Dr Smith: Well, Dr Stone, thank you. You don't disappoint. This has really been a fantastic conversation. I really very much appreciate it. Dr Stone: That's great, Gordon. Thanks so much for your time, yeah. Dr Smith: Well, listeners, again, today I've had the great pleasure of interviewing Dr Jon Stone about his article on the multidisciplinary treatment for functional neurologic disorder, which he wrote with Dr Alan Carson. This article appears in the August 2025 Continuum issue on movement disorders. Please be sure to check out Continuum Audio episodes from this and other issues. And listeners, thank you once again for joining us today. Dr Monteith: This is Dr Teshamae Monteith, Associate Editor of Continuum Audio. We hope you've enjoyed this subscriber-exclusive interview. Thank you for listening.
In this episode of The Healthy Peaceful Podcast, I am joined by Dr. Marc Edwards, an adjunct professor at Maharishi International University (MIU), teaching in its graduate level Ayurveda programs. With an MD, MBA, and over 30 years of experience in healthcare management, Dr. Edwards has dedicated his career to the study and practice of Maharishi Ayurveda since 1984.Having relocated to Chapel Hill, North Carolina, in 2004, Dr. Edwards has been actively involved in various research programs at MIU. Notably, his research on MIU's MS Ayurveda & Integrative Medicine alumni revealed that 70% of participants joined to improve their own health, with most achieving significant health benefits.In our conversation, Dr. Edwards shares insights from his recent lecture for MIU titled "Mental Health in Ayurveda," which extended far beyond mental health. We explore essential Ayurvedic principles, including:Who Needs Ayurveda? Dr. Edwards discusses the universal relevance of Ayurveda.Food and Medicine: The integral role of diet, digestion, and daily routine in maintaining health.The Nature of the Mind: How consciousness is a crucial leverage point for improving health.Ayurveda as a Guiding Principle: Dr. Edwards' perspective on navigating information and decisions with Ayurveda as his "true north."The Three Gunas: The interplay of Sattva, Rajas, and Tamas in the material universe and their impact on behavior and diet.Digestion: The importance of Agni (digestive fire) and Ojas (vital essence) in achieving optimal health.Doshas: Understanding the doshas as the first expressions of consciousness and their balanced state.Dr. Edwards also addresses common mental health disturbances, such as anxiety, anger, and depression, from an Ayurvedic perspective, providing practical strategies for managing these conditions through lifestyle and herbal remedies. Additionally, he highlights the significance of sleep hygiene, the therapeutic use of herbs, and the foundational importance of proper diet and routine.Join us for a rich and insightful discussion that bridges ancient wisdom with modern health practices, offering actionable steps for a balanced and harmonious life.His website: Dr. Marc EdwardsI would love it if you would follow, rate, or write a review for my podcast. What you think matters and I appreciate all feedback!Get in touch with topic ideas relating to my podcast's categories: The meaning of health and well-being, personal and collective consciousness, and maximizing full human potential. My email: plantsroc@gmail.com.With sincere gratitude, Noreen
Admired as a bold saxophonist (and also sometimes guitarist, vocalist, pianist), composer Zoh Amba traces a journey from a difficult Tennessee childhood to musical and spiritual revelation. The remarks are coupled with excerpts from two performances at Roulette: the Bhakti project (2022, with Micah Thomas, piano; Thomas Morgan, bass; Marc Edwards, drums; and Matt Hollenberg, guitar) and Sun Quartet (2024, with Lex Korten, piano; Caroline Morton, bass; and Miguel Marcel Russell, drums). The Quartet emerged from a Roulette commission and is built using graphic scores and variations of devotional hymns.https://roulette.org/
Admired as a bold saxophonist (and also sometimes guitarist, vocalist, pianist), composer Zoh Amba traces a journey from a difficult Tennessee childhood to musical and spiritual revelation. The remarks are coupled with excerpts from two performances at Roulette: the Bhakti project (2022, with Micah Thomas, piano; Thomas Morgan, bass; Marc Edwards, drums; and Matt Hollenberg, guitar) and Sun Quartet (2024, with Lex Korten, piano; Caroline Morton, bass; and Miguel Marcel Russell, drums). The Quartet emerged from a Roulette commission and is built using graphic scores and variations of devotional hymns.
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Happy New Year from the Big Moe Podcast. We have a special show todayFirst, the NEWEST Cincinnati Bearcats-commit Drew Robinson ‘24, then we chat with Marc Edwards, the first Cincinnati Mr. Football in 1992.Looking forward to a big 2024 on the Big Moe Podcast
On this week's episode we are pleased to have 9-year NFL vet and Super Bowl XXXVI Champion, Marc EdwardsPrior to the NFL, Marc was a standout for the Fighting Irish. He tells us the story of being carried off the field by his teammates in South Bend.Marc was drafted out of the University of Notre Dame by the 49ers in the 2nd round. There, he played with some football greats including Steve Young and Jerry Rice.He came to New England at the birth of the Dynasty and the emergence of Tom Brady. Marc talks about Tom in his first year as a starter and when he thought TB12 might be special. He goes into detail about the 2001 team and beautifully illustrates the “Snow Bowl” game and the big game in New Orleans.It's a wonderful conversion that includes the book written about his younger days to what he is doing now.
Tim Grauel and Jim Irizarry preview Notre Dame-Duke with former Fighting Irish football standouts Ian Book, Eric Pennick, Marc Edwards, and Dr. Brian Ratigan.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Ryan Wilson, Max Lahiff and Marc Edwards kick off a brand new rugby show 'MAUL OR NOTHING' powered by BallCarrier! They share their predictions for France, debate the Springbok 7-1 split, chat Fiji's incredible rise, and much more.
Mike and Bruce are LIVE with #44 Marc Edwards!http://www.audilous.comSupport the show
Mike and Sean break the schedule down game by game.***NOTE*** Correction: #44 Marc Edwards had to reschedule, epidose will be availble on Tuesday, Aug 22nd and patreon subscribers will have access on Friday Aug 18th.www.audilous.comSupport the show
NewsSwift.org Community Showcase ForumSwift on RISC-VSupporting visionOSPackagesDockProgress by Sindre SorhusSwift HTTP Types by AppleIntroducing Swift HTTP TypesColorPaletteCodable by Darren FordColour management by Marc Edwards, Part 1Colour management by Marc Edwards, Part 2Colour management by Marc Edwards, Part 3Colour management by Marc Edwards, Part 4Colour management by Marc Edwards, Part 5Aoxiang by isacedSwifter by Damian Kołakowski and Victor Sigler
BC, our perhaps former Vatican Assassin, just watched ally Marc Edwards lose his re-election for Governor of Lunar Prime to BC's enemy Daniel McEntyre. Now, McEntyre is about to take power, in Chapter Three of Vatican Ambassador. Join host, author, and narrator Mike Luoma for his original, independent, audio science fiction on Glow-in-the-Dark Radio!Promo this week is for Flash Pulp: http://FlashPulp.com. Thank You to our Glow-in-the-Dark Radio Patrons! Please consider becoming a Patron and supporting the podcast: https://www.patreon.com/glowinthedarkradio. Free Stuff? Videos? Everything else? Links and details: http://glowinthedarkradio.com and http://mikeluoma.com. Music by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com / https://filmmusic.io). Show theme - "Hitman". Vatican Assassin theme - "Phantom From Space".
In this revealing and insightful episode, Damon Maloney takes us behind the scenes in his work as a broadcast journalist. Damon discusses the personal impact of the Flint Water Crisis and how that tragedy affected so many. He'll also discuss how being a reporter, news anchor and producer has strengthened his belief in the power of journalism to touch lives and affect change. At the heart of his investigative reporting is a passion for truth, respect for the many people in the newsroom behind each story, and his abiding belief that “journalism is a people business.” Damon Maloney is an Emmy award-winning journalist who has covered national and regional news stories including Flint water crisis, devastating tornado to high-profile murder trial. QUOTES: DAMON: “So it took more work, I would say, on behalf of journalists, but also the people of Flint. They were determined to get somebody in to listen...with credence.” DAMON: “I thoroughly enjoy just getting out and meeting people... in their environment, figuring out what their story is, and sharing that with others. You encounter so much tragedy. Yeah. But on the flip side, you also meet so many inspiring people.” DAMON: “And you have to respect people when they don't wanna talk to you....I've had many doors slammed in my face...and from some very interesting situations! But you always have to conduct yourself as a professional. Now that doesn't mean that you're not aggressive or competitive, or you ask those tough follow up questions, but you do so with dignity, with professionalism and respect.” LINKS: https://www.damonmaloney.com ThreeSixty Alumni Spotlight: Damon Maloney: A local reporter covering the Flint water crisis, Lucas Johnson, September 2018 Marc A. Edwards, Charles Lunsford Professor, University Distinguished Professor @ Virginia Tech Virginia Tech's Marc Edwards testifies on contaminated drinking water in Flint, Michigan Flint water activist LeeAnne Walters wins environmental prize,Detroit Free Press, Associated Press, April 23, 2018 Without These Whistleblowers, We May Never Have Known the Full Extent of the Flint Water Crisis, Smithsonian Magazine, John McQuaid, December 2016 National Association of Black Journalists
Marc joins the show to talk about his college career at Notre Dame, why he chose the Fighting Irish despite growing up in Ohio, being only the 2nd Irish player ever to be carried of the field, he also talks about some of the great coaches he had and not so favorite ones and the mastermind coach Bill Belichick, winning the Super Bowl, what it takes for kids to be great athletes, and how parents should let there kids play football, and how the personal foul penaltIrs have gone to far, and much, much, more! Follow us on Instagram @Football_fatherhoodlife. On Twitter @lifefatherhood1 and Facebbok @FFLSHOW Marc Edwards on Twitter: @MarcEdwards44
After assassinating the Governor of Lunar Prime, BC works on his alibis and on shifting the blame onto others. We meet the new Governor, Marc Edwards, and Keith Hughes (http://Penslinger.com) continues his special voice cameo as Cardinal Andersen in Chapter Four of a very special audio version of the Vatican Assassin 15th Anniversary Edition with in-character Voice Cameos from friends and great talents from the world of podcasting, podcast fiction, writing, voice acting, and narration. This encore presentation comes in honor of the release of the new Vatican Assassin Trilogy Third Edition! Enjoy free, original, independent audio science fiction from author, host and narrator Mike Luoma – almost every week for over SIXTEEN years – on each episode of Glow-in-the-Dark Radio!Our Promo this week is for The Fix-It Home Improvement Podcast. Please consider becoming a Patron and supporting the podcast: https://www.patreon.com/glowinthedarkradio. Free Stuff? Videos? Everything else? Links and details: http://glowinthedarkradio.com and http://mikeluoma.com. Music by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com / https://filmmusic.io). Show theme - "Hitman". Vatican Assassin theme - "Phantom From Space".
In this episode, NRCM Rising Leadership Team member Kate Shambaugh speaks with Isabel Rogers, Hub Organizer for Sunrise Movement Franklin County, which just celebrated its first anniversary. It is part of a national youth-led nonprofit made up of young activists working on environmental and social justice issues such as climate change. Learn more about NRCM's new Franklin County coordinator Marc Edwards and his work, as well as which state recently became the fourth to pass an EPR for Packaging Law. Maine was the first state to pass such a law in 2021.
Kane Biotech (OTCQB: KNBIF) is a Canadian-based biotechnology company engaged in the discovery, development, and commercialization of products that prevent and remove microbial biofilms. CEO Marc Edwards returns to provide an update on the company's patents, trials, and technology. View Podcast Transcript for Kane Biotech
Pre-show: Marco played himself Would there be a “Studio Display Max” within two years? 22” Cinema Display 23” Cinema Display 27” Cinema Display 27” Thunderbolt Display Marco’s Studio Display impressions NuShelf Dual Mount for Mac mini New Peripherals Black Keyboard Black Trackpad Squat TouchID Keyboard Lenovo ERGO K860 Ergonomic Split-Keyboard Fingerprint security Stephen Hackett on Apple color mark-up Follow-up: Marc Edwards from Bjango has a follow-up on Retina displays Some thoughts on acoustics from Sam Kusnetz John Lee Supertaster Chris Gonyea points out errors with some USB-C ↔ Ethernet adapters with the Studio Display Issues with iCloud and custom domains DKIM issues & SPF via Eli Lindsey Expectations for WWDC, the event Original Gravity Public House iPhone 14 Rumors Pill & Hole Punch Previously in pill & hole punch iPhone 14 is in EVT, perhaps without periscope camera? MaxTech on the iPhone 14 camera rumors #askatp If going from Canon dSLR → mirrorless, is it worth jumping to Sony? (via Elijah) Are fusion drives even worth it in 2022? diskutil Is there any sort of KVM-like thing for Thunderbolt? (via Matt Chinander) Given The Cook Doctrine, why is Apple bothering making their own cellular modems? (via Daniel Bergqvist) Apple A4 Apple A6 Post-show: Marco files a complaint about RecDiffs Marco forgets an anniversary John’s sitrep Sponsored by: Squarespace: Make your next move. Use code atp for 10% off your first order. Linode: Instantly deploy and manage an SSD server in the Linode Cloud. New accounts get a $100 credit. Trade Coffee: Incredible coffee delivered fresh from the best roasters in the nation Become a member for ad-free episodes and our early-release, unedited “bootleg” feed! Become a member!
Phil used to play a boardgame called Shogun with a kid who grew up to be an NFL Super Bowl champion with the 2002 New England Patriots. It was the first of seven Lombardi's by a (then) fourth string QB named Tom Brady, thrust into action that season only due to a devastating injury to franchise qb Drew Bledsoe. Marc rose from the big fish in the small pond of unassuming Norwood, Ohio to standout at the storied grid iron of South Bend at the University of Notre Dame to an incredibly successful career in the NFL with four different franchises. As we count down to Super Bowl 56 this Sunday, we thought it was the perfect time to wake the echoes of Marc's amazing career in football. Enjoy! YUH Theme by David T and Mojo 3 https://www.amazon.com/Insanity-Sobriety-Blues-David-Mojo3/dp/B091N8BJNB Video excerpt from this interview: https://www.facebook.com/YeahUhHuhPod/videos/1031887997670521 Feature on Marc Edwards from the Cincinnati.com website: https://www.cincinnati.com/videos/sports/high-school/high-school-sports/2021/01/05/former-norwood-notre-dame-nfl-running-back-marc-edwards-through-years/3874394001/ Marc Edwards on Twitter: https://twitter.com/marcedwards44 Yeah Uh Huh on Facebook https://facebook.com/YeahUhHuhPod Yeah Uh Huh on Twitter https://twitter.com/YeahUhHuhPod Yeah Uh Huh on Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/7pS9l716ljEQLeMMxwihoS?si=27bd15fb26ed46aa Yeah Uh Huh on Apple Podcasts https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/yeah-uh-huh/id1565097611 Yeah Uh Huh Website: https://yeah-uh-huh.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/lisa-huey/message
In this amazing episode with special guest Marc Edwards, who is a former 9 year NFL veteran, Super Bowl Champ, and former teammate of the great Tom Brady we have a very interesting conversation about his NFL and more! We talk about all the success he found at the high school level, including when he was named “Mr. Ohio” after a phenomenal high school career. Then we talk about his magical moments at Notre Dame, such as getting carried off of the field after a big upset and showing what underdogs can really do. Then we segue into his NFL career. He talks about his first NFL snap, how it felt to win the Super Bowl and the season leading up to the big win, and what it was like having the great Tom Brady as a teammate and Bill Belichick as a coach. This is an incredible interview! Please give it a listen.
The journey from CNA, to Nurse, to Wholesaler, to established Real Estate agent serving the Kansas City Market. Marc Edwards loves helping people and thrives on assisting first time home buyers achieve the dream of home ownership!! Skilled in Open Houses, Helping Clients Succeed, Buyer Representation, Listings, and Real Estate Transactions. Marc focuses on investing and helping investors find cash flowing assets! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/collisstutzer/message
We're back for Offload Season 2, with new host Marc Edwards joined by Max Lahiff, Ryan Wilson and special guest this week Hamish Watson. The guys chat pre-season, World 12s, the new rules in the premiership and how they see the season unfolding. We're also joined by Hamish Watson to fill us in on the Lions Tour to South Africa, who he bonded with, how things went on and off the pitch and what he made of the furore about his size by a certain journalist. Lots more including a few new regular segments, so make sure you're subscribed wherever you get your podcasts. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission has joined forces with its UK and German equivalents in an agreement to prevent tech giants from using mergers and acquisitions to maintain market dominance. In a join statement, the three groups state that stronger control over mergers is required to create room for competition in the market, particularly in new areas of innovation.Microsoft has added new settings to Outlook that can enforce breaks between meetings in an effort to overcome the problem of wall-to-wall meetings and general digital overload. The setting can make meetings start five minutes after the usual hour or half hour, with Microsoft's own research suggesting even small breaks can have a positive impact when people are feeling overloaded. Now if only they could automatically mute everyone at the scheduled end time to stop overrun that would be good too.The EU is moving forward with its proposal to impose strict rules upon the use of artificial intelligence. Seen in draft form last week, the plan aims to outlaw the use of AI for general social scoring, the use of remote biometric detection in real-time policing, and more. The rules also demand compulsory transparency obligations whenever AI is used to interact with humans, to generate or manipulate content, like with deep fakes, or to perform social or emotional detection. If the rules go ahead they're expected to have widespread impact on AI technology initiatives across the world.In Britain, the country's former children's commissioner is taking legal action against TikTok over the collection of personal data about child users. The lawsuit, brought by Anne Longfield, claims the company's collection of personal information, phone numbers, location data and the videos themselves may be illegal in the absence of transparent consent of parents given children cannot give legal consent. The case claims to represent millions of British children. No word on why the case singles out TikTok over Instagram or Snap.In backyard science, it's the right time of year to catch the Lyrids meteor showers, with the best time to head outside and take a look around one hour before sunrise over the next few days. Expect to catch meteor sightings with the naked eye every 3-5 minutes. Look toward the north to spot them.In video games, Xbox owners can now play free-to-play games online without needing to pay for an Xbox Live Gold subscription to do so. The change was flagged earlier in the year by Microsoft, but the change is now officially in the system after a number of recent adjustments to Xbox networking arrangements.And if you're hunting for something great to play on PlayStation and you had held out on buying Horizon Zero Dawn, the Complete Edition of the game is now free for all PS4 and PS5 owners. Sony's PlayStation at Home program has made a number of games available over recent weeks from its back catalogue for free – you have a few more hours to grab nine others before they exit the offer.Finally, Australian esports organisation Order, mentioned on Bits recently for Valorant tournament management efforts and a number of team victories, has raised $5.3M in new investments as it aims to establish itself as a local leader in the esports scene. It has also appointed a new CEO, Marc Edwards, and revealed plans for a dedicated facility in Melbourne's Collingwood. The team has a number of big brand partnerships with Puma, Optus, Alienware and Logitech. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Our friendly neighborhood Vatican Assassin BC seems to have calmed down the upset Lunar Prime Governor Marc Edwards. Now, it's off on a new mission and Fortune Station... in Chapter Thirteen of Vatican Assassin – the 15th Anniversary Edition – on Glow-in-the-Dark Radio. Written and performed by host Mike Luoma – free, original, independent science fiction audio adventure – every week! Our Promo this week is one last time for The Melting Potcast: http://themeltingpotcast.com. (RIP) Please consider becoming a Patron and supporting the podcast: https://www.patreon.com/glowinthedarkradio. Free Star Seeds Audiobook? Everything else? Links and details: http://glowinthedarkradio.com and http://mikeluoma.com. Music by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com / https://filmmusic.io). Show theme - "Hitman". Vatican Assassin theme - "Phantom From Space".
As BC preps for his new assignment, an upset Lunar Prime Governor Marc Edwards calls and wants to speak to BC immediately. Find out what's up in Chapter Eleven of the Vatican Assassin 15th Anniversary Edition, this week on Glow-in-the-Dark Radio! Free, original, independent science fiction audio adventure from your writer, host and narrator Mike Luoma. 600+ Episodes and counting! Our Promo this week is for Geek Radio Daily: http://GeekRadioDaily.com. Please consider becoming a Patron and supporting the podcast: https://www.patreon.com/glowinthedarkradio. Free Star Seeds Audiobook? Everything else? Links and details: http://glowinthedarkradio.com and http://mikeluoma.com. Music by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com / https://filmmusic.io). Show theme - "Hitman". Vatican Assassin theme - "Phantom From Space".
At the funeral of his victim, Meredith McEntyre, Vatican Assassin BC tries to avoid suspicion while working on winning over the new Lunar Prime Governor Marc Edwards – and worrying about aggressive ship movements by the Universal Islamic Nation. Chapter Six of the Vatican Assassin 15th Anniversary Edition with writer, host and narrator Mike Luoma. Get free, original, independent audio science fiction adventure every week on Glow-in-the-Dark Radio! Our Promo this week is for Geek Radio Daily: http://geekradiodaily.com. Become a Patron and support the podcast: https://www.patreon.com/glowinthedarkradio. Free Audiobooks? Everything else? Links and details: http://glowinthedarkradio.com and http://mikeluoma.com. Music by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com / https://filmmusic.io). Show theme - "Hitman". Vatican Assassin theme - "Phantom From Space".
On this New Year’s Day edition of Gameday, Tim and Vince interview.. -1973 Notre Dame national championship assistant coach Mike Stock and offensive lineman Steve Slyvester -1990s Notre Dame football standouts Marc Edwards, Kory Minor, and Allen
New Lunar Prime Governor Marc Edwards calls together a group to discuss the possible assassination of his predecessor and aggressive ship movements by the Universal Islamic Nation. Vatican Assassin BC has not only managed to avoid suspicion, Edwards now seems to be taking his advice! Chapter Five of the Vatican Assassin 15th Anniversary Edition features Special Voice Cameos, as once again, Keith Hughes (http://penslinger.com) is Cardinal Andersen, and we hear Starla Huchton (https://www.starlahuchton.com) perform Nita Bendix and #1 New York Times best-selling novelist Scott Sigler (https://scottsigler.com/) voice Daniel McEntyre! All led by writer, host and narrator Mike Luoma. Get free, original, independent audio science fiction adventure every week on Glow-in-the-Dark Radio! Our Promo this week is for Nutty Bites: http://www.nimlas.org/blog. Become a Patron and support the podcast: https://www.patreon.com/glowinthedarkradio. Free Audiobooks? Everything else? Links and details: http://glowinthedarkradio.com and http://mikeluoma.com. Music by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com / https://filmmusic.io). Show theme - "Hitman". Vatican Assassin theme - "Phantom From Space". Scott Sigler (https://scottsigler.com/) is like the Neil Armstrong of fiction podcasting. His one, small step with Earthcore led to many giant leaps for podcast fiction over the years. It was the very first podcast-only novel. You couldn't get it anywhere else, you had to listen, week by week. Scott mostly just voices his own stuff, so I'm honored to have a pioneer like him performing Daniel McEntyre.
Kane Biotech (OTCQB: KNBIF) is a Canadian-based biotechnology company engaged in the discovery, development, and commercialization of products that prevent and remove microbial biofilms. President and CEO, Marc Edwards, joins us to discuss why biofilms are a health threat to humans and animals, and the types of solutions and applications the company is developing.
Marc Edwards is a Professor of Civil Engineering at Virginia Tech University. In this episode Marc discusses how he became involved in the drinking water crisis in Flint, Michigan and that it was a failure of responsibility across all levels and aspects of government. He explains the model of investigative science that he and his team uses to examine drinking water quality, and while he dislikes crossing into advocacy and activism he will expose government misconduct if necessary. Marc talks about the engineering ethics course he teaches at Virginia Tech and how students learn to follow scientific obligations to the profession and society. See all podcast episodes at www.waterloop.org The waterloop podcast is brought to you by High Sierra Showerheads, the smart and stylish way to save water, energy, and money while enjoying a powerful shower. Use promo code waterloop for 20 percent off at www.highsierrashowerheads.com
Business Day TV — Tower Property Fund has reported a 16% drop in annual revenue. The firm, which has assets in South Africa and Croatia, says the Covid-19 pandemic has created unprecedented challenges, and has added to the pressures facing its tenants. Business Day TV spoke to CEO Marc Edwards for more insight.
What the Eyes Don't See: A Story of Crisis, Resistance, and Hope in an American City" (https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/42040559-what-the-eyes-don-t-see), which was named one of the New York Time's 100 most notable books of the year in 2018. Dr. Mona is the Director of the Pediatric residency program at Hurley Medical Center in Flint, Michigan. In 2016 she was named one of Time Magazine’s 100 most influential people in the world (https://time.com/collection-post/4301337/marc-edwards-and-mona-hanna-attisha-2016-time-100/). She was also awarded the Heinz Award in Public Policy (2017), was named one of Politico's 50 most important people in 2016 and won the James C. Goodall Freedom of Expression Award in the same year. In this conversation we discuss what factors gave rise to this crisis and what we can learn from it, her role as an activist and how this provides an example to other change-makers, the invisible forces, especially policies, that shaped this crisis and our society, how anti-democratic laws directly precipitated this crisis, the dark age of science (https://www.ucsusa.org/resources/attacks-on-science) we are living through and its implications, the state of environmental injustice in Michigan and America, the resilience of Flint and its people, and many other topics. Background reading: I’m Sick of Asking Children to Be Resilient (https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/12/opinion/sunday/flint-inequality-race-coronavirus.html)(Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha, New York Times) Flint Water Crisis shows dangers of "Dark Age of Science (https://www.cnn.com/2019/03/14/opinions/flint-water-myths-scientific-dark-age-roy-edwards/index.html)" (Marc Edwards, CNN) The Devastating Impacts of Air Pollution on Children (https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2019-11-22/pm2-5-air-pollution-harms-human-health-reduces-iq-in-children) (Bloomberg) A written plus audio transcript of this episode is available here (https://app.podscribe.ai/episode/48346487) Support this podcast
Alibi Jones is in a mysterious cavern underneath a Vermont mountain, speaking mind-to-mind with a strange being called the "arch-mage". Marc Edwards led Alibi here, but he's been catatonic since touching a force field. Alibi tries to wake him up, as we get into Chapter Ten of Alibi Jones and the Star Seeds of Earth! Original, independent science fiction, written and performed by Mike Luoma. Brand-new work-in-progress. Free to listen, download and subscribe since 2006 -- Glow-in-the-Dark Radio. Promo This Week – Flash Pulp: http://flashpulp.com. Support the podcast – Become a Patron: https://www.patreon.com/glowinthedarkradio. Find links and details at http://glowinthedarkradio.com and http://mikeluoma.com. Music by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com / https://filmmusic.io). Show theme - "Hitman". Star Seeds of Earth theme - "Echoes of Time".
Listen as The Star Seeds of Earth continues! A brand-new novel work-in-progress – Alibi Jones and the Star Seeds of Earth – Alibi Jones searches for the DNA delivery system of the Ancient Enemy – on a mountainside in Vermont. Marc Edwards brings him up to an ancient "fireplace" – that may hold deeper secrets! Original, independent science fiction written and performed by Mike Luoma – Glow-in-the-Dark Radio! Free to listen, download and subscribe since 2006. Promo This Week - Check out The Melting Potcast: http://meltingpotcast.com. Support the podcast – Become a Patron: https://www.patreon.com/glowinthedarkradio. Find links and details for my stuff at http://glowinthedarkradio.com and http://mikeluoma.com. Music by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com / https://filmmusic.io). Show theme - "Hitman". Star Seeds of Earth theme - "Echoes of Time".
The Ohio Mr. Football award has finally returned to Greater Cincinnati. Wyoming senior quarterback Evan Prater was named Wednesday afternoon as the 33rd Ohio Mr. Football. Prater, who is verbally committed to the University of Cincinnati, is the first Ohio Mr. Football from the Cincinnati area since Norwood’s Marc Edwards won the prestigious award in 1992. Prater is the second area player to win the annual award since it began in 1987. Prater, Wyoming coach Aaron Hancock and Edwards joined the WCPO High School Insider to discuss the significance of the award and share some football memories.
Former Notre Dame football standouts Marc Edwards and Chris Zorich look back at their college careers and the Fighting Irish regular season-ending match-up with Stanford. Plus, an interview with San Diego-based sports medicine expert Dr. Tommy John on this edition of Legacy Heating & Air Gameday.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Marc Edwards, Professor, civil engineering, Virginia Tech expert in water treatment and corrosion talks about tainted water series part 3
Marc Edwards, a civil engineer and University Distinguished Professor at Virginia Tech conducted the research confirming that lead was poisoning Flint's water. His work on the “Lead Crisis” in DC led to publication of a landmark paper documenting harm to DC's children resulting from government agency negligence. He also created the Flint Water Study, an independent research team from Virginia Tech (VT) that volunteers their time, resources and expertise to help resolve scientific uncertainties associated with drinking water issues being reported in the City of Flint.
What a interview!!! I got the opportunity to interview Former NFL pro Marc Edwards. He played Fullback for 5 different teams and he was apart of Super Bowl XXXVI, when the New England Patriots beat the St. Louis Rams by a score of 20-17. That 2001 team was the start of a dynasty. Marc shared some great stories of his days with the Patriots, and it was a true blessing to hear them. ENJOY!Marc Edwards Career Stats5 NFL teams- San Francisco - Jacksonville - Cleveland- Chicago - New England Career Stats82 Starts13 combined Touchdowns1,301 rushing yards405 receiving yards167 receptions
Episode Two of the Flint Phenomenon series (brought to you by CORROSION journal) continues the roundtable discussion surrounding the water crisis in Flint, Michigan. In this chat, panelists explore the science behind the problem while evaluating the difficulty in monitoring lead in water systems; the use of corrosion inhibitors and water filters; the changing standards of lead in metals and drinking water; and how Flint is doing today. Panelists include John Scully, Technical Editor in Chief of CORROSION journal; Virginia Tech’s Marc Edwards, who led the team that collected the water samples; and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Darren Lytle.
This show discusses Notre Dame's victory over Louisville, former Notre Dame Head Coach Bob Davie and the career of Marc Edwards. Edwards gives his first person account of Lou Holtz's motivation, camp at the Culver Academy and his Super Bowl victory with the New England Patriots. Thank you for listening! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
The first episode of NACE International's Flint Phenomenon series discusses the water crisis in Flint, Michigan, including the causes of lead release in the drinking water and how the situation was handled. It includes discussion on the difficulty in identifying and replacing lead pipe in Flint and throughout the United States. The episode includes discussion with panelists Marc Edwards, who lead the team that collected the water samples in Flint, and Darren Lytle with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Meet the Panelists Darren Lytle, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Darren Lytle is an environmental engineer with EPA’s Office of Research and Development, National Risk Management Research Laboratory in Cincinnati, Ohio. Since beginning work at EPA in 1991, his primary goal has been to research the quality of drinking water. Over the years, Lytle has investigated and published works on drinking water systems, including work on distribution system corrosion control and water quality (e.g., red water control, lead and copper corrosion control); filtration (emphasis on removal of particles, and microbial contaminants and pathogens from water); biological water treatment; and iron and arsenic removal. Lytle holds a B.S. in civil engineering from the University of Akron an M.S. in environmental engineering from the University of Cincinnati, and a Ph.D. in environmental engineering from the University of Illinois. Marc Edwards, Virginia Tech Marc Edwards is a University Distinguished Professor of Civil Engineering at Virginia Tech, where he teaches courses in environmental engineering, applied aquatic chemistry, and engineering ethics. His research group conducted the investigative science uncovering the 2001-2004 D.C. Lead Crisis, the 2014-2016 Flint Water Disaster, and illegal pesticide dosing to water of Denmark SC 2008-2018. Time Magazine dubbed Edwards “The Plumbing Professor” in 2004, listing him amongst the 4 most important “Innovators” in water from around the world. The White House awarded him a Presidential Faculty Fellowship in 1996, he won a MacArthur Fellowship in 2007, and in 2013 Edwards’ was the 9th recipient (in a quarter century) of the IEEE Barus Award for “courageously defending the public interest at great personal risk.” In 2016 he was named amongst TIME Magazine’s 100 Most Influential people in the World, the World’s 50 Greatest Leaders by Fortune Magazine, Politico Magazine’s Top 50 Visionaries who have transformed American politics, Foreign Policy Magazine's 100 World’s Greatest Thinkers, and was short-listed amongst Flint whistleblowers as Time person(s) of the year. He was co-recipient of the inaugural 2017 MIT Disobedience Award, and received the AAAS Scientific Freedom and Responsibility award (2018) and the Hoover Humanitarian Medal (2019).
Show premiere. This show discusses the new podcast, the preseason AP poll and the 1996 Notre Dame-Purdue game. Marc Edwards, former Notre Dame fullback, joins the program and discusses the 1996 season as well as Lou Holtz's retirement. Finally, Irish Football Archive makes their final predictions about the upcoming season. Thank you for listening! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Drummer/multi-instrumentalist Weasel Walter is an intense and formidable figure in the world of underground music. Active since 1991, he has been touring and recording non-stop, amassing a staggering discography along the way. His long list of collaborators include Damon Smith, Henry Kaiser, Lydia Lunch, Marc Edwards and many many more. Next month Weasel is releasing the first record by his band the Flying Luttenbachers in many years, before taking the new lineup to Europe. Since starting this podcast in 2013, I have received more requests to have Weasel on than any other artist. Here we are.
On this episode, Evan Sharpley and Tim Grauel preview Notre Dame-Syracuse with Irish football stars Marc Edwards and Allen Rossum, and talk recruiting with 24-7 Sports’ Steve Wiltfong.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Legionnaires' disease is caused by the bacterium, Legionella. The bacterium was named after an outbreak in 1976, when many people who went to a Philadelphia convention of the American Legion got sick with pneumonia. In the United States, approximately 5,000 cases of Legionnaires' disease are reported annually. However, Legionnaires' disease is likely underdiagnosed and the true numbers are likely higher. I was joined by two experts on Legionnaires' disease, Legionella and water systems–civil engineering/environmental engineer and the Charles P. Lunsford Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Virginia Tech, Dr. Marc Edwards and scientist and engineer, Sarah Ferrari, who is a member of the Alliance to Prevent Legionnaires' Disease, a coalition of subject matter experts and stakeholders formed to promote best practices on Legionnaires' Disease prevention.
In today's episode, host Marc Clair welcomes in…himself? That's right, in this little experiment of an episode, it's Marc and Marc alone, with no guests or roundtable partners to save the listeners from his unbridled ranting. Marc decides that some recent comments he made during his interview with Dr. Marc Edwards on the Flint Water Cr [...] Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In today's episode, host Marc Clair is joined by Dr. Marc Edwards, the civil engineer who led the study which exposed dangerously high levels of lead in the water in Flint, Michigan. Before we dig into his work in Flint, Dr. Edwards explains why he first pursued the field of civil engineering, with the idea that he could help people with little foreseeable incentive to pursue an unethical path. He then touches on his first encounter with a government cover-up of a water supply in Washington, D.C., and then gets into his most recent work on the Flint crisis. Dr. Edwards breaks down the events which lead to the poisoning of the water in Flint, and why it took [...] Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Marc Edwards of Bjango talks to Rene about screen sizes and display densities, the different implementations choices made by Google, Apple, and Microsoft, the road to 1080p and @2x, the advent of 2K, the possibility of @4x, and the question of how big and dense phones can get.