Podcasts about Olin

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Best podcasts about Olin

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Latest podcast episodes about Olin

Your College Bound Kid | Scholarships, Admission, & Financial Aid Strategies
YCBK 607: How the Calm College Method Reduces Student & Parent Stress

Your College Bound Kid | Scholarships, Admission, & Financial Aid Strategies

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2026 76:51


In this episode you will hear: (02:54) Mark interviews Lisa and Lynda about their new book, "The Calm College Method" (27:18) Susan joins Mark to answer a question from Andrew, a listener from Oregon (54:27) Interview-Susan Brisson-Olin College of Engineering Preview of Part 2 v Susan talks about the level of math Olin is looking for and she discusses the admission requirements v Susan talks about the individual in-person evaluative interview Olin has v Susan tells us what some red flags are students in admissions v Susan shares her the cross-apps are for Olin v Susan explains why their application timeline is different from many of their peers v What do employers tell you that they like about Olin grads? Recommended Resource Guide to help first year students complete the Common Application- Application guide for first-year students Speakpipe.com/YCBK is our method if you want to ask a question and we will be prioritizing all questions sent in via Speakpipe. Unfortunately, we will NOT answer questions on the podcast anymore that are emailed in. If you want us to answer a question on the podcast, please use speakpipe.com/YCBK. We feel hearing from our listeners in their own voices adds to the community feel of our podcast. You can also use this for many other purposes: 1) Send us constructive criticism about how we can improve our podcast 2) Share an encouraging word about something you like about an episode or the podcast in general 3) Share a topic or an article you would like us to address 4) Share a speaker you want us to interview 5) Leave positive feedback for one of our interviewees. We will send your verbal feedback directly to them and I can almost assure you your positive feedback will make their day. To sign up to receive Your College-Bound Kid PLUS, our new monthly admissions newsletter, delivered directly to your email once a month, just go to yourcollegeboundkid.com, and you will see the sign-up popup. We will include many of the hot topics being discussed on college campuses. Check out our new blog. We write timely and insightful articles on college admissions: https://yourcollegeboundkid.com/category/blog/ Follow Mark Stucker on Twitter to get breaking college admission news, and updates about the podcast before they go live. You can ask questions on Twitter that he will answer on the podcast. Mark will also share additional hot topics in the news and breaking news on this Twitter feed. Twitter message is also the preferred way to ask questions for our podcast: 1. To access our transcripts, click: https://yourcollegeboundkid.com/category/transcripts/ 2. Find the specific episode transcripts for the one you want to search for and click the link 3. Find the magnifying glass icon in blue (search feature) and click it 4. Enter whatever word you want to search. I.e. Loans 5. Every word in that episode when the words loans are used will be highlighted in yellow with a timestamps 6. Click the word highlighted in yellow and the player will play the episode from that starting point 7. You can also download the entire podcast as a transcript We would be honored if you will pass this podcast episode on to others who you feel will benefit from the content in YCBK. Please subscribe to our podcast. It really helps us move up in Apple's search feature so others can find our podcast. If you enjoy our podcast, would you please do us a favor and share our podcast both verbally and on social media? We would be most grateful! If you want to help more people find Your College-Bound Kid, please make sure you follow our podcast. You will also get instant notifications as soon as each episode goes live. Check out the college admissions books Mark recommends: https://yourcollegeboundkid.com/recommended-books/ Check out the college websites Mark recommends: https://yourcollegeboundkid.com/recommended-websites/ If you want to have some input about what you like and what you recommend, we change about our podcast, please complete our Podcast survey; here is the link: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScCauBgityVXVHRQUjvlIRfYrMWWdHarB9DMQGYL0472bNxrw/viewform If you want a college consultation, text Mark at 404-664-4340, or email us at yourcollegeboundkid@yahoo.com All we ask is that you review their services and pricing on their website before the complimentary session; here is link to their services with transparent pricing: https://schoolmatch4u.com/services/compare-packages/

Zone 1150 - TexAgs Radio
TexAgs Live - Go Hour with OB and Nuño & Former A&M QB Stephen McGee : 01.22.26

Zone 1150 - TexAgs Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2026 44:07 Transcription Available


David and Olin react to the win over Mississippi State by Bucky McMillan and Co. Later, Stephen McGee joins the show!

Zone 1150 - TexAgs Radio
TexAgs Live - Go Hour with OB and Nuño : 01.21.26

Zone 1150 - TexAgs Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2026 44:08 Transcription Available


It's the GO Hour with Olin and David! They talk about how much optimism the A&M football team has earned and the legal battles of NIL. 

Zone 1150 - TexAgs Radio
TexAgs Live - Go Hour with OB and Nuño : 01.20.26

Zone 1150 - TexAgs Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2026 44:29 Transcription Available


Olin & David react to last night's National Championship Game and Charean Williams joins the show!

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show
Louie Belina Show - Olin Buchan of TexAgs + United Way of the BV: 01.20.26

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2026 47:23 Transcription Available


Olin Buchanan of Texags inside the Charles Schwab Studio talks Bucky Ball, the National Championship Game, and Marcel Reed plus the Oline 2026.The day ends with the Community SpotLight and the United Way with special guest Save Our Street Ministries joins Louie.

Zone 1150 - TexAgs Radio
TexAgs Live - Go Hour with OB and Nuño : 01.19.26

Zone 1150 - TexAgs Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2026 44:25 Transcription Available


It's the GO Hour with Olin and David! They talk about Aggie basketball, the CFB championship game, and CFB playoff structure. 

Your College Bound Kid | Scholarships, Admission, & Financial Aid Strategies
YCBK 605: How Being Low-Income Impact Admission Decisions at Need-Blind Colleges

Your College Bound Kid | Scholarships, Admission, & Financial Aid Strategies

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2026 95:54


In this episode you will hear: (36:18) Mark shares some different policies that colleges have for deferred applicants. (03:26) Susan joins Mark to answer a question from a listener about how being a low-income impacts decisions at need-blind schools. (01:10:18) Interview-Susan Brisson-Olin College of Engineering Preview of Part 1 v Susan gives her backstory v Susan gives us the basics about Olin v Susan explains why you will see the name Olin on so many different colleges v Susan explains what makes Olin different from other engineering-oriented colleges v Susan explains the first-year curriculum at Olin v Susan talks about the size of Olin and what the advantages and challenges are when you are at a school this is so small v Susan talks about the BOW consortium, and how it benefits students Recommended Resource Guide to help first year students complete the Common Application- Application guide for first-year students Speakpipe.com/YCBK is our method if you want to ask a question and we will be prioritizing all questions sent in via Speakpipe. Unfortunately, we will NOT answer questions on the podcast anymore that are emailed in. If you want us to answer a question on the podcast, please use speakpipe.com/YCBK. We feel hearing from our listeners in their own voices adds to the community feel of our podcast. You can also use this for many other purposes: 1) Send us constructive criticism about how we can improve our podcast 2) Share an encouraging word about something you like about an episode or the podcast in general 3) Share a topic or an article you would like us to address 4) Share a speaker you want us to interview 5) Leave positive feedback for one of our interviewees. We will send your verbal feedback directly to them and I can almost assure you your positive feedback will make their day. To sign up to receive Your College-Bound Kid PLUS, our new monthly admissions newsletter, delivered directly to your email once a month, just go to yourcollegeboundkid.com, and you will see the sign-up popup. We will include many of the hot topics being discussed on college campuses. Check out our new blog. We write timely and insightful articles on college admissions: https://yourcollegeboundkid.com/category/blog/ Follow Mark Stucker on Twitter to get breaking college admission news, and updates about the podcast before they go live. You can ask questions on Twitter that he will answer on the podcast. Mark will also share additional hot topics in the news and breaking news on this Twitter feed. Twitter message is also the preferred way to ask questions for our podcast: 1. To access our transcripts, click: https://yourcollegeboundkid.com/category/transcripts/ 2. Find the specific episode transcripts for the one you want to search for and click the link 3. Find the magnifying glass icon in blue (search feature) and click it 4. Enter whatever word you want to search. I.e. Loans 5. Every word in that episode when the words loans are used will be highlighted in yellow with a timestamps 6. Click the word highlighted in yellow and the player will play the episode from that starting point 7. You can also download the entire podcast as a transcript We would be honored if you will pass this podcast episode on to others who you feel will benefit from the content in YCBK. Please subscribe to our podcast. It really helps us move up in Apple's search feature so others can find our podcast. If you enjoy our podcast, would you please do us a favor and share our podcast both verbally and on social media? We would be most grateful! If you want to help more people find Your College-Bound Kid, please make sure you follow our podcast. You will also get instant notifications as soon as each episode goes live. Check out the college admissions books Mark recommends: https://yourcollegeboundkid.com/recommended-books/ Check out the college websites Mark recommends: https://yourcollegeboundkid.com/recommended-websites/ If you want to have some input about what you like and what you recommend, we change about our podcast, please complete our Podcast survey; here is the link: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScCauBgityVXVHRQUjvlIRfYrMWWdHarB9DMQGYL0472bNxrw/viewform If you want a college consultation, text Mark at 404-664-4340, or email us at yourcollegeboundkid@yahoo.com All we ask is that you review their services and pricing on their website before the complimentary session; here is link to their services with transparent pricing: https://schoolmatch4u.com/services/compare-packages/

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show
Louie Belina Show – Olin Buchanan of TexAgs + Community Spotlight : 01.13.26

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2026 47:01 Transcription Available


Olin joins Louie inside the Charles Schwab Studio to talk all things NCAA — including the College Football Transfer Portal, sports journalism, Aggie Football, Miami Football, and the CFP.  In the Community Spotlight, Aggieland Humane Society joined Louie inside the Charles Schwab Studio to talk about their upcoming events — and they brought along a very special guest, Butters, who's currently up for adoption!  

Radical Truth
Three Differences Between Christianity & Islam (Olin Giles)

Radical Truth

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2026 53:40


Olin Giles preaches from 2nd John and shares three differences between Christianity & Islam. Visit us at RadicalTruth.net

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show
Louie Belina Show – Olin Buchanan of TexAgs : 01.06.26

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2026 45:39 Transcription Available


Olin joins Louie inside the Charles Schwab Studio.  They kick things off by discussing Aggie Basketball's matchup with Auburn tonight, Aggie Football and recent transfer portal additions, including KC Concepcion and Cashius Howell, plus a look ahead at Aggies preparing for the NFL Draft.  

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show
Louie Belina Show - Olin Buchanan of TexAgs + Community Spotlight : 12.30.25

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2025 48:23 Transcription Available


Olin joins Louie inside the Charles Schwab Studio to cover Aggie Football, including players entering the transfer portal, those declaring for the NFL Draft, Bryce Anderson, Theodor Melin Öhrström, and Aggie Football recruiting. In our Community Spotlight, the Brazos Valley Food Bank joins Louie inside the Charles Schwab Studio to highlight their upcoming events and fundraisers. 

Radical Truth
End-of-Year Update & Preparing for 2026 (Olin Giles)

Radical Truth

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2025 8:32


Olin Giles shares an end-of-year update and how we're preparing for 2026! Website: https://RadicalTruth.net Donate: https://RadicalTruth.net/Donate** ALL Donations are Tax-Deductible **

Toppskiktet
33. Eva Olin - Region Uppsala

Toppskiktet

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 26, 2025 52:14


Eva är biträdande regiondirektör och ekonomidirektör för Region Uppsala sedan fem år tillbaka. Innan dess var hon ekonomi- och finansdirektör på Nacka kommun och har en lång erfarenhet av diverse ekonomiroller inom både offentlig och privat sektor, men med tyngden inom offentlig sektor. I dagens avsnitt berättar Eva bland annat om ett stabilt och backande ledarskap, att ständigt utmana sig själv på jobbet, och lockelsen med leda verksamheter som tjänar samhällets gemensamma bästa. Vi pratar även effektivitet och balans, att identifiera framtida ledare, styrning efter politiska intentioner, sjukvård och hårda bollar i tennis.

Zone 1150 - TexAgs Radio
TexAgs Live - Billy Liucci of TexAgs : 12.22.25

Zone 1150 - TexAgs Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2025 44:17 Transcription Available


The GO Hour is extended for an extra segment to start off this hour, as David and Olin take listener calls. Then, Billy Liucci of TexAgs comes in to discuss the A&M loss. 

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show
Louie Belina Show - Olin Buchanan of TexAgs : 12.19.25

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2025 44:10 Transcription Available


Olin joins Louie at Rally House at Texas Avenue Crossing to talk Aggie Volleyball — recapping Texas A&M's sweep of Pitt — then shares his thoughts ahead of Texas A&M vs. Miami, breaks down the key matchups between the Hurricanes and the Aggies, weighs in on Carson Beck, and lays out the three key things Aggie Football needs to do to beat Miami. 

Travel Stationary
Mild Bill's Radio Hour: Greg Olin (aka Graves)

Travel Stationary

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2025 55:42


Harvard Alumni Entrepreneurs Invites
When to Pivot, When to Quit

Harvard Alumni Entrepreneurs Invites

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2025 36:48


IN THIS EPISODE: In this episode, Denise Silber HBS MBA welcomes Professor Daniel Elfenbein,  a triple Harvard alumnus and entrepreneurship researcher at Olin Business School. Together, they explore the delicate balance entrepreneurs must strike between confidence and overconfidence, commitment and detachment, and the hard truth of knowing when to pivot—or when to quit. Dan shares insights drawn from his own entrepreneurial journey, research experiments, and global teaching experience. From biotech boardroom standoffs to mathematical models of founder behavior, he unpacks how emotions, attachment, and overconfidence affect decision-making in startups. You'll learn why "quitting" may just be the smartest pivot of all—and how founders can better calibrate their confidence to avoid costly mistakes. GUEST BIO: Daniel Elfenbein is Professor of Strategy at Washington University in St. Louis's Olin Business School. A triple Harvard alumnus, Dan earned his Ph.D. and M.A. in Business Economics from Harvard, and graduated summa cum laude with an A.B. in Chemistry. Dan is a leading scholar at the intersection of strategy, entrepreneurship, and organizational economics. His research delves into how trust, incentives, and behavioral biases shape outcomes in entrepreneurial ventures and strategic alliances. His work has been published in top-tier journals including the Academy of Management Review, Organization Science, Strategic Management Journal, Management Science, and The Review of Economic Studies. A central theme of Dan's research is understanding the nuanced role of overconfidence in entrepreneurial decision-making. His work—spanning computational modeling, experiments, and economic theory—has provided deep insights into how different forms of overconfidence (including overestimation and overprecision) influence venture formation, pivot strategies, and exit decisions. He has demonstrated that some forms of overconfidence can impede learning and decision-making, while others may be counterbalanced by well-designed experimentation programs. Dan served as Chair of the Strategy and Entrepreneurship Area at Olin from 2020 to 2024, where he championed a culture of scholarly excellence and cross-disciplinary collaboration. He served as Academic Director and then as Associate Dean for Olin's joint Executive MBA Program with Fudan School of Management in Shanghai. Prior to academia, Dan worked as a consultant at Monitor Company—a firm founded by Harvard Business School professors and graduates, including Michael E. Porter, with whom Dan had the great privilege to work. He also served as a staff economist with the President's Council of Economic Advisers in the Clinton Administration. He has held faculty appointments at Berkeley's Haas School of Business and has delivered invited talks at Harvard Business School, MIT Sloan, and London Business School, and more than 30 other universities around the globe.  

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show
Louie Belina Show - Olin Buchanan of TexAgs + Community Spotlight : 12.09.25

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2025 46:53 Transcription Available


Olin joins Louie inside the Charles Schwab Studio to discuss the upcoming College Football Playoff matchup, as No. 7 Texas A&M prepares to face No. 10 Miami. They share insights on potential changes to the bowl structure and the CFP, as well as opinions on which teams made the playoffs and which were left out. In our Community Spotlight, Aggieland Humane Society joins Louie inside the Charles Schwab Studio to highlight their upcoming event, “Cocoa for a Cause at Santa's Wonderland & Free Adoption Event,” share volunteer opportunities, and introduce a special guest—Barbara & Blanche, who is ready for adoption. 

Delta
Olin õnnelik, sest mul oli huvitav töö. Aino Strutzkin 100

Delta

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2025 50:47


Raadiotoimetaja Aino Strutzkini (07.12.1925 - 01.02.2002) mälestussaade.Eetris pühapäeval. 7. detsembril kell 16.05.

COLUMBIA Conversations
BONUS EPISODE: Seattle Architect Elisa Renouard on Laurie Olin, Vic Steinbrueck, a homework assignment from 1960 - and "CITY ERASED"

COLUMBIA Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2025 31:58


Feliks Banel's guest on this BONUS EPISODE of CASCADE OF HISTORY is Elisa Renouard, Lecturer at the University of Washington Architecture Department and Associate at Olson Kundig Architects in Seattle. After hearing about our conversation earlier this week with landscape architect Laurie Olin – where Mr. Olin described an assignment he did as a student at the University of Washington 65 years and which he assumed was lost to the mists of time - Ms. Renouard shared a copy of Mr. Olin's work from the UW archives (parts of which have been posted at the CASCADE OF HISTORY Facebook page). There's a lot to discuss about that assignment, and about the work Elisa Renouard is doing now with her students to explore and re-create parts of Seattle that were wiped off the map decades ago – as part of a recurring student exhibit called “CITY ERASED.” I spoke with Elisa Renouard on Thursday, December 4, 2025. For more information about Elisa Renouard: https://arch.be.uw.edu/people/elisa-renouard/ For more information about the "CITY ERASED" project: https://www.instagram.com/p/DLnDJBbJirQ/ To hear the BONUS EPISODE with Laurie Olin: https://soundcloud.com/cascadeofhistory/bonus-episode-laurie-olin To see Laurie Olin's 1960 UW study of the Kalmar Hotel: https://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/digital/collection/archps/id/1544/rec/8 CASCADE OF HISTORY is broadcast LIVE most Sunday nights at 8pm Pacific Time via flagship station SPACE 101.1 FM in Seattle and gallantly streams everywhere via www.space101fm.org. The radio station broadcasts from studios at historic Magnuson Park – located in the former Master-at-Arms' quarters in the old Sand Point Naval Air Station - on the shores of Lake Washington in Seattle. Subscribe to the CASCADE OF HISTORY podcast via most podcast platforms and never miss regular weekly episodes of Sunday night broadcasts as well as frequent bonus episodes.

COLUMBIA Conversations
BONUS EPISODE: The Heady Seattle Years of World-Renowned Landscape Architect Laurie Olin

COLUMBIA Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2025 104:18


Feliks Banel's guest on this BONUS EPISODE of CASCADE OF HISTORY is world-renowned landscape architect - and renaissance man - Laurie Olin. Laurie Olin has been associated with many high profile projects around the world, and taught at the University of Pennsylvania for decades. Earlier in his career, Olin studied architecture at the University of Washington, and spent several years in Seattle from the late 1950s to the early 1970s working with a range of architects and civic leaders, and later writing poetry. In those formative years for the modern city, he was part of a vibrant community of artists and scholars, and was involved with design projects and grassroots preservation efforts that still resonate today in 21st-century Seattle. In a long conversation recorded on December 1, 2025, Laurie Olin covered a lot of ground, and helped evoke many well-known people and iconic places from a heady era in a young Seattle of the 1950s and 1960s. For more information about Laurie Olin's teaching: https://www.design.upenn.edu/people/laurie-d-olin For more information about Laurie Olin's work: https://www.theolinstudio.com/people#/laurie-olin/ Laurie Olin's October 2025 letter for The Cultural Landscape Foundation regarding Gas Works Park: https://www.tclf.org/laurie-olin-threats-gas-works-park CASCADE OF HISTORY is broadcast LIVE most Sunday nights at 8pm Pacific Time via flagship station SPACE 101.1 FM in Seattle and gallantly streams everywhere via www.space101fm.org. The radio station broadcasts from studios at historic Magnuson Park – located in the former Master-at-Arms' quarters in the old Sand Point Naval Air Station - on the shores of Lake Washington in Seattle. Subscribe to the CASCADE OF HISTORY podcast via most podcast platforms and never miss regular weekly episodes of Sunday night broadcasts as well as frequent bonus episodes.

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show
Louie Belina Show - Olin Buchanan of TexAgs + Community Spotlight : 12.02.25

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2025 48:00 Transcription Available


Olin joins Louie in the Charles Schwab Studio to talk all things Aggie Football — recapping the A&M vs. Texas game, previewing tonight's new CFP rankings and where the Aggies might fall, discussing Mike Elko, and the Ole Miss situation following Lane Kiffin's departure to LSU. In our Community Spotlight, Twin City Missions joins Louie in the Charles Schwab Studio to discuss the longest night of the year and its impact on the homeless, as well as the memorial ceremony on December 21st honoring those who have passed away in 2025. 

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show
Louie Belina Show - Olin Buchanan of TexAgs : 11.26.25

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2025 45:05 Transcription Available


Olin joins Louie inside the Charles Schwab Studio to talk all things Aggie Football — kicking things off with the Lone Star Showdown, everything you need to know ahead of the Aggies–Longhorns rivalry, Arch Manning, Cashius Howell, and the key position matchups between A&M and Texas this week. 

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show
Louie Belina Show - Olin Buchanan of TexAgs + Community Spotlight : 11.18.25

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2025 47:13 Transcription Available


Olin joins Louie inside the Charles Schwab Studio to talk all things Aggie Football — recapping Texas A&M's game against South Carolina, Marcel Reed, the Aggies' strong second-half performance, areas to clean up before upcoming games, Lane Kiffin, and thoughts on the CFP rankings. In our Community Spotlight, United Way of the Brazos Valley and the Boys & Girls Club of Brazos Valley join us to share their upcoming events: Member Thanksgiving Fest on Tuesday, November 25th; Ballet Brazos' The Nutcracker at the Club on Wednesday, November 19th; Teen Night on Friday, December 5th; and the Member Christmas Party on Friday, December 12th. 

Becker’s Healthcare Podcast
Garrett Olin, MBA, Chief Information Officer at Shasta Community Health Center

Becker’s Healthcare Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2025 9:19


Garrett Olin, MBA, Chief Information Officer at Shasta Community Health Center, discusses the center's expansion efforts, addressing cybersecurity concerns, and the ethical implementation of AI into workflow to enhance operational efficiency and patient care.

Levila kuulatavad artiklid
Ma olin vangivalvur

Levila kuulatavad artiklid

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2025 28:17


Gerda oli üks Eesti nooremaid vangivalvureid. Ta töötas vanglasüsteemis poolteist rastat. Ta räägib, miks ta sinna tööle läks ja miks ära tuli. Lisaks annab Gerda soovitusi kõigile neile, kes kunagi peaksid vanglasse sattuma, olgu valvuri või kinnipeetavana."Enne vanglasse tööleminekut töötasin kaubamajas. Müüsin lastele mänguasju. Alguses oli tore, aga lõpuks oli see minu jaoks kohutav koht. Siis ütles mu isa, kes on aastaid vanglas töötanud, et kuule, mis sa seal passid, sa saad nii sitta raha, tule vanglasse, siin on parem palk!"Audiolugu loeb: Gerda KullSalvestus, helikujundus ja originaalmuusika: Janek MurdLevila 2025 Support the show

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show
Louie Belina Show - Olin Buchanan of TexAgs + Community Spotlight : 11.11.25

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2025 46:34 Transcription Available


Olin joins Louie inside the Charles Schwab Studio to talk all things Aggie Football — recapping the Texas A&M vs. Missouri game, breaking down the Aggie run game and Reuben Owens' performance, sharing thoughts on where A&M might land in tonight's CFP rankings, discussing Ohio State and their CFP standing, and talking about the Aggie O-Line. In our Community Spotlight, Aggieland Humane Society joins Louie inside the Charles Schwab Studio to highlight upcoming events, volunteer opportunities, and showcase a special guest — Nala, who is ready for adoption. 

The MMAnomaly Show!
UFC Noche Special w/ MikeyRoots | Best Mexican Fighters, WWE Hot Takes & Fight Night Talk

The MMAnomaly Show!

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2025 25:58


It's a special UFC Noche week on The MMAnomaly Show: No Filter!Olin aka MMAnomaly sits down with close friend and barber MikeyRoots for a fun, free-flowing conversation before fight night.We dive into:

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show
Louie Belina Show - Olin Buchanan of TexAgs + Community Spotlight : 11.04.25

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2025 48:29 Transcription Available


Olin joins Louie inside the Charles Schwab Studio to break down the first College Football Playoff rankings — where they think Texas A&M will land, their own CFP predictions, thoughts on the Aggies' upcoming matchup against Missouri, and the strength of the Missouri Tigers' defense. In our Community Spotlight, Twin City Mission joins Louie inside the Charles Schwab Studio to share how their nonprofit is meeting the needs of those who are homeless and hurting in our community. 

Human Circus: Journeys in the Medieval World
Osman of Timisoara 5: Osman's Great Escape

Human Circus: Journeys in the Medieval World

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2025 45:51


Osman flees Vienna and reaches freedom, with success and suffering on the other side. If you like what you hear and want to chip in to support the podcast, ⁠⁠⁠⁠my Patreon is here⁠⁠⁠⁠. I'm on BlueSky ⁠⁠⁠⁠@a-devon.bsky.social⁠⁠⁠⁠, Instagram ⁠⁠⁠⁠@humancircuspod⁠⁠⁠⁠, and I have some things on ⁠⁠⁠⁠Redbubble⁠⁠⁠⁠. Sources: Osman Aga of Timisoara. Prisoner of the Infidels. Edited, translated, and introduced by Giancarlo Casale. University of California Press, 2021. Olin, Timothy. The Banat of Temesvar: Borderland Colonization in the Habsburg Monarchy. Stanford University Press, 2025. Yaycıoğlu, Ali. "On the Ottoman Arguments during the Congress of Karlowitz (1699)," in Territorial Imaginaries: Beyond the Sovereign Map, edited by Kären Wigen. University of Chicago Press, 2025. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show
Louie Belina Show - Olin Buchanan of TexAgs + Community Spotlight : 10.28.25

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2025 48:49 Transcription Available


Olin joins Louie inside the Charles Schwab Studio. Recapping the A&M vs. LSU game and how the Aggies took over Death Valley, we break down the matchups faced by the Top 4 College Football Playoff teams this season — Ohio State, Indiana, Texas A&M, and Alabama. We also highlight the two Top-25 opponents the Aggies have already faced and discuss how this team continues to improve week after week, showing tremendous potential for even more growth as the season progresses. In our Community Spotlight, the Brazos Valley Food Bank joins Louie inside the Charles Schwab Studio.BVFB discusses rural hunger, exploring the unique challenges of living in rural areas and how their agencies and programs provide support. Shannon Avila and James Ragen from BVFB are joined by a special guest, Robert Martin, who works closely with their agency and mobile partners on a daily basis. 

McNeil & Parkins Show
Olin Kretuz is ready for his call from the Pro Football Hall of Fame

McNeil & Parkins Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2025 22:20


Matt Spiegel and Laurence Holmes were joined by Score football analyst Olin Kreutz to preview the Bears-Ravens game Sunday in Baltimore.

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show
Louie Belina Show - Olin Buchanan of TexAgs + Community Spotlight : 10.21.25

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2025 46:37 Transcription Available


Olin joins Louie inside the Charles Schwab Studio. Recap Texas A&M's win over Arkansas, look ahead to the Aggies' trip to Death Valley to face LSU, and share thoughts and predictions for that matchup. They also discuss Mike Elko's impact, Missouri Football, and the potential for A&M to reach the 10-win mark this season. In our Community Spotlight, the United Way of the Brazos Valley joins us to talk about the 7th Annual Brazos Valley Gives event happening today, October 21, 2025, as well as their upcoming fundraiser, “Pizza With a Purpose,” on October 30. They're also joined by the Brazos Valley Council on Alcohol and Substance Abuse (BVCASA) to share details about their organization and highlight their upcoming community events. 

So Rude
Lyrics & Longnecks Founder Olin Wallace on Country Roots & Building Community in Nashville - Ep. 125

So Rude

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2025 53:32


McNeil & Parkins Show
Olin Kruetz's advice to Tyrique Stevenson is to 'forgive himself' (Hour 2)

McNeil & Parkins Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2025 18:04


In the second hour, Matt Spiegel and Laurence Holmes were joined by Score football analyst Olin Kreutz to preview the Bears-Commanders game on Monday Night Football. Later, Spiegel and Holmes tried to figure out which Cubs fan(s) started the "Freddy, Freddy" chants that were directed at Brewers ace Freddy Peralta on Thursday at Wrigley Field in the Cubs' win in Game 4 of the National League Division Series.

McNeil & Parkins Show
Olin Kruetz's advice to Tyrique Stevenson is to 'forgive himself'

McNeil & Parkins Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2025 18:04


Matt Spiegel and Laurence Holmes were joined by Score football analyst Olin Kreutz to preview the Bears-Commanders game on Monday Night Football.

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show
Louie Belina Show - Olin Buchanan of TexAgs + Community Spotlight : 10.07.25

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2025 46:59 Transcription Available


Olin joins Louie inside the Charles Schwab Studio. Looking ahead at which SEC team will present the toughest offensive challenge for Aggie Football, reviewing the Aggie defense's improvements since the start of the season, and breaking down the explosive Aggie offense and their chances against Florida this week. Community Spotlight featuring Twin City Mission.  

Purple Daily
ACCESS: One of those years for Minnesota Vikings?

Purple Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2025 39:01


Is this just going to be “one of those seasons” for the Minnesota Vikings? From losing your starting QB in J.J. McCarthy to being down 3/5ths of your starting Olin by week 5, it just seems odd for the Minnesota Vikings. Purple Daily's Judd Zulgad and The Minnesota Star Tribune's Chip Scoggins break down the start of this Minnesota Vikings season. How can the Minnesota Vikings adjust as they go forward and what are the Minnesota Vikings not able to adjust? Can Kevin O'Connell do anything different? See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Skid Steer Nation
Ryan Haar: Why He Still Runs the Skid Steer That Nearly Broke Him

Skid Steer Nation

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2025 70:34


Most guys don't talk about the bad deals they've made. But Ryan Haar does, and his story will sound familiar to anyone who's bought a “great deal” machine that turned into a money pit. Injectors failed, the drive motor quit, and what should have been a win nearly sank him before he got started. But instead of bailing, Ryan stuck with that skid steer, learned the hard lessons, and built Elite Excavation in Olin, Iowa.In this episode, Ryan opens up about what that experience taught him about persistence, referrals, and marketing in a crowded market. His journey proves that sometimes the worst machine can teach you the best lessons.Takeaways:✅The nightmare skid steer purchase that nearly stopped him—and why he still runs it today✅How one driveway job turned into five more through simple word-of-mouth✅Why old-school flyers plus creative videos helped him stand out in a saturated Iowa market✅His personal motto: “Cost to floss—strap in and hold tight” and what it means for businessWhy it Matters:Every contractor knows the sting of bad equipment—but Ryan's story shows how grit and consistency can turn setbacks into stepping stones.Links:

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show
Louie Belina Show - Olin Buchanan of TexAgs : 09.30.25

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2025 47:26 Transcription Available


Olin joins Louie inside the Charles Schwab Studio. Aggie Football– A look at the penalties that disrupted A&M's offensive momentum during the Auburn game, a prediction of the Aggies' win-loss record for the season, and key thoughts heading into the matchup against Mississippi State. 

Zone 1150 - TexAgs Radio
TexAgs Live - Go Hour with Olin and David : 09.25.25

Zone 1150 - TexAgs Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2025 42:35 Transcription Available


It's the GO Hour with Olin Buchanan and David Nuno! Talking Heisman candidates—thoughts on if Auburn will try to shut down Aggie Football's passing attack and force them to run more. A fast, explosive start from A&M could be key against Auburn. Stephen McGee, former Texas A&M QB, joins us to share his insights ahead of this week's A&M game. 

Zone 1150 - TexAgs Radio
TexAgs Live - Go Hour with Olin & David + Robert Earl Keen : 09.24.25

Zone 1150 - TexAgs Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2025 42:54 Transcription Available


It's the GO Hour with Olin Buchanan and David Nuno! Robert Earl Keen joins us today to share stories from his time at A&M, discuss his music career, and talk about Aggie Football.

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show
Louie Belina Show – Olin Buchanan of TexAgs + Community Spotlight : 09.23.25

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2025 47:50 Transcription Available


Olin joins Louie inside the Charles Schwab Studio.Thoughts on the Aggies gearing up for the new basketball season under first-year head coach Bucky McMillan, a brand-new team, and only one player coming back. Plus, thoughts on the upcoming Aggie game against Auburn—highlighting A&M's explosive offense, a defense that gets the job done, and the importance of minimizing mistakes on the field.Community Spotlight with United Way of the Brazos Valley.

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show
Louie Belina Show - Olin Buchanan of TexAgs + Community Spotlight : 09.16.25

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2025 47:35 Transcription Available


Olin joins Louie inside the Charles Schwab Studio.Breaking down the standout moments and pivotal plays from the Aggies vs. Notre Dame clash — and is Marcel Reed emerging as a serious Heisman contender this season?Community Spotlight with United Way of the Brazos Valley. 

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show
Louie Belina Show – Olin Buchanan of TexAgs + Community Spotlight : 09.09.25

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2025 47:43 Transcription Available


Olin Buchanan joins Louie inside the Charles Schwab Studio. A&M Football vs. Notre Dame: The Three Key Matchups1. A&M Receivers vs. Notre Dame Cornerbacks 2. A&M Run-D vs. Notre Dame Running Backs3. Marcel ReedCommunity Spotlight with Aggieland Humane Society.

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show
Louie Belina Show – Olin Buchanan of TexAgs + Community Spotlight : 09.02.25

Zone 1150 - Louie Belina Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2025 47:33 Transcription Available


Olin Buchanan joins Louie inside the Charles Schwab Studio.  How did Aggie Football look on both sides of the ball against UTSA — and which Aggie players stood out like we expected last Saturday?Community Spotlight with Twin City Mission.

Daily Detroit
Our 89x Nostalgia-palooza

Daily Detroit

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2025 24:15


If you listened to radio in the 90s and early 2000s, and were into rock music, 89x was a regular stop on the dial. The blast of nostalgia of them coming back after a time as a country radio FM station on the air this week felt good as a pair of Millenials (one, an elder, on the cusp of Gen X). So we get into our favorite memories, local Detroit bands they played - from those more well known like Sponge and the veritable one-hit wonders, Charm Farm. 89x was always a platform for local music, seemingly to play more than other spots. Plus, the DJs, the Canadian Exports. All of it. And our first CDs we ever bought. Plus - Jer and Devon both went to the new Alo and have thoughts, plus the new Lunch at Olin in Downtown Detroit in our regular "Where we've been" segment, highlighting places we've actually tried or visited.  Feedback as always - dailydetroit -at- gmail -dot- com or leave a voicemail 313-789-3211. Follow Daily Detroit on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/daily-detroit/id1220563942  Or sign up for our newsletter: https://www.dailydetroit.com/newsletter/  

The Full Go with Jason Goff
“That's Just Bears” With Olin Kreutz | Ep. 540

The Full Go with Jason Goff

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2025 56:34


The Full Go returns as Jason welcomes former Chicago Bears great Olin Kreutz to the podcast. The two discuss how much time is needed for an offensive line to jell, what Olin takes from preseason games, and the most athletic offensive linemen Olin played with. They also dig into Ben Johnson's play calling and expectations for Caleb Williams in year two (1:13). Please visit ⁠www.rg-help.com⁠ to learn more about the resources and helplines available. Host: Jason Goff Guest: Olin Kreutz Producer: Kyle Williams Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast
Podcast #210: Mt. Hood Meadows President and General Manager Greg Pack

The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2025 78:27


The Storm does not cover athletes or gear or hot tubs or whisky bars or helicopters or bros jumping off things. I'm focused on the lift-served skiing world that 99 percent of skiers actually inhabit, and I'm covering it year-round. To support this mission of independent ski journalism, please subscribe to the free or paid versions of the email newsletter.WhoGreg Pack, President and General Manager of Mt. Hood Meadows, OregonRecorded onApril 28, 2025About Mt. Hood MeadowsClick here for a mountain stats overviewOwned by: The Drake Family (and other minority shareholders)Located in: Mt. Hood, OregonYear founded: 1968Pass affiliations:* Indy Pass – 2 days, select blackouts* Indy+ Pass – 2 days, no blackoutsClosest neighboring U.S. ski areas: Summit (:17), Mt. Hood Skibowl (:19), Cooper Spur (:23), Timberline (:26)Base elevation: 4,528 feetSummit elevation: 7,305 feet at top of Cascade Express; 9,000 feet at top of hike-to permit area; 11,249 feet at summit of Mount HoodVertical drop: 2,777 feet lift-served; 4,472 hike-to inbounds; 6,721 feet from Mount Hood summitSkiable acres: 2,150Average annual snowfall: 430 inchesTrail count: 87 (15% beginner, 40% intermediate, 15% advanced, 30% expert)Lift count: 11 (1 six-pack, 5 high-speed quads, 1 fixed-grip quad, 3 doubles, 1 carpet – view Lift Blog's inventory of Mount Hood Meadows' lift fleet)About Cooper SpurClick here for a mountain stats overviewOwned by: The Drake FamilyLocated in: Mt. Hood, OregonYear founded: 1927Pass affiliations: Indy Pass, Indy+ Pass – 2 days, no blackoutsClosest neighboring U.S. ski areas: Mt. Hood Meadows (:22), Summit (:29), Mt. Hood Skibowl (:30), Timberline (:37)Base elevation: 3,969 feetSummit elevation: 4,400 feetVertical drop: 431 feetSkiable acres: 50Average annual snowfall: 250 inchesTrail count: 9 (1 most difficult, 7 more difficult, 1 easier)Lift count: 2 (1 double, 1 ropetow – view Lift Blog's inventory of Cooper Spur's lift fleet)Why I interviewed himVolcanoes are weird. Oh look, an exploding mountain. Because that seems reasonable. Volcanoes sound like something imagined, like dragons or teleportation or dinosaurs*. “So let me get this straight,” I imagine some puzzled Appalachian miner, circa 1852, responding to the fellow across the fire as he tells of his adventures in the Oregon Territory, “you expect me to believe that out thataways they got themselves mountains that just blow their roofs off whenever they feel like it, and shoot off fire and rocks and gas for 50 mile or more, and no one never knows when it's a'comin'? You must think I'm dumber'n that there tree stump.”Turns out volcanoes are real. How humanity survived past day one I have no idea. But here we are, skiing on volcanoes instead of tossing our virgins from the rim as a way of asking the nice mountain to please not explode (seriously how did anyone make it out of the past alive?).And one of the volcanoes we can ski on is Mount Hood. This actually seems more unbelievable to me than the concept of a vengeful nuclear mountain. PNW Nature Bros shield every blade of grass like they're guarding Fort Knox. When, in 2014, federal scientists proposed installing four monitoring stations on Hood, which the U.S. Geological Survey ranks as the sixth-highest threat to erupt out of America's 161 active volcanoes, these morons stalled the process for six years. “I think it is so important to have places like that where we can just step back, out of respect and humility, and appreciate nature for what it is,” a Wilderness Watch official told The New York Times. Personally I think it's so important to install basic monitoring infrastructure so that thousands of people are not incinerated in a predictable volcanic eruption. While “Japan, Iceland and Chile smother their high-threat volcanoes in scientific instruments,” The Times wrote, American Granola Bros say things like, “This is more proof that the Forest Service has abandoned any pretense of administering wilderness as per the letter or spirit of the Wilderness Act.” And Hood and the nation's other volcanoes cackle madly. “These idiots are dumber than the human-sacrifice people,” they say just before belching up an ash cloud that could take down a 747. When officials finally installed these instrument clusters on Hood in 2020, they occupied three boxes that look to be approximately the size of a convenience-store ice freezer, which feels like an acceptable trade-off to mass death and airplanes falling out of the sky.I know that as an outdoor writer I'm supposed to be all pissed off if anyone anywhere suggests any use of even a centimeter of undeveloped land other than giving it back to the deer in a treaty printed on recycled Styrofoam and signed with human blood to symbolize the life we've looted from nature by commandeering 108 square feet to potentially protect millions of lives from volcanic eruption, but this sort of trivial protectionism and willful denial that humans ought to have rights too is the kind of brainless uncompromising overreach that I fear will one day lead to a massive over-correction at the other extreme, in which a federal government exhausted with never being able to do anything strips away or massively dilutes land protections that allow anyone to do anything they can afford. And that's when we get Monster Pete's Arctic Dune Buggies setting up a casino/coal mine/rhinoceros-hunting ranch on the Eliot Glacier and it's like thanks Bros I hope that was worth it to stall the placement of gardenshed-sized public safety infrastructure for six years.Anyway, given the trouble U.S. officials have with installing necessary things on Mount Hood, it's incredible how many unnecessary ones our ancestors were able to build. But in 1927 the good old boys hacked their way into the wilderness and said, “by gum what a spot for snoskiing” and built a bunch of ski areas. And today 31 lifts serve four Mt. Hood ski areas covering a combined 4,845 acres:Which I'm just like, do these Wilderness Watch people not know about this? Perhaps if this and similar groups truly cared about the environmental integrity of Mount Hood they would invest their time, energy, and attention into a long-term regional infrastructure plan that identified parcels for concentrated mixed-use development and non-personal-car-based transit options to mitigate the impact of thousands of skiers traveling up the mountain daily from Portland, rather than in delaying the installation of basic monitoring equipment that notifies humanity of a civilization-shattering volcanic eruption before it happens. But then again I am probably not considering how this would impact the integrity of squirrel poop decomposition below 6,000 feet and the concomitant impacts on pinestand soil erosion which of course would basically end life as we know it on planet Earth.OK this went sideways let me try to salvage it.*Whoops I know dinosaurs were real; I meant to write “the moon landing.” How embarrassing.What we talked aboutA strong 2024-25; recruiting employees in mountains with little nearby housing; why Meadows doesn't compete with Timberline for summer skiing; bye-bye Blue double, Meadows' last standing opening-year chairlift; what it takes to keep an old Riblet operating; the reliability of old versus new chairlifts; Blue's slow-motion demolition and which relics might remain long term; the logic of getting a free anytime buddy lift ticket with your season pass; thoughts on ski area software providers that take a percentage of all sales; why Meadows and Cooper Spur have no pass reciprocity; the ongoing Cooper Spur land exchange; the value of Cooper Spur and Summit on a volcano with three large ski areas; why Meadows hasn't backed away from reciprocal agreements; why Meadows chose Indy over Epic, Ikon, or Mountain Collective; becoming a ski kid when you're not from a ski family; landing at Mountain Creek, New Jersey after a Colorado ski career; how Moonlight Basin started as an independent ski area and eventually became part of Big Sky; the tension underlying Telluride; how the Drake Family, who has managed the ski area since inception, makes decisions; a board that reinvests 100 percent of earnings back into the mountain; why we need large independents in a consolidating world; being independent is “our badge of honor”; whether ownership wants to remain independent long term; potential next lift upgrades; a potential all-new lift line and small expansion; thoughts on a better Heather lift; wild Hood weather and the upper limits of lift service; considering surface lifts on the upper mountain; the challenges of running Cascade Express; the future of the Daisy and Easy Rider doubles; more potential future expansion; and whether we could ever see a ski connection with Timberline Lodge.Why now was a good time for this interviewIt's kind of dumb that 210 episodes into this podcast I've only recorded one Oregon ep: Timberline Lodge President Jeff Kohnstamm, more than three years ago. While Oregon only has 11 active ski areas, and the state ranks 11th-ish in skier visits, it's an important ski state. PNW skiers treat skiing like the Northeast treats baseball or the Midwest treats football or D.C. treats politics: rabid beyond reason. That explains the eight Idaho pods and half dozen each in Washington and B.C. These episodes hit like a hash stand at a Dead show. So why so few Oregon eps?Eh, no reason in particular. There isn't a ski area in North America that I don't want to feature on the podcast, but I can't just order them online like a pizza. Relationships, more than anything, drive the podcast, and The Storm's schedule is primarily opportunity driven. I invite folks on as I meet them or when they do something cool. And sometimes we can connect right away and sometimes it takes months or even years, even if they want to do it. Sometimes we're waiting on contracts or approvals so we can discuss some big project in depth. It can take time to build trust, or to convince a non-podcast person that they have a great story to tell.So we finally get to Meadows. Not to be It-Must-Be-Nice Bro about benefits that arise from clear deliberate life choices, but It must be nice to live in the PNW, where every city sits within 90 minutes of a ripping, open-until-Memorial-Day skyscraper that gets carpet bombed with 400 annual inches but receives between one and four out-of-state visitors per winter. Yeah the ski areas are busy anyway because they don't have enough of them, but busy with Subaru-driving Granola Bros is different than busy with Subaru-driving Granola Bros + Texas Bro whose cowboy boots aren't clicking in right + Florida Bro who bought a Trans Am for his boa constrictor + Midwest Bro rocking Olin 210s he found in Gramp's garage + Hella Rad Cali Bro + New Yorker Bro asking what time they groom Corbet's + Aussie Bro touring the Rockies on a seven-week long weekend + Euro Bro rocking 65 cm underfoot on a two-foot powder day. I have no issue with tourists mind you because I am one but there is something amazing about a ski area that is gigantic and snowy and covered in modern infrastructure while simultaneously being unknown outside of its area code.Yes this is hyperbole. But while everyone in Portland knows that Meadows has the best parking lot views in America and a statistical profile that matches up with Beaver Creek and as many detachable chairlifts as Snowbasin or Snowbird and more snow than Steamboat or Jackson or Palisades or Pow Mow, most of the rest of the world doesn't, and I think they should.Why you should ski Mt. Hood Meadows and Cooper SpurIt's interesting that the 4,845 combined skiable acres of Hood's four ski areas are just a touch larger than the 4,323 acres at Mt. Bachelor, which as far as I know has operated as a single interconnected facility since its 1958 founding. Both are volcanoes whose ski areas operate on U.S. Forest Service land a commutable distance from demographically similar markets, providing a case study in distributed versus centralized management.Bachelor in many ways delivers a better experience. Bachelor's snow is almost always drier and better, an outlier in the kingdom of Cascade Concrete. Skiers can move contiguously across its full acreage, an impossible mission on Balkanized Hood. The mountain runs an efficient, mostly modern 15 lifts to Hood's wild 31, which includes a dozen detachables but also a half dozen vintage Riblet doubles with no safety bars. Bachelor's lifts scale the summit, rather than stopping thousands of feet short as they do on Hood. While neither are Colorado-grade destination ski areas, metro Portland is stuffed with 25 times more people than Bend, and Hood ski areas have an everbusy feel that skiers can often outrun at Bachelor. Bachelor is closer to its mothership – just 26 minutes from Bend to Portland's hour-to-two-hour commutes up to the ski areas. And Bachelor, accessible on all versions of the Ikon Pass and not hamstrung by the confusing counter-branding of multiple ski areas with similar names occupying the same mountain, presents a more clearcut target for the mainstream skier.But Mount Hood's quirky scatterplot ski centers reward skiers in other ways. Four distinct ski areas means four distinct ski cultures, each with its own pace, purpose, customs, traditions, and orientation to the outside world. Timberline Lodge is a funky mix of summertime Bro parks, Government Camp greens, St. Bernards, and its upscale landmark namesake hotel. Cooper Spur is tucked-away, low-key, low-vert family resort skiing. Meadows sprawls, big and steep, with Hood's most interesting terrain. And low-altitude, closest-to-the-city Skibowl is night-lit slowpoke with a vintage all-Riblet lift fleet. Your Epic and Ikon passes are no good here, though Indy gets you Meadows and Cooper Spur. Walk-up lift tickets (still the only way to buy them at Skibowl), are more tier-varied and affordable than those at Bachelor, which can exceed $200 on peak days (though Bachelor heavily discounts access to its beginner lifts, with free access to select novice areas). Bachelor's $1,299 season pass is 30 percent more expensive than Meadows'.This dynamic, of course, showcases single-entity efficiency and market capture versus the messy choice of competition. Yes Free Market Bro you are right sometimes. Hood's ski areas have more inherent motivators to fight on price, forge allegiances like the Timberline-Skibowl joint season pass, invest in risks like night and summer skiing, and run wonky low-tide lift ticket deals. Empowering this flexibility: all four Hood ski areas remain locally owned – Meadows and T-Line by their founding families. Bachelor, of course, is a fiefdom of Park City, Utah-based Powdr, which owns a half-dozen other ski areas across the West.I don't think that Hood is better than Bachelor or that Bachelor is better than Hood. They're different, and you should ski both. But however you dissect the niceties of these not-really-competing-but-close-enough-that-a-comarison-makes-sense ski centers, the on-the-ground reality adds up to this: Hood locals, in general, are a far more contented gang than Bachelor Bros. I don't have any way to quantify this, and Bachelor has its partisans. But I talk to skiers all over the country, all the time. Skiers will complain about anything, and online guttings of even the most beloved mountains exist. But talk to enough people and strong enough patterns emerge to understand that, in general, locals are happy with Mammoth and Alpine Meadows and Sierra-at-Tahoe and A-Basin and Copper and Bridger Bowl and Nub's Nob and Perfect North and Elk and Plattekill and Berkshire East and Smuggs and Loon and Saddleback and, mostly, the Hood ski areas. And locals are generally less happy with Camelback and Seven Springs and Park City and Sunrise and Shasta and Stratton and, lately, former locals' faves Sugarbush and Wildcat. And, as far as I can tell, Bachelor.Potential explanations for Hood happiness versus Bachelor blues abound, all of them partial, none completely satisfactory, all asterisked with the vagaries of skiing and skiers and weather and luck. But my sense is this: Meadows, Timberline, and Skibowl locals are generally content not because they have better skiing than everyplace else or because their ski areas are some grand bargain or because they're not crowded or because they have the best lift systems or terrain parks or grooming or snow conditions, but because Hood, in its haphazard and confounding-to-outsiders borders and layout, has forced its varied operators to hyper-adapt to niche needs in the local market while liberating them from the all-things-to-everyone imperative thrust on isolated operations like Bachelor. They have to decide what they're good at and be good at that all the time, because they have no other option. Hood operators can't be Vail-owned Paoli Peaks, turning in 25-day ski seasons and saying well it's Indiana what do you expect? They have to be independent Perfect North, striving always for triple-digit operating days and saying it's Indiana and we're doing this anyway because if we don't you'll stop coming and we'll all be broke.In this way Hood is a snapshot of old skiing, pre-consolidation, pre-national pass, pre-social media platforms that flung open global windows onto local mountains. Other than Timberline summer parks no one is asking these places to be anything other than very good local ski areas serving rabid local skiers. And they're doing a damn good job.Podcast NotesOn Meadows and Timberline Lodge opening and closing datesOne of the most baffling set of basic facts to get straight in American skiing is the number of ski areas on Mount Hood and the distinction between them. Part of the reason for this is the volcano's famous summer skiing, which takes place not at either of the eponymous ski areas – Mt. Hood Meadows or Mt. Hood Skibowl – but at the awkwardly named Timberline Lodge, which sounds more like a hipster cocktail lounge with a 19th-century fur-trapper aesthetic than the name of a ski resort (which is why no one actually calls it “Timberline Lodge”; I do so only to avoid confusion with the ski area in West Virginia, because people are constantly getting Appalachian ski areas mixed up with those in the Cascades). I couldn't find a comprehensive list of historic closing dates for Meadows and Timberline, but the basic distinction is this: Meadows tends to wrap winter sometime between late April and late May. Timberline goes into August and beyond when it can. Why doesn't Meadows push its season when it is right next door and probably could? We discuss in the pod.On Riblet clipsFun fact about defunct-as-a-company-even-though-a-couple-hundred-of-their-machines-are-still-spinning Riblet chairlifts: rather than clamping on like a vice grip, the end of each chair is woven into the rope via something called an “insert clip.” I wrote about this in my Wildcat pod last year:On Alpental Chair 2A small but vocal segment of Broseph McBros with nothing better to do always reflexively oppose the demolition of legacy fixed-grip lifts to make way for modern machines. Pack does a great job laying out why it's harder to maintain older chairlifts than many skiers may think. I wrote about this here:On Blue's breakover towers and unload rampWe also dropped photos of this into the video version of the pod:On the Cooper Spur land exchangeHere's a somewhat-dated and very biased-against-the-ski-area infographic summarizing the proposed land swap between Meadows and the U.S. Forest Service, from the Cooper Spur Wild & Free Coalition, an organization that “first came together in 2002 to fight Mt. Hood Meadows' plans to develop a sprawling destination resort on the slopes of Mt. Hood near Cooper Spur”:While I find the sanctimonious language in this timeline off-putting, I'm more sympathetic to Enviro Bro here than I was with the eruption-detection controversy discussed up top. Opposing small-footprint, high-impact catastrophe-monitoring equipment on an active volcano to save five bushes but potentially endanger millions of human lives is foolish. But checking sprawling wilderness development by identifying smaller parcels adjacent to already-disturbed lands as alternative sites for denser, hopefully walkable, hopefully mixed-use projects is exactly the sort of thing that every mountain community ought to prioritize.On the combination of Summit and Timberline LodgeThe small Summit Pass ski area in Government Camp operated as an independent entity from its 1927 founding until Timberline Lodge purchased the ski area in 2018. In 2021, the owners connected the two – at least in one direction. Skiers can move 4,540 vertical feet from the top of Timberline's Palmer chair to the base of Summit. While Palmer tends to open late in the season and Summit tends to close early, and while skiers will have to ride shuttles back up to the Timberline lifts until the resort builds a much anticipated gondola connecting the full height, this is technically America's largest lift-served vertical drop.On Meadows' reciprocalsMeadows only has three season pass reciprocal partners, but they're all aspirational spots that passholders would actually travel for: Baker, Schweitzer, and Whitefish. I ask Pack why he continues to offer these exchanges even as larger ski areas such as Brundage and Tamarack move away from them. One bit of context I neglected to include, however, is that neighboring Timberline Lodge and Mount Hood Skibowl not only offer a joint pass, but are longtime members of Powder Alliance, which is an incredible regional reciprocal pass that's free for passholders at any of these mountains:On Ski Broadmoor, ColoradoColorado Springs is less convenient to skiing than the name implies – skiers are driving a couple of hours, minimum, to access Monarch or the Summit County ski areas. So I was surprised, when I looked up Pack's original home mountain of Ski Broadmoor, to see that it sat on the city's outskirts:This was never a big ski area, with 600 vertical feet served by an “America The Beautiful Lift” that sounds as though it was named by Donald Trump:The “famous” Broadmoor Hotel built and operated the ski area, according to Colorado Ski History. They sold the hotel in 1986 to the city, which promptly sold it to Vail Associates (now Vail Resorts), in 1988. Vail closed the ski area in 1991 – the only mountain they ever surrendered on. I'll update all my charts and such to reflect this soon.On pre-high-speed KeystoneIt's kind of amazing that Keystone, which now spins seven high-speed chairlifts, didn't install its first detachable until 1990, nearly a decade after neighboring Breckenridge installed the world's first, in 1981. As with many resorts that have aggressively modernized, this means that Keystone once ran more chairlifts than it does today. When Pack started his ski career at the mountain in 1989, Keystone ran 10 frontside aerial lifts (8 doubles, 1 triple, 1 gondola) compared to just six today (2 doubles, 2 sixers, a high-speed quad, and a higher-capacity gondy).On Mountain CreekI've talked about the bananas-ness of Mountain Creek many times. I love this unhinged New Jersey bump in the same way I loved my crazy late uncle who would get wasted at the Bay City fireworks and yell at people driving Toyotas to “Buy American!” (This was the ‘80s in Michigan, dudes. I don't know what to tell you. The auto industry was falling apart and everybody was tripping, especially dudes who worked in – or, in my uncle's case, adjacent to (steel) – the auto industry.)On IntrawestOne of the reasons I did this insane timeline project was so that I would no longer have to sink 30 minutes into Google every time someone said the word “Intrawest.” The timeline was a pain in the ass, but worth it, because now whenever I think “wait exactly what did Intrawest own and when?” I can just say “oh yeah I already did that here you go”:On Moonlight Basin and merging with Big SkyIt's kind of weird how many now-united ski areas started out as separate operations: Beaver Creek and Arrowhead (merged 1997), Canyons and Park City (2014), Whistler and Blackcomb (1997), Alpine Meadows and Squaw Valley (connected via gondola in 2022), Carinthia and Mount Snow (1986), Sugarbush and Mount Ellen (connected via chairlift in 1995). Sometimes – Beaver Creek, Mount Snow – the terrain and culture mergers are seamless. Other times – Alpine and the Palisades side of what is now Palisades Tahoe – the connection feels like opening a store that sells four-wheelers and 74-piece high-end dinnerware sets. Like, these things don't go together, Man. But when Big Sky absorbed Moonlight Basin and Spanish Peaks in 2013, everyone immediately forgot that it was ever any different. This suggests that Big Sky's 2032 Yellowstone Club acquisition will be seamless.**Kidding, Brah. Maybe.On Lehman BrothersNearly two decades later, it's still astonishing how quickly Lehman Brothers, in business for 158 years, collapsed in 2008.On the “mutiny” at TellurideEvery now and then, a reader will ask the very reasonable question about why I never pay any attention to Telluride, one of America's great ski resorts, and one that Pack once led. Mostly it's because management is unstable, making long-term skier experience stories of the sort I mostly focus on hard to tell. And management is mostly unstable because the resort's owner is, by all accounts, willful and boorish and sort of unhinged. Blevins, in The Colorado Sun's “Outsider” newsletter earlier this week:A few months ago, locals in Telluride and Mountain Village began publicly blasting the resort's owner, a rare revolt by a community that has grown weary of the erratic Chuck Horning.For years, residents around the resort had quietly lamented the antics and decisions of the temperamental Horning, the 81-year-old California real estate investor who acquired Telluride Ski & Golf Resort in 2004. It's the only resort Horning has ever owned and over the last 21 years, he has fired several veteran ski area executives — including, earlier this year, his son, Chad.Now, unnamed locals have launched a website, publicly detailing the resort owner's messy management of the Telluride ski area and other businesses across the country.“For years, Chuck Horning has caused harm to us all, both individually and collectively,” reads the opening paragraph of ChuckChuck.ski — which originated when a Telluride councilman in March said that it was “time to chuck Chuck.” “The community deserves something better. For years, we've whispered about the stories, the incidents, the poor decisions we've witnessed. Those stories should no longer be kept secret from everyone that relies on our ski resort for our wellbeing.”The chuckchuck.ski site drags skeletons out of Horning's closet. There are a lot of skeletons in there. The website details a long history of lawsuits across the country accusing Horning and the Newport Federal Financial investment firm he founded in 1970 of fraud.It's a pretty amazing site.On Bogus BasinI was surprised that ostensibly for-profit Meadows regularly re-invests 100 percent of profits into the ski area. Such a model is more typical for explicitly nonprofit outfits such as Bogus Basin, Idaho. Longtime GM Brad Wilson outlined how that ski area functions a few years back:The Storm explores the world of lift-served skiing year-round. Join us. Get full access to The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast at www.stormskiing.com/subscribe

I'll Have Another with Lindsey Hein Podcast
Episode 518: Olin Hacker: USATF 5K Champion, 5th at World Indoors, and NAZ Elite Pro

I'll Have Another with Lindsey Hein Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2025 56:32


On this week's episode of I'll Have Another, I'm joined by Olin Hacker! Olin just won the USATF 5K Championships in Indianapolis—such an exciting race to witness, and I was lucky enough to be on the mic announcing it. He's got an impressive range of PRs: 13:08 in the 5K, 3:36 in the 1500, and ... more »