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George Wachsmann (o Jojo) e Patrick O'Grady se reúnem para responder, ao vivo, as principais dúvidas e perguntas que chegaram em nossos canais de atendimento. Participe da Live ou envie suas dúvidas para duvidas@mkt.vitreo.com.br
A convite do estrategista-chefe da Empiricus, Felipe Miranda, Patrick O'Grady, Jojo Wachsmann e o anfitrião fazem um balanço do mercado do último mês e novidades.
Patience, like yeast, beans, and toilet paper, is just one more thing that people are running short of as the lockdown drags on. Patrick O'Grady tapped his supply to get through eight weeks with a broken ankle, but thinks he has a little bit left over to deal with The Bug.
Felipe Miranda, estrategista-chefe da Empiricus, convidou Jojo Wachsmann e Patrick O'Grady para uma conversa em que tiraram dúvidas dos investidores e comentaram sobre o momento de crise no mercado financeiro diante da pandemia do Coronavírus.
Working from home isn't for everyone. But weirdos like Patrick O'Grady wouldn't be remotely employable if they couldn't be employed remotely. Sure, he takes a lot of really loud meetings with the voices in his head. But they never complain to HR, so it's all good.
Patrick O'Grady, CEO da Vitreo, responde às perguntas que mais tem chegado à nossa Central de Atendimento nesse momento de grande stress nos mercados e que causa dúvidas nos investidores.
Os mercados sofreram grave queda nos últimos dias por complicações na epidemia do Coronavírus e uma nova crise no preço do petróleo. Jojo Wachsmann, Patrick O'Grady e Rodrigo "Kiki" Knudsen comentam as mudanças em algumas carteiras da Vitreo, comportamento dos fundos e respondem dúvidas.
Nursing a broken ankle and crazed on antihistamines, Patrick O'Grady tries to make sense of Super Tuesday a day late and a peso short, and as usual, fails utterly. Lo siento mucho.
Patrick O'Grady has a bad habit of rolling ... ankles. He gave up rolling the other stuff ages ago. Which is too bad, really, because if he'd been rolling a blunt last Friday morning he wouldn't have been rolling an ankle during a trail run. And some other poor sap would have gotten this low-tech pair of crutches, and this podcast wouldn't be two days late and more than a dollar short. Just say no, kids.
Jojo Wachsmann e Patrick O'Grady, na esteira dos recentes lançamentos da Vitreo, fizeram uma Live no dia 19 de Fevereiro em que responderam diversas dúvidas dos nossos investidores e possíveis investidores.
You got your AM, and over here, you also got your FM. And over there, you got your fat boys wanting to take it away from you. Longtime listener-member Patrick O'Grady deejays a brief, one-man pledge drive for NPR.
A discussion at maddogmedia.com about distraction-packed land yachts causes Patrick O'Grady to recall (and resurrect) a 2014 Bicycle Retailer and Industry News column about the auto industry's drive to make cars smarter than their drivers.
Riding trails when they're muddy, like encountering an unguided SUV drifting into the bike lane, is gonna leave a mark. Just ask Patrick O'Grady, who will tell you all about it even if you don't ask.
For a cyclist, fixing a flat is part of the price of admission to the game. And a garrulous potato-eater like Patrick O'Grady occasionally finds a tale in the travail. Or a podcast. ...
Patrick O'Grady still keeps a training diary, though he's not training for anything other than being Patrick O'Grady. You'd think he'd have that down by now.
The trouble with being your own IT guy is that you're being your own IT guy when you should be being whatever the hell it is that you really are. Just ask Patrick O'Grady. Then move over.
Nesta edição especial, o Lado a Lado com o Gestor traz uma conversa especial entre Jojô Wachsmann e Patrick O'Grady sobre os novos fundos da Vitreo, o Exponencial FIA IE e o Exponencial Light FIC FIM.Além um breve relato sobre o período em que Patrick fez parte do time da XP Inc.
Patrick O'Grady muses on a few close calls en route to turning 65, including one right before The Big Day.
Patrick O'Grady nearly bought a Honda Element. Twice. The second time he had the book thrown at him. The Kelley Blue Book, that is.
In this special Shut-Ins Edition of Radio Free Dogpatch, a snowbound Patrick O'Grady revisits a February 2004 escape to McDowell Mountain Regional Park in sunny Arizona.
Where's the bike business headed? Anyone seen magnetic north lately? Maybe it's going south like everything else. Patrick O'Grady swaps his GPS for a Magic 8-Ball, but it keeps telling him "Reply hazy, try again."
We're off on another lap around the sun, but we're flying blind — the big yellow ball is nowhere to be seen, though we seem to have plenty of ice and snow for anyone who likes that sort of thing. Our winter weather is a mouse fart compared to the shit monsoon swamping the nation's capital, though, and with the Chinese more interested in exploring the moon than the wowie-zowies of Apple's latest and greatest black monolith, Patrick O'Grady wonders how much longer it'll be before we're all clubbing each other around the water hole again. Ook ook ook. • Show notes: Recorded on a 2012 MacBook Air using an Audio-Technica AT2035 mic, a Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 and Rogue Amoeba's Audio Hijack. Edited on a 2014 MacBook Pro using Apple's GarageBand, with voiceovers run through an Audio-Technica 2100-USB mic and a Behringer Xenyx 1204USB mixer. Doc Strangelove and his backup band, Monkey and the Monolith, courtesy Stan Kubrick, who's dead and won't ever know. Car wheels spinning on the ice from Freesound.org. Blizzard and snow shoveling recorded with a Sony ICD-UX533.
With the 2018 cyclocross nats going on in Louisville and some very un-’crosslike weather going on in Albuquerque, Patrick O'Grady is reminded of one dusty pre-season in 2002 when it seemed that both sides of the street were sunny, and a little too much so. Recorded using a Shure SM-58 mic, a Focusrite Scarlett 2i2, Rogue Amoeba's Audio Hijack and a 2009 iMac. Background music is "Newborn," a jingle lifted from Apple's iMovie, which also supplied the "Medal Ceremony" opener.
Marc Sani's "Through the Grapevine" column about legislation to permit mountain bikes in wilderness, and the Republicans who support it, squeezed the grapes of many a reader of the trade magazine Bicycle Retailer and Industry News. Patrick O'Grady never could resist kicking someone who's down, especially if someone else did the hard work of actually putting them down, so he jumps in with his latest edition of Radio Free Dogpatch. Recorded using an Audio-Technica AT2100-USB microphone and a Zoom H5 Handy Recorder. Edited in Apple's GarageBand on a 2014 MacBook Pro. Background music is "Looking Back Over the Hill" by David-Gwyn Jones, from ZapSplat.com. Other sounds from Freesound.org and Patrick O'Grady | Mad Dog Media.
Patrick O'Grady chats with his old friend and colleague Hal Walter about the running career of Hal's son, Harrison. Patrick's father was a ball-sports kind of guy, and the two never connected on that level. But Harrison has grown up sharing his father's love of running, and he just completed his first season with the high-school cross-country team. This might be unremarkable if Harrison were not autistic. But he is, and it adds what gymnasts, divers and equestrians call "a degree of difficulty" to the basic activity. After some ups and downs during the regular season Harrison failed to qualify as a varsity athlete for the 2018 Colorado cross-country championships. But it turned out that he was eligible to run states in an event for special-needs kids. He wanted to run, but his dad had some concerns, and Hal shares the story with us in this episode of Radio Free Dogpatch. Background music is "The Matador's Entry" from ZapSplat. Audio clip from the Colorado state championship meet supplied by Hal Walter. Interview recorded using FaceTime with a Shure SM58 microphone, Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 USB audio interface, and Ecamm's Call Recorder for FaceTime, which apparently will not survive Apple's transition to Mojave. Edited in Apple's GarageBand.
After reading a New Yorker essay about aging, complacency and a risk-management program gone all pear-shaped, Patrick O'Grady recalls a few painful damage-control miscues of his own, and argues that an overabundance of caution can be as perilous as throwing it to the wind. Recorded with an Audio-Technica ATR2100 USB microphone and a Zoom H5 Handy Recorder. Edited in Apple's GarageBand. Sound effects from Freesound. Blues loop from fredsonic at Freesound. Read the essay by Daniel J. Levitin at The New Yorker.
Patrick O'Grady used to hate running, and some days he still does. But it helps keep his inner fat bastard too winded to scream for seconds from the dessert cart.
In this very first episode of "How The Focaccia" I talk to Patrick O'Grady who has been a long time client of mine and more recently a business mentor.He is a passionate individual who believes that there is good in everyone and has only recently adopted a healthier way of living that will see him live a happy, healthy and long life with his two daughters and wife.Patrick is a brand strategist who currently works between Melbourne and San Francisco and should you be more interested in what he does for a living, you can find his business details below.The purpose of this first show was to finally get my first podcast up as I have been talking about doing this for almost a year now, but more so to give you an idea of what you can expect to hear on this podcast as we move forward over the coming weeks, months and who knows... Even years.It is a sit down between friends that talk about life, family, business and fitness and let the conversation flow to wherever it may go.I hope you enjoy the content and look forward to having you listening in and hearing your comments.Have a great dayYour in Health,The No Breakfast Guy
Patrick O'Grady and his old friend Hal Walter team up for an impromptu Two Dudes Mystery Theatre podcast, discussing a pair of late poets — Jim Harrison and Merle Haggard — as well as journalism, cooking and a couple of pet projects. For more information on the topics discussed, see www.maddogmedia.com.