Podcasts about north high

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Best podcasts about north high

Latest podcast episodes about north high

Conversations with Chanda
My Life as a Black Cop and a Championship Coach: A Conversation with Charles Adams (OA)

Conversations with Chanda

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2024 59:42


Chanda Smith Baker speaks with Charles Adams, an Author of Twin Cities: My Life as a Black Cop and a Championship Coach, about his Northside upbringing and the complexities of community policing. They discuss the challenges black officers face, the impact of George Floyd's murder, and the removal of officers from schools. Joining the conversation is Jayland Baker, a North High alumnus and former football player coached by Charles, who shares his perspective on the importance of having officers in schools and the sense of security they provided. To purchase 'Twin Cities: My Life as a Black Cop and a Championship Coach': https://www.amazon.com/Twin-Cities-Black-Championship-Coach/dp/030683054X www.conversationswithchanda.com IG @chandasbaker & @conversationswithchanda Twitter/X: @chandasbaker

Siouxland Public Media News
Newscast 6.18.2024: Judge strikes down Iowa immigration enforcement law; Rainwater deluge continues to create problems for Okoboji lakes; North High pool could be axed in Sioux City

Siouxland Public Media News

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2024 1:40


Another reason to drink
Flip, Flop & Roll

Another reason to drink

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 8, 2024 70:23 Transcription Available


S5-E1, Cracking open a cold one has never been more thrilling than in our latest episode, where Ohio's craft beer landscape takes center stage. My co-host and I share our impressions of North High's Filthy McMint and Sounders Brewery's You Betcha, diving into a frothy discussion filled with nostalgia, laughter, and the unexpected pleasure of beer floats with mint ice cream. But it's not just about the brews; we whisk you away on a tangential journey through the trials of TikTok-inspired cooking, complete with cornstarch-fried chicken and all-purpose bagel seasoning hacks. Expect to chuckle as we recount personal mishaps, from splinters to a memorable drug test mix-up.Ever pondered how much sodium is lurking in your favorite sub? We've got the salty scoop, and it's sure to raise your eyebrows. Alongside health-conscious tidbits, we meander through the peculiar wilderness of dating app bios, uncovering the quirks and conundrums of modern romance. And as if that's not enticing enough, a minty beer emerges as the unlikely hero of a hypothetical traffic stop, revealing how our palates and punchlines intermingle.The laughs don't stop there, as we dish out a smorgasbord of random trivia that's as captivating as it is bizarre. Discover the only body part you can tickle yourself, the peak day for bank robberies, and the world's most prolific smokers. Your curiosity will be sated and your funny bone tickled as we wrap up with a sidesplitting escalator incident and rave reviews of our featured beers, proving that our palette for humor is just as refined as our taste in craft beer. Join us for a session where every sip and story is a toast to the lighter side of life.Support the showwww.anotherreasontodrink.com

Jazz88
Supt. Cox on first week of school, new benefits for ESPs

Jazz88

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2023 8:50


With the new school year underway, MPS Interim Superintendent Rochelle Cox talks with MPS Voices and Jazz88's Manny Hill about welcoming the students back, and also shares important information regarding Educational Support Professionals around the district. Also, how's the new Career & Technical Education Center at North High coming together?

Drivetime with DeRusha
Charles Adams on policing in Minneapolis

Drivetime with DeRusha

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2023 14:52


Charles Adams is a former MPD officer and head football coach at North High. He joined Jason to talk about his new book: "Twin Cities: My Live as a Black Cop and Championship Coach"

MPR News with Angela Davis
'Losing is learning': Life lessons from an iconic Minneapolis basketball coach

MPR News with Angela Davis

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2023 44:53


If you played high school sports growing up, you know how being a student-athlete can change your life. It teaches you teamwork, responsibility, perseverance and so much more. MPR News host Angela Davis talked earlier this year with longtime high school boys basketball coach Larry McKenzie. He was the first coach in Minnesota history to win four consecutive basketball state titles. “The reason that I won was because I gave my kids unconditional love,” he told Davis. McKenzie retired in 2022, but he is still mentoring. Now, instead of leading high school athletes, he is coaching other coaches.Listen to the rebroadcast to hear MPR News host Angela Davis talk with McKenzie about what makes a great coach, teaching young people to lose with grace, why the team is more important than the individual and how he supported his students after George Floyd's murder and through the pandemic.Guest: Larry McKenzie is a longtime high school boys' basketball coach. He retired in 2022 from coaching at Minneapolis North High School.Here are five key moments from the conversation.The following transcript has been edited for length and clarity. Click the audio player above to listen to the full conversation.You are now coaching other coaches. Why did you want to do that?Larry McKenzie: One of the things about being one of the elder coaches in the game is getting a lot of calls from young coaches. I've always understood the importance of having good mentors, and the importance of mentorship. When I was 14 years old, my grandmother gave me a book by Napoleon Hill, and it compared having knowledge and not sharing it to having an atomic bomb and never dropping it. For me, after 42 years and the various experiences that I've had and the success, I didn't want to keep that to myself, I wanted to share.Right now, we probably have about 10 or 12 coaches that we're talking to on a weekly basis, sharing information, being there to do some one-on-ones, visiting practices, and helping them become better coaches.One of the things I tell them all the time is that it's really critical that they get to know their kid and to spend at least thirty seconds to a minute with every single kid and ask: How is your day? What's going on in school? What's going on with you and your girlfriend? I think that that's a critical part of one being successful because you got to know them beyond the court or the track or the football field.What makes a great high school coach?Larry McKenzie: First of all, one of those quotes that I like to use is: “a coach can impact more lives in a year than most people can in a lifetime.” I think a great coach is a great teacher. It's not about the Xs and Os — it's an opportunity to change lives.In my journey, it was like being an artist: I get a lump of clay that's a 14-year-old boy that I get to mold for three or four years, and leave me as an 18-year-old young man. I think a good coach is someone that's not so caught up in what the record is but understands that whatever sport they're coaching is an opportunity to have a captured audience to change lives.In my experience, probably 80 percent of the young men that I coached didn't have a father in their houses. So my responsibility, first and foremost, was to teach them how to be a man, to help them understand what was ahead of them. So I knew all the time, they would be watching me, what I did and how I showed up. It's important to lead by example, but it's also important to teach that nobody's perfect, we're gonna all make mistakes. When kids get off track, it's not throwing in the towel, but helping them work through those situations. Coaches, particularly at the high school level, want to help kids go to college, but the most important thing is to prepare them to become productive adults.You were a coach at Minneapolis North in 2020 when police killed George Floyd. How did you talk to your students about that?Larry McKenzie: I'll never forget that morning waking up and seeing that video. The first thing I did with my current players, my former players and my son was to apologize. I need to apologize because I've gotten so busy doing other things that I forgot about this fight. Philando Castile, Jamar Clark, all of those that had gone before George Floyd, this was not the first time.I always try to think outside of the box, and we did something very unique. I called my friends and raised some money, were able to hire a dear friend of mine who was a mental health coach. He would come to practice and be available to our kids, so if they had something going on and needed somebody to talk to, we had a professional there to support them.What concerns you about high school sports these days?Larry McKenzie: Something that really bothers me is how kids have so much to do with social status. When you go to a game, you don't hear parents cheering for the team anymore, everything is about the individual kid. But it is a team sport, right? And you should be really cheering for all kids to be successful.The other thing that concerns me is the passing of “name, image and likeness” at the high school level, which is the ability to pay kids to advertise. Now I got one kid sitting in my locker room, who's got a contract for $5,000 — he's representing the neighborhood barbecue store. And then you got another kid for $1,000. Does that kid making $5,000 expect to play more? Probably in his mind, and in his parents' mind he does.Right now, to my knowledge, I think there's still only one or two high school kids that have taken advantage of it. But I just think long term is going to create an issue in a locker room.How do you teach student-athletes how to lose?Larry McKenzie: You always find life lessons in the loss. Losing is learning. One of the things that I always try to do in losing is taking that opportunity and transfer it into a life experience. In life, everything doesn't go the way that you want it to go, you're gonna have some ups and downs, so you have to learn to stay in the moment, get up, dust yourself off and get going again.One of the things that I particularly used to tell my young men is that there are situations where you will lose, but if you have kids, and you have a house payment and those kinds of things, you don't have a whole lot of time to sit around and feel sorry for yourself. You got to keep it moving.Your stories about coachesListeners called into the show and shared their stories. Here are some of them.Coach leads a new track team to victoryI had a great coach in high school in St. Paul. This was in the ‘70s when there wasn't a women's track team. He was asked, as the football coach, to begin the women's track team. So he would see different young women in school, come up to us and ask us, “Do you want to join the team? I already talked to your friend, she's on the track team.”He used that approach because none of us were really runners and that worked. He joined us together as a team because he believed in us. We didn't have the confidence and we didn't have the skills. The coach put it all together for us and worked with us like the football team. We became very close and won the conference championship the very first year that they had women.— Anita from St. PaulHow a good coach impacts generationsI've been in sports since I was 8 years old and I still remember what my coaches told me and, to this day, it's still beneficial. I called in with two specific examples.I have twin brothers younger than me, we all played baseball during the same period of time, and both our teams won a championship. Their coach drove them incessantly hard, and turns out later he was an alcoholic, but my brothers never loved sports again, until they were parents and gradually got back into it and started to love it again. And they lament how much they wish they would have played their high school years with me.On the other hand, I had a great coach, I had great experiences. I learned how to make it fun. And my joy of sports carried down to my son, who also I think experienced wonderful coaching.— Brent from Eden PrairieMemories from North High SchoolI just wanted to say that I'm a graduate of North High in ‘99. I'm 41 now and the structure that I still hold on to from being on a team with my coaches is just awesome. And I still hold that unity, the hot and cold, until today and I'm just blessed for being on North High's team. Coach Larry, thank you for putting financial teaching out there because we definitely need to figure out how to tap in on the finance part. I experienced getting money and blowing it and not knowing what to do.— Amal from MinneapolisA well-remembered coachI'm a product of Minneapolis Central High School and I was there in the late 50s, early 60s when I graduated. I had a memorable coach, one of the best coaches in the city of Minneapolis, that I've ever known anyway. His name was Earl Bowman. He was one of my mentors, and I coached football in the park system for many years as a result of having experience with him. He was a taskmaster, but he also had real care for the kids and was one of the first Black coaches in Minneapolis.— Louis from MinneapolisSubscribe to the MPR News with Angela Davis podcast on: Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify or RSS. 

North Star Journey
'Losing is learning': Life lessons from an iconic Minneapolis basketball coach

North Star Journey

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2023 44:53


If you played high school sports growing up, you know how being a student-athlete can change your life. It teaches you teamwork, responsibility, perseverance and so much more. MPR News host Angela Davis talked earlier this year with longtime high school boys basketball coach Larry McKenzie. He was the first coach in Minnesota history to win four consecutive basketball state titles. “The reason that I won was because I gave my kids unconditional love,” he told Davis. McKenzie retired in 2022, but he is still mentoring. Now, instead of leading high school athletes, he is coaching other coaches.Listen to the rebroadcast to hear MPR News host Angela Davis talk with McKenzie about what makes a great coach, teaching young people to lose with grace, why the team is more important than the individual and how he supported his students after George Floyd's murder and through the pandemic.Guest: Larry McKenzie is a longtime high school boys' basketball coach. He retired in 2022 from coaching at Minneapolis North High School.Here are five key moments from the conversation.The following transcript has been edited for length and clarity. Click the audio player above to listen to the full conversation.You are now coaching other coaches. Why did you want to do that?Larry McKenzie: One of the things about being one of the elder coaches in the game is getting a lot of calls from young coaches. I've always understood the importance of having good mentors, and the importance of mentorship. When I was 14 years old, my grandmother gave me a book by Napoleon Hill, and it compared having knowledge and not sharing it to having an atomic bomb and never dropping it. For me, after 42 years and the various experiences that I've had and the success, I didn't want to keep that to myself, I wanted to share.Right now, we probably have about 10 or 12 coaches that we're talking to on a weekly basis, sharing information, being there to do some one-on-ones, visiting practices, and helping them become better coaches.One of the things I tell them all the time is that it's really critical that they get to know their kid and to spend at least thirty seconds to a minute with every single kid and ask: How is your day? What's going on in school? What's going on with you and your girlfriend? I think that that's a critical part of one being successful because you got to know them beyond the court or the track or the football field.What makes a great high school coach?Larry McKenzie: First of all, one of those quotes that I like to use is: “a coach can impact more lives in a year than most people can in a lifetime.” I think a great coach is a great teacher. It's not about the Xs and Os — it's an opportunity to change lives.In my journey, it was like being an artist: I get a lump of clay that's a 14-year-old boy that I get to mold for three or four years, and leave me as an 18-year-old young man. I think a good coach is someone that's not so caught up in what the record is but understands that whatever sport they're coaching is an opportunity to have a captured audience to change lives.In my experience, probably 80 percent of the young men that I coached didn't have a father in their houses. So my responsibility, first and foremost, was to teach them how to be a man, to help them understand what was ahead of them. So I knew all the time, they would be watching me, what I did and how I showed up. It's important to lead by example, but it's also important to teach that nobody's perfect, we're gonna all make mistakes. When kids get off track, it's not throwing in the towel, but helping them work through those situations. Coaches, particularly at the high school level, want to help kids go to college, but the most important thing is to prepare them to become productive adults.You were a coach at Minneapolis North in 2020 when police killed George Floyd. How did you talk to your students about that?Larry McKenzie: I'll never forget that morning waking up and seeing that video. The first thing I did with my current players, my former players and my son was to apologize. I need to apologize because I've gotten so busy doing other things that I forgot about this fight. Philando Castile, Jamar Clark, all of those that had gone before George Floyd, this was not the first time.I always try to think outside of the box, and we did something very unique. I called my friends and raised some money, were able to hire a dear friend of mine who was a mental health coach. He would come to practice and be available to our kids, so if they had something going on and needed somebody to talk to, we had a professional there to support them.What concerns you about high school sports these days?Larry McKenzie: Something that really bothers me is how kids have so much to do with social status. When you go to a game, you don't hear parents cheering for the team anymore, everything is about the individual kid. But it is a team sport, right? And you should be really cheering for all kids to be successful.The other thing that concerns me is the passing of “name, image and likeness” at the high school level, which is the ability to pay kids to advertise. Now I got one kid sitting in my locker room, who's got a contract for $5,000 — he's representing the neighborhood barbecue store. And then you got another kid for $1,000. Does that kid making $5,000 expect to play more? Probably in his mind, and in his parents' mind he does.Right now, to my knowledge, I think there's still only one or two high school kids that have taken advantage of it. But I just think long term is going to create an issue in a locker room.How do you teach student-athletes how to lose?Larry McKenzie: You always find life lessons in the loss. Losing is learning. One of the things that I always try to do in losing is taking that opportunity and transfer it into a life experience. In life, everything doesn't go the way that you want it to go, you're gonna have some ups and downs, so you have to learn to stay in the moment, get up, dust yourself off and get going again.One of the things that I particularly used to tell my young men is that there are situations where you will lose, but if you have kids, and you have a house payment and those kinds of things, you don't have a whole lot of time to sit around and feel sorry for yourself. You got to keep it moving.Your stories about coachesListeners called into the show and shared their stories. Here are some of them.Coach leads a new track team to victoryI had a great coach in high school in St. Paul. This was in the ‘70s when there wasn't a women's track team. He was asked, as the football coach, to begin the women's track team. So he would see different young women in school, come up to us and ask us, “Do you want to join the team? I already talked to your friend, she's on the track team.”He used that approach because none of us were really runners and that worked. He joined us together as a team because he believed in us. We didn't have the confidence and we didn't have the skills. The coach put it all together for us and worked with us like the football team. We became very close and won the conference championship the very first year that they had women.— Anita from St. PaulHow a good coach impacts generationsI've been in sports since I was 8 years old and I still remember what my coaches told me and, to this day, it's still beneficial. I called in with two specific examples.I have twin brothers younger than me, we all played baseball during the same period of time, and both our teams won a championship. Their coach drove them incessantly hard, and turns out later he was an alcoholic, but my brothers never loved sports again, until they were parents and gradually got back into it and started to love it again. And they lament how much they wish they would have played their high school years with me.On the other hand, I had a great coach, I had great experiences. I learned how to make it fun. And my joy of sports carried down to my son, who also I think experienced wonderful coaching.— Brent from Eden PrairieMemories from North High SchoolI just wanted to say that I'm a graduate of North High in ‘99. I'm 41 now and the structure that I still hold on to from being on a team with my coaches is just awesome. And I still hold that unity, the hot and cold, until today and I'm just blessed for being on North High's team. Coach Larry, thank you for putting financial teaching out there because we definitely need to figure out how to tap in on the finance part. I experienced getting money and blowing it and not knowing what to do.— Amal from MinneapolisA well-remembered coachI'm a product of Minneapolis Central High School and I was there in the late 50s, early 60s when I graduated. I had a memorable coach, one of the best coaches in the city of Minneapolis, that I've ever known anyway. His name was Earl Bowman. He was one of my mentors, and I coached football in the park system for many years as a result of having experience with him. He was a taskmaster, but he also had real care for the kids and was one of the first Black coaches in Minneapolis.— Louis from MinneapolisSubscribe to the MPR News with Angela Davis podcast on: Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify or RSS. 

The Craig Silverman Show
Episode 144 - Coach Steve Finesilver

The Craig Silverman Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2023 143:10


Rundown -    Troubadour Dave Gunders - 10:54   "Eddie Don't Quit" by Dave Gunders - 25:37   Steve Finesilver - 32:13   For many decades, the surname Finesilver has been famous throughout Colorado. Judge Sherman Finesilver was an esteemed federal judge, and before that a popular judge in Denver County and District courts. In the 1940s, Sherm Finesilver was a star football center at North High, and then CU. https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/28409079/sherman-glen-finesilver   Steve followed in his Dad's footsteps, starring in football, wrestling and shot-putting at Denver's George Washington High School where he and host graduated in 1974. Fast friends since fourth grade, learn how guest Finesilver and host experienced careers in education and law respectively. Small college varsity athletics helped form their character.   Coach Steve Finesilver worked hard and well at Montbello HS in the 1980s, and next spent many successful decades coaching the football and wrestling teams at George. He's also been a passionate and dedicated fitness and science teacher who has mentored thousands of Denver high schoolers. Now, he's ready to tell all about Denver educational deficiencies and how to fix them.   Steve Finesilver's book is entitled Hard Knocks & Dirty Socks, Through the Eyes of Coach. In his book, Coach Finesilver peels back the curtain and reveals an educational product lacking in Denver. Hear his harsh condemnations, and constructive calls to action, designed to remedy public school disasters, like the one that exists at Denver Public Schools. https://www.amazon.com/Hard-Knocks-Dirty-Socks-Through/dp/1954077068/ref=tmm_hrd_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1681523615&sr=8-1   Recent shooting horrors at East High are discussed. The 1971 GW school riot also gets reviewed. Finesilver reveals the dangers of modern schools and the under-reporting of safety violations. Gone are the days when teachers were treated as professionals and entrusted with the authority, training and backing to do their jobs properly.   Good education starts with good parents and the Finesilver family is renowned for that. We talk about Steve's mom and dad, and his crush on Nancy Silverman, the host's younger sister. It all ended in humorous calamity as you will hear. The experience made everybody stronger, especially Steve Finesilver who then hit the gym.   Ahead of his time when it came to disciplined training and weight-lifting, Steve Finesilver grew his body through hard training and became massively strong. That made Coach Finesilver an ideal instructor in football and wrestling, as proved not just by scores of champion DPS athletes, but by his (and Brenda's) 7 amazing kids. https://www.win-magazine.com/2018/12/21/finesilvers-are-a-gem-of-a-family/   The Finesilver boys are wrestling legends. They've won countless Colorado championships and both sets of twins wrestled collegiately for Duke. Matt Finesilver took advantage of one more eligibility year to just kick ass as a heavyweight for Michigan. Watch this. https://twitter.com/umichwrestling/status/1632088661339815936   Steve Finesilver is still working to help and motivate kids. His book and call to action is his effort to reform education. Knowing Coach, he won't quit. That's the theme of the song by Show Troubadour Dave Gunders titled, Eddie Don't Quit, about a determined high schooler. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dJJmE1aHERs   Listen at the outset of the show to a good discussion of outrageous new abortion restrictions headed for review by the US Supreme Court, featuring corrupt Justice Clarence Thomas. Lively discussion ensues over what sports are real and which ones are least athletic. There is locker room flavor and jock smell to the entire show. Enjoy.

MPR News Update
North High football standout Deshawn Hill's killer will spend decades in prison

MPR News Update

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2023 5:57


North High football standout Deshawn Hill's killer will spend decades in prison, and Republicans come out in support of state tax rebates, after spurning them last year. This is an evening update from MPR News, hosted by Tim Nelson. Music by Gary Meister.

MPR News with Angela Davis
'Losing is learning': Life lessons from an iconic Minneapolis basketball coach

MPR News with Angela Davis

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2023 47:22


If you played high school sports growing up, you know how being a student-athlete can change your life. It teaches you teamwork, responsibility, perseverance and so much more.  MPR News host Angela Davis talked with longtime high school boys basketball coach Larry McKenzie. He was the first coach in Minnesota history to win four consecutive basketball state titles.  “I don't think I was a greatest X and O guy or any of that kind of stuff. The reason that I won was because I gave my kids unconditional love,” he told Davis. He retired in July, but he is still mentoring. Now, instead of leading high school athletes, he is coaching other coaches. Guest: Larry McKenzie is a longtime high school boys' basketball coach. He retired from coaching at Minneapolis North High School in July. Samantha Matsumoto | MPR News MPR News host Angela Davis talks with longtime high school boys basketball coach Larry McKenzie. He was the first coach in Minnesota history to win six basketball state titles.  Here are five key moments from the conversation. The following transcript has been edited for length and clarity. Click the audio player above to listen to the full conversation. You are now coaching other coaches. Why did you want to do that? Larry McKenzie: One of the things about being one of the elder coaches in the game is getting a lot of calls from young coaches. I've always understood the importance of having good mentors, and the importance of mentorship. When I was 14 years old, my grandmother gave me a book by Napoleon Hill, and it compared having knowledge and not sharing it to having an atomic bomb and never dropping it. For me, after 42 years and the various experiences that I've had and the success, I didn't want to keep that to myself, I wanted to share. Right now, we probably have about 10 or 12 coaches that we're talking to on a weekly basis, sharing information, being there to do some one-on-ones, visiting practices, and helping them become better coaches. One of the things I tell them all the time is that it's really critical that they get to know their kid and to spend at least thirty seconds to a minute with every single kid and ask: How is your day? What's going on in school? What's going on with you and your girlfriend? I think that that's a critical part of one being successful because you got to know them beyond the court or the track or the football field. What makes a great high school coach? Larry McKenzie: First of all, one of those quotes that I like to use is: “a coach can impact more lives in a year than most people can in a lifetime.” I think a great coach is a great teacher. It's not about the Xs and Os — it's an opportunity to change lives. In my journey, it was like being an artist: I get a lump of clay that's a 14-year-old boy that I get to mold for three or four years, and leave me as an 18-year-old young man. I think a good coach is someone that's not so caught up in what the record is but understands that whatever sport they're coaching is an opportunity to have a captured audience to change lives. In my experience, probably 80 percent of the young men that I coached didn't have a father in their houses. So my responsibility, first and foremost, was to teach them how to be a man, to help them understand what was ahead of them. So I knew all the time, they would be watching me, what I did, and how I showed up. It's important to lead by example, but it's also important to teach that nobody's perfect, we're gonna all make mistakes. When kids get off track, it's not throwing in the towel, but helping them work through those situations. Coaches, particularly at the high school level, want to help kids go to college, but the most important thing is to prepare them to become productive adults. You were a coach at Minneapolis North in 2020 when police killed George Floyd. How did you talk to your students about that? Larry McKenzie: I'll never forget that morning waking up and seeing that video. The first thing I did with my current players, my former players, and my son was to apologize. I need to apologize because I've gotten so busy doing other things that I forgot about this fight. Philando Castile, Jamar Clark, all of those that had gone before George Floyd, this was not the first time. I always try to think outside of the box, and we did something very unique. I called my friends and raised some money, were able to hire a dear friend of mine who was a mental health coach. He would come to practice and be available to our kids, so if they had something going on and needed somebody to talk to, we had a professional there to support them. What concerns you about high school sports these days? Larry McKenzie: Something that really bothers me is how kids have so much to do with social status. When you go to a game, you don't hear parents cheering for the team anymore, everything is about the individual kid. But it is a team sport, right? And you should be really cheering for all kids to be successful. The other thing that concerns me is the passing of “name, image and likeness” at the high school level, which is the ability to pay kids to advertise. Now I got one kid sitting in my locker room, who's got a contract for $5,000, he's representing the neighborhood barbecue store. And then you got another kid for $1,000. Does that kid making $5,000 expect to play more? Probably in his mind, and in his parents' mind he does. Right now, to my knowledge, I think there's still only one or two high school kids that have taken advantage of it. But I just think long term is going to create an issue in a locker room. How do you teach student-athletes how to lose? Larry McKenzie: You always find life lessons in the loss. Losing is learning. One of the things that I always try to do in losing is taking that opportunity and transfer it into a life experience. In life, everything doesn't go the way that you want it to go, you're gonna have some ups and downs, so you have to learn to stay in the moment, get up, dust yourself off and get going again. One of the things that I particularly used to tell my young men is that there are situations where you will lose, but if you have kids, and you have a house payment and those kinds of things, you don't have a whole lot of time to sit around and feel sorry for yourself. You got to keep it moving. Your stories about coaches Listeners called into the show and shared their stories. Here are some of them. Coach leads a new track team to victory I had a great coach in high school in St. Paul. This was in the ‘70s when there wasn't a women's track team. He was asked, as the football coach, to begin the women's track team. So he would see different young women in school, come up to us and ask us, “Do you want to join the team? I already talked to your friend, she's on the track team.” He used that approach because none of us were really runners and that worked. He joined us together as a team because he believed in us. We didn't have the confidence and we didn't have the skills. The coach put it all together for us and worked with us like the football team. We became very close and won the conference championship the very first year that they had women. — Anita from St. Paul How a good coach impacts generations [[Coach Larry, thank you so much for all you do. I've never met you but I can guarantee you that you've influenced many kids for the rest of their lives.]] I've been in sports since I was 8 years old and I still remember what my coaches told me and, to this day, it's still beneficial. I called in with two specific examples. I have twin brothers younger than me, we all played baseball during the same period of time, and both our teams won a championship. Their coach drove them incessantly hard, and turns out later he was an alcoholic, but my brothers never loved sports again, until they were parents and gradually got back into it and started to love it again. And they lament how much they wish they would have played their high school years with me. On the other hand, I had a great coach, I had great experiences. I learned how to make it fun. And my joy of sports carried down to my son, who also I think experienced wonderful coaching. [[So again, thank you, coach, Larry.]] — Brent from Eden Prairie Memories from North High School I just wanted to say that I'm a graduate of North High in ‘99. I'm 41 now and the structure that I still hold on to from being on a team with my coaches is just awesome. And I still hold that unity, the hot and cold, until today and I'm just blessed for being on North High's team. Coach Larry, thank you for putting financial teaching out there because we definitely need to figure out how to tap in on the finance part. I experienced getting money and blowing it and not knowing what to do. — Amal from Minneapolis A well-remembered coach I'm a product of Minneapolis Central High School and I was there in the late 50s, early 60s when I graduated. I had a memorable coach, one of the best coaches in the city of Minneapolis, that I've ever known anyway. His name was Earl Bowman. He was one of my mentors, and I coached football in the park system for many years as a result of having experience with him. He was a taskmaster, but he also had real care for the kids and was one of the first Black coaches in Minneapolis. — Louis from Minneapolis TikTok: Major keys from a basquetball coach legend

North Star Journey
'Losing is learning': Life lessons from an iconic Minneapolis basketball coach

North Star Journey

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2023 47:22


If you played high school sports growing up, you know how being a student-athlete can change your life. It teaches you teamwork, responsibility, perseverance and so much more. MPR News host Angela Davis talked with longtime high school boys basketball coach Larry McKenzie. He was the first coach in Minnesota history to win four consecutive basketball state titles. “I don't think I was a greatest X and O guy or any of that kind of stuff. The reason that I won was because I gave my kids unconditional love,” he told Davis. He retired in July, but he is still mentoring. Now, instead of leading high school athletes, he is coaching other coaches. Guest: Larry McKenzie is a longtime high school boys' basketball coach. He retired from coaching at Minneapolis North High School in July.Here are five key moments from the conversation.The following transcript has been edited for length and clarity. Click the audio player above to listen to the full conversation.You are now coaching other coaches. Why did you want to do that?Larry McKenzie: One of the things about being one of the elder coaches in the game is getting a lot of calls from young coaches. I've always understood the importance of having good mentors, and the importance of mentorship. When I was 14 years old, my grandmother gave me a book by Napoleon Hill, and it compared having knowledge and not sharing it to having an atomic bomb and never dropping it. For me, after 42 years and the various experiences that I've had and the success, I didn't want to keep that to myself, I wanted to share. Right now, we probably have about 10 or 12 coaches that we're talking to on a weekly basis, sharing information, being there to do some one-on-ones, visiting practices, and helping them become better coaches. One of the things I tell them all the time is that it's really critical that they get to know their kid and to spend at least thirty seconds to a minute with every single kid and ask: How is your day? What's going on in school? What's going on with you and your girlfriend? I think that that's a critical part of one being successful because you got to know them beyond the court or the track or the football field.What makes a great high school coach?Larry McKenzie: First of all, one of those quotes that I like to use is: “a coach can impact more lives in a year than most people can in a lifetime.” I think a great coach is a great teacher. It's not about the Xs and Os — it's an opportunity to change lives. In my journey, it was like being an artist: I get a lump of clay that's a 14-year-old boy that I get to mold for three or four years, and leave me as an 18-year-old young man. I think a good coach is someone that's not so caught up in what the record is but understands that whatever sport they're coaching is an opportunity to have a captured audience to change lives.In my experience, probably 80 percent of the young men that I coached didn't have a father in their houses. So my responsibility, first and foremost, was to teach them how to be a man, to help them understand what was ahead of them. So I knew all the time, they would be watching me, what I did, and how I showed up. It's important to lead by example, but it's also important to teach that nobody's perfect, we're gonna all make mistakes. When kids get off track, it's not throwing in the towel, but helping them work through those situations. Coaches, particularly at the high school level, want to help kids go to college, but the most important thing is to prepare them to become productive adults.You were a coach at Minneapolis North in 2020 when police killed George Floyd. How did you talk to your students about that?Larry McKenzie: I'll never forget that morning waking up and seeing that video. The first thing I did with my current players, my former players, and my son was to apologize. I need to apologize because I've gotten so busy doing other things that I forgot about this fight. Philando Castile, Jamar Clark, all of those that had gone before George Floyd, this was not the first time. I always try to think outside of the box, and we did something very unique. I called my friends and raised some money, were able to hire a dear friend of mine who was a mental health coach. He would come to practice and be available to our kids, so if they had something going on and needed somebody to talk to, we had a professional there to support them.What concerns you about high school sports these days? Larry McKenzie: Something that really bothers me is how kids have so much to do with social status. When you go to a game, you don't hear parents cheering for the team anymore, everything is about the individual kid. But it is a team sport, right? And you should be really cheering for all kids to be successful. The other thing that concerns me is the passing of “name, image and likeness” at the high school level, which is the ability to pay kids to advertise. Now I got one kid sitting in my locker room, who's got a contract for $5,000, he's representing the neighborhood barbecue store. And then you got another kid for $1,000. Does that kid making $5,000 expect to play more? Probably in his mind, and in his parents' mind he does. Right now, to my knowledge, I think there's still only one or two high school kids that have taken advantage of it. But I just think long term is going to create an issue in a locker room.How do you teach student-athletes how to lose?Larry McKenzie: You always find life lessons in the loss. Losing is learning. One of the things that I always try to do in losing is taking that opportunity and transfer it into a life experience. In life, everything doesn't go the way that you want it to go, you're gonna have some ups and downs, so you have to learn to stay in the moment, get up, dust yourself off and get going again. One of the things that I particularly used to tell my young men is that there are situations where you will lose, but if you have kids, and you have a house payment and those kinds of things, you don't have a whole lot of time to sit around and feel sorry for yourself. You got to keep it moving. Your stories about coachesListeners called into the show and shared their stories. Here are some of them.Coach leads a new track team to victoryI had a great coach in high school in St. Paul. This was in the ‘70s when there wasn't a women's track team. He was asked, as the football coach, to begin the women's track team. So he would see different young women in school, come up to us and ask us, “Do you want to join the team? I already talked to your friend, she's on the track team.” He used that approach because none of us were really runners and that worked. He joined us together as a team because he believed in us. We didn't have the confidence and we didn't have the skills. The coach put it all together for us and worked with us like the football team. We became very close and won the conference championship the very first year that they had women.— Anita from St. PaulHow a good coach impacts generationsI've been in sports since I was 8 years old and I still remember what my coaches told me and, to this day, it's still beneficial. I called in with two specific examples. I have twin brothers younger than me, we all played baseball during the same period of time, and both our teams won a championship. Their coach drove them incessantly hard, and turns out later he was an alcoholic, but my brothers never loved sports again, until they were parents and gradually got back into it and started to love it again. And they lament how much they wish they would have played their high school years with me. On the other hand, I had a great coach, I had great experiences. I learned how to make it fun. And my joy of sports carried down to my son, who also I think experienced wonderful coaching.— Brent from Eden PrairieMemories from North High SchoolI just wanted to say that I'm a graduate of North High in ‘99. I'm 41 now and the structure that I still hold on to from being on a team with my coaches is just awesome. And I still hold that unity, the hot and cold, until today and I'm just blessed for being on North High's team. Coach Larry, thank you for putting financial teaching out there because we definitely need to figure out how to tap in on the finance part. I experienced getting money and blowing it and not knowing what to do.— Amal from MinneapolisA well-remembered coach I'm a product of Minneapolis Central High School and I was there in the late 50s, early 60s when I graduated. I had a memorable coach, one of the best coaches in the city of Minneapolis, that I've ever known anyway. His name was Earl Bowman. He was one of my mentors, and I coached football in the park system for many years as a result of having experience with him. He was a taskmaster, but he also had real care for the kids and was one of the first Black coaches in Minneapolis.— Louis from Minneapolis TikTok: Major keys from a basquetball coach legend

Henry Lake
Correa's New Suitor?; A Big Shoutout to North High

Henry Lake

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2023 33:47


Henry wonders if the Twins can, or should, try to bring shortstop Carlos Correa back to the team. Minneapolis North HS football coach and former MPD officer Charles Adams, Jr. talks about the team being profiled through a new Showtime series, "Boys in Blue".

FORTiTUDE
S5E9 - #FZSupt and Winter Concerts 12.28.22

FORTiTUDE

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2022 26:42


Halfway through the school year, Dr. DuBray celebrates achievements, outlines the work ahead and tunes in to performances from some of our student ensembles from Westhoff Elementary, South Middle and North High. 12.28.22

The Ken Carman Show with Anthony Lima
AFC North + High Standards + Problems at Ohio State?

The Ken Carman Show with Anthony Lima

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2022 37:02


Ken and Lima go Around the AFC North with Ken Weinman (BAL), Mo Egger (CIN) and Andrew Fillipponi (PIT). Should Browns fans have higher standards with their team? Does Ohio State need more money? Listen to The Ken Carman Show with Anthony Lima weekday mornings 6-10am on Sports Radio 92.3 The Fan and the Audacy App!

Minnesota Now
Minnesota Now - Dec. 12, 2022

Minnesota Now

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2022 55:18


We're in for a messy weather week — between snow, ice and rain. We'll have the latest from our meteorologist Sven Sundgaard. And a lot of people are sick with RSV, flu and COVID-19. We'll talk with a doctor from Mayo who will answer your questions. Jean Tretter was a lifelong advocate and historian for LGBTQ communities in Minnesota. He died last week. We find out how his legacy is living on. And it's almost Kwanzaa time! There's a big celebration at North High in Minneapolis this week. We talk with one woman who decided to center her life around the celebration.

Steve and Ted in the Morning
Wichita North High students vote on new mascot name

Steve and Ted in the Morning

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2022 39:45


Hour 1 - The students had a choice between 4 different suggestions.  The final decision on changing the name has yet to be made.  Local and national news plus a visit from Moneytracker Don Grant C.F.P. on Steve and Ted in the Morning.

KGET 17 News
17 News @ Noon 09/23/2022

KGET 17 News

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2022 7:32


Top stories: - Reports on social media claim at least six students have overdosed on fentanyl at North High. - A family in southwest Bakersfield is mourning the death of their two dogs after a house fire.- A black bear was hit and killed by a car on Highway 178 near the Lake Isabella area. This is the second bear to be hit on Highway 178 in the past two months.

Siouxland Public Media News
CULTURE COUNTS: North High Marching Band Prepares for Starfest

Siouxland Public Media News

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2022 2:50


FORTiTUDE
s5B7 - Meet the new FZN Principal

FORTiTUDE

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2022 0:06


A familiar face to some North High families, Dr. Buddy Entwistle is ready to Honor the Past and Claim the Future as he begins his tenure as the Principal at North High.

KMOJCast
08/01/2022 Freddie Bell chats with North High Basketball Coach, Larry McKenzie who is retiring after 42 years.

KMOJCast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2022 11:07


A legendary journey has come to an end. Hall of Fame basketball coach Larry McKenzie is retiring. He reflects on his career with KMOJ's Freddie Bell and says instead of coaching players he may begin helping coaches.

Jazz88
Principal Friestleben on Rising Grad Rates at North High

Jazz88

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2022 5:48


Manny Hill talks with North Community High School Principal Mauri Friestleben on the rising graduation rates at North High, and the relentless work that the teachers and students have put in while enduring the pandemic and tragedy in the community.

Jazz88
Solar Panels top North High and How You Can Benefit

Jazz88

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2022 5:06


Kyle Samejima, Executive Director of Minneapolis Climate Action discussed the North High Community Solar Garden and ways to get involved.

The Morning Show
Solar Panels top North High and How You Can Benefit

The Morning Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2022 5:06


Kyle Samejima, Executive Director of Minneapolis Climate Action discussed the North High Community Solar Garden and ways to get involved.

KGNU Morning Magazine Podcast
Morning Magazine Podcast — Monday, May 16, 2022

KGNU Morning Magazine Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2022 25:57


On today’s Morning Magazine, a popular Chicano teacher at Denver's North High has been placed on administrative leave after a student-led walkout Friday. Then, the CityCast Denver crew will examine the case of a shooting of a respected community leader […]

KGNU Morning Magazine Podcast
Morning Magazine Podcast — Thursday May 12, 2022

KGNU Morning Magazine Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2022 26:26


On today’s Morning Magazine, students at Denver's North High are planning a walkout tomorrow, calling on school administrators to keep a popular Chicano teacher on staff. Then, John Lehndorff will be in the studio to catch us up on local food […]

Jazz88
North High Principal on impact of million dollar scholarship funding.

Jazz88

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2022 9:06


Manny Hill talks with North Community High School Principal Mauri Friestleben about Pillsbury United's $1 million fundraising for the North class of 2022. As each graduating senior will receive $10,000 in scholarship funding, Friestleben shares more on the impact this has had on the students of North High.

Jearlyn Steele
Ready For Their Next Steps

Jearlyn Steele

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2022 32:44


Last week, Pillsbury United Communities made an announcement that could change the education opportunities for seniors at Minneapolis North High School.  Organization Head of Mobilization and Narrative Strategies (and former North High teacher) Kenzie O'Keefe explains the tremendous gift for these students. When it comes to having a career plan once you graduate college, some folks have it figured out.  One such person is Emma Freebersyser.  The Bethel University senior has already started a business that will be expanding once she walks across the stage next month.  She joins the program to describe her business and how she came to this path.

Jearlyn Steele
Highlight: A Head Start for Some Deserving Students

Jearlyn Steele

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2022 14:58


Last week, Pillsbury United Communities made an announcement that could change the education opportunities for seniors at Minneapolis North High School.  Organization Head of Mobilization and Narrative Strategies (and former North High teacher) Kenzie O'Keefe explains the tremendous gift for these students.

Sports Daily
Elbert Mack inducted into the Wichita Sports Hall of Fame

Sports Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2022 41:40


Hour 1 - It is a Hall of Fame Tuesday and for today's induction into the Wichita Sports Hall of Fame we have North High, Butler, Troy, and NFL star Elbert Mack.  He joins Bruce, Jacob, and Paul for the formal induction on a Tuesday edition of Sports Daily.

The Craig Silverman Show
Episode 91 - Honorable Tim Tymkovich!

The Craig Silverman Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2022 116:56


Rundown -    Chief Judge Tim Tymkovich in Craig's Lawyers' Lounge - 04:22   Troubadour Dave Gunders - 01:32:48   "Tear Up Time" by Dave Gunders - 01:48:30   Craig's Lawyers' Lounge proudly welcomes Chief Judge Tymkovich who has long presided over the U.S. Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals, the second highest court in America. He is a Colorado native with firm native roots in Broomfield, preceded by a father and uncle at Denver's North High, and before that, by the Judge's grandfather, who came from Ukraine.   Learn about Chief Judge Tymkovich's formative years at The Colorado College and CU Law before his 2003 federal appointment by President George W. Bush. We discuss just confirmed soon-to-be Justice Ketanji B. Jackson (when Breyer steps down), and legendary Justice Robert H Jackson who took a Supreme Court leave of absence to prosecute Nuremberg war criminals.   Speaking of war criminals, Putin is discussed. Judge Tymkovich is passionate about Ukraine where he's travelled four times to Ukraine between 2007 and 2018 to aid that country's transition to democracy and a fair justice system which was leading to Ukraine's anticipated admission into the European Union. Many great strides were made but those have blown up.   Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and his brave Ukrainian compatriots are hailed, while we remember the atrocities against Ukraine committed by Stalin, and now Putin. We discuss the reasons behind Ukraine once again being in the center of the storm and the best ways for citizens to react. Its not often you hear a federal judge speak so candidly.   Troubadour Dave Gunders contributes his beautiful and haunting song titled, Tear Up Time, a heart-rending ballad about people pulling up roots and moving because things have been torn apart. Ukrainian refugees need our help and understanding. Putin needs to go.

FORTiTUDE
S4B7 - FZ Prop 4 Growth North High

FORTiTUDE

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2022 3:46


Growth. For more than 20 years it has been part of the Fort Zumwalt story. And it continues in the northwest corner of our boundary, bringing more students into North High, North Middle and their elementary feeder schools. Hear from Principal Joe Sutton and incoming Principal Buddy Entwistle about how growth is affecting students at North High and what the school needs to accommodate its increasing population. #FZProp4 is a no-tax increase bond issue. It requires 57-percent approval to pass and would provide funds for maintenance, upgrades and additions at Fort Zumwalt's 27 schools and five support facilities. Learn more at go.FZSD.us/FZProp4 Check the video on our quick casts at FORTiTUDEonair on YouTube. 

Mackey & Judd w/ Ramie
Mackey talks with Manny Hill about the Deshaun Hill, Jr. tragedy

Mackey & Judd w/ Ramie

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2022 12:46


Following the tragic death of 15-year-old Deshaun Hill Jr., Minneapolis North HS has set up a fund that aims to raise scholarship money for the North Class of '24 (Deshaun's class). SKOR North is getting behind this -- SKORNorth.com/hill The goal of the Deshaun Hill, Jr. - North High fund is to establish an initiative that will benefit the students, the school, and ultimately the Northside community for years to come. Let's give some kids a better chance to succeed in life. BACKSTORY: Deshaun was senselessly killed in North Mpls on Feb. 9. He was a stand-out athlete + honor roll student, and his friends & family described him as “an amazing son, brother & friend who touched the lives of everyone he met w/ his infectious smile & humble personality"

The Shark Effect
Ryan Lauderdale | Planning your work & working your plan

The Shark Effect

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2022 37:45


Ryan Lauderdale is a Sports Performance Coach with a mind for business. He's a Nike Master Trainer & is on the Advisory Board at Wix.com. Born and raised in Southern California, Ryan learned the craft of elite athlete training at an early age. He has been no stranger to high-level competition and has been a part of multiple winning teams from the high school level (North High) to the D-1 level (San Jose State University). Ryan got his first start as a strength and conditioning coach at Velocity Sports Performance (Redondo Beach facility, assisted under Performance Director Ken Vick and Head Performance Coach Nick O'Brien) while simultaneously excelling as an Equinox Tier 3+ trainer at the South Bay location.  His years of working with a wide array of clients in the industry and having a successful track record have made him so impactful in the industry. In addition, since 2011, he has contributed to fitness on a global scale as a Nike Master Trainer and has given presentations to thousands of people on behalf of Nike Inc. Ryan has traveled the world consulting for product development, trained Nike celebs and athletes, contributed to events and has lead hundreds of participants in weekly workouts for the Nike Training Club fitness program as well as contributing training workouts to Nike's training app (Nike Training Club). What we discussed: Leadership is needed in any industry (it needs to be first when working in the service industry). The secret shortcut to getting better faster. Becoming a mentor is the last stage of personal development. How to use discipline to develop yourself faster. Breathing techniques and the benefits of doing it correctly Connect with Ryan: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryan-lauderdale-88773b43/ (LinkedIn) https://www.rypenfitness.com/ (Website) https://www.instagram.com/rypenfitness/ (IG) Let's connect: https://open.acast.com/shows/5e759e3195fa07a414c9afe8/episodes/60ed28a18c0c31001917b838/www.yourultimateplaybook.com (My book (The Ultimate Playbook for High Achievement) ) https://www.linkedin.com/in/alex-molden-9693431b/ (LinkedIn) https://www.instagram.com/alexmolden/ (IG) https://www.facebook.com/alex.molden1/ (Facebook) https://open.acast.com/shows/5e759e3195fa07a414c9afe8/episodes/www.alexmoldenspeaks.com (website) https://thehaacademy.com/get-full-access (High Achievers Academy) *Get you a https://www.uv-brite.com/ (UV Brite water bottle)!! Use coupon code Sharkeffect15 for 15% off!! **Get stronger w/https://frogfuel.com/ (Frog Fuel)!! Use coupon code Sharkeffect20 for 20% off of your 1st order! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

The Breakout Sessions
TBOS Episode 26 - Former EC North Husky and current UW Badger - Sam Stange along with the North High Huskies - Bestul Boys

The Breakout Sessions

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2022 66:19


Listen along as Sam shares some memories of his magical senior year where he won the state player of the year in both baseball and hockey. He talks about his experience playing junior hockey as well as the support hr received from his coaches along the way.The North High Huskies Bestul Boys - Gabe, Noah and Jacob talk about their awesome once in a lifetime experience of playing hockey on the same team together!Remedy Bloody Mary Mix Remedy Bloody Mary Mix, out of Wisconsin, created to satisfy your deep craving for a Bloody Mary! Chippewa Valley Ortho and Sport Medicine Dedicated and committed to the health care needs of patients in Western Wisconsin since 1954.

Pat's Pints
A White Christmas with Jason McKibben

Pat's Pints

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2021 91:00


Just in time for the holidays we offer up a fascinating conversation with Jason McKibben of North High Brewing. Listeners in Central Ohio know Jason as the Brewmaster and Co-owner of North High Brewing, but his career in the brewing industry also includes stops at Anchor Brewing, where he was the Production Director, and Budweiser, where he spent 12 years in a variety of positions including a stint as manager of the research pilot brewery in St. Louis. In this wide ranging conversation, we cover topics as varied as medalling at the World Beer Cup, brewing with local ingredients, North High's embrace of the brewpub model, studying with Charlie Bamforth at UC Davis, a behind the scenes look at the iconic Anchor Christmas Ale, and an insider's perspective on Budweiser. Along the way we find out what they do at Bud's Research Pilot Brewery, and sample a vintage bottle of White Christmas, a white dog whisky distilled from the 2012 batch of Anchor Christmas Ale.

Keeper Of The Games
Episode 87: Keeper of the Games - Season 2 Episode 39 - December 7, 2021

Keeper Of The Games

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2021 66:07


December is finally here and Keeper of the Games is back!! It's time for a brand new episode of the Keeper of the Games podcast with Blake Cripps and Tommy Castor!!On this episode #87:- The Kansas City Chiefs come off their bye week with another dominant defensive performance in primetime as the Chiefs beat division rival Broncos 22-9 on Sunday Night Football to move to 8-4 on the season.  Although the offense still isn't where most people would like it to be, Blake and Tommy discuss how this team can ride their defensive prowess to another championship.- Kansas State and Wichita State met on Sunday afternoon for the first time since 2003 in downtown Wichita at Intrust Bank Arena.  Kansas State, led a strong defensive output, beat the Shockers 65-59.  The Shockers have some concerns offensively and the guys discuss where WSU goes from here after this loss to an in-state team.- Time for some News and Notes on the show where the guys discuss some other important topics like Kansas Volleyball, Newman University basketball, Kansas basketball and Wichita Thunder hockey. - Our Wichita Whiparound honors the legendary Lynette Woodard who had the basketball court at North High named after her over the weekend, plus Blake gives a final update on high school football championships.  Congratulations to the Andale Indians for a decisive 3A state title.- The show ends with Additions, Corrections and Retractions all about football coaching changes at both Kansas State and Kansas as well as Buck O'Neil finally being inducted in the Baseball HOF.Make sure to hit subscribe so you never miss an episode. You can listen on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, iHeartRadio, TuneIn Radio and more! Check out our new website at www.kogsports.com. Watch full episodes on YouTube and Facebook by searching for Keeper of the Games. Follow us on Twitter and Instagram @KOGpod.Follow Blake @becripps & Tommy @TweetsFromTommy. #KOGpod 

The Morning Show
North High Alum Javonte Anyabwele talks about the Inspiration behind his Gift to the School

The Morning Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2021 6:17


Javonte Anyabwele, North High Class of '99 is celebrating his 40th birthday by setting up 9 scholarships for North High students. He talks about how attending North High and HBCU Florida A&M University shaped him and what he hopes to achieve by giving back.

Geckos & Grottos D&D
Geckos The Musical - North High Rivals

Geckos & Grottos D&D

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2021 33:52


The Crew continue their musical scuffle against East High's rival high school!Interested in hearing your very own Gecko Cards read on the podcast? Head on over to our Facebook Page and submit your own! Facebook: http://bit.ly/2JejxYOiTunes: https://buff.ly/2YIGI7G⠀Google Play: https://buff.ly/35KSrqF⠀Spotify: https://buff.ly/33e4c7aFacebook: http://bit.ly/2JejxYOWeb: https://buff.ly/3gF0J57

Racial Reckoning: The Arc of Justice
Public Safety Charter Amendment Sparks Intense Debates in Minneapolis

Racial Reckoning: The Arc of Justice

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2021 1:59


Georgia Fort reports: Debates across Minneapolis are heating up as the deadline to vote for the public safety charter amendment approaches. The amendment is posed as a yes or no question on the city's November 2021 ballot. It proposes removing the Police Department as a standalone department and creating a new Public Safety Department, which includes police. During a debate at North High the community heard from Minister JaNae Bates with “Yes 4 Minneapolis.” She said approving the amendment will help with police transparency and accountability.“If this passes it will be, finally, a way for the people of Minneapolis to raise the standard of public safety in the city,” she said. “They will be able to have an expanded department of public safety and police officers will get to work alongside qualified professionals experienced in crisis.” Reverend Jerry McAfee urged folks to vote “no” on the amendment and says more resources should be allocated to community led safety alternatives instead.“Most of the people I kick it with ain't concerned about the police,” he said. “They concerned about Shorty and Ray Ray with them glocks and them switches on ‘em.”  The Racial Justice Network hosted a debate of its own which included filmmaker DA Bullock. Bullock said he plans to vote “yes” for a new public safety department. “We know for a fact that this current system is not supplying us with proper protection,” he said.Sandra Samuels, CEO of North Side Achievement Zone, says she'll vote no; she says police are needed to deter violence.“In 24 years of living here I have never experienced the level of violence and crime and despair that I have seen… never,” she said.  The deadline to vote on the Public Safety Charter Amendment is Nov 2.

Watch This
Outer Banks is back; Dwayne Johnson in Jungle Cruise

Watch This

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2021 18:44


On this weekend's What to Watch: The treasure hunt continues on season 2 of Netflix's Outer Banks, and star Chase Stokes teases the action; Dwayne Johnson and Emily Blunt star in Disney's Jungle Cruise; High School Musical: The Musical: The Series wraps up its second season with East High and North High battling for top honors; Grammy and Oscar winner Watch the Sound; and The Suicide Squad invade Wipeout. We take a look at this year's Emmy race with a clip from EW's The Awardist podcast and Pose nominees Mj Rodriguez and Steven Canals. Plus, our Sound Bite of the Week from The White Lotus, entertainment headlines — including our first look at Hawkeye and Rosie O'Donnell confirms she's in the League of Their Own series — and trivia. More at ew.com, ew.com/wtw, and @EW. Host/Producer: Gerrad Hall (@gerradhall); Editor/Producer: Joshua Heller (@joshuaheller); Writer: Tyler Aquilina (@tyler_aquilina); Executive Producers: Shana Naomi Krochmal (@shananaomi) and Carly Usdin (@carlytron). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Arroe Collins
Larry Saperstein From Disney's High School Musical The Musical

Arroe Collins

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2021 18:56


In Season 2, the East High Wildcats, who are preparing to perform Beauty & the Beasts as their spring musical, face off against rival school North High to win a prestigious and cutthroat student theater competition. Wigs are snatched, loyalties are tested and ballads are belted! Joining Nini (Olivia Rodrigo), Ricky (Joshua Bassett), Big Red (Larry Saperstein), E.J. (Matt Cornett), Ashlyn (Julia Lester), Kourtney (Dara Renee), Carlos (Frankie Rodriguez), Seb (Joe Serafini), Mr. Mazzara (Mark St. Cyr) and Miss Jenn (Kate Reinders) are several exciting new characters. Zach (Derek Hough), Miss Jenn's ex-boyfriend and former high school heartthrob, shakes things up when he returns to Salt Lake after a successful acting career in NYC to become the new drama teacher at East High's rival high school North High. Antoine (Andrew Barth Feldman), a foreign exchange student at North High, cannot help but flirt with Ashlyn. Howie (Roman Banks), a hyper-smart bespectacled adorkable high school junior, gets close to a certain Wildcat or two while working after school as a delivery guy for Big Red's family's pizza shop, Salt Lake Slices. And Lily (Olivia Rose Keegan) is a sugary sweet energetic East High student who wants nothing more than to be on stage with the Wildcats, but her sweetness masks her hugely competitive nature.

Arroe Collins
Larry Saperstein From Disney's High School Musical The Musical

Arroe Collins

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2021 18:56


In Season 2, the East High Wildcats, who are preparing to perform Beauty & the Beasts as their spring musical, face off against rival school North High to win a prestigious and cutthroat student theater competition. Wigs are snatched, loyalties are tested and ballads are belted! Joining Nini (Olivia Rodrigo), Ricky (Joshua Bassett), Big Red (Larry Saperstein), E.J. (Matt Cornett), Ashlyn (Julia Lester), Kourtney (Dara Renee), Carlos (Frankie Rodriguez), Seb (Joe Serafini), Mr. Mazzara (Mark St. Cyr) and Miss Jenn (Kate Reinders) are several exciting new characters. Zach (Derek Hough), Miss Jenn's ex-boyfriend and former high school heartthrob, shakes things up when he returns to Salt Lake after a successful acting career in NYC to become the new drama teacher at East High's rival high school North High. Antoine (Andrew Barth Feldman), a foreign exchange student at North High, cannot help but flirt with Ashlyn. Howie (Roman Banks), a hyper-smart bespectacled adorkable high school junior, gets close to a certain Wildcat or two while working after school as a delivery guy for Big Red's family's pizza shop, Salt Lake Slices. And Lily (Olivia Rose Keegan) is a sugary sweet energetic East High student who wants nothing more than to be on stage with the Wildcats, but her sweetness masks her hugely competitive nature.

The Brazilian Dragon
Pod, Talk, Jam & Break: The Field Trip (HSMTMTS S2, E7)

The Brazilian Dragon

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2021 72:20


WHAT TEAM? WILDCATS! Get'cha head in the game with Felipe and Katelyn as we recap Season 2 of High School Musical: The Musical: The Series every week on our brand new series called Pod, Talk, Jam & Break. In this episode, Katelyn is too scared to break into North High, so Felipe recruits guest cohost Rebecca to recap Season 2, Episode 7 - "The Field Trip." We discuss competitive theatre seminars, Rebecca's love for EJ, and That's How I Beat Shaq by Aaron Carter in addition to our breakdown of the episode. Have any questions for the podcast? Email them to brazildragonpod@gmail.com or tweet them at us. And if you are seeking out more HSM content, listen to Felipe's appearance on Rob and Akiva Need A Podcast. Follow the Brazilian Dragon on social media: Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook! And feel free to support The Brazilian Dragon Podcast via PayPal. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/braziliandragon/support

High School Musical: The Musical: The Series: The Recap: The Podcast
High School Musical: The Musical: The Series: Season 2, Episode 6 - Yes, And?

High School Musical: The Musical: The Series: The Recap: The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2021 19:28


Join me for a recap of HSMTMTS Season 2, Episode 6, titled ‘Yes, And?' Miss Jenn makes the gang do improv, Nini makes her debut as the Rose and writes a song from the Rose's perspective (which is something that nobody asked for) and North High got a real French guy to play Lumiere, classy move.... High School Musical: The Musical: The Series: The Recap: The Podcast is hosted by Nathan Brown, who you can find on Twitter and Instagram at @nathanbrown90. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/nathanbrown/message

What's Your Favorite Part?
HSMTMTS Season 2 Episode 5: The Quinceañero

What's Your Favorite Part?

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2021 42:49


SHOW DESCRIPTION:In case you didn't get the hints, it's Carlos's birthday in High School Musical: The Musical: The Series (aka HSMTMTS)! Xandra and Junie discuss their favorite parts of Season 2 Episode 5: The Quinceañero, including … how North High took the puppies!Wanting to celebrate your birthday without telling peopleNini is SO excited to be back… and is also having a mid-high school crisisGINA'S STORY ARC IS SO GREAT!Her duet with Little Carlos!EJ and Gina!!Gina's private vs public personasWho is more realistic: Lily or Rachel Berry?Is Zack competitive or kooky? Does Zack want to win over Miss Jenn or show that he's better than her? They TOOK the PUPPIES!So the dancers were just standing in for the puppies?SEB SINGS THE CLIMB! Country pop Sharpay crossover!The most high school romances are with the adultsHooray for a seasonally synced episode during Pride month!CHORUS COW CALLED IT PREDICTIONS:Who will do the recap next week? Why IS Zack back teaching at North High if he's such a successful Broadway Miley and Joe duet pleaseDid North High recruit a Beauxbatons carriage of French performers? Does North High even exist? Will the North High Robotics Team built Cogsworth? A Lumiere-offIs Howie a student at North High?How will Miss Jenn's love triangle play out?Gina is not leaving right???Gina needs a Miss Jenn momentWhat is Nini's new role in the show?SHOW DETAILS:Tell us your Favorite Part: favoritepart@heroinetraining.comA  Heroine Training  PodcastXandra is on YouTube: http://heroinetraining.com/youtubeOur HSMTMTS Playlist is on SpotifyOur music is ‘Singing & Silence' by Rorie:  http://roriemusic.com

What's Your Favorite Part?
HSMTMTS Season 2 Episode 2: Typecasting

What's Your Favorite Part?

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2021 33:37


SHOW DESCRIPTION:We have a Beauty and the Beast cast on High School Musical: The Musical: The Series! Xandra and Junie discuss their favorite parts, the events of Season 2 Episode 2: Typecasting, including how…EJ’s signature wink returnsAshlyn just is BelleLily is the worst!Ricky is a realistic straight guy in high school theatre It’s nice to see Miss Jenn being a good leader!We love Troy’s Dad!!! What is your name???Babette ze fezzerdusterrDabbling in Disneybounding We are your biggest fans, Spencer McConnell!YAC gets the Order of the Phoenix blue filter Trust the Outcome??? Seriously?Did Emily sabotage Nini? Is vocal rest as a punishment the best lesson?The villain of this season is THE INSTITUTION!Every moment IS an audition tho Welcome back to social media, EJ!CHORUS COW CALLED-IT PREDICTIONS:How long will Nini stick it out at this stupid school? Who sent Gina the heart?We don’t want to see Big Red sadCan Ricky be there for his castmates??Will Lily be North High’s sneaky informant?  PLUS:Xandra’s Mrs. Potts Disneybound: https://www.heroinetraining.com/beauty-beast-review-mrs-potts-outfit/Send us and email and let us know: What’s Your Favorite Part? favoritepart@heroinetraining.com SHOW DETAILS:Tell us your Favorite Part: favoritepart@heroinetraining.comListen to The Art Life, Xandra’s podcast on trusting the process as an artist:  http://theartlife.showA  Heroine Training  PodcastOur music is ‘Singing & Silence’ by Rorie:  http://roriemusic.com

S.T.S Podcast
"WeTheNorth"

S.T.S Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2021 38:48


On the 83rd episode of the “S.T.S Podcast” we have North High Athletic Director and Head Coach of Boys Basketball A.J Shearon on to discuss this upcoming basketball season. His journey in his coaching career from Liberty High to Fresno Pacific University and currently at North High. We're talking about the rural communities that our kids grow up in and the death of his player Manny Arechiga changed his perspective on coaching forever. One of my favorite sit down interviews so far. Follow the S.T.S Podcast on Twitter and Instagram. Twitter.com./STSPODCAST661 Instagram.com/STSPODCAST661 Make sure you subscribe and rate on Apple Podcasts! This podcast is also available on Spotify, Anchor and Iheart Radio. This podcast is sponsored by: Coco Glo by Em This is spray tanning specialist is located in Bakersfield, Ca and is ready to get your tan right! This is an affordable option for you and will take your beauty to the next level. Located at 612 18th St. Mention the “S.T.S Podcast” and you will get 3 spray tans for only the price of 2! Appointment only. Contact now @ (661) 348-1365 Instagram: coco_glo_by_em Monkeys Smog Check and Repair Located at 1331 E Truxtun Ave in Bakersfield, Ca This local and family owned repair shop specializes in brake and battery services, oil changes, smog checks, transmission repair, AC services and more! To show their love and support to their customers, everyone who mentions the "STS Podcast" during their Smog check with $5 off! Muscle Cience The newest and most complete fully dosed pre workout to hit the market in recent memory. Muscle Cience was created here in Bakersfield, Ca and it'll take your workout to the next level. Filled with BAITA alanEEN, caffeine, amino acids and its sugar free! Sampled this product during my workouts this week and it kept me focused, motivated, energized and pumped to the max. WISER. STRONGER. BETTER. Get yours now! IG: Instagram.com/musclecience Nights Watch Private Security This is a private security company serving Kern County aiming to improve the safety and security in their public residences, private companies and events! Instagram.com/nightswatchps

FORTiTUDE
S3 Bonus - FZN Hoops with Coach Uffmann

FORTiTUDE

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2021 14:47


Unprecedented. For fans of North High boys basketball, this word is more than OK to say again. In this episode, Coach Michael Uffmann shares the challenges, the celebrations, and the FORTiTUDE it took for his team to put together an unprecedented season and shares some insights on the power of positive role models when it comes to shaping young leaders.

Columbus Business First
Crisis Management: Why North High Brewing stopped worrying and became a restaurant operator

Columbus Business First

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2021 22:15


Business in times of struggle often talk of getting back to their roots. Not North High Brewing. Like many breweries and other businesses, the last year was one of big changes in the face of challenges, but the North High of today doesn’t resemble the one first dreamed up by co-founders Gavin Meyers and Tim Ward a decade ago. They didn’t want to run any brewpub. Today they have four and could be in double digits by the end of the year. They didn’t have aspirations beyond Columbus but soon will be in multiple states. They only barely wanted to brew their own beer — the initial hook for the business was as a brew-your-own operation. North High’s own beers would be secondary to the experience of inviting customers in, showing them a book of recipes and letting them loose (with professional guidance) on the brewing system. That brew-your-own option diminished over time as the founders realized being a traditional brewery made more sense. It officially ended last year. “That was the reason for being. That was the point of differentiation back when we thought the seventh brewery in Columbus was going to really crowd the industry,” Meyers said. There are dozens of craft brewers around Central Ohio today and hundreds in the state. North High is poised to rise in those ranks. Meyers chatted with Columbus Business First for an episode of Crisis Management, a podcast about businesses operating amid the coronavirus pandemic. He talked about the challenges of the past year — declining sales, laying off staff — but also the promise of the future. Thanks to its relationship with Columbus-based coworking space developers and operators CoHatch, North High’s reach is moving beyond its original Short North taproom. Through that partnership, North High now has operations in Dublin, Springfield and Cincinnati, with additional units lined up in Cleveland, Cincinnati, Indianapolis and Florida. Meyers explains how that relationship developed, how it works and how it’s allowing North High to expand at “a fraction of the cost” they would incur if striking out on their own.

CBF Archives
Crisis Management #46: Why North High Brewing stopped worrying and became a restaurant operator - Women Of Influence

CBF Archives

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2021 22:16


Business in times of struggle often talk of getting back to their roots. Not North High Brewing. Like many breweries and other businesses, the last year was one of big changes in the face of challenges, but the North High of today doesn't resemble the one first dreamed up by co-founders Gavin Meyers and Tim Ward a decade ago. They didn't want to run any brewpub. Today they have four and could be in double digits by the end of the year. They didn't have aspirations beyond Columbus but soon will be in multiple states. They only barely wanted to brew their own beer — the initial hook for the business was as a brew-your-own operation. North High's own beers would be secondary to the experience of inviting customers in, showing them a book of recipes and letting them loose (with professional guidance) on the brewing system. That brew-your-own option diminished over time as the founders realized being a traditional brewery made more sense. It officially ended last year. “That was the reason for being. That was the point of differentiation back when we thought the seventh brewery in Columbus was going to really crowd the industry,” Meyers said. There are dozens of craft brewers around Central Ohio today and hundreds in the state. North High is poised to rise in those ranks. Meyers chatted with Columbus Business First for an episode of Crisis Management, a podcast about businesses operating amid the coronavirus pandemic. He talked about the challenges of the past year — declining sales, laying off staff — but also the promise of the future. Thanks to its relationship with Columbus-based coworking space developers and operators CoHatch, North High's reach is moving beyond its original Short North taproom. Through that partnership, North High now has operations in Dublin, Springfield and Cincinnati, with additional units lined up in Cleveland, Cincinnati, Indianapolis and Florida. Meyers explains how that relationship developed, how it works and how it's allowing North High to expand at “a fraction of the cost” they would incur if striking out on their own.

FORTiTUDE
S3E13 - Go Boldly: NASA's Airborne Astronomy Ambassadors

FORTiTUDE

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2021 16:16


Space. The final frontier. These are the voyages of teachers who long to keep learning. Their mission: To explore new curriculum; To seek out new strategies and new techniques, To engage students in learning as they’ve never engaged before. Meet West High science teacher Melissa Bouquet and East High science teachers Joe Leibner and Tom Ogle. They are joined by K - 12 Science Curriculum Coordinator Anne Green to share their journey as Airborne Astronomy Ambassadors. In 2020 they, along with North High’s Nick Fisher, were among 28 teachers selected to participate in the NASA program through the SETI Institute. They brought what they learned back to their students, and are hoping to take flight this summer to complete their training.  

Steve and Ted in the Morning
USD 259 decides to change North High mascot

Steve and Ted in the Morning

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2021 15:53


Local and national news and sports on Steve and Ted in the Morning. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Wrestling Changed My Life Podcast
#169 Bruce Burnett - 4x Olympic Coach, Hall of Famer

Wrestling Changed My Life Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2020 69:48


Four-time Team USA Olympic Coach Bruce Burnett is our guest today. Bruce is known as one of the great coaches of all time. A brilliant tactician who developed a mastery of studying film. Bruce has been inducted into numerous hall of fames and currently resides in North Idaho. In this episode we talk about Bruce’s coaching career, John and Pat Smith, and the 1992 Olympics. BIO: Bruce Burnett was the U.S. National Freestyle Coach for USA Wrestling from 1992-2000. During his tenure, the U.S. won World Team Titles at the 1993 and 1995 World Freestyle Championships and captured five medals at the 1996 Olympics. The 2000 Olympic squad won four medals. Burnett was named USA Wrestling Freestyle Coach of the Year in 1995 and 1996 and the U.S. Olympic Committee Coach of the Year for 1996. A North High graduate, Burnett was a two-time State Champion with a 55-3 record, winning the state meet's outstanding wrestler award in 1970. He then wrestled at the University of Idaho, where he was a Big Sky Champion and undefeated in dual meets. PHOTO: Tony Rotundo SPONSOR This episode is brought to you by the Wrestling Changed My Life online store. We have podcast T-Shirts, Hoodies, Crew-necks, Stickers and more. Go to Store.WrestlingChangedMyLife.com to shop. ABOUT THE WRESTLING CHANGED MY LIFE PODCAST Hosted by Ryan Warner, the Wrestling Changed My Life Podcast features in-depth interviews with wrestlers and coaches to learn how the sport shaped and molded their lives. By stitching together stories of sacrifice, triumph, defeat and perseverance, the Podcast takes the listener deep inside the world’s oldest sport. New episodes are released every Monday and Wednesday. FOLLOW THE PODCAST WrestlingChangedMyLife.com

Yousuf and Ryan Podcast
EP 47 FT Matthew Beal: Death Penalty, Honey Buns, and More

Yousuf and Ryan Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2020 87:17


In this episode, we're joined with North High physics teacher and board game enthusiast Matthew Beal. Check out the timestamps below: Intro: 0:00-2:45 Wealth and Materialism: 2:45-6:30 Dark Matter and Physics: 6:30-21:34 Renewable Energy: 21:34-25:08 Death Penalty: 25:08-30:14 Should Individuals Be Judged Based on the Time Period They Lived In: 30:14-42:13 Pandemic/ Vaccines: 42:13-53:06 Pyro: 53:06-55:30 Becoming A Teacher: 55:30-1:06:57 Jiu Jitsu: 1:06:57-1:13:18 Amish People and Honey Buns: 1:13:18-1:20:17 Ending: 1:20:17-1:26:09 This podcast is hosted by Yousuf Qaum and Ryan Flint. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

The Brew Crew Podcast
094 Its a Fact

The Brew Crew Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2020 88:09


Welcome back to The Brew Crew Podcast. We are a fun, non-pretentious podcast about craft beer. In this 94th episode, we rate three alike beers! What a terrific spontaneous decision. We imbibe Collective Arts: All the Things, North High, Inherit the Stars and Luplin Fashion Mullet. A ton of meaty morsels on this episode! Thank you so much for listening, tell your friends and as always hit that subscribe button below. Cheers!

30 Rack of Sports
Episode 23 - North High Brewing

30 Rack of Sports

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2020 74:28


North High's "Stardust to Stardust" is our Beer of the Week, a week that will see the return of baseball. We take a deep dive into the Indians and Reds upcoming campaigns. Plus, while the Crew are on to the Round of 16, can FC Cincinnati squeak in too? We'll also discuss a wild lineup of beers and collaborations going on in Ohio this month.

Anything and Everything Podcast
The Unexpected Dreams of a Valedictorian | Anything and Everything Ep.4 with Ahsan Zaman

Anything and Everything Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2020 54:52


In this episode we get the chance to sit down with the very brilliant and dope Ahsan Zaman (@ahsanzaman) . Back story is that Ahsan was our high school valedictorian (North High class of 2015) and I (Tyler) got the chance to catch up and learn how Ahsan has adjusted to life while striving for his M.D from the very prestigious USC. 

The 6 Pack with DaveMan
Friday night BEER show with check-ins on how they're dealing with COVID-19 from Zaftig, Jackie Os, North High and Nocterra Brewing

The 6 Pack with DaveMan

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2020 29:59


The Afternoon Cruise
North High Principal Mauri Melander Friestleben

The Afternoon Cruise

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2020 7:25


The new principal at North Community High School, where our KBEM studios are located, stopped by the Morning Show to talk about the school.

The Morning Show
North High Principal Mauri Melander Friestleben

The Morning Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2020 7:25


The new principal at North Community High School, where our KBEM studios are located, stopped by the Morning Show to talk about the school.

Jazz88
North High Principal Mauri Melander Friestleben

Jazz88

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2020 7:25


The new principal at North Community High School, where our KBEM studios are located, stopped by the Morning Show to talk about the school.

The Taproom Exclusive
Episode 83 - MadCap - Gold Flash

The Taproom Exclusive

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2020 18:00


In the MadCap Brewing Company premiere, I sit down with Vince Rinaldo, brewmaster and Kyle Mullen brand manager over their flagship Gold Flash golden ale. Hear all about this beer and more! Plus, in the Northeast Ohio Craft Brewery News "Tasting Glass" segment, North High is working on a new project, and North Water Brewing will join MadCap as Kent's 2nd brewery, and more! Tune in!

The JFH Podcast
095: Our Favorite Christmas Songs (feat. Southlen's Jared Barbosa)

The JFH Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2019 69:19


Chase gets to spend this episode questioning three Christmas music aficionados about their Christmas music-listening habits and the seasonal songs they list as most favorite to least favorite. Those three guests are JFH's own Timothy Estabrooks and Josh Balogh, as well as Jared Barbosa from the band Southlen. This episode is sponsored by North High, whose new EP Scribbles is available now, wherever you stream or purchase music. Click here for more information. Timothy's Christmas Spotify playlist Josh's Christmas Spotify playlist The JFH Podcast is hosted and produced by Chase Tremaine and executive produced by John DiBiase and Christopher Smith. To meet the people behind the show, discuss the episodes, ask questions, and engage in conversations with other listeners, join the JFH Podcast group on Facebook.

FORTiTUDE
S2E12 - Symphony Notes

FORTiTUDE

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2019 11:04


In the newest episode of the FORTiTUDE podcast we check in with middle school orchestra teachers Chris Torretta from DuBray and Jenina Kenessey from North (and North High). Tune in to learn more about the role of music in our students' lives, how new technology supports that learning and about Chris and Jenina's unique opportunity to perform with the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra.

Denise Kavanaugh-Athletics
FUN While Managing a Football Game! The Avenger Team Model.

Denise Kavanaugh-Athletics

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2019 15:28


Accomplishing the mission of everyone having a positive experience with Friday night under the lights. A sample of our model. Welcome to North High!

Columbus Business First
News & Brews No. 26: North High Norden Hoch, Columbus Brewing Festbier

Columbus Business First

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2019 23:23


This week’s News & Brews sets up a seasonal face-off. The team samples a pair of local-made Oktoberfests — Norden Hoch from North High Brewing and Festbier by Columbus Brewing — and compares and contrasts the malty lagers. Which Columbus creation prevailed? Beyond the beer, we hoist some metaphorical steins to news from Columbus Brewing, which expects to open its taproom Sept. 18. In more taproom news, we chat about SIP Local, a new brewpub coming to Clintonville and taking the short-lived space of Actual Brewing. It’s an offshoot of Somewhere in Particular Brewing, which opened on the city’s Northwest side last fall. I also discuss the recent King of Ohio IPA competition, including kudos for Pickerington’s Combustion Brewing and Columbus’ Seventh Son Brewing, both of which fared well in the annual beer contest. And finally, Mark Somerson makes a shocking revelation about pumpkin beers and an even more stunning statement about Christmas beers.

CBF Archives
News & Brews No. 26: North High Norden Hoch, Columbus Brewing Festbier - Women Of Influence

CBF Archives

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2019 23:24


This week's News & Brews sets up a seasonal face-off. The team samples a pair of local-made Oktoberfests — Norden Hoch from North High Brewing and Festbier by Columbus Brewing — and compares and contrasts the malty lagers. Which Columbus creation prevailed? Beyond the beer, we hoist some metaphorical steins to news from Columbus Brewing, which expects to open its taproom Sept. 18. In more taproom news, we chat about SIP Local, a new brewpub coming to Clintonville and taking the short-lived space of Actual Brewing. It's an offshoot of Somewhere in Particular Brewing, which opened on the city's Northwest side last fall. I also discuss the recent King of Ohio IPA competition, including kudos for Pickerington's Combustion Brewing and Columbus' Seventh Son Brewing, both of which fared well in the annual beer contest. And finally, Mark Somerson makes a shocking revelation about pumpkin beers and an even more stunning statement about Christmas beers.

S.T.S Podcast
EDDIESANCHEZ

S.T.S Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2019 54:11


This week I am discussing the passing of hip hop legend Bushwick Bill, the latest raffle with my DJ business, the importance of supporting your inner circles business goals. Also, talking about high school basketball summer league at North High, the use of social media as a business tool and have a GREAT discussion with our guests! Pro boxer Eddie Sanchez and his trainer Jason Glaspie, we're talk about their upcoming bout on June 15th! Follow the S.T.S Podcast on Twitter and Instagram. Twitter.com./STSPODCAST661 Instagram.com/STSPODCAST661 Make sure you subscribe and rate on Apple Podcasts! This podcast is also available on Spotify, Anchor and Soundcloud. This episode is brought to you "Precision Lawn and Landscaping" Please contact Brandon Yap for your free estimate on all of your gardening needs!!! (661) 364-7614 brandonyap54@gmail.com "Zenteno's Carpet" Specializing in carpet design, linoleum, tile and granite counter tops! Ask for Zenteno and get your FREE ESTIMATE. License #1000110363 Contact #: (626) 757-0071

CBF Archives
News & Brews No. 7: North High's Filthy McNasty vs. Land-Grant's Deep Search - Women Of Influence

CBF Archives

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2019 20:03


Our latest News & Brews podcast tackles an age-old beer question: porters vs. stouts? Which is which & which is your preference? On one side is the North High Filthy McNasty Russian Imperial Stout, and on the other is Land-Grant Brewing Co.'s Deep Search Baltic Porter. Does the conversation wander away from that topic at some point? You bet! (Mis)adventures in brewing you own beer at North High are discussed, ice cream inspired beers find few defenders here and someone defiantly proclaims “I don't need fruit in my beer.”

Columbus Business First
News & Brews No. 7: North High's Filthy McNasty vs. Land-Grant's Deep Search

Columbus Business First

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2019 20:02


Our latest News & Brews podcast tackles an age-old beer question: porters vs. stouts? Which is which & which is your preference? On one side is the North High Filthy McNasty Russian Imperial Stout, and on the other is Land-Grant Brewing Co.’s Deep Search Baltic Porter. Does the conversation wander away from that topic at some point? You bet! (Mis)adventures in brewing you own beer at North High are discussed, ice cream inspired beers find few defenders here and someone defiantly proclaims “I don’t need fruit in my beer.”

Are You Ready for Another...?
02: Meh... It's Just a Normal IPA

Are You Ready for Another...?

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2019


How we started liking better beer, and some of the best memories with that beer.Beers drank this weekKevan’s first: Sierra Nevada: Hazy Little ThingMichael’s first: Brew Dog: Albino Squid AssasinKevan’s second: New Belgium: VooDoo Ranger Liquid ParadiseMichael’s second: Jackie O’s: Berliner Style WeisseDiscussionThe official label approver: Tobacco Tax and Trade BureauBrewDog chooses Canal WinchesterBrewDogs TV ShowHow we got into fancier beersGoose Island: Honkers AleBlack and TanBeer tracking: UntappedMemorable ExperiencesDelirium in BrusselsActual footage of Kevan at DeliriumMcSorley’s in Ney York CityJackie O’s Cellar Cuvée 11 “ …Pairs well with chocolate salami, beet/blue cheese endive boats, and fig bacon flatbread.”Heurich House in Washington, DCKiss Cafe in Ballard, SeattleRainbow Room in New York CityAthens Breweries: Jackie O’s, Little Fish, Devil’s KettleColumbus Breweries: Columbus Brewing Company, Land Grant, North High, Seventh Son, Elevator

The Taproom Exclusive
The Tasting Glass - December 28th Edition

The Taproom Exclusive

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2018 5:58


This week's samples include: Crooked Handle's Resilience tapping with proceeds going to Sierra Nevada's Camp Fire relief fund, Rhinegeists's Cornerstone Renter Equity fundraiser, Jackie O's 13th anniversary, HiHo's 2 year anniversary plus releases from North High and Listermann! Rick Armon and Marc Bona's top ten stories of 2018 and more! Tune in!

Craft Beer Radio Podcast
CBR 460: Opening Day

Craft Beer Radio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2018 51:30


Beers North High Hefeweizen Platform The Project Calypso Kindred Hodad IPA Trillium Vicinity Fieldwork Textbook Farmhouse Fieldwork Althea Rankings: Jeff: 1. Platform 2. Textbook 3. Hodad 4. Trillium 5. North High 6. Althea Greg: 1. Textbook 2. Hodad 3. Trillium 4. Platform 5. North High 6. Althea Social: @craftbeerradio on Twitter CBR on Facebook CBR on Google+ Support CBR: Subscribe or Donate Review CBR on iTunes CBR Amazon Store Extras: Preshow Postshow

Craft Beer Radio Podcast
CBR 460: Opening Day

Craft Beer Radio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2018 51:30


Beers North High Hefeweizen Platform The Project Calypso Kindred Hodad IPA Trillium Vicinity Fieldwork Textbook Farmhouse Fieldwork Althea Rankings: Jeff: 1. Platform 2. Textbook 3. Hodad 4. Trillium 5. North High 6. Althea Greg: 1. Textbook 2. Hodad 3. Trillium 4. Platform 5. North High 6. Althea Social: @craftbeerradio on Twitter CBR on Facebook CBR on Google+ Support CBR: Subscribe or Donate Review CBR on iTunes CBR Amazon Store Extras: Preshow Postshow

Craft Beer Radio Podcast
CBR 457: Na Na Na Na Na Na Na Na

Craft Beer Radio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2018 48:32


Beers Jackie O’s Dark Apparition Jackie O’s Elle Epic Common Interests Brasserie Dupont Avec Les Bons Voeux (2015) North High Stardust to Stardust 3 Floyd’s Lazersnake Rankings: Jeff: 1. Dark Apparition 2. Saison Dupont 3. 3 Floyd’s 4. Elle 5. North High 6. Epic Greg: 1. Elle 2. 3 Floyd’s 3. Dark Apparition 4. Saison Dupont 5. North High 6. Epic Add Comment Social: @craftbeerradio on Twitter CBR on Facebook CBR on Google+ Support CBR: Subscribe or Donate Review CBR on iTunes CBR Amazon Store Extras: Preshow Postshow

Craft Beer Radio Podcast
CBR 457: Na Na Na Na Na Na Na Na

Craft Beer Radio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2018 48:32


Beers Jackie O’s Dark Apparition Jackie O’s Elle Epic Common Interests Brasserie Dupont Avec Les Bons Voeux (2015) North High Stardust to Stardust 3 Floyd’s Lazersnake Rankings: Jeff: 1. Dark Apparition 2. Saison Dupont 3. 3 Floyd’s 4. Elle 5. North High 6. Epic Greg: 1. Elle 2. 3 Floyd’s 3. Dark Apparition 4. Saison Dupont 5. North High 6. Epic Add Comment Social: @craftbeerradio on Twitter CBR on Facebook CBR on Google+ Support CBR: Subscribe or Donate Review CBR on iTunes CBR Amazon Store Extras: Preshow Postshow

Craft Beer Radio Podcast
CBR 456: Egg-Not

Craft Beer Radio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2018 65:51


Beers Evil Twin Eggnog IPA Ommegang Brunette Lord Hobo Glorious North High Filthy McNasty Double Nickel Vienna Wolf’s Ridge Brewing L’Abondance Jackie O’s Mystic Mama IPA Rankings: Jeff: 1. Lord Hobo 2. Jackie O’s 3. Wolf’s Ridge 4. North High 5. Double Nickel 6. Ommegang 7. Evil Twin Greg: 1. Lord Hobo 2. Double Nickel 3. Ommegang 4. North High 5. Jackie O’s 6. Wolf’s Ridge 7. Evil Twin Add Comment Social: @craftbeerradio on Twitter CBR on Facebook CBR on Google+ Support CBR: Subscribe or Donate Review CBR on iTunes CBR Amazon Store Extras: Preshow Postshow

Craft Beer Radio Podcast
CBR 456: Egg-Not

Craft Beer Radio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2018 65:51


Beers Evil Twin Eggnog IPA Ommegang Brunette Lord Hobo Glorious North High Filthy McNasty Double Nickel Vienna Wolf’s Ridge Brewing L’Abondance Jackie O’s Mystic Mama IPA Rankings: Jeff: 1. Lord Hobo 2. Jackie O’s 3. Wolf’s Ridge 4. North High 5. Double Nickel 6. Ommegang 7. Evil Twin Greg: 1. Lord Hobo 2. Double Nickel 3. Ommegang 4. North High 5. Jackie O’s 6. Wolf’s Ridge 7. Evil Twin Add Comment Social: @craftbeerradio on Twitter CBR on Facebook CBR on Google+ Support CBR: Subscribe or Donate Review CBR on iTunes CBR Amazon Store Extras: Preshow Postshow

The Morning Show
Jam, Lewis honored and interviewed at North High

The Morning Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2018 9:04


Super-producers with Minneapolis roots Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis visited North High School, Lewis' alma mater, Jan. 31, 2018. The duo was in town to curate the performances of the Super Bow Live event on Nicollet Mall. Jazz88 student broadcasters Azhaela Hanson and Odell Wilson visited with the pair about their connections to the North Side and what they consider their greatest honors.

Jazz88
Jam, Lewis honored and interviewed at North High

Jazz88

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2018 9:04


Super-producers with Minneapolis roots Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis visited North High School, Lewis' alma mater, Jan. 31, 2018. The duo was in town to curate the performances of the Super Bow Live event on Nicollet Mall. Jazz88 student broadcasters Azhaela Hanson and Odell Wilson visited with the pair about their connections to the North Side and what they consider their greatest honors.

True North Podcast
EP 7-Part 1 True North Introduces News from Denver North High

True North Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2017 3:43


EP 7-Part 1 True North Introduces News from Denver North High by Jennifer Wolf and Robin Hoch

True North Podcast
EP7-Part 2 News from Denver North High

True North Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2017 15:57


Updates about Denver North High School from the "News from North High" podcast club!

Taproom Talk
PALE ALE

Taproom Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2016 27:31


CHRISTOPHER goes on location at NORTH HIGH BREWING talking with Brewmaster, JASON McKIBBON about NORTH HIGH's 2016 World Beer Cup silver medalist, Pale Ale. TAPROOM TALK is the spoken word of the HOMETOWN CRAFT BEER NETWORK.

508: A Show About Worcester
508 #209: UPDATED BREAKING

508: A Show About Worcester

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2012


508 is a show about Worcester. This week’s panel is Brendan Melican, Shane Capra, Bruce “Snow Ghost” Russell, Jen Burt, and Holly C.K. Jones. Not on this week’s show: the now 3 North High altercations. [display_podcast] Audio: Download the mp3 or see more formats. Twitter | Facebook | Subscribe with iTunes | Contact Info You … Continue reading "508 #209: UPDATED BREAKING"

WPS-TV School News
School News 9/27/10

WPS-TV School News

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2010 20:00


In this Edition of the School News: Northwest High School's AVID program holds a Free Tailgate Party Chisholm Trail Elementary Celebrate their Heroes OK Elementary holds its' Second Grandparents' Day Lunch Feed The Children Provides more Backpacks for Homeless Students Minneha Core Knowledge Magnet gets a New Computer Lab and Art Room Hadley Middle School's new Anti-Bullying Initiative Lauren Collins from North High is the Anchor Run time: 20:00 

WPS-TV School News
School News 8/27/10

WPS-TV School News

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2010 23:50


In this Edition of the School News: The SCOPE Program has another successful summer Jardine Magnet gets a Huge Check Drill/Leadership Summer Camp First Student provides Transportation for the District K-State Coach speaks to WPS Teachers L'Ouverture starts a new Partnership 6th & 9th Graders start School 1 day early Anchor: Lauren Collins from North High   Run time: 23:30