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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
Hour 2 - Our good friend Olin Buchanan of TexAgs joins us in-studio!
[ Únete a este canal para acceder a sus beneficios:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCO4U9kGvYAPxLZF9XRIWnjA/join] [ Puedes apoyarme en: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/HDeEspantos o comprando un producto en: www.amway.com.mx/FerPalaciosStore ] Todo es Eventual (Everything's Eventual), es un compilado de14 relatos (de hecho el subtítulo del libro es "14 Relatos Oscuros")que Stephen King escribió y publicó en 2002. De cierta forma, este libro fue planeado usando de base las14 cartas de una baraja inglesa tradicional (13 números de cada símbolo y elcomodín son los que representan los 14 relatos), a manera de que estos tuvieranun orden y un sentido. En lo personal, la compilación completa me ha gustado, peroexisten 2 que ya hemos grabado; "Montado en la Bala" (Riding theBullet), y ahora #1408. Un relato bastante curioso, porque, si bien existendemasiadas historias (ficticias o anecdóticas) que hablan de habitacionesembrujadas a lo largo del mundo, #StephenKing nos regala un cuento bastantefuerte, interesante y terrorífico. Además, en esta ocasión tuve la fortuna de contar con ErickLome (@MeDicenLome) interpretando a #Olin. Espero que sea de su agrado y lo disfruten mucho. Colóquense unos audífonos o auriculares y disfruten de estahistoria de Stephen King. Les dejo por acá las REDES SOCIALES DE ERICK LOME: - https://www.instagram.com/medicenlome- https://www.facebook.com/Bourborne02 y su banda #TamarindoIce -https://linktr.ee/tamarindoice?fbclid=PAZXh0bgNhZW0CMTEAAacSFhGLlMlxSHaTR0u42m_vKZx0pJK2wHcyDE5TtQ0OCWwvj13JE8V6mXHQ-w_aem_Uorvbvr1lBspfMbA_LXX_Q Y aquí... las redes sociales oficiales de Historias deEspantos por Fernando Palacios: · Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/HistoriasDeEspantosxFP/ · Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/HistoriasDeEspantosxFP Estas son mis redes sociales: ·Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fer.mr.bones/ ·Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/fer.mr.bones/?_rdc=1&_rdr &https://www.facebook.com/FernandoPalaciosAKAMrBones ·Twitter: https://twitter.com/FerMrBones También lo encuentras en Spotify y cualquier otro serviciode podcast. https://anchor.fm/fernando-palacios94https://podcasts.apple.com/mx/podcast/historias-de-espantos/id1554046415
Hour 2 - Our weekly chat with Olin Buchanan!
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
[ Únete a este canal para acceder a sus beneficios:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCO4U9kGvYAPxLZF9XRIWnjA/join] [ Puedes apoyarme en: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/HDeEspantos o comprando un producto en: www.amway.com.mx/FerPalaciosStore ] Todo es Eventual (Everything's Eventual), es un compilado de14 relatos (de hecho el subtítulo del libro es "14 Relatos Oscuros") que Stephen King escribió y publicó en 2002. De cierta forma, este libro fue planeado usando de base las14 cartas de una baraja inglesa tradicional (13 números de cada símbolo y el comodín son los que representan los 14 relatos), a manera de que estos tuvieran un orden y un sentido. En lo personal, la compilación completa me ha gustado, peroexisten 2 que ya hemos grabado; "Montado en la Bala" (Riding the Bullet), y ahora #1408. Un relato bastante curioso, porque, si bien existendemasiadas historias (ficticias o anecdóticas) que hablan de habitaciones embrujadas a lo largo del mundo, #StephenKing nos regala un cuento bastante fuerte, interesante y terrorífico. Además, en esta ocasión tuve la fortuna de contar con Erick Lome (@MeDicenLome) interpretando a #Olin. Espero que sea de su agrado y lo disfruten mucho. Colóquense unos audífonos o auriculares y disfruten de estahistoria de Stephen King. Les dejo por acá las REDES SOCIALES DE ERICK LOME: - https://www.instagram.com/medicenlome- https://www.facebook.com/Bourborne02 y su banda #TamarindoIce - https://linktr.ee/tamarindoice?fbclid=PAZXh0bgNhZW0CMTEAAacSFhGLlMlxSHaTR0u42m_vKZx0pJK2wHcyDE5TtQ0OCWwvj13JE8V6mXHQ-w_aem_Uorvbvr1lBspfMbA_LXX_Q Y aquí... las redes sociales oficiales de Historias de Espantos por Fernando Palacios: · Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/HistoriasDeEspantosxFP/ · Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/HistoriasDeEspantosxFP Estas son mis redes sociales: ·Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fer.mr.bones/ ·Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/fer.mr.bones/?_rdc=1&_rdr &https://www.facebook.com/FernandoPalaciosAKAMrBones ·Twitter: https://twitter.com/FerMrBones También lo encuentras en Spotify y cualquier otro serviciode podcast. https://anchor.fm/fernando-palacios94https://podcasts.apple.com/mx/podcast/historias-de-espantos/id1554046415
Hour 2 - OB joins us for the full lunch hour talking all things Texas A&M
Hour 3 - Olin Buchanan of TexAgs + Community SpotLight with Brazos Valley Food Bank
How did neoliberalism go from fringe idea to ruling ideology in the United States? In this deep-dive episode of Explaining History, we trace the hidden rise of America's most influential right-wing think tanks—Heritage Foundation, Cato Institute, Manhattan Institute and more—from their birth in the 1970s oil-crisis chaos to their role in dismantling the New Deal order.You'll discover:• The 1971 Powell Memo that sparked a billionaire-funded “war of ideas”.• How a handful of corporate dynasties (Koch, Olin, Coors) bankrolled institutions that turned think-tank papers into front-page policy.• The media pipeline that quietly replaced the post-war social-democratic consensus with free-market orthodoxy.• Why these think tanks succeeded where state propaganda failed—by cloaking ideology in “independent expertise”.• The transatlantic playbook now shaping politics on both sides of the pond.If you've ever wondered why inequality keeps rising even as growth stalls, this episode unmasks the invisible architects of modern America. Essential listening for historians, activists, journalists and anyone who wants to understand how ideas—funded in secret—became the law of the land.*****STOP PRESS*****I only ever talk about history on this podcast but I also have another life, yes, that of aspirant fantasy author and if that's your thing you can get a copy of my debut novel The Blood of Tharta, right here:Help the podcast to continue bringing you history each weekIf you enjoy the Explaining History podcast and its many years of content and would like to help the show continue, please consider supporting it in the following ways:If you want to go ad-free, you can take out a membership hereOrYou can support the podcast via Patreon hereOr you can just say some nice things about it here Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Hour 3 - Olin Buchanan joins us LIVE from SEC Media Days in Atlanta + Community SpotLight with United Way
Orimattilassa nautitaan perjantaina stand upista kun Jätinpesän lavalle nousee useampia esiintyjiä. Näyttelijä, koomikko, stand up -artisti Heli Sutela pohti Radio Voimalla torstaina sitä, miksi komiikka sopii hänelle hyvin taiteenlajiksi.- Se on kyllä ihan vahinko. Teatterikoulussa olin enemminkin hyvä itkemään, Sutela muisteli pilke silmäkulmassaan.Kesältä Sutela odottaa hyvää sienisatoa.Kuuntele koko haastattelu Radio Voiman podcastilta.
„Violoncello jsem na konzervatoři dostudoval, dokonce jsem vyhrál konkurs do tehdejšího Státního symfonického orchestru Gottwaldov (dnešní Zlín) na místo cellisty. Ale protože jsem také kamarádil s bigbiťáky a folkaři, tak jsem asi měsíc před nástupem do symfoňáku ,dostal lano‘ od kapely Marsyas,“ popisuje své začátky rockový violoncellista, baskytarista, zpěvák a houslista Jaroslav „Olin“ Nejezchleba. Všechny díly podcastu Hovory můžete pohodlně poslouchat v mobilní aplikaci mujRozhlas pro Android a iOS nebo na webu mujRozhlas.cz.
Hour 3 - OB gives his thoughts on Aggie Football ahead of SEC Media Days + Shining the Community SpotLight on Aggieland Humane Society
Hour 3 - Olin Buchanan of TexAgs joins us for a full hour to close out the show
Skaping er for den franske filosofen og teologen Jean-Luc Marion uløyseleg knytt til Gud. I det nyskrivne Fosseforedraget Skaping har han undersøkt korleis kunsten og litteraturen blir til.Skapinga, som verda kjem frå, kan og må ikkje bli forstått ut frå noko som helst som høyrer til verda.For å snakke med Marion om kunsten og kvifor han er så viktig for oss, kjem filmskapar og forfattar Margreth Olin. I fleire av verka sine tematiserer Olin den store krafta som finst i naturen og mellom menneske, spørsmål som dei begge er opptekne av.Jean-Luc Marion (f. 1946) sit som ein av dei udøyelege i Académie française og er professor emeritus ved Sorbonne og universitetet i Chicago. Marion har gitt ut ei rekkje bøker, mellom anna God without Being (1982) og sist Revelation Comes From Elsewhere (2024), som mange omtalar som eit meisterverk.Margreth Olin (f. 1970) har gjort seg kjend gjennom filmar som Dei mjuke hendene (1998), Engelen (2009) og Fedrelandet (2023). Ho har teke imot ei rekkje prisar for fleire av filmane sine, der auget hennar for det vesle mennesket i den store verda blir løfta fram som ein særleg kvalitet. Nyleg gav ho ut den kritikarroste romanen Song til mor – ei bok om kjærleiken til foreldra sine, kunsten og naturen. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In Part 2 of Episode 27 I'm joined by 2011 U.S. Senior Open Champion Olin Browne and one of the all-time great golf course Photographers Evan Schiller. Olin shares memories from playing in the US Open at Oakmont in 1994 and 2007, including battling brutal heat during a sweltering second-round tee time in '94 and the honor of playing the same day as Arnold Palmer's final U.S. Open round. We also talk about Oakmont's legendary rough and greens, whether a 15-handicap could even break 150, and how it ranks among the toughest courses Olin has ever played. Then I'm joined by world-renowned golf course photographer Evan Schiller, who reflects on his experience playing in the 1986 U.S. Open at Shinnecock. We dive into Evan's recent and upcoming travels, including his return to Ireland to shoot Old Head, his thoughts on Andrew Green's restoration work at East Lake, and why Pasatiempo might feature the best collection of par 3s anywhere. We wrap up with a deep dive into Reynolds Lake Oconee's Creek Club, the incredible courses at The McLemore, and the designers who've left the biggest impression on him. From Tour-tested insight to breathtaking golf course imagery, it's a conversation every golf fan will love.
Hour 3 - talking all things Texas A&M with Olin Buchanan + our Community SpotlIght is focused on the Brazos Valley Food Bank
Hour 3 - We talk Texas A&M, MLB, and more with Olin Buchanan + Community SpotLight with United Way of Brazos Valley
Recorded live. Fueled by the energy of the crowd. Powered by HOKA.Straight from the Big River Running Company in Missouri on June 4th, this special episode of the podcast captures the excitement, energy, and anticipation just one night before the iconic HOKA Festival of Miles.We sit down with four of the sport's most compelling figures: Olin Hacker – NCAA champion turned pro who thrilled fans with his powerful closing speed in previous Festival races; Krissy Gear – Steeplechase star known for her fearless racing style, who brought the heat to this meet with memorable performances in the past; Brandon Miller – A local favorite and middle-distance standout whose past runs at the Festival showcased both talent and heart in front of his hometown crowd; and Colleen Quigley – Olympian and St. Louis native who's been a longtime supporter and star attraction of the Festival, using this stage to inspire the next generation.Whether you're a die-hard track fan or just tuning in, this episode sets the stage for one of the most exciting nights in distance running.Tap into the Live Festival of Miles Special. If you enjoy the podcast, please consider following us on Spotify and Apple Podcasts and giving us a five-star review! I would also appreciate it if you share it with your friend who you think will benefit from it. Comment the word “PODCAST” below and I'll DM you a link to listen. If this episode blesses you, please share it with a friend!S H O W N O T E S-The Run Down By The Running Effect (our new newsletter!): https://tinyurl.com/mr36s9rs-BUY MERCH BEFORE IT'S GONE: https://shop.therunningeffect.run-Our Website: https://therunningeffect.run -THE PODCAST ON YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClLcLIDAqmJBTHeyWJx_wFQ-My Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/therunningeffect/?hl=en-Take our podcast survey: https://tinyurl.com/3ua62ffz
Olin Buchanan of TexAgs inside the Charles Schwab Studio really start to think about Aggie Football 20205.
Send us a textPoevargused on Eestis jõhker peavalu. Turvamehena töötanud Kaius Põder räägib ausalt, kuidas ta vargaid püüdis. Või ei püüdnud.
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 »
It's the GO Hour on TexAgs LIVE! David & Olin talked Aggie Football! Later, Stephen McGee joined the show, discussing which Aggie players could take a step up this year!
Today's guest needs no introduction—but he definitely earned a new one.Olin Hacker is back—and this time, he's bringing a U.S. title with him.Just weeks ago, Olin stormed to victory at the USATF 5000m Championships in Indianapolis, running 13:32 to claim his first national crown. But this moment wasn't built in a month—it was years in the making.As a collegiate runner, Olin secured multiple Big Ten championships while running for Wisconsin in 2022, winning both the indoor 3000m and 5000m events, as well as the outdoor 5000m.The highlight came in 2022 at the Oregon Relays, where he shattered the meet record in the 5000m, clocking 13:19.34 and improving his personal best by 16 seconds.The rise continued, as Olin represented the U.S. at the 2024 World Athletics Indoor Championships, finishing fifth in the 3000m with a season-best of 7:45.4.The Wisconsin Badger alum owns impressive PRs of 13:08.76 in the 5000m, 7:38.10 in the 3000m, and 3:56.59 in the mile. He took advantage of an extra year of eligibility due to the COVID-19 pandemic, returning for a seventh year, and claiming an NCAA 5000m victory.In today's conversation, Olin walks me through his recent win at the USATF road 5k championships, winning his first national title, his new mindset going into 2025, why he's racing more this year, going back to FOM next month, his goals for USA's 2025, and starting a podcast. Tap into the Olin Hacker Special. If you enjoy the podcast, please consider following us on Spotify and Apple Podcasts and giving us a five-star review! I would also appreciate it if you share it with your friend who you think will benefit from it. Comment the word “PODCAST” below and I'll DM you a link to listen. If this episode blesses you, please share it with a friend!S H O W N O T E S-The Run Down By The Running Effect (our new newsletter!): https://tinyurl.com/mr36s9rs-BUY MERCH BEFORE IT'S GONE: https://shop.therunningeffect.run-Our Website: https://therunningeffect.run -THE PODCAST ON YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClLcLIDAqmJBTHeyWJx_wFQ-My Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/therunningeffect/?hl=en-Take our podcast survey: https://tinyurl.com/3ua62ffz
Olin Giles interviews Rev. Samuel Green about his book called, "Where to Start with Islam". Visit us at RadicalTruth.net** ALL Donations are Tax-Deductible **
Tony Gurule & Olin Giles discuss the crucifixion of Christ, presenting historical evidence and biblical scripture, as well as the problems that arise when claiming Jesus 'did not die' on a cross. Visit us at RadicalTruth.net ** ALL Donations are Tax-Deductible **
It's The GO Hour on the first TexAgs LIVE of May! David and Olin talk Aggie Football, discussing the team's ceiling and expectations for the continued development of Marcel Reed!
Episode 370 of the John1911 Podcast is now live! I screwed up on the last podcast upload. Marcus Africanus SIG caught cheating on their manual homework. Olin buys out AMMO Inc's ammunition plant. Hi-Point gets into the AR-15 red ocean. Delton drowns in the AR-15 red ocean. Glock discontinues a whole bunch of models. Blued Python win's handhgun of the year. Gunsite is hiring a marketing manager. Neil Armstrong's watch. Police blotter: So That's what Gas Station Sushi means! Regards, Marky John1911.com "Shooting Guns & Having Fun"
It's the GO Hour with Olin Buchanan and David Nuno! We start off talking about Olin's new voice and CFB rankings. Then, we call up Charean Williams to talk about the NFL draft and punishment for pranks.
Did the Bears make a mistake taking Luther Burden III over an offensive lineman? (Hour 1) full In the first hour, Mike Mulligan, David Haugh and Olin Kreutz debate if the Bears should have went offensive line at pick 39 and not WR Luther Burden III. Olin also thinks the Bears are trying to outsmart opponents. 2935 Sat, 26 Apr 2025 17:18:28 +0000 7TJ02aCJoMutnwBRsD3NBQx6g0o4UD4T sports Mully & Haugh Show sports Did the Bears make a mistake taking Luther Burden III over an offensive lineman? (Hour 1) Mike Mulligan and David Haugh lead you into your work day by discussing the biggest sports storylines in Chicago and beyond. Along with breaking down the latest on the Bears, Blackhawks, Bulls, Cubs and White Sox, Mully & Haugh routinely interview the top beat writers in the city as well as team executives, coaches and players. Recurring guests include Bears receiver DJ Moore, Tribune reporter Brad Biggs, former Bears coach Dave Wannstedt, Pro Football Talk founder Mike Florio, Cubs president of baseball operations Jed Hoyer and Cubs pitching coach Tommy Hottovy.Catch the Mully & Haugh Show live Monday through Friday (5 a.m.- 10 a.m. CT) on 670 The Score, the exclusive audio home of the Cubs and the Bulls, or on the Audacy app. For more, follow the show on X @mullyhaugh. 2024 © 2021 Audacy, Inc. Sports False htt
It's The GO Hour on TexAgs LIVE! David and Olin discussed Aggie Football and how many SEC teams can make the College Football Playoff! Later in the hour, Stephen McGee joined the show!
A growing protest movement On 28 March, in downtime Jakarta across from the Sarinah department store, an unlikely group of protesters gathered holding signs and making speeches. The crowd largely consisted of middleclass women of various ages, gathered under the name ‘Suara Ibu Indonesia' (Voices of Indonesian Mothers). For the organisers, the choice of name and location for their protest was deliberately designed to evoke a moment in Indonesia's past, now 27 years ago, when in the final months of the autocratic Suharto regime an economic and political crisis saw student protests met with deadly violence at the hands of the military and police. Then a group called Suara Ibu Peduli (Voices of Concerned Mothers, SIP), tapped into growing concern within wider society about the state of their country. In late March 2025, as student protests at campuses and in front of law offices were once again met with violence by state law enforcement, the women who gathered in downtown Jakarta expressed their fear of a return to unbridled militarism and a contempt for democracy. The revision of the Military (TNI) Law a few weeks earlier, which opens the door for active military figures to occupy more and key positions in the government and bureaucracy, appears to have sparked a broadening of the growing protest movement. As one of the original SIP organisers, Karlina Supelli was quoted as saying, “If mothers have joined the protests, this means that the situation has become critical.” What compelled the Suara Ibu Indonesia protesters to go to the streets now? What are the urgent concerns of activists and students amid a time they describe as ‘Indonesia Gelap'? Can such opposition to the newly installed Prabowo government be sustained for the long haul? In this week's episode Jemma chats with Olin Montiero, a feminist activist, researcher, writer, consultant and producer. Olin has been working for the women 's movement since the 1990s and was a member of the Suara Ibu Peduli movement in 1998. She has founded several women organisations in Indonesia, including the network Peace Women Across the Globe Indonesia and ArtsforWomen, connecting women activists, artists, art workers and cultural workers for a feminist collaborative space. Olin facilitates feminist networks Jagat Setara (Online platform feminist discussion), Woke Asia Feminist (young feminist in Asia network), and FeministArt Community (a new young people discussion on art creativity and feminism). In 2025, the Talking Indonesia podcast is co-hosted by Dr Jemma Purdey from the Australia-Indonesia Centre, Dr Jacqui Baker from Murdoch University, Dr Elisabeth Kramer from the University of New South Wales and Tito Ambyo from RMIT. Image: Olin Monteiro
In this episode of The Hydrogen Podcast, we explore three major developments shaping the future of global hydrogen infrastructure:
On Thursday's edition of TexAgs LIVE, we started with The GO Hour! David and Olin discussed Texas A&M spring football! Stephen McGee joined the show and told us what he wants to see from Marcel Reed in the spring game on Saturday!
Stuart Rempel has one of those resumes. If you look at it, you know that he has lived an incredible life, and it all started with a ski bum mentality. Stuart went from pounding nails and skiing winters to running Salomon NA, Olin, K2 Skis, and Whistler. Most people at that level have a few degrees and plenty of suits. That's not Stuart, though. Throughout his career, he made it a priority to be on snow as much as possible, and the beta he gathered from the hill was used to make skiing better. It's another great business episode with an important person in the hardgoods and resort world, and Stuart's legendary neighbor, Mike Douglas, asks the Inappropriate Questions. Stuart Rempel Show Notes: 4:00: His streak, growing up in Kamloops, skiing, working construction to ski, going to the ski show, getting into the biz at the bottom, the traveling RV sample room, Salomon Rep, the boot launch, and being a subsidiary 20:00: Stanley: The brand that invented the category! Only the best for Powell Movement listeners. Check out Stanley1913.com Best Day Brewing: All of the flavor of your favorite IPA or Kolsch, without the alcohol, the calories, or the sugar. 22:00: Working with French Salomon Team, launching the skis, Olin Skis, sharing technology, Smooth Johnson, K2, Your Mamas a Mountain campaign, internet sales and Intrawest 40:00: Elan Skis: Over 75 years of innovation that makes you better. Outdoor Research: Click here for 25% off Outdoor Research products (not valid on sale items or pro products) 42:30: The early Whistler vibe, using the weather to market the mountain, the energy of Whistler, does Vail change that energy 60:00: Expensive taste, not making the 2018 Olympic team, bad teammates, not going to his last Olympic because of injury Palmer and Nate Holland 54:00: Inappropriate Questions with Mike Douglas
I caught up with Edgar Hoffman in the Sinai in Egypt, in the exact same place by the red sea where he developed a special relationship with a dolphin called Olin.We focus in on what makes these encounters with cetaceans special and meaningful, and why our society might want to pay more attention to what and how the cetaceans are communicating.https://www.amazon.com/DOLPHIN-HEART-Destiny-Edgar-Hoffman/dp/1697870678https://www.dolphinheart.org/https://youtu.be/BmIWYkGhy2M?si=h3-xXYs3eihXOu19email : edgardolphin@yahoo.co.uk
It's The GO Hour on TexAgs LIVE! David and Olin discussed Aggie Football following the spring press conference with coach Mike Elko yesterday. Later in the hour, Stephen McGee joined the show!
"Olin jotenkin ajatellut, että meidän oikeuslaitos on objektiivinen." Nuoren toimittajan luottamus Suomen oikeuslaitosta kohtaan karisi hänen jouduttua itse keskelle erikoista oikeudenkäyntiä. Jälkikäteenkään ajateltuna Johanna Aatsalo tuskin olisi tehnyt mitään toisin, mutta ehkä pyörremyrskyyn olisi jotenkin voinut varautua.
Olin interviews Dr. Tim Orr, a scholar of Islam, an Evangelical minister, a conference speaker, and an interfaith consultant with over 30 years of experience in cross-cultural ministry. He holds six degrees, including a master's in Islamic studies from the Islamic College in London. For 15 years, he taught Religious Studies at Indiana University Columbus and now serves as a research associate for the Congregations and Polarization Project at the Center for the Study of Religion and American Culture at Indiana University Indianapolis. Website: https://www.RadicalTruth.net** ALL Donations are Tax-Deductible **
Olin interviews Hatun Tash Website: https://www.RadicalTruth.net** ALL Donations are Tax-Deductible **
Tony Gurule & Olin Giles discuss the violent teachings of Islam that are found in its primary sources, which not only explain the history of Islamic expansion, but also the actions of its most devout followers today. Website: https://www.radicaltruth.netDonate: https://www.radicaltruth.net/donate
In the news today: For our first story of the day focusing on campus news, report alleged more 'inappropriate behavior' by Olin employee at sexual violence training. For our second story focusing on city news, Quark! closes its doors, transitions to online-only.
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.
The Olin Business School at Wash U in St. Louis turns its attention to women leaders. One focus for this event, She Suite 2025, is negotiation. Dr. Hillary Anger Elfenbein, a Professor of Organizational Behavior at Olin, joined Megan Lynch.
Olin Buchanan joins Louie the entire hour. Then Chip Howard joins Louie and Olin, it is pretty funny. Lot's of Aggie Baseball and Basketball plus Shemar Stewart.
Olin just released 'Telos - Part 3' on the moral superiority of Jesus over Muhammad. However, if you haven't listened to the first two parts called, "Telos 1: Sin & Salvation in Christianity and Islam" and "Telos 2: Who is the Perfect Example - Jesus or Muhammad?", be sure to listen those as well! Website: https://www.radicaltruth.net Donate: https://www.radicaltruth.net/donate
Colossians 4:2-6 in the Bible is about prayer, speaking wisely, and sharing the Gospel. It conveys that God cares about our personal prayer life and how we interact with others. Here is Olin's recent sermon that he preached at Calvary Mission Outreach CrownPoint, and after the sermon there was nearly a 20-minute Q&A about Islam and reaching Muslims with the Gospel! Website: https://www.radicaltruth.net Donate: https://www.radicaltruth.net/donate
Theresa and Juliet talked briefly about Oddity during their Best of 2024 episode, but today they take a deep dive into this modern gothic horror film. Join them to talk about the dream of owning a curio shop full of cursed objects, why Olin deserved justice, and whether death or haunting is a more fitting revenge. CW/TW: none for this episodeBuy us a coffee!Become a Patron!Theme music: "Book of Shadows" by Houseghost (Rad Girlfriend Records) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
TexAgs LIVE begins with the GO Hour! David and Olin discussed the Myles Garrett situation and possible trade destinations for him. Then, we heard their opinions on who would be on the Mount Rushmore of Aggie Sports! Finally, Stephen McGee joined the show, talking about the Super Bowl.
Today, Olin Glenne, the owner of Sturtevants bike & ski shop is back on GEAR:30 to talk about the state of the bike industry and ski industry; the World Cup Finals that are being held in Sun Valley in March of 2025; Sun Valley's impressive ski race programs and some things those programs are doing that might be good ideas for race programs elsewhere to consider. Olin and Jonathan also talk a lot about ski tuning and ski finishing; ski base flatness (and who should obsess the most about it); and more.RELATED LINKS1: 5850 Fest2: Get Yourself Covered: BLISTER+3: Get Our Winter Buyer's Guide4: Blister Summit 2025: Learn MoreTOPICS & TIMES5850 Fest (1:11)Status of the Bike industry (4:16)Status of the Ski Industry (6:16)Ski Season Readiness (9:04)WC Finals in Sun Valley (13:03)Sun Valley's Racing Program (18:43)Ski Tuning & Ski Finishing (30:27)What's New at Sturtevants (53:13)CHECK OUT OUR OTHER PODCASTS:Blister CinematicBlister PodcastBikes & Big IdeasCRAFTED Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.