Podcasts about Pea Ridge

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Best podcasts about Pea Ridge

Latest podcast episodes about Pea Ridge

The B Team Podcast
Ep. 57 - Goodcents: Bentonville's Newest Sub Sensation

The B Team Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2025 40:50 Transcription Available


A culinary revelation has arrived in Bentonville, and the B-Team couldn't wait to sink their teeth into it. Meet Jason, owner of Goodcents Subs, who's brought this Kansas City-born sandwich shop to Northwest Arkansas just five days before joining us in the studio—complete with an impressive spread that left our hosts speechless (and stuffed).The magic starts with the bread—pillowy soft and baked fresh daily in three varieties. The Garlic Pepper bread quickly emerged as a favorite, delivering bold flavor without needing additional toppings. Even our most critical hosts—those with East Coast Italian roots who typically dress their sandwiches with every condiment available—were astounded by how delicious these subs tasted completely unadorned.But Goodcents isn't just another sandwich shop. Their pasta offerings—Buffalo Chicken, Chicken Alfredo, and Meatball—became instant showstoppers at just $7.99 per generous portion. "I was not expecting that," admitted Josh, our resident Italian meatball expert, as he went back for seconds.What truly distinguishes Goodcents from its competitors is its remarkable value. Signature 16-inch subs start at just $13.49, with classic options even more affordable. Their catering options, including boxed lunches and party platters of 4-inch sandwiches, make feeding a crowd both easy and economical.Located at 2508 Walton Boulevard (next to Love's Donuts), Goodcents represents Jason's passion project after previously opening a popular breakfast restaurant in Bentonville. With 14 employees already on staff and plans to expand to Bella Vista, Pea Ridge, and Rogers, this sandwich sensation is just getting started.Ready to try it yourself? Mention the B-Team Podcast when you visit Goodcents Subs for 10% off your order! After tasting everything from their Italian sub to their meatball pasta, we're confident you'll become regulars just like we plan to be.

Dave & Jenn in the Morning
Pea Ridge Apartment Fire 03/19/25

Dave & Jenn in the Morning

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2025 1:35 Transcription Available


Pea Ridge Apartment Fire 03/19/25

The Big Honker Podcast
ON THIS DAY - March 6th

The Big Honker Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2025 8:34


In this series, Jeff and Andy look at historical events that took place on this day.On this day in 1862 a pivotal battle in the Civil War was fought in Arkansas at the Battle of Pea Ridge. This series is brought to you by the great Boss Shot Shells.

Seven Ages Audio Journal
The Caddo Culture of Southern Arkansas | SAAJ 77

Seven Ages Audio Journal

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2024 66:47


In this episode, the team begins with an intriguing discussion concerning a recent discovery by anthropologists from the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the University of Hawai'i, presenting research on a previously unknown—or, rather, uncategorized— introduction to the human species, H. juluensis.  The team is then joined by Southern Arkansas University archaeologist Dr. Carl Drexler to discuss the enigmatic Caddo culture. Dr. Carl G. Drexler (Station Archeologist) received his Ph.D. from the College of William and Mary in Virginia in 2013. He has been working in Arkansas since 2001 on domestic and military sites, including the battlefield of Pea Ridge. He has worked as an archeologist for the National Park Service, Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, and the United States Army. He has field experience in eight states and three foreign countries. Major research interests include conflict archeology, spatial analysis, historical archeology of the U.S. South and Midwest, Cuban archeology, terrestrial and aerial laser scanning (LiDAR), and the history and ethnography of sports in the United States, primarily baseball and hockey. His publications include articles in the SAA Archaeological Record and Arkansas Historical Quarterly, and a book chapter on spatial analysis in conflict archaeology, in addition to a number of reports.  Seven Ages Official Merchandise  Instagram  Facebook  Seven Ages Official Site  Patreon  Seven Ages YouTube  Guest Links  Trowel 'n' Transit Blog   

Pea Ridge Baptist Church with Dan Londeree

Roger Adams, who served as the pastor at Pea Ridge from 1990-99, shares what it means for followers of Jesus to let our light shine in a dark world. We need to adopt some specific practices to help us to do this, and know what problems to watch out for along the way.

Coffee and Cases Podcast
E226: April Andrews

Coffee and Cases Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2024 41:47


Fifteen-year-old April Andrews told her mom that she was going to make a short trip down the road to the church clothing sale. It wasn't too far; it seemed safe to make the walk, especially in their small town of Pea Ridge, Arkansas. But April never made it home, nor had she made it to the sale. What happened to April Andrews?If you are interested in bonus content for our show or in getting some Coffee and Cases swag, please consider joining Patreon. There are various levels to fit your needs, all of which can be found here: https://www.patreon.com/coffeeandcases

featured Wiki of the Day
William Y. Slack

featured Wiki of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2024 2:30


fWotD Episode 2512: William Y. Slack Welcome to featured Wiki of the Day where we read the summary of the featured Wikipedia article every day.The featured article for Thursday, 21 March 2024 is William Y. Slack.William Yarnel Slack (August 1, 1816 – March 21, 1862) was an American lawyer, politician and military officer who fought for the Confederate States of America during the American Civil War. Born in Kentucky, Slack moved to Missouri as a child and later entered the legal profession. After serving in the Missouri General Assembly from 1842 to 1843, he fought as a captain in the United States Army for fourteen months during the Mexican–American War, beginning in 1846. He saw action at the Battle of Embudo Pass and the Siege of Pueblo de Taos. Returning to a legal career, Slack became influential in his local area.After the outbreak of the American Civil War in April 1861, Slack, who held pro-slavery views, supported the Confederate cause. When the Missouri State Guard (MSG) was formed the next month to oppose the Union Army, he was appointed as a brigadier general in the MSG's 4th Division. After participating in the Battle of Carthage in July, he fought in the Battle of Wilson's Creek on August 10. After a surprise Union attack, Slack's deployment of his division gave time for further Confederate States Army and MSG troops to deploy. Suffering a bad hip wound at Wilson's Creek, he was unable to rejoin his command until October.Along with other Missouri State Guard officers, Slack transferred to the Confederate States Army in late 1861 where he commanded a brigade with the rank of colonel. On March 7, 1862, during the Battle of Pea Ridge, Slack suffered another wound that was close to the injury he had received at Wilson's Creek. Infection set in, and he died on March 21. He was posthumously promoted to brigadier general in the Confederate army on April 17; the Confederate States Senate may not have known that he was dead at the time of the promotion.This recording reflects the Wikipedia text as of 00:40 UTC on Thursday, 21 March 2024.For the full current version of the article, see William Y. Slack on Wikipedia.This podcast uses content from Wikipedia under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.Visit our archives at wikioftheday.com and subscribe to stay updated on new episodes.Follow us on Mastodon at @wikioftheday@masto.ai.Also check out Curmudgeon's Corner, a current events podcast.Until next time, I'm Joanna Standard.

The Jason & Scot Show - E-Commerce And Retail News
EP316 - Annual Predictions 2024

The Jason & Scot Show - E-Commerce And Retail News

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2024 59:02


EP316 - Annual Predictions 2024  Jason visited the Walmart Neighborhood Market in Pea Ridge, Arkansas featuring drone delivery. Here is a video for those interested. 2023 Predictions Recap Jason: At least 2 retail bankruptcies (besides Party City) Yes BNPL Consolidation (Klarna, Affirm, Afterpay. Sezzle) – at least one merges/exits US or BNPL. No Shopify launches an ad product such as a retail media network Yes Meta/Google/TikTok lose ad share to new social media platforms and retail media networks. No Live Streaming Commerce Still not meaningful in US in 2023 (less than 5% of social commerce in US) Yes Jason Total Score: 3 of 5 Scot: Amazon uses this 2022 setback/slowdown/reversion to the mean for a public resetting of expectations, but behind the scenes they take share and raise the bar on shipping. Yes Shopify is acquired No An innovation in e-commerce powered by ai (gpt4) surprises us by how fast it's adopted and how cool it is. Yes E-commerce accelerates back to the mean in 2H after a mean regression in 1H. E-com returns 10-15% growth rates. Yes Sephora and/or Ulta move to a subscription model for new product discovery. Yes Scot Total Score: 4 of 5 Trends revert to the mean, and Scot is back on Top! 2024 Predictions Jason: Retail Media Networks go In-store. At least 1 top 20 retailer launches a digital in-store ad network AI is even hotter at end of 2024 than now. Most text boxes in E-Com are GenAI powered. A least one retailer has an AI based auto-replenishment solution with significant adoption. Bifurcation drives at least two more retail bankruptcies, including 1 national specialty retailer, and one general merchandise/dept store. (two top 50 retailers) China companies focus more on West and get more traction. Shein successful IPO. Temu US gets to at least 75% of target US E-Com. Grocery E-Commerce goes from $95B to $125B in 2024 (after being down in 2023 per Bricks meets clicks). Bonus: Live-steaming, MetaVerse, Crypto still not a major thing in e-commerce; Management stops blaming performance on retail crime; and Smaller RMN's fail. Scot: Amazon relaunches Alexa on a native LLM Temu falters as people realize it's wish 2.0 RMN is currently $52b, growing 20% y/y, accelerates in 24 to 30% and $67b (coresight has the 52 datapoint) Instacart who's stock IPO'd at $33 and now is $23, solves ads and pops to 40 While everyone thinks Shein/Temu takes share from Amazon, they end up hurting Nordstrom, Macys and Target instead – materially (10%+) focus on apparel, maybe take target out? Don't forget to like our facebook page, and if you enjoyed this episode please write us a review on itunes. Episode 316 of the Jason & Scot show was recorded on Thursday, January 11th, 2024. http://jasonandscot.com Join your hosts Jason "Retailgeek" Goldberg, Chief Commerce Strategy Officer at Publicis, and Scot Wingo, CEO of GetSpiffy and Co-Founder of ChannelAdvisor as they discuss the latest news and trends in the world of e-commerce and digital shopper marketing. Transcript Jason: [0:23] Welcome to the Jason and Scott show. This is episode 316 being recorded on Thursday, January 11th. I'm your host, Jason Retail Geek Goldberg. And as usual, I'm here with your co-host, Scott Wingo. go. Scot: [0:39] Hey, Jason, and welcome back. Jason and Scott show listeners. Well, folks, this is one of our most popular shows of the year. This is our Jason and Scott annual prediction show. This is where being an audio podcast really works against us. You can't see us, but Jason, I normally wear leisure wear when we record the podcast, but tonight we're wearing tuxedos. Jason, I really like that cummerbund. It looks really good on you. Jason: [1:04] Thanks. Scot: [1:04] I feel like you've really elevated elevated your game this year the the suede tuxedo really suits you thanks thanks and the extra glitter on the bow tie was my daughter's influence smart the the 17 year old touch as you can never have enough glitter that is literally what she says half the time so yeah this is the show where we make we kind of self-score last year's predictions which would have been the predictions we made this time last year early January for 2023 and then we make new ones for this year the 2024 2024 predictions but before we jump into that Jason we're recording this on the Eve of nrf big show and I know that's a huge show for you it's now I think it's expanded it's always a fun weekend show which I've always appreciated that that was sarcasm and then I think they've extended it you know I think it was like what was it Saturday Sunday Monday and now there's like a Tuesday and then there's pre-days and post days so it's like a whole it's like a whole month of nrf big show are Are you teed up and energized and ready to go? Jason: [2:06] Yeah, and I feel like if all those things weren't exciting enough, you know, it's like 113 years old, and it's always over a holiday, Martin Luther King Day, and it always draws a blizzard, like either on the first day or the last day. And so this year, maybe we'll get both. Scot: [2:22] Yeah, yeah, and it's always fun. And it used to be there was nothing down in that part of New York, and now at least they have, what's that thing called? Hudson Yard or whatever. Jason: [2:29] Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, I feel like Manhattan has grown up around Javits a little bit. So you are definitely right. I have clients and partners with offices that are now walking distance from the show. And Hudson Yard is pretty cool. Scot: [2:42] Yeah, very cool. Now, are you speaking and also on behalf of the listeners, what are you going there to learn more about? Jason: [2:51] Yeah, so in the highly unlikely event, there's anyone that listens to this show that doesn't already know what the show is. National Retail Federation's big trade organization represents retail in the United States. It's their big event. 30,000-ish people come to New York City. Tons of exhibitors in a wide variety of fields. The area that's always fun for me is one area of the show is dedicated to innovation. So they give like inexpensive booths to small companies that, you know, aren't ready to invest in a big booth. And many of these are startups or startups from other countries. And, you know, so it's always, there's always a lot of wacky dubious stuff there. But in between that, there's usually some, you know, kind of cool ideas. And it's often the first place you'll see something that a few years down the road becomes, becomes one of the innovative new parts of retail. So I love walking the innovation center. Last year, retail media networks were the big thing at this show, and I'm sure they're going to be a big thing again this year. People were starting to talk about AI last year, but this year, I think it's just going to be off the hook. I think in order to get a booth, you had to say you were an AI company. I'm pretty sure the trash is getting emptied by AI sanitation engineers. [4:09] I feel like it's simultaneously going to be wildly overhyped and super important and transformative to the industry. So that'll be interesting to see how that all plays out. I like to talk about food and grocery a lot and InterF has done a lot to expand their coverage of the food industry. So there's a whole separate portion of the trade show dedicated to grocery retail vendors and a whole content track. So that stuff is all interesting. John Furner, the president of Walmart, will have a keynote. A bunch of other retailers will have keynotes. Magic Johnson is kind of the outside speaker that they're hyping this year, which is, I mean, fine, but I don't go for those paid, not retail speakers that much. And then I am speaking, I am doing a session on one of the featured stages that is entitled, Coming to America, which is all about what Western brands can and should be learning from the Chinese brands that are now successfully doing business in the US. And so most notably, Timu, Shein, and probably a little bit of TikTok. [5:26] Yeah very cool i also saw on linkedin that you had what i would call a close encounter with a. [5:32] Drone experience what tell us more about that i did so i mean scott i'm sure you remember this but it was like i looked it up it was like 2013 that jeff bezos was on 60 minutes and was like oh and we're going to deliver all the packages via drone wasn't it the eve before cyber monday was like that sunday night before yeah cyber money yeah and so he made that announcement and you know that sounded incredibly far-fetched and i don't know if you remember but i had a session that i was doing an internet big show that year and i dressed up a drone with the amazon air logo and landed it on stage at the javits center or i had someone that was better than me landed on stage at the javits center in the middle of my presentation as a joke and i got in huge trouble for that that's wildly illegal that's why they call you retail geek yeah sometimes it's better to ask forgiveness than permission is my philosophy on that one. But back then, it was like this kind of silly science fiction. And since then, we've on this show and in the press and media talked about various kind of edge use cases where drone delivery might actually make sense or be economical. And we've talked a lot about some of these pilots that both Amazon Amazon and Walmart are running. And so I know it's a real thing and you can really do it. And maybe in some use cases, it's even practical at this point. [6:57] This December, last December, so last month, I did my last trip of the year to Walmart, which is in Bentonville, Arkansas, which side note, downtown Bentonville is beautiful for Christmas. They have a super cool light show. So if you've never visited Walmart, that's the time to do it. But there is a small Walmart neighborhood market, which is their grocery store concept, which is in a small community of 5,000 people about about 30 miles away from Bentonville called Pea Ridge. And so I drove out to Pea Ridge to visit the Walmart neighborhood market. And behind the neighborhood market is a drone center. And they are actually delivering packages via drone on an ongoing basis for all the residents of this 5,000 person community. And so standing in a parking lot and having a bunch of these planes, and the Walmart ones are fixed wing aircraft, launch and like zoom over your head and all the signs in the parking lot, you know, say low flying aircraft beware. [8:00] And like seeing all these planes like launch, it was more fun and cool than I expected it to be. And what's particularly cool is this particular model, the way they recover the planes is the planes all have a hook on the tail and they literally have a a retractable zip line that like two robot arms raise up and it puts the zip line across the drone center, which is elevated. And the plane flies into the zip line and gets hung up and it just swings like a swing until it loses momentum. And so, you know, I just sat there for like probably 45 minutes and watched like 10 planes launch and get caught by the zip lines. And I I made a video and put it on LinkedIn. So I edited it down to like a minute, but I know this is not new news to most people on this show that there's drone deliveries, but I'm telling you like when you actually see one in person, it's still kind of cool. Scot: [8:58] Neat. Are they, obviously they're not going to carry like a gallon of milk or something super heavy like that. What's their payload max on this? Jason: [9:06] Yeah, so I am not super well-versed on exactly what, like the one part of the experience I couldn't see, unfortunately, Unfortunately, you'd have to be pretty lucky to be out of residence when a delivery was happening. I think it's like a four-pound payload, and it's dropped via parachute. And I know the way it works is you register in advance to be a drone delivery site, and then you're given a little foldable circle target that you put in your backyard, and the drone drops the packages right on this target. And so, you know, Walmart neighborhood market is… Scot: [9:42] It's a grocery store with like you know dry goods and pharmacy and stuff like that so i i think it's a lot of like bottles of advil and things like that that are likely getting delivered there, very cool so head over to linkedin and look up jason and it's it's the post that starts you know x years ago on 60 minutes and it's in there yeah i'll put a link in the show notes if you if you want to find it quick cool one last topic we wanted to cover before we get into the meat of of the prediction show, Jason and I have been getting a lot of questions from listeners and it concerns a slowdown in our frequency. Well, no one can pull the wool over our listeners' eyes. You guys caught us. We have slowed down our frequency. And that's because starting with the next episode, 317, we're going to rebrand and it's going to be the Jason Bott and Scott Bott show. And nothing's going to really change. We are going to increase the frequency. It's going going to be daily. You guys wanted more shows. So next year, we're not going to do 365. That would be too much, but like 355, something like that. And you probably guessed by the rebranding that it's going to be Jason and I writing the outline of the show. But Jason, being the geek he is, has created a Gen AI version of himself that's been trained on 800 hours of Jason content. and he produces a lot more content than I do. So about 300 hours a month. So congrats, Jason, on this technological breakthrough. Jason: [11:09] Yeah. I'm super excited about that. You've disclosed one of the secrets to our success is that every episode is about a three to one ratio of Jason and Scott. Scot: [11:22] Since you do the audio editing, I try to go easy on you and you're self-inflicting your own pain. Yeah. Jason: [11:27] The truth, and that may be the norm, but the truth is we have two kinds of shows. There are shows where you are much more dominant than I am. And then there's shows where I I contribute more than you. It's kind of funny to see the flip-flop. If you get an interesting entrepreneur or you get a deep dive in a really arcane portion of Amazon's business, you get a lot of Scott. Scot: [11:48] Yeah. Yeah, that's where I thrive in the darkest corners of the interwebs. Yeah. Seriously, though. Jason: [11:55] I was just going to say one side note on that. That LLM we trained, you can now buy on the OpenAI GPT store that went live tonight. Scot: [12:03] Yeah, and you can have your own personalized. We get a lot of requests for personalized shows, so you can just write your own. Jason: [12:09] There you go. Scot: [12:09] Yeah. We'll talk to you in a three-to-one ratio of Jason to Scott. But seriously, though, we do not have an LLM. We wouldn't do that to you, but our frequency has decreased. We looked this up, and our first show was on November 14, 2015, if you believe it or not. So that's over eight years ago we started. This will be our ninth year. And yeah, so that's a lot of content. And when we started, I had just, I was one year into my current company Spiffy, and now we'll be celebrating our 10 years this year at Spiffy. And we had five employees and now we have about 500. Jason worked for Razorfish and he only had two words in his title. And now he works for the biggest or one of the biggest ad agencies with a fancy French name called Publicis. [12:59] And he has 16 words in his title. So there in his world, you measure your success by the size of your title. And he has done awesome. So both of those endeavors have kept us a little bit busier than we were nine to 10 years ago. So that is the root cause of our slowdown. We did the math and we actually did 15 shows last year. So it was like monthly plus a couple extras, plus three, if you will. We used to do around 50 a year. So you're all right. We have reduced the frequency. Apologies for that. this is a passion project for us so our revenue good news our revenue has not gone down which is which is good because we don't make any revenue we just love talking about this stuff and hanging out together and that was the whole genesis of this show and still is true even though we have less time to do it anything you want to add there jason yeah no i i think i mean obviously i feel like we've both gone a tremendous amount out of the show and we we love it and want to want to keep it going we want to make sure when we do shows that that they're interesting and valuable for folks. Jason: [13:57] And so one of the things that I've gotten a lot of feedback on is we, you know, every year we've always done a handful of these deep dives on particular topics. And I feel like the shows we get the most compliments on are when we do these deep dives or when we do really detailed breakdowns on the Amazon earning shows. And so, you know, certainly we'll still keep the Amazon earning shows on the schedule, but like, I'd like to lean into if, you know, if we are going to, you know do sort of one to two shows a month uh lean into some of those like more prep higher production deep dives as well so that is one of my new year's resolutions is to drink a lot more ice coffee and the other one is going to be to make sure we get get some relevant deep dives into the show schedule every year yeah there's got to be on the topic of ice coffee there has to be some limit to what the human body can endure there so it's going to be interesting too you're kind of a tim Tim Ferriss body experiment mode with the level of coffee you're reaching. Scot: [14:58] So I look forward to seeing how this goes. Jason: [15:00] Hack myself. Scot: [15:03] Okay. With that housekeeping out of the way, let's jump into the meat and potatoes of the show. As mentioned, this is our annual prediction show. Way back in episode 301, recorded on January 20th, 2023, we made five predictions each about what would happen in the upcoming year, which was 2023. 23. Let's go through and review our performance because jason is first in our title he always gets to go first decision i greatly regret from eight years ago just kidding my memory from eight years ago is you did name the show yeah scott and jason just doesn't it doesn't sound right obviously so here we are so jason go ahead i'll read your prediction and then you self-score All right, Jason, prediction number one, insert drum roll sound effect. You predicted, prediction number one, at least two retail bankruptcies besides Party City would occur. How'd you do on that one, Jason? Jason: [16:03] Yeah, well, Mr. Debbie Downer was right. The Party City reference was because Party City had already declared bankruptcy by mid-January of that year. But unfortunately, there were a number of other bankruptcies last year. So the marquee one was probably Bed Bath & Beyond, although they have a new life as the brand for Overstock. Talk david's bridal right aid but the one that i'm personally maybe the most sad about and i know you were a customer if not a fan was boxy yeah yeah very sad yeah so i'm giving myself credit for that that first one although i feel like a bad person for making negative predictions, it's kind of part of your personality i used to be the malageddon guy and now you flipped lived through the bankruptcy guy. Scot: [16:49] So I appreciate you carrying the banner on that one. Jason: [16:52] I'm here for you, man. Scot: [16:53] Okay. So that's so far one out of five is what we're scoring you. So one right, zero wrong. And number two, buy now, pay later consolidation. Klarna, Affirm, Afterpay, excuse me, Afterbuy is another one, et cetera. At least one of these will emerge or exit the US or BNPL altogether. Jason: [17:15] Yeah, and I failed. Those companies, for the most part, continued to gain traction. I want to say Sezzle had some valuation problems, although it started to recover in Q4 this year, but they're all viable, independent entities still going. So that is a miss. Scot: [17:34] Okay, cool. So we're now tied one and one, one right, one wrong out of the first two. So batting 50, which is pretty good for a batting average. Above my my career average i'm pretty sure yeah yeah we we i have i will self-admit we've done a terrible job of track tracking this over the years because you know it's really fun and it's just trying to it's good exercise and i recommend you do it too listeners because it makes you think, in a little bit longer term way and when you make a prediction and you don't have to put yours out there but when you put it out there it makes you think a little bit a little bit deeper about it Your third prediction, prediction number three, was in 2023, Shopify will launch an ad product such as a retail media network. You were banging the RMN drum back then. Jason: [18:22] Oh, for sure. So this is a complicated one. I feel like I kind of got it right, but full disclosure, not in the way I expected. So when I wrote that, I really thought, gosh, Shopify's got, you know, all these independent stores that are probably too small to have retail media networks. That, you know, one of the interesting products Shopify could launch is a sort of a confederate network where, you know, all these individual sellers opt into a shared advertising product that Shopify could administer and help all these sites to monetize their traffic. And that did not happen. But what I wrote was launch an ad product such as a retail media network. And last year, Shopify did launch, they already had a product called Shopify Audiences, which is buy data on anonymous data on people that use ShopPay to help target ads. And last year, they added automated integrations with Snap, Criteo, which Criteo is a multi-platform advertising platform, and TikTok. So as a Shopify seller, you could now say, hey, I want to go buy an ad using Shopify customer data to define your market it and have it automatically placed on all these different digital media platforms. So I don't know. I feel like I kind of lucked into it because it didn't happen the way I thought, but it kind of did happen. Yeah. Scot: [19:49] Okay. We will give you, so at this point we're on number three and you've got two right, one wrong. Heading into the fourth prediction. And this one was in 2023, Meta, Google, TikTok are going to lose ad share to new social media platforms and retail media networks. How did you do on that one? Jason: [20:10] The real answer is I don't know. So I expected it to be much more prominent. And the tail of the tape is kind of mixed. Using eMarketer data, Google lost share across all their properties. So they went from 28% to 26%. Meta was kind of flat at 20%. They They lost share in Facebook but gained a little share in Instagram. And then TikTok actually grew a little share, so from 2% to 2.4%. And then the retail media networks obviously did gain share, but they're smaller. So Amazon went from like 11% to 13%. Walmart went from like less than 1% to 1.2%. So it kind of happened, but it happened. Scot: [20:56] To a tenth of a percent instead of what i i sort of felt would happen which was multiple percentages so i'm gonna not give myself credit for that one okay that's very generous of you, we uh this is the trick of writing these in hindsight you're always you wish you'd put like a clear number there so you'd be easier to score 100 100 they're kind of being squishy all right so here on number four you're at you're back to 50 50 so two right and two wrong and then one One quick clarification was this share of digital ads, like not all ads, right? Like not TV and stuff in the DOM denominator. All right. Number five prediction for Jason Retail Geek. For 2023, live streaming commerce, still not meaningful in the US. It will be less than 5% of social commerce in the United States of America. How'd you do on that one? Jason: [21:50] Also, the real answer is don't know because it turns out there's no good data source for truly measuring live streaming commerce. The estimates, which are based on these kind of thousand person surveys, are that all video commerce in the US is like 32 billion to 50 billion. And so how much of that like really happened live? Even if all of that was live, it's still not 5% of total e-commerce, but like what what percentage of e-commerce is social commerce. I just, I ended up feeling like I wrote a bad, squishy forecast, but there is part of me that wants to say, hey, the spirit of this was people aren't gonna be shopping for products live on video and it's not gonna be very meaningful. And I think that that is absolutely the case, that it's not meaningful. Scot: [22:39] Yeah, one thing that's interesting about, kind of like thinking back on 2023 with streaming, There's a couple of things I'm kind of just pontificating here. I don't I don't have an I'm not scoring you. Yeah, I kind of want to use this opportunity to pick your brain. So, you know, we have TikTok shops. I'm going to guess you don't think that's live streaming, right? Because it's like a recorded video and you're selling an ad next to it. Is that exactly? Jason: [23:04] And when you say I don't think it's live streaming, it's because it's it's not. Scot: [23:07] It's not. You're not putting it in your definition of live streaming. Yeah. Jason: [23:11] And that's something different to you. Scot: [23:13] But it's like a static streaming revenue or something. I don't know. Jason: [23:17] Yeah, I think there is video commerce, right? And even video commerce is not a very big thing. But most of TikTok shops and YouTube native checkout and these other experiences are what we would call video commerce. And there are now a couple vendors that have decent size revenue helping enable video commerce. So I think of someone like a fireworks, for example, that, that adds, adds video commerce to a lot of e-commerce sites and ad platforms. Scot: [23:45] And then how about, so there was a really interesting experiment and I don't think we talked about it because we were deep into the holiday data stream, but you know, Amazon had Thursday night prime video football. And then on Thanksgiving, the Friday after Thanksgiving, they bumped the game and did it on Friday. And part of that was if you watched the thing that's fascinating about the Amazon live stream is there's like three or four sub streams in there. And one of them had basically QR codes and you could buy right from the ad. Yeah. Is that live streaming or it was like an ad next to a football live stream in your view? Yeah. Jason: [24:23] So I do think that would meet the definition of live streaming because most people watch that game live. live, and they didn't disclose any data on how those were done. I could tell you in talking to several people that bought those ads, there was not meaningful engagement with the QR codes. [24:43] And so, yeah, you know, I think there's still lots of experiments. I think there's use cases where native checkout in video makes a lot of sense. There's even a few use cases where live video make sense, but they're edge cases. They're not, it's not the main thing. And again, there's a big difference between China and the US. There is a ton of content that is streamed only live and allows you to buy stuff in China, but it's mostly deals stuff. It's kind of like the next generation of guilt.com, if you will. And it's mostly like very scarce items. So it's farmers in tier three cities in China selling their produce for the week. And when they're out, they're out. And so they don't store the video and have people watch it later in order because they sell all their apples during the live stream. And that's a meaningful way people sell stuff in China. It's just it's just not I mean like the vast majority of video can be time shifted in the US and then it's not live streaming and you know we still for the most part don't have people buying a lot of stuff even you know through through video that's not live so I feel like because of the success in China it gets a little overhyped in the US and I feel like it hasn't lived up to the hype a. [26:02] Year ago though I would argue there are a bunch of vendors telling us that this is the next thing and we're all going to be out of business if we don't jump on the bandwagon and i can assure you if you did not jump on that bandwagon you you potentially are still in business. [26:14] Got it i know how amazon's going to solve this so hear me out this is this is an unofficial prediction and i know andy jassy listens to this show so andy here's how to solve this i'm going to share my entrepreneurial insights number one you have to keep travis and taylor together number Number two, you've got to get the Kansas City game next Friday after 2024 is Thanksgiving. Scot: [26:36] And then you have to sell exclusive Taylor merchandise on that game. So that's how you're going to get the engagement you want. You got to tap into the Swifties. Jason: [26:45] Yeah, I feel like the Swifty economy is a way to solve any business problem. I'll totally agree with that. I will throw out Amazon, you know, did lean into live streaming and they had a product called Talk Shop Live. And you know by all accounts it wasn't very successful the people they they bribed influencers with extra bonuses to produce content and as soon as they stopped offering those bonuses all those influencers moved off the platform and now it there's a a version of it that still exists but once again it's not live yeah yeah uh okay so what does that give me three out of three uh Uh, three out of five. Scot: [27:25] Yeah. So you, so three, correct. Two wrong. So that's good. You have a winning average. That's very similar to my college career. Jason: [27:32] Yeah. Scot: [27:32] There you go. Yeah. Gentleman's a D minus. Yeah. Jason: [27:40] So now let's get to Mr. Sparty Pants, who I suspect and fear did much better than me. So Scott, you'll remember your first prediction. It'll come as a shock to no one involves Amazon, right? Amazon uses this 2022 setback slash slowdown slash reversion to the mean for a public resetting of expectations. But behind the scenes, they take share and raise the bar on shipping. Scot: [28:09] Yeah. I, um, the shipping part was surprisingly clairvoyant there because, you know, what they did in 2023 is one of the things Jassy dug into this and they did these, what do they call it? Nodes regional. Yeah. These regional nodes. And they, they started zoning out at a tight level. They were moving too much product too far unnecessarily. And they, they really tightened that up and it allowed them to cut costs pretty dramatically on shipping and get a lot of leverage that that everyone was surprised about but also and this is nice they similarly you know have really cranked up to delivery speed and delighted customers so so you know very rarely in a business do you find something that that both saves money and delight usually you're having to make a choice you're like well i could save money but customers are going to hate this this was what very aligned with their, you know, their corporate goals of being like wildly efficient and automated, but at the same time, getting products to customers faster. So I think they had a pretty good year. So they've, you know, everyone was in the doldrums about Amazon. Everyone was like, oh, this Jassy guy is really messing things up. And I think he went kind of back to basics and said, let's squeeze some nickels and dimes out of this shipping thing and get it a little faster. And the customers have reacted to it. So I would score that one correct. Jason: [29:32] Yeah, 100%. I feel like Tim cooked it, and it was a good call on your part. Scot: [29:36] Yeah, absolutely. Jason: [29:38] So your second prediction, and I'd like to harp on this one a while if possible, is that Shopify would get acquired. Remind me, did that happen? Scot: [29:49] It did not, but you have to put this in context. Shopify dropped, what was it, like from $60 billion to $10 billion? They had a precipitous fall, and they had a lot of missteps. So they, you know, when this happened, you and I, I think jointly predicted that them getting into fulfillment was not only a bad idea, but a terrible idea. So this is the year they had to unwind all that, which I thought it would be. [30:18] I didn't think they would do that, but kudos to them. You know, so I 100% give them this is very hard to make a mistake and fix it out in the public world. It is a very humbling thing, but they sure did. So they got rid of the shipping part. They turned that into a little bit of lemonade where they ended up having a good partnership with a company that acquired Flexport, I believe it is. And then they have made a series of moves that have rebounded not all the way back to where they were, but they have done very well and they are not going to be acquired or they're not in any kind of existential problems. I do still think there's a world where meta, I think the natural require for them is meta. And at some point, those companies kind of have to go together. I also, if I recall my thesis on this, it was around the first party, the third party data going away. And I felt like they'd have to go on to a first party network. I still think that's true. I think they can survive independently. independently but i think to unlock a lot of value they need to be married into a first party entity more tightly so yeah yeah and of course the stock has rebounded a bit so it's it's it's a bigger swing now yeah i don't you know i you will spoil alert i did not repeat this. [31:42] This prediction i was gonna say you technically only missed that prediction by one word had you had you written shopify with fulfillment is acquired you you kind of would have been right, yeah long time listeners will know i have a long history of repeating predictions and then it never works out for me so i've learned my lesson the hard way my my big one was like for what have we we've been doing this for like eight times i guess or maybe this is the ninth and you know literally for like five years i predicted amazon would compete with them with fedex and i gave up and then like two years later they announced they're gonna compete as soon as you stop repeating it that's when you know it's gonna happen yeah so maybe i am predicting shopping there you go Oh, head explode emoji. Jason: [32:21] Yeah. So one out of two. So then let's move on to number three. And innovation in e-commerce powered by AI, such as GPT-4, surprises us by how fast it's adopted and how cool it is. Scot: [32:36] Yeah, I would say there's no one innovation that you can kind of say, wow, everyone added X to their site and it was amazing. But I would say it's pretty amazing how many retailers are using and getting a lot of value out of AGI. So, you know, the one you read a lot about is the helping of writing product description pages and tightening those up. A lot of people are using it for customer service and really improving that. A lot of people are using it for, you know, one of the things that's a total pain in the e-commerce world is many times you want to take a product image and it's, you know, it's in a scene and you want to isolate it. And then you want to spin it around and do a video and inject that thing in another templated video. you know, that was always very hard. And you would send these images to, you know, a, you know, another country where someone would, you know, for $5 an hour, sit there and meticulously isolate the item out of the background and pixel by pixel do that. Now they have, you know, pretty awesome AI systems for doing all those things. And, you know, retailers are using those pretty heavily. So I would say. [33:48] It's a little hard to score this one. I'll defer to you. I feel like I've been surprised by how much of it was useful. I think a lot of people were kind of saying this is going to be another blockchain, another live stream, another social chat commerce kind of a thing. AI is going to be a flash in the pan. And I would say, you know, companies are really using this. It's real. It's impacting the customer experience and improving retailers margins because they can be wildly more efficient. Jason: [34:15] Yeah, no. So I'm for sure giving it to you. I feel like part of the art here is you have to go back in time to last January and put yourself in the context that this was made. And I think there's a lot of things that are being routinely done today and are pretty darn cool that we would not have believed happened last January. And I think all that text on product detail page is one. The images is for sure one. there used to be whole sections of these trade shows dedicated to companies that were doing image manipulation and image masking and all that stuff. And they're all gone because the AI is so good. And I would also say they're now like it's starting to be pretty meaningful in search. Like Instacart has had generative AI search engine for a while. Walmart just launched generative AI in their search engine. So, you know, there is a lot of flavors of AI that are overhyped and it, But, you know, it is like, I mean, there are a lot of AI snow jobs out there, but also there's a lot of legitimate stuff. And so I think I definitely have to give you that one. So I think you're two out of three at the moment. Scot: [35:22] Awesome. Jason: [35:23] And so then we move on to number four. E-commerce accelerates back to the mean in the second half after a mean regression in the first half. E-commerce returns to 10 to 15 percent growth rate. Scot: [35:36] Yeah, I will. The bulk of my e-commerce data comes from Amazon. And I would say Amazon kind of checked this box. But you, the ultimate consumer and gesture and recool charter of all the data, do you agree that I got this one? Jason: [35:53] I do, especially because you were prescient enough to list the growth rate as a range from 10 to 15. So I'd say there was this weird regression where there was even a stage where retail was growing faster than e-commerce. And for sure, by the second half of last year, we were back to sort of normal trends with retail growing at 3% to 4%. And kind of pre-pandemic, e-commerce might have been growing at like 14% or 15%. And it returned to sort of 10% growth. So I think you definitely hit the spirit of this that we're kind of back to normal. And I think you also hit the technical letter of your prediction because I think we surpassed 10% growth for e-commerce. Scot: [36:40] Cool. So that puts us at three right now. Jason: [36:44] Three for four, which basically means you have to miss this last one for us to tie. Um, and I, I think I'm in trouble because your last one was Sephora and or Ulta moved to a subscription model for new product discovery. Scot: [37:02] Yeah, I, you know, I have to tip my hat to my daughter who previously mentioned is now 17 and was 16. Thanks to her. I spend an inordinate amount of time and money in both Sephora and Ulta. So this one was inspired by her. And yeah, I do have to admit before the show, I didn't know how I did on this one, but I was looking and I see Sephora has this thing called play exclamation mark. And it's the beauty inside community community announcing our new monthly beauty subscription box. Play on players. I don't know if you subscribe to that, Jason, but it sounds like your kind of thing. Jason: [37:39] You said oh yeah i was i was a pilot user you can't get this kind of camera ready look for the podcast without being totally totally plugged into all those products yeah no i think i think you definitely get this one if i was smarter i should have objected at the time because there's a debatable way in which this was already happening back then but they had subscribe and save but that doesn't count that's like auto that's like yeah with some sampling and stuff So, but I think it's much more customer facing and prominent now. So I, I'm giving it to you. So I'm giving you four out of five, which any year would be good performance. And in this particular year, it's both good performance and enough to declare you the winner. Ding, ding, ding, ding, ding. We have a winner. And I will be sending the Claret Jug to your home to live for the next year. Scot: [38:30] Awesome. Thanks. Thanks everybody. Jason: [38:31] Everybody I would like to I am a little salty to the folks at Shopify Toby if you're listening if you had only said yes to whatever acquisition came your way I would have been 100 so thanks dude thanks for everything so now for the three listeners that have hung out for our 15 minute of pre-ramble and our and our 20 minutes of scoring you finally get to the meat what the heck is going to happen in the world of e-commerce in the next year Nostradamus Thomas? Scot: [39:00] Yeah, let's continue. I just went, so why don't you give us the Jason Retail Geek Goldberg 2024 predictions for retail. Go. Jason: [39:12] Yeah. So last year, retail media networks were super hot. I think this year is going to be the year that the big retail media networks really start focusing on their in-store audiences. So I'm calling it Retail Media Networks Go In-Store, and I'm predicting that at least one top 20 retailer will launch a digital in-store ad network. So some kind of screens or interactive displays in a store that you can buy ads on through the retail media network. Scot: [39:41] So I'm in Sephora or whatever retailer. There's a cool screen telling me about this exciting new Kardashian lip color. And I go and interact with it and suddenly an ad comes up for something else. Jason: [39:53] Exactly. Scot: [39:55] Okay. Jason: [39:56] Switching you to the Taylor Swift cosmetics from the Kim Kardashian ones. Scot: [39:59] Whoa. Swifties make another appearance in the predictions. All right. Jason: [40:03] Exactly. My second one, I know what the spirit is. I struggled to make it specific enough that we can measure it, but I tried. So we've been talking a lot about AI. You had an AI prediction last year. [40:16] I think while a lot of these trends kind of get really buzzy and then die down, I think AI is the real deal. I think despite all the hype, AI is going to be even hotter in in December of 2024 than it is right now. And so the way I'm gonna try to quantify that is, I think by December of 2024, it will be more common than not that if there's a text box in an e-commerce experience, it's gonna be powered by generative AI. So we're gonna start typing sentences into all of these search engines instead of keywords. I think it is gonna take consumers a little while to learn to do that after it's possible, but I think that'll be really common. And then I think at least one retailer is going to have an AI-based auto replenishment solution that has significant adoption. And I need to clarify that because one retailer, Walmart, announced it at CES yesterday. So I don't think it exists yet, but they've announced that they're going to do it. And my prediction is not that they're going to try it. My prediction is that it will work or someone else will do one that works. and it's very different than like a subscription-based thing where you automatically get a fixed amount of something. This is going to be, you know, handing the keys to the computer and letting the computer decide how much peanut butter you're going through and making sure that I send you new peanut butter whenever you need it. Scot: [41:38] Hmm. Cool. Jason: [41:40] So that's number two. Number three, I really think this is going to be a bifurcated year in terms of retail prospects. I think we're going to have a handful of retailers that are really going to do well, that are poised for some growth rebounds from the last couple of years. Yeah, I kind of think Amazon and Walmart are both going to be in that bucket. I think we're going to disagree about this, but I think some of the Chinese companies like Timu and Shein might might be in that bucket. And I think there's going to be some other traditional retailers that really struggle. And so you're either going to do well or do poorly. I don't think there's going to be very many retailers kind of treading water in the middle of the road. And as a result, I think we're going to have a couple more significant bankruptcies in 2024. So the Grim Reaper is at it again. I'm once again predicting that at least two well-known retailers will close their doors and this year i'll be slightly more specific at least one of them is going to be a specialty retailer so in a category and another is going to be a general merchant or department store so i hope to be wrong on that one but it is what it is that's prediction number three how about a little size this can be like a two unit kind of a thing or no no no these uh yeah like these have to be a little more two two top 50 retailers like oh okay oh let's write Write that in because I won't remember that next time. Okay. [43:02] I will add it and then delete it in about six months when you've forgotten. No, I'll remember. Yeah. So number four, and this is where I think it's going to start getting fun. [43:12] I actually think that we're going to see more Chinese companies focusing on Western consumers. So I actually think that for a variety of reasons, the Chinese economy is not as hot as it once was. And I think it's going to take a little while to recover. So I think there's going to be more entrepreneurs in China trying to export their solutions to other parts of the world. And, you know, Timu and Xi'an are certainly the two most noted examples of companies that don't sell in China, but do sell in the U.S. I think Xi'an is going to successfully execute a Western IPO next year. And I think Timu is going to continue to grow. And very specifically, I think by 20, by the end of 2024, Timu is going to have at least 75% of the e-commerce revenue that we see from a very well-established U S retailer like target for e-commerce. Scot: [44:06] Okay. Now, are you implying it comes out of targets hide or that just like that? Jason: [44:10] I do think it's partially is going to come out of targets hide, but I'm not specifically saying that I feel like target could come down a little bit and that would help me make this. but I actually think e-commerce will not be the sore spot at Target next year. Scot: [44:25] Got it. Jason: [44:27] So that's number four. I'm bullish on the Chinese companies coming to America. And my fifth one is going to go to grocery e-commerce. So, you know, grocery e-commerce grew a lot during the pandemic, but fun fact, grocery e-commerce actually shrunk a little bit in 2023 relative to the big growth they had in 2022, like partly because groceries got more expensive, people, it was safer to go back to grocery stores. And so people kind of regressed a little bit in their e-commerce shopping. So the best source we have for e-commerce data for grocery is BricksMeetClicks, which is a big, it's a survey, but it's a big survey. So the BricksMeetClicks folks said that grocery e-commerce shrunk by about 2%. And I'm saying they're going to grow by like 25% in 2024. So very meaningful acceleration and growth. Scot: [45:18] Cool. Jason: [45:20] So those are my five. Some years we did bonuses. is. I'm just going to throw out some other things that I guarantee are going to happen, but I don't want to bother making them predictions because they're too hard to measure. But as I did this year, again, I'm going to say live streaming is not a major thing next year either. And I'll throw the metaverse and crypto in there as well. If you're an innovative startup that's going to solve retail with live streaming the metaverse and crypto, please don't send me an email. Scot: [45:46] But it's on blockchain. Jason: [45:48] Yeah, exactly. If you're doing anything on blockchain, the first thing i need to know is why i can't just do it with a database and why i need a distributed ledger so if you can't answer that question don't call me um because blockchain yeah, i i think another one that really annoys me i couldn't figure out how to measure this so i didn't make it a forecast but i think you're going to hear a lot less retail ceos blaming their poor performance on retail crime next year if you don't know or haven't been following it That's mostly a scam. Shrink in retail is down. There is this new kind of crime called organized retail crime, which is awful, and people get hurt, and people should stop doing it. But it's not economically meaningful, and it's not the reason that any of these retailers miss their guidance. And I think we're going to see. [46:34] And CEOs stop leaning on it as much because it's becoming obvious that it's a false excuse. And lastly, I was bullish on some of the big retail media networks in my predictions. I said one would go in-store. But a corollary to that, there's a lot of really small retailers that are seeing the success of the big retailers and trying to launch retail media networks. And yeah, that's not going to work. So if you're, you know, a relatively unsuccessful e-commerce, a specialty retailer with small e-commerce or you're a regional retailer, you're just not going to have enough traffic and a big enough audience to make it work. So I think, you know, I'm starting to see some retailers that are probably on the wrong side of the scale equation, trying retail media networks and I'm mostly not optimistic for them. So, so you heard it here first. Scot: [47:24] So the world where they patch together in like a little alliance and like a a Battlestar Galactica kind of thing and get some heft. Jason: [47:32] There is. There absolutely is. And the most notable place that's happening is in Europe. And kind of interestingly, the biggest retailer in Europe, Carrefour, like sort of embrace that. Like Carrefour is the Battlestar Galactica in this, this like, you know, convoy of ragtag, this fleet of ragtag ships. And so, so you're exactly right. And I heard the giant French advertising company that is helping them do it is decent too. Scot: [47:59] Yeah. Soccer blue. One clarification on your grocery e-commerce thing. You know, that's a big number, right? That's like 30% off a big base, 25%. Are you counting like curb pickup on that? Jason: [48:15] Yeah. So I'm specifically using the Bricksmeet Clicks metric, which does include three categories of grocery. It's curbside pickup, which is over 50% of grocery in most U.S. cities. It's home delivery of groceries. And it is actually shipping of some grocery items, but that's a relatively small one. Yeah. Scot: [48:37] So Instacart would be kind of captured in there as well. Jason: [48:39] They would. Yeah. Yeah. Side note, I actually, I think I'm not as bullish on Instacart as I think you're going to be, but they will certainly be part of it that helps me make this prediction. Scot: [48:51] Cool. And we should have said this before we got into the predictions, but what we do is we do these independently and then we splat them into our shared show notes that we have here that Jason and I use. Jason: [48:59] Yeah. So it would have been possible for us to have the same predictions, but we did not. Scot: [49:03] We never see each other's beforehand. So that's a part of the fun. So there's no, no, no planning or, or, you know, kind of swapping and prediction. Jason: [49:12] No cross-contamination. Scot: [49:14] But because we're, we don't have any revenue, we don't have Pricewaterhouse verifying that. You're just going to have to trust us. Okay. Jason: [49:23] What do you have, Scott? Scot: [49:24] Well, I want to point out that I see you snuck in three bonuses. So you took, so yet again, you're hogging the stage, but that's okay. You're first in the, in the title there. Jason: [49:34] And I have many more words in my title in case you didn't notice. Scot: [49:38] Being a rule follower, I have five predictions, not eight. And my first one is Amazon's going to relaunch Alexa on a native LLM. So, yeah, Alexa and the whole Siri and what's the Xbox one, Katana, you know, Cortana, they they once you interact with the chat GPT voice, which is a little slow, but it's a little slower than those. But the responses are so much better. You really want to just throw your Alexa in the garbage can. So, you know, this is tricky because Amazon doesn't have an LLM. The things they've done on AWS are kind of like geared towards being neutral, and I think they're not going to stay neutral. So they have to be neutral, and then they have to rewrite Alexa on that. Maybe it's tricky because what do you do? Do you call it like new Alexa, or do you change their name, or you've got some brand equity built there? So it's going to be interesting to see how they navigate that. that. [50:40] And then number two is I don't understand how Timu isn't just wish dot 2.0. So in the early days of wish, everyone got all excited and they're like, oh my God, this is amazing. I can buy all this cheap stuff and it comes and it's amazing. And it's like a dollar drone and it's awesome. And then it showed up six months later and then it broke in five minutes. So I think there's a lot of buzz around these things. I think a lot of this stuff gets supported by China and free shipping and these kinds of things that the Chinese government does to help give their Chinese-born companies an edge. And none of that is infinite, right? So we saw that with Alibaba and Alipay. That whole thing kind of has had a whole situation in China where it got too big and they didn't like the success there. And Jack Ma, and Lord knows what's happened to him. I think these, I think Timu is kind of, there's gonna be some kind of an episode like that. And this was my, I kind of use the word falters. So that kind of thing. I don't think they're gonna do an IPO. That would really shock me. Jason: [51:48] Yeah, I think we're going to, I mean. Scot: [51:50] Yeah. So we're misaligned on that one, which makes it fun. Yeah, either could happen. Jason: [51:53] There are smart people that think on both sides of that one, but that's a fun one. We'll agree to disagree. Scot: [51:58] But both can't happen. So this is a zero-sum game one for sure. Jason: [52:01] Exactly. Scot: [52:02] And then, you know, this one I guess we're aligned on, but I kind of got more specific because you always do super generic ones that make it easier to get them. [52:13] Retail media networks are currently and i found a there's a research firm called core site so like you i wanted to kind of pick a measurement stick here and they say the whole world that that whole thing in 2023 did 52 billion and it's growing 20 so that's their data and i said my prediction thus is it's going to accelerate this year to 30 growth and that brings it to to about 67 billion. So, you know, clever listeners that listen to our Amazon recaps, you'll know, you'll notice that, well, okay, if that's at 52 billion, Amazon ads are at like, what are they? Like 49, 45 billion? So, but that's a run rate. So for that Amazon number, you take the quarter, and the last one we talked about was Q3, Q4 will be coming out soon. So we took the Q3 number, multiply it by four, and that's how you get the 45-ish. So, so really doing 15 a quarter, but the prior quarter was like, like 10 ish. And the prior quarter that was like eight ish. So, so Amazon didn't do 45 in a year. They probably did more like 35 to 30 in the year. But the trajectory is such that when you do the run rate, it comes out to be a big number. So, so they are a large part of that 52 billion, but they're not like 90% of it. They're, you know, 65% of it or so. So there's that one. Jason: [53:34] Okay. Scot: [53:35] Number four, and this one we're kind of aligned on, surprisingly, even though the specifics you disagree with. Here, I've been

The Bentonville Beacon
2023 NWA Tech Summit Live Part 4: Ranu Jung, Justin Urso, Randy Wilburn, Jack Short and Katie Thompson

The Bentonville Beacon

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2023 55:15


SummaryJoin host James Bell in the final episode of a special four-part series of The Bentonville Beacon podcast, featuring live-recorded conversations at the 2023 Northwest Arkansas Technology Summit with the thinkers and doers shaping the future of global tech in Bentonville. The NWA Tech Summit is the Heartland's premier technology conference and serves to enhance, prepare and diversify the Northwest Arkansas economy. Now in its tenth year, the event is hosted by the Greater Bentonville Area Chamber of Commerce and is supported by nearly 100 partners, including the Walton Family Foundation, Walmart, Sam's Club, Verizon, Salesforce, T-Mobile for Business, Zebra, Scott Family Amazeum and Arvest. These episodes bring together voices from the event to share their company's stories, personal insights and unique #BecauseBentonville moments that define the community's character. Tune in as we explore the innovations and experiences that are fostering a culture where technology meets the essence of Bentonville and Northwest Arkansas!Show Notes(1:12) Introducing Ranu Jung and I³R(7:12) Ranu's Ernst & Young Innovator of the Year Award(8:48) Ranu's #BecauseBentonville Story( 11:49) Introducing Justin Urso and the Walton College Master of Science in Product Innovation(13:28) About the McMillon Innovation Studio(16:59) Justin's Northwest Arkansas Technology Summit Experiences(18:17) Justin's #BecauseBentonville Story(21:10) Introducing Randy Wilburn(24:15) Randy's Northwest Arkansas Tech Summit Experience(26:18) Randy's #BecauseBentonville Story(31:29) Introducing to Jack Short and the Greater Bentonville Area Chamber of Commerce(34:56) Jack's NWA Technology Summit Experience(35:38) Jack's #BecauseBentonville Story(38:53) Introducing Katie Thompson and Science Venture Studio at Winrock International(47:11) Katie's NWA Tech Summit Experience(50:01) Katie's #BecauseBentonville Story(53:59) Closing ThoughtsLinksJames BellBentonville Economic Development Northwest Arkansas Technology SummitRanu JungInstitute for Integrative & Innovative Research (I³R) at University of ArkansasUniversity of ArkansasJustin UrsoMcMillon Innovation Studio at University of ArkansasMaster of Science in Product Innovation (MSPI) at University of ArkansasBig Box KaraokeConcord AdamsRandy WilburnONBoardNWAI am Northwest ArkansasJack ShortGreater Bentonville Area Chamber of CommerceKatie ThompsonScience Venture Studio at Winrock InternationalQuotes“You walk into this place, Northwest Arkansas, and what do you see on The Momentary shouting out in pink? You belong here. This place has a unique situation. Think of it like a baby and a toddler growing up, and excitement of people coming together and all sectors, right? There is the private industry. There's the philanthropic organizations. There is an entrepreneurial spirit. What did I hear, thirty-six people a day coming into this place. Only in [Bentonville and NWA] can you think about a future where people say, ‘Are you crazy that you're going to be able to deploy solutions?' It's like, no, we are not because we are together. We have the ability in this place, unlike many other places, to not only think of solutions, not only produce solutions, not only deliver them, but actually deploy them and be able to move them at scale. So converge and together find the solutions and then distribute an impact at scale and really globally ultimately.” - Ranu Jung, (8:52)“[The Northwest Arkansas Technology Summit] has been incredible. The biggest thing about all of this is just seeing the growth in the community, the industry, and the tech leaders' companies that are not from this area coming here to be part of this.” - Justin Urso, (17:00)“I think only in Bentonville can you go to a building and ride into that building on your bike, ride around that building and experience what it's like for a cyclist to be able to commute to work and commute to a building that's actually built for them. And that's the beauty…I have a space at the Ledger. I can ride my bike to work and park it almost basically at my office, and it is perfectly suited and set up for the environment that we're trying to create in Northwest Arkansas of more people on bikes using alternative transportation and providing them with the necessary resources so that they can really take advantage of that.” - Randy Wilburn, (26:19)“I would tell them that what they're experiencing in Northwest Arkansas is the future of what the United States is going to be like. Because I do believe we're setting a new standard for what things can be like from a diversity perspective, from an employment perspective, from a jobs creation perspective and from an education perspective.” - Randy Wilburn, (30:16)“The Greater Bentonville Area specifically is Bentonville, Centerton, Pea Ridge and Bella Vista, and that is our framework of who we encompass as the Greater Bentonville Area Chamber of Commerce. But the chamber membership itself, our member base, it's international, it's global. We got people from all across the world who are members with us, and it just makes for a very fantastic experience as a chamber member.” - Jack Short, (34:00)“[In Bentonville] there's so many opportunities for my kids to explore their creativity and explore the environment and stuff. I mean the Amazeum is one of the places that we love to go to, but now my kids are getting older and they want to go see the artwork and go to Crystal Bridges…I didn't get those experiences growing up because I grew up in a very, very small town, but I'm able to share those experiences, and get to experience it myself but also see my kids experience them, and I hope that it's given them some inspiration to be whoever they want to be.” - Katie Thompson, (50:29)

Our American Stories
Horse Jumping Was Dull -- So They Jumped Mules

Our American Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2023 7:59 Transcription Available


On this episode of Our American Stories, everyone knows that a horse can jump a good-sized fence - but the folks in Pea Ridge, Arkansas thought whether a mule could do it was much more interesting. Here's the story of how their unique competition started. Support the show (https://www.ouramericanstories.com/donate)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Bentonville Beacon
Sculpting the Future: Mayor Nathan See's Vision for Pea Ridge

The Bentonville Beacon

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2023 36:12


SummaryOn this episode of The Bentonville Beacon, host James Bell spends time with Pea Ridge Mayor Nathan See. Nestled beside Bentonville in Northwest Arkansas, Pea Ridge balances its rapid development with its rich history. In addition to being the gateway to Pea Ridge National Military Park, the city is located in close proximity to world-class businesses such as Walmart, J.B. Hunt and Tyson Foods. It is just 40 minutes from the University of Arkansas and is surrounded by outdoor recreation and cultural amenities just a few minutes away, including the picturesque Beaver Lake and the globally acclaimed Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art. Join James and Mayor See as they explore the trajectory of Pea Ridge's expansion, both current and future, under the mayor's visionary leadership.Thanks for tuning in!Show NotesTimestamps in this blog are for the audio-only version of the podcast; video timing differs.(0:59) Introduction to Mayor Nathan See(6:49) The Story of Pea Ridge's Growth(10:06) Who Is Moving to Pea Ridge, Arkansas(15:24) How Living in Pea Ridge Helps People Live Their Best Lives(19:58) #LiveWorksHere Story(23:29) About the Community Development Institute(30:02) Collaborations between Pea Ridge and Bentonville(34:09) Closing Questions‍LinksJames Bell Bentonville Economic Development Mayor Nathan SeeCity of Pea RidgeQuotes“Pea Ridge is a thriving community that has great opportunities for growth, family values and community involvement. That's what we piece together as our scope of what we're trying to go after as far as vision. That's who we are, and that's who we strive to be.” - Mayor Nathan See, (1:31)“We want everybody to come in and be a part and be accepted into our city no matter their culture or their background or anything else. We want them to have a place to play at our parks and we want them to have a place to enjoy their families and friends and come together as a community at our community events.” - Mayor Nathan See, (11:03)“Bentonville has great things going on from the murals to the mountain bike trails to sculptures, and that's stuff we're trying to bring to Pea Ridge.” - Mayor Nathan See, (30:35)

oh brother
the next closest park

oh brother

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2023


Tomorrow is rain make-upfield day!Land Rush Dayshttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Land_Rush_of_1889Oklahomans are weird…Field trips MUST be educational in natureAll of Arkansas is under constructionAaron is actually staying!Wilson's Creek: https://www.nps.gov/wicr/index.htm Pea Ridge: https://www.nps.gov/peri/index.htmBrandon's in a vault!No casual civil war enthusiastsWho has a cannon?Oklahoma is getting $600 mil: https://okcfox.com/news/local/oklahoma-education-plan-2023-paid-maternity-leave-teacher-pay-raises-literacy-program-school-districts-redbud-fund-school-choice-security-upgrades-kevin-stitt-greg-treat-ryan-walters-mark-mcbride-teachers-house-senateCollin's hiring woesSuspiciously angular pondFast French Facts…Unfortunate side of dog rescue Summer reading list!Hot takes with Brandon…Fantasy novel book covers are trashGeneric text with object in the centerRandom film review corner…The Spanish Prisoner: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0120176/Summer Reading BOOK CHALLENGE EXTRAVAGANZA!!!!Aaron's honeymoon - Charleston, Atlanta, etc!Check out our other episodes: ohbrotherpodcast.comFollow us on InstagramCheck us out on Youtube

Our American Stories
The Jumping Mules of Pea Ridge

Our American Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2023 7:59


On this episode of Our American Stories, Mule Jumping in Pea Ridge became a sport because hunters needed their mules to jump fences. Everyone knows that a horse can jump a good-sized fence - but whether a mule will do it is much more interesting. Support the show (https://www.ouramericanstories.com/donate)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Leadership Next
Will Drone Delivery Go Mainstream?

Leadership Next

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2023 36:24


Zipline is the world's largest commercial drone delivery system. Since the company's founding in 2014, Zipline's autonomous electric aircrafts have delivered hundreds of thousands of packages to people around the world. It's planning to complete 1 million deliveries by the end of 2023. Most of the packages the Zips have delivered include vital items like medicine, vaccines and PPE. Zipline's first distribution center opened in Rwanda in 2016 and it has since expanded into Ghana, Nigeria, Kenya, Côte d'Ivoire, Japan, and the U.S. Keller Rinaudo Cliffton is Zipline's co-founder and CEO. In today's episode of Leadership Next, Rinaudo Cliffton joins hosts Alan Murray and Ellen McGirt to share why Zipline started with drone delivery to hospitals in Rwanda seven years ago, and how the company has grown. He explains why launching as a business, not a philanthropy, was essential. He also talks about Zipline's partnership with Walmart, delivering to shoppers in Arkansas, and the company's plans for expansion into the consumer delivery market. Later in the episode, hear from Fortune Senior Writer Jessica Matthews who visited Walmart's drone delivery site in Pea Ridge, AR back in 2021. Matthews tells us more about the state of the drone delivery market, where it's going and what challenges it's facing.

Queens of the Mines
Cathay Williams

Queens of the Mines

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2023 22:49


In 1843, Cathay Williams was born to an enslaved woman and a free black man, ironically in Independence, Missouri. It is hard to know an exact day, because records were not kept for the birth of slaves, and if you were born to an enslaved woman, you were born property. Cathay's childhood was spent on the outskirts of Jefferson City, Missouri, working for years as a house slave on the plantation of a wealthy planter by the name of Johnson.   Union forces took over Jefferson City in the early stages of the Civil War. Slaves were released and persuaded to serve in voluntary military support roles.   Captured slaves within Union lines were officially designated as contraband. When we say contraband today, usually the first thought would be illicit drugs, or something else forbidden. But back then, humans were labeled Illegal goods, “contraband.”  Over 400 women served in the Civil War posing as male soldiers. Today we are talking about  Cathay Williams, the only known female Buffalo Soldier. Williams was not only the first black woman to enlist, but the only documented woman to serve in the United States Army, while disguised as a man, during the Indian Wars. She was a pioneer for the thousands of American women serving in armed forces in the United States today.   Season 3 features inspiring, gallant, even audacious stories of REAL 19th Century women from the Wild West.  Stories that contain adult content, including violence which may be disturbing to some listeners, or secondhand listeners. So, discretion is advised. I am Andrea Anderson and this is Queens of the Mines, Season Three.   As contraband, Cathay was taken to Little Rock by Col. Benton of the 13th army corps and “pressed” into serving. She did not want to go. Benton wanted her to cook for the officers, so Cathay learned the skill. At 17, her role as an Army cook and washerwoman under the service of Union General Philip Sheridan took her all over the country. She saw the soldiers burn lots of cotton. During these travels, Williams was at Shreveport when the rebel gunboats were captured and burned on Red River, and witnessed Comanche, Kiowa, Southern Cheyenne, and Arapaho tribes relocated to reservations during the Red River campaign in Texas. She was there for the  Shenandoah Valley raids in Virginia, and saw the union defeat the Confederates, despite being outnumbered at the Battle of Pea Ridge in Fayetteville Ar. The work brought her to Iowa, Louisiana, Georgia and back home to her home state of Missouri. The lure of independence was undeniably attractive to a female young, unmarried former slave. So, in St. Louis, Missouri, she voluntarily enlisted for a three-year engagement in the U.S. army on November 15, 1866, this time to fight. Despite the prohibition against women serving in the military. The recruiter described her as William Cathay, a 5′ 9″ tall male with black eyes, black hair and black complexion. But in actuality, she was the first black female soldier to enlist with the Army. Only 4 months after Congress passed a law authorizing the formation of six all-black army units, after the Union Army had seen the value of black soldiers in the military and thought they should have the opportunity to join the peacetime army.  You would think an Army surgeon should have been able to identify Williams as a woman during the cursory examination, but the Army didn't require full medical exams then.     Williams said, “The regiment I joined wore the Zouave uniform,” which was  a distinctive jacket, vest, sash, baggy trousers, and fez. She continued to say that “only two persons, a cousin and a particular friend, members of the regiment, knew that I was a woman. They never ‘blowed on me. These particular friends were partly the reason Williams joined the Army. She could shoot, march and stand guard with the best of them and performed regular garrison duties. A garrison is a group of soldiers whose task is to guard the town or building where they live. Soon, orders transferred the new recruits out west to protect pioneers traveling through one of the most dangerous routes to California, called Cooke's Canyon.  In April of 1867, her troop marched to Fort Riley, Kansas, by July they had made it to Fort Union Mexico and arrived at Fort Cummings NM on October 1, 1867. They would remain stationed here for the next 8 months.  Williams had joined the army's fight against the Indigenous people. Health struggles began to plague Cathay.  She became feeble both physically and mentally, and much of the time quite unfit for duty. Smallpox was the most debilitating, but the back-to-back hospitalizations during eight months off sick leave were the most devastating. At Fort Cummings in New Mexico,  her body really began to show signs of strain. Maybe it was the heat, maybe  the effects of smallpox, or the years of marching. But the biggest blow came when the post surgeon discovered Cathay Williams, or William Cathay, was a woman. The surgeon informed the post commander. She said, “the men all wanted to get rid of me after they found out I was a woman. Some of them acted real bad to me.” Williams was honorably discharged by her commanding officer, Captain Charles E. Clarke on October 14, 1868 at at Fort Bayard, New Mexico, It was the end of her tenure in the Army, but her adventure as William Cathay had just gotten started. Again, dressed as a man, Cathay signed up for the 38th U.S. Infantry, an emerging, segregated all-black regiment. The 38th U.S. Infantry would eventually become part of the Buffalo Soldiers. Cathay and her fellow black comrades were named Buffalo Soldiers by the Plains Indians because they were fierce fighters, and they had short curly hair like the buffalo. The Buffalo Soldiers fought in skirmishes with Native Americans, escorted vulnerable wagon trains, built forts, mapped the territory, and protected white settlers – all with sub-par equipment. They showed tremendous skill. She is the only known black female soldier a part of the Buffalo Soldiers. Williams was adrift after the war but wanted to remain independent and self-sufficient.  She was accustomed to the Military providing shelter, education and medical care. She saw it as far superior to the uncertainties of civilian life as a liberated slave. As a newly freed slave, post-war job opportunities were practically nonexistent. The inequality and lack of access was smothering, particularly in the southern states. Most had no choice but to turn to military service to survive.  She went back to living under her original name and headed to Pueblo, Colorado, where her mother ran an orphanage and she was able to secure work as a cook. She was married there, but it ended fast after her husband was arrested for stealing her watch and chain, a hundred dollars and her team of horses and wagon. She had him arrested and put in jail. She moved to Trinidad, Colorado, and took on jobs as a seamstress, laundress and part time nurse under the name Kate Williams. But only after first passing as a male by the name of James Cady upon arrival.   The kids in town were afraid of her, she  was tall and dark with a masculine appearance. He walk had a limp due to her amputated toes.  She liked Trinidad. She knew good people there and had dreams of success. She hoped to take land near the depot when the railroad finally came in. She said, “Grant owns all this land around here, and it won't cost me anything. I shall never live in the states again.”  Trinidad had its own lil rush in the early 1870's when gold was discovered in the Spanish Peaks. In 1876, Trinidad was officially incorporated only a few months before Colorado became a state. There were about 50 to 60 mine shafts operating there, and one of them was owned and operated by one of Abraham Lincoln's sons.     Are you enjoying the podcast? Make sure to subscribe, rate, review and find us on facebook and instagram. You can join the biggest fans behind the scenes at patreon.com/queensofthemines, or give a one time tip via venmo to, @queensofthemines   Her life story went public while Williams was in Trinidad. A reporter from her home state of Missouri heard rumors of the black woman who faked her way into the army, and came to Trinidad from St Louis to meet her. She told the reporter,  “I wanted to make my own living and not be dependent on relations or friends. Cathay Williams' adventures were breaking news when it was published in the St. Louis Daily Times on January 2, 1876. She became well-known to most Trinidad residents, especially the older ones.  In 1891, Williams applied for a disability pension through the Army. She was now 49 years old.  At 52, she was suffering from neuralgia, loss of hearing, rheumatism and diabetes. She walked with a crutch, for all of her toes had been amputated. Her pension was denied. She had lied, and posed as a man to serve the country that had enslaved her. But women would not be allowed to serve in the army until 1948.  Historians argue about the time and location of her death but  most signs point to  Cathat Williams passing away in Trinidad in 1924 at the age of 82. It was said that she was very sick and had been without fire or food for several days.  Something else that I find fascinating about Trinidad. Trinidad is dubbed the Gender Reassignment Capital of the World. Dr Stanley Biber was a veteran surgeon returning from Korea in the 1960s. He moved to Trinidad, to be the town surgeon. In 1969, he performed his first Gender Reassignment for a local social worker, did a good job and earned a good reputation at a time when very few doctors were performing the surgery.  He was performing 4 gender reassignment surgeries a day in his peak years.  Haskell Hooks of Trinidad, Co wants to erect a local statue to honor Cathay Williams.  If you want to donate to the gofundme you can search Memorial Statue for Ms Cathay Williams, on the gofundme site. Its important to note Cathay is spelled Cathay. He has spent several years researching her story and is attempting to raise $50,000 to have the statue created by a New Mexico sculptor. He has organized several fund-raising events to cover the cost, including T-shirt sales and activities at Flo-Jo's Tavern & BBQ in downtown Trinidad and a gofundme page. I found this quite interesting, considering I just spent two days in Trinidad in November. While I was there, I had no idea who Cathay was, but I managed to stay right next to the location of her old house anyways. She lived at the corner of Second and Animas streets, and on West First Street ; the original homes no longer stand. It all leads me to wonder how far will you go to get what you want ?   _____________    

AM 1180 WFYL
OUR AMERICAN HERITAGE 8 - 21 - 21 A.Hunter - LindseyRandall - Pea Ridge Part 4

AM 1180 WFYL

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2022 25:00


OUR AMERICAN HERITAGE 8 - 21 - 21 A.Hunter - LindseyRandall - Pea Ridge Part 4 by WFYL 1180 AM

Fear From the Heartland
S3E15: Reality of Delusion - Fear From The Heartland

Fear From the Heartland

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2022 59:12


In tonight's final episode of Pea Ridge, we take up the saga of a backwoods Missouri county under an alien invasion. Captain Elijah Boelyn has caused he, Glen and Sarah to crash their pickup as they were on their way to the hospital to check on Glen's brother Rich who was attacked by the aliens. The canine heroes Snaggle and Thor may very possibly be Rich's best chance for survival. And now for your indulgence...the conclusion of Pea Ridge by Xavier Poe Kane. To watch the podcast on YouTube: http://bit.ly/ChillingEntertainmentYT Don't forget to subscribe to the podcast for free wherever you're listening or by using this link: https://bit.ly/FearFromTheHeartland If you like the show, telling a friend about it would be amazing! You can text, email, Tweet, or send this link to a friend: https://bit.ly/FearFromTheHeartland Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Fear From the Heartland
S3E11: Cosmic Creatures: Pea Ridge Part 2 - Fear From The Heartland

Fear From the Heartland

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2022 54:48


What should be a trip of peaceful nights full of writing and contemplation is interrupted by strange sounds and smells. Evidence proves that something is out there, and, two brothers are suddenly on the hunt —or are they the ones being hunted? To watch the podcast on YouTube: http://bit.ly/ChillingEntertainmentYT Don't forget to subscribe to the podcast for free wherever you're listening or by using this link: https://bit.ly/FearFromTheHeartland If you like the show, telling a friend about it would be amazing! You can text, email, Tweet, or send this link to a friend: https://bit.ly/FearFromTheHeartland Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Battles Of The American Civil War
Battles Of Pea Ridge | Hampton Roads

Battles Of The American Civil War

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2022 76:21


We got two more battles coming up for you in this episode. The first is the Battle of Pea Ridge taking place on March 7-8, 1862 near Leetown, Arkansas. The Union is looking to drive the Rebels out of Missouri and into Arkansas. Our second is the Battle of Hampton Roads also known as the Battle of The Iron Clads. We have an epic showdown between two ironclad monsters, the USS Monitor and the CSS Virginia. The Virginia was built from the salvaged USS Merrimack after the Union failed to destroy it while fleeing from Virginia after it's succession. For any questions or comments, email us at bangdangpodcast@gmail.com or find us on Twitter @bangdangpodcast. Join our brand new Discord! A new place to come hangout and chat about the civil war, history, sports, politics or anything else you want! Click the link or copy it to your browser!https://discord.gg/6Hy9V8Gk5S

Short Talks from the Hill
Episode 18: Station Archeologist Discusses Ozark Bluff Shelters and Pea Ridge Leetown Project

Short Talks from the Hill

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2022 11:37


Jamie Brandon, UA Fayetteville station archeologist and research professor in the Department of Anthropology, explains the Arkansas Archeological Survey and discusses Leetown, an important archeological dig at Pea Ridge National Military Park.

Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
Prep Rally - One swing changes the postseason for three teams

Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2022 32:06


With one swing of a Rogers Heritage bat Tuesday night, Heritage, Fort Smith Southside and Bentonville West earned playoff berths in 6A baseball. Chip Souza, Henry Apple and Leland Barclay will also talk about Pea Ridge completing the track triple-crown by winning the Class 4A boys team title.

Prep Rally
One swing earns teams playoff berths

Prep Rally

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2022 32:06


With one swing of a Rogers Heritage bat Tuesday night, Heritage, Fort Smith Southside and Bentonville West earned playoff berths in 6A baseball. Chip Souza, Henry Apple and Leland Barclay will also talk about Pea Ridge completing the track triple-crown by winning the Class 4A boys team title.

The Ozark Podcast
Ep. 13 - Keith Allison - Retriever Ridge Kennels, ESPN Great Outdoor Games, and Dog Training Essentials

The Ozark Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2022 87:27


Kyle & Adam sit down with Keith Allison, the Tom Brady of retriever/duck dog training. Currently operating as the owner of Retriever Ridge Kennels out of Pea Ridge, AR Keith has decades of experience training retrievers at the very highest level with Hunt Test titles in a variety of nationally recognized events. He's also set multiple records in the Super Bowl of retriever Hunt Tests, the Super Retriever Series, where he's 1 of only 3 handlers ever to record a perfect score of "0". He's been invited to compete in the SRS Finals & Semifinals with over 7 different retrievers and was a semifinalist in the 2004 ESPN Great Outdoor Games. He's even trained two dogs that were featured on the Arkansas State Duck Stamp: 'Lucas' in 2010 and 'Steel' in 2021. Support the show & gain access to exclusive video footage of our interviews + free monthly stickers through our patreon: patreon.com/theozarkpodcast Advertising inquiries: theozarkpodcast@gmail.com Instagram: @theozarkpodcast The Ozark Podcast is presented by Inland (@inland.us). Check out our website featuring t-shirts, hoodies, hats, stickers, and other merch at www.inland-us.com

Battles and Banter: A Relaxed Military History Podcast

On this solo episode of Battles & Banter, Avery takes on one of the most important engagements to come out of the Trans-Mississippi Theater of the American Civil War. Fought on March 7-8, 1862, the Battle of Pea Ridge would end in a major Union victory that would secure the border state of Missouri as a bastion for Federal forces against Confederates in the area for the rest of the war. Avery would also like to take this time to send kind regards to any listeners in Ukraine who are living through the current conflict. We here at Battles & Banter Podcast stand with Ukraine and will be covering the conflict at a later date to be decided. In the meantime, enjoy this episode on the 160th Anniversary of Pea Ridge!

Pensacola Morning News
03/08/22 - DeVann Cook - SRC Interim Administrator

Pensacola Morning News

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2022 8:11


DeVann Cook joins Pensacola Morning News to share about the proposed vacuum trucks for storm drains, and updates about the Pea Ridge connector.

Civil War Weekly
Episode 51: Pea Ridge

Civil War Weekly

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2022 30:36


The Battle of Pea Ridge in Northwest Arkansas is fought in Episode 51.  https://cwweeklypod.wixsite.com/my-site Patreon:                                                                                       https://www.patreon.com/CWweeklypod Venmo:  @Timothy-Patrick-48   --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/civil-war-weekly/support

HHS Eagle Action
Welcome Back

HHS Eagle Action

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2022 21:12


This is our longest episode yet! Our special guest this week is Ms. Williams, choir director at the Huntsville High and Middle School and Band assistant. She gives us an inside look of what running choir is like and a special invitation to a piece never performed and specially tailored to the voices at Huntsville High School. Our senior spotlights this year include basketball team captains Addison Ruth and Hayden Dotson. They tells about their season so far and how they all share a special bond that make them a true eagle! On this episode, we also include Mrs. Watkins, a counselor at the Huntsville High School. She gives some tips/tricks on succeeding at the ACT including telling us how to access a program called On To College (OnToCollege.com) and approaching test dates (February 12, April 2, June 11). Scholarships are an important part of getting into college and staying out of debt. Mrs. Watkins gives us some advice on finding and applying to scholarships. In regards to sports, before Christmas break, we had our first conference game between Pea Ridge, however, both the boys and girl's team took a loss against the Blackhawks. Over Christmas break, both the boys and girl's teams went to Missouri to compete in a tournament. The boy's team came home in third place, however the girls did not place. Back from Christmas break, we had a conference game against the Shiloh Saints and came back with two victories. This week we are playing Berryville at home and Farmington at their place. PREDICTIONS FOR THE SUPERBOWL: Rams are going to win, but not by a lot. Listen in on how they've come up with this prediction (13:20). Starting a new series, book reviews. Listen in on the plot and review of Carrie by Stephen King. Also a new series, movie ratings from our very own co-hosts Daniel Sandoval and Hunter McNeer. The two discussed Zack Snyder's Justice League's history as well as their final thoughts on the movie. They ended with a message to Warner Brothers, "Get Him Back...We're Done." Show Notes: For more information on this episode, visit hhseagleaction.com/welcome-back. ___ HHS Eagle Action Podcast Hosts: Elly Harriman | Daniel Sandoval | Hunter McNeer Writer: Elly Harriman Executive Producer: Kelvin Orduna Want to know how we're doing or have a general question about the podcast? Visit hhseagleaction.com/contact to see how to direct your question. hhseagleaction.com ©2022 Eagle Action Media

Pensacola Morning News
DeVann Cook, Interim Santa Rosa County Administrator

Pensacola Morning News

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2021 10:08


Permit applications and fees, document shredding/digitizing, A&P School with PSC, Pea Ridge connector, panhandle trail bike lane, Oriole Beach boat launch improvements $107K v actual cost

NWA Coaching Lab
Brey Cook - Pea Ridge - Linemen Development and First Pea Ridge Win

NWA Coaching Lab

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2021 25:26


Pea Ridge head coach Brey Cook joins the show to discuss the importance of size versus skill when it comes to line play, avoiding false starts, defending against more advanced defensive linemen, and earning the first win of the season and his head coaching career. Coach Cook Twitter: https://twitter.com/CoachBreyCook Pea Ridge Football Twitter: https://twitter.com/Blackhawks_FB NWA Coaching Lab Twitter: https://twitter.com/nwacoachinglab

NWA Coaching Lab
Brey Cook - Pea Ridge - Morrilton, Homecoming, Lane Kiffin

NWA Coaching Lab

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2021 24:23


Pea Ridge head coach Brey Cook joins the show to discuss the Morrilton game, homecoming against Vilonia, and an Arkansas Ole Miss prediction. Coach Cook Twitter: https://twitter.com/CoachBreyCook Pea Ridge Football Twitter: https://twitter.com/Blackhawks_FB NWA Coaching Lab Twitter: https://twitter.com/nwacoachinglab

Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
Whats' Up Podcast - Mule Jumping in Pea Ridge

Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2021 9:03


As editor of the Pea Ridge Times, Annette Beard has been covering the community's annual mule jump for years. She'll chat with Features Editor Becca Martin-Brown about the event, the participants she's met and the joys of small-town journalism.

What's Up! NWA and River Valley
The 2021 Pea Ridge Mule Jump

What's Up! NWA and River Valley

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2021 9:03


As editor of the Pea Ridge Times, Annette Beard has been covering the community’s annual mule jump for years. She’ll chat with Features Editor Becca Martin-Brown about the event, the participants she’s met and the joys of small-town journalism.

NWA Coaching Lab
Brey Cook - Pea Ridge - Early Season Adjustments, Grading Players, Alma Recap

NWA Coaching Lab

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2021 21:18


Pea Ridge head coach Brey Cook joins the show to discuss the progress of the team after four games, how they grade players, recaps the Alma game, and gives a little preview of the Arkansas Texas A&M game. Coach Cook Twitter: https://twitter.com/CoachBreyCook Pea Ridge Football Twitter: https://twitter.com/Blackhawks_FB NWA Coaching Lab Twitter: https://twitter.com/nwacoachinglab

NWA Coaching Lab
Brey Cook - Pea Ridge - Linemen Assignments, Film Review, Prepping for Siloam

NWA Coaching Lab

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2021 20:38


Pea Ridge head coach Brey Cook returns to the show to breakdown identifying linemen, picking up blitzes, breaking down film as a head coach, and prepping for his team's first road game of the season. Coach Cook Twitter: https://twitter.com/CoachBreyCook Pea Ridge Football Twitter: https://twitter.com/Blackhawks_FB NWA Coaching Lab Twitter: https://twitter.com/nwacoachinglab

NWA Coaching Lab
Drew Morgan - Elkins - Scripting Offense, Pre Snap Motion, Scrimmage and Week 1 Recaps

NWA Coaching Lab

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2021 22:48


Elkins assistant coach Drew Morgan returns to the show to breakdown offensive theory and comment on their scrimmage against Pea Ridge, and the week 1 win over Lincoln. Drew Morgan Twitter: https://twitter.com/drewmorgan15 Elkins Athletics Twitter: https://twitter.com/ElkinsAthletics NWA Coaching Lab Twitter: https://twitter.com/nwacoachinglab

Milk and Murder
16. April Dawn Andrews BONUS Patron Preview: Cerilla Doyle

Milk and Murder

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2021 33:27


April Dawn Andrews mysteriously disappeared from Pea Ridge, Arkansas while out for a walk one November afternoon. With the weight of the world on her shoulders, some say she ran away but there's so much more to the story. BONUS: Patrons of Milk and Murder will now receive a BONUS episode with each weekly episode. I decided to include this as a general thank you for waiting and a preview for what these bonus episodes are like. Please be aware the topics of alcoholism, policing, chronic illness, and suicide are all discussed in this episode.

NWA Coaching Lab
Brey Cook - Pea Ridge

NWA Coaching Lab

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2021 19:21


Pea Ridge head coach Brey Cook joins the show to discuss his coaching journey. Coach Cook Twitter: https://twitter.com/CoachBreyCook Pea Ridge Football Twitter: https://twitter.com/Blackhawks_FB NWA Coaching Lab Twitter: https://twitter.com/nwacoachinglab

Civil War Breakfast Club
Civil War Breakfast Club Episode 29 - Battle of Pea Ridge

Civil War Breakfast Club

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2021 65:03


We finally visit the Trans-Mississippi Theatre & look at the Battle of Pea Ridge!

Just Talkin'
February 18th | Pea Ridge Arkansas

Just Talkin'

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2021 13:15


Sponsored by the official Hot Sauce of Jomboy Media Oso Rojo Hot Sauce! Visit https://www.osorojohotsauce.com/ Use discount code: 'Jomboy' for 10% off your order We look into the town of Pea Ridge Arkansas home of the Mule Jump

Random Thoughts From The Road - A Motorcycle Podcast
Favorite motorcycle movies and the Pea Ridge to Eureka Springs ride in Arkansas

Random Thoughts From The Road - A Motorcycle Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2021 26:41


In this episode Randy and I talk about the “Pea Ridge to Eureka Springs” ride in Arkansas.  Also we talk about some of our favorite motorcycle movies, and yes even a documentary or two… Maybe there's a movie you haven’t seen yet, but should.

Media Roots Radio
'Abraham Lincoln Was Not a Freemason' the Freemasonic History of the United States Part 5 [Preview]

Media Roots Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2021 28:21


A preview clip to Part 5 of the Freemasonic History of the United States, Brother Against Brother... Freemasonry, Knights of the Golden Circle & the Scottish Rite During the Civil War [Full episode is 4.5 hours long]. To get access to the full series, become a Patreon subscriber of Media Roots Radio for as little as $5 a month or per creation https://www.patreon.com/mediarootsradio. Full episode synopsis: Robbie Martin continues the Freemasonic History of the United States with Part 5 starting with speculation on Abraham Lincoln's potential Freemasonry. Robbie then moves onto the Civil War and how Albert Pike became a Confederate General tasked with recruiting the '5 Civilized Tribes' of Native Americans to the Confederate side in the war. Pike ended up commanding over 1,000 Native American soldiers in the battle of Pea Ridge resulting in great controversy that would haunt him for the rest of his life. Before the war was over a secret society Freemasonic inspired group called the Knights of the Golden Circle conspired to kidnap and assassinate Abraham Lincoln but the actual assassination itself was carried out by KGC member John Wilkes Booth. In an act of Masonic solidarity Albert Pike ends up being redeemed after the war by fellow Scottish Rite Freemason, President Andrew Johnson. The Knights of the Golden circle eventually evolved into what we know now today as the Ku Klux Klan.

Historical Hugh
Pea Ridge Part 2 and Battle of Hampton Roads

Historical Hugh

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2020 38:11


The first half of this episode narrates the second stage of the Battle of Pea Ridge, in which General Earl Van Dorn's Confederates attacked General Samuel Curtis' Union troops. The second half of the episode treats the listener to a description of the Battle of Hampton Roads between the CSS Virginia and the USS Monitor, the first clash of Ironclad warships. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hugh-henry/support

KVOM NewsWatch Podcast
KVOM NewsWatch, Friday, October 2, 2020

KVOM NewsWatch Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2020 28:34


In our local news today: local active COVID cases show an increase on Thursday; Monsters on Main Street is cancelled for 2020; a Boil Order has been issued for Oppelo; Sacred Heart will host Oktoberfest this weekend; Local unemployment rates decline again in August; a state panel recommends computer science credit requirement in high school; one lane of Toad Suck Bridge will close on Monday; we'll check sports where the Devil Dogs are on the road to face Pea Ridge tonight at 7; and we'll visit with Alicia Hugen with the Conway County Extension Service.

Ozarks at Large
Ozarks at Large for Wednesday, September 16, 2020

Ozarks at Large

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2020 46:33


On today's show, we find out about Community Clinic's newest school-based health center in Pea Ridge. Plus, we head to Bentonville where a coffee roaster is opening a cafe in the woods. And, we hear about a new program that provides free legal assistance to families affected by the opioid epidemic.

Ozarks at Large Stories
Community Clinic Opens School-Based Health Center in Pea Ridge

Ozarks at Large Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2020 4:21


Community Clinic is opening its eighth school-based health center inside the new Pea Ridge High School . The clinic, which had its soft opening Monday, is providing access to medical services and educational opportunities for students.

Historical Hugh
Battle of Pea Ridge Part 1

Historical Hugh

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2020 45:35


The Union Army of the Southwest under General Samuel Curtis launched a campaign to eliminate the threat to Missouri of Confederate General Sterling Price. As the Union forces pursued Price across the southern border into Arkansas, Price linked up with Ben McCulloch's Army and their joined forces met Curtis' Army near Leetown, Arkansas. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hugh-henry/support

The Chicago Civil War Round Table Monthly Meetings
March 1989 - Gary Russell on The Battle of Pea Ridge - Chicago Civil War Round Table Monthly Meeting

The Chicago Civil War Round Table Monthly Meetings

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2020 67:48


Date: March 9, 1989 Speaker: Gary Russell Topic: The Battle of Pea Ridge - Chicago Civil War Round Table Monthly Meeting

The Chicago Civil War Round Table Monthly Meetings
May 1987 - Edwin C Bearss on Pea Ridge Commanders - Chicago Civil War Round Table Monthly Meeting

The Chicago Civil War Round Table Monthly Meetings

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2020 45:30


Date: May 9, 1987 Speaker: Edwin C Bearss Topic: Pea Ridge Commanders - Chicago Civil War Round Table Monthly Meeting

Business Casual
Walmart Experiments with Cashierless Checkout at Fayetteville Superstore

Business Casual

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2020 18:54


From social distancing to masks to gloves to hand sanitizers, businesses reopening in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic are utilizing unprecedented strategies to limit the spread of the coronavirus and the imminent threat of a second wave. On this snippet, MarketScale's Business Casual co-hosts Tyler Kern [embed contributor page] and Daniel Litwin discuss Walmart's latest efforts to confine the contagion within the mega-brand's stores. Considered an essential business during the pandemic, Walmart kept its doors open, shelves stocked (in most cases) and their workers employed while other businesses were forced to shut down and layoff staff. However, in April, health officials ordered the closure of a Walmart in suburban Denver as three people connected to the store died after being infected with the coronavirus and at least six employees tested positive. To prevent other closures while protecting workers and customers, earlier this week, the Walmart opted to remove cashiers and standard conveyor belt lines at one of its popular superstores in Fayetteville, Arkansas. In a testing the waters type of tactic to limit human interaction, this coronavirus-inspired solution could also help customers pay and leave the store faster. While store staffers will be ready to assist anyone who has a large order, has trouble working the machines, or just prefers having some human interaction at the checkout, if all goes well, the company could expand the concept to more of their superstores. This cashierless test, believed to be the first at a full-fledged Supercenter, comes about a year after Walmart conducted a similar dry run of a self-checkout-only system at a Walmart Neighborhood Market (Walmart's smaller grocery-focused chain) in Pea Ridge, Arkansas. That initial trial run was considered successful enough that the company replicated the system at a new Neighborhood Market in Coral Way, Florida that opened in back in January. Litwin and Kern chat about Walmart's cashierless strategy, shopper reactions as well as those of employees whose jobs may be transformed or altogether eliminated. Bringing thought leadership to your day, MarketScale's Business Casual keeps you current with the hottest topics, the newest trends and the latest technology shaping business and our world today. And for the latest thought leadership, news and event coverage across B2B, be sure to check out our industry pages.

Threads From The National Tapestry: Stories From The American Civil War

About this episode:  E.B. and Barbara Long’s monumental The Civil War Day By Day reveals that there were 10,455 military events during the American Civil War. Here’s a few examples selected from the 16 classifications that they used: there were 79 captures, 727 expeditions, 6337 skirmishes, 76 major battles, and 29 campaigns. No surprise that Virginia was the stage for the most military events. Though Tennessee was second, most students of the conflict are more aware of those events in the eastern theater. However, for this episode, we take you west to The Trans-Mississippi - to an active theater of the war that may surprise you. The statistics bear me out. The third most active state for Civil War events was Missouri, fourth was Mississippi, and the fifth serves as our stage today: Arkansas. For this episode, we recount a clash that may well have slipped under your Civil War radar - a 2-day fight which produced profound consequences. Today, we make our way to northwestern Arkansas - to Elkhorn Tavern, and the Battle of Pea Ridge. ----more----   Some Characters Mentioned In This Episode:  Henry W. Halleck Samuel Ryan Curtis Peter J. Osterhaus Sterling Price Benjamin McCulloch Earl Van Dorn Albert Pike   Other References From This Episode  Leetown - March 7th, 1862   Elkhorn Tavern - March 7th, 1862   Elkhorn Tavern - March 8th, 1862   **Maps credit: Steven Stanley of The Civil War Trust **Picture credit: On The Battery by Andy Thomas   Get The Guide: Want to learn more about the Civil War? A great place to start is Fred's guide, The Civil War: A History of the War between the States from Workman Publishing. The guide is in its 9th printing.   Producer: Dan Irving

Today In History
Today In History - March 07, 1862: Battle of Pea Ridge (Elkhorn Tavern), Arkansas

Today In History

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2020


https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/battle-of-pea-ridge-elkhorn-tavern-arkansasSupport the show on Patreon

Unfound
April Dawn Andrews: Through A Child's Eyes

Unfound

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2020 84:03


April Dawn Andrews was a 15 year old from Pea Ridge, AR. She was a shy girl who had many siblings. On Saturday, November 18, 2006, April and her family had taken a trip to a store. When they got back, April decided to walk to a local church that was having a clothing drive. She was never seen again. FACEBOOK GROUP: https://www.facebook.com/groups/183467174997373/ CHARLEY PROJECT: http://charleyproject.org/case/april-dawn-andrews NAMUS: https://www.namus.gov/MissingPersons/Case#/5799?nav ARTICLE: https://www.5newsonline.com/article/news/local/outreach/back-to-school/police-seek-new-leads-in-pea-ridge-girls-disappearance/527-04caa253-ee22-4ed8-a3e7-86805ad8a139 If you have any information regarding the disappearance of April Andrews, please contact the Pea Ridge Police Department at (479) 451-8220. --Unfound supports accounts on Podomatic, iTunes, Stitcher, Instagram, Twitter, Spotify and Facebook. --on Wednesday nights at 9pm ET, please join us on the Unfound Podcast Channel on YouTube for the Unfound Live Show. All of you can talk with me and I can answer your questions. --Contribute to Unfound at Patreon.com/unfoundpodcast. You can also contribute at Paypal: unfoundpodcast@gmail.com --that is also the email address. --Merchandise: --The books at Amazon.com in both ebook and print form. --don't forget the reviews. --shirts at unfound-podcast.myshopify.com --cards at makeplayingcards.com/sell/unfoundpodcast --And please mention Unfound at all true crime websites and forums. Thank you.

The Ridge Church
S1:E2 Broken Debts Part 3: Victory

The Ridge Church

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2020 48:10


Broken Debts series This is Part 3 - Victory. This sermon will help you understand the biblical principles of giving, saving, and spending so you can honor God by living in financial victory. It will outline three steps towards financial victory: giving, saving, and spending according to God's plan for you. For more info on The Ridge Church in Pea Ridge, AR please be sure to visit our website at theridgechurchpr.com

The Ridge Church
S1:E1 Broken Debts Part 2: Rewards

The Ridge Church

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2020 41:00


Check out the second part of the Broken Debts message series and learn why it's important to sow! For more info about The Ridge Church in Pea Ridge, AR please visit our website www.theridgechurchpr.com

Conduit News Radio with Paul Harrell
Ken Yang from the Family Council on Pea Ridge School District Ending Prayer: 12/17/19, Hr. 2

Conduit News Radio with Paul Harrell

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2019 49:45


Ken Yang from the Family Council on Pea Ridge School District Ending Prayer: 12/17/19, Hr. 2 by Conduit Media

WTAW - Infomaniacs
The Infomaniacs: November 25, 2019 (6:00am)

WTAW - Infomaniacs

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2019 35:50


Thanksgiving week. Sheldon from Pea Ridge. National holidays and celebrity birthdays. In politics, Ukraine, a new presidential candidate, and the Schwab - TD Ameritrade merger. Plus local news and sports.

WTAW - Infomaniacs
The Infomaniacs: November 25, 2019 (6:00am)

WTAW - Infomaniacs

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2019 35:50


Thanksgiving week. Sheldon from Pea Ridge. National holidays and celebrity birthdays. In politics, Ukraine, a new presidential candidate, and the Schwab - TD Ameritrade merger. Plus local news and sports.

Lion Lettermen
Week 6 Previews - Gravette Travels to Pea Ridge. Can the Lions Bring Some Fight?

Lion Lettermen

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2019 38:31


Week 6 Previews - Gravette Travels to Pea Ridge. Can the Lions Bring Some Fight? by Lion Lettermen

Go There - Español
7 - Arkansas

Go There - Español

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2019 36:06


En este episodio viajamos por el Estado Natural, Arkansas. De Texarkana a Little Rock, a el Bosque Ozark, Fort Smith, y Eureka Springs. Diamantes, garrapatas, senderos, y lluvia. Paradas de historia en los 9 de Little Rock, el campo de batalla Pea Ridge de la Guerra Civil, y Bass Reeves.

Hoop Heads
Trent Loyd - Pea Ridge (AR) Boys' Head Varsity Coach - Episode 140

Hoop Heads

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2019 83:14


Trent Loyd is the head coach at Pea Ridge High School in Pea Ridge, Arkansas. Trent grew up around the game of basketball his entire life. His Dad was a basketball coach in Arkansas for over 30 years, so being at the gym and around the game is all Trent has ever known. He played for his Dad at Van Buren High School for 3 years. Trent knew he wanted to be a basketball coach for as long as he could remember. He graduated from college in 2011 at the University of Arkansas and took a junior high job at Pea Ridge straight out of college. Trent actually did not even know how to get to Pea Ridge for that job interview, but was fortunate enough to be able to land that Jr. High job at the time. Two years later at 23 years old Coach Loyd was offered the High School job when the previous head coach went into administration. Trent just completed his 6th year as the boys’ varsity coach at Pea Ridge where the superintendent, principal, and athletic director are all former high school basketball coaches, so the amount of support and encouragement is unbelievable. Coach Loyd has amassed a 140-49 won loss record in his first six seasons at the helm of the Pea Ridge program. After you’re finished listening to the show hop over to iTunes and leave us a 5 star rating and review to help others in the basketball community find the Hoop Heads Podcast. Subscribe now on your favorite podcast app so you don’t miss an episode. You can find every episode we’ve ever recorded on our website www.hoopheadspod.com Take some notes and be ready to learn as you listen to this episode with Coach Trent Loyd from Pea Ridge High School in the state of Arkansas. Email - tloyd@pearidgek12.com Twitter - @Coach_TLoyd Support this podcast

Threads From The National Tapestry: Stories From The American Civil War

About this episode:  It was April of 1862, and the war was just about to enter its second year. The beginning of that year had been a bleak one for the Confederacy. In February, Fort Henry, Roanoke Island, North Carolina, and Fort Donelson all fell. Now there were invasion routes into "The Old North State," the interior of Tennessee, and the very heartland of the Confederacy. In the first week of March, Missouri was for all practical purposes lost to the confederacy thanks to Union victory at Pea Ridge. In the east, more cause for southern concern. The ironclad USS Monitor had revolutionized Naval warfare, and neutralized the Confederacy's CSS Virginia, and George B. McClellan finally stirred from his slows to land 121,000 men on the Virginia peninsula with its sights on Richmond. Though there had been all these military events, there were still some, North and South, who believed that particularly if the southern capital fell, the conflict would soon end. In fact a year earlier, A.W. Venable of Granville County, North Carolina declared that he would wipe of every drop of blood shed in the war with "this handkerchief of mine." Naive words. In his most vivid and terrible nightmares, he never dreamed of two days like April 6th and 7th, 1862. Neither had an entire nation. Two horrific days that churned and burned near a river landing and a little Methodist church built for the Prince Of Peace. Two bloody days that served as a national wake up call; a call that announced the sobering reality of how terrible civil war would truly be. This is the story of those two days. This is the story of the Battle of Shiloh.----more---- Some Characters Mentioned In This Episode:  Don Carlos Buell Ulysses S. Grant Willie Lincoln Albert Sidney Johnston Pierre Gustave Toutant Beauregard Braxton Bragg William H.L. Wallace William T. Sherman Benjamin M. Prentiss   Other References From This Episode:   1st day of the Battle of Shiloh: Confederate Offensive.   Second day of the Battle of Shiloh: Union Offensive. Get The Guide: Want to learn more about the Civil War? A great place to start is Fred's guide, The Civil War: A History of the War between the States from Workman Publishing. The guide is in its 9th printing.   Producer: Dan Irving

Historical Controversies
The Battle of Pea Ridge, Part 2: Elkhorn Tavern

Historical Controversies

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2019


Season 3, Episode 48 While Confederates were facing disaster at Leetown, General Van Dorn and his Confederates at Elkhorn Tavern were fighting the Union forces with more success. But after pushing the Union forces back on the first day of fighting, they found out that they would not be reinforced by General Ben McCulloch's 7,000 man division. This two-day battle is often overshadowed by other battles that were fought shortly before and after it, but at the time it took place, the Battle of Pea Ridge was the bloodiest battle the war had yet seen. Chris Calton recounts the controversial history of the Civil War. You may support this podcast financially at Mises.org/SupportHC. Subscribe today at Spotify, Google Play, iTunes, SoundCloud, Stitcher, or via RSS.

Historical Controversies
The Battle of Pea Ridge, Part 1: Confederate Disaster at Leetown

Historical Controversies

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2019


Season 3, Episode 47 The Battle of Pea Ridge was fought on two fronts, one at Leetown, and the other at Elkhorn Tavern. The combat at Leetown was led by Ben McCulloch, who commanded a force that greatly outnumbered the Union opponents. But due to a series of unfortunate disasters, the Confederate assault would fall apart, demonstrating what is likely the greatest example of a breakdown in leadership during the entire war. Chris Calton recounts the controversial history of the Civil War. You may support this podcast financially at Mises.org/SupportHC. Subscribe today at Spotify, Google Play, iTunes, SoundCloud, Stitcher, or via RSS.

History on the Table
Episode 2 - Battle Hymn: Vol. 1

History on the Table

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2019 81:35


History on the Table returns with a review Battle Hymn Volume One: Gettysburg and Pea Ridge from Compass Games. In this episode we also spend a little bit of time talking about the Battalion Combat Series (BCS), some new games and some books of interest.  One episode in and I'm already apologizing for breaking a resolution I made last time.    Comments, questions or concerns can be sent to: historytablepodcast@gmail.com  Twitter: @HistoryTablePod. 

Pub Hound Podcast
Episode 4 - Jules Ensor Kubiena

Pub Hound Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2018


Rich and Drew go from Parnassus and Middlemarch, to Vinita and Pea Ridge with the newest PHP author, Jules Ensor Kubiena, along with lots of whiskey and a jug of beer on the way. 

Civil War Talk Radio
1422-Eric Lee Smith-Civil War Games: Battle Hymn: Gettysburg and Pea Ridge and other

Civil War Talk Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2018


Eric Lee Smith, designer of Battle Hymn: Gettysburg and Pea Ridge and other Civil War games

Civil War Talk Radio
1422-Eric Lee Smith-Civil War Games: Battle Hymn: Gettysburg and Pea Ridge and other

Civil War Talk Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2018


Eric Lee Smith, designer of Battle Hymn: Gettysburg and Pea Ridge and other Civil War games

Civil War Talk Radio
1422-Eric Lee Smith-Civil War Games: Battle Hymn: Gettysburg and Pea Ridge and other

Civil War Talk Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2018


Eric Lee Smith, designer of Battle Hymn: Gettysburg and Pea Ridge and other Civil War games

Civil War Talk Radio
1422-Eric Lee Smith-Civil War Games: Battle Hymn: Gettysburg and Pea Ridge and other

Civil War Talk Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2018


Eric Lee Smith, designer of Battle Hymn: Gettysburg and Pea Ridge and other Civil War games

Lion Lettermen
#107 - Gravette vs. Shiloh, Friday Night Football Wx, Is Pea Ridge a Lock for Top Seed, and More

Lion Lettermen

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2017 32:59


#107 - Gravette vs. Shiloh, Friday Night Football Wx, Is Pea Ridge a Lock for Top Seed, and More by Lion Lettermen

Lion Lettermen
#94 - Pea Ridge vs. Hamburg

Lion Lettermen

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2017 30:01


#94 - Pea Ridge vs. Hamburg by Lion Lettermen

Ozark Highlands Radio
OHR Presents: Avery Hill & "The Flathoof Stringband"

Ozark Highlands Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2017 58:59


Ozark Highlands Radio is a weekly radio program that features live music and interviews recorded at Ozark Folk Center State Park’s beautiful 1,000-seat auditorium in Mountain View, Arkansas. In addition to the music, our “Feature Host” segments take listeners through the Ozark hills with historians, authors and personalities who explore the people, stories, and history of the Ozark region. This week, modern folk minstrel and intimate songwriter Avery Hill performs live at the Ozark Folk Center State Park. Also, interviews with Avery, and performances and interviews with our very own “Flathoof Stringband.” Mark Jones offers an archival recording of legendary Ozark balladeer Ollie Gilbert, telling the story of “The Preacher and the Bear.” Writer, professor, and historian Dr. Brooks Blevins profiles the second in a series of three Ozark Civil War Ballads, “The Battle of Pea Ridge.” Hailing from Portland, Oregon, Avery Hill captures the essence of modern singer/songwriters in her music. Though Avery studied to be a school teacher, an environmental educator, and then a storyteller, all of these things eventually led her back to music, the thing she knows and loves best of all. Avery's first full-length recording, entitled “Dreams & Ghosts: A Family Album,” features intimate portraits, life lessons, & sometimes embarrassingly humorous songs inspired by her family’s history. Like a photo album, this collection of songs presents musical snapshots of different times in history, reflecting on universal themes of growing up and being brave. Old Time Ozark music played with passion and love, that’s the “Flathoof Stringband.” The group is comprised of guitarist Mike Sutter, who was a member of the original Ozark Folk Center house band when the park opened in 1973. (Sorry to age you there, Mike.) On fiddle is Roger Fountain, another long time OFC musician and one of the best dance fiddlers, anywhere. Wes Kent holds down mandolin duties and, along with his wife Judy, is an active volunteer in many Stone County music endeavors. Long time OFC musician Gresham McMillon holds it all together with his steady roll on the upright bass. In this week’s “From the Vault” segment, musician, educator, and country music legacy Mark Jones offers an archival recording of legendary Ozark balladeer Ollie Gilbert, telling her own version of the traditional story “The Preacher and the Bear.” from the Ozark Folk Center State Park archives. From his series entitled “Back in the Hills,” writer, professor and historian Dr. Brooks Blevins profiles the second of three Ozark Civil War ballads. This episode features a recording of archivist Max Hunter himself, singing the Ozark Civil War ballad “The Battle of Pea Ridge,” that he learned from Allie Long Parker of Hog Scald Holler, Arkansas. The recording was made at the tenth annual meeting of the Arkansas Folklore Society in 1958, and is preserved in the Max Hunter Collection at Missouri State University. https://maxhunter.missouristate.edu/songinformation.aspx?ID=0126

Lion Lettermen
Looking at the Week's Schedule and a Glimpse at Pea Ridge

Lion Lettermen

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2016 34:43


Looking at the Week's Schedule and a Glimpse at Pea Ridge by Lion Lettermen

Lion Lettermen
Looking at Pea Ridge and 1-4A Picks

Lion Lettermen

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2015 25:10


Looking at Pea Ridge and 1-4A Picks by Lion Lettermen

The Civil War (1861-1865): A History Podcast
#104 PEA RIDGE (Part the Fourth)

The Civil War (1861-1865): A History Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2015 22:12


In which we conclude our discussion of the Battle of Pea Ridge, which took place in northwest Arkansas on March 7-8, 1862.

The Civil War (1861-1865): A History Podcast
#103 PEA RIDGE (Part the Third)

The Civil War (1861-1865): A History Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2015 37:04


In which we continue our look at the Battle of Pea Ridge, which took place in northwest Arkansas on March 7-8, 1862.

The Civil War (1861-1865): A History Podcast
#102 PEA RIDGE (Part the Second)

The Civil War (1861-1865): A History Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2014 24:36


In which we continue our discussion of the events preceding the Battle of Pea Ridge, which took place in northwest Arkansas on March 7-8, 1862.

The Civil War (1861-1865): A History Podcast
#101 PEA RIDGE (Part the First)

The Civil War (1861-1865): A History Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2014 30:09


In which we set the stage for the Battle of Pea Ridge, which took place in northwest Arkansas on March 7-8, 1862.