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The College Football Experience (@TCEonSGPN) on the Sports Gambling Podcast Network continues its 134 college football team preview series with the Indiana Hoosiers 2024 Season Preview. Pick Dundee aka (@TheColbyD) & Patty C (@PattyC831) break down the entire Indiana Hoosiers 2024 roster from offense to defense and key in on every game on the Hoosiers 2024 schedule. Did Indiana hit a grand slam when they hired James Madison Dukes head football coach Curt Cignetti? Will Kurtis Rourke be a name the entire Big Ten is familiar with after 2024?Will the run game be rock solid with Kaelon Black, Justin Ellison and Ty'Son Lawton all transferring in? Will the wideout room be improved with the likes of Elijah Surratt, Donaven McCulley, Myles Price and EJ Price? Did the addition of Zach Horton at tight end from JMU mean a ton to this Hoosiers offense? Will the offensive line be in good shape with Carter Smith, Trey Wedig, Tyler Stephens, Bray Lynch, Nick Kidwelll and Mike Katic? Will the Indiana offense be way ahead of last years numbers?What should we make of the Indiana Hoosiers defense under Bryant Haines? Will the defensive line be an quality unit with James Carpenter, CJ West and Mikail Kamara? Is Aiden Fisher at the linebacker spot a name Big Ten opponents will know after coming over from James Madison? Is the Hoosiers secondary in decent shape with D'Angelo Pounds, Jamier Johnson, DJ Warnell and Shawn Asbury? What would be a great first season for Curt Cignetti in Bloomington, Indiana? We talk it all and more on this Indiana Hoosiers edition of The College Football Experience. JOIN the SGPN community #DegensOnlyExclusive Merch, Contests and Bonus Episodes ONLY on Patreon - https://sg.pn/patreonDiscuss with fellow degens on Discord - https://sg.pn/discordDownload The Free SGPN App - https://sgpn.appCheck out the Sports Gambling Podcast on YouTube - https://sg.pn/YouTubeCheck out our website - http://sportsgamblingpodcast.comSUPPORT us by supporting our partnersCirca Sports - 16 MILLION in guaranteed prizes w/ Circa Survivor & Circa Millions - https://www.circasports.com/circa-sports-millionFootball Contest Proxy - Use promo code SGP to save $50 at - https://www.footballcontestproxy.com/Rithmm - Player Props and Picks - Free 7 day trial! http://sportsgamblingpodcast.com/rithmmUnderdog Fantasy code SGPN - Up to $250 in BONUS CASH - https://play.underdogfantasy.com/p-sgpnGametime code SGPN - Download the Gametime app, create an account, and use code SGPN for $20 off your first purchase - https://gametime.co/ADVERTISE with SGPNInterested in advertising? Contact sales@sgpn.io Follow The College Experience & SGPN On Social MediaTwitter - https://twitter.com/TCEonSGPNInstagram - http://www.instagram.com/TCEonSGPNTikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@TCEonSGPNYoutube - https://www.youtube.com/@TheCollegeExperienceFollow The Hosts On Social MediaColby Dant - http://www.twitter.com/thecolbydPatty C - https://twitter.com/PattyC831NC Nick - https://twitter.com/NC__NicK
This week we're talking about some murders close to home in good old Muncie Indiana!
Our month appreciating comedic films continues with The Coen Brothers' Hudsucker Proxy. Released in 1994, the film stars Tim Robbins as Norville Barnes, a graduate of Muncie Indiana's business school. He gets a job at Hudsucker Industries whose CEO, Waring Hudsucker, happens to join the great hereafter the day Norville begins work. After a mix-up, Barnes goes all the way from the mail room to the boardroom and becomes the new interim head of the corporation. Rahne Alexander and David Kittrredge join Mike to discuss the ins, the outs, and the what-have-yous about this oft-overlooked tribute to classic screwball comedies told only in the way that the Coen Brothers (and Sam Raimi) could tell it.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-projection-booth-podcast--5513239/support.
Our month appreciating comedic films continues with The Coen Brothers' Hudsucker Proxy. Released in 1994, the film stars Tim Robbins as Norville Barnes, a graduate of Muncie Indiana's business school. He gets a job at Hudsucker Industries whose CEO, Waring Hudsucker, happens to join the great hereafter the day Norville begins work. After a mix-up, Barnes goes all the way from the mail room to the boardroom and becomes the new interim head of the corporation. Rahne Alexander and David Kittrredge join Mike to discuss the ins, the outs, and the what-have-yous about this oft-overlooked tribute to classic screwball comedies told only in the way that the Coen Brothers (and Sam Raimi) could tell it.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-projection-booth-podcast--5513239/support.
Jermaine Recaps his POST-ComicsPro experiecne venturing through Chicago, Muncie Indiana and more! He brought gifts! We add more to the Cat Person/Dog Person argument and answer a long awaited listener question. Send your Cat Person/Dog Person ideas and all listner questions to ben@acmecomics.com!
Musician Jerry Barker was inspired by Johnny Cash at the age of 12 to sing and play guitar. He never looked back. He studied history and English while at Ball State, but his passion for the guitar had a grip on him that would not let go. He pracitced and played for years behind the scences, but once he broke free during a gathering of "pickers" at a nursing home one evening, he knew what he had to do. After graduating from Ball State in 2019, Jerry recorded an album called "Dog Eat Dog World" and is preparing to record his next record. He can be found all around the Muncie Indiana area playing as a headliner, or as part of an open mic night. He opened for Don McLean at Ball State's Brown Family Ampitheatre in 2023 and continues to draw crowds everywhaere he plays. We talk about his inspiration, his favorite parts of being a musician, his goals, and what is coming next for he and his band. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/scott-schick/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/scott-schick/support
This week's story involves the shooting death of a Columbus, Ohio man named VonMason Walker. On October 16, 2015 he was visiting the home of acquaintences. Before the night was over, he would be dead. VonMason Walker was born on December 24, 1990 in Columbus, OH. His parents are Willie Walker and Jennifer Gillman. He had graduated from high school in Muncie Indiana and had received his CDL so that he could become a truck driver. He was found dead in the home of an acquaintance on October 16, 2015. His father Willie Walker described his relationship with son as close. Willie had become VonMason's primary caretaker when he was a child. Willie considered his son a good man who was motivated to make his own way. He eventually become a security guard. But after some time on the job, VonMason followed in his father's footsteps and became a truck driver.Willie felt that his son had made a great career choice and was on his way to getting set for life. Unfortunately, Willie's life changed forever when he learned that his beloved son had died from a gunshot wound on October 16, 2015. According to Willie, he was told that VonMason was dancing around with a gun and tripped over a toy and accidentally killed himself.Willie said this was a deduction made from the Columbus police department because no one in the house corroborated this story. Willie found the explanation ludicrous. He would hire a private investigator who looked into the matter further. Based on the investigator's findings, VonMason's death was no accident. Willie has spent the past several years trying to get the Columbus Police Department to change VonMason's death from accidental shooting to a homicide. He has been unsuccessful. Willie shared VonMason's story with me hoping that someone will listen to his pleas for help in getting to the truth of what really happened to his beloved son. What truly happened to VonMason? Was the shooting accidental or did someone kill him and get away with murder? Willie Walker doesn't believe the Columbus Police Department will do anything with any tips they might receive. If you have a valuable tip, please contact Willie Walker directly at (614) - 441-6911. He would like to screen out tips and then discuss them with law enforcement personally.Please also visit my website for more information about my true crime and paranormal newspaper columns at www.themarcabe.com. You can also help support my podcast by purchasing a cup of $5 coffee every month. To help support the podcast, please visit https://www.buymeacoffee.com/catchmykiller. If you would like to contact me about this podcast, please visit my websites www.catchmykiller.com or www.themarcabe.com where you can submit a case. And if you are a parent, Law enforcement, official friend or relative seeking justice for an unsolved homicide case. Please visit my website and complete the contact form.This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/4077372/advertisement
Cabernet and True Crime is a (kind of) weekly podcast that covers the more unusual and uncommon true crime cases. Each week, your host, Jana, breaks down the narrative of a specific true crime case— turning it into a conversational learning experience for you… and sometimes herself! Join me in the place where good wine and true crime come together.
Evansville police are kept busy over the weekend handling shots fired and domestic battery calls... One person is dead and at least 19 are wounded, some critically, in a mass shooting at a party in Muncie Indiana... Yellow Freight, a national trucking firm, with a depot in Evansville, has shut down...See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Bishop Julius C. Trimble is the Resident Bishop of the Indiana Area of the United Methodist Church.Bishop Trimble has the personal mission to encourage all people with the love of Jesus Christ to rise to their highest potential. It is his commitment to his personal mission that led Bishop Trimble to create the “To Be Encouraged” Podcast along with co-host Rev.Dr. Brad Miller. Bishop Trimble says, “I am compelled by Jesus to share with you an encouraging word or two about Jesus, theology, the Bible, the pandemic, the environment, racism, voting rights, human sexuality, and the state of the United Methodist Church.” To Be Encouraged with Bishop Julius C. Trimble is to be published weekly and is available at www.tobeencouraged.com and all the podcast directories.https://www.inumc.org/bishop/office-of-the-bishop/Episode 066 of To Be Encouraged is a bonus episode recorded live from the Indiana Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church June 8-10, 2023 in Muncie Indiana.Youth Leading the Way: Empowering Change and Encouragement in the Methodist Church with Matthew and Kristen Bisciglia.Introduction:In this episode of "To Be Encouraged," Reverend Dr. Brad Miller engages in a conversation with Matthew Bisciglia and Kristen Bisciglia, where they discuss their experiences within the church and the importance of inclusion and encouragement. Through their dialogue, we gain valuable insights into the power of community, the uniqueness of the Methodist faith, and the significance of gradually introducing friends to church settings. Here are three key takeaway points from this episode.1. The Value of Inclusion and Diverse Voices in the Church:Both Matthew and Kristen highlight the significance of inclusion and diverse representation within the church. They stress the importance of having different voices and perspectives on the stage, as it fosters a sense of belonging for everyone. Matthew admirably mentions his support for the LGBTQ+ community, wearing a rainbow shirt to show his endorsement. Through this example, we understand that inclusivity is not only a principle but also a tangible practice that allows individuals to feel seen and accepted within their faith community.2. The Unyielding Grounding of the Methodist Faith:Matthew's connection to the Methodist faith serves as a powerful testimony to the lasting impact a religious grounding can have during uncertain times. He expresses how the teachings of the Methodist faith provide solace and certainty, especially in the face of loss exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. The principle of Christian anchor within the Methodist faith allows individuals to find comfort and a sense of direction. This steadfast foundation becomes a guiding light, not only for internal fortitude but also for sharing that light with others in the midst of a discouraging world.3. The Gradual Introduction of Friends to Church Settings:The discussion delves into Matthew's efforts to involve his friends in the church, a process that emphasizes trust-building and friendship. Recognizing the limited efficacy of direct invitations to youth group activities, Matthew sought alternative ways to introduce his friends to the church environment. By initially inviting them to informal gatherings at his house and engaging them in church events like Easter egg hunts and nerve games, he recognized the importance of easing individuals into the unfamiliar setting. This strategic approach allows friends to acclimate at their own pace, fostering an environment where they can discover their own spiritual voice.Conclusion:In Episode 066 f the "To Be Encouraged" podcast Matthew and Kristen Bisciglia present a thought-provoking conversation about the significance of inclusion, finding...
Guest: Timothy Egan is a Pulitzer Prize–winning reporter and the author of many books, his latest is A Fever in the Heartland: The Ku Klux Klan's Plot to Take Over America, and the Woman Who Stopped Them. Photo(c): WikimediaCommons. Euskara: A Ku Klux Klan gathering in Muncie Indiana in 1922. The post The KKK of the 1920's appeared first on KPFA.
CLL #2227 (feat. Ron Pearlman) 04/12/2004 – Monday Night Show Source – Tucker Stream Recording (2004) with a Fan Stream Recording (2004) Patch This episode is 100% complete with a medium audio upgrade, Ron is making his only appearance on CLL. Drew saw ‘Hellboy’ and is broadcasting remotely from Muncie Indiana, Adam and Ron have a bizarre on air rapport and the episode has a “handball against the drapes” quality according to many fans. Who knows how things would have gone down had Drew been in studio, once again listen and decide for yourself. The Love Between The Two Hosts – CLL on Youtube, with Video for select episodes. Paid Link – As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Music Provided by Rich Banks Read More →
Former Muncie Indiana Officers Sentencing Case Reset For June 2023 https://www.thestarpress.com/story/news/crime/2023/01/31/ex-muncie-officers-sentencing-in-federal-brutality-case-reset-for-june-27/69855346007/ Former Muncie Indiana Police Department Supervisor Pleads Guilty https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/former-muncie-police-department-supervisor-pleads-guilty-obstruction-justice-writing-false Former Muncie Indiana Police Officer Pleads Guilty https://fox59.com/indiana-news/retired-officer-gets-plea-deal-in-muncie-excessive-force-case/ https://twitter.com/JuryFile https://www.instagram.com/juryfile/ https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100075902688137 Victims Health & Legal Fund: https://juryfile.com/shop/uncategorized/10-donation/ https://cash.app/$JuryFile --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/jury-file/support
This week Katie does a solo and feels like a lunatic talking to herself in a empty room about the murder of Mary Grubb just before Thanksgiving in 2020. **Trigger warning DV**. Katie also starts a would you rather section? Let us know which you'd rather do!? DM us on IG @Maniacally Midwest! If you or someone you know is struggling with violence you can find help at CTSafeConnect.org or contact 888-774-2900, 24/7/365 We love you guys!! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/maniacally-midwest/support
Haylee Cummings is a missing teen from Muncie, Indiana, who was reported missing on the evening of August 9, 2022. It was originally believed that Haylee attended school on August 9, 2022. However, it was later revealed that Haylee did not attend school on August 9, 2022. It is believed that Haylee has left the state of Indiana could be in the company of a man she met online. Haylee Cummings was previously reported missing in early 2022 and was reuinted with her family after a successful search for her whereabouts early this year. https://twitter.com/JuryFile https://www.instagram.com/juryfile/ https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100075902688137 Victims Health & Legal Fund: https://juryfile.com/shop/uncategorized/10-donation/ https://cash.app/$JuryFile --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/jury-file/support
Haylee Cummings was reported MISSING on January, 19, 2022. Haylee did not go to school that morning and her mother later discovered that she left with a 18-year-old male who she was chatting with online. After mysterious information surfaces, Haylee's case becomes even more concerning. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/jury-file/support
In this episode, you will hear the tear jerking stories of three cases in Muncie, IN that deserve justice. What is going on in Muncie? Who is holding this department accountable? Who will step up and help these families fight as if it was one of their own loved ones? Ashley Mullis, Michael Coates, and William Balfour we are all here as Warriors fighting for YOUR justice! Let's do this!!!
Host Kristopher H. Bilbrey had been "under the weather" for several days... and then on Wednesday, November 10th, 2021 former Mayor of the City of Muncie Indiana, Dennis Tyler, was sentenced to a year in prison on federal charges! Prosecutor's say they wanted Tyler to serve time to: "deter others in similar positions from abusing their positions of public trust, and promote respect for the law so as to restore faith in the local system of government." The question is "Will Trust Return Now?" Click the link for Kris' thoughts! Sponsors for Ep #172: National Concealed Carry Association... https://nationalconcealedcarryassociation.com. & Vital Farms... https://vitalfarms.com. Also, to get some PERCEPTION-GEAR in your life, check out the "Merch IS Reality" store at the following link: https://merchisreality.square.site. Perception IS Reality w/Kristopher H. Bilbrey 11.11.21 Kris can be found @ www.facebook.com/Bilbrey318 (Produced by: The Vulgar Poets)
This week I sit down with Pastor Frank Scott Sr. who is heavily involved with the community of Delaware County in Muncie Indiana. We discuss the importance of reaching out and giving back to our community that we live in and how we can we can be an impact to those around us that need a hand.Support the show (https://cash.app/$NathanBrosher)
Live from the no panic zone—I'm Steve Gruber—I am America's Voice— I am Fierce and Fearless— I am here to tell the truth—I mean lets be honest—somebody has to—And—I'm the guy— Here are three big Things you need to know right now— ONE— The Chair of the Fed is now admitting that inflation is getting far worse—and its not going to get better any time in the near future— TWO— The Pandemic is about to get a lot worse for those who live beyond the bright city lights in rural America— there is a collapse coming—you will only hear about right here— THREE— I went out and saw America over the weekend—I travelled to Muncie Indiana—the home of Ball State—and was surprised at how many conservative students there are—and how many are proud to let you know it— I am working on a documentary series—and its taking me to the far corners of America— I am finding what is good and what is not—I am talking to people from all backgrounds—and religions and persuasions—and it is an education— It makes me hopeful that if millennials are too obtuse to understand the greatness of America—todays high school and college kids are not— and with the train wreck in the White House—it seems they are ready to make a big change come election day 2022—
This week on Bridging the Gap I sit down with Community Advocate and Associate Pastor of Renovation Life Church Frank Scott Sr. of Muncie Indiana as he shares his journey through life and how he got to the place he is today.Support the show (https://cash.app/$NathanBrosher)
TWO trips in a row! Annalisa and Joan go back to Muncie, Indiana where they met at their alma mater, Ball State University.
The silence from elected officials can be quite deafening and they say so much to us by not saying anything at all! This is something that citizens must start fighting back against... the time is now! Join Host Kristopher H. Bilbrey as he turns the volume up and gives a voice to the voiceless! Listen & Share! Sponsors for Ep #166: Kings Island (Amusement Park): https://www.visitkingsisland.com. & Bob McNally's "Strumstick": https://strumstick.com. Also, to get some PERCEPTION-GEAR in your life, check out the "Merch IS Reality" store at the following link: https://merchisreality.square.site. Perception IS Reality w/Kristopher H. Bilbrey & Amber Greene 09.14.21 Kris can be found @ www.facebook.com/Bilbrey318 Amber can be found @ www.facebook.com/amberbousman www.facebook.com/groups/346784843160593 www.beautycounter.com/Ambergreene (Produced by: The Vulgar Poets)
This week on Bridging the Gap, I sit down with Pastor Andre Mitchell who is currently the Senior Pastor of Deliverance Temple in Muncie Indiana. He shares his upbringing and testimony and how God had called him into ministry while he was in college.Support the show (https://cash.app/$NathanBrosher)
The boys are back and this time they've got a date with Muncie Indiana! Who knew one place could hold so much Bob Ross and Garfield?! Also Crendor find a love for castles and harassing Jesse about coffee... or is it espresso? All this and a woman taking her cow for a joy ride on a brand new Cox n' Crendor! Visit http://joinhoney.com/cox to get Honey for free. Go to http://meundies.com/crendor to get 15% off your first order and free shipping!
This week's guest was one that was MUCH more than sports talk with a television station's Sports Director! Glenn Marini, Sports Director for WANE 15 (CBS affiliate in Fort Wayne Indiana), joined Sam & Richey in the Lounge, and it was such a great time, AND it was his first-ever podcast appearance!From nearby Muncie Indiana, Glenn talked about his time working in a VERY small television station in Kentucky, where he KNEW being on TV was for him! Going from there to Arkansas wasn't something that was expected, but something great happened there that kept him there longer than he wanted, but eventually, he made it back to the Hoosier state, and the position he now holds!What led him to television? Growing up in Muncie, how in the world did he end up going to college at Miami University of Ohio? What was one of his most memorable experiences since becoming a sportscaster? How about the WEIRDEST?! Glenn shares so many stories that are funny, unusual, and UNEXPECTED! He shares a Peyton Manning story that... well, you just have to hear it! What is the biggest change he's seen with high school sports in his time as a sportscaster? He does some name-dropping, and that's A-OK! His take on people and comparing them to their public persona is a good one! What a fantastic time the guys had with Glenn! It's definitely imperative they have him back because they only scratched the surface with him! You will certainly enjoy the guys reminiscing about things around the town of Muncie, because all three of the guys went to Ball State, and Glenn... well he grew up there!SO, sit back, relax & #grabalisten!Find Glenn on Twitter: @glennmariniWANEand on Facebook: Glenn Marini WANE 15
This week I sit down with Evangelist Bob Ewert of Muncie Indiana as we discuss his story and where his journey began and how God is using him in the area of evangelism all across Indiana.Support the show (https://cash.app/$NathanBrosher)
In this weeks episode I sit down with Dr. Keith O'Neal, the Lead Pastor of Destiny Christian Center International in Muncie Indiana as we discuss "Pride" and how it operates. Bishop O'Neal is in the process of writing a book entitled "Being Right is Overrated" and we discuss the principle around that mantra he has made throughout the past 15 years and the importance of that simple statement.Support the show (https://cash.app/$NathanBrosher)
This is such a fantastic episode we have here today. I'm proud to announce that "Nothing But A Bob Thang" is here to talk to us as well as my wife Glory2Glory2Glory "on Instagram" and we will do a special / special of the Bob Ross Experience and what we experienced in Muncie Indiana. Please check out there awesome podcast here and let them know your a fan of Bob! Glory2Glory2Glory : https://www.instagram.com/glory2glory2glorytheprophet/ Nothing But A Bob Thang : https://anchor.fm/nothing-but-a-bob-thang Twitter : https://twitter.com/Bob_ThangPod and check out there other podcast here Your Favorite Thing Sucks : https://anchor.fm/your-favorite-thing-sucks Sushi Jackknife : https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/sushi-jackknife/id975017116?mt=2
Artie Haire - Made his way from Muncie Indiana to Mooresville NC Now the crew chief for Jordan Anderson Racing, Artie had a very unusual and twisting path from Indiana to the big leagues of NASCAR. And Tim has his story right here! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
In this episode we go to the original recordings @ the Bob Ross Experience in Muncie Indiana. I was given the green light release the recordings by Minnetrista. So here we go to the Grand Opening Ceremony dedicated to the Bob Ross Experience. Links for more info: Bob Ross Experience @ Minnetrista www.minnetrista.net/bobrossexperience Bob Ross on YouTube www.youtube.com/channel/UCxcnsr1R5Ge_fbTu5ajt8DQ Bob Ross Inc. www.bobross.com/ Twitch Glory2Glory Studio www.twitch.tv/glory2glory2glory
This Episode is the Jim Needham Bob Ross talk at the Minnetrista Gallery in Muncie Indiana. Jim talks about his personal relationship with Bob Ross and what it was like being the General Manager of WIPB. So grab that easy chair and enjoy! Links for more info: Bob Ross Experience @ Minnetrista www.minnetrista.net/bobrossexperience Bob Ross on YouTube www.youtube.com/channel/UCxcnsr1R5Ge_fbTu5ajt8DQ Bob Ross Inc. www.bobross.com/ Twitch Glory2Glory Studio www.twitch.tv/glory2glory2glory
In this special we are going to Muncie Indiana to see the Bob Ross Experience and like never before! This was an ultimate Bob Ross fans dream come true. So come a long and pull up the old easy chair for an hour of relaxing fun at the WIPB station at Ball State University. Links for more info: Bob Ross Experience @ Minnetrista https://www.minnetrista.net/bobrossexperience Bob Ross on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCxcnsr1R5Ge_fbTu5ajt8DQ Bob Ross Inc. https://www.bobross.com/ Twitch Glory2Glory Studio https://www.twitch.tv/glory2glory2glory
On this Quickie Larry talks about the podcast, computer repairs, a new compressor set up, the upcoming Kickstarter from Knight Models, and the Boys Ross experience at Minnestrata in Muncie Indiana!
JP Crabtree, 3rd generation racer from Muncie Indiana joins us to talk about how he got started in racing and the upcoming All American 400 on Halloween weekend. We get to talk a little bit about what got him started in racing and what he does during his free time, which admittedly he does not have a lot of! This will be the first time he has raced at the Nashville Fairgrounds Speedway and he will be up against the best of the best for this race. Hear what his expectations are and his plans for the weekend. Through our friends at GC Performance Classics, DrivinLife will be along for the ride this weekend. A huge thank you to Jeremy Carpenter and his crew for helping this young driver make it to the track, and for giving us an opportunity to be a part of it as well. If you have never been to this race, go get a ticket and lets get to some short track, end of season racing!!
Your College Bound Kid | Scholarships, Admission, & Financial Aid Strategies
In this episode you will hear: (05:02) In this week’s news segment, an article from The Wall Street Journal, “U.S. Medical School Applications Soar in COVID-19 Era” by Patrick Thomas. The pandemic has placed a spotlight on the healthcare industry and medical schools are reporting record numbers in applications. Prospective students have shared reasons for the heightened interest based on wanting to address pronounced healthcare disparities and the heroic status of frontline workers, all brought on by the coronavirus. (28:15) We’re in chapter 142 of 171 Answers and we’re talking through priority deadlines and why they are important. (43:14) This week’s bonus content looks at why admission directors are nervous about their Early Decision numbers and what they are going to do about it. (01:08:01) Mark kicks off his interview with William Segura, Associate Dean at Emory in “Understanding 3 models of decision making for admission committees” (01:14:56) Recommended resource: The best CSS PROFILE Walkthrough Mark has seen. It is by Gail Holt, Dean of Financial Aid at Amherst and she does this for MEFA. You can access this webinar under the video section of MEFA.org or on MEFA YouTube Channel, but here is a link: . MEFA did a second CSS PROFILE Walkthrough that I also recommend. Here it is: (01:27:03) College spotlight: Ball State in Muncie Indiana (bsu.edu) Don't forget to send your questions related to any and every facet of the college process to: questions@yourcollegeboundkid.com If you enjoy our podcast, would you please do us a favor and share our podcast both verbally and on social media? We would be most grateful! To access and best utilize the transcripts of each podcast, please do the following: Go to Click the Transcripts tab, from the top menu by the Episodes tab Click on the transcript for the specific episode you are interested in, just click on the image or by the word “Transcript” You will see a Share icon, a download option, a link to Apple podcast and you will see a magnifying glass Use the magnifying glass to search for any word. If that word was used in the episode, it will show up, highlighted in yellow. You will also see a timestamp so you can see the exact minute and second this word was spoken. If you click the word highlighted in yellow, the podcast player will start playing right at that word. You can stop it from playing by clicking the pause button. Note: The transcription accuracy is about 90%, so you will see some spelling errors and errors in translation going from voice to print. We are excited to give our listeners a chance to play a role in shaping what topics we discuss, so please send us your ideas for college spotlights, articles for discussion and recommended resources. You can let your voice be heard by completing this survey. Just put the following link in your browser and give us your honest feedback. We thank you in advance. Every episode of Your College-Bound Kid will align with a chapter from the book 171 Answers to the Most-Asked College Admission Questions. To get a copy go to Amazon and click: If you want to place a bulk order, you will save money by purchasing this book at 171answers.com. Every penny goes to The Atlanta Mission, a Christian organization that helps over 1000 homeless residents every day. If you want to see what future episodes will discuss in the book chapter section, just go to 171answers.com and then click the red button "See exactly what 171 Answers covers"
The Commons Good podcast team sat down with the All-America City (AAC) 2020 finalists to learn more about their efforts and the individuals helping to steward the work. In this episode of the AAC podcast mini-series we hear from Jane Ellery on behalf of the community of Muncie, Indiana. The All-America City awards celebrates and recognizes neighborhoods, villages, towns, cities, counties, tribes and regions that engage residents in innovative, inclusive and effective efforts to tackle critical challenges.
RadioPublic|LibSyn|YouTube|Patreon|Square Cash (Share code: Send $5, get $5!) The wait is over! We were all on tenterhooks for a bit, with all of the intense speculation, second-guessing, rumors swirling… But, Joan McCarter did return! Turns out she was just on vacation. Whew! Joan called in to report that California Sen. Kamala Harris will be running for Vice President on the Democratic ticket, and that she is a very good, and popular choice and certain to work well for Joe Biden. Grassroot money already approves of Kamala. (Please remember to pay in Alpha Kappa Alpha denominations) Greg Dworkin concurs with the enthusiasm, telling us that the big papers are running “the safe choice” essays, while conservative pundits are pointing out how Kamala is a Wall Street connected commie soft on crime narc, who isn’t quite black or female enough to qualify as “a woman of color”... and where’s her birth certificate? Donald Trump sums it all up as… oh wait, that’s a parody essay. What Trump really said was… uhm. Suburban housewives, who Donald pictures looking like Ivanka in gingham aprons, are now Trump’s last hope. Ilhan Omar has won her Democratic primary election. So did Bircher Qanon supporter Marjorie Taylor Greene. And, no, that does not “balance it out”. However, now Trump can eliminate ALL of his intelligence briefings. Joe Biden leads Trump by about 10 points, since about forever. Which, seems to be a good thing, on the face of it... But, what about those who don’t like that answer, or would really rather have Trump leading, or those who just hated being yelled at by everybody in 2016 and wanted to hedge their bet? Pretty much the same answer. Political consultants know, but aren’t in the job of telling you the answer. David Waldman also knew Kamala Harris would be the pick, but chose not to steal anyone’s thunder by making an early announcement. Republicans know they could never compete statewide in Washington DC or Puerto Rico, but no one has the heart to make them say why that’s the case. Perhaps we can save the Post Office by not sending things. Trump sues to prevent dropboxes. More than 200 students went into coronavirus quarantine near Muncie Indiana this week. School boards just want an agreed upon death count to establish proper education. That, and staff and cash. Without cash, pretty much everything will end soon. (The UK economy suffered its biggest slump on record between April and June.) Trump’s executive memos did nothing, except waste time that wasn’t available. The next step towards stimulating the economy—cutting off unemployment, then cutting off the food.
The killing of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer, and the subsequent protests, have brought to the forefront a renewed conversation on Black lives and the injustices BIPOC folks face each day. But this time, will there be change? Join J.R., Kelsey, and special guest WaTasha Barnes Griffin as they discuss Living While Black in the U.S.A. Stories It Shouldn't Matter WaTasha Barnes Griffin's story as told to Seth Carrier-Ladd from Facing Racism in Muncie Indiana. Performed by Amanda Hummer. Music Used in this Episode "Been On" by JBlanked Released under an Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) License. From the Free Music Archive.
The Sound Of Muncie Indiana On 4-8-67 On WERK Radio. Please Go To Website For Contents.
Welcome to Indelible! This podcast's purpose is to start a new conversation about sexual violence on college campuses.
EXPLICIT CONTENT! Ladies & Gentlemen, this Episode #051 is a very short and to the point show covering very important statements made by a Candidate running for Office in Muncie, Indiana. These statements made BY the Candidate contradict beliefs the Candidate has tried to portray to voters! Listen and decide for yourself the importance of the statements she makes! I, for one, believe these statements to be a look at who I truly see, when I look at the Candidate! In this short episode, you will hear a quick 54 second clip of (6) six statements made by: At Large, Muncie City Council, Incumbent, 214-Democrat Nora Powell. SOME OF THE WORDS IN SOME OF THE STATEMENTS MAY NOT BE SUITABLE FOR WORK OR CHILDREN... Parental Guidance Suggested! I offer an apology to you and I will offer an apology on Councilor Powell's behalf! In April & May of 2019 I was 'interview prepping' several Candidates running for various offices in various communities! At Large, Muncie City Council, Incumbent, 214-Democrat Nora Powell was one of the Candidates! During a series of discussions with Councilor Powell, leading up to her "Candidate Interview" on April 28th, 2019, and during a few follow up discussions Councilor Powell made the following (6) six statements you will be hearing here! These statements are HER WORDS! With no EDITS other than the edits to push the (6) statements together simply to condense what otherwise was several hours worth of conversion. *Her statements begin @ 8:56. Please listen and share with all voters in the Muncie, Indiana area! For listeners OUTSIDE of Muncie or the state of Indiana! I am sorry for this extremely local episode... and to all listeners I am sorry for the short nature of the entire episode! However, the short episode serves two purposes: 1 - we are down to 2 episodes before the BIG #054 Episode that will air on Election Day (Tuesday 11.05.19). I am preparing content for both episodes #052 (airing on: Tuesday 10.29.19) & #053 (airing on: Saturday 11.02.19)... as well as, prepping for the FaceBook Live episodes on Monday 10.28.19 & Monday 11.04.19 (you can catch those Live episodes @ www.facebook.com/Bilbrey318). And of course, we will have all day LIVE coverage on Election Day... as well, episode #054 will air Tuesday night 11.05.19. & 2 - keeping this episode short will ensure more voters have a chance to hear the statements, because, lets face it, there are. people that will want to listen that are not regular listeners and they will want to get right to the statements! We will be back on Tuesday 10.29.19 with a regular, full length show... episode #052! Looking forward to talking to you all then! Until then, please share this and all other episodes... as well as the home link: https://perception.fireside.fm Perception IS Reality w/Kristopher H. Bilbrey 10.26.19 (Produced by: The Vulgar Poets)
Kristopher H. Bilbrey has 2 Candidate Interviews lined up for this EXCLUSIVE... FIRST, COMPARATIVE LOOK at the Candidates running for the Office of the Muncie, Indiana City Clerk. In this #048th episode you will hear from current, Incumbent Democrat: City Clerk, Melissa Peckinpaugh & her Republican Challenger: Belinda Munson. Both of these Candidates will face off in this upcoming 2019 General Election! Please use this episode and the interviews of these 2 Candidates to help make your decision on who to vote for and PLEASE... SHARE THIS EPISODE WITH ALL VOTERS IN THE CITY OF MUNCIE, INDIANA! The episode breakdown is as follows: Democrat Melissa Peckinpaugh's Interview time is from: 00:00 - 28:14 Republican Belinda Munson's Interview time is from: 28:15 - 51:16 You can pick and choose which interview you want to listen to... however, it would be wise, to listen to both interviews to be able to compare and contrast! The Candidates were allowed to take as long as they wanted and were able to answer all questions how they saw fit! Perception IS Reality w/Kristopher H. Bilbrey 10.15.19 (Produced by: The Vulgar Poets)
Kristopher H. Bilbrey lays out several clips of insanity from a recent Muncie, Indiana City Council meeting that last 6 hours! (THAT'S RIGHT I SAID 6 HOURS!) In the clips you can hear the absolute break down of the City Officials! This episode SINGLE HANDEDLY shows why voters need to get OFF their asses and get out to vote... which, by the way, EARLY VOTING IS UNDERWAY! So come along for a FANTASTIC episode... showing the VERY WORST of the "Broken Local Government!" Election Day is Tuesday, November 5th, 2019 from 6a - 6p. Be sure to listen and share this episode... but also episode #045: perception.fireside.fm/045 Perception IS Reality w/Kristopher H. Bilbrey 10.09.19 (Produced by: The Vulgar Poets)
On this SPECIAL Episode #042 Kristopher H. Bilbrey records LIVE from Muncie Central High School in Muncie, Delaware County, Indiana where Ball State University in conjunction with the Bowen Center for Public Affairs & Muncie Community School Corp holds a Candidate Forum for the 2019 Municipal Election for the City of Muncie! The evening starts with the City Council Candidates (Time Stamp > 00:00:00 - 01:23:06) The evening concludes with the Mayoral Candidates (Time Stamp > 01:23:07 - 03:10:00) We will hear questions asked of the Candidates in attendance and their answers and at various points Kristopher H. Bilbrey will interject to give his thoughts on the matters at hand! Council Candidates in attendance were: Aaron Clark (R) At Large Linda Gregory (D) At Large - Incumbent Troy Ingram (R) At Large Richard Ivy (R) At Large Nora Evans Powell (D) At Large - Incumbent Ralph Smith (R) Dist 1 Brandon Murphy (R) Dist 2 Jeff Robinson (D) Dist 2 Scott Paluch (R) Dist 3 Brandtley Spicer (L) Dist 3 Monica James (G) Dist 4 Bradley Polk (R) Dist 4 - Incumbent Council Candidates NOT in attendance were: WaTasha Barnes Griffin (D) At Large Doug Marshall (D) Dist 1 - Incumbent Ray Dudley (D) Dist 3 Jerry Dishman (D) Dist 5 (with no November opponent he will win the election) Anitra Davis (D) Dist 6 (with no November opponent she will win the election) Mayoral Candidates in attendance were: Dan Ridenour (R) Terry Whitt Bailey (D) Steve Smith (L) To WATCH the LIVE event without interuption or my thoughts please click on the following link: Mayoral Candidates: https://www.facebook.com/Bilbrey318/videos/10212546166403772/ Council Candidates: https://www.facebook.com/Bilbrey318/videos/10212545102817183/ To register to vote in the state of Indiana ON OR BEFORE 10.08.19 @ 11:59p OR AFTER 11.05.19, do so by visiting the following link: www.IndianaVoters.com Perception IS Reality w/Kristopher H. Bilbrey 09.26.19 (Produced by: The Vulgar Poets)
Kristopher H. Bilbrey asks the very real question... "Where is Everyone?" Just 30 days after 1200 people attended a City Council meeting we are now back to the normal, humdrum, normal amount of people at a meeting! AND THAT IS WHAT HE WAS AFRAID OF! Discussion of how to overcome this is talked about and Kris asks for YOUR INPUT? September 11th, 2001 is also discussed due to the Anniversary! The BRAVE men & women of Flight 93 are discussed and the question is asked... how could we be more like them? Two older episodes were mentioned and links to those episodes are as follows: Ep #028: Catch More Bees with Honey Perception.fireside.fm/028 Ep #010: The Dregs of Society Perception.fireside.fm/028 Perception IS Reality w/Kristopher H. Bilbrey 09.10.19 (Produced by: The Vulgar Poets)
The purpose of the United Methodist People Podcast with Rev. Dr. Brad Miller is to strengthen the connection int eh United Methodist Church through conversation and commentary to fulfill the mission of the United Methodist Church of making disciples of Jesus Christ for the transformation of the world. In Episode 015 Brad has a deep conversation with Rev. Lisa Schubert Nowling the Senior Pastor or College Avenue United Methodist Church in Muncie Indiana and an Indiana Conference delegate to the 2019 General Conference. Lisa tells Brad about her early faith formation in being nurtured and encouraged in her local church to sept into leadership and eventually answering the call to ministry complimented by here training an skills and education in journalism and French. Lisa has special affinity for serving people in the margins of life on matter of social justice and enhancing the influence to the local church to achieve life transformation Lisa expressed to Brad her concerned about the state of the church and how the UMC is struggling to relate to many generations of people driven in many ways by the failure of the UMC to understand and respond to the context of the 21st century world. She goes on to go deeper int eh matter of context in regards to the understanding and preparing for the 2019 General Conference regarding g the way forward. She lays out in some detail the nature of the traditional, one church and connectional conference plans. She talks about the merits and challenges of each and shares with Brad why is leaning toward supporting the one church plan as the best approach to saving the unity of the church and the UMC’s ability to continue to impact the world for the Good News of Jesus Christ. She unpacks with Brad her concerns in two area’s prior to going to General Conference those be differing views of interpreting Scripture and the need too approach the sensitive matters of human sexuality at the General Conference with a heart of peace. Perhaps the most impact statement that Lisa made to Brad on Episode 015 the UMPP was that her hope for the UMC is not in General Conferee but in Jesus Christ. This is an important issue the United Methodist People Podcast in understanding and relating to the matter facing the UMVC on the way forward. Please listen, share with other and subscribe, rate and review on iTunes. Doing All the Good We Can, October 2018 Rev. Dr. Brad Miller
This week on ViewPoint, Jim Lyon is joined by Joshua and Laura Brandt. They recall experiences and life lessons they have learned while living in Muncie Indiana as well as topics on family, life, and faith. Join us! (Air Date 10-7-18)
Gudrun met the USA-based mathematician Roza Aceska from Macedonia in Turin at the Conference MicroLocal and Time-Frequency Analysis 2018. The topic of the recorded conversation is dynamical sampling. The situation which Roza and other mathematician study is: There is a process which develops over time which in principle is well understood. In mathematical terms this means we know the equation which governs our model of the process or in other words we know the family of evolution operators. Often this is a partial differential equation which accounts for changes in time and in 1, 2 or 3 spatial variables. This means, if we know the initial situation (i.e. the initial conditions in mathematical terms), we can numerically calculate good approximations for the instances the process will have at all places and at all times in the future. But in general when observing a process life is not that well sorted. Instead we might know the principal equation but only through (maybe only a few) measurements we can find information about the initial condition or material constants for the process. This leads to two questions: How many measurements are necessary in order to obtain the full information (i.e. to have exact knowledge)? Are there possibilities to choose the time and the spatial situation of a measurement so clever as to gain as much as possible new information from any measurement? These are mathematical questions which are answered through studying the equations. The science of sampling started in the 1940s with Claude Shannon who found fundamental limits of signal processing. He developed a precise framework - the so-called information theory. Sampling and reconstruction theory is important because it serves as a bridge between the modern digital world and the analog world of continuous functions. It is surprising to see how many applications rely on taking samples in order to understand processes. A few examples in our everyday life are: Audio signal processing (electrical signals representing sound of speech or music), image processing, and wireless communication. But also seismology or genomics can only develop models by taking very intelligent sample measurements, or, in other words, by making the most scientific sense out of available measurements. The new development in dynamical sampling is, that in following a process over time it might by possible to find good options to gain valuable information about the process at different time instances, as well as different spatial locations. In practice, increasing the number of spatially used sensors is more expensive (or even impossible) than increasing the temporal sampling density. These issues are overcome by a spatio-temporal sampling framework in evolution processes. The idea is to use a reduced number of sensors with each being activated more frequently. Roza refers to a paper by Enrique Zuazua in which he and his co-author study the heat equation and construct a series of later-time measurements at a single location throughout the underlying process. The heat equation is prototypical and one can use similar ideas in a more general setting. This is one topic on which Roza and her co-workers succeeded and want to proceed further. After Roza graduated with a Ph.D. in Mathematics at the University of Vienna she worked as Assistant Professor at the University Ss Cyril and Methodius in Skopje (Macedonia), and after that at the Vanderbilt University in Nashville (Tennessee). Nowadays she is a faculty member of Ball State University in Muncie (Indiana). References Overview on sampling theory and applications: M. Unser: Sampling-50 years after Shannon Proceedings of the IEEE 88 (4) 569 - 587, 2000. Dynamical sampling in shift-invariant spaces: R. Aceska e.a.: Dynamical Sampling in Shift-Invariant Spaces 2014 (Version at Archive} Dynamical sampling: R. Aceska, A. Petrosyan, S. Tang: Dynamical sampling of two-dimensional temporally-varying signals International Conference on Sampling Theory and Applications (SampTA), DOI:10.1109/SAMPTA.2015.7148929, 2015. DeVore, Ronald, and Enrique Zuazua: Recovery of an initial temperature from discrete sampling, Mathematical Models and Methods in Applied Sciences 24.12 (2014): 2487-2501, 2014. Evolution operators involved in dynamical sampling: S. Tang: System identification in dynamical sampling, Advances in Computational Mathematics 43 (3) 555–580, 2017. On Bessel systems, bases and frames in the dynamical sampling setup: A.Aldroubi e.a.:lterative actions of normal operators Journal of Functional Analysis 272 (3), 1121-1146, 2017. Related Podcasts G. Thäter, E. Zuazua: Waves, Conversation in Modellansatz Podcast Episode 054, Fakultät für Mathematik, Karlsruher Institut für Technologie (KIT), 2015.
Gudrun met the USA-based mathematician Roza Aceska from Macedonia in Turin at the Conference MicroLocal and Time-Frequency Analysis 2018. The topic of the recorded conversation is dynamical sampling. The situation which Roza and other mathematician study is: There is a process which develops over time which in principle is well understood. In mathematical terms this means we know the equation which governs our model of the process or in other words we know the family of evolution operators. Often this is a partial differential equation which accounts for changes in time and in 1, 2 or 3 spatial variables. This means, if we know the initial situation (i.e. the initial conditions in mathematical terms), we can numerically calculate good approximations for the instances the process will have at all places and at all times in the future. But in general when observing a process life is not that well sorted. Instead we might know the principal equation but only through (maybe only a few) measurements we can find information about the initial condition or material constants for the process. This leads to two questions: How many measurements are necessary in order to obtain the full information (i.e. to have exact knowledge)? Are there possibilities to choose the time and the spatial situation of a measurement so clever as to gain as much as possible new information from any measurement? These are mathematical questions which are answered through studying the equations. The science of sampling started in the 1940s with Claude Shannon who found fundamental limits of signal processing. He developed a precise framework - the so-called information theory. Sampling and reconstruction theory is important because it serves as a bridge between the modern digital world and the analog world of continuous functions. It is surprising to see how many applications rely on taking samples in order to understand processes. A few examples in our everyday life are: Audio signal processing (electrical signals representing sound of speech or music), image processing, and wireless communication. But also seismology or genomics can only develop models by taking very intelligent sample measurements, or, in other words, by making the most scientific sense out of available measurements. The new development in dynamical sampling is, that in following a process over time it might by possible to find good options to gain valuable information about the process at different time instances, as well as different spatial locations. In practice, increasing the number of spatially used sensors is more expensive (or even impossible) than increasing the temporal sampling density. These issues are overcome by a spatio-temporal sampling framework in evolution processes. The idea is to use a reduced number of sensors with each being activated more frequently. Roza refers to a paper by Enrique Zuazua in which he and his co-author study the heat equation and construct a series of later-time measurements at a single location throughout the underlying process. The heat equation is prototypical and one can use similar ideas in a more general setting. This is one topic on which Roza and her co-workers succeeded and want to proceed further. After Roza graduated with a Ph.D. in Mathematics at the University of Vienna she worked as Assistant Professor at the University Ss Cyril and Methodius in Skopje (Macedonia), and after that at the Vanderbilt University in Nashville (Tennessee). Nowadays she is a faculty member of Ball State University in Muncie (Indiana). References Overview on sampling theory and applications: M. Unser: Sampling-50 years after Shannon Proceedings of the IEEE 88 (4) 569 - 587, 2000. Dynamical sampling in shift-invariant spaces: R. Aceska e.a.: Dynamical Sampling in Shift-Invariant Spaces 2014 (Version at Archive} Dynamical sampling: R. Aceska, A. Petrosyan, S. Tang: Dynamical sampling of two-dimensional temporally-varying signals International Conference on Sampling Theory and Applications (SampTA), DOI:10.1109/SAMPTA.2015.7148929, 2015. DeVore, Ronald, and Enrique Zuazua: Recovery of an initial temperature from discrete sampling, Mathematical Models and Methods in Applied Sciences 24.12 (2014): 2487-2501, 2014. Evolution operators involved in dynamical sampling: S. Tang: System identification in dynamical sampling, Advances in Computational Mathematics 43 (3) 555–580, 2017. On Bessel systems, bases and frames in the dynamical sampling setup: A.Aldroubi e.a.:lterative actions of normal operators Journal of Functional Analysis 272 (3), 1121-1146, 2017. Related Podcasts G. Thäter, E. Zuazua: Waves, Conversation in Modellansatz Podcast Episode 054, Fakultät für Mathematik, Karlsruher Institut für Technologie (KIT), 2015.
Welcome to episode 14 of the Activated podcast sponsored by Strictly Entertainment. This week we are proud to present an interview with Dub Dueci straight out of Muncie Indiana. This guy is an incredible artist/producer with a great technical flow and bars that hit hard. Be on the lookout for his new projects dropping this year and go peep his tape G.O.A.T out now on all music services. Shout out Top Flight Music Gang. INSTAGRAM: Dub Dueci: https://www.instagram.com/dubdueci22/ Walter: https://www.instagram.com/realwalterford/ GDQ: https://www.instagram.com/gdqthe1/ Dlaney: https://www.instagram.com/6sidemma/ Strictly Lit: https://www.instagram.com/strictlylitentertainment/ Music from Dub Dueci: https://soundcloud.com/dubdueci22/dub-dueci-x-viola https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E4B_PvRVM-E https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/the-g-o-a-t/1376334905 GET MOMENTUM ON ITUNES/APPLE MUSIC/SPOTIFY/ALL MUSIC SERVICES NOW!!! ITUNES/APPLE MUSIC: https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/momentum/1340386856 SPOTIFY: https://open.spotify.com/album/569vqw0VNAhsTM6R5GE3wv --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/theactivatedpodcast/support
Athletes spend their lives fighting for a spot in a field of 2,000 triathletes in the most grueling competition on Earth. Their prize? Thrashing through a 2.4 mile open-water swim in the Pacific, fighting trade winds and a convection oven of heat on a 112-mile bike and finishing with a marathon - a 26.2-mile run. Becoming an IRONMAN at the World Championships at Kona wasn't a dream of Jen Ator's. As Fitness Director at Women's Health and author of The Women's Health Fitness Fix, she was happy to fit runs through Manhattan and no-nonsense strength-training workouts into her busy days. That all changed when reps from Chocolate Milk called with an offer to make her an IRONMAN. And while she said it took her a few days to accept the branid's invitation - an invitation to compete in a race that allows athletes 17 hours to finish - she now counts it as the goal she's proudest of accomplishing. Alongside her on the journey to Kona that she details on this week's episode of #WeGotGoals was an all-star cast. Eight-time Olympic medalist in speed skating Apolo Ohno would train with her and both Ator of Ohno received guidance from world-class coach and seven-time IRONMAN World champion Paula Newby-Fraser (a woman who does not know the word quit). Like most audacious goals, it didn't come without brief periods of imposter syndrome. Three months before her trip to Kona, Ator recounts a night spent crying and questioning her own abilities as the minutes slipped away between her and her first half IRONMAN race - a 1.2-mile swim, 56-mile bike and 13.1-mile run. "Kind of by a act of God or stroke of grace or something, my watch kind of malfunctioned after the swim in the transition to the bike," she recalled of the race. "All I could do was be in the moment and do it. And I kind of just plugged along and I worked the plan that me and my coach had figured it out and really paid attention to my effort." Ator blew her "self-deprecating goal" out of the water and turned her new confidence and attention to Kona - the true test of her training. Because Ator was among an elite group of invite-only participants at Kona, she wasn't required to qualify for the race like the majority of participants. The thought of that made her feel unworthy of the field of competition. "I had a talk with one of the pro Ironman athletes before and he said, 'look Jen, maybe at the beginning of this you didn't deserve to be here. Sure maybe at the very beginning. But now you've done everything that all these other athletes have done to get here,'" She said. "That kind of attitude kind of helped carry me through the rest of the day." Even, she recalled, in the lava fields known for their heat and for the clear path that's left for unexpected gusts of wind known to knock riders clear off of their bikes. The wind was everything she'd heard. Ator recalled riding her ultra-light road bike in what's known as the arrow position. As she leaned over her handle bars, she shook with the fear that she may too have her race cut short by a fall. Newby-fraser preparing Ator for that exact moment: "You're going to be tempted to sit up and sit back because that's the instinct that feels safer ... that is the time that you need to lean in and commit because the safest thing you can do, practically speaking, is lean over that front wheel." Listen to how Ator's run at Kona concluded and where this author, editor and IRONMAN is setting her sights next. And if you like what you hear, be sure to rate and review #WeGotGoals on iTunes and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. --- JAC:Welcome to #WeGotGoals, a podcast by aSweatLife.com on which we talked to high achievers about their goals. I'm Jeana Anderson Cohen; with me, I have Kristin Geil and Maggie Umberger. KG: Good morning Jeana. JAC: Good morning. MU: Good morning. Jeana, you spoke with Jen Ator, who is the fitness director of Women's Health this week. JAC:I sure did. And what an inspiration Jen is. Throughout our talk I think I gasped, I had a smile across my face and I definitely cried. MU:Good summary. And she is also an Ironman Kona finisher which I didn't know what that was prior to hearing this interview. JAC: So what’s actually really interesting about this is the campaign that Jen was a part of with chocolate milk is actually something I worked on in my past life the year before she was on it. So in 2013 I was a part of that campaign working on chocolate milk. And I got to see sort of the journey that she went through and I just missed her by a year. So throughout her explanation of sort of what she went through and how she was trained by Paula Newby-Fraser and how she had these incredible teammates like Apolo Ohno I could identify with that journey so deeply because I'd seen it once before. But her sort of personal take on it was so interesting to hear, one because she had been an athlete before and two because she had this sort of wavering journey of self-doubt accomplishment and in believing in herself just as I feel anyone does. The first time they do anything. KG: While she was training with chocolate milk team she had some sort of realization that she mentioned during the podcast. Can you speak to that and describe what her big epiphany was? JAC:She realized that she was the thing standing in her way which was incredible to hear her say because I believe that was the moment I cried. So Jen realized at the end of her half Ironman which is a 1.2 mile swim of 56 mile bike ride and a thirteen point one mile run she realized that she blew her own projected time out of the water because she wasn't running with a watch and there was a malfunction with it in her actual swim. She saw that she actually could accomplish so much more than she was giving herself credit for when she just sort of let go and was in the moment as an athlete and trusted her training. MU: And her training really is pretty simple she talks about loving just straight strength and running amidst being the fitness director of Women's Health. JAC: Yes. So her preferred training normally is not Ironman training. Ironman training is really involved. Oftentimes athletes will have to do two disciplines in one day sometimes morning sometimes evening or sometimes they'll have to stack them in a brick workout. But she is generally a big fan of just down and dirty strength training program sort of similar to what you'll see on the pages of Women's Health and also in the pages of her new and second book Fitness Fix. They have a mix of a lot of different things but they'll always have the sort of tried and true, pick up some dumbbells and do this workout kind of routine. And that's her preference and it works for her. But when she was training for Ironman she was doing these long workouts these distance workouts. She was running more than five or six miles because she had to finish a day of fitness with a marathon. JACShe'd never run a marathon before doing Ironman Kona which is sort of nuts to think about but she did it. She got through it and she was able to hug her dad at the finish line. MU: We can't wait to hear your interview with Jen here. JAC:I’m Jeana Anderson Cohen and I'm here with Jen Ator, who is the fitness director at Women's Health. Jen, thank you for joining me. JA: Thank you so much for having me. JAC: So Jen you have a really cool job and we're so excited to have you but you're also an accomplished athlete and a writer and a published author. Can you tell me a little bit about how you spend your days? JA:Yeah you know the kind of beauty and madness of my job and my career is that no two days are ever the same in fact rarely are two days ever even remotely the same. As the fitness director here at Women's Health, I balance a lot of different responsibilities. First and foremost I'm responsible for the stories and the editing of the fitness content inside our magazine. So that involves a lot of working back and forth with writers getting stories approved. Coming up with the monthly lineups that I pitch to our editor in chief and writing a lot of the stories myself and kind of managing our internal team and all the goals and deadlines that we have here. I also work on our online content. I do a lot of our videos so there'll be days where I might take a two hour break in the middle of the day to change into some workout clothes and go record some videos for our social team and our online team. And then there's other days where I'm doing I do a lot of press and interviews with the different objectives and things that we're working on for the brand. So yesterday I was in Atlanta doing a bunch of press at the CNN headquarters there. So you know that's kind of one of the more glorious looking days where you know you're getting hair and makeup and you're running on and off set and trying to catch up frantically with your e-mails as you're in between everything. But a lot of the days are just plugging behind a desk and you know working very long hours. I always joke that there's rarely days where I don't have a second job, where I don't go home at the end of the night and and have another big chunk of assignments or things that I need to work on. So there's plenty of days where it's just kind of grinding through a very very big long to do list and then you know I get to mix in some opportunities to have some fun and go check out new brands and new workouts and talk to experts and just kind of experience a lot of the cool stuff happening inside the fitness scene. JAC:So before I asked you our two big questions I need to know what is your favorite workout right now? JA: You know I I probably buck the trend of most fitness centers. I'm not I'm I'm I'm a pretty traditionalist. I am not somebody who—you know I check out a lot of the new workouts. I love them for what they give to different people and I love them for first and foremost being vessels to bring more people into fitness. I'm somebody who's lived my life with sport and fitness as a huge centerpiece of it. So for me anything that brings more people into it I'm I'm so jazzed about but I think just with my schedule and you know the different fitness goals that I tend to be working towards I tend to be a pretty straightforward, a pretty basic fundamental—I like a good run good solo run, a good long swim by myself and some pretty basic strength training. Some simple circuits and pair dumbbells or resistance band and a good playlist and I'm good to go. JAC: Gets the job done. JA:It does. JAC:Yeah I get it the same way and this is not about me but I'm kind of the same way or I will a couple days a week opt to work out alone because it just clears your head. JA:Yeah and I think you know especially in the field that I’m in we have access to so much so it's such an amazing thing to be able to go check out the latest spin studio and you know go to the latest yoga class or the latest fusion class and sometimes it can get murky of, is this my job or am I doing this for my fitness? You know and so I kind of tend to keep the two pretty separate and my workouts are my workouts and like I said you know it gives me so much and I have my own goals and objectives of why I have my own why of why I workout. So for me that just tends to be easier to do in my own kind of bubble rather than going to all the different classes. But certainly like Tone House is a great one, that's always a lot of fun to go with a group. And Swerve is a cycling studio here in New York that I've really been liking so there's there's definitely ones that you know I always have a great time whenever I get an opportunity to check them out. But I tend to be a go at my own speed type person. JAC:I love it. Know who you are. So can you tell me about a big goal that you accomplished and how you got there. JA:Yeah probably the biggest goal I've accomplished is I completed the Ironman, the World Championship Ironman in Kona and that was back in 2014. And it was by far, the process of it was by far the most transformative thing I've ever done. And like I said I've been an athlete my whole life. I played D1 lacrosse I have fitness in my job title but this was really pushing it for me. I had never done any type of endurance efforts before and for anyone listening that that isn't familiar with Ironman. It's a 2.4-mile swim, a 112-mile bike and then a full marathon at the end just in case you felt like you hadn't done enough. And I had done one sprint triathlon. I had done maybe two half marathons prior to tearing my ACL and having ACL and meniscus reconstruction. So I had been approached by chocolate milk, who we had worked with a bunch with work stuff and they were putting together a program and wanted one female everyday athlete and then they had a male pro athlete who was Apolo Ohno the speed skater. And they said, hey, like we would love for you to join him and we want to kind of document the two of you trying to reach this big goal that neither of you have any experience to be able to do. And it took me probably three weeks to answer you know there was there was a lot of gut check soul searching because it was so far outside my comfort zone. It was something that I truly did not know if I could do. I had never clipped into a road bike before. I was terrified of swimming in the open water. I don't particularly love ocean swimming. So while I grew up a competitive swimmer I I was not experienced in open water swimming. And I never run a marathon before and at that point I was only running about three miles a few times a week. I was about 13 months postop so I had a lot of doubts. A lot of insecurity about doing it because not only was I going to try to do it I was going to try to do it in six months and I was also going to do it while sharing our experience with a large audience. And it was really intimidating. But you know I think at the end of the day it was an opportunity to do a arguably one of the most famed and historic and legendary races that I've watched you know year after year those NBC broadcast. I mean I watch them I cry to them it's always so moving. You know it is an opportunity to do something that I had so much respect and reverence for. And also it was an opportunity to really see what I was made of. And you know I realized at that point in my life, I admit I had built a career out of trying to encourage women and people to chase their big goals and I'd spent my career interviewing athletes and then you know putting those into stories that people could read and be inspired by. And yet I was kind of sitting on the sideline a little bit and I was intimidated by the challenge of it for myself. And so you know I decided just to say OK I'll do it. I'll try and I'll try my best. And you know win lose or draw, I’ll put everything I can into it and then began some of the hardest months of my life. Thankfully my workplace was very understanding it's not like I could just be out of work for half the day to go train. But they were more understanding if you know if I squeeze in a swim in the morning and come in with a little bit wet hair you know they they kind of gave me some passes here and there. But you know I really I they teamed us up with some coaching staff and some nutrition staff members that really to just day after day give us the tools to be able to go out and do this. Because I certainly would not have been able to do it on my own. So I had a one on one coach, I used this great app called Training Peaks which you can use for free and just kind of log your workouts. It allows you to kind of like set your plan for the week and then as you complete them it syncs with your watches and it'll show you if you were like green and did an amazing job in your workout or yellow and you know kind of got there or like red you didn't do it. But I also had a coach that would then can go in and I would leave notes for him. He was really big on—he wanted me to leave emotional notes as well as performance notes so not only you know how did it go, how did it feel, how was your knee, how was you know this and that but how did you feel. So it was really an interesting process of watching how much your emotional state you know being stressed from work or you know coming back on a red eye from a business trip and you know feeling really exhausted and run down or having a lot of anxiety over a workout that felt kind of you know too much for me at that time. It showed in the performance you know it reflected in the workouts that maybe went really well or didn't go so well and he really took all that into account and would adjust my schedule and my workouts based on not just my physical progress but you know my emotional things that were going on too and my logistical things that were going on and so yeah, I basically just really committed to the plan and had a lot of doubts had no idea how all the pieces were going to fit together. About three months in, we did a half Ironman. Apolo did Boise. Then three weeks later I did Muncie, Muncie, Indiana. I found myself doing a half Ironman which is 70.3 so half the distance of the full Ironman and I was super intimidated and even going into that I didn't think I was going to able to do it. You know I was crying the night before I. I was I was certain that I had not done enough work to be able to do this. And kind of by a act of God or stroke of grace or something my watch kind of malfunctioned after the swim in the transition to the bike. So I was getting nothing—I had no idea where I was at. I think it was recording the whole time but it was showing me weird screens. So I had no perception of what I was doing. All I could do was be in the moment and do it. And I kind of just plugged along and I worked the plan that me and my coach had figured it out and really paid attention to my effort. And I finished that had no idea about what my time was and I'll never forget the moment where you know I was I was with my dad and a couple of our other, you know, our team that was working on this project and they told me my time and it was easily like two hours faster than what I had projected for myself. Like. My really like self-deprecating goal just got blown out of the water. And I think that was probably the most eye opening moment. Obviously then three months later finishing the race in Kona was probably the most emotional moment—but that one in Muncie Indiana was was the most eye opening of wow. Like I can do so much more than I think I can. Like I I am the thing in my way. I really grabbed onto that moment and really let it kind of fully you know affect me because I was so blown away that the whole time I mean my whole support staff, everybody else thought I could do this. You know everybody else was like hey your training's going really well you're doing the work outs. But me as the individual as the self doubting individual was so certain that I hadn't done enough that I wasn't measuring up that I wasn't going to be able to do it. And then to exceed you know I hadn't even thought I would succeed. I definitely thought I was going to fail and then to not only succeed but to blow out any perception that I had of how I could do, it was really a turning point for me. And so from then I was able to kind of you know it didn't get mentally easier. There were plenty of really tough workouts and I did a lot of it on my own. And a lot of people said oh well you should join a running group here in the city or you should join a biking group here in the city because then you’ll have people to share these huge workouts with. And for me it was really important because I knew when I got to that Ironman I was going to be doing it alone. There wasn't going to be anybody running with me there wasn't going to be anybody biking with me. And I was going to spend that time possibly up to 17 hours of my life alone. And so for me it was important to spend those months practicing that. And for me that meant having to do the workouts by myself. And so you know there were a lot of really towards the peak of that training cycle. And I was probably doing lower mileage than other people in Ironman training plans because we were trying to be really cautious of my knee to not you know get injured and to do just enough that I needed to to complete the race because I wasn't trying to race the race. And so yeah I I remember I mean on a Friday I would do a 4-mile swim; on a Saturday then I would wake up and do 110 miles on the bike and then get right off and run 7 to 9 miles. JAC:Wow. JA: And then the Sunday I would run 20 miles. So this was all so new to me and so so outside of what I'd ever done before. And so yeah there were a lot of very humbling moments during all that but I really you know after that half Ironman I was able to just say hey OK something's working I don't have to understand it but I'm going to respect what they're putting together for me and what they're telling me to do and I'm going to trust that I've got really smart people helping me do this and if I do what they tell me to do to my best to the best of my ability I'll be able to do this thing. And so yeah October rolled around race was here we went to Kona two weeks early to adjust to the heat and kind of get used to everything there and even still I really did not think I'd be able do it. It's just such a massive massive thing. And I remember the night before crying to my dad who was there with me. And I said What are you know what are they going to do? We had been recording these you know little videos that ran on YouTube and we did eight of them to kind of show the journey and I said, What are they going to do if I don't finish? What are they going to—everybody is going to see that? How are they going to make the last … you know I was so nervous about letting other people down are so nervous about the external perception of taking on something like that that was so big and you know. At the end of the day I woke up this morning and said—I still have the alarm on my phone the alarm notification on my phone because I never want to forget it but I just set up the alarm to say, Cherish this day. And I really felt like at the end of those six months I had already gone so far outside of what I thought I could do for myself that you know no matter what happened—I feel like a lot of times when we get into races and we you know are chasing the big goals we immediately are focusing on the negative of it. You know the performance or I want to reach this goal or I want to do this thing. I just said you know I've put in so much work like this has already been like the most transformative thing I've ever done in my life. I just want to go out and enjoy it and I don't want to waste this once in a lifetime opportunity that I'm being given on being caught up on the nerves or being caught up in the anxiety of what if I fail or anything like that. And so I went out and I had a very thought through mental game plan because for me the the performance side was a little bit more straightforward. You know it's basically just figuring out that yellow type of effort that that feels comfortable to sustain. And you know I kind of broke up the race in three parts. The swim, my mantra was I can and I just kept repeating I can do this I can do this I can do this. And for me that was a huge part of reaching a level of deservedness to be there. Because these are the best athletes in the country. These these people have worked some of them their lives to be there. And you know I kind of got a fast pass to be able to enter this race through this opportunity that I was given. And I took it so seriously but I also felt so undeserving because of all these other amazing athletes that were around me and you know I really had to I had a talk with one of the pro Ironman athletes before and he said look Jen, maybe at the beginning of this you didn't deserve to be here. Sure maybe at the very beginning. But now you've done everything that all these other athletes have done to get here. Like you've put in the work. So you have to kind of remember that that you've put in the work. So that kind of attitude kind of helped carry me through the rest of the day. During the bike I said I am doing this am doing this I am doing this I am doing this because I needed to be present. I needed to be focused on the mile I was and I needed to not be worried about the run that was coming up. I knew that I needed to be very very present because the bike to me was the way the most technical, the thing that I had to be the most you know concentrated on getting my nutrition at the right time getting my speed at the right time focusing on my pedal stroke all of those things. So, I am doing this. And then the run was, I will do this because you know I I knew it needed to be emotional for me. I knew I knew it was going to be emotional for me. And I remember talking to my dad at the very start of this and and we mapped out you know we broke down there's different cutoff points for this race. And you have 17 hours to complete it. So we had figured out OK well you know even if you if you make it through the bike cut off then you have eight hours to do the marathon. So technically you could walk it. You could walk it. You could walk an entire marathon. And that was kind of one of the questions that I had to answer myself before I said Yes. I said, am I willing to walk an entire marathon depending on whatever happens that day, because I've no idea. Would I be willing to walk for 26.2 miles? And I said yeah you know? To be able to walk on historic ground like that to be able to follow through on something that I’m going to set out to do. Yeah I would be willing to walk it even though I'd be a very long long part of a day. So thankfully I got there and I didn't have to walk. And I was able to to run the whole thing but I just kept saying, I will do this. And I I broke it down by thinking about one person every mile. Because you're also not allowed to use headphones so I'm a big music person when I run other races I listen to music and you couldn't have anything. So there's there's a lot of thinking that goes on during that day and you’ve gotta manage your your headspace more so than your you know physical space. And so I said you know I'm going to I'm in a force myself to only think about one person for every mile. And I dedicated a mile to each, to 26 people that had really been the reason that I was there. You know from from my doctor who gave me the green light and then you know help monitor everything that was going on and making sure my knee was solid. To Apolo being such a great team mate and supportive friend. To you know my best friend in high school who I played lacrosse with and she's always been an inspiration to me. You know, just different people that along the way and I get choked up even just thinking about it now. You know who have built me up and supported me and given me the confidence that I didn't have in order to do something like this because like I said I I did not believe I could do it. But they all did. And you know I think one of the greatest gifts you can give somebody is is your confidence in them and you know I'm kind of living proof of that. I know I have been the result of people giving me their confidence in me and that lifted me up enough to take on big goals and to chase things that seem intimidating and so that that run is probably one of the most memorable runs I've ever had. And you know I got I got back after and wrote a letter to each person and told them you know what I was thinking of, and what part of the race I was in and which mile I dedicated to them and it really just brought the whole thing full circle. And you know I got to cross that finish line 13 hours and 17 minutes after I started. JAC: Wow. JA: Yeah a very long day. I got to do that and I got to run to my dad and hug my dad who was standing at the finish line. But it was really such a beautiful race to remember that you know to be able to finish it remembering that I'm really here because of so many people and I got to share this with so many people. And for me that made it so much more meaningful than just if I had accomplished a singular goal on my own. So yeah that very long winded story is definitely my biggest goal that I've accomplished. JAC: Jen. What an incredible saga is the best way. It was like Odyssean. JA:It felt it, it felt it during the time. JAC:So I have so many questions. First and foremost I think it's so interesting that you sort of felt the weight of your decision to say yes to this throughout. Just hearing you talk about it at different points: What if I don't succeed? What if I don't succeed? And then just seeing yourself not only succeed finish crush it. You didn't walk a marathon you probably stopped a couple times if you had to eat something but like just hear you tell it, you killed it! Was there any point during the bike during the swim during the run when you didn't think you could do it? JA:Yes. There was one specific point in the race where I did not think I could do it. And I was approaching the climb to Hawi so the road to Hawi is kind of a signature point of the Ironman World Championship bike course. And it's about a 7 mile climb, just a steady low grade inline but steady for I believe about 7 miles. And then when you get there that's the turnaround point of the bike race and I'm climbing and it had been a really tough—again, I'm not a strong cyclist but I was climbing and you know it's really hard and there weren’t a ton of women in the race. There's probably about I think 635 the year I did it and total about 1200 age group guys. So lot of guys, not that many women. As I'm climbing this woman and all hot pink hot pink like helmet, hot pink tri suit, hot pink bike, hot pink shoes, everything. Starts climbing past me. And she's like oh, man the heat and wind are brutal today. I was like oh yeah. You could tell this woman had done this. She just looked so pro like she was like just jacked and so impressive and a slightly older woman and just looked like, OK, she's been here before and so I was like I'm glad to hear you say that because this is my first time. And she's like just keep going just keep pedaling. You're almost there. Thank you. Thank you. And she's like keep it up. Great job. And you know it was so nice because throughout the entire race whenever a woman passed you or you passed a woman there was there was a real solidarity and there was a very, everybody cheered for each other, everybody is support each other. It was really nice. So she passed me up she went you know that was it. And I get to the turnaround point. I'm coming back. And now you're going down a downhill and throughout the race you're kind of going through these lava fields and some of them have these kind of like big rocks that you're going through. So you're facing a lot of headwind but then you're also because of how these rocks are you get these sudden bursts of sidewinds that kind of come out of nowhere and you know our coach coaching staff and team had told us about this so they had said you know you're going to feel you could feel the gusts coming from the side. And it's it's a little bit shaky at times. I mean these bikes are super light. I feel like my bike weighed probably 12 pounds you know and you're coming downhill. And all of a sudden the the sidewinds are really starting to pick up and I'm looking down and I wasn't always super comfortable in that aero position where you’re leaned over the bars and you're really down low on your bike that that was intimidating to me to get used to, especially when going downhill. And one of our coaches was the legendary Paula Newby-Fraser. And she's the queen of Kona. And I remember her saying to me there are going to be times where you get scared and where that wind comes out of nowhere and hits you on the side and you feel shaken. And she's like, you're going to be tempted to sit up on your bike. You're going to be tempted to sit up, sit back because that's the instinct that feels safer and she's like that is the time that you need to lean in and commit because the safest thing you can do practically speaking is lean over that front wheel because these bikes are so light that if you're sitting up and sitting back that front wheel can get picked up a lot easier from these gusts up side wind. So I'd remembered that she said that to me I was trying to stay down, was trying to stay down. And all of a sudden I look up and I see all these people in front of me are swerving around something and I can't tell what's going on but they're clearly like really moving around something. And as I get closer I see the all pink everything. And the woman was being carried off in a stretcher. JAC: Oh God. JA: And I mean I was shaking. I was tearing up. I had to actively be like, oh my gosh calm down calm down because it was the only moment where—I had passed the point of thinking, oh my gosh can I do this. Once I got through the swim I was like oh man, all right. We'll figure this out. We're going to we're going to get through this. It was the only point of the race where I thought maybe I won't be able to do this because there's somebody who is clearly more experienced than me clearly has done this before and she's not even able to finish because of freak—you know maybe she was reaching for her water or when when a gust of wind came in and wiped her out. Or maybe—who knows? You know and anything like that could happen. And I I could just be I could be done. And again I found myself kind of sitting up and I was trying to get my composure and I heard Paula you know as I'm like shaking trying not to cry and trying to push through it and I just found myself saying commit commit
James Connolly Director, Center for Middletown Studies and George and Frances Ball Distinguished Professor of History, at Ball State University in Muncie Indiana, discusses his past and recent projects including his work on “What Middletown Read,” a study of print culture and urban life at the turn of the twentieth century, in collaboration with Frank Felsenstein.
This week we went to Zanies Comedy Club to see Nick DiPaolo's triumphant return and as you could probably assume, WE GOT STORIES FOR USE GUYS. It's all starts there and ends with Ben admitting he's been lying about seeing Weird Science for all these years. Music by: Vanity 6, Operation Ivy, and The Germs