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Stu had guest Matt Harper on and they rambled. Please like the Facebook and Twitter pages. Please consider subscribing to the Patreon. Please rate/review/subscribe. Thanks.
Guest preacher: Matt Harper - The Heart God DesiresNov 3, 2024 • Matt HarperGuest preacher Matt Harper preaches on the story of the Pharisee and the tax collector from Luke 18:9-14 and what it teaches us about the heart God desires.
CTL Script/ Top Stories of October 1st Publish Date: October 1st From the Ingles Studio Welcome to the Award-Winning Cherokee Tribune Ledger Podcast Today is Tuesday, October 1st and Happy 100th Birthday to President Jimmy Carter. ***10.01.24 – BIRTHDAY – JIMMY CARTER*** I'm Keith Ippolito and here are the stories Cherokee is talking about, presented by Credit Union of Georgia. 1. Woodstock's Flyin' Wrench Celebrates Reopening 2. Cherokee County 911 Foundation Celebrates Ribbon Cutting 3. Cherokee County Fire Department Mourns Loss of Firefighter Plus, Leah McGrath from Ingles Markets on fast food. We'll have all this and more coming up on the Cherokee Tribune-Ledger Podcast, and if you're looking for Community news, we encourage you to listen and subscribe! Commercial: CU of GA (06.26.24 CU OF GA FREE CHECKING_REV_FINAL) STORY 1: Woodstock's Flyin' Wrench Celebrates Reopening Flyin' Wrench Motorsports in Woodstock has fully reopened after overcoming significant setbacks. In June 2023, a truck crashed into their building, followed by a windstorm that damaged the roof. Despite these challenges, co-owners Matt Harper and Amanda De Los Reyes, with community support, restored the business. The incidents cost them about $1.2 million, but they chose to preserve the building's structure. Specializing in European car repairs, Flyin' Wrench celebrated its grand reopening on September 26, expressing gratitude for the community's support and readiness to continue serving Woodstock. STORY 2: Cherokee County 911 Foundation Celebrates Ribbon Cutting The Cherokee County 911 Foundation celebrated its formation with a ribbon-cutting ceremony on September 30 at the Cherokee County Public Safety Facility in Canton. Established on April 12, the nonprofit aims to support and advance Cherokee County E-911 through various programs, including emergency funds, health initiatives, education, and public awareness campaigns. Foundation President Lori Flink highlighted their mission to enhance the 911 center and community. The foundation supports multiple local emergency services and aims to leave a lasting legacy. For more information or to donate, visit their website. STORY 3: Cherokee County Fire Department Mourns Loss of Firefighter Cherokee County Fire and Emergency Services is grieving the unexpected loss of Fire Apparatus Operator Nevin O'Hearn, who passed away on September 28. O'Hearn, who joined the department in 2019, was known for his dedication and kind spirit, serving as both a Fire Apparatus Operator and Advanced Emergency Medical Technician at Fire Station 13. His death was unrelated to his firefighting duties. The department expressed deep sorrow and called for support and compassion for his family, friends, and colleagues, honoring his impactful legacy in the community. We have opportunities for sponsors to get great engagement on these shows. Call 770.874.3200 for more info. Back in a moment Break: DRAKE (Drake Realty (Cherokee County) – The Mill (09.26.24 THE MILL ON ETOWAH REV 2 30_FINAL) STORY 4: Global Nonprofit Hosts Road Cleanup in Woodstock Volunteers from the international nonprofit Dr. Shri. Nanasaheb Dharmadhikari Pratishthan participated in an Adopt-a-Road cleanup in Woodstock on September 29, collecting eight bags of trash weighing about 120 pounds. This effort aligns with their motto "Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam" (the world is one family) and is part of their ongoing collaboration with the U.S. government to promote cleanliness. Since July 2022, the organization has conducted similar activities in nine Georgia cities, involving 239 volunteers who have collected 2,850 pounds of trash. For more information, visit their website. STORY 5: CCEMA: No Need to Take Action in Cherokee After BioLab Fire Cherokee County residents are advised that no action is needed following a chemical fire at the BioLab facility in Conyers, which led to evacuations due to a large smoke plume. The Georgia Emergency Management and Homeland Security Agency issued a local area emergency, with the EPA monitoring air quality for chlorine. Current data suggests no harm to most people, and no harmful compounds have been detected in Cherokee County. Residents are encouraged to report any concerns to the non-emergency number and can follow updates on the CCEMA Facebook page or sign up for CodeRed alerts. Commercial: Ingles Markets (Laura Lynn Products) 3 And now here is Leah McGrath from Ingles Markets on fast food. ***LEAH INTERVIEW***INGLES 3 FAST FOOD (INTERVIEW)*** We'll have closing comments after this. COMMERCIAL: Heller 1 (04.24.24 HELLER LAW 1_FINAL) SIGN OFF – Thanks again for hanging out with us on today's Cherokee Tribune Ledger Podcast. If you enjoy these shows, we encourage you to check out our other offerings, like the Cherokee Tribune Ledger Podcast, the Marietta Daily Journal, or the Community Podcast for Rockdale Newton and Morgan Counties. Read more about all our stories and get other great content at www.tribuneledgernews.com Did you know over 50% of Americans listen to podcasts weekly? Giving you important news about our community and telling great stories are what we do. Make sure you join us for our next episode and be sure to share this podcast on social media with your friends and family. Add us to your Alexa Flash Briefing or your Google Home Briefing and be sure to like, follow, and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. 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Brought to you by Diesel David and Main Street Warriors Amanda and Matt Harper are the owners of Flyin' Wrench Motorsports. Since 1994, Flyin' Wrench Motorsports, a family-owned business, has been a trusted European car specialist, recently bringing our exceptional foreign car repair and maintenance services to Woodstock. Our journey began with a vision to create a clean, […]
Brought to you by Diesel David and Main Street Warriors Amanda and Matt Harper are the owners of Flyin' Wrench Motorsports. Since 1994, Flyin' Wrench Motorsports, a family-owned business, has been a trusted European car specialist, recently bringing our exceptional foreign car repair and maintenance services to Woodstock. Our journey began with a vision to create a clean, […] The post Amanda & Matt Harper with Flyin’ Wrench Motorsports appeared first on Business RadioX ®.
Girls Gone Hallmark is getting into the Christmas spirit this July with a special lineup of fan-favorite movies recommended by the Girls Gone Hallmark Facebook group. This week, Megan and Wendy review "A Bride for Christmas," featuring Andrew Walker in a refreshingly against-type role, made even better by his hilariously terrible best friend played by Peter Benson. The well-rounded cast also includes Arielle Kebbel and Kimberly Sustad. Tune in to hear what Girls Gone Hallmark thought! What is your favorite Christmas movie? Email us at meganandwendy@gmail.com or let's talk about it in the Girls Gone Hallmark Facebook Group! We Need Your 5-STAR Ratings and Reviews Spotify Podcast listeners: Spotify allows listeners to rate podcast episodes. Once you listen to a podcast for at least 30 seconds, you get the option to rate it between one and five stars. Return to the podcast's main page and tap the star icon. Then, tap submit. News and Notes About "A Bride for Christmas" This movie originally premiered on December 12, 2012 as part of the 3rd annual Countdown to Christmas line up. "A Bride for Christmas" was directed by Gary Yates. Yates currently has 43 directing credits and since this movie has gone on to direct many Hallmark movies including “Christmas By Starlight,” “On the 12th Date of Christmas” and “Merry and Bright” amongst others. Barbara Kymlicka wrote the script for this movie. We just reviewed another movie written by Barbara Kymlicka called “A Very Merry Mix-Up” which came out a year after “A Bride for Christmas.” Kymlicka is a 2-time nominee and 1-time winner of the Canadian Screen Awards for best writing. Arielle Kibbel plays runaway bride Jessie. This appears to have been Arielle's first project for Hallmark Channel. She went on to co-star with Andrew Walker again in the 2015 movie “Bridal Wave.” We last saw her on Hallmark last year in “Love in the Great Smoky Mountains: A National Park Romance.” Andrew Walker plays Aidan. Walker just starred in the June 2024 movie “For Love & Honey.” He will also co-star in the highly anticipated “The Wisemen and a Baby” premiering later this year. Kimberley Sustad plays sister Vivian. This was Kimberley's first project for Hallmark. Peter Benson plays co-worker Matt Harper. Peter not only has a very extensive resume of movies he's acted it, he is also a busy producer and director. We'll see Benson appear in the forthcoming “The Cases of Mystery Lane: Death is Listening.” Karen Kruper plays Jessie and Vivian's mom Suzie. Karen recently co-starred with Kimberley Sustad in “To All a Good Night” as well as “Aurora Teagarden Mysteries: Something New” and “The Wedding Veil Expectations” - all in 2023. Sage Brocklebank plays ex Mike. Sage has appeared in a few Hallmark movies since “A Bride for Christmas,” including “Stop the Wedding” and “The Irresistible Blueberry Farm.” If you're playing along with the GGH Bingo, Sage has also starred in “Once Upon a Time” as Sir Gaston. Watch the Trailer for "A Bride for Christmas"
It's Friday! And that means that Christie Barlament is in the studio to give us the Weekend What's UP! She'll fill us in on what's going on in NEWisco. Tons of stuff going on so there's no reason to be bored this weekend. Ed the Diver is in, and our guest for the LIVE From The CityDeck Landing Studios Music Series is Matt Harper. A local artist who got into music when he was young by creating his own lyrics for popular rap songs. He blows the roof off the joint this morning performing his own music, including a song he wrote for Jim and John. Maino and the Mayor is a part of the Civic Media radio network and airs Monday through Friday from 6-8 am on WGBW in Green Bay and on WISS in Oshkosh. Subscribed to the podcast to be sure not to miss out on a single episode! To learn more about the show and all of the programming across the Civic Media network, head over to https://civicmedia.us/shows to see the entire broadcast line up. Follow the show on Facebook and X to keep up with Maino and the Mayor! Guests: Christie Barlament, Ed The Diver, Matt Harper
Join us on the latest episode, hosted by our guest host Matt Harper! Our Guest: Kristen Holmes, Global Head of Human Performance & Principal Scientist at Whoop.What you'll get out of this episode:Transition from Athletics to Tech: Kristen Holmes discusses her journey from being a celebrated Princeton field hockey coach to a tech innovator, emphasizing her lifelong interest in human performance.Performance Framework Creation: Holmes talks about developing a comprehensive framework for performance, combining her expertise in sports and education with technology to monitor athletes' recovery and readiness.Insights into Whoop's Mission: She details her role at Whoop and the company's focus on enhancing human performance through behavioral changes, supported by wearable technology.Importance of Personal Values: Kristen Holmes highlights the significance of aligning personal values with daily habits and routines, sharing her practices and how they contribute to her well-being.Healthcare and Wearable Technology: Holmes envisions a future where healthcare integrates wearable technology more effectively, using it to foster a deeper understanding of personal health and behaviors.Embracing Startup Culture and Risks: Reflecting on her career transition, Holmes discusses the importance of authenticity and staying true to personal values, especially when moving from a stable job to a dynamic startup environment.To learn more about Whoop:Website: https://www.whoop.com/us/en/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/whoop/Guest's Socials:LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kristen-holmes/Our sponsors for this episode are:Sage Growth Partners https://www.sage-growth.com/Quantum Health https://www.quantum-health.com/Show and Host's Socials:Slice of HealthcareLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/sliceofhealthcare/Jared S TaylorLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jaredstaylor/WHAT IS SLICE OF HEALTHCARE?The go-to site for digital health executive/provider interviews, technology updates, and industry news. Listed to in 65+ countries.
In this bonus episode Kev interviews Matt Harper, fellow Hart Road Runners club mate and finisher of the Centurion Winter Downs 200. If you are considering entering this or any other 200 miler, here is some more invaluable insight.https://www.centurionrunning.com/races/winter-downs-200-2024https://www.hartroadrunners.co.uk/Aid Station website where you can find the episodes or leave comment https://www.aidstation.co.uk/Please feel free to give the show some feedback on Apple Podcasts https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/aid-station/id1549735359
Providing long duration and the ability to run long term with no degradation and zero fire risks, vanadium flow batteries have characteristics that place them in a unique position in the storage lineup.In today's episode, guest host Tim Overton, CPO at Modo Energy, sits down to talk to Matt Harper, CCO at Invinity Energy Systems. Over the course of the conversation, they discuss: Vanadium flow batteries - how they work, and how they differ from other cell chemistries.The position of vanadium flow batteries in the market.How the development of technology is the driver in shaping markets.A look at some of the projects Invinity has recently worked on.The challenges that come with building increasingly larger assets. About our guestInvinity envisions a world powered by abundant clean electricity. Founded to build utility-grade energy storage that delivers renewable power on demand, Invinity Energy Systems was created through the 2020 merger of two leading flow battery providers: redT Energy and Avalon Battery. With a global presence, Invinity are able to partner with utilities, developers, engineering firms and businesses to address their energy storage needs. For more information on what they do, head to their website.About Modo EnergyModo Energy provides benchmarking, forecasts, data, and insights for new energy assets - all in one place.Built for analysts, Modo helps the owners, operators, builders, and financers of battery energy storage solutions understand the market - and make the most out of their assets. Modo's paid plans serve more than 80% of battery storage owners and operators in Great Britain.To keep up with all of our latest updates, research, analysis, videos, podcasts, data visualizations, live events, and more, follow us on Linkedin or Twitter. If you want to peek behind the curtain for a glimpse of our day-to-day life in the Modo office(s), check us out on Instagram.
In this episode of the Climate Confident podcast, I talked energy storage with Matt Harper, the Chief Commercial Officer at Invinity Energy Systems, who explained vanadium flow batteries—and their implications for renewable energy.We started with a 'Battery 101' comparing the familiar lithium-ion to vanadium flow batteries. Matt shared fascinating insights into the modular nature of these batteries, how they differ in their response to the degradation issues plaguing conventional batteries, and their non-flammability—a significant safety advantage.We discussed the role of vanadium flow batteries in supporting infrastructure rather than powering EVs, given their weight. But where they truly shine is in the realm of grid energy storage.Looking at the bigger picture, Matt highlighted the economic shifts towards longer-duration storage, driven by the ever-decreasing costs of solar and wind power. Our conversation touched upon the broader market dynamics and the critical role of energy storage in achieving a net-zero future.The episode closed with Matt's passionate perspective on the necessity of supportive industrial policies for renewable technologies, ensuring a robust and sustainable energy sector.Do not miss this enlightening conversation on 'Climate Confident,' where we continue to unravel the innovations steering us towards a cleaner, more resilient energy future. And don't forget to check out the video version on YouTube.Stay Climate Confident!The Gaming BlenderHave you ever wanted to design your own video game?Listen on: Apple Podcasts Spotify BuzzcastKeep up to date on the latest podcasting tech & news with the folks at Buzzsprout!Listen on: Apple Podcasts Support the showPodcast supportersI'd like to sincerely thank this podcast's amazing supporters: Lorcan Sheehan Hal Good Jerry Sweeney Christophe Kottelat Andreas Werner Richard Delevan Anton Chupilko Devaang Bhatt Stephen Carroll William Brent Marcel Roquette And remember you too can Support the Podcast - it is really easy and hugely important as it will enable me to continue to create more excellent Climate Confident episodes like this one.ContactIf you have any comments/suggestions or questions for the podcast - get in touch via direct message on Twitter/LinkedIn. If you liked this show, please don't forget to rate and/or review it. It makes a big difference to help new people discover the show. CreditsMusic credits - Intro by Joseph McDade, and Outro music for this podcast was composed, played, and produced by my daughter Luna JuniperThanks for listening, and remember, stay healthy, stay safe, stay sane!...
Ep 464 - Addressing Renewable Energy's Weak Link Guest: Matt Harper By Stuart McNish Will vanadium redox flow batteries address an issue that has been the Achilles' heel of renewable energy production – how to store the power generated by wind and solar power generation? The sector has challenges, such as the inability of renewable energy sources to produce consistent on-demand power needed to supply an ever-fluctuating need. Matt Harper of Vancouver-based Invinity Energy Systems, a leader in battery storage systems says, “Yes. And in doing so, we will be filling a significant need in jurisdictions where there is a huge increase in the amount of renewable power being generated – power that needs a home until it is required for use: places like California, Australia and Alberta.” We invited Matt Harper to join us for a Conversation That Matters about harnessing, storing, discharging and recharging renewable energy to meet the electricity needs of the future. Learn More about our guests career at careersthatmatter.ca Join me Oct 3 for Conversations Live - A Vancouver Sun Town Hall: AI - Friend or Foe https://www.conversationslive.ca/
This week Matt Harper enters The Wizards Den and El Curtis newses on and on till the break of dawn. ----more---- The CoCo Nation Show (TCN) - a weekly live and interactive discussion about the Color Computers, Dragons, MC-10, clones, and cousins! Website: https://thecoconation.com/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@The_CoCo_Nation Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/thecoconationshow FaceBook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/theco... Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheCoCoNation Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thecoconati... PodBean: https://thecoconation.podbean.com/ Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast... iHeart Radio: https://iheart.com/podcast/105011302/ MeWe: https://mewe.com/join/thecoconation Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0qx9Nx7... TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@the_coco_nation Email: mailto:show@TheCoCoNation.com Patreon: patreon.com/user?u=83010467 If you would like to chat on a live show of TCN using FaceBook, please follow this link and you will be good to go. The link is featured on TCN's group. https://tinyurl.com/FB-Chat Need even more chat? Join hundreds of other “CoConuts” (or is that CoConauts?) on the Color Computer Discord: https://discord.com/invite/4J5nHXm CoCo Nation logo by Ron Delvaux and Paul Shoemaker CoCo Nation theme music (c) 2022 D. Bruce Moore The CoCo Nation is a registered trademark of The CoCo Nation, LLC. All rights reserved.
How did an expatriate eccentric Englishman armed with a video camera become the Grandfather of Gay Porn? Peter De Rome, whose erotic films were made at a time when doing so was incredibly dangerous and would later gain recognition in the 70's by Jack Deveau and then again some 40 years later with a new generation. The story behind Peter De Rome's The Destroying Angel came to be when De Rome noticed that by the mid 70s many subjects were tackled by the gay erotic film except for horror. At that same time, DeRome had wanted to make a film that had been lingering in his mind about twins. What De Rome ended up making was a psychosexual, horror film that bends so many genres. Will Seagers appeared in some of the most iconic gay porn films of all time, working with other legendary talent and filmmakers. He was stunning, having come into his looks in his 20's and becoming the quintessential 1970's man, everyone lusted over.In this episode, we will celebrate Peter De Rome, a charming Englishman and cinematic outlaw who channeled his erotic side and experimented with putting his unique vision on celluloid and contributed some of the best gay erotic films in the industry's history. We'll also review Peter DeRome's Poe inspired, The Destroying Angel, a haunting, psychedelic gay erotic film that explores "twincest," religion, the ego and magic mushrooms of course. And last but not least, we will celebrate Will Seagers, also known as Matt Harper, who starred in a string of classic scenes during his cinematic run in the late 1970's and early 80's.
In this episode, we chat with Matt Harper, Head of Web3 Development at Snail Games. A video game company founded in 2000, Snail Games USA is primarily known for developing video games, such as the ARK collection, but has also made forays into blockchain technology. BCCN3 | Blockchain, Cryptocurrency, NFTs, and Web3. Jason on Twitter: @JaysCryptoLife Newsletter: bccn3.com/subscribe Twitter • Instagram • TikTok: @bccn3_media
Tier 1 Premodern boomer/brewer (brewmer?) Matt Harper comes on the show this week to chat about 2 of his tribal masterpieces.
Yoversion Podcast with John Jones >> House Music with Vision
Yoversion Podcast #115 – April 2023 with John Jones - Special Guestmix: Alena Arples (Z Records / Up On The Roof) TRACKLISTING Larse - A Part Of “Riva Starr Saturn Mix” // Defected Lovely Laura & Ben Santiago – Angel // Trick THE HOTSPOT Dennis Ferrer x Shouse x Troxler - T4GETU // Hell Beach Tom Bug & Grooveline - Love Will Shine // Soulfuric BACK IN THE BOX Mr V - Jus Dance “Quentin Harris Remix” // Vega Records Prunk & Rona Ray – Keep It Simple // Defected KPD – Everyday // Vicious Recordings 3-ON-THE-SPIN K & K – Longbeach // Under The Counter Catz 'n Dogz - Reincarnation Harry Romero - Mood Vision Dirty Channels - Make You Cry // Glitterbox Crackazat - Demucha “Dam Swindle Remix” // Heist Recordings Your SHOUT! (Matt Harper, Yateley) Kid Massive – Alright // Sugastarr Demuir - Jacob and The Covenant // Purveyor Underground THE CLASSIC TRACK Paul Johnson - Hear The Music // Peacefrog Records Special Guestmix: Alena Arples (Z Records / Up On The Roof) Roisin Murphy - Jacuzzi Rollercoaster Chic - I Want Your Love - Todd Terje Remix End-To-End - Nothing's Happening Peggy Gou - I Go (Maurice Fulton Remix) Giovanni Amico - Night Time (Inst) The Detroit Experiment - Think Twice Edmondson - Think Back Hidden Spheres - Tanzen Soichi Terada - Bamboo Fighter Kano - It's a War (Purple Disco Machine & Lorenz Rhode Remix) Payfone - Paradise Eddie Chacon - Holy Hell (Mndsgn Remix)
Stu had guest Matt Harper on the podcast. They just rambled. Please like the Facebook and Twitter pages. Please consider subscribing to the Patreon. Please rate/review/subscribe. Thanks.
Did you know February is Heart Month? Todd Svetlovics sits down with Matt Harper, Director of Development, from the American Heart Association to discuss the importance of heart health, what you can do to make a difference and how to take care of yourself to stay heart healthy.
What do China, North Korea, Russia, and Cuba have in common? Not only are they totalitarian states with all power concentrated in the hands of a few, but they are countries that have only state-controlled policing forces. This is not coincidence; tyrannical governments require a monopoly on force. In the U.S., where police and sheriff's departments are accountable to the local citizens they serve, the enemies of freedom have been trying for many decades to destroy the credibility of local police for the ultimate purpose of nationalizing them. In this episode, Paul discusses with Art Thompson and Matt Harper how the tragic death of Tyre Nichols after being beaten by police officers is being exploited by anti-police activists. Art Thompson is the former CEO of The John Birch Society, and Matt Harper is the Executive Director of the Law Enforcement Charitable Foundation. Read "Biden's Crime Wave" from The New American magazine @ https://thenewamerican.com/print/biden-crime-wave/ Learn more and get involved in supporting your local police @ https://jbs.org/sylp/ Connect with a local coordinator to get plugged in to JBS activism @ https://jbs.org/coordinator/ Order an American-made JBS coffee mug like the Paul's @ https://shopjbs.org/product/jbs-stoneware-mug/
On episode 50 of Inside ChampCar -- The Good, Band and the Ugly win at Sebring. The ChampCar staff takes on the legendary Florida road course... and we trade stories with Matt Harper. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/racingwire/support
Today, we bring in previous guest and friend of the show to talk about a movie and soundtrack that will really bring you back to the good ol' days! To find Matt and everything he is up to, head on over to his Etsy store, just search Barefoot Gnome, and find him on TikTok at MattHarperArt. -------------------- Music used throughout the show created by Jair Driesenga Follow him @brotherjair on Instagram, Facebook, Bandcamp, and Youtube. Logo was created by Grand Rapids comedian Carl Sobel. PODCAST SOCIAL MEDIA: Facebook: The Notes McGotes Podcast Instagram/TikTok: @NotesMcGotesPod Email: TheNotesMcGotesPodcast@gmail.com BRANDON SOCIAL MEDIA: TikTok/Twitter/Instagram: @brandonalberda and Brandon.alberda STEVE SOCIAL MEDIA: TikTok: @stevemadole Our podcast is sponsored by: anchor.fm Leave us a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thenotesmcgotespodcast/message --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thenotesmcgotespodcast/message
Stu and Matt Harper just rambled. Go check out Matt's store on Etsy- Barefoot Gnome. And follow him on Instagram and Tik Tok at MattHarperArt. Please like the Facebook and Twitter page. Please rate/review/subscribe. Please consider subscribing to the Patreon.
CEO and owner of Artonic, Matt Harper highlights what to look for to prevent getting scammed by SEO solicitors.
In this issue of Flanigan's Eco-Logic, Ted speaks with Matt Harper, a clean-tech entrepreneur and product developer, on commercializing battery technology and bringing it to scale. Matt is an MIT educated engineer with a lifelong passion for innovation, and Co-Founder and Chief Commercial Officer at Invinity Energy Systems.Ted and Matt discuss various battery chemistries and how they each have roles in energy storage: lithium for the short term, vanadium flow 8 - 12 hours, iron air for 100 - 150 hours, and green hydrogen for seasonal storage. Matt also shares great insights on coupling battery chemistries to "stack" revenue streams and benefits.
Stu has a conversation with Matt Harper. That's it. Enjoy. Please like the Facebook and Twitter. Please consider subscribing to the Patreon.
On this episode of Spoon Mob's Chefs & Guests podcast series, Ray chats with former executive chef of Gallerie Bar & Bistro, now CEO of Ray Ray's Hog Pit Bill Glover about growing up near Pittsburgh, how he got his start cooking, spending one semester in culinary school before walking out, his time working in private country clubs, opening his own restaurant Sage American Bistro, the biggest challenge with being a first time restaurant owner, working with sommelier Chris Dillman, why Sage closed, how the opportunity with the Hilton came about, what running the food program for a hotel is like, how hotel life is different than restaurant life, how he wound up getting invited to cook at the James Beard House, helping design other Hilton properties, how covid changed his career, undertaking new challenges outside the kitchen, future business endeavors, some of his best recent restaurant experience's, fish keeping, if he'll ever step back into the kitchen, answers the question left behind by chef Matt Harper of Comune, and more before taking on the “burning grill” questions! For more on Bill Glover and Ray Ray's Hot Pit, visit spoonmob.com/billglover and follow him on Instagram @chefbillglover & @rayrayshogpit. Visit rayrayshotpit.com for menu details & bulk ordering. For all things Spoon Mob, visit spoonmob.com and make sure to follow us on Instagram (@spoonmob), Twitter (@spoonmob1), and Facebook (@spoonmob1). Audio Editing by @TrackEditPrint. Intro music by @kabbalisticvillage.
On this episode of Spoon Mob's Chefs & Guests podcast series, Ray chats with Comune's new executive chef Matt Harper about growing up in Arkansas, how he got started cooking during high school at Sonic, spending time on his grandfather's rice farm as a teenager, changing his career path from journalism to culinary arts, moving to Atlanta for culinary school, starting on the line at Empire State South, moving to Philadelphia, how he got into the kitchen at Zahav, learning new spices and a style of the cuisine, launching his own supper club to find his culinary voice, getting his first executive chef job at Kensington Quarters, his time in Baltimore at the start of the pandemic, how he landed in Columbus Ohio, his time working at Front Axel Farm, how the opportunity with Comune happened, new ideas for the menu, how his experience in Columbus has been so far, future plans, answers the question left behind by chef Jorge Guzman of Sueno, and more before taking on the “burning grill” questions! For more on chef Matt Harper and Comune, visit spoonmob.com/mattharper and follow him on Instagram @matthewerikharper & @comune_restaurant. Visit comune-restaurant.com for menu details, reservations & online ordering. For all things Spoon Mob, visit spoonmob.com and make sure to follow us on Instagram (@spoonmob), Twitter (@spoonmob1), and Facebook (@spoonmob1). Audio Editing by @TrackEditPrint. Intro music by @kabbalisticvillage.
Matt Harper, chief commercial officer at Invinity Energy Systems, joins us to explain vanadium flow batteries. We discuss the future of energy storage, how vanadium flow batteries differ from lithium-ion, what has held back vanadium flow so far, what's next for Invinity and more.
Matt Harper is the CEO of the Marketing Practice, with their recent acquisitions, they are now one of the leading full-funnel B2B agencies in the world. He previously ran the agency's US operation prior to becoming group CEO. His goal is to develop a team that's the best in the world at B2B marketing, delivering a blend of local expertise and global scale that helps clients grow customers, pipeline and partner channels. The company has recently made two significant acquisitions, Omobono, the digital experience company for B2B brands, and Kingpin, the B2B comms specialists, to make them a collective powerhouse of B2B specialists.
Matt Harper is the CEO of The Marketing Practice, with their recent acquisitions, they are now one of the leading full-funnel B2B agencies in the world. He previously ran the agency's US operation prior to becoming group CEO. His goal is to develop a team that's the best in the world at B2B marketing, delivering a blend of local expertise and global scale that helps clients grow customers, pipeline and partner channels. The company has recently made two significant acquisitions, Omobono, the digital experience company for B2B brands, and Kingpin Communications, the B2B comms specialists, to make them a collective powerhouse of B2B specialists. We talk about:
Today, the guys brought in comedian and podcaster Mandy Elane from Another Episode Podcast to talk about the first movie soundtrack to Twilight. FOLLOW Another Episode Podcast on Facebook and Instagram. You can also listen and follow along every week on Matt Harper's Twitch stream when they record the episode. You can find that at twitch.tv/Mattopoly83. AS ALWAYS: Theme song and W.A.N.G theme created by Jair Driesenga. Follow him @brotherjair on Instagram, Facebook, Bandcamp, and Youtube. The logo for the pod was created by Grand Rapids area comedian Carl Sobel. Follow Brandon's comedy: TikTok/Twitter/Instagram: @brandonalberda Facebook: Brandon Alberda Comic Follow us on social media: Facebook: The Notes McGotes Podcast Instagram/Twitter: @NotesMcGotesPod Email: TheNotesMcGotesPodcast@gmail.com Our podcast is sponsored by: anchor.fm Leave us a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thenotesmcgotespodcast/message --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thenotesmcgotespodcast/message
In this episode, David Rowlands spoke with Matt Harper, CEO of The Marketing Practice (TMP), to discuss the agency's recent acquisitions of Omobono and Kingpin. David and Matt talk about why Kingpin and Omobono were such a great fit for TMP, why B2B agencies are set to receive further investment, the challenges of combining three agencies, and more.
Dave and Mojo welcome Hastings' Comedian Matt Harper to the podcast!Dave and Matt have known each other for years and Matt talks comedy and also let's us know what he's been doing since the pandemic began to keep comedy fresh!Find out what Karajoke is!!!What movie molded Mojo's childhood?Check this episode out and have some laughs! Thank YOU for supporting us and as always, Cheers All!
Carl catches up with Hastings comedian, Matt Harper! Matt has been doing comedy for quite some time now and has his own podcast titled "Another Episode" that he does with another comedian. The two discuss Norm Macdonald, live action role play, and much more!Instagram : carljohnsonisfunnyMatt HarperInstagram : @funnymattyMusicJesse PassageInstagram : @thebignapArtRachel HarperInstagram : @rachelrockstar
Our 2nd episode, we had a great time discussing Little Red Riding Hood with our guest Matt Harper, check it out, subscribe and listen!
Comedian and co-host of "Another Episode" Matt Harper joins the podcast to discuss William Friedkin's star-studded remake of 12 Angry Men. Listen to Another Episode: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/another-episode-podcast/id1404653415 Follow Matt on Twitch: Mattopoly83 Follow the podcast on Instagram and Twitter: @WeAreMoviesPod Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/WeAreMoviesPodcast Follow Johnny on Instagram, Twitter, and Letterboxd: @JohnnyMocny
We are talking big buck stories with Matt Harper who shares a few stories about his biggest bucks and how food plots played a part!
VSA Capital Tech & Transitional Energy Matt Harper of IES 150721 by VSA Capital
Guess who's back? Back again? Harper's back. Tell a friend! Today, Steve, Brandon, and Matt deep dive into Sesame Street for adults, also known as Avenue Q. We talk about the hills being alive, mixtapes, and a fellow comedians gastroenterologist. You can find Matt on Twitch, just go to twitch.tv/mattopoly83. You can also subscribe and listen to his podcast, Another Episode Podcast, wherever you listen to podcasts. AS ALWAYS: Theme song created by Jair Driesenga. Follow him @brotherjair on Instagram, Facebook, Bandcamp, and Youtube. The logo for the pod was created by Grand Rapids area comedian Carl Sobel. Follow Brandon's comedy: Twitter/Instagram: @brandonalberda Facebook: Brandon Alberda Comic Follow us on social media: Facebook: The Notes McGotes Podcast Instagram/Twitter: @NotesMcGotesPod Email: TheNotesMcGotesPodcast@gmail.com Our podcast is sponsored by: anchor.fm Leave us a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thenotesmcgotespodcast/message --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thenotesmcgotespodcast/message
Today's guest is a pioneering cleantech entrepreneur and product developer as chief Commercial Officer of the company Invinity Energy Systems. We're talking about Matt Harper! He's transforming the evolution of what we call the Grid storage and value creation to enable the energy transition that we all desire so much. Matt has been in this industry for a long time and he's looked at product creation from a number of different angles. Remember you can always find the resources and learn more about today's guest, recommendations, book links, and more than 370 other founder stories and startup advice at www.mysuncast.com. Gain access to all the show notes & resources from this episode here You can connect with me, Nico Johnson, on Twitter, LinkedIn or email
Today’s guest is a pioneering cleantech entrepreneur and product developer as chief Commercial Officer of the company Invinity Energy Systems. We’re talking about Matt Harper! He's transforming the evolution of what we call the Grid storage and value creation to enable the energy transition that we all desire so much. Matt has been in this industry for a long time and he's looked at product creation from a number of different angles. Remember you can always find the resources and learn more about today’s guest, recommendations, book links, and more than 370 other founder stories and startup advice at www.mysuncast.com. Gain access to all the show notes & resources from this episode here You can connect with me, Nico Johnson, on Twitter, LinkedIn or email
Stu and Matt Harper just rambled. That's it. Enjoy, have fun. Go listen to Matt's Another Episode Podcast every Wednesday. Please like the Facebook and Twitter page. Please consider subscribing to the Patreon.
BONUS EPISODE! Today the guys talk with a comedian, podcaster and Twitcher from the middle of the Grand Rapids, Kalamazoo, and Lansing scenes, Matt Harper. We talk about all things Al, and all things band and choir. You can follow Matt on Twitch, just go to Twitch.tv/Mattopoly83 You can also listen and subscribe to his podcast, which is Another Episode Podcast As always: Theme song created by Jair Driesenga. Follow him @brotherjair on Instagram, Facebook, Bandcamp, and Youtube. The logo for the pod was created by Grand Rapids area comedian Carl Sobel. Follow Brandon's comedy: Twitter/Instagram: @brandonalberda Facebook: Brandon Alberda Comic Follow us on social media: Facebook: The Notes McGotes Podcast Instagram/Twitter: @NotesMcGotesPod Email: TheNotesMcGotesPodcast@gmail.com Our podcast is sponsored by: anchor.fm Leave us a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thenotesmcgotespodcast/message --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thenotesmcgotespodcast/message
The Marketing Practice has secured investment from Horizon Capital to build on its strengths in ABM and demand generation and deepen its expertise in technology and data. In this week's episode, Editor for B2B Marketing David Rowlands spoke with Matt Harper, CEO at TMP about what this means for TMP as well as why B2B is attracting so much investment as of late. TMP was also ranked seventh in our Top 10 fastest growing agencies list, seventh in our Top 10 rising stars, and sixth in our Top 10 international agencies in our US Agencies Benchmarking Report. You can check it out here: https://www.b2bmarketing.net/en-gb/free-downloadable-guides/b2b-marketing-us-agencies-benchmarking-report-2021 If you'd like to learn more, you can follow Matt on Twitter @MattDHarper
With families getting back to some outdoor activities this week Ray and Laura caught up with Leahy's Open Farm yard manager Matt Harper, Ruairi makes an ass of himself and Ray's bottlebank show & tell.
Food Artist and Competition Carver, Matt Harper, joins the crew for a talk on how he views competition. From the collegiate swimming pool to battling the clock on the Food Network, Matt brings a unique perspective to never give up, never quit!This was a very casual and fun episode that reinforced a known element to success, you just don't quit.Other topics:Eagle rare is good whiskeyThe best people are Kansas City Chief fansCed can't really swimAll broadcasting degrees are fakeIntro Music Melo Rock 8 by Sascha EndeLink: https://filmmusic.io/song/366-melo-rock-8License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license
The podcast by project managers for project managers. As leaders we should bring clarity of purpose into our teams in times of crisis. Hear how to take action when things look overwhelming, stay grounded during crisis, and lead through tragedy. In times of crisis, it's not the title you have but what you do. Table of Contents 02:45 … Peter's Early Career04:13 … A Forensic Investigator06:17 … Entering a Project as a Subject Matter Expert08:40 … International Assignment: Bali10:45 … Performing in a Hostile Environment15:58 … International Assignment: Thailand18:32 … Leading Through Tragedy21:59 … Four Stages of the Crisis Clock27:13 … When a Project Changes Your Perspective31:20 … Finding Purpose: Hands Across the Water34:11 … Measuring Success38:48 … Shared Benefits of Corporate Social Responsibility42:56 … Food for the Soul44:19 … Find Out More45:04 … Closing PETER BAINES: The most important stage I would suggest is that third stage where our energy is so low. That's when we need the leaders. That's when we need to understand our real clarity of purpose, or why we do what we do, the importance. And for leaders it's when we should be bringing that into our teams. WENDY GROUNDS: Welcome to Manage This, the podcast for project managers by project managers. I am Wendy Grounds, and this is the part where I usually say, “In the studio with me is Bill Yates.” However, Bill is not with us in the studio today. But he is joining us from home. Welcome, Bill. BILL YATES: Thank you, Wendy. Appreciate it. WENDY GROUNDS: Today we're talking to Peter Baines. We came across Peter and discovered some of the work that he is doing, an incredible story. He was a forensic investigator, and he worked in Bali in 2002 after the terrorist bombings, as well as in the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami. He went to Thailand and worked there as a forensic investigator after those disasters. And he's going to talk more about that on the podcast. BILL YATES: Yeah, Wendy, this is going to be an interesting conversation with Peter. He has had unique experiences that kind of hit a theme that we've had some prior episodes on. We had conversation with Dr. Chuck Casto about the Fukushima nuclear disaster. We talked with Dave Gibson about the development of the MRAP team. More recently we spoke with Matt Harper about the USS Cole bombing. And we had a conversation with a fire chief, Mark Von Tillow, who's been chasing wildfires. So there's a common thread there of times of incredible crisis that Peter can speak to, and through that he's got a lot of wisdom to share with us. He can help give us perspective on our projects of what actions to take when things look overwhelming, how to stay grounded during crisis, and just how to lead through it. WENDY GROUNDS: Yeah, just a little more about Peter which we don't cover in the podcast is he worked for Interpol in France, leading counterterrorism projects. He also spent time advising the United Nations Office in Drug and Crime in Southeast Asia on leadership and counterterrorism. And he will go on to tell us about a charity that he started called Hands Across the Water. And we're very excited to hear about the work that he's been doing there. Also he was awarded the Order of Australia Medal for his international humanitarian work in 2014, and in 2016 he received the Most Admirable Order of Direkgunabhorn awarded by the king of Thailand for his services to the kingdom of Thailand. We really are so honored to have Peter with us today. Welcome, Peter. Thank you so much for joining us on Manage This. PETER BAINES: It's so nice to join you. Thank you for the invitation. Peter's Early Career WENDY GROUNDS: I want to go back and find out about your career, how you became a forensic investigator. What led you into that field? PETER BAINES: So I joined the New South Wales Police, and I was a serving police officer here for several years.
Idea: A redesign of Netflix which is actually good. It'll be good because a) the shows are better (obviously), and because b) it'll offer a much more immersive experience. It'll support immersion into a particular movie or TV show by including commentaries, Arsenio Hall talk show promotional segments, bloopers, and other bonus content related to the movie or TV show. It'll also support immersion into the time period of the movie or TV show by showing TV commercials from the time period (and allowing you to buy the old-timey products in the commercials), by enabling censorship rules from the time period, by simulating audio/video quality problems of the time period (such as tracking issues), and by simulating other inconveniences from the time period (such as stopping the video stream at 1:00 AM to simulate the local TV broadcast tower shutting down for the night) Matt Harper (twitter.com/MattHarperJokes anotherepisodepodcast.podbean.com twitch.tv/mattopoly83) Brett Mercer (twitter.com/brettmercer_ bigtimegarbage.libsyn.com linktr.ee/Brettmercer) Johnny Mocny (twitter.com/JohnnyMocny linktr.ee/wearemoviespod) Tom Walma (twitter.com/thomaswalma)
Idea: A DJ-in-a-box for a Covid-era wedding (or other social event). It'd be extremely cheap because the socially-distanced event would only have around 10 people in attendance and therefore wouldn't justify the cost of a normal DJ. It'd consist of an oscillating fan with some laser pointers taped to it, a pack of three "smart light bulbs" to put around the venue, and a Spotify playlist which you say is customized but is actually the same playlist for every wedding. Also: a self-hating DJ; optional add-ons like a holographic DJ, a celebrity Cameo for a wedding toast, and an entire wedding-in-a-box; a sad single person ordering a DJ-in-a-box to use alone in his apartment Matt Harper (twitter.com/MattHarperJokes anotherepisodepodcast.podbean.com twitch.tv/mattopoly83) Brett Mercer (twitter.com/brettmercer_ bigtimegarbage.libsyn.com linktr.ee/Brettmercer) Johnny Mocny (twitter.com/JohnnyMocny linktr.ee/wearemoviespod) Tom Walma (twitter.com/thomaswalma)
The Department of Justice Antitrust Division enjoys many tools to hone its criminal investigations, including many designed to incentivize cooperation from potential defendants. But how do Deferred Prosecution Agreements differ from the leniency program, and when might the Antitrust Division choose to negotiate one? Jon Jacobs, a seasoned antitrust trial lawyer and DOJ alumnus, joins Christina Ma and Matt Harper to examine how Deferred Prosecution Agreements factor into the Antitrust Division’s criminal investigation and when Deferred Prosecution Agreements might be expected in the future. Listen to this episode to learn more about Deferred Prosecution Agreements and how the Antitrust Division uses them. Related Links: DOJ Antitrust Division - Evaluation of Corporate Compliance Programs in Criminal Antitrust Investigations Hosted by: Christina Ma and Matt Harper
This week we are back at it with multiple zoom guests! Lockdown extension continues, and Let's Have A Beer will be here for you. This week I talk with a bunch of past guests and comedians, it's a virtual Christmas open house full of debochery and dumbfuckery. We were joined by David Steves, Carl Sobel, Adam Degi, Darius Stowers, Gerrit Elizinga, Osa Basal, Matt Harper, Jon Batch and Jared Hibbs. We laugh, we make fun of each other, we talk about our Christmas presents, and Darius tries to teach us how to use his new food ninja. Let's Have a Beer Podcast is available on all extraordinary podcast apps including Anchor, Apple Podcast, Spotify, Pocketcast, Google Podcasts. Go out and listen, rate, subscribe, and if you're feeling generous, give us a review, it may even get read on a future episode. Follow the podcast on Twitter https://twitter.com/LhaBpodcast Follow me on Social Media: Twitter: https://twitter.com/mattcookrph Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mcookrph Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mattcookcomedy/ Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCipDhpKprmTtSq0VHO_MpDA For dates and all things comedy related check out the website: mattcookcomedy.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
The European Marine Energy Centre (EMEC), Orkney, Scotland will deploy an Invinity Energy System (AIM: IES) 1.8 MWh flow battery at EMEC’s tidal energy test site on the island of Eday. This unique combination of tidal power and flow batteries will be used to power EMEC’s hydrogen production plant, demonstrating continuous hydrogen production from variable renewable generation. EMECs production of hydrogen The commercialisation of green hydrogen is an essential step toward a 100% renewable future. Green hydrogen is created and consumed without carbon emissions and can replace fossil fuels in the energy mix, supporting the decarbonisation of heavy industry and transport sectors. The Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult estimate that developing a green hydrogen industry could create 120,000 jobs and deliver £320 bn to the UK economy by 2050. Funded by the Scottish Government, via Highlands and Islands Enterprise (HIE), Invinity’s modular flow battery system will be assembled at the company’s manufacturing facility in Bathgate, West Lothian, and consist of eight Invinity VS3 battery modules linked together into a single system. The project is expected to go live next year. Scotland’s Energy Minister, Paul Wheelhouse, said: “We are delighted to support this world-first innovative energy systems project in Orkney, with £1.8 million of funding from the Scottish Government. The demonstration of hydrogen and systems integration with renewables will be a key part of our energy transition pathways and we look forward to watching the progress of this exciting and pioneering project, building on the strong track record of Orkney and EMEC, in particular, in demonstrating hydrogen and integrated energy systems.” Invinity’s vanadium flow batteries (VFBs) are a form of heavy-duty, stationary energy storage that are deployed in high-utilisation, industrial applications. They provide hours of continuous power, one or more times per day, through decades of service. This makes them the perfect candidate for regulating the generation of tidal energy, an application where more conventional lithium-ion batteries would degrade and eventually wear out. Tidal generation is predictable yet variable, with two high and two low tides occurring each day. This is an extremely heavy cycling application, requiring up to four cycles per day, compared to solar coupled energy storage projects which typically require just one charge and discharge each day. At EMEC’s site, the system will store electricity generated by tidal turbines during high power periods, and discharge it during low power periods. This will ‘smooth’ tidal generation to create continuous, on-demand electricity to turn into hydrogen using EMEC’s 670 kW hydrogen electrolyser. This will optimise hydrogen production at the site to enable tonnes of green hydrogen generation each year. Neil Kermode, Managing Director at EMEC, said: “EMEC’s core purpose is to demonstrate technologies in new and inspired ways to decarbonise our energy system. This is the first time that a flow battery will have been coupled with tidal energy and hydrogen production, and will support the development of the innovative energy storage solution being developed in the Interreg NWE ITEG project. “Following a technical review looking at how to improve the efficiencies of the electrolyser we assessed that flow batteries would be the best fit for the energy system. As flow batteries store electrical charge in a liquid rather than a solid, they can provide industrial quantities of power for a sustained period, can deeply discharge without damaging itself, as well as stand fully charged for extended periods without losing charge. These are all necessary qualities to integrate battery technology with the renewable power generation and hydrogen production process.” Matt Harper, Chief Commercial Officer at Invinity, said: “We are thrilled to be part of this Scottish success story, showcasing the ...
No job … no interviews … little hope. But what Qantas pilots Matt Harper and Dave Rubin did next is a lesson for us all.
Sadly, Chris could not join the podcast today as he and his family mourn the loss of their dog, Rufus. RIP Rufus! Rob Crain is joined instead by his friend and colleague Matt Harper, who is the VP of Ticket Sales for the Worcester Red Sox. Matt and Rob talk about their actual hiring process at the Red Sox. They systematically take you behind the scenes of the what it takes to get hired by the Worcester Red Sox. Matt went to Grad School at FSU and we have received a lot of questions about if grad school is the right decision. Matt gives his advice on if you should take the grad school leap. At the end, Rob tries to make fun of Chris with Matt about Taco Bell but that backfires completely... Follow Us!Twitter - @FOFeaturesInstagram - @frontofficefeaturesLinkedIn - Front Office Features
Zack, Mike, and Dominic are joined this week by Matt Harper. Matt is Vice President of Marketing for Nylas, where he leads global marketing efforts for the API-first developer platform that serves customers like Dialpad, Ceridian, Hubspot and Move.com. Nylas most recently closed a Series B round for $25M this past June. Matt joined Nylas from Moogsoft, where he helped lead the company from Series B through Series D rounds, raising nearly $100M and scaling the company’s revenues by over 6x. Previously, Matt led marketing departments at Glassdoor and Sony PlayStation, where he led digital marketing efforts for the PlayStation 4. Nylas is a developer API platform that helps you quickly launch new productivity features without having to write custom code. Through a single integration, developers can leverage rich communications data to trigger automated workflow, like scheduling meetings or syncing data to a CRM. Learn more about Nylas at nylas.com or on Twitter @nylas. Some of the topics we discussed: Secular trends in the market - engineering as a blue-collar profession API adoption rates and insights into Twilio’s enterprise market penetration Combinatorial innovation, composable software What matters most to developers? Insights from market research. From monolithic suites to individual components — rise of REST APIs Why “best of breed” used to be a dirty word — and isn’t any longer Integration with “proper” development practices — versioning, backups, security, ongoing maintenance, etc What does DevOps look like when Dev is not developers and Ops is automated away? That blog post of Dominic's that he shamelessly promoted on air: Serving Two Causes Follow the show on Twitter @Roll4Enterprise or on our LinkedIn page. Please send us suggestions for topics and/or guests for future episodes!
In September 2020's edition of Recharge by Battery Materials Review, the Focus article is on the subject of incentive prices in lithium and nickel and we discuss the level that prices need to reach before it will be economic for producers to invest in new capacity. We also include our usual recap of all the key news flow in global batteries and raw materials markets, as well as analysis of key developments. Our interview this month is with Matt Harper of AIM-listed Invinity Energy Systems (AIM:IES), a vanadium redox flow battery (VRFB) producer. We discuss some of the key challenges and opportunities in the VRFB market and talk in detail about the outlook for Invinity.
In this week's bonus episode: the guys welcome comedian, podcaster, and showrunner Matt Harper; David has problems with colonoscopies; Jon has problems with dreaming; Matt has a problem with butterflies. You can listen to Matt's podcast Another Episode Podcast anywhere you stream podcasts. You can find him on IG as @funnymatty and on Twitter as @MattHarperJokes.
Matt Harper joins Aaron Sorrels and Brian Atkinson on the Clean Comedy Time Podcast. We celebrate Matt's own long-running podcast, the comedy rooms he runs, and talk about the funny side of clothes-shopping and hitting rock-bottom. Matt Harper Jokes
Today I zoom with comedian and podcaster Matt Harper. We chat about video games, dogs, Father's Day, comedy post Covid and celebrating 100 episodes of his podcast “Another Episode Podcast”. Matt is an amazing comedian, and his podcast with Mandy Elaine is out every Wednesday wherever great podcasts are found. Follow them at https://www.facebook.com/AnotherEpisodePodcast/ to fall back in love with your favorite movies and cult classics. Matt is also the show runner and host at Wally's Brewpub Comedy Club in Hastings, Michigan, check out https://www.facebook.com/WallysComedyCrossroads/ for upcoming lineups once comedy gets rolling again. “Let's Have a Beer” Podcast is available on all extraordinary podcast apps including Anchor, Apple Podcast, Spotify, Pocketcast, Google Podcasts. Go out and listen, rate, subscribe, and if you're feeling generous, give us a review, it may even get read on a future episode. Follow me on Social Media: Twitter: https://twitter.com/mattcookrph Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mcookrph Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mattcookcomedy/ Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCipDhpKprmTtSq0VHO_MpDA For dates and all things comedy related check out the website: mattcookcomedy.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
VSA Capital Podcast Episode 37 Larry Zulch & Matt Harper Invinity Energy Systems by VSA Capital
In this episode, we chat with one half of the elite music duo known as Two Friends - most popularly known for their Big Bootie Mix's.Eli Sones joins us to discuss how Two Friends got their start, life on tour, life in quarantine, fan interaction, partying, and what's next for them! Overall great dude - the type you'd want to slam a beer (or seven) with.Don't forget to subscribe, give us 5 stars, leave a review, and share!*We do not own the rights to any of the music used in this episode*
The podcast by project managers for project managers. The unpredictable nature of a crisis means that leaders have little time to prepare. Our guest Matt Harper, a retired 20 year Naval Officer, talks about crisis leadership lessons he learned onboard the USS Cole during a terrorist attack. Table of Contents 00:37 … Meet Matt 01:38 … Matt's Role on the USS Cole 03:55 … Background to the USS Cole Deployment 06:32 … Geographical Location of Yemen 07:58 … October 12th, 2000 10:02 … Reacting in Times of Crisis 12:24 … Events Following the Attack 14:36 … Responding Well or Responding Poorly in a Crisis 16:34 … Management vs. Leadership 20:15 … Crisis Leadership Lesson One: Understand Yourself 21:05 … Crisis Leadership Lesson Two: Be Comfortable with Uncertainty 22:40 … Crisis Leadership Lesson Three: Collaborate 24:01 … Crisis Leadership Lesson Four: Be Ready to do Anything 26:35 … Crisis Leadership Lesson Five: Lessons Learned 27:35 … Keeping Motivated in a Crisis 29:42 … Get up on the Balcony, Take a Different Perspective 33:11 … Go Beyond Your Comfort Zone 34:41 … Resolving the Problem 37:20 … Get in Touch with Matt 38:52 … Closing MATT HARPER: ...this is the hallmark of the good leader, of the good project manager that says, got it, that's the way it's supposed to be done, but we're in a crisis deadline or whatever the case may be. And this is how we need to do it now. WENDY GROUNDS: Welcome to Manage This, the podcast by project managers for project managers. I am Wendy Grounds, and with me is Bill Yates. BILL YATES: Hi. Hi, Wendy. WENDY GROUNDS: Hi, Bill. Today we're talking about what will we do in a time of crisis. We have Matt Harper with us. He is on Skype from Denver, Colorado. Meet Matt BILL YATES: Yeah, Matt has had a twenty year career with the US Navy and we'll get more into that. Specifically though, he had a unique experience and I'm looking forward to discussing with him and sharing with our audience. WENDY GROUNDS: Matt is going to tell us about his experience on the USS Cole after a terrorist attack in Aden, Yemen, which happened in October 2000. He was decorated for his leadership after this attack and he's applied that to coaching lessons in crisis leadership, and so I think he's got a lot of good stuff he's going to bring to us today. BILL YATES: Yeah, Matt, we so appreciate your time. Welcome to Manage This. MATT HARPER: Well, thanks. Thanks for having me. Looking forward to it. BILL YATES: Any time we can bring somebody into a conversation that has the knowledge, the training, and the experience that you do, we know our project manager listeners are going to appreciate it and learn from it. Wendy and I were talking, we feel like the best way to tackle this topic is just start from the beginning. Give us a sense for what happened with the USS Cole and what your role was, or what part you played in that. Matt's Role on the USS Cole MATT HARPER: Sure. Well, thanks, thanks again for having me. I would like to kind of start out, having a 20-year military background, I'm sure a lot of the people listening to the podcast will have military backgrounds. BILL YATES: Right. MATT HARPER: But for most people who do not, I would like to say that anybody who spends time in the military, what we do on a daily basis is really project management. BILL YATES: That's true. MATT HARPER: It's something that we I think don't do a very good job, we people in the military or prior military personnel, we don't do a very good job really making it clear that that's really what we do, probably 90 percent of our day, is really different types of projects that all interrelate to each other. They're all underfunded; they're all under-resourced. BILL YATES: Yes. MATT HARPER: And that's what we do on a daily basis. So about my experience, I originally grew up in San Francisco. I always knew I kind of wanted to be in the Navy,
The podcast by project managers for project managers. The unpredictable nature of a crisis means that leaders have little time to prepare. Our guest Matt Harper, a retired 20 year Naval Officer, talks about crisis leadership lessons he learned onboard the USS Cole during a terrorist attack. Table of Contents 00:37 … Meet Matt 01:38 […] The post Episode 104 – Crisis Leadership – Lessons Onboard the USS Cole appeared first on PMP Certification Exam Prep & Training - Velociteach.
In this episode, Christian Haynes '20 interviews Che Anderson '11 about his work supporting public art, and how his Holy Cross experience inspired him to make his mark on the City of Worcester. Recorded November 20, 2019 --- Transcript Ché: If at 23, 24, 25 you find something that's really keeping you up at night, and that's making you wake up early in the morning, go pursue that. There's no right or wrong way to do life, we're all just figuring it out. Maura: Welcome to Mission-Driven, where we speak with alumni who are leveraging their Holy Cross education to make a meaningful difference in the world around them. I'm your host, Maura Sweeney, from the class of 2007, director of Alumni Career Development at Holy Cross. I'm delighted to welcome you to today's show. Maura: In this episode we hear from Ché Anderson from the class of 2011. A New York native, Ché now claims Worcester as home. After making his mark on campus as a co-founder of the Brother to Brother Committee, Ché continues to make a positive impact on the Worcester community as an alumnus. Currently working as deputy cultural development officer for the City of Worcester, Ché was one of the organizers of the POW! WOW! Worcester Mural Festival. First debuting in 2016, POW! WOW! Worcester is an annual week-long festival that has already curated over 130 pieces of public art. For this great work, Ché was named to Worcester Business Journal's 40 Under 40 list in 2018. Maura: Christian Haynes, from the class of 2020, speaks with Ché about how this work came to be. Starting with his childhood in New York City, they speak about the many people and moments that have shaped Ché as a professional and as a leader. Filled with inspiring takeaways, their conversation showcases the power of putting the Holy Cross mission into action in the community. Christian: I'm here with my man, Ché Anderson. Ché: Hello there. Christian: So let's go ahead, it's your boy Christian, you already know what it is. So I'm talking about... I got to bring myself into this. Ché: I hear you, I hear you. Christian: First question, is it Ché or Shae? I know you have people that have known you for about 10, 20 years that still call you Shae. Ché: Yes, they do, my name is Ché Anderson, hard Ch with the accent over the E. I was named after Ernesto Ché Guevara, and oddly I got that name because my grandmother, rest her soul, was a Black Panther and she was a Black Panther from Harlem. And she raised my father strictly in that environment, and so having his first born son, he wanted to give me a name that, from the way I hear it, was powerful but that said, I would cause a little bit of trouble. And initially he wanted to name me Huey after Huey Newton. Ché: And my mother was just like, "No, I don't want that name". So they landed on Ché, because it was unique, and because they both thought that he was a really interesting and powerful figure. And so you could imagine growing up, now 30 years and people going, "Well either you have a lot to live up to", or, "Do you know what he was about or what he did?". And it's like, "yes", I've read every biography and autobiography I can of that person. Christian: That's wow. Did you feel that type of environment, that Black Panther type in your environment growing up, in your household growing up? Ché: I think that... It's funny, my mom was a correction officer, and worked on Rikers Island in New York. Which, for those that don't know, it's an interesting facility, to say the least. Ché: And I think that my mother always, drove home how important it was to be aware of myself and all my situations. Not only what it meant to walk a street, but what it means to walk the street as a black male, and how that can be perceived by different people. And so some of that was in the ideologies and philosophies of those in the Black Panther party, some of those are just growing up as a black person in New York City, and some of that is from my grandmother coming from South Carolina. So I think that, when you have family, all that legacy comes with you in the way that you're raised or brought up, or the different lessons you're taught. Christian: That's a lot. Ché: It is, it's heavy. Christian: It is heavy. I think that's the right word to use. Do you ever ask your mother why correctional officer was like... Ché: Yeah, apparently my mom was trying to figure it out, I think like most people are in life, in their early twenties and I think she knew that there were some really interesting opportunities and good pertinent opportunities in civil service. And for her, she had actually a friend who was taking the exam to be an officer, and so she said, "You know what, good pension, good paying job if I have a family", and she was recently married, "This could be a great fallback for the family". And then lo and behold, nine months into her tenure, that's when she found out she was pregnant with me. And she did it for 22 years, and went again from Rikers, which is one of the most notorious prisons in our country to working at Manhattan Courts, which is a little more relaxed. Ché: But my mom is the toughest person I know. She's a soldier, she's a warrior, but also somehow like the most loving person ever know. Christian: How close were you and your grandmother, from your mother’s side? Ché: Very, My dad actually wasn't really around much growing up. So my mom's side is who I really knew well. And so my grandmother was the one that kind of took care of me while mom was at work, and so she got to hear a lot of my first words, and first things like that. And my grandmother, it's odd, for work, she would actually clean houses, and so I spent a lot of my Saturday and Sunday mornings going with her to affluent people's houses and sitting on couches watching cartoons. Ché: And so it was an interesting dichotomy, growing up in the Amsterdam Projects where I grew up, which public housing, and then going to these affluent Central Park West houses and seeing what it's like to have a doorman, what it's like to have people who are throwing words like sommelier around, and not having any idea what that meant. And having fancy dogs, and having big flat screen TVs before we had that, when we still had the TV with the knob on it. Which was... but again, all that frames kind of who you are as you go up, right? So because of that I think I always felt comfortable everywhere. Because I was able to experience that at an early age, and around all kinds of people. Because I was able to see all sorts of people from, again, the penurious that were struggling, trying to figure it out, to the princely, that were running around throwing thousands of dollars at their kids, or their nieces and nephews. Christian: That's pretty tough, I thought we had a similar background. My mom was cleaning... she was a home attendant, taking care of the elderly. Coming from the Projects, even going to these houses in Bushwick at the time. They weren't the best houses, but they were still houses. And I guess you could say it's similar, from coming from the Projects not really having nothing, to seeing these fish tanks, these bigger TVs, these rooms that, more than one bedroom, more than two bedrooms. These people have a lot more than me, it's not a lot, but it's a lot more than me. And just spending time with my mother like that, I guess that made me more comfortable being in different spaces, like you say. Christian: But I remember the first time I learned about you, hear about you, learn about you, because in class I was into stats, psych stats, and I was on the website, Holy Cross website in a see 40 under 40. So what stood out to me was that title, and it was a black man. So I got to figure out what this is, and I realized he was a Holy Cross alum. I was like, the first person I had- Marcellis. I know you know this man. Ché: Big shout to Marcellis Perkins too. Christian: Of course, he got some questions for you too. I was like, "Who is this man?", He was like, "Yeah, Ché Anderson, yada yada, alumni 2011". And we actually going to meet up pretty soon, I'll come through if you want, and then that was the first time I met up with you at Crossroads. I'm like, "Yeah, he seemed like a cool dude, talk fast". Ché: I do talk fast, sorry about that. Christian: No, you're good, yeah yeah yeah yeah... no but you talk real fast. I was like, "Yeah, he seem like a cool dude", I remember the first time you mentioned... That was the first time you mentioned to me that you had connects with the Pawtucket Red Sox, and then there was a big thing at the time that they were coming from... Ché: From Pawtucket to Worcester. Christian: Yeah to Worcester, I think they made it here right? Ché: Yeah, they are opening day is April, 2021. Christian: Yeah so, baseball was a big thing for me, still is. So I was like, "Yeah, I got to say connect to this man right here". Christian: But I know you got a lot of work with art and street art, so just going back to your childhood or teenage years, whatever, do you remember your first time experiencing that or seeing it and admiring it. Whether it was street art, art, any type of art form? Ché: Yeah, so my mom, when she did have days off, we had to go somewhere, every time. I think that part of her raising me was that she wanted me to experience everything that she couldn't. And that literally meant everything. Some Saturdays we would just go for a walk and we'd walk Central Park and walk down Fifth Avenue and just window shop, but it was cool to just see all the different things people were getting, and FAO Schwarz, which was down on 59th and then Fifth Avenue, the toy store from Big with the big piano and we'd go in there, and I'd inevitably convinced her to get me like a Ninja Turtle or something. But I had to see it, it was this big experience and we'd go to the American Museum of Natural History, or we go to the Guggenheim. And often I was way too young to really comprehend it, but my mom tried to make sure I saw everything. And I think that that... Those are some of my earliest memories experiencing art. And I remember walking through parts of Harlem, or parts of Brooklyn, or lower Manhattan, and you see graffiti and places but you're kind of fed this narrative that that's bad, that's desolate areas, you don't want that. And oddly, it probably wasn't until seven or so years ago that I had this experience, and it's actually what led me on this path that I thought was really interesting. I was in Worcester, Post grad, living in a city I was sort of familiar with, but I didn't get off the Hill as much as I probably should have while I was a student. And the artist Banksy, from London, one of the most prominent public artists living today in modern history was doing a residency in New York City. And my friends were running around taking pictures and posting them on Instagram, and I needed a new cool profile pic so I ran down to New York and I was blown away by how many people were traveling to New York City to catch a glimpse of this artwork. I came from Massachusetts, people were coming from Connecticut, and from Jersey, and growing up in New York, and you get this, quite often you stayed in your borough. If you didn't have to travel to see family or a close friend that lives somewhere else. If you were from Manhattan, you stayed in Manhattan. If you were from Harlem, which is part of Manhattan, but you stayed in Harlem and that was it. And so people were coming from Staten Island taking the ferry to look at this artwork and I said, "This is awesome, where else is this happening?" And eventually I started researching, and I learned about Wynwood, and more about what's happening in Bushwick, Brooklyn, and Philadelphia has this mural arts program that's been changing the city since the 1970's and I was like, "Hey, Worcester could do this, we have the wall space for sure, but we have a creative community, we've always kind of been an alternative community, let's see where it goes". And that was kind of it from there, it took off. But it's one of those things where it's... I tell people, "You grew up in New York City and you don't really appreciate growing up in New York City until you leave New York City". You know what I mean? You don't realize how many things you have at your fingertips, and how alive the city is, and how active it is, until you're at a city that closes down at midnight and you're just like, "What's going on?" Christian: I'd say 10 o'clock. Ché: Or until you're at a place and you're like, "Aw man, I can't sleep and I'm starving", but there's no bodega. Or you're like, "Aw man, I really want a Uber or taxi", and it's like, "No, there are none in the area right now, it's too late". And so it's not lost on me that what really made me appreciate being a New Yorker was not living in New York, and having to sort of figure out where to find the pockets that made me feel like I was home. Christian: I would've thought that you done a lot of research about graffiti, especially in the 80's in New York. Ché: Oh yeah, of course, at this point I have, but growing up, no. And I tell people this all the time, I think that people see 40 under 40, I got this award for this public art project that I'm always taking pictures with murals and I'm doing talks, and stuff about murals... That's all in the last 10 years. I didn't study that, I'm not classically trained in any of that. There are people that'll bring up famous artists to me, from different movements, and I'm just like, "Nope, no idea what you're talking about". But it goes to a point of, people have their belief of a right way to do something, and that you have to be the biggest scholar and that. You don't, like you can just be passionate about something, you could really like something and find your niche in that world. And that's what it is for me. I appreciate the culture, I respect it, I've learned my history on it. So I'm not just someone that's a culture vulture that came in and was like, "I'm going to do this thing". No, I've sat with graffiti writers, I've had to hold some graffiti writers names close to the vest because no one needs to know that. But the fact of the matter is that as a person who appreciates neo-contemporary art, which is just the really fancy way of saying street art or graffiti, I was able to come humbly to a table and have a seat at it now, and have just open conversation. And so this is a person who... I want it to be a lawyer, I was a poli- sci major, I interned with the Manhattan DA for seven years, that was it for me. And so to go from that, to this sort of hobby that's become a big part of my now job and everything else, I think is a testament to the fact that if at 23, 24, 25 you find something that's really keeping you up at night, and that's making you wake up early in the morning, go pursue that. There's no right or wrong way to do life, we're all just figuring it out. Christian: Yeah. You mentioned neo... What is it? Ché: Oh, neo-contemporary art. It's a recently used, made up term, to allow people to contextualize what street art is. Street art has this sort of trivial, kind of fun sound to it, but if I talk to you about Renaissance art, you're like, "Oh wow, that's Renaissance art". Or if I mention modern art you're, "Oh my God, that's modern". So people started calling street art neo-contemporary, new-age contemporary art, because you're now having people that have taken artwork and put it outside to make it public, and now they're taking that same aesthetic and bring it back inside some museums, and galleries, and spaces like that. So it's just a newly coined term to make it sound more official. Christian: Sounds like... So I'm going to dance class right now, and it sounds like, what they deal with B-boy and B-girl, and turn it into break dance, it's a commercialize it. Do you think it's the same? Ché: It's similar, I think that there are... the sad reality of it is that there are certain cultural norms that different people experience, and to make the masses feel comfortable with it, it becomes a different thing. It's like when you talk about hip hop versus rap, there's none of this. But for some people, it's like, "Well, hip hop is a bit more nuanced, and safe, and rap is grungy and dirty and raw", and I tell people when it comes to street art and graffiti and such, I don't see a difference. I think that they are synonyms, it's semantics. Both are generally painted with spray paint, outdoor. The difference is that one tends to be formalized and legal, and one's illegal. But if I paint a beautiful portrait of Dr. King on a wall, but I do it illegally, but it's gorgeous. It's perfect rendering, is that graffiti or is that street art? If I pay you $2,000 to paint your name on my wall, is that graffiti or street... We get too deep into the weeds of it. Sometimes you got to just appreciate it. Again, I've seen some of the most beautiful art I've seen, bar none, gallery, museums included, online included. I've seen some gorgeous things people do with letters. And you think about typography in general, and how lettering, and hand lettering, and hand scripting, and hand styling has grown right from the clothes you wear, and the person who chose that font, to the way you type. There's a certain nuance to that. And I've seen some of the best done publicly, by just graffiti writers. But that's just me. Christian: I think you did mention this, but do you make art yourself? Any type of art? Singing doesn't count cause you say you can't sing. Ché: Ow man, I can sing, just not well is what I'm saying. I don't do visual art. But here's a fun fact that most people don't know about me. I write poetry. I have since I was younger. I don't perform it, I don't really share it, but I do. I've always done that, it's been what I turned to when I'm really stressed out or something, I write down a poem about something. And it's one of the main reasons why when I was on campus, and we had this organization called the Brother to Brother committee, we did this poem Black Man Rising, and we did it. A big part of doing that was that... it was like my outlet to actually perform some semblance of poetry. So no, I don't draw or anything. Christian: But you mentioned the Brother to Brother committee. Ché: Yeah. Christian: Turn into the Male Involvement Coalition, which I am the co-chair of. And we just performed Black Man Rising in The Griot. Did you hear about that? Ché: I did not hear about this particular, no I didn't. Christian: I do have a video I'll show you after. Ché: I need that, I need to see it. Christian: And we did perform it in my sophomore year at BSU fashion show at Mechanics Hall. Ché: Do you kick it off? Christian: Yeah. Ché: Are you the, "Look at yourself again. Alright... alright... You're not a Black Man Falling, You're a Black Man Rising, by James H. Chapman. Christian: We switched it up, it was dedicated to Rob Jones. Ché: Okay. All right, I hear you. Christian: It was a cool experience, and I just found out that you were the founding members of Brother to Brother committee. So talk to me about that and how it was back then. Ché: So when I was a sophomore, there was a conference members of the camps were invited to, and it was called the CHAS conference, the coalition for higher achievement and success... consortium for higher achievement success. And they had one that was specific to black and brown males. And so a group of us attended it, and were so uplifted at Skidmore by the people we're hearing from. I believe at Skidmore, by the people we were hearing from and hearing new initiatives at other colleges and campuses, when we came back to campus, we ended up just meeting a bunch of times and discussing some of the issues that were affecting people in our communities. As we were talking about doing things inevitably, we hit a point where we started doing events but we weren't a recognized student organization. We were just a bunch of students doing these things that having talks, having dialogues, facilitating conversations and we were just dynamic. You had students that wanted to be architects, that wanted to be lawyers or wanted to be doctors that were athletes, that were thespians. So we realized we kind of had something and said, "Okay, we could formalize this in RSO." There was Jeff Harris, who was class of 2012 went to high school with me and there were these two things we did in high school. One was a daily affirmation and the other one was Black Men Rising that Jeff performed. So he introduced that to the campus and that became our calling card for this group. Then Antonio Willis-Berry, he was 2013, there was this Shawn whose last name is escaping me, but he was class of 2013, Jose Paz, who was class of 2012. We just had this group. Then there was a gentleman named Tyrone Billingsly who was kind of the elder statesman of our group along with Eric Collazo. The two of them didn't want a role officially. They were happy being like ex-official members but just guiding us because they'd been here longer. So when we finally got recognized, I was a senior advisor and Jeff was one of the co-chairs and we sort of just became this network of men on this campus that just wanted to talk about issues that impacted or afflicted us or just talk about uplifting things that were happening in the community, talk about music, eat some good food. It really was his brotherhood that got developed. It's funny because initially, the way I became the Brother To Brother Committee is it started out as a Black and Brown Coalition, which sounded militant for some people, which we were cool with. But we said, "You know what? If indeed, we want to open this up, there's an opportunity," and we realized, You know what? There were folks on campus who weren't Black or Brown that were extreme allies, that were on the front lines for all these conversations and so we shouldn't exclude them like that. They're our brothers in arms. To be honest, there were women on campus who were willing to pick up arms, so to speak, and stand on those front lines and protest and argue with us in the same way. So there was this sort of overarching brotherhood, sisterhood, familial aspect of it. But it all started with this group of brothers. So that was kind of that. What was crazy is, in the very first year as a recognized student organization, we have this picture that I love of ... there were five of us and we held seven awards from the SGA award ceremony, three for the organization and four for individual members of the organization. I was like, "This has to be a record for a first-year organization." It felt great to sort of have to prove why we belonged and then show like with our work that we were here just to make the campus a community, like a true community, which is wild. Honestly, I remember the first time you told me about ... first of all I heard about the Men Involvement, the MIC. I was just like, "That sounds familiar. What happened to the BBC in it?" I think Rob Jones was just like, "Oh yeah. It kind of became this other group." I remember meeting you and Marcellis and some other brothers and I was like, "I couldn't have hoped for anything better." Part of it, it makes you sad. You're like, "Wow, they have some of the same conversations we had almost a decade ago." You wonder if that's sort of just the nature of being on a campus, having new students and you're always onboarding new people. But to see that there were people here who were dedicated and you know what I mean? It makes me happy to like sit across from you and be like, "Oh man, this is me 10 years ago." Christian: I appreciate that. I really do. I think that's the reason why we ended up calling it MIC because they were people who didn't identify as being Black or Brown, but who had the same struggles that we have as males and that's why we're open to any male. Our meetings are open to anybody. There are a lot of people who want to help us, who feel like even if they don't agree with some of the things that we believe in, they want us to know that. I think that results into a great dialogue, great conversations and us doing things on campus to made the campus better, so yeah. Ché: So Black Man Rising was super controversial the first time we did it. Christian: Why? Ché: Because effectively, you had this group of ... and our first group that did Black Men Rising were Jeff Harris, 2012, who played basketball, Freddie Santana, who's Puerto Rican, from New York, my year, 2011. Mudiaga Ohimor, who my year as well. Mud was 250, 6' 8". He was a big dude. Jonathan St. Firmin who was another New York guy who we know. Jonathan is probably like 5' 9" and if he's taller than 5' 9" and he's listening, I'm sorry Jonathan, but about 5' 9" to me, probably like 150, like a smaller dude and then myself. So you had this interesting range of gentlemen. Some were quieter, some were bigger, into parties. Some were athletes, some weren't, but you had this sort of force of effectively militant looking men talking about the powers of a Black man on a predominantly White campus. So people were like, "You know what? This may not be the best thing for us, where we come off as too aggressive." We were just like, "Us? Aggressive? We're going to do it anyway. We're going to do it anyway." So we did. There were people inside our group, there were people inside the administration who were kind of like, "You know, this could not go the right way." We said, "There's something to speaking your truth that's important. This is what we experience and maybe we have a dialogue around that afterwards." But we did it and we got a standing ovation and organizations around Worcester asked us to come off campus and perform it, because it was something that was unique at the time for this group that you may not always see together kind of speaking truth to power, if you will. So yeah man, it was something. Christian: I feel that, no, I definitely feel that. I remember first being introduced to it ... My first year as the MIC freshman and sophomore year it was, I'll say, very slow. Not a lot of people attended. But like myself personally, I didn't feel as if it was that important. I wasn't into this, who I am now, into this like Black man power, being a Black man, especially on this campus. I wasn't really into that. I was just trying to go through school, get my degree, all that stuff, whatever. But then I really talked to Marcellis and other people, they introduced me to that. Like the importance of being a Black man. Christian: I know even coming from New York, the only thing I had to worry about was the police, because there wasn't a lot of White people that I really had to worry about. I came from a really mixed culture, like everybody from every ... It's New York. You know what I'm saying? You see everybody. But just being on campus was a different vibe and I didn't get that notion until sophomore year. Towards the end of sophomore year, that's when I would ... actually, towards the end of sophomore year, second semester after we did Black Man Rising I saw the power that we had. I saw the audience that we had, the support that we had. It opened my eyes and it was just like, "Damn. We do got power." Ché: You do. Christian: When you talk about it being controversial now, it will make me do it even more. I think freshman year and sophomore year, beginning of sophomore year I was like, "Hey, it was controversial. Let me not ... " Ché: It takes time to, I think, part of the collegiate experience, particularly if you're a student of color or someone whose English wasn't their first language or something to that effect there's the natural onboarding, right? You're 18, 17, 19 years old trying to figure out what you're going to do for the rest of your life. Trying to make it to 8:30 classes when everyone knows they suck. Christian: Mine was actually pretty good. Ché: Well lucky you, I guess, but you have that experience and then it's how do you socialize? How do you meet people? How do you make friends? How do you figure out who you are? Who are you, right? Whose are you? How do you look? How do you dress? What do you comfortable in? There was a guy when I was at Holy Cross named Tom, everyone called him Pajama Pants Tom. Pajama Pants Tom literally wore pajama pants to everything. He worked at Kimball. He wore them to class. Pajama Pants Tom had a 4.0 and took six classes every semester from the time he was a first-year student. He audited classes because he just wanted to learn more. I think he got a Fulbright, went abroad, came back with long hair. Looked just like Jesus. It was amazing. Pajamas Pants Tom was one of the smartest people I ever met. But if you looked at him and saw this kid walking into class in the winter in pajama pants and flip flops, you're like, "What's wrong with this person?" but he was comfortable with himself early on and so that didn't matter. So I think that some get there earlier but there's that dynamic of just like, "I'm just trying to get these A's and go on." But also real quick, I just have to shout out Shawn Johnson because I realized his last name was Johnson, as well as Matt Harper and Darien and Jose Paz and Jeremiah Gonzalez. Darien Henry was actually our freshmen apprentice, our first year student who was part of the group. The reason why I had to shout them out the same way that Eric and Tyrone was, because when I say it was a brotherhood, like I meant that, right? Like Lance Williams, like there are people who I don't see all the time, but if ever something happened, if every one of them had a big thing, Tony Zelayandia, that's family. It really is. So from the time that we were 20, 21, 19 years old to now, I'm 30 it is intriguing to me to think I'm on campus and we started this thing here and now people are going to be class 2023 they're on campus and people are still joining this thing. Man, that's something. Christian: Yeah, we definitely got it. We got freshmen really into it. It's just the legacy that you have and you see it grow and grow and it's just amazing. I'm glad to be a part of that legacy. MIC... Brother to Brother... It's a brotherhood that's kind of... so I notice... so I read that your mother played a big part in you going to Holy Cross, right? Ché: Yeah. Man. Christian: I feel like the question is asked a lot, what made you go to Holy Cross? What made you stay at Holy Cross? Ché: That's a good question. When I was deciding where I wanted to go, being the first in my, I think, semi-extended family to go to college, my mom, who was like, "I have to do everything right with her firstborn," hit a point where she said, "You know. You need to go to Harvard." I was just like, "You're right. I should go to Harvard." So we looked at schools, mainly looked at Ivy league schools, but I was going to a Jesuit high school in Harlem, New York. Big shout out to Rice High School. Christian: Wait, what's the name of it? Ché: Rice High School. Christian: Right. I feel like I know people from there but it's not there anymore. Ché: Kemba Walker- Christian: Right. Okay. He's not there anymore. Ché: ... plays for the Boston Celtics went to Rice High School. But no, my high school is not there anymore, which is sad. It's sad. The bodega across street's still there. Christian: It's still there. Ché: Rice not there. But I was looking at a lot of Ivy league schools. My mom, wanted me to look at Morehouse because she thought there was something special about being, again, around other men who look like me and maybe had similar struggles or similar situations. Actually, a brother who was at Rice High School said, "You know what I think what would be a great institution for him? College of the Holy Cross." My mom looked into it, saw similarities to my high school. Thankfully, it wasn't an all boys school, all men's college. I did that for four years in high school, but she said, "I think this would be a great space for you. It's not too big. Great academics." At that time I felt that I was an athlete, so she was like, "Maybe you can do something around sports." I did not. I did not while I was here. Christian: We're going to talk about that too. Ché: No. But after talking about it, it actually was my second choice. After all the looking at colleges, I thought I wanted to go to Columbia. For me, I was like, "That's where I'm going, it's 20 blocks from where I grew up. One of my best friends in the world was going there." It was perfect. My mom said, "You need to leave New York." It actually is one of the best decisions she's ever sort of made for me. At the time I was angry, but her thing was so much of my family is in New York and stayed in New York and I needed to see something else. I had to see another part of the world. Oddly enough, it was only four hours away, but I said, "Okay. We'll see Holy Cross. Then if I don't like it, I guess I'll transfer." During my first semester here, I actually was uncomfortable. I just it was too far and all my friends were back in New York and I was trying to acclimate to the new environment and Worcester wasn't New York City. I remember calling her and saying, "Ma, I need to go back home. I got to transfer to Columbia." She said, "Nope." She said, "Nope. I'm not helping you with any of the tuition, so you do that if you want to." Christian: You're paying for it. Ché: Right and I was just like, "Nope. I'm broke." I think for her it was, "You know what? You got to see this through and at the end of the day, if you don't like it, come back to New York." I find it to be intriguing that now it's been 13 years since I first got to Worcester and I still live here. Now I'm one of the biggest Cheerleaders in the city. But that's because of my mom kind of making me get here and honestly because of the campus, over time, making me fall in love with it. There was a person here before Rob named Boyd Servio-Mariano, Dr. Boyd Servio-Mariano. He's a doctor now, so I got to say that. Doc, which is what I call him, he spotted me as a first year student. There was a competition, a dance contest, during ALANA Student Weekend. Oh yeah, I used to boogie. I used to get down. So I got up on stage and won this dance contest. Christian: You won. Ché: Yeah. Yes I did. Christian: What was the competition? Ché: It was just they played music and you've got the freestyle to it and they played like an old Chris Brown song. It was Run It or something. I won and that was Friday night. Then Saturday night they did a trivia contest for Explore Asia. There was a group called Asia, which was for Asian students or Asian-American students. Christian: It's still here. Ché: So they had an Asian trivia contest and I went up against a kid, Chris Bondoc who actually went to my first high school before I transferred high schools. He's an Asian-American student. We had a trivia contest and I won. Point for me, take that Chris, all these years later. But Doc grabbed me and was just kind of like, "If you come here, you got to come find me." I was like, "All right, older guy. That's strange." Then I do come to campus, I realized because he went to my high school and at the time again, I was a young person with a lot of energy and didn't know all the best places to put it, so I was just running around and going crazy. He grabbed me up and said, "Hey, you should come to this multicultural peer education group." I was just like, "No, I'm not going to do that. I'm not. I'm sorry." Then the MPEs, received tickets to the Boston Celtics game in Worcester. I said, "Oh, I need tickets to this game." He goes, "Only way to get tickets is if you come to a few meetings." I was just like, "Ah. You got me." Christian: He got you. Ché: So I came to the meetings and I loved it and I loved what they were talking about and I was all for it. then I went to the Celtics game and that was it. I'd inadvertently found myself a mentor. We literally had a conversation this past weekend. That's my guy. But he's another person who worked in the Office of Multicultural Education and picked me up and helped mold me into a productive person. That's what helped keep me at Holy Cross that he introduced me to guys like Tyrone Billingsly and Eric Collazo and other brothers on campus that were doing great things. He kind of forced me into, or some organizations that led to me getting on the BSU board and knowing the infrastructure to help found the Brother To Brother Committee. He got me involved off campus and working with local junior high schools and high schools and talking to young people off campus and understanding what nonprofits role in developing a city were or an interfacing with a college. He kept me on the right kept me in shape when I stepped out of line, like a big brother would. So really, I think that he's a big part of that. I had somebody to look out for me because honestly, we all have on campus who knows kind of what happens, right? Like do I just spiral out and kind of not go on to do some things I've done. I don't know. So I think that's what kept me. My mom got me here, to be honest and then I had a mentor, I had a big brother who made sure I finished out strong. Christian: You kind of answered my next question. Who you we went to when anything went well or went wrong. Ché: I had some upperclassmen, like I said, Tyrone. I got Lawrence Dickson who play basketball. He's a cool dude. I saw him at the game the other night. Eric Collazo who was my RA my first year, rocky start, but then I was dancing at his wedding. When I say the brotherhood is strong, I mean that. So I think those are the people I turn to. And then there are people younger than me too, right? Like Jeff who wants a high school with me was a guy I roomed with my junior year when he was a sophomore. We had a quad. My first year roommate was my roommate every single year. That's still one of my best friends. If anyone could ever marry him, which, tough order, I'll be his best man. That's that. Big shout out to Stefan. But I feel like I had this network also and I have to give her a huge shout out. Brianna Turner, who was my year at Holy cross. Licensed Social Worker, dynamic woman. They used to call us the velvet glove and the iron fist because Bri could make something out of nothing. She was just dynamic and got things done. We were the two co-chairs or the leads, I guess, because NPS didn't have co-chairs. So she was very task-oriented, goal-oriented, task master, bullet point list and I was the velvet glove. Like I'm going to make the sound beautiful and like sell it to the masses. It worked well because we both knew our strengths. She was another person who those days where I was like, "I don't feel like doing this," would pick me up by my collar and be like, "Nah, come on. We got stuff to do. Let's get after it. So I learned a lot about project management as a student here because of Bri. I don't think Bri would even consider that or acknowledge that or call it project management. But she was someone who got me to understand, task management. I took that with sort of the personality that I had and I'm like, that's what helped me become a project manager for the City. Christian: That's fire. So I will have to say my person is Rob Jones. Shout out to Rob Jones. Ché: Big shout out to Rob Jones. Christian: He put me into MIC, put me on to a MIC and kind of like forced me into MIC, in a way. Ché: I see a trend. That was the trend. Christian: I think we all need those people to go to even just to talk to. I'm pretty sure I know the answer to this, but did you ever feel uncomfortable because of how you looked, or who you ... Christian: ... feel uncomfortable because of how you looked or who you were on campus? Ché: Yeah, I- Christian: Or even, so sorry to cut you off, have you ever felt the impostor syndrome? Ché: Oh, I still feel imposter syndrome now. Yeah. To answer the first part, your question, I am a lot of things. There are a lot of words to describe me, right. But for me, I'm an African American male from New York City, right. I love hip hop and rap music. I love ridiculous movies. I love sports. Some of that is considered stereotypical, right. Expected of me as a six foot three male who looks like me. And I think I struggled with that at first when I got to campus, right. I started listening to a lot more Bruce Springsteen, and Def Leppard, and Poison, and Mötley Crüe, and country music, which I never listened to growing up, but I was like all right, Dixie Chicks is going to be it because I want it to fit in to what a Holy Cross student was, right. I stopped wearing the stuff that I was wearing and started switching up and going, all right. I could wear some khakis and boat shoes. Christian: Right what you're wearing now. Ché: Yeah, but I wear this for work. Don't come at me like that, all right. Don't do me like that. I have to go in a closet, all right. But honestly, right, I was just like this is what's expected of a Holy Cross student. And I went through that for a year of just why am I wearing these cardigans all the time? Honestly, right. Because that I thought that was ... And then it took me a minute to get comfortable in myself to be like you know what? If you didn't hear the new Gucci Mane album, that's your fault. You're missing out, right. I'm not the one ruined and things. And yeah, I mean I dress like this for work, but in all seriousness, I think that getting back into whatever I felt was appropriate for me and whatever culture I represented, it took a minute, but I got there. And I think that as far as imposter syndrome, I think that was part of it, right. I was trying to acclimate and blend in because I wanted to feel like I was a part of something, not realizing I was already a part of something. And even now I find myself in some rooms, or on some boards, or on some committees and I walk in and I'm just like I can't believe I'm here. And I think that almost everyone feels. I know famous, well-paid, well-off people that I've got a chance to meet who will confide that they feel like they don't belong in some of the rooms they get, or they feel like they shouldn't have won the awards compared to some of their peers. And I think that's just natural. You know what I mean? I think when you do something extraordinary, quite often you don't expect to do something extraordinary. It happens and you fall into it, and you're like oh my God, here's this thing. And a lot of that is just a team around you. I have a team around me of friends, and coworkers, and confidence, mentors and mentees that will lift me up when I need it. And like, "You did some dope, you did a TED talk. That's great. Enjoy that." And the ones that will deflate my ego sometimes. They're just like, "You're acting out. Relax. All right, let's not forget the way you dress for work," like you did to me. So I think that's all important to your makeup. A lot of people will say look at your five closest friends and that'll tell you who you are. And I think that that's a really simplistic way to look at it, but the people that you surround yourself with, the people that you spend most of your voluntary time with, that tells you a lot about who you are and who you can be. They're the ones that define some of your limitations, however you may see them, because they're going to limit you or they're going to push you to whatever's next. And so I'm lucky to have some people that I consider good friends or just kind of friends that I can call on and say, "Here's this crazy opportunity." They'll be like, "Go get it. Go after it. And if you don't get it, at least now you know how to do this thing that can maybe get the next opportunity to you." Christian: Told you I was going to get back to that athletic dream that you had, because honestly, all jokes aside, I had the same goal. I was trying to walk on to the baseball team. It didn't work out. I think that was probably the toughest thing I ever had to face all my life. I mean I went from a real high to a real low, and it was just like I was doing things that I probably would've never done before. I felt like I was trying to find myself again because before that happened I was a baseball player. After that, I didn't know who I was or what I was. I was really trying to find myself. I feel like you probably went through the same thing. Ché: Similar. I think that that I was always a nerd first. You know what I mean? I was always an academic, but I love sports and I was okay at them, and so it's funny, I got here. That did not work out, obviously, walking on or anything. And then played club basketball, intramurals. We won intramurals four years, twice in the A league, twice in the B league, a big shot, but we lost the championship. Anthony DiMichele, who's a football player, they beat us. And if I don't mention it, he was going to mention it, or make a comment or something when they posted it, so I just got to put it out there. But I never stopped playing. The school is getting a new field house, right. And that's fine. But back before they destroyed the last field house, my name was on the back board up until two years ago, right. Because we did a dunk contest and I dunked and put my name up with a sticker. That is like the best part of any legacy I got sports-wise on campus, and that was cool. That was cool that it still stayed there. But I think, back to your point, at some point you have to rebrand, just figure out what your thing is, right. It's like if you're a person that threw amazing parties in college, and then you look back and you're like wow, I'm 53 and I still throw these crazy house parties. Not saying that's not fine. If that's your thing, cool. Shout out to all my 53-year-olds throwing parties. But that just wouldn't be what I want to be known for, right. I'd hope that I had accomplished something in my life. And I think that a big part of the growth of your experience through your time on a campus is understanding that you can be dynamic. You don't have to be ... In high school you kind of fall into well, I am an athlete. I'm a great student. I'm the captain of the chess team. You have that thing that defines you. Ché: And I feel like as you grow, you want to be a utility person, you want to be dynamic. You want people to go, "Oh yeah, Christian. I know him from this thing," in one room and then another room go, "Oh right, but he's also really great at this thing." I think that you can be many things to many people, and that's something that it took me a while to learn, but once I did, that was it. I want it to be the Renaissance of all Renaissance. Christian: So I got a lot more questions. So all right, after your Holy Cross years. Oh wait, so a question. What are the untold stories of Holy Cross from your end? Ché: The untold stories of Holy Cross. Christian: Yeah, spilling the beans out here. Ché: There's a trillion untold stories of Holy Cross. Christian: We just need one. Ché: All right. One thing that happened on campus one year was we were talking about the experiences that students of color have on predominant white institutions campus. And we thought about some of the HBCUs and how they have yard shows, right. Stomp shows and such. And so we threw one. So when I was a senior, we figured out ways to finagle some money. Christian: On campus? Ché: On campus. And some of the administrators had contacts because they're a part of historically black Greek letter organizations. And we rented a stage. And right in the Kimball Quad, right down the stairs, the same way they do battle of the bands, we took that stage, we brought out four step teams. We had the Rhythm Nation Steppers also perform. We had people cooking out, right. They were cooking burgers, catfish, fried fish, like they did back down South. People were doing sides and soul food. We have food from the local places. Addie. Do you know Addie? Addie wasn't around at the time, this place called Sweet Teas, but yeah, same kind of feel, right. We even got some food from up at Home Style, right. And we got a microphone, and we had a DJ, and the DJ was playing hip hop, urban music the whole time. And then when there was time for show time, they did their step show, and we had a ball. And then we throw after party afterwards up at Hogan. And for me it was amazing because for that six-hour period we got to feel like the campus was ours, right. And I think that that, for me, was a beautiful thing because the students came from BC, and from BU, and Becker, and Clark. I mean it was packed, not just Holy Cross students, because other people wanted to see what it'd be like if they also, at their traditionally none necessarily super diverse campus, can come and see just what a mass of us would look like, and what a party for all of us looked like. And it was something. And so I'd say that it was something I wish would've continued after we were gone because I think it is a good reminder of what can happen. Similar to when Holy Cross played Howard, and Howard brought the band, and the dancers, and everyone up. And then four of us ended up going down to Howard the next weekend to visit. Class one Friday wasn't important that weekend. But we went down to Howard and we got to go to their homecoming, and there were so much love from Howard. They brought us on the field. We got to do the swag surf with everybody, because it was just oh, look at these three students of color who are extending themselves beyond Worcester to come down here to this area. And so that love was something that literally inspired us to bring it back and have this yard show step show. So there's some stuff that doesn't make it through kind of the storytelling pass down components of what we're doing, but is something that one of the things I hang my hat on this campus. Christian: You definitely should. Ché: I was excited. Christian: But transitioning into after college. So MCPHS. Got it. Boom. University. Right. Assistant director of engagement or student affairs? Ché: Student activities, student engagement. Christian: Okay. And initially wanted to get into law and government, but ended up there. Ché: At a college. Christian: Right. If you want to talk about that, you can. Ché: Yeah. Christian: Yeah, go ahead. Ché: Yeah. So I was prelaw, poli-sci. I got to my senior year and realized I don't think I want to be a lawyer anymore. And after my mom stopped crying, she was like, "What are you going to do?" Christian: I mean hold on. Not that there aren't any lawyers coming out of Holy Cross. Did she expect that? Ché: Oh yeah. No, for her, that was it. Christian: Interesting. Ché: My son, the lawyer was how a lot of conversations started. That was a thing. Christian: So Thanksgiving was- Ché: It was awkward. It was awkward, yeah. I only got one serving of mac and cheese, so you know how that goes. But she effectively was just like, "What are you going to do?" And I said, "For the first time in my life, I really don't know, but I do know I'm not moving home. I'm going to figure it out." And I start applying to jobs and looking for opportunities. And one of the former VPs here was Jackie Peterson, who's amazing. She recommended that I apply for the position at MCPHS. And I was staying on campus. I was working at [OME 00:49:20] for the summer, and they paid me a small stipend and then I got to live on campus, so I got a place to stay. And I interviewed for this position that was totally above my punching weight. You know what I mean? I was like I'm not going to get this. And Dean Peterson sends a recommendation and it got me the interview. And again to that earlier point, right, sometimes you just need that foot in the door to make it happen, and I must've crushed the interview because they pulled me in and said, "Hey, we think you'd be great for this position." Right. First person ever in this position, I get to build and develop a program based on some other things they've been doing, and I said, "Let's do it." And I spent two years there working with students, working for students, engaging with people. The highlight of my time there is I got inducted into Phi Lambda Sigma, which is a pharmacy fraternity, not a pharmacist, but in this pharmacy frat, so shout out to all my brothers and sisters from Phi. Christian: I tried to hold it in. Ché: No, that's cool. That's cool. I got a pin and everything. It's official. But you know what? While there I had a supervisor who was a Dean of students, effectively the de facto leader of campus, named Shuli Xi, and he was so into the idea of me being a statesman. He would always say that to me. Don't be a politician, be a statesman. You want to be a person of and for the people and with the people, not just someone looking to get elected. And because of that, he brought me into his government affairs meeting. He made sure that when there was a consortium of the colleges that, I guess, I served on the student activities one, but also went to some of the student affairs ones in general with people who were in positions way above my own. When I told him I wanted to join a committee at the chamber of commerce, he said, "Fine, and we'll give you the time off you need when you got to go to those meetings." When I told them I want it to be a Rotarian, and at the time I was one of the youngest Rotarians in the city, part of the Worcester Rotary Club, he said, "Great, we'd love to have MCPHS represented there." And so he supported sort of the dynamism of me going I don't know what I want to do, but I want to do everything and see what's going on. And he was cool with that. Even down to when I went and told him I was leaving to go work for the city, for the government, he wasn't like, "Oh my God," he was just like, "I'm sorry to lose you. But yeah, that's the next step of your life." He looked out for me as a person, which I appreciated so much. And my time there was great. I know a lot of pharmacists now and optometrists. Getting my glasses is super easy. If ever I need acupuncture, I get a discount. That's sweet. But it was a great step in transitioning from 22 to 24 because I learned how to be in charge of something, right. Student activities was mine. The budget, I managed the Student Government Association, I developed a campus activities board and managed them. And so I learned project management, I learned people management. It was great, and it was a perfect transferable thing for kind of the next step in my career. So it was a kind of unique path. But again, it goes back to there's no right way to do anything. You kind of figure it out as you go. Christian: So I wanted to ask you what do you think has a big impact on a community? Let's say for yourself as an individual working at a desk, law and government. That's my view. Law and government. Or working with the community as you do now? Ché: So the answer I'm going to give you is a cop out answer, I'm going to let you know that, but there's a reason why. And so it is a reason why. Neither one of them, quite honestly, is more important than the other one. I think that they both, and as cliché as it sounds, are both equal for different reasons, right. I think that if you're a person that is solely behind a desk, and let's say you solely work on legal matters, on policy, on development of strategies, that is how you input change. That's how you impact things to a point that they're standardized, right. I can be a great leader and I can say, "You know what? As long as I'm in office, this is going to be the thing," but as soon as I'm out of office, if someone else just comes in and goes, "I don't believe in that," that's done. There's no policy there. There's nothing kind of on paper. There's no legal ramification of it. It only impacts a very small population or people at a certain time. I think that when it comes to community development, community impact, you want something that has longevity, right. Every parent wants for their kid to not have to struggle the same way they did. I think that that should work as far as generations of constituents and community. I don't want the next you, or me, or whoever to have to fight the same fights I fought. Then what did I do for that time I was around? But I think that you want to be authentic to the place you are, and that there's a component that has to come from the community, right. Holy Cross' whole mission ... I just always say men and women for others. And then it was a shift to men, and women for and with others. And that shift is important, it's imperative, right. It's not about doing things for people, it's about doing things with people, bringing them along, having a conversation, knowing when it's time to lead and when it's time to follow. And so I think that you got to work with the community to see what the community wants, right. Because you could have a great idea and the community could be like, "We don't care about this right now," right. "We have this other more dire thing." And so you have to know what the thing is before you can implement policy, or structure, or an infrastructure around it. But if you just have people that are, let's say, marching in the street, and fighting the man, and having ideas, but no-one flipped that switch to implement policy, well then you just have angry people, and another population of angry people who are mad that this population's angry, and they are just butting heads and not getting anything. If you just have people sitting in a room being bureaucrats, then nothing actually permeates to the community because you have no idea what the community wants. You're just doing whatever you saw online, or on TV and you think you're doing the best thing, but the two of you come together, that's how change actually happens. That's how real, positive, sustainable change happens. So I'm a person that hates sitting behind my desk, to be honest. I'm not a fan of it. I'm a person that wants to be around people. And you have those days where you're like I've had nine meetings in a row. I haven't eaten. I've been just taking information in. But if I don't have time to go sit down and write that stuff up, and write those notes, and get it out to other departments to make things happen, or follow up with community partners because I didn't really understand something they said, but I want to do more with it, I'm missing the boat. So I know I just kind of said both, and that's not the answer you want, but I do think that both are equally important. Christian: Yeah, I kind of expect that coming from you. Ché: I mean, yeah. You know what I'm saying? Christian: Yeah. And you did mention the mission statement. Holy Cross mission statement. I feel like you have that before you even got to Holy Cross. Is that true? Ché: Oh yeah. That's the way I was raised. My mom said two things to me every day from the time that I was probably 3 or 4 going off to school, to the time that I was 18. My mother always said, "Hey, listen. Treat everyone the way you want to be treated," which is just basic. But to this day, she still, "Treat everyone the way you want to be treated, and be a leader, not a follower." To the point that when I was 10, she'd say, "Be a leader," and I'd say, "Not a follower. Leave me alone," but I think that for her there was something about making my own decision, and being able to decipher what's right from what's wrong. And also whether I'm walking into any building, whether it's the person that's the concierge, or the person picking up trash, or the maintenance person, or the CEO of a company, you treat everybody with respect, and you show love to everyone. And I take that even beyond that, right. Whether I'm walking in City Hall and I'm talking to the mayor, or the grounds crew, or a person who might be homeless in front of City Hall, I say, "What's up?" I show love. I don't always have things to help, but I'm always going to give you respect as a human being. And I think that that's something my mother instilled in me and then it moved on through all my schooling, and the Holy Cross sort of just drove it home a bit. But that's just the way that I was raised. Christian: So you got this mission statement Holy Cross, but then you got your own from back home: be a leader, not a follower. And so was the other one? Ché: Treat everyone the way you want to be treated. Christian: Treat everyone the way you want to be treated. I kind of struggle on that. There was one where treat everyone the way you think they should be treated. Ché: Yep. That one, I think, gets problematic. Christian: Yeah. Ché: I think no one wants me treated poorly, right? Christian: Right. Ché: So the idea is that you reciprocate that. I think treat everyone the way you think they should be treated gets into some real interesting things with some of your own biases or implicit biases or unrecognized issues you may have with some things. I think it's well-intended, but I think that it can lead to some interesting situations. Christian: And the one I never agreed with was treat everybody the same. Ché: Nope, same. I think though, whenever you talk about things like DEI, right, diversity, equity, inclusion, there's a reason that it's equity and not equality, right? There's an image people always paint of if you have three kids looking over a fence and they're different heights and you give them the same size box, that's equality. Everyone has the same stuff. That doesn't help all the kids, right? You want equity. You want the really short kid to have a taller box because then they can all see the game. And I think that in certain pockets of our communities, you're starting to see that. It needs to permeate more, but that equity is important. And that doesn't mean that you give everyone a dollar, right? The millionaire doesn't necessarily need that dollar, but that person that's struggling maybe needs $5 or $10 to make it out. And that's obviously me oversimplifying it, but I think that that's part of that being someone for and with others, you know what I mean? Christian: Yeah. Ché: It's the width to understand what the need is, and then it's the for that if you have more, you got to help out. And I don't mean to get all socialist here. That's not what I'm trying to do, but I'm being honest. Christian: Yeah, for real, bro. Ché: You know what I mean? You have to be realistic and then understanding what the needs are of people, if we're going to truly help and benefit people. Christian: Yeah. So I guess with the combination, if you have a combination with what your mother taught you and what Holy Cross taught you, have you ever came up with a mission statement that drives you to do the work you do now? Ché: The honest truth is that I have a statement that that drives me. It has a swear in it. You can figure out which word that is, that that is the one. I have two things that matter to me that drive everything I do. The first is I want to impact my community. And so that's whatever I have, right: time, talent, treasure, anything. I want to make sure that when all is said and done, whenever my last moment is here, that people said he cared and he did good by us, whatever that community can mean. And that can be my hyperlocal community, that can be my global community, whatever the case is. The other is do cool stuff. And I think that for me, there's something special about doing projects that people think are interesting and fun. Not that there aren't things that are just that ... like making the microchip is important, and for some people that's super interesting. For the other people it's all right, whatever. But for me, I want to do stuff that people are like, "Aw man, that was awesome. That was an experience. That was a moment." Because creating moments is difficult in life and you hope to have and share a bunch with other people. So if I can combine the two and I can do things that are going to impact and change my community for the better and make sure that stuff is cool, that's what both allows me to rest but also keeps me up at night. You know what I mean? Christian: Yeah, I got you. Ché: Like thinking of how to do it, but then sleeping happy when I make it happen. Christian: Yeah, definitely feel that. What was your favorite project so far? Ché: One of them's a selfish answer, and one's not. I'm going to give you two quick ones. This year as part of the public art project POW! WOW! that I helped bring to Worcester, we were able to paint murals and do workshops and activations with youth in a public housing area of the city of Worcester. And we also painted on the abutting schools and did workshops in the abutting schools to this area. And so we got to work with a population that doesn't necessarily see academic development the same way, that doesn't feel it the same way, that may not even know it's happening, with kids that quite often feel overlooked. And I know, because I was one of those kids growing up. And so to go over there and have these young people feel a new appreciation for the arts and feel like celebrities are coming around their neighborhood to paint, and getting tutorials from people that have worked with Dis
In this episode, (Matt) Harper and I talk about how his family influenced the different styles of music he listened to, and he shares some great stories from when he attended Summerfest over the years. We also discuss his uncle's guitar collection and we delve deeper into the long-lasting debate of separating the work of art from the artist. Instagram: @matty_harpster Snapchat: @matt_harper2000
Nat & Erin are joined by the newly named Lifesaver of the year Matt Harper of Maroubra SLSC off the back of winning his award!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Adam and Bob come together with Michigan comedian, Pun Master, and Podcast Host of Another Episode Podcast, Matt Harper. The conversation takes a walk through topics like Stage Fright, Shady Bookers, and their Comedy Histories. Bob makes some progress towards his weightloss goal, but still does not have a good setup for the scale. Adam is still texting jokes to himself, and that is okay. We also go over some tactics of how to deal with Judgement of the crowd.A long conversation, we had tons of fun, and hope you enjoy this episode as much as we did recording it. Facebook.com/YWFSPODTwitter - Instagram@YWFSPODywfspod@gmail.comywfs.podbean.com https://anotherepisodepodcast.podbean.com/@MattHarperJokes Instagram@AnotherEpisodePodcast
This week for the pod, Gerrit and Mike watched Ryan Reynolds voice a little yellow CGI fluff-ball that dons a detective hat in "Pokémon Detective Pikachu." Mike grew up with Pokémon and Gerrit did not, so clearly you already know the audience of this movie. Justice Smith (of "Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom" fame) and Kathryn Newton (from "Blockers" - the first episode of TBBG, by the way) also star. Is the movie good with all of these things going for it though? The episode is good, but to see if the movie is, you'll have to take a listen. The episode also includes some reviews from iTunes users and a question from fellow podcaster, Matt Harper. Check out his podcast with Mandy Elaine in the link below. Feel free to fill the TBBG fellas in on what YOU thought with any questions, concerns, or comments by subscribing, liking, commenting and by reaching out on the social medias here: facebook.com/thisbetterbegoodpodcast @TBBGpodcast - Twitter Mike Logan can be found at: facebook.com/Icecoldcomedian @Icecoldcomedian - Twitter & Instagram If you're in the Grand Rapids, Michigan area - come check out the show that Mike runs at The Garage Bar. Go like that page here: facebook.com/thegaragebarcomedyshow Gerrit Elzinga can be found at: facebook.com/GElzinga1 @GerritElzinga - Twitter @gerrit__elzinga - Instagram Gerrit has a comedy album called, "Perspective." One link you can use to purchase it is right here: itunes.apple.com/us/album/perspective/1191999579 This episode is sponsored by: Anchor anchor.fm Game Goose Podcast facebook.com/GameGoosePodcast Another Episode Podcast facebook.com/AnotherEpisodePodcast As always, thanks for listening! --- 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/thisbetterbegood/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thisbetterbegood/support
Part two of Host Brian B's interview with comedians Matt Harper and Stu McCallister. Topics include getting started in comedy, the ups and downs of being on the road and their best heckler stories.
Part one of Host Brian B's interview with comedians Matt Harper and Stu McCallister. Topics include getting started in comedy, the ups and downs of being on the road and their best heckler stories.
In this episode we talk to Matt Harper, EVP & Managing Director at The Marketing Practice. Click here to connect with this guest on LinkedIn.
Copyright 2018 - The Energy Show, Barry Cinnamon It's depressing that lithium batteries get almost all of the focus in the energy storage industry. Lithium batteries have a number of advantages, including high energy density, good longevity, declining costs and established integration with electronics, vehicles and stationary energy storage. Although ideal for residential and commercial storage applications, lithium ion chemistries are not great for long term and high capacity energy storage — which are the characteristics that many utility storage installations require. Flow batteries have the potential to meet these utility storage application needs. Flow batteries use two tanks of liquid electrolyte, separated by a special membrane, that flows between the anode and the cathode within the battery cell. Energy is stored in this liquid electrolyte instead of as part of the electrode material in conventional batteries. The energy storage capacity of a flow battery is related to the amount of liquid electrolyte — bigger tanks provide greater storage capacity. The power output of a flow battery depends on the size of the anode and cathode electrodes in the battery cell. Since their storage capacity is limited mostly by the size of the electrolyte tanks, flow batteries are great for grid-scale storage. They are also finding applications when sited alongside PV systems. Since the battery can absorb power in excess of what the grid or inverter can handle, inverters can be smaller — resulting in lower equipment costs and greater efficiency. I heard about new flow battery technology from my friends at NexTracker. I was initially hesitant to learn about flow batteries - one could say I'm in a lithium rut waiting for the commercialization of dual lithium crystalline reactor technology for interstellar travel. But when I understood the real-world benefits of Avalon's batteries when integrated with utility-scale tracker installations, I was convinced. So on this week's show we're going with the flow. Our guest is Matt Harper, Co-Founder and Chief Product Officer of Avalon. I hope you tune in to this week's Energy Show as Matt explains the technology behind flow batteries, practical applications, availability of electrolytes, and Matt's view of how flow batteries have the potential to meet our long duration energy storage needs.
Stu and Jamie welcomed guests Matt Harper and Mandy Elaine to the podcast. They learned somethings about Mandy's dad. They learned somethings about Matt. And they talked about a Facebook fight Stu got involved in.
It's the final chapter in our SPOOKY SPECTACULAR! This week Matt Harper and Mandy Elane bring Muskegon area comedians Ricarlo Winston and Tim Locke into the studio. We talk about the greatest musical ever made... Little Shop of Horrors! We talk about everything from bad Halloween candy, growing up in Muskegon and life on skid row. Check out our Facebook page for info on upcoming episodes, pictures from the studio and find new ways to interact with the show. Follow Ricarlo on Twitter @thewolfspider23 Find Tim Locke on Facebook. Email the show - AnotherEpisodePodcast@gmail.com Thanks for listening! THANKS MORE for SUBSCRIBING AND RATING!
BOB IS BACK! This week Mandy Elane and Matt Harper sit down with funny man Bob Fredericks as he makes his second appearance on the show. We are right in the middle of our Spooky Spectacular October episodes and this one is a dooozie... THE LOST BOYS! A lot of people like this movie. Matt is not one of them. Tell us how you feel. Email the show at AnotherEpisodePodcast@gmail.com Check on Bob's schedule at www.noglitteronchristmas.com Find Bob on twitter at @Bob_Fred_Rick
Matt Harper and Mandy Elane kick off the month of October with their month of scary movies!!! Up first (we started slow) we talk to Grand Rapids area comedian Nardos Osterhart about the classic (friendly) ghost-filled comedy, CASPER! We've got Ricci, Pullman, Sawa... what more do you need? Listen as we talk through the plot holes, the stand out performances and all of the weird cameos... Check out Nardos on twitter at @Nardichoke Email the show at AnotherEpisodePodcast@gmail.com
Matt Harper and Mandy Elane take a deep dive into the 1985 Adventure/Comedy THE GOONIES! This week we talk with Grand Rapids area comedian Adam Degi. We talk plot holes, character choices and how to deal with people who have never seen this movie. Listen as we try our best to "Never say DIE". Check Adam out on... Twitter: @ADAMDEGI Instagram: AdamDegi Youtube: Here Email the show at AnotherEpisodePodcast@gmail.com
Matt Harper and Mandy Elane take a deep dive into the wildly successful and outrageously crude, funny and often problematic 1981 cult classic, PORKY'S! Chicago comedian Gwen Hope joins us as we discuss the ins and outs of this odd little Canadian film. Check out Gwen's schedule at www.GwenHopeComedy.com Email the show at AnotherEpisodePodcast@gmail.com FIND US ON FACEBOOK! RATE AND REVIEW US ON ITUNES!
Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed, Something Brewed.
Mandy and Matt from Another Episode Podcast join us for a 90's spectacular! First, we're Prolonging the Magic of the 90's, with Cake's third album. Next, Andrew brings in the newest sounds of twenty years ago with American Football's American Football. After that, Matt livens it up Barenaked Ladies' first live album, Rock Spectacle. Finally, we wash it all down with Mandy's prescription: Alanis Morissette's Jagged Little Pill. It's SoSnSbSb! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/sosnsbsbpodcast/support
Matt Harper and Mandy Elane take a deep dive into the 1992 Comedy-Drama/Sports film A League of Their Own! Today we are joined by Kalamazoo comedians/podcasters Victoria Mansberger and Brennan Schoen. Listen in as we tackle the hard hitting questions like... How many baseball comedies are there? Is Geena Davis attractive? Should Dottie drop Bill Pullman to get with Jimmy Dugan? You can find Victoria on twitter at @averagegrades You can find Brennan on twitter at @BrennanSchoen Check out their podcast Smoking Degrassi on SoundCloud: Smoking Degrassi Let us know what you think! Contact the show... via email: AnotherEpisodePodcast@gmail.com via Twitter: @AnotherEpPod
Matt Harper and Mandy Elane take a VERY deep dive into the 2000 Comedy-Drama/Musical Comedy from director Cameron Crowe, Almost Famous. We discuss Casey's love for Lester Bangs and his uncanny ability to slip a plug into regular conversation. Be sure to check out Casey as he hosts Harvey's Upstairs Comedy every Wednesday at Harvey's on the Mall in Kalamazoo, Michigan. Find the show on twitter at @AnotherEpPod Email the show at AnotherEpisodePodcast@gmail.com Find us on Facebook. SUBSCRIBE AND RATE US! WE ARE BEGGING YOU!
Your Hosts, Matt Harper and Mandy Elane, take deep dive into Stand By Me with kalamzoo funny man, and host of Stand Up or Shut Up at Shakespeare's Lower Level. We talk about the first time we saw a dead body, ending up in places that we aren't supposed to be and how hard it is to find a jar of buried pennies. Izzy the cat shows up and tries to shut down the whole operation. You can find Bob on the social medias here... Twitter: @Bob_Fred_Rick Website: www.NoGlitterOnChristmas.com Reach the show at:AnotherEpisodePodcast@gmail.com Twitter: @AnotherEpPod
Stu talked with guest Matt Harper about their gig at a casino, booking shows, revealing the winner of the comics bracket and starting a new bracket!
The Tao of Sports Podcast – The Definitive Sports, Marketing, Business Industry News Podcast
It's the 5th Anniversary of the original recording the Tao of Sports Podcast, with Ep. 1 guest Matt Harper, who returns for the third time to the show. Harper discusses his transition from college ticket sales to minor league baseball, as well as the founding of the college ticket association (NAATSO) and the first Sports Sales Boot Camp. Harper provides his thoughts on why he had originally agreed to be on the podcast in the first place, and some of the opportunities for connections that it gave him since that time. Twitter: @mattharper_tix
The Tao of Sports Podcast – The Definitive Sports, Marketing, Business Industry News Podcast
Well, 199 episodes prior, Matt Harper began the journey to record the first episode of the Tao of Sports Podcast on his last day in California before heading up to Eugene, Oregon to begin his role at UO. Now, as the podcast hits its 200th episode, recorded during a blistering hot day in Orlando with the air conditioning shut off in the hotel room, Harper returns to talk about his initial decision to take an chance on doing the podcast, being the first guest and how the podcast has grown since. Harper provides an extensive status update as to his role with the University of Oregon as GM of DuckTix, and whether jumping to a BCS FBS school has changed him or his attitude. Twitter: @MattHarper_UO
The Tao of Sports Podcast – The Definitive Sports, Marketing, Business Industry News Podcast
Matt Harper serves as the general manager of The University of Oregon's Duck Tix, an in-house out-bound ticket sales division within the UO athletic department. Harper's extensive experience in ticket sales includes work at IMG-Learfield, Disney Wide World of Sports, & Seattle University Athletics. Harper sits down with Troy Kirby to talk selling philosophies, customer care, season ticket holder retention, and some of the misconceptions of the ticket sales arena. A companion to this podcast is a 11 minute minicast (available exclusively to FREE iOS podcast app subscribers), where Harper discusses leveraging ticket sales and other topics.
DG Martin interviews Mark Ethridge - Grievances For more than twenty years, the murder of a thirteen-year-old boy during racial unrest in rural South Carolina has gone unpunished, unsolved, even uninvestigated. But that changes when Charlotte Times reporter Matt Harper sits down with a fellow who shows up in the newsroom—a guy with a grievance. As he struggles with his journalistic legacy, Harper comes to understand why the investigation must be pursued and why he must be the one to do it—despite the opposition of his publisher, violent threats from mysterious forces that do not want the story told, and his father's ill health.
DG Martin interviews Mark Ethridge - Grievances For more than twenty years, the murder of a thirteen-year-old boy during racial unrest in rural South Carolina has gone unpunished, unsolved, even uninvestigated. But that changes when Charlotte Times reporter Matt Harper sits down with a fellow who shows up in the newsroom—a guy with a grievance. As he struggles with his journalistic legacy, Harper comes to understand why the investigation must be pursued and why he must be the one to do it—despite the opposition of his publisher, violent threats from mysterious forces that do not want the story told, and his father's ill health.