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Fraudology is presented by Persona.In this episode of Fraudology Karisse Hendrick welcomes Patrick Hall, Product Architect at Persona, for an in-depth exploration of the cutting-edge world of online fraud prevention and identity verification. Patrick, with his rich background in fraud fighting at industry giants like DoorDash, Uber, and BlackRock, offers listeners a unique perspective on the challenges and innovations shaping the trust and safety landscape. The conversation kicks off with a deep dive into the complexities of KYC (Know Your Customer) processes in modern marketplaces, revealing how fraudsters exploit vulnerabilities in referral programs and delivery systems.As the discussion unfolds, Patrick illuminates the rapid evolution of fraud tactics, from easily detectable visual manipulations to sophisticated AI-generated fake IDs that can deceive even trained human eyes. He introduces the concept of "time-based fraud" in delivery services, a growing concern where fraudsters manipulate time-based payment systems for illicit gains. The episode also delves into the critical role of behavioral analysis and pattern recognition in identifying linked fraudulent accounts, showcasing how Persona's innovative graph product helps detect these intricate fraud networks.Throughout the conversation, Patrick and Karisse address the challenges faced by trust and safety teams in justifying investments and balancing risk management with business growth. They offer valuable insights on building compelling narratives using data to secure executive buy-in for trust and safety initiatives. The episode concludes with a thoughtful discussion on the importance of self-care and maintaining perspective in the relentless fight against fraud. Don't miss this opportunity to enhance your fraud-fighting toolkit – listen now and join the conversation on protecting digital trust in today's complex online ecosystem.To Connect with Patrick:https://www.linkedin.com/in/pathall1/To register for the upcoming demo/webinar with Persona:https://crowdcast.io/c/585cz8yzb1gaFraudology is hosted by Karisse Hendrick, a fraud fighter with decades of experience advising hundreds of the biggest ecommerce companies in the world on fraud, chargebacks, and other forms of abuse impacting a company's bottom line. Connect with her on LinkedIn She brings her experience, expertise, and extensive network of experts to this podcast semi weekly, on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
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2024 - 11 - 06 Patrick Hall by CurtinFM 100.1 in Perth, Western Australia
2024 - 09 - 30 Patrick Hall by CurtinFM 100.1 in Perth, Western Australia
2024 - 08 - 12 Patrick Hall by CurtinFM 100.1 in Perth, Western Australia
Join us as we chat with Patrick Hall, Principal Scientist at Hallresearch.ai and Assistant Professor at George Washington University. He shares his insights on the current state of AI, its limitations, and the potential risks associated with it. The conversation also touched on the importance of responsible AI, the role of the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) AI Risk Management Framework (RMF) in adoption, and the implications of using generative AI in decision-making.Show notesGovernance, model explainability, and high-risk applications 00:00:03 Intro to PatrickHis latest book: Machine Learning for High-Risk Applications: Approaches to Responsible AI (2023)The benefits of NIST AI Risk Management Framework 00:04:01 Does not have a profit motive, which avoids the potential for conflicts of interest when providing guidance on responsible AI. Solicits, adjudicates, and incorporates feedback from the public and other stakeholders.NIST is not law, however it's recommendations set companies up for outcome-based reviews by regulators.Accountability challenges in "blame-free" cultures 00:10:24 Cites these cultures have the hardest time with the framework's recommendationsPractices like documentation and fair model reviews need accountability and objectivityIf everyone's responsible, no one's responsible.The value of explainable models vs black-box models 00:15:00 Concerns about replacing explainable models with LLMs for LLM's sake Why generative AI is bad for decision-making AI and its impact on students 00:21:49 Students are more indicative of where the hype and market is todayTeaching them how to work through the best model for the best job despite the hypeAI incidents and contextual failures 00:26:17 AI Incident Database AI, as it currently stands, is a memorizing and calculating technology. It lacks the ability to incorporate real-world context.McDonald's AI Drive-Thru debacle is a warning to us allGenerative AI and homogenization problems 00:34:30Recommended resources from Patrick:Ed Zitron “Better Offline” NIST ARIA AI Safety Is a Narrative ProblemWhat did you think? Let us know.Do you have a question or a discussion topic for the AI Fundamentalists? Connect with them to comment on your favorite topics: LinkedIn - Episode summaries, shares of cited articles, and more. YouTube - Was it something that we said? Good. Share your favorite quotes. Visit our page - see past episodes and submit your feedback! It continues to inspire future episodes.
Patrick Hall drops in to provide a current take on risk, reward and regulation in AI today.In this bonus episode, Patrick reflects on the evolving state of play in AI regulations, consumer awareness and education.
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Welcome to Church Pew Sports Ep 123 - A Candid Conversation with Dan Patrick - Hall of Fame Broadcaster We welcome in the legendary Dan Patrick for a rollicking conversation about his new book (more infor below) and pretty much everything else in the sports world...plus his church connections and a most "unique" interaction with the offering plate as a kid. Hope you'll listen to one of the bests guests we've ever had on Church Pew Sports! This week's CPS Starting Host Lineup: Bill Hobson Pastor Paul Miller Pastor Josh Pardee John Fitzsimmons You can also listen to EVERY episode of CPS by visiting Churchpewsports.com/ We would love to hear your thoughts, comments, and questions. Reach out to us at: churchpewsports316@gmail.com Stay connected to Church Pew Sports on Facebook and Twitter @CPewsSports316 ---------- The Occasionally Accurate Annals of Football: The NFL's Greatest Players, Plays, Scandals, and Screw-Ups (Plus Stuff We Totally Made Up) Celebrated sports commentator Dan Patrick and comedy writer Joel H. Cohen team up with some of America's greatest* comedy writers to tell you everything and nothing about America's sport!** *“greatest” is actually just a bad type-o for “mediocre” **No, not darts, we mean pro football. (book on professional darts coming never) Did you know . . . Tom Brady is a very good quarterback. (True, but only according to statistics and accomplishments.) The formation of the NFL took place in an auto dealership. The founders started an institution and also were convinced to buy rust-proofing for it. (Half true.) The Carolina Panthers originated as a book club but turned to football when they couldn't agree on which John Grisham novel to read. (Maybe true. Research isn't our thing.) The Occasionally Accurate Annals of Football is a love letter to America's favorite game, full of highlights, history, great plays and players, scandals, Super Bowls, and a series of lies, idiotic theories, baseless conspiracies, a diet that may kill you and, of course, a poorly-written haiku. The book takes the credibility Dan Patrick has built up over a stellar broadcast career (ESPN, NBC Sports, something called “Peacock”) and risks it all with these falsehoods, half-truths, and even some quarter-truths.
What questions do you have about the NIL and how effects CCU? Take a listen and find out as we welcome Maurice Simpkins, Brian Kepple, and Patrick Hall!
Patrick Hall, is co-founder of BNH and a visiting faculty member of decision sciences at the George Washington University School of Business. Agus Sudjianto, EVP, Head of Corporate Model Risk at Wells Fargo. We explore several topics covered in the new book Machine Learning for High-Risk Applications, co-authored by Patrick and with a foreword by Agus.Subscribe to the Gradient Flow Newsletter: https://gradientflow.substack.com/Subscribe: Apple • Spotify • Stitcher • Google • AntennaPod • Podcast Addict • Amazon • RSS.Detailed show notes can be found on The Data Exchange web site.
The Rev. Patrick Hall joins Sarah and Evan to look at a number of issues: the devil, whether wealth is really evil, and whether babies should be baptized. Just a little controversy.
The mission of the Rocky Mountain Refuge for End of Life Care is "to offer a dignified alternative to dying alone on the street for those with terminal illness." In this podcast, you'll learn from the interim executive director, Brother James Partick Hall, about the often challenging end-of-life trajectories for unhoused people in the Denver community. JP shares clear information plus moving stories about how a team of social workers and hospice caretakers are stepping in to support those in need. Subscribe to the podcast for bonus content for only $7.99 a month! https://anchor.fm/diane-hullet/subscribe For more information on Best Life Best Death please visit our website at www.bestlifebestdeath.com Follow us on our social channels to receive pertinent and helpful resources on death, grieving, and more at: Facebook: www.facebook.com/bestlifebestdeath Instagram: www.instagram.com/bestlifebestdeath
Patrick Hall is the Principal Scientist at bnh.ai.Patrick artfully illustrates how data science has become divorced from scientific rigor. At least, that is, in popular conceptions of the practice. Kimberly and Patrick discuss the pernicious influence of the McNamara Fallacy, applying the scientific method to algorithmic development and keeping an open mind without sacrificing concept validity. Patrick addresses the recent hubbub around AI sentience, cautions against using AI in social contexts and identifies the problems AI algorithms are best suited to solve. Noting AI is no different than any other mission-critical software, he outlines the investment and oversight required for AI programs to deliver value. Patrick promotes managing AI systems like products and makes the case for why performance in the lab should not be the first priority.A transcript of this episode can be found here.
In Episode 29 we focus on the issues with the software engineering people, practices, and technologies currently used to create flawed machine learning and artificial intelligence systems. We'll do this by doing a deep dive into the book Responsible Machine Learning by Patrick Hall, Navdeep Gill, and Benjamin Cox.Follow on Twitter: https://twitter.com/kendallgilesJoin to support the show and for exclusive content, including episode notes, scripts, and other writings: https://patreon.com/kendallgiles
"Far from ever being punished for their investigative failures, these officers were rewarded for their years of mediocre service. In 1984, Roch Gaudreault received the Police Exemplary Service Medal from the Governor General of Canada. Real Chateauneuf received the honor in 1986; Patrick Hall and Jacques Filion -from the Carole Fecteau case, by the way, this is the 44 anniversary of her unsolved murder - in 1985; and Noel Bolduc, who was the lead on the Grimard and Bergeron, investigation in 1988."For more information please visit the website: www.theresaallore.com
Here's the audio! We look at those "borderline" sins and ask when do they cross the line between right and wrong, and why? Adam Harger, Mac Gervais, Evan McClanahan, and Patrick Hall are the panelists.
The rising use of artificial intelligence in sensitive industries such as recruitment, criminal justice, and healthcare has raised debate about bias and impartiality. However, human decision-making in these and other disciplines might be incorrect due to unconscious individual and social biases. In this IQT Podcast episode we are joined by Andrea Brennen, VP of Design and Visualization at IQT labs, Andrew Burt, Managing partner at BNH.AI and chief legal officer at Immuta, and Patrick Hall, a principal scientist in BNH.AI, visiting professor in the Dept. of Decision Sciences at George Washington University. They will share insights and knowledge on how we test and assess AI technology to minimize unwanted biases and also consider legalities and ethics. Listen to this episode if you're interested in AI technology and want to discover how it's being evaluated from a legal and ethical stance.
Stephen Curto and Patrick Hall join Sarah and Evan to talk through the process of deciding what falls within the realm of classical Christianity and when we dishonor God in the name of loving others. We look at current topics and apply the standard to each.
Theology on Tap looks at ancient Christian heresies and how they apply today. Dr. Adam Harger of HBU is on hand to offer a presentation and then we have a panel discussion. Thanks to Adam and the panelists: Paul Sloan, Meredith Mills, and Patrick Hall.
On this month's ATB, our headline-driven episode, we look at popular teenage witches, a "Bobos in Paradise" redux, the phrase "Let's Go Brandon," the state of politics generally, and the practice of cohabitating. The cast this week includes Patrick Hall of the Church of the Epiphany in Houston, Sarah Stone of MDPC, and Evan McClanahan of First Lutheran.
Kris tells the story of the witch of yazoo city was ostracized from the town. She may have been a serial killer and at the time of her death she cursed the town, changing the trajectory of Yazoo city forever. This one is true crime and plenty of spook and folklore. Special thanks to Faye Hall fir telling me this story for the first time and Patrick Hall for research assistance.
We discuss ML explainability in credit underwriting with John Dickerson (UMD) and Patrick Hall (bnh.ai).
Patrick Hall, co-founder at bnh.ai, explains to Tonya Hall why data scientists must be aware of the legal and security pitfalls of their algorithms. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
With so much recent talk about prominent Evangelicals walking away from faith, terms like “deconstruction” and “Exvangelical” have become par for the Christian course. But, what does it mean to deconstruct, and is this something new, or has it been happening all along? Is it a good thing? What makes deconstruction different from doubt, and after taking apart the building blocks of your faith, how are you supposed to put back together your beliefs and worldview? Sarah Stone and Patrick Hall interview Joshua Smith.
BNH.ai is a law firm and data science company serving enterprise organizations using #artificialintelligence applications in their business processes. BNH.ai helps the world's largest and most innovative organizations ensure the privacy, security, fairness, and transparency of their AI and analytics. Our clients rely on us for concrete, highly technical advice to manage the risks of models that affect millions of people around the world. In this episode, we were joined by firm co-founder and resident data scientist, Patrick Hall. Patrick Hall is principal scientist at bnh.ai. Patrick also serves as a visiting professor in the Department of Decision Sciences at The George Washington University. He is a frequent writer, speaker and advisor on the responsible and transparent use of AI and ML technologies. In this episode we discuss a variety for AI use cases in which their firm has been involved. DC allows for non-lawyer ownership of law firms, which makes this firm really fascinating. It gives them a lot of flexibility to provide services as a full-service consultancy and law firm. The most poignant and probably highest profile topic we discussed is that of #algorithmicbias. Naturally, this is a topic that rears its ugly head in the #legaltech and justice technology discussions and topics. The nice thing about hiring a law firm with a scientist as a co-founder is your company has a full staff available to guide you through issues to avoid algorithmic bias. More about Patrick Hall & bnh.ai: Patrick Hall on Twitter: https://twitter.com/jpatrickhall. Patrick Hall on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jpatrickh.... bnh.ai on Twitter: https://twitter.com/bnh_ai. bnh.ai website: https://www.bnh.ai/.
For more information on St. Michael's Episcopal Church: www.facebook.com/st.michaels.austin www.st-michaels.org
A native of Los Angeles, Pat embodies the vitality and energy of the city and his generation. A gifted director, Pat also brings a strong background in post production, sound design, and visual effects, so he intuitively knows how to capture the content he needs to create an impactful edit. His extensive production skills underpin his success as a storyteller; his executions are fresh and engaging. Pat’s boundless curiosity and natural talent for telling stories on film started at a young age. Akin to a prodigy, he is a three-time Santa Barbara International Film Festival finalist, winning his first festival at the early age of 15. He has recently directed and edited content for Adidas, Oakley, Facebook, ASICS, MeUndies, WSJ, Foot Locker, and Outside Magazine.
This month's Around the Blackboard looks at headlines ranging from the scientific (man and machine becoming one) to the legal (several states writing laws to deal with LGBTQ issues) to the bizarre (hello, Satan shoes.) Thanks to Patrick Hall, Rector at Epiphany Episcopal in Houston for joining Sarah and Evan.
In episode six on forgiveness, The Rev. Patrick Hall, Rector of Epiphany Episcopal Church in Houston, Texas, shares his reflections.
If you’re a planner who loves control and updating your Google calendar, welp....infertility is probably your greatest nightmare. Infertility can bring even the most buttoned up, organized, over-functioners to their knees. In this episode, Danielle and Patrick Hall, spouses and co-founders of MyVitro, share their own fertility journey alongside their favorite tips for getting through infertility when you’re Type A and why you should embrace your desire to organize and schedule if you’re gearing up for IVF. To learn more, visit MyVitro.com.
Patrick hall is a photographer, educator, and entrepreneur. In 2010, Patrick and his partner Lee started Fstoppers.com. Fstoppers started out as a simple place for creative professionals to learn photography and cinematography from behind the scenes videos. Fast forward 10 years, today Fstoppers gets around 3-5 million unique visitors a month. Today Patrick/Lee run Fstoppers full-time and split their time between home in Puerto Rico, and production on the road. ➜Learn more about Patrick and Fstoppers at www.fstoppers.comThe Think Stupid Simple Podcast is a place for authentic conversation to uncover the stupid simple truths that help us succeed and find happiness.
Lee Morris is a photographer, online educator, and entrepreneur. In 2010, Lee and his partner Patrick Hall founded the website Fstoppers.com, a website dedicated to helping inspire photographers and cinematographers. Today, Fstoppers gets around 3-5 million unique visitors per month. Their YouTube channel is approaching one million subscribers, and their premium education is in a league of its own. ➜Visit Fstoppers here: www.fstoppers.comThe Think Stupid Simple Podcast is a place for authentic conversation to uncover the stupid simple truths that help us succeed and find happiness.
In this interview, Lee Morris and Patrick Hall, co-founders of Fstoppers.com join the show to discuss the past, present and future of their wildly popular site. We get some insight into how and why they relocated to Puerto Rico, and some valuable lessons about how easy or hard it can be to follow your dreams, and make them a reality.
On today's episode of the Active Atlanta Podcast we are lucky enough to be joined by Dr. Patrick Hall who is an internal medicine physician with Kaiser. Dr. Hall is also a Crossfit athlete at a gym called Move Fitness located here in Decatur and he's here with us today to bring you some very cool information. As a primary care physician, Dr. Hall's focus is on the prevention of chronic diseases by emphasizing the importance of maintaining an active lifestyle and making smart dietary choices. Check out Dr. Patrick's Kaiser Permanente Insurance/Physician Group: https://healthy.kaiserpermanente.org/georgia/clinicians/patrick-hall-1715192
Today, my oldest brother Patrick Hall joins us to talk about a topic that scares many of us--negotiating. Making money is one thing, but asking for MORE is a little tricky. What should you do before you make the ask? What's the normal range for raises? How do you play the corporate game so that you can best position yourself for growth?We dive into all of this and more in today's episode, plus, Patrick shares his own experience with negotiating in his current position at the Apple headquarters in Austin, Texas.Subscribe, Rate, and Connect with me on Instagram! www.instagram.com/jannamhallForever Funemployed now has its own Instagram! Follow us: www.instagram.com/foreverfunemployed See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In this episode, Jonathan talks with longtime Move member Dr. Patrick Hall. Patrick is a Primary Care Physician for Kaiser Permanente. We discuss the normal topics of CrossFit beginnings, health and fitness backgrounds, and goal setting and priorities. But we also dig into how Patrick's health and fitness endeavors inside the gym affect how he interacts with his patients outside of the gym. Listen on YouTube: https://youtu.be/Zd8tI44Atj0 Listen on iTunes or Anchor: https://anchor.fm/movefunctionalfitness #crossfit #gym #decaturga #podcast #fitnesscoach #primarycarephysician #experiences
Chai Time Data Science Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLLvvXm0q8zUbiNdoIazGzlENMXvZ9bd3x In this episode, Sanyam Bhutani interviews Patrick Hall, Sr. Director of Product at H2O.ai. Patrick has a background in Math and has completed a MS Course in Analytics. In this interview they talk all about Patrick's journey into ML, ML Interpretability and his journey at H2O.ai, how his work has evolved over the years. They talk a lot about MLI, ML Explainability and Model Debugging. They also talk about how these ideas are implemented inside of h2o.ai and how can someone bring these ideas to their pipelines. Links: "Real-World Strategies for Model Debugging": https://medium.com/@jphall_22520/strategies-for-model-debugging-aa822f1097ce An Intro to MLI Book: https://www.h2o.ai/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/An-Introduction-to-Machine-Learning-Interpretability-Second-Edition.pdf "Why you should care about debugging machine learning models": https://www.oreilly.com/radar/why-you-should-care-about-debugging-machine-learning-models/ "Proposed Guidelines for the Responsible Use of Explainable Machine Learning": https://arxiv.org/pdf/1906.03533.pdf Follow: Patrick Hall: https://twitter.com/jpatrickhall https://www.linkedin.com/in/jpatrickhall/ Sanyam Bhutani: https://twitter.com/bhutanisanyam1 Blog: sanyambhutani.com About: http://chaitimedatascience.com/ A show for Interviews with Practitioners, Kagglers & Researchers and all things Data Science hosted by Sanyam Bhutani. You can expect weekly episodes every available as Video, Podcast, and blogposts. Flow by LiQWYD https://soundcloud.com/liqwyd --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/chaitimedatascience/message
In this episode: 00:45- How Patrick went from an MFA to opening a cabinet shop and working as a general contractor 7:09- How Patrick grew his design/build business 12:52- How working with fabricators and manufacturers has informed Patrick's art-making methods 13:47- Patrick explains what "fabrication" means in the context of design/build work 19:10- How Patrick has made the transition from contracting to creating fine art clay pottery 21:49- How 2D art is different from 3D art, and the unique challenges of each type of work 24:09- Where Patrick is headed next with his art 27:40- Patrick describes the state of being "in the zone" that he reaches when working in clay 30:45- How Patrick learned to manage the logistics of a busy practice and business
Today on the show, we travel down to D.C. John Murph is a mainstay in the jazz writers circuit, he's a respected music journalist whose work is found at downbeat, NPR, The Atlantic, Washington Post, and many more. He's been on the scene as jazz has evolved in the twenty first century, and he's very familiar with the Ropeadope story. John is also a deejay, and is working on a series of Ropeadope retrospective playlists found on Mixcloud. Let's hear his view on where jazz is in 2019. To learn more on John's work, check out his stories. https://www.npr.org/people/5280399/john-murph https://www.theatlantic.com/author/john-murph/ Produced by Nick Perri and Steve Eshewsky. Engineered by Patrick Hall. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
In this episode of The Darkroom Podcast we had the chance to chat with Lee Morris, CEO and Co-founder of Fstoppers, one of the largest and most active online communities for creative professionals. Morris and his Co-founder Patrick Hall started Fstoppers in 2010, leveraging video tutorials and other visual content to help budding photographers learn new skills. As a photographer himself, Morris was shooting 30 weddings a year when he began thinking about what he wanted to do with his free time. Hear more about how Morris and Hall scaled Fstoppers to one of the largest online creative communities with 50+ writers and and millions of visitors a month.
Part two of our interview with Ghandiii and Patrick Hall. Check out Ghandiii on Instagram and Twitter @imghandiii - search for him on iTunes as well. If you would like to have Patrick as your producer/managerm hit him up on Twitter @patrickhall93 or Instagram @patrickhall.wav - Follow Wasted Local Talent on Instagram and Facebook @wastedlocaltalent and on Twitter @wastedlocal - Follow Daniel & Jed on Instagram @hoveroundgenocide and @juddrage308 - Music provided by Worst Kept Secret, check them out on Facebook and Instagram @worstkeptsecretwv or by searching "Worst Kept Secret" on BandsInTown - If you would like to apply to be on WLT head over to www.thirteenpalmtrees.com/wastedlocaltalent
Jed and Daniel spend the afternoon with local rap artist Ghandiii and his manager Patrick Hall. Ghandiii explains how he started his rap career and his thoughts behind the local music scene and what need to happen to help it grow. Patrick gives his opinions on the local scene and how he started managing and producing local rap and hip/hop. Stay tuned after the episode for a sneak peak of BANDZ, a new track from Ghandiiis upcoming album. This is our very first two-part episode so stay tuned next week for part two! Check out Ghandiii on Instagram and Twitter @imghandiii - search for him on iTunes as well. If you would like to have to have Patrick as your producer/manager, hit him up on Twitter @patrickhall93 or Instagram @patrickhall.wav - Follow Wasted Local Talent on Instagram and Facebook @wastedlocaltalent and on Twitter @wastedlocal - Want to follow our hosts? Check them out on Instagram: Daniel @hoveroundgenocide - Jed: @juddrage308 - Music provided by Worst Kept Secret, check them out on Facebook and Instagram @worstkeptsecretwv or by searching "Worst Kept Secret" on BandsInTown.
Brad Sullivan 5th Sunday of Lent March 18, 2018 Emmanuel, Houston John 12:20-33 Sleeper Awake (and Quit that Darn Snooze Button) First of all, I’d like to thank my buddy Patrick Hall for his sermon last Sunday entitled, “Risking Exposure,” which helped draw out of me these words for today. You can look him up, Patrick Hall, and search for his sermon from last Sunday called, “Risking Exposure.” Now turning to today’s sermon, I’ve recently found that one of the worse inventions ever created is the snooze button. It’s a procrastinator’s dream. You get to put off the day and stay comfy in bed, wrapped in the covers for just a little bit longer, which, if you’re going to do that just set the alarm for 10 minutes later. The big problem with the snooze button is what doesn’t get done because of it, the morning walk or time in prayer, the rushing through a morning that could have been more peaceful. Ok, so as non-horrific and only mildly annoying as that may sound, what about when we begin hitting the snooze button on life? I know I need to do this thing now. I know it’s important. I know it’s where I need to go in life, but I really just want to stay as I am, so I’ll put it off. Snooze. When the Greeks came to see Jesus, that was an alarm going off for him. As soon as he heard that a couple of Greeks wished to see him, Jesus immediately told his disciples, “The hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified,” aka, it’s time for me to go get arrested and killed. Why was the fact that a couple Greeks wanted to talk to him an alarm clock for Jesus? Perhaps because they were Gentiles, and Jesus realized that in order for his mission to extend to the Gentiles, he had to die and be raised, and the Holy Spirit to come upon his disciples so that they could all continue his work and grow his Kingdom here on earth. Perhaps it was simply some pre-ordained signal given to Jesus by his Father. “Now son, when a couple of Greeks come to talk to you, that’s when it’s time.” In any case, as soon as that alarm went off, Jesus hopped out of bed, and immediately began preparing his disciples for his coming death. He told them that a grain of wheat must fall into the earth and die so that it could bear much fruit, rather than just stay as it is. Jesus was talking about his Kingdom and the resurrection life within his kingdom both after this life, and in his kingdom life here on earth. Long before our deaths, we have alarm clocks going off, telling us that it is time for the Kingdom life here on earth, letting us know there are conditions and situations in our lives which need to die to let the Kingdom life happen. We need to let go of an old resentment. We need to stop drinking. We need to stop going halfway with our faith and fully embrace the way of Jesus. We need to let a past relationship go, or we need to stop fooling ourselves that we are ok as we are and admit to just how broken we really are. We all have alarm clocks going off letting us know that it is time to let that condition or situation die, and we hear the alarm, we know what we need to do, that it is time to get up out of bed, that shadow of the tomb, and let die what needs to die, but instead, we hit the snooze button and stay as we are, assuming we can manage life as it is, assuming we can try harder, do better, and largely stay as we are. This is of course untrue, and we simply wait for the next alarm, keeping our whole lives in the shadow of death, rather than waking up, getting out of bed, and placing that part of our lives that needs death into the tomb. Why do we do this over and over? Why, when we hear Jesus calling us to let something in our lives die, do we keep hitting that blasted snooze button? We could say lack of trust or lack of belief, fear at facing the new day without whatever part of us we need to let go, or sometimes we’re just so comfortable as we are, even if it’s not working, we’re just so comfortable lying in bed with the covers drawn up, that we don’t want to move. We don’t want to change, because it’s just too hard to get up out of bed, when we know we’ve got that snooze alarm ready to come around again. The problem is that with this snooze alarm, is that in life, it only makes getting out of bed even harder. We become more engrained in the life we have, and even though we know life is not working, the thought of risking change becomes intolerable. Facing the new day is far too daunting, and we are far too tired, so we hit the darn snooze button again. Perhaps then, we need to start going to bed earlier, so we’re not so tired in the morning, and the thought of facing the new day doesn’t seem so daunting. By going to bed earlier, I mean intentionally following practices of prayer, of scripture reading, of service to others, setting aside intentional time each day for prayer, learning more and more to trust in Jesus and thereby to be rested enough so that the alarm is not a horrid sound, but an invitation from a trusted friend. We also need to do these prayer and scripture practices, this service others not only by ourselves, but also in community with others who can help us learn to trust in Jesus more. We need to admit to those prayer, scripture, and service partners, why we keep hitting the snooze button. We need to admit to them and to ourselves what is keeping us in bed so that they can give us extra support so that we can get up out of bed in the morning, knowing we have others to help us face the world without the things we need to let die. We need help putting things in the tomb. We need folks with us at the funeral, and we need those folks with us to help us through the new life as our lives are remade by Jesus, as his fruit begins to grow. It is a daunting task to let die within us that which Jesus is calling us to let die, and that snooze button is so tempting, but what is waiting for us when we get out of bed is the resurrection life of Jesus’ kingdom here on earth. The love of Jesus, the life of Jesus, the forgiveness and grace of Jesus all both received from Jesus and then given by us to others, that is what we are putting off every time we hit that thrice blasted snooze button. His Kingdom. His resurrection life. His grace and forgiveness, a new life unbound by that which keeps us asleep. That is what is waiting for us. “Sleeper awake,” Jesus calls. “Quit that darn snooze button, and get out of bed, that shadow of death. Let die within you that which needs to die, and follow me.”
Brad Sullivan 5th Sunday of Lent March 18, 2018 Emmanuel, Houston John 12:20-33 Sleeper Awake (and Quit that Darn Snooze Button) First of all, I’d like to thank my buddy Patrick Hall for his sermon last Sunday entitled, “Risking Exposure,” which helped draw out of me these words for today. You can look him up, Patrick Hall, and search for his sermon from last Sunday called, “Risking Exposure.” Now turning to today’s sermon, I’ve recently found that one of the worse inventions ever created is the snooze button. It’s a procrastinator’s dream. You get to put off the day and stay comfy in bed, wrapped in the covers for just a little bit longer, which, if you’re going to do that just set the alarm for 10 minutes later. The big problem with the snooze button is what doesn’t get done because of it, the morning walk or time in prayer, the rushing through a morning that could have been more peaceful. Ok, so as non-horrific and only mildly annoying as that may sound, what about when we begin hitting the snooze button on life? I know I need to do this thing now. I know it’s important. I know it’s where I need to go in life, but I really just want to stay as I am, so I’ll put it off. Snooze. When the Greeks came to see Jesus, that was an alarm going off for him. As soon as he heard that a couple of Greeks wished to see him, Jesus immediately told his disciples, “The hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified,” aka, it’s time for me to go get arrested and killed. Why was the fact that a couple Greeks wanted to talk to him an alarm clock for Jesus? Perhaps because they were Gentiles, and Jesus realized that in order for his mission to extend to the Gentiles, he had to die and be raised, and the Holy Spirit to come upon his disciples so that they could all continue his work and grow his Kingdom here on earth. Perhaps it was simply some pre-ordained signal given to Jesus by his Father. “Now son, when a couple of Greeks come to talk to you, that’s when it’s time.” In any case, as soon as that alarm went off, Jesus hopped out of bed, and immediately began preparing his disciples for his coming death. He told them that a grain of wheat must fall into the earth and die so that it could bear much fruit, rather than just stay as it is. Jesus was talking about his Kingdom and the resurrection life within his kingdom both after this life, and in his kingdom life here on earth. Long before our deaths, we have alarm clocks going off, telling us that it is time for the Kingdom life here on earth, letting us know there are conditions and situations in our lives which need to die to let the Kingdom life happen. We need to let go of an old resentment. We need to stop drinking. We need to stop going halfway with our faith and fully embrace the way of Jesus. We need to let a past relationship go, or we need to stop fooling ourselves that we are ok as we are and admit to just how broken we really are. We all have alarm clocks going off letting us know that it is time to let that condition or situation die, and we hear the alarm, we know what we need to do, that it is time to get up out of bed, that shadow of the tomb, and let die what needs to die, but instead, we hit the snooze button and stay as we are, assuming we can manage life as it is, assuming we can try harder, do better, and largely stay as we are. This is of course untrue, and we simply wait for the next alarm, keeping our whole lives in the shadow of death, rather than waking up, getting out of bed, and placing that part of our lives that needs death into the tomb. Why do we do this over and over? Why, when we hear Jesus calling us to let something in our lives die, do we keep hitting that blasted snooze button? We could say lack of trust or lack of belief, fear at facing the new day without whatever part of us we need to let go, or sometimes we’re just so comfortable as we are, even if it’s not working, we’re just so comfortable lying in bed with the covers drawn up, that we don’t want to move. We don’t want to change, because it’s just too hard to get up out of bed, when we know we’ve got that snooze alarm ready to come around again. The problem is that with this snooze alarm, is that in life, it only makes getting out of bed even harder. We become more engrained in the life we have, and even though we know life is not working, the thought of risking change becomes intolerable. Facing the new day is far too daunting, and we are far too tired, so we hit the darn snooze button again. Perhaps then, we need to start going to bed earlier, so we’re not so tired in the morning, and the thought of facing the new day doesn’t seem so daunting. By going to bed earlier, I mean intentionally following practices of prayer, of scripture reading, of service to others, setting aside intentional time each day for prayer, learning more and more to trust in Jesus and thereby to be rested enough so that the alarm is not a horrid sound, but an invitation from a trusted friend. We also need to do these prayer and scripture practices, this service others not only by ourselves, but also in community with others who can help us learn to trust in Jesus more. We need to admit to those prayer, scripture, and service partners, why we keep hitting the snooze button. We need to admit to them and to ourselves what is keeping us in bed so that they can give us extra support so that we can get up out of bed in the morning, knowing we have others to help us face the world without the things we need to let die. We need help putting things in the tomb. We need folks with us at the funeral, and we need those folks with us to help us through the new life as our lives are remade by Jesus, as his fruit begins to grow. It is a daunting task to let die within us that which Jesus is calling us to let die, and that snooze button is so tempting, but what is waiting for us when we get out of bed is the resurrection life of Jesus’ kingdom here on earth. The love of Jesus, the life of Jesus, the forgiveness and grace of Jesus all both received from Jesus and then given by us to others, that is what we are putting off every time we hit that thrice blasted snooze button. His Kingdom. His resurrection life. His grace and forgiveness, a new life unbound by that which keeps us asleep. That is what is waiting for us. “Sleeper awake,” Jesus calls. “Quit that darn snooze button, and get out of bed, that shadow of death. Let die within you that which needs to die, and follow me.”
Welcome to Episode 33. I was invited to attend the Austin Marathon Expo and interview the athletes running the Marathon and Half Marathon. I learned a LOT from the Pacers and some of the out of town guests. If you listen to the end you'll learn a little something special about me. I want to thank everyone who stopped by the booth to say HI or grab some swag. It was great meeting you all. Our Guests Today: (in order of appearance) Michelle Hittner, Stewart Mickler, Sam Lemelle, Elaine Chung, Matt Fletcher, Patrick Hall, Nora Colligan, Jim Moore, Michelle Ryan, Robert Nathan, David Fuentes, Roger Moore, Joel Stanford, Kapler Burnett, and Mark Wignall. #WeRunThisTown #RunAustin18 Austin Marathon HIgh Five Events Get your Drunk Athlete Merchandise at our store. https://www.bigpistachio.com/shop To be a patron or make a donation to this podcast, go to https://www.bigpistachio.com/drunk-athlete-podcast For more information go to: email erin@bigpistachio.com http://www.bigpistachio.com https://www.bigpistachio.com/drunk-athlete-podcast PARTNERS: A special thank you to our partner Big Mouth Announcing Logan@BigMouthAnnouncing.com Thank you to our sponsor Austin Massage Company Check out the amazing bike tours at Velo View Bike Tours! Get 5% off when you mention Drunk Athlete. Big Pistachio Racing https://www.bigpistachio.com/team Alphay International https://www.bigpistachio.com/alphay FOLLOW US: INSTAGRAM - @DrunkAthletePodcast FACEBOOK - https://www.facebook.com/DrunkAthlete Please Share, Rate & Review this podcast so other awesome people like you can find it easier. Cheers!
Hoy hablamos de mis mochilas fotográficas y de los cambios que he introducido en mis objetivos de focales más largas. El fotógrafo de viajes seleccionado por Sandra Vallaure para este episodio es Elia Locardi. CONTENIDO DEL PROGRAMA Empezamos el episodio recordando que quedan muy pocas plazas para el Taller Costa Asturias que voy a impartir del 9 al 11 de Marzo. Si estás interesado echa un vistazo y no te lo pienses demasiado. También puedes ver el resto de Talleres de Fotografía de Paisaje programados para este año. Después, te cuento qué mochilas utilizo en cada situación, dependiendo del material fotográfico necesario. Posteriormente, explico el cambio de objetivos con focales más largas: qué utilizaba antes y cuáles han sido mis motivos para cambiar. Seguidamente, Sandra nos habla de Elia Locardi. el fotógrafo de viajes que ha elegido para este episodio. Vamos con los enlaces relacionados con los contenidos tratados hoy: MOCHILAS Kiboko Gura Gear Think Tank Urban Disguise 50 Think Tank StreetWalker Pro Camera Backpack F-Stop Satori EXP Foliage Green 62L + ICU Pro Series XLarge + ICU Pro Series Large Peli 1510 Maleta de transporte estanca Mind Shift Moose Peterson MP-3 V2.0 Mind Shift Filter Hive (bolsa de transporte para filtros cuadrados/rectangulares y redondos) FOTÓGRAFOS Andy Gibbs Darwin Wiggett Ian Plant Michael Reichmann MI EQUIPO FOTOGRÁFICO Canon EOS 5D Mark IV 3 Baterías Canon LP-E6N RAVPower Cargador USB para Canon LP-E6 & LP-E6N 2x2000mAh 2,1A OBJETIVOS Canon TS-E 24mm f/3.5L II (objetivo descentrable) Canon EF 16-35mm f/4L IS USM Canon EF 24-105mm f/4L IS II USM Canon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II USM Canon Extender EF 1.4x III Canon Extender EF 2x III Canon EF 70-200mm f/2.8L IS II USM Canon EF 300mm f/2.8L IS USM Nikon 14-24mm f2.8 G ACCESORIOSS Bastones de treking plegables Black Diamond Distance Z Cargador Baxxtar USB Dual TWIN PORT 1833 para baterías Canon NB-13L Cargador USB, EBL U421 Quick Charger para pilas AA y AAA FOTÓGRAFO DESTACADO En la sección de viajes, Sandra nos habla del fotógrafo Elia Locardi. Puedes seguir su trabajo a través de su página web, Instagram, Facecbook y Twitter. ¿Por qué destaca? Viaja por el mundo Localizaciones increíbles Paisaje urbano y de naturaleza Obsesión por la luz Creador de “momentos en el tiempo” Vídeo “de las botas” de Patrick Hall de Fstoppers Hasta aquí el episodio de hoy. Como siempre, gracias por escucharnos y recuerda que puedes enviarnos tus opiniones/comentarios sobre los contenidos del programa o nuevos temas que te gustaría que tratásemos a través del formulario de contacto. También nos encantaría recibir tu valoración sincera del podcast en iTunes y comentarios en ivoox y si te gusta, compártelo. Esta será la mejor forma de poder llegar a más personas. Muchas gracias y volvemos en 15 días con un nuevo episodio de Distancia Hiperfocal. ¡¡Un saludo y hasta pronto!! CONTACTA CON NOSOTROS Puedes contactar con Sandra en Twitter @vallausa y con Rafa en Twitter @rafairusta y en Instagram @rafairusta Podcast Destino Sifakka presentado por Sandra Vallaure SaruPhotoTours.com (fotopaseos por Sevilla con Sandra) Talleres de Fotografía de Paisaje con Rafa Irusta SUSCRÍBETE AL PODCAST Suscríbete a Distancia Hiperfocal en Apple Podcasts, Android, ivoox, YouTube y Spotify Únete a nuestro canal en Telegram Talleres de Fotografía de Paisaje con Rafa Irusta NOTA: He dedicado tiempo y esfuerzo a crear los contenidos de este podcast/artículo y espero que te resulten útiles. Encontrarás enlaces en algunos productos. En calidad de Afiliado de Amazon, obtengo ingresos por las compras adscritas que cumplen los requisitos aplicables. No obstante quiero aclarar, que todas mis opiniones sobre productos o servicios, son siempre sinceras y honestas, basadas en mis propias pruebas y experiencias.
Lee Morris has been a wedding photographer for over 10 years and in 2010 he started Fstoppers with Patrick Hall. Fstoppers has grown into one of the top resources for photography lighting, gear reviews, business tips, behind the scenes, and industry news and reaches over 1.5 million photographers!
One of the first things I noticed while talking with Fstoppers Co-Founder and Photographer Lee Morris, was that he is brutally honest with himself about his abilities, level of talent, and the validity of any goals he might have set for himself. He's always been creative, but it took him a little while to figure out where that creativity would lead him. At an early age, while growing up in the south, he had dreams of being an animator. When he had the opportunity to pursue that dream however, he made one of his earliest self critiques, and decided that he didn't have the level of talent that some of the other young artists had. This attitude would continue through several endeavors until he found himself armed with a camera, taking headshots on the college campus. That soon led him to the world of wedding photography and the slow build of creating a business and an easy going lifestyle based around it. One day while talking to his good friend and fellow wedding photographer Patrick Hall, the two of them decided it would be a good idea to try and start a website devoted to teaching some of the techniques they wished they could have learned sooner. That website would become Fstoppers and it would go on to become a very well known online photography community and education platform. On this episode of the podcast we sit down with Lee to talk about the future of online education, what he feels like is the best way to deal with commercial clients, and what he says is a guaranteed way to succeed in the world of photography. To Learn More About Lee Morris Visit: https://fstoppers.com About Visual Revolutionary http://www.visualrevolutionary.com Because we are interested in people's story, and not what type of gear they use, we introduce a new much needed podcast in the world of photography and filmmaking. Featuring in-depth conversations with some of the world's leading photographers, filmmakers, and other visual artists, we are bringing you the backstory on how they got to where they are today.
This week on Friday Night Blind Pig Confessions we had the pleasure of sitting down at Claude and Annie’s in Fishers, IN with some very special guests. Joining us this week was Mr. Darrin Snider from Indy In-Tune (our syndicator), our famous and deliciously sexy bearded buddy, Patrick Hall, and the host of Niko’s Open Stage at Claude and Annie’s, Nick Wengler. Nick gives us the low down on open mic night every Wednesday as well as Keith Disbro’s DJ Bingo on Tuesdays (and Trivia on Thursdays) to name just a few of the many activities to enjoy each night at Claude and Annie’s. Due to the Back to the Future predictions that were not, we pay tribute to the many sci-fi predictions that have come to fruition as well as a review of Goose Island’s Autumn Ale. There were also some shout out to local musicians, Dead Squirrels, Dave Vogt, among others in this well rounded and fun episode with friends and drinks. And a big thanks to Heather Jones to putting up with us all evening.
The TogTools Podcast - Interviews with Successful and Industry-leading Photographers
Wow. We can’t believe today is the final session of our Fstoppers series! And we have to say, it’s very bittersweet. We seriously can’t thank everyone enough for being a part of this amazing series. We’ve heard many great things about how these sessions have helped you all! And we have learned so much ourselves. We […]
Our weekly look at all things photographic with Sarah Jacobs and PhotoShelter co-founder Allen Murabayashi. Get the podcast: http://bit.ly/ilovephoto Watch the broadcast: http://bit.ly/ilovephotoyt 1:14 James Estrin interviews Getty’s Jonathan Klein 6:02 Ayman Oghanna essay on changing Iraqi life 7:45 Pete Muller’s Birthplace of Ebola outbreak 9:25 Neil Leifer’s The Boxing Photos 12:28 Benjamin Lowy photographs tennis star Eugenie Bouchard 14:24 Kevin Frayer’s Chinese Women in Face-kinis 16:28 Instagram Hyperlapse 21:00 Godlis’ Punk Rock after dark 24:00 Mathieu Maury and Antoine Pai capture video through Pentax 6x7 25:56 Patrick Hall photographs people getting tasered 29:21 Brinson Banking is a thing 30:56 Lilly McElroy’s I Throw Myself at Men 32:00 Monkey Selfie Statement
The Rev. Patrick Hall
delivered be The Rev"d. Patrick Hall
The Rev. Patrick Hall
delivered by the Rev'd. Patrick Hall
delivered by the Rev'd. Patrick Hall
delivered by the Rev'd. Patrick Hall
National Gallery of Australia | Audio Tour | The National Sculpture Prize and Exhibition 2005
My older sister would, in a three-dimensional Superman comic sort of typeface, loudly proclaim her ownership by writing her name over and over on her things. Mum became particularly aggrieved when her graffiti branding colonised her school textbooks, obliterating title and author. I remember Steff’s response to Mum’s protests: ‘It’s only writing, that’s what books are’. Perhaps it’s the overlaying and assertion of independent thought on the existing that allows us to make our own structures and find our own meanings. It is how we shuffle language and symbol to form blocks of pattern, how we stack shades of opinion, one on another, how we lay facts and fictions side by side, how we order, rank and classify the views of others that allows us to find space – a little void to calibrate our own experience, a place to put our own thoughts. Photography: Peter Whyte
*(Breather) Enjoy some really thoughtful questions from listeners on an incredible variety of topics relating to healthy eating, exercise, and lifestyle.* In this breather show, you’ll hear a little bit of my amateur attempt at an Irish accent (by request!) before I dive into some great questions from listeners. I touch on the importance of being strategic when it comes to whom you try to help/convince with lifestyle changes (wait till they are “ready to receive,” says Mia Moore) and the benefits of being reasonable, open-minded, and avoiding the all too common polarization that’s so common today in so many areas of society, including health advice. I also offer a sneak preview of my new triathlon training book called How To Improve Your *Triathlon Time: A Healthy, Balanced Approach to an Obsessive Sport, and share my thoughts on the best ways to experiment with strict carnivore if you are already a high calorie burning endurance athlete. I also talk about the powerful effects of nose breathing and why you should be doing it throughout the day, as well as the importance of taking some deep, diaphragmatic breaths to engage your lower abdomen. That’s all for today, and thanks to everyone who sent in questions! If you’d like to submit a question to be answered in an upcoming show, shoot me an email ( getoveryourselfpodcast@gmail.com ) ! *TIMESTAMPS:* Breath through your nose. [01:29] Maciej says keto lifestyle is not for everyone. We often perceive ourselves to be more open-minded than we really are. [04:08] Mick from Ireland asks about adding pigs’ ears when making bone broth at home. A true bone broth will be gelatinous when refrigerated. [06:36] John Bennett describes the progress is 15-year-old son has made since he, as a weight lifter, has changed his diet and training regimen. [11:22] A note from Patrick Hall mentions Brad’s old book about improving triathlon. Brad is republishing it and it will be on Amazon soon. “How to Improve Your Triathlon Time” [13:46] Dennis in Seattle asks: Do you have a rough template for the season after the two-month aerobic base building period? Make sure you’re ready and start slowly. [14:36] When you decide to go into an extreme restrictive diet like the carnivore diet, you could have a bit of a problem if you are a typical endurance athlete in training. [16:47] Steven Raider is questioning the idea that if you go carnivore it means fruits and vegetables are bad. [21:21] If you are going to try a carnivore diet, be sure to eat the most nutritious and best products. [28:19] All the antioxidant benefits we hear about in the superfoods can be surpassed by fasting. 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