POPULARITY
Snakes…why'd it have to be snakes? There's a Burmese Python problem in Florida's Everglades which is dramatically altering the ecological balance in the Sunshine State. Currently, the only way to control these non-native, invasive snakes, is to send hunters deep into allegator infested swamps to find, capture, and kill these apex predators. Really, no Really! You might imagine these Hunters as burly “Crocodile Dundee-types” with sophisticated equipment, night vision, Rambo-style bowie knives, and guns, lots of guns. But reality is quite different. Our guest today Amy Siewe styles herself as the “Python Huntress;” she's a 5'4, 120lbs. woman who by trade is a realtor, who regularly captures these beasts – some as big as 20 feet, 250 pounds - using only a canvas bag and her wits. She has killed over 400 pythons using a quick and humane method but the number of endangered or threatened native species being eaten by these pythons is getting longer each year. Is this really the best solution to this problem and what does she do with all those dead snakes? The answers might surprise you. IN THIS EPISODE: How Amy transformed from mild-mannered Indiana-based realtor to “Python Huntress.” Does she speak Parseltongue…the language of snakes? Step-by-step instructions capturing a 17-footer…alone! What snake Periscoping means. Vipers, allegators, panthers, and bears oh my! All the things stalking Amy as she hunts. We analyze our collective fear and loathing of snakes. How do you humanely euthanize huge snakes while in the muck of Florida's Everglades? Amy's message to prospective buyers of commercial pythons and exotics… Jason's close encounter with a snake at “America's Stonehenge.” SEE one man's emotional support allegator. Is this legit? Googleheim: Pythons are just one of the many invasive species harming Florida's ecology. FOLLOW AMY SIEWE: WATCH Amy take down a 17ft python Website: PythonHuntress.com Instagram: @ThePythonHuntress YouTube: Python Huntress Amy Siewe X/Twitter: @AmySiewe Facebook: Amy Siewe FOLLOW REALLY NO REALLY: www.reallynoreally.com Instagram YouTube TikTok Facebook Threads X (Twitter)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This episode is also available as a blog post: https://nairaweb.ng/2022/08/07/periscoping-the-roots-of-nigerias-economic-woes/
• Derek is back on Uncensored • Jacob missed turkey season • Brayden's turkey hunting story • Shots fired on a turkey • Dan and Derek's turkey stories • Finding turkeys in the woods and sneaking up on them • Calling to stubborn Toms and quiet hens *** [UNCENSORED] by GoWild kicks off your week with shameful nonsense, inappropriate convictions, and unfiltered tales from the woods, waters and whatevers. [UNCENSORED] is a behind the scenes look at our adventures, failures, wins, embarrassing moments at trade shows, hilarious tales from the warehouse, and a good rant or three about the most recent tyranny from the Dark Lord of the Sith himself. The show launches every Monday morning. Subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts or watch the conversation on our YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC35NE3KkYcpullhcpYqZuLw JOIN GOWILD AND GET $10: http://downloadgowild.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Our merry band of adventurers have caught a nasty case of burnout! Luckily for them, RJCarrot is on the case, and willing to educate them on the finer points of saying "fuck this entirely". Special thanks to Mrs Shaggrath, who's vivacious wit and cutting sarcasm added a surprise element of joy to this episode!
Today’s segments include: We’ll be live tweeting and Periscoping and Gramming from ConCarolinas on June 3, Jason’s new work ‘friends’ (00:27), News We Actually Care About (17:34), Trigger Warning: Walking and Cell Phoning (32:35), Power Rankings: Greatest 90s TV Shows (42:54), Woke Thoughts (1:26:32), Best Week of the Week (1:26:50) Please leave us a review on iTunes if you like what you hear! Screenshot it and email it to us at twtpcast@gmail.com to be entered to win some free stuff! Join our FACEBOOK GROUP at https://www.facebook.com/groups/TWTPCast/ and talk to us and other listeners about today’s show! Enter our ‘Clean out the Podcast Studio’ Giveaway by going to www.talkingwithoutthinking.com/giveaway and entering your email address. You will then be registered to win a box full of goodies including Funko Pops, Pins, Patches, Art Prints, Nickelodeon gear and much more! Social Media: Talking Without Thinking: www.twitter.com/twtpcast Scott Lowder: www.twitter.com/scottlowder Jason Eckard: www.twitter.com/jasoneckard Jarrod Carpenter: www.twitter.com/TheActualJarrod Talking Without Thinking is a member of the TWT Podcast Network.
Katrina Ruth: Oh, nobody's there anyway, it doesn't matter. We can just pretend, nobody's there. Marlene Leslie: You say that to all the girls Katrina Ruth: Huh? Marlene Leslie: You say that to all the girls Katrina Ruth: Hang on, we have a problem, we have a lighting issue. Oh! Look how much more fabulous we look. So, we'll give people a moment to jump on. We'll share this stream over and tag you in properly. Katrina Ruth: Hello people who are not there yet but who are going to be watching this as a replay. Look at this fabulous, mysterious guest who I have here with me. She has some important things to share with you. I'm not sure you're going to like them though, 'cause she's been referred to as, what was it? Kind of aggressive? Marlene Leslie: Aggressive and intimidating. Katrina Ruth: I mean, who would want an aggressive woman on a livestream, I don't know what that would be about. Is that better lighting? Katrina Ruth: It's not really making a difference Katrina Ruth: Um, okay. Hi Tamara, hi Katherine. What's been happening? I'm glad you asked, Marlene and I, this is Marlene Leslie, I'll tag her in. Marlene and I have been at dinner and we were kind of rudely having a conversation all to ourselves and now we, 'cause we are kind, nice people, decided to share it with you. That's roughly what happened, isn't it? I suppose you could also say that I somewhat bullied her into leaving the dinner table and coming home to have a livestream conversation. Marlene Leslie: This is true. Katrina Ruth: Like literally ten minutes ago we were sitting at a beautiful restaurant with wine and food and I was like, let's do a livestream. Marlene Leslie: And you refused to answer my questions. Katrina Ruth: That's true. I refused to answer any more questions until I was on camera. It's roughly how I operate, in a general sense. Okay, who's that? That's not you. Okay, I'm just going to share this over to my page and then we are going to start to tell you some very important things, which you are going to need to pay attention to. So get your wine or whatever you need. If you go to my personal page you can see that I've tagged Marlene in, so you should do that. But not now, because you should be listening to us now. I don't know, do you want to say what we were talking about at dinner? Marlene Leslie: Yeah. We were talking about what it takes to make it in the online space as a coach. Katrina Ruth: As a high level authentic as fuck mentor. Marlene Leslie: Yeah, and being yourself and unapologetically being yourself and coaching people outside of the industry but leveraging the online space. Katrina Ruth: Right, so let's give people some backstory, because everybody loves a great story. Where did we meet? Bali, right? Marlene Leslie: Yes, oh gosh. Katrina Ruth: Oh my god, have you guys seen my happy pants? So, check out these pants. Like, what happened is we went to dinner and I was wearing the tightest skinny jeans in the world and then by halfway through dinner I was like, sitting like this, because they were digging in and I couldn't eat. So I was half wanting to get out of the restaurant so that we could livestream and half so I could get the fucking jeans off. And I'm not sure what's up with these pants but I'm going to wear them anyway. Okay, we got that out of the way. Katrina Ruth: So, we met in Bali. Marlene Leslie: Yeah, 4 years ago? Katrina Ruth: 3 or 4 years ago. And we did many things that we probably shouldn't publicly talk about, so we can't tell you about that but it was fabulous. Marlene Leslie: So the livestream is over. Katrina Ruth: Well, we actually were kind of living or staying together at a mutual friend's villa and lots of different cool people were always coming through and staying at this villa people who want to create their own lives and do lives on their terms. Lives on their terms? At least their own life on their terms. And, I don't know, like we just...there were so many people that came through that villa. Marlene Leslie: Cause we were there for like 3 weeks, or maybe it was 2. Katrina Ruth: I was there for like 8 months but you were there for a few weeks. But there was a lot of people that came and stayed there and I didn't continue to stay friends with, I think just you and one other person. And we just clicked because this solidarity about being somebody who insists on creating life on their terms basically. And then I think we just have reconnected, basically, I mean once or twice a year since then, here in the US. Like, we've been up in Utah together and every time I come here we end up catching up. But we haven't seen each other now since... Marlene Leslie: This time last year. Katrina Ruth: You know, I think the last time we saw each other was in Utah, when we went up the mountain. Marlene Leslie: Oh, that's right. Katrina Ruth: Cause I got the Facebook memories a month ago, it was like February of last year. Marlene Leslie: Oh my gosh, it seems like it was just yesterday. Katrina Ruth: It was so long ago. So we are literally catching up tonight for the first time in over a year. But, like this was such an interesting conversation because obviously, as you guys know, I've built a very successful online business and brand and that's my area and Marlene has so much incredible fucking success in the offline world, specifically around, I mean, why don't you tell like a little bit of your background. Because I was super intimidated by you when I met you. Like, I was like, this women is seriously high level. She frickin' builds hotels, not with her own physical hands but.. Marlene Leslie: I have people for that. Katrina Ruth: She has people to do the building. Marlene Leslie: Yeah, so my background is in hospitality and I started working in hospitality when I was in high school and college and then in New York, my first job was as the general manager of a $20 million restaurant. I actually started out as a manager but finagled my way up really quickly because I was very aggressive and intimidating. Katrina Ruth: The path was just delayed. It's considered an unbecoming personality trait. Marlene Leslie: So they say. Katrina Ruth: But that's exactly what we're here to talk about. Marlene Leslie: So, from there I studied hospitality, worked a lot of notable restaurants in New York and transitioned into the hotel industry and opened a very popular hotel that basically had one of the most notable food and beverage programmes in the city. Then I went on to launch another hotel brand and concepted and came up with restaurants and bars within that brand until about 3 years ago, right before Cat and I met, parted ways with that company, my position was eliminated and I was at a point in my career where I kind of, and you'll appreciate this, I totally manifested that because I wanted out so badly but it was such a great job and it was like having an open chequebook to do whatever I wanted to do and to design and to create what I wanted to within hotels, that I felt that the best possible thing that would happen to me was to be able to have my job eliminated or to be let go in some way so that I could travel and take a year off. Katrina Ruth: Yeah, which is how we met because you were on that travel year. But honestly, like when we did meet I was like, I felt intimidated until I got to know you, which I know a lot people feel about me because I think, and we were just talking about this right before we got the [inaudible 00:07:30], like I think that anytime it's an area that you've got no understanding of and it just feels super vast and mysterious and daunting. Marlene Leslie: Yes, yes, totally. Katrina Ruth: And then you meet somebody who has conquered that, like, I'm like hello, she's opened like multi cagillion dollar hotels and done it all. I'm like, that's, like I have no clue to this day about that world. Why would I? I've never been part of it. To me that sounds insanely high level and like just impressive and daunting and vast. And if you try to turn me into getting a hotel opened I would have everybody livestreaming in no time but I'm not quite sure what else I would do. But there would definitely be wine and I'd get some martinis made and then I'm not quite sure what I would do, I'd probably get sick of everybody and leave 'cause I hate people sometimes. So, you know, like we were talking about this because Marlene mentors and coaches insanely high level executives and leaders in the physical world, not so much the online world. Like the real world, like people on the streets of New York you guys. And I'm like whoa, that's crazy. How do you connect with like an executive of a multi multi multi hundred million dollar firm or whatever it is. Katrina Ruth: But we were talking about like what I do and then Marlene's wanting to come online and basically conquer the online world. Marlene Leslie: I didn't want to come onto this, let's be clear. Katrina Ruth: I have my ways of getting people onto livestreams, it's just what I do, it's a gift, I can't teach it to you. Well, I can, you should join my high ticket sales workshop, it's going live tomorrow. Yeah but, like this is what I was trying to explain, right? Cause you were kind of like, it feels like I don't know how to start and like kind of the conversation we're having is the one that I have with all of my clients and friends also, from time to time, around how do I know if I'm good enough and how do I know if I can do that and how do I do it and what's the strategy. Katrina Ruth: And I was trying to explain, it's just about your perception, right? Because if you go to the top of that mountain and plant the flag and say I'm here and I'm the leader and everybody should listen to me, well you've got to be able to back it up. But it's about realising that you've that inside of you to back it up. Marlene Leslie: Yeah, yeah. That's a good point because there are two very different worlds and that analogy is so perfect in describing like my world versus your world and finally realising what I wanted to do and having those aha moments and having people say wow, you changed my life. That takes your breath away, where you are like, I did that? Actually, like you did it but I was there to support you on that. And I've personally been struggling with how to scale that and how to do that in a really meaningful way with executives and with the people that I really want to work with. It's a super scary world to venture into. Katrina Ruth: Right, and it's about, and this relates to everyone. Like I do not think that there is anybody else who is on this livestream or replay who is going to say that they've opened multi-million dollar hotels. But every single person here has their own experiences, stories, skills, things you've learned, things you've overcome. What makes you credible enough to be a leader alone is that you fucking decide that you are and that you believe that you are. So I said to you, in the Uber I think, what you've got to understand is that just being around you is a value. And then you said, how is that a value? Marlene Leslie: Yeah, I did. I was like, what? Katrina Ruth: Like, how? And I'm like, okay, you can choose to play smaller and think that it's egotistical to imagine that just being around you is a value. Typically, that is what people would say to me, right? They'd be like, it sounds egotistical if I think that I'm good enough that people should listen to me and people should, you know, that I should be able to teach people something or position myself as somebody to pay attention to. Katrina Ruth: It's actually egotistical not to and the reason is that it's not about you, the person who has their own insecurities and doubts, as we all do. It's about the talent and the gift that you have inside of you and if you separate your own self, your own self away from that, will that talent and gift inside of you help people, yes or no? Marlene Leslie: Yeah. Katrina Ruth: Right, so get out of your own way, get the fuck over yourself. It's not about you, it's about what's inside of you. So if you would prevent yourself from putting your work out into the world because you think it's egotistical to imagine that people should listen to you, then what you are actually doing is stopping people from being helped and served and you are making your own human self more important than the message and the gift that's inside of you. So look at it as, what if it was a responsibility to get that message out and to impact people with what you have. And that's what I do and I feel like people will never fully understand how real this is for me, and even people who do know me super well. We were just saying that you know me really well, you know that I'm a natural introvert. We've stayed together, travelled together, known each other for some years now, you know that I'm not the person that people online think I am. Marlene Leslie: Totally. Katrina Ruth: Right? But, it's still a real part of me, it's not fake, it's not made up. It's that I allow it to come out, I access that part of me and I let it out. But when I come online, not always, but a significant part of the time I'm still that same scared little girl whose like, am I good enough, do people really want to listen to this, am I just repeating myself all the time? Am I too rambling, I'm wishy-washy, I'm vague, I'm all over the place or some people who don't like me or what do people think about how I look. Like, all the normal things, right? Marlene Leslie: Absolutely. We talked about this earlier too, about how some of the people that we coach are mirrors to us and this comes up for everyone. It's funny to hear. Katrina Ruth: Like you coach your clients and you're like oh, I should probably do that too. Marlene Leslie: Yeah, that's really good advice, I should listen to that. Katrina Ruth: I watch my own livestream replays, I'm not even kidding. I watch my own livestream replays because I don't know what I'm talking about right now, it's all just whatever comes out. Then later on I'll watch it and think that's good, I'll write that down. Marlene Leslie: But it's true, it's true. You hear the stuff that comes up and then you look in the mirror and you are like oh, how can I possibly coach people on this and help them get out of their own way but yet... Katrina Ruth: Because you understand it. Marlene Leslie: Yeah, I understand it but I think that we are also really sneaky when it comes to ourselves. Katrina Ruth: Yeah, the internal critic, the internal dialogue. Marlene Leslie: Yeah, absolutely. It takes somebody like you or another coach to say hey, by the way... Katrina Ruth: Get out of your own way. Marlene Leslie: Exactly. Katrina Ruth: It's not about you it's about what you can help people with, get over yourself, stop making it all about I feel this and I feel that and what do people think about this and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. Instead, make it what if I was committed to my work, my art, my message, my business, my clients, whatever it is. And also, I guess in the end it's just like when you put all your own drama aside, like what we just said, do you know that what you have inside of you can help people. Katrina Ruth: And you had asked me the question, because I said just being around you is a value and you were like, how? And I'm like, because of the way you've lived your life. Like, I never prepared for anything, right? I ran my event here yesterday and it was so fucking amazing, I'm doing San Diego next Tuesday, message me if you want to come. I was saying to Marlene, and the ladies yesterday knew this as well obviously, I don't prepare anything for that. The event started at 11:00 am, from about 10:15 to 10:40 I was taking selfies in the mirror in the bedroom because I had those rose-gold thigh high boots on. I mean, I'm just going to say, it's essential to get a really good selfie in the boots, that was my preparation for the event. Katrina Ruth: But prior to that my preparation earlier that morning was journaling, did some inspiring reading of my books in there that you saw. Marlene Leslie: Shared on livestream. Katrina Ruth: Not in the morning, that's an afternoon activity, thank you. Wrote something online, went to the gym, went to Equinox, went to the dry bar, did a little bit writing or whatever there. So I did nothing to prepare for the event, in fact I literally didn't even prepare for the event until the afternoon before when I got here and I was like, hey I want to run an event tomorrow and they are like that is plenty short notice and I'm like I'm sure you can figure it out. I didn't plan a single note or concept or anything that I would speak about because I knew and trusted that the message for these women would come through me and would be powerful. However, and this was my point around the value of being around you. My fucking preparation was the fact that since I was 11 years old, so for 27 years now, I've been doing personal development and growth work. Katrina Ruth: That was my preparation and my preparation is the way I live my life every single day and your preparation and what makes you credible and what makes you credible, if you know that this is for you as well, is the way you live your life and how when other people are doing whatever the fuck it is that they are all doing out there, which we really don't want to know most of the time, you're growing and you're putting yourself into uncomfortable situations and you're walking away from situations that are not aligned and you are actively, day by day, moment by moment, designing your life purposefully. I think we take that, we forget sometimes that that's not normal. And not that we want to necessarily be like oh, that's not normal, but mostly to make the point that that is of immense value. The way you live your life is of immense value. So therefore, when you open your mouth, literally value comes out. So somebody should pay just to be around you or they can pay, but it depends on what you want to do. Marlene Leslie: Right, yeah. And I think the question that I asked you to that was, how do you monetize that? Like that's the question, there are so many coaches out there that are selling stuff that doesn't seem to be inline with, sometimes I sense a misalignment in what they are saying and what they are actually doing. So you pick up on that. Katrina Ruth: You can feel it. Like give love heart shower if you see on your Facebook feed people who are selling shit where, like actually I wanted to put a post up, I think I've forgotten and you've just reminded me, which was something like hey, stop fucking selling shit that you yourself have no clue about. Like you're scarcely verbal, your desperate vibe shows. Marlene Leslie: Yeah, exactly, exactly. So the question is how do you, like how do you monetize that in a way that is true to you? Katrina Ruth: Is not that. Marlene Leslie: Yeah, is not that, exactly. Katrina Ruth: Well, firstly you know that you wouldn't because you decide to, like you say that and you are like, ick. It doesn't feel good, it feels yuck inside of you. So you consciously chose out of that already. But secondly, it is about you've got to be, I think it's a courage thing, you've got to be courageous enough. KELLY!!!! That's Kelly. Marlene Leslie: Oh hey! Katrina Ruth: What's up! All right, shout out for Kelly. Everybody send Kelly the love heart shower, I think she's at LAX about to get on a plane. Send her good vibes for her flight home. We're sending you wine and happy flight vibes. Miss you. Katrina Ruth: Jenna, hey! I'm reading the comments. Energy doesn't like, exactly Kristine, energy doesn't like, people can feel. Kelly, look at all those love hearts coming in for you. People can feel when you are being real and when you are not being real in the land. Katrina Ruth: So, how you are going to monetize it? I'm like very committed to this cushion. You don't understand how bloated my stomach is right now you guys, it's death. Well, not really, I'm abundantly alive but anyway, I'm very distracted by it. So you've got to get into giving yourself permission to own your greatness. That's the long and the short of it, right? Like, we all do this, I did this for years, one of my key jobs or roles that I choose into and that I love as a mentor is to kind of kick your ass, to not spend years doing it, like I did. Like the whole point of mentoring with somebody like me, for people that mentor with me. Katrina Ruth: Like I'm constantly preaching at my friends because it just kind of happens as well, like the whole point is not just to learn maybe how somebody does something that if you align to their way of doing things but you should be able to save time and effort and money or whatever by saying, okay, this person is like me and they are saying they wasted all this time doing this that means I don't have to waste all that time, I can learn my lesson. I didn't have a mentor like myself telling me to be true to myself and stay the course and follow my soul and I literally took years before I finally gave in to being me and I think everybody takes years in some way or another before they finally give into being them. Katrina Ruth: And what people do and what you don't want to do is people kind of dip their toe in the water, where they try to do the real passion purpose work that's inside of them and they do like some kind of half fake, not fake, but half assed attempt basically, a cautious attempt is a better way to say it. Katrina Ruth: They are like, well you know I don't want to be inappropriate. Marlene Leslie: Or I don't want to offend anybody. Katrina Ruth: Right, I don't want to offend anybody. Marlene Leslie: Or intimidate anyone. Katrina Ruth: That, be too aggressive, be too much, like women like us, this is what they say about women like you, women like me. She's too much, she's too aggressive, she's too loud, she's over the top, don't you think she's a bit whatever. So we learn to tone it down but also it's the not good enough thing comes up again and like I always wanted to talk about the stuff I talk about now and then for years I was like, why would I get to talk about that, what makes me good enough to talk about that and who would want to listen to me. Marlene Leslie: It doesn't matter. Katrina Ruth: Yeah, it doesn't matter. Is it even a thing? Like everybody here has felt this, is my message good enough, does that really matter? And everyday people say to me, I'm not clear on what my message is and I say bullshit. You are clear, it's just that one, you've got given yourself permission and two, you think it needs to be more fancy in order to be good enough. You're like bad cop, that's too vague, that's like not even a thing. Marlene Leslie: I totally believe that. Yeah, it needs to be packaged really nicely and it needs to be perfect and it needs to use all the right words. Katrina Ruth: And have like modules. Marlene Leslie: Yeah, like the right cadence and the right tone inflexion, like all of that stuff. Yeah, absolutely. Katrina Ruth: Yeah, exactly, when actually your true message is the simple truth of, like I have this megaphone exercise that I give all my clients, which is if you are on the balcony, like on whatever floor, but if you are on a balcony super high up and there was like tens of thousands of people below you and you had a megaphone and get one minute and you get to say, hey, don't you understand, this is what you've got to understand about life, this is what it's about, what would you say? Marlene Leslie: I'd say, be you and I've said that for the longest time. Katrina Ruth: Right, and it is very fucking simple and we would all say some version of that, but that's actually the whole message, that's it. And then you kind of like, but how do you monetize that? And everybody says, but that's like come on, everybody says that. How am I going to stand out from the other coaches and how do you turn that into something you would sell. Well, you start to build on it but you don't imagine to yourself that it's got to be something different from that simple core message. My core message is be you, be unapologetically you. But then when I express it I say a few more words than that and it comes out through the filter of my life experience and what I've chosen and what I've done. So there are lessons, there are stories, there are details or elements but the message is just, be unapologetically you, life does not press play, you've can't have it all, do what it takes. Katrina Ruth: Whatever it is it just comes out differently each day. But it's always the simple stuff and in any era of life it's the simple stuff, right? Whether it's health and fitness, whether it's business, whether it's love, anything just comes down to simple core truths. And there is nothing you need to add to that. Marlene Leslie: So do you find that using, how do you relate that message to executives that are very lonely when they get to that point and they want a little bit more substance. They are used to pain, they are used dealing with it being really hard and I'm wondering how you attract those people in on a regular basis? Katrina Ruth: It's about realising that no matter how high level somebody is, they are a person who has their own insecurities, doubts, uncertainties. And actually, what I've found, is that the higher level somebody is the more they really appreciate, and we were talking about this, like real and raw, and typically the higher level somebody is the more that people, in general, are scared to speak to them at all. Marlene Leslie: I see that all the time. Katrina Ruth: Or they are scared to speak in a real way or speak the truth and it's kind of like cow towing or whatever the expression is. And just faking it, essentially. So when you come in and you be that, you just honestly just be your real self, like you said, and say what you know to say. It doesn't matter how impressive or high up the person in front of you is, if you just pause for a moment and check in with your own self and be like, what do I need to say to this person, you'll know what to say. And people, like I've mentored and consulted with people who have even up to multi hundred million dollar businesses and if they don't have significance and meaning connected to their core desires, and often it is something to do with auto-creativity or whatever it is, then they are not happy. Katrina Ruth: And it doesn't mean that they are going to walk away from their whole business and life, necessarily, but when you can start to connect somebody back to what matters to you, what makes you come alive, and just speak to them as yourself, like take away what their title is or their position. Like, for me, in the online world, I have many clients now who are very well known leaders online and some of those clients, when they first started working with me, I was kind of like, are you sure? Do you know who you are? Like, I know I'm doing okay but I was like, really? Such and such person wants to me to be their mentor? And now that's just kind of my client base. Katrina Ruth: But I still feel that way, I'm still like this is kind of crazy. Like, how did I pull this off? How am I getting away with this? Because all I'm doing is speaking my truth. All I'm doing is, I became the person who stopped worrying about whether it was allowed or whether it was okay. And relevant to your question of how do you know how to coach those people? Well you know because you know and if you put aside the idea that you don't know, well then it's going to be a complicated thing. Then you do know exactly what to say. Marlene Leslie: Yeah, so I don't have a problem coaching those people, I want to know how to cull them in. Katrina Ruth: Okay, cool, perfect. So this is exactly what we were talking about at the end of dinner around fuck niching, or however the word is said here in America. I get confused about it. Like screw niching and nitching, both of them. And like demographics and all that bullshit. It's not about that, that's not how you find your ideal clients, right? It's about personality type and characteristics. So you write down, who is the person who I am speaking to. Like, my ideal client is, well most of my clients are women, but that's because I've typically marketed to women, so a woman or a man now, it's a person who is a born entrepreneur, firstly. So I don't believe in entrepreneurs being made. Yes, I'll agree that somebody can become an entrepreneur and build a business, that's not the same as being a born entrepreneur, that's a different kettle of fish. Katrina Ruth: So my clients are born for it, they've always known it, they've always known that they were born for more. They've grown up feeling like they are kind of smarter than everybody and know more than everybody but they probably felt bad about that, because it sounds egotistical. But they just knew inside of them that they were born for more, that they are going to do something extraordinary, they are not going to live the normal life, they are going to create something amazing. They've always had that yearning and that pull and that are typically like the fuck the status quo, black sheep type person who breaks all the rules. Either who was a bad girl or a bad girl growing up or alternatively more like me, who was like a teacher's pet good girl who somehow hacked the entire fucking system and nobody knew that I was always just doing whatever the fuck I want. Katrina Ruth: But I was still like the A grade, good girl student but I never did anything. I just like hacked it and I always just got the result and I was like, it's so easy. Like I'd always get the top mark and I didn't do anything, right? Which is still now, I'm like I don't really do anything, somebody should report me, I don't know what I'm doing here, like I'm just making shit up every day and now people are agreeing to pay me so that I can talk at them when I just wanted them to listen to me the whole time anyway. Katrina Ruth: So that's who my client set has been, they've either been like kind of a rabble rouser and got into trouble growing up or they were like the good girl or good boy who hacked the system and kind of got away with shit and nobody really knew. And then as time went on, they pretty much walked out on every job, they continually started new business ventures or new endeavours or always never finished them and then feel bad about it, like I never finish things, there is something wrong with me, I'm not being organised, I'm not responsible, I'm not reliable. Because that whole time when you are walking away from everything and supposedly failing at everything and quitting on everything in your life, what you were really doing was going more and more connected to your soul and you were like the one person whose smart enough to not stick with something that's not soul aligned. Katrina Ruth: And now that person is like that woman or man whose said that she's too much, too aggressive, over the top, doesn't do it properly, I could go on and on but my point is that's how you cull your clients. You speak to who they are at their core and you don't worry about what their demographics are. My clients spend, as we were saying, I just from early 20s into 60s and even beyond actually, and all walks of life and all types of businesses, as well. Roughly 40%, maybe a little bit more of my clients are coaches, there are many different kinds of people. It's not about what they do, it's not about how they look, what their age is, what their background is, it's about who they are at their core. Katrina Ruth: And then the way to get those clients wanting to work with you is you do have to be doing this, right? Which you are. But messaging and communication of some kind. Marlene Leslie: So like blogging? Katrina Ruth: Blogging, telling stories, writing massive 3,000 word blog posts every single day 365 days a year. No, not really. You don't have to do anything that I do but you've certainly got to communicate, right? Because you want to be that voice where your core clients are like, if Marlene doesn't write another fucking blog post at 3 I'm going to go over to her house and personally sit her down and make her write it. Like, I used to have bloggers that I would follow, which I still do, but I get so shitty, like I'd be curious to know, like on the odd occasion where I take a day off, does anybody get kind of shitty at me? That I didn't post anything? And I know you do because I gets messages about it. People will message me and be like, did you die? Um excuse me Kat, why have you not posted a blog in two days? Katrina Ruth: And I used to be like that. Like you find that person that you are inspired by and you just want them to produce content for you all the time and the way to become that person for your people is to just become that person and do it and be it and then continue to show up for it. So then your ideal clients wake up in the morning and they are like I'm going to go check Marlene's page and see what she's posted or has she done another livestream, because that's food for their soul. Katrina Ruth: So the question would be, not how do I find my clients the question is, how do I just be food for the soul of my clients right now. And the way to do that is so easy, it's literally turn on the camera or start writing and say what's inside of you, zero filter. Like, whatever it is. Whether it's about obvious relevant things. Kristine says, haha, I feel like where's Kat, why hasn't she gone online. I got so much shit last month when I did hardly any livestreams because I was in the hospital and then I was travelling. I was going my branding in LA with Chris and it was quite full on. We were doing these fancy things. And I did like two livestreams in a month, which was so rare for me. Gosh, people were giving me such a hard time about it. Not in a mean way, obviously. But that's what happens when you build up your position as a leader. And you've just got to let it be easy. Marlene Leslie: It's true. I was going to ask you a question but I know what you'll probably say, to the idea of creating content. Like that's a lot of pressure to create content on a regular basis and to first, like find your voice and then secondly, to like own it and do it on a consistent daily basis because you don't want to be that person that's dipping their toe in the water. Katrina Ruth: Right, but you have a voice already. That's the thing to realise. Right? Like, we go to dinner or we go out with a group of people, you're an aggressive, over-the-top, and we did establish earlier this evening, a hilarious person. We agreed that we are both very funny, we established that earlier in the evening. Marlene Leslie: Cheers. Katrina Ruth: But that's who you are, you're like the life of the party person, same as me, that's why we're friends. We would have never stayed in touch after Bali if we weren't that same sort of person, right? So you already have that voice, you have that crazy irreverent personality and also ability to go super deep super fast and experience and knowledge and wisdom. And its literally just let that same part of you come out here, don't separate it. Katrina Ruth: This kind of doesn't make sense because we're all online and we don't go to boardrooms, but it's a good analogy that I came up with a few years ago, which is it should be the same conversation in the boardroom as what's in the bar. Right? Like separate nothing, at all. The irreverent stuff, the crazy stuff, the random shit that's got nothing to do with anything, like even me carrying on about my pants and my stomach at the start of the livestream. That's just me being me but its also me kind of, that was somewhat deliberate of me to do that because I'm conscious of who wants to just sit down and watch a, like what are we going to do, sit here like this, hello Marlene, this evening on the Katrina Ruth show we're going to have a conversation about what it takes to be a leader online but hang on a second, you shouldn't really do that with a top that has holes in it. Marlene Leslie: Let's start this again. Cut! Cut! Katrina Ruth: And you definitely shouldn't do it in like MC Hammer copper pants. Marlene Leslie: Cut! We're going to delete all this, right? Katrina Ruth: Yes. Marlene Leslie: These people on here are all friends. Katrina Ruth: And besides, switch spots with these weirdo [inaudible 00:36:48], like it should be a proper set. Like, do you know what I mean? Like so many entrepreneurs are like, I'm going to make it look like perfect and now I'm going to present my topic, like they are presenting like a grade school paper or something. Marlene Leslie: Did you hear what I said? Like Marie? Katrina Ruth: Ooh. Marlene Leslie: I'm just kidding, I don't want to be mean. Katrina Ruth: Marlene, you're the one who said it. You guys didn't hear that. But you know what I mean? Like, you don't have to find your voice to message online. There is a voice already there, just use the one that you've got. Marlene Leslie: That's a good point, yeah. Katrina Ruth: But all of it, like all of it. That's the missing link. Don't make it like I've got to make sure that I've got a relevant topic that's of value and it's useful and is this a good enough topic and then what are my fucking three key points or something like that. Don't do that. Make it the same as if you would go to dinner and you already go to dinner with high level people and we all actively call people who are thinkers and action takers and success minded and growth minded. And you'd be able to have an amazing, inspiring, entertaining and motivating conversation with them. So just put it here, same thing. Marlene Leslie: What if nobody watches it? Katrina Ruth: Then you keep on going because you've got to trust in the process. That's a good question because that is hard. Like, I can remember my first livestream, it was actually on Periscope. Do you remember Periscope? So, it wasn't that long ago. It was that same year in Bali, it wasn't that long ago. I was Periscoping from Rob's villa but I did the first one like not that long before we met. It went for about ten minutes and after the ten minutes I found out that I had done the whole thing sideways and I hadn't known because I didn't know how to read the comments at the time. And people were like, it's sideways and that was all that the comments were about. And if you would watch it, and I think it's gone now, or maybe it's somewhere on YouTube, who knows, but team probably like downloaded it on YouTube, but I was so nervous and I was so [inaudible 00:38:53]. Katrina Ruth: I was nothing like the savvy, livestreaming entertainer that I am now. Because I've been online for nearly 12 years now, but Facebook Live is fairly new and livestreams in general, but I think when I first started doing them, for ages it was like three or four people getting on, stuff like. Now it's so widely varied, there's 19 people on right now, but this will totally get like several thousand views over the next day or so, and sometimes there are a few hundred people on, it goes quite varied. But either way, make it not about the numbers, make it about the message. And play the long game, right? Like, for real, you feel self-conscious if you do something and nobody seems to be engaging. Or let's say that you try to sell something and only one person buys it. But you've got to look at it like, well imagine somebody said, well I went to the gym today and I don't have abs yet, so what should I do? Marlene Leslie: Totally. Katrina Ruth: I'd be like, um, hello, idiot. Marlene Leslie: Keep going. Katrina Ruth: It's going to take more than a day or maybe even more than 100 days in a row, who knows. Depending on what your goal is, but play the long game. And I think it is about that, it's about being that very rare person that's going to be brave enough to put themselves out there when they do feel self-conscious and when they do feel like, is this good enough. And you put that video out, like you did something terrifying and scary. Tell people about it. Marlene Leslie: Yeah, I mentioned to Kat earlier that I, my coach had me put a video on Facebook to coach a hundred people in a hundred days, which the coaching part didn't scare me but the moment that she said video on social media, my heart dropped and I started trembling, I was like ugh. Like, can I just talk to people? She's like nope, social media, tomorrow. And I was like, holy shit! What? I was like fine, I'll do it. This also came after I had struggled putting my website together and writing my copy and going through this entire process. Katrina Ruth: And letting people know you. Marlene Leslie: Yeah, letting people get to know me and putting my message out there. So I actually asked for this challenge, I was like you know, I really want to be challenged in a way that I can overcome something because I felt really good. Long story short, I did the Facebook video and it was horrifying, it was so scary. The moment that I pressed post I was like, ugh, nobody is going to watch this and I'm going to have to like go into witness protection programme. Like this is going to bomb. Katrina Ruth: I watched it. Marlene Leslie: But the crazy thing about that was that I had a lot of people reach out to my privately that were impressed by my bravery, my courage. Like all of these words that were used and all the support that I got, that I didn't even anticipate, it was amazing and I reconnected with a lot of great people and actually coached a lot of great people too. It was pretty powerful and I got like 1.8k views or something, which is crazy. Katrina Ruth: And that's the thing, like so few people are going to choose to be brave enough to do something like that and every time you are brave and vulnerable and authentic. Marlene Leslie: That word came up a lot. Katrina Ruth: Vulnerable, right. It pays off, for sure. And there is no way to get around the terrifying part though, that's the thing. You've got to go through it but at the end of the day we are all here to create a life that other people don't even dare to dream of. So it's kind of like, at some point you've got to remind yourself that it's not going to fall into your lap just because you were born for it. Nobody is going to knock on your door with a silver platter and be like, hi you were born for it, here's your leader status, here's your dream life, here's your soulmate. I used to think that. Like I honestly thought that. And then when I was like 27 I was like fuck, I don't think it's going to happen, I think I have to do it. Marlene Leslie: You have to work for it, yeah. Katrina Ruth: Yeah! Legitimately, I was like, holy shit. Because when you are 27 you think that 30 is clearly the beginning of the end, right? Like, when you are 27 you are like I'm going to be 30! Life is nearly over! Like, I had a lot of friends and clients who are not yet 30 and I'm like, shut the fuck up. They are like, I'm going to be 30, I'm not a billionaire yet. Marlene Leslie: You'll be just fine. Katrina Ruth: I'm like, just shut up or I'm going to punch you. But I got to 27, I did, and I was like, fuck, I haven't done any of the stuff, I had a whole life planned. Married at 24, kids at 26, millionaire by 30, just your typical normal life plan. I was like 25, I got married and I'm like, I'm on track, I'm sweet. Then 26, I'm divorced, not part of the plan. 27, no clue, bulimia, debt, looking great from the outside, fitness modelling, whatever, like showing the world success, mess. And I was literally like fuck, what am I going to do? Katrina Ruth: Because I was a personal trainer and I was good at it and I loved fitness but I was not in a good place, but I knew that fitness wasn't my life. And it was, it was that thing of going, holy shit, my whole life I've known I'm born for more and I just suddenly realised that it's not going to magically happen. And that's the year that I started my first blog. Marlene Leslie: Oh wow. Katrina Ruth: Yeah, that's why I started. Because I was like, I better start doing something then. And I built my own little homemade website, it was like, website in a box I think it was called, and you pay for it like $100 and you build it yourself. It was a black background with white writing and neon colours everywhere. Marlene Leslie: Shocker. Katrina Ruth: And it was called kickasslifetraining.com. Anyway. But we all went through that period. So you do have to go through that period of putting yourself out there and what if nobody is watching and nobody responds and I fall on my face. I've had way more offers failed than what have succeeded over the years, but nobody knows or remembers about that. And I barely even remember about it at this point. But it is true and it is real. I just think, when I look back at my business journey I know that very few people would put themselves through what I put myself through because they don't have the inner strength and the tenacity and I think that's really what this conversation is about. Marlene Leslie: Yeah. Katrina Ruth: It's not about do you know you've got what it takes, because you know that, you know that, we all know that. It's about do you have the tenacity, do you have the resilience, do you have the inner strength, will you choose it, because it's all a choice anyway, right? Marlene Leslie: Yeah, but I think that its normal to have those doubts in everything that you do. So, do you feel that that inner strength can be built up? Katrina Ruth: Definitely! It's a muscle, the same as we build our muscles in fitness and we build our mindset in fitness as well. I mean, for me personally and you are probably the same, like I take a lot of stuff to this day in my business from fitness. Marlene Leslie: Oh, totally. Katrina Ruth: Like, you know how to push through, you know how to overcome, you know how to go beyond your limits, you know when you feel like you are at your limit so you want to stop but you know that you are actually not at your limit. So I feel really grateful that I had fitness in my life for such a long time because it has taught me so much and I think that it's critical. But, regardless, anyhow, yes it can be built up, of course it's a practise and a discipline and it's basically that moment when you feel like you can't keep going. Katrina Ruth: Or actually, like back in the day, years ago I used to train with professional rugby players and I was always the only female in the gym, because it was part of our management training when I worked in Australia's largest health club chain. And it would literally be like, you think you are going to die, and I still train so extreme and I learned it from these guys, but back then it was beyond. And it was literally like you would be on the floor nearly crying and dying and it would be like hey Kat, are you dead? No. Then get up and keep going. They don't care. Throwing up? Are you dead? No? Then get up and keep going. Katrina Ruth: And I really just applied that philosophy to business. I don't mean, and we talked about this, I don't mean that you've got to work all the hours to make money or burn yourself out and do shit that you don't want to do, but maybe you do maybe you don't, we all have, but obviously what I teach and preach is fall on your knees and that's what I believe. But it's a kind of interesting thing to talk about because I felt, I was like, I didn't do anything, I felt pretty sure that I did nothing, I'd just sit around all day, all I did was yoga and gym, facial, massage, or whatever. Katrina Ruth: But I still actually wrote about 5,000 words of content, including a sales pitch for an entire new programme, and a long blog posts and a bunch of promotional stuff and communicated with 100% of my clients privately. I said to you, I did nothing today, I slept in, I went to yoga, had a smoothie, had a facial, then went to the gym, had another smoothie, then went to the dry bar and then went to dinner. I was legitimately like I had a total bliss day. Katrina Ruth: Now I'm like, hang on, I wrote a sales pitch for a whole new programme, I wrote a 2,500 word blog post, which was really good, I communicated with all of my private clients [inaudible 00:48:57], I responded to my all my team staff, I laid out a bunch of new project stuff and like probably ten other things I can't even remember right now. To me, I'm like I did nothing. So it's about becoming that person whose disciplined and where it's just kind of who you are, you don't think about it. I'm way off on a tangent there. Marlene Leslie: So how do you differentiate between the stuff that you have to do or that you need to do for your business, like a Facebook Live, like obviously that's something that I'm not comfortable with and everyone has their thing. So the Facebook Live versus like being in flow and ease. Katrina Ruth: Okay. This is where you've got to go, is it true that you don't want to do a Facebook Live or is it that you can't for your mindset, because I know who you are as a person, that actually you're the exact kind of perfect person to do Facebook Live and that if it wasn't a new uncomfortable area you'd be having the best time ever. So the way to differentiate is kind of like a gut check. Like, okay is this an aligned action for me, personally, to be taking my business. Do I, at my core, feel that this is right for me to be doing, yes or no? And if yes, do I feel grumpy or scared or annoyed or fearful around it? Marlene Leslie: Yes. Katrina Ruth: Well, too bad because you just said it's aligned, right? Marlene Leslie: Right. Katrina Ruth: But then there are other things where somebody might go, well for me, anything where somebody says really classic internet marketing strategy type stuff, where I always felt, like even before I knew what I know now, that it's all so fucking unnecessary. But back before I really believed in myself, I intuitively felt like I just don't want to do that and what I felt was, I felt a feeling of I just don't really think that I have to. But then I was listening to people who were saying that you do have to, you should. So I was like, okay. Katrina Ruth: It was exactly like I had a coach helping me in the love and romance area and I stopped working with her and I was so grateful for the work that we did and things that I did learn but I had to stop working with her because she kept telling me this is how to communicate with men and like teaching me rules, right? Marlene Leslie: And you immediately want to break them. Katrina Ruth: Right. Well, at my core I was kind of like, oh well, I haven't had results or success in this area and I feel like I don't know what I'm doing yet and I was still learning or something, like I was in a long-term relationship for 15 years straight and all of a sudden you are single again, I was literally like, I don't know what dating even means. Like, I'm not really sure what you do on a date, how do you do that, how do you get a date and then what do you do on a date, right? So then I went and got a coach, or actually had several. Marlene Leslie: As one does. Katrina Ruth: Yeah. And some were amazing for me personally and one or two, it was like what would be said to me, I was like, I guess you're right because you're the expert but at my core what I felt was, really? Like, really? Am I really going to learn like a fucking script to send a message, for example. Like an appropriate way of how you would word things. So, yeah, that's how you know because something inside of you says well maybe you are right because you are the expert but actually, at my core, I just don't believe you. I kind of at my core don't think I have to do it that way and to be honest, if I would have to do it that way that would be bullshit. Because then what is any connection that I form going to be based on? Katrina Ruth: And that's how I felt with a lot of strategy stuff for business. Like I would hear stuff or see stuff on Facebook or people would tell me things, you've got to do this, you've got to do that. And I was like, I don't want to, personally. I just don't want to do that. And the history of my entire life says that if I don't want to do it it's pretty fucking unlikely that I'm going to do it, no matter what I try and pretend. Like, you might say to yourself, you are going to do something and then it's not going to happen. But there is also that part of you that's like, I kind of think I'm smarter than you. So that's how you differentiate. So go to something like Facebook Live, well is that how you feel about it? If so then don't do it. But if you are like, well I think I'm just kind of scared of it and I'm not used to it yet, then that's a whole different scenario, right? Marlene Leslie: Yeah, that's a good point. Katrina Ruth: So then daily, repeatedly, it's a matter of identify those things which you know you would be doing already if you'd gotten over yourself and if you had the confidence and if you were like kind of that next version of yourself and then you just do it, you just choose that you are going to do it. And nobody knows, it's kind of like, I remember changing schools when I was 8 years old and I was like the shy, introverted person that I am, but I remember when I changed schools I was like, well nobody knows that, I can be the cool girl. But I didn't, I didn't like choose to or know how to, I guess. But we're grown-ups now, we know how to show off and allow that confident side of ourselves out, it's actually a choice. Nobody knows. Katrina Ruth: Like I said, when I first met you I viewed you as this slightly scary, intimidating woman and you still are that to many people with what you do and what you achieve. And so am I to many people as well. And then you get to know each other and it's like, oh, she's like me. Marlene Leslie: Normal. Katrina Ruth: We can be friends. Lets do a livestream. Marlene Leslie: Oh god. Katrina Ruth: I don't know, what else are you thinking? Marlene Leslie: I'm speechless. Katrina Ruth: We have run out of speech. Marlene Leslie: I mean, not really. Katrina Ruth: Never. Marlene Leslie: Not really. Katrina Ruth: Well, how you know you should be doing Facebook Live is you are a talking, you have stories and things to say. Marlene Leslie: Oh god, I do. I don't know if I can go public. Katrina Ruth: Oh please. Marlene Leslie: Maybe we can refer to them as "clients". Katrina Ruth: Well, really if we had recorded our whole conversation from the bar and dinner, that's some fucking high value entertainment. Like, you're a storyteller. Like, this is the quietest I've ever seen you in 3 or 4 years. But like this woman is like a pretty fucking out there crazy person. Marlene Leslie: Chatterbox. Katrina Ruth: Over the top storytelling entertainer, life of the party, dominant. All the things that we all are and then you're just on a platform where it's uncomfortable. But you are going to get into it. Tell stories says Kristine. So Marlene told me she's dating two men and then she finished telling all the stories and I'm like, didn't you say two? What are we up to, what's happening, I don't remember anything. Marlene Leslie: We're up to four. Katrina Ruth: The point is, you definitely have things to say and to share with the world and that's who you are in your normal everyday life. Marlene Leslie: Yeah, I just have to get over that fear. I've never had trouble exercising or doing a workout plan or any of that stuff, to me it's very similar, I equate this to someone I work with in particular who has never exercised. It's like, how could you not? Katrina Ruth: Right. Marlene Leslie: Like, how could you not want to go for a run? Katrina Ruth: How is that even a thing? I'm like, how can you get on a plane or go to an event or go do anything. Marlene Leslie: Or people that don't travel. I have friends that won't get on a flight. I'm like, I don't even understand how you live, like how you live your life. Katrina Ruth: Right. So anything that you do that to you is just really natural and automatic and people try to make it out like it's a big deal and you're like, that's crazy. It's all just a choice. Right, like at some point along your journey, even if it was way back when, you decided to be a fit person, same as me. So at some point along my journey I decided I was sick of the fact that nobody knew who I was and I felt like people should know who I am and people should frickin' listen to me, just listen and then pay me for it. So then I decided to be that person. Katrina Ruth: And it really is that you guys. You've got to understand, people are like how did you become so well known online or whatever and I'm like, because I decided to. I just became that person, I let the inner side of me out. I appointed myself. I keep saying this over and over again and so few people follow it though, like one in a thousand, which makes sense anyway because I always say it's the one percent within the one percent, but the ones that do go to the top fast. Marlene Leslie: But it's scary. Katrina Ruth: It is scary, it is scary. Like, I think about my visions and dreams that I've not yet created, like things beyond my own businesses, like other businesses that I want to bring to life and my empire and other things that I desire in my life and it's terrifying. You know that. Like what we talked about earlier, like putting yourself out there and pursuing something where you feel like, am I crazy? Am I just like a crazy person and nobody wants to tell me? Well, people do tell me that. Right? But it's that thing that we all have of like is what I feel inside of me real, am I crazy, am I just like losing my mind? Who do I think I am that it could be like that? Katrina Ruth: The rule is that if you feel it inside of you then it is available for you or it wouldn't come through you. I believe that, I believe that you don't get given a dream that's not your dream to dream. So if it comes through you then it's available and it's available specifically for you, not just in the general sense. And, if you are feeling and dreaming it it's available now, already. Marlene Leslie: I totally believe that. Katrina Ruth: It's not like for ten years away. Even investing in ourselves can be scary as fuck. Of course it can, investing in any sense, not just financially, but energetically, emotionally, with our time. It is. We feel the fear and do it anyway. You know there is that cliché expression, but I feel like it's so true, which is you know you do what others won't so you can live like they can't. Well I'm at the stage now where if somebody comes along and just meets me, they see the product of my decade, two decades, whatever it is if you really go back through all the years of growth work. So people have a sort of perception of me, if they don't know my story or get to know me. And what's actually happened is, I did it, I did what others wouldn't do for many, many years. As every single person here has in different areas of their life and now I do get to live like they can't. Katrina Ruth: Like somebody said, you're living the dream. And I'm like, yeah, I am and I did the fucking work. Marlene Leslie: Yeah, you have. Yeah, that's exactly right because a lot of people expect it to just happen naturally and you read a book on manifestation and you're like, well how come I can't think it and it's appearing in my life. Like there is actually some action that needs to happen. Katrina Ruth: You can, it comes from thought but yeah there's like a lot more steps than that. Marlene Leslie: But you can't just think it. Katrina Ruth: It's the daily commitment and process. I think it all comes from thought, you do think it and that's how it happens but because you think it you become the person. And that kind of speaks to what I was saying where I legitimately feel like I don't do anything. I'm like, all I do is whatever I want all day. I only do whatever the fuck I want all day but then when you reverse engineer it, you're like, I do a fuckload of stuff. For my business, for my clients, for my children, for my health and fitness, for my relationships. I do a lot, but why do I feel like I do nothing? Because I became that person, so I kind of thought it into being part of my being. I did it through journaling as well. Katrina Ruth: Like fitness, right? To you, same as me, it's part of who you are, it's got nothing to do with what projects you're working on or how busy you are or whether you are travelling or whether you are tired, whether you feel like it. So therefore, you can say that it's easy to stay in great shape and to be fit but then of course you do the work. Marlene Leslie: And anytime somebody asks me how I stay in shape, I tell them that I work my fucking ass off. Katrina Ruth: Yeah, you work your ass off but it's easy because it's part of who you are. Like, it's not easy in the physical sense, the easy part is that there's no internal battle of will I or won't I. Marlene Leslie: The decision has already been made. Katrina Ruth: There is no negotiation being made. And that's actually the hard thing, that's why people lose their energy and their power, is not in the actual doing of the work, like whatever you do at the gym or the studio or whatever, the hard part is that conversation in your head, will I or won't I, do I feel like it, what about this, what about that, oh my god. Who has time for that. Marlene Leslie: It's exhausting. Katrina Ruth: It is exhausting. Marlene Leslie: You feel like you've done the work and haven't actually done anything. Katrina Ruth: Right, exactly. So just make it easy by making it part of who you are. You are still going to sweat and push and hustle and grind and do whatever you do. Like exercising isn't like a production, I just do it, it's easy. Right, it's easy because you just do it. Like, I say all the time, things are easier that doesn't mean you don't put the effort in. Marlene Leslie: Right. Katrina Ruth: Cool, we could talk all night. This is how easy it is to do a Facebook Live. You just start having a chat. Marlene Leslie: I just popped a cherry. Katrina Ruth: You popped your livestream cherry. I've taken another livestream virginity. It's not the first, it's kind of a thing. You brought it up though. Like, I might have hustled to get out of the restaurant because I got excited about taking my pants off. Two activities that are not always connected but occasionally. But it was your idea, you said it first. Marlene Leslie: I did nothing about this. Katrina Ruth: You did, you brought it up somehow. And I was like, done, I'm in. And then what you do next is sell something. Do you have anything to sell? Marlene Leslie: Just my teaching. I coach high level executives. Katrina Ruth: Are you a high level executive who needs somebody whose actually not afraid to tell you the truth? Marlene Leslie: Tell it like it is? That's exactly right, yeah. Katrina Ruth: Well that's the thing, right? That's why you do what you do so damn well. Because you are actually willing to say to people's faces what other people won't say. Marlene Leslie: That's true. Katrina Ruth: Connect with Marlene and if you want to come hang with me in San Diego next week I have one or two places left. Message me on my personal Katrina Ruth page if you want to come to my one day soul shifts and money making day in San Diego on Tuesday and stay tuned because I'm going to launch my high ticket sales with ease workshop probably tomorrow. Have an amazing rest of the day, keep pressing play. Marlene Leslie: Bye.
"What made Russell... RUSSELL??" After 18 months of sitting in the same room every day, I'm beginning to understand WHY Russell Brunson is Russell Brunson... maybe? What’s going on everyone? This is Steve Larsen and you’re listening to Sales Funnel Radio. Welcome to Sales Funnel Radio where you’ll learn marketing strategies to grow your online business using today’s best internet sales funnels and now here’s your host, Steve Larsen. Hey, hope you're good. Hey, so was it this last week? We were putting on this webinar. It went fantastic. I got to watch Russell in full bore offer creation mode, and it's been fun. I mean I love watching him in that mode as well, and I try and learn like crazy. I'm trying to be a sponge. The things that I learn, I'm trying to pass 'em on to you guys. I'm trying to soak in those things. I'm like, "Oh, my gosh, this guy's like a 14 years of experience of obsessive, obsessive perfectionism and being the absolute best inside the marketing world." Like holy crap, and I'm trying to soak things in. Well, it's been fun to watch. We put this webinar on, and it was cool to see why, and it was fun to watch why. He went back, and we were looking at the same old offers we had. We were like, "We need to fix some stuff. We could just fix it and re-put it out there," but honestly, it's completely a brand new offer. It's a totally different product. We went out, and we launched it and it killed it. It went amazing and yet, again, I had another experience where I went back home to my wife, and I said, "Babe, I just watched him make $1,000,000 again." Like holy crap. Russell and I were sitting back the other day, and it was fun to ... I love getting him in those moments where he starts to reminisce, and he's telling me about ... If you guys never been inside the ClickFunnels office, all across the ceiling, all across the walls towards the ceiling, there are these 2 Comma Club plaques. They're all across the walls. They're all over the place, all over the walls, all over ... in the hallway near where the bathrooms are. Literally, ceiling-to-floor totally covered in 2 Comma Club plaques of people, of the ClickFunnels users who've made a million bucks, and they're constantly coming in another five every week. It's crazy. I mean it's really, really exciting. It's fun to see. I didn't think I had any kind of aversion towards making money beforehand. I really didn't, but the scope of what I feel like I'm able to accomplish has just been sky-rocketing. I was sitting back and Russell started reminiscing. He goes, and he was honestly asking me ... "Hey." He's like, "Steven, dude, how many 2 Comma Club plaques do I have out there again?" I was like, "You have like 18." He's like, "Dude, I've been put in the 2 Comma Club 18 times on my own and three of those awards are in the 8-Figure Club." This is besides ClickFunnels, altogether, which makes a lot of money. Besides, ClickFunnels, altogether, right? Russell knows how to make offers. It's fun to go back and watch him create offers. Repeatedly, one of the phrases, one of the lessons that's been ... I mean it was already burned in my brain. I remember two or three years ago, I was listening to ... It was when I first learned of who Russell Brunson was. I hope you guys ... I'm totally Russell Brunson Fan Boy. If you guys are not okay with that you should probably get off because there's ... anyway. I hope you don't mind if I share some lessons that I learned from him personally. This is one that's really stuck out to me, and I wanna tell you what I'm doing about it, but anyway, about three years ago, I was listening to one of Russell's earlier podcasts when it was still "Marketing In Your Car." He said in there, and I believe I've brought this up before, but he said in there ... "One of the easiest ways to become successful in something is to get a coach, number one and number two, to be a coach." Right? The moment you get a coach, you're not held accountable. Number two, the moment you become a coach you start to learn your own tactics better because people are asking you how you do what you do. You may not I honestly know how you're doing what you're doing, so you get a coach, and you be a coach. That theme has continued to come up over and over and over. I mean all the time it comes up, and it came up again yesterday. Honestly, weekly that that is the theme. He is constantly looking for the next coach, for the next person, the person that he can go hook into and not only be held accountable from, but who's the next powerhouse he can take his plug and plug into and learn more, whatever it is and supercharge. I love books. I am surrounded in them right now as I'm recording this podcast. There are books all over the place; stacks of them literally. Not just in bookshelves. There are stacks of books. Books a great, but sometimes when it comes to applicable knowledge that you need in the moment, man, coaches are great. Get a coach. Get a coach. Get a coach. Get a coach. That's been the thing that I've been watching him doing. I mean I'm starting to do myself as well. There was guy when I got hired on at ClickFunnels, and I was the ... got hired on as the Lead Funnel Builder. I'm sitting there, and I was already starry eyed. I'm pretty sure I was mute for the first two months 'cause I couldn't believe I was sitting three feet away from Russell Brunson. I was like, "Holy crap, dude. I almost put a poster of you on my wall?" He was like, "Ah, ha-ha." I was like, "I'm not kidding." It's like oh, awkward. There's a guy though who messaged out to me. He goes, "Dude, do you realize that to be near Russell that often is to become more like him in every way." Trey Lewellen calls me "little Brunson" now. I'm not patting my own back, but what I've started to notice, I've been there a year and a half now, and I'm like, "Oh, my gosh. That's starting to become true." The ism's; my mannerisms. Even the way I speak, the way I teach, all those pieces are starting to sink deeply into my own behaviors. Behavior is not an easy thing to change in human beings, right? It's not. That takes a long time. There is a huge amount of conscious effort that goes into shifting how you behave, right? Tons. Oh, especially over the last two or three weeks. I've begun to ask myself why has Russell become Russell? It's been a very interesting question, and it's kind of been a little bit subconscious; also conscious question, though. I was like, "Why? Why do I really feel Russell has become Russell?" There's a lot of reasons. There's a ton of 'em. The work ethic is through the roof, right? I mean he ... The dude knows how to work, right? He understands how to be a creator, right? Rather than someone just creating a me-too product. He knows how to create offers. It's so funny. A lot of times we'll go create something. ClickFunnels will go put something out there and within a little while, people will be trying to knock it off with their own versions of it. Russell has not created his expertise by learning how to do that well. He has created his expertise on learning how to create brand new amazing offers, right? That's huge, but why? One of the major points I'm trying to get here: why has Russell become Russell? Because I have never seen him where he's not had a coach. I have never seen him where there's not a sense of urgency, which is in part to the fact that someone else is holding him accountable as well, who he has paid money to. That's amazing. Recently, I would do coaching. I love it. It's a lot of fun. It was actually a buddy. I don't know if you guys know Akbar Sheik. I actually had him on the podcast recently. I hope he doesn't mind me telling this. I respect him like crazy. He is not just an acquaintance. He's a true friend to the core and I really, really appreciate him, but if you think about that. He came, and he's like, "Hey, do you wanna look over something of mine? I'll take one of your coaching spots." I was like, "Sure, that'd be great." I was tempted to not charge him, and I was tempted to not charge him because we're close. We're very, very close. You know what I mean? I've done that a lot to family, and I've done a lot of close friends and you know what I've noticed? Every single time is they never do anything afterwards. Ever. It's the saddest. It's heart-wrenching for both; the one being coached and the coach. Because the coach is really trying to help and so even by the way of self-preservation. Not that I'm emotionally weak or anything, but it sucks to watch that. I was like, "Dude, I hope you don't mind, but there is a law; some kind of weird unspoken law that if I don't charge somebody they don't do anything. They don't do anything. It's a sad thing to watch happen. It's not fun." When I first graduated from college, I was so impressed by the book, "DotCom Secrets," I sent 30 of them to friends for free. I just got the books, and I sent 30 of them out. I was like, "This book literally has changed my life. It started my actual business while I was in college. It got me out the door. It got me. It got me everything." "DotCom Secrets" was the freaking way, man. I mean I was so obsessed already that I plugged the powerhouse that I was already learning to become with the powerhouse of "DotCom Secrets," and it exploded me and made me qualifiable to actually work at a place like ClickFunnels next to Russell. You know what I mean? It's because I was trying to coach. I was trying to get a coach, and I was trying to be a coach. That was a principal that was always going through, around in my head, but I told my buddy. I was like, "Dude, I feel like I gotta charge you although it's weird for me to do so." He was like, "Hey, dude, I actually understand that. You charge me full price." I was like, "Okay." It's amazing what happens when there is a transfer of value back and forth. That's why it's free plus shipping. Does that make sense? Because if it was just free, no one would ever do anything afterwards. There has to be, even though it's usually $7 for the shipping. There has to be some kind of transfer value both ways. It's a give and give relationship, not a give and take one. Does that makes sense? All of business is, all of customers ... Any business I've ever seen that's worthwhile. It's sustainable for a lot of reasons. It is a give and take. There has to be some kind of transfer of value back and forth between the two, but I'm starting to notice ... Akbar paid me. My buddy paid me. I went and I watched Russell go out and get a new coach again for something different. He is constantly learning. I started thinking through ... Okay. Just bear with me for a second. I'm trying to figure how to share this. A lot of people have been telling like, "Steven, oh, my gosh, you work in the freaking marketing nucleus of the planet." I was like, "Yeah. I know." Freaking amazing. I mean it's the most cutting-edge stuff, right? Status quo is created in ClickFunnels. That's amazing. Marketing status quo is created in ClickFunnels all the time. How? He is bathing himself in it and loving it and is so passionate about it and if you can't be passionate about the thing you are to that degree, change the thing. Find the thing. You may not be in the right thing. He's going around, and he's constantly pushing himself, pushing himself, and I had the thought like how freaky would it be? Would Steve Larsen be Steve Larsen if I had not hooked into that? Interesting. I believe I would, but not with the speed that has happened. If you're frustrated with how slow things might be moving. Maybe they're not going fast enough. I dare you to go get a coach, and I dare you to pay them full price. I dare you to pay a full price. You know what? Overpay 'em a little bit. There is something weird that happens. Every single time I do any kind of coaching at all, I charge for their benefit. Does that make sense? It's not that I need the money. I'm not dying. You know what I mean? We're doing great, but if I don't charge, the other person doesn't take it serious, and they don't go freaking get off their butt and do what I said, or you know what I mean? The best people I've ever seen coaching wise - oh, my gosh - they come willingly. They pay beforehand and then they go do the thing immediately. Then they report back to me within like a day. They've already done the thing that I said. Like, "Oh, my gosh, that's way cool." Then they'll come back, and they'll do another session, back and forth and back and forth. That's how it happens. I think it's the same thing. Sitting around listening to Russell, the way he talks and be like, "Yeah. Yeah. This person was my first mentor." "Oh, yeah, this person over here was my mentor for a while over here doing this." "Oh, you know what? This guy over here? He was a mentor of mine." He was like, "Holy crap, dude. How many mentors have you had?" I know you've been at if for 14 years, but really in hindsight, 14 years is not that long. You know what I mean? Compared to all the greats that have been out there and all the guys who have done this. I mean 14 years that's not that long. In 2003, 14 years ago, that's really not that crazy. That's not that crazy. How has a guy who's not even, he's barely past mid-thirties, the way he is? It's 'cause of his coaching. That's my opinion, all right? He's just hooking into people all the time. He doesn't freak out when someone says, "Yeah, you gotta pay in order to be a part of this." He gets it. He knows it, right? That's why there's hundred thousand dollar groups in Masterminds. Those people get it, but sometimes it takes a mentality break. It takes a shift for people to understand that. Of course, there's an element of status to it, as well, being part of those kinds of groups, but that's not it. Every time I watch or I hear the guys that are involved with those groups, every time I see someone whose going ... I mean they all understand you have got to pay to play. Get a coach and be coach. Get a coach and be coach. Get a coach and be good. I feel I should keep saying that over and over and over again. Just burn it in your head. That one principle. Russell asked me once. He's like, "Dude, what was the thing that got it? What was the thing that clicked in your head?" I was like, "Two things. Number one, I learned how to create offers when I was in college." Not products, offers. Not services, offers. The point is to graduate products and service into an offer, right? You don't sell products. You don't sell services. You don't sell products or ser ... That's not at all what you sell. You sell offers... It's very different. It's very different. When I learned how to do that in college. Boom. Massive, massive stride and progress for me. Luckily, I learned that before going to ClickFunnels. Then I was like and I said the second thing, what I told him was, I was like, "Dude, there was this podcast you gave when I was probably a junior in college and you said 'Get a coach and be a coach.' That changed my life." 'Cause I was trying to be a coach. I was Periscoping and I was Periscoping, I was scared to death. I really don't know all the things I was talking about. I was just trying to talk about different lessons that I was learning in marketing. That was it. I didn't have enough experience so I was just choosing little things here and there. That's what got me publishing and out the door. Then I was trying to get a coach as well. I was just consuming like a beast with the intent to reteach it. That's very, very key of learning for two. I've talked about that as well on here. Anyway. I'm blabbering now, but I want you to know that's really been the major thing in my mind why Russell Brunson has become Russell Brunson. For the last 18 months, I have spent every day, work day, in the same room with him. The thing that I watch over and over and over again ... You know what? I bet you listening to this podcast right now, you probably know how to work hard. You probably do. I'm a hard working guy. I do believe in an element of law of attraction. There's certainly the attractive character. You've probably been attached to this podcast for some reason. Mono e mono. We're seeing each other eye to eye or at least ear to ear. Voice to ear, anyway, right? Okay, so then what's the difference? His speed of execution is insane. The dude knows how to make offers. He knows how to work. You probably know how to do the same thing, but man, the dude has coaches for everything. He'll have a coach for ... Yeah. Maybe I shouldn't rattle 'em all off, but there's a lot. It's all over the place. There's coaches for everything. Then I get frustrated when someone's like, "You have a coaching fee to help me with my funnel, Steven?" Freak. Yes. I do. Because you won't do a dang thing unless You pay. You understand? You know what I mean? Clearly, I get animated about it 'cause I'm like, "Gosh, you don't get it yet. You don't get it yet." Anyway, lot of fun. It was fun. I look up the Akbar like crazy. He's fun to do that with him. All the other people that have done coaching sessions with me, you guys are all awesome, too. I really appreciate it. If you are looking for one ... You know what that's an announcement for later on, but anyway, guys, I hope that's sinking deep. Hope you're getting what I'm trying to say here. That if you choose to get a coach, it increases your speed in a way that's very hard for me to describe. Especially when you pay, always pay. Otherwise, I have a hard time saying that it's an actual coach. I see a lot of people sometimes on Facebook go like, "Hey, who wants to get together and do a Mastermind?" It's like, "Oh, that's cool. That's great." But if it's a free Mastermind, I feel like sometimes people have the facade of movement, and they start confusing motion with achievement. It's just moving. They're not really achieving stuff. You know what I mean? I'm not saying they're not good. I'm not saying you don't learn stuff. You learn great things. It's awesome. It's resources. It's fun stuff. I totally get it. I'm not backing on that at all. I feel like sometimes people try and take the place of a coach with things like free Masterminds on the internet, and I don't think that that takes its place at all. I think it robs it if you're thinking that way. Anyway, I'm continuing to ramble here, and I'm trying to get faster on my podcast. Sometimes I go a little bit too long, and I know that, but anyway, you guys are awesome. Appreciate it. Go get a coach and be a coach. I'll talk to y'all later. Bye. Thanks for listening to Sales Funnel Radio. Please remember to subscribe and leave feedback. Want to get one of today’s best internet sales funnel for free? Go to salesfunnelbroker.com/freefunnels to download your prebuilt sales funnel today.
Uncomplicate Your Business | Small Business Strategy for Women Entrepreneurs
We hear that we should be everywhere. We should be on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Pinterest. Last year it was Periscoping and Blabbing… and now we should be on Facebook Live! We stress over blogging every week… no let’s make that a vlog… what if we make it a podcast! And we also need to write a book. And we need to be speaking and attending all these conferences and events all around the world because networking is essential. Then we need to be hosting webinars… having free clarity sessions… asking for referrals… doing all the things to build our business. It’s overwhelming isn’t it? One of the biggest challenges we face as entrepreneurs is simply understanding what strategies are the right ones to grow our unique businesses. Without this clarity and focus in your marketing, it’s nearly impossible to gain real momentum in your business — adding more tips and tricks and tactics simply dilutes all the effort you put into a marketing strategy. That’s right - adding MORE will often cannibalize the results of everything else you are working on. http://www.rachealcook.com/be-everywhere-is-bad-advice/
Sara B. Boykan (aka Boinkin') is a licensed mental health professional and a Periscope influencer. In this Podcast we create an inception like atmosphere by recording our Podcast, Live Streaming on Facebook, and Periscoping all at the same time! We discuss Sara's travels, and she shares some tips and tricks if you want to build your own Periscope community. If you want to find out more about Sara, you can find her on any of the following: Spotted Places: @itsboink Facebook: Sara B. Boinkin' Snapchat and IG: itsboink Periscope and Twitter: @BBoinkin Website: www.projectpotential.co
It’s conference season so in this episode Dan and James discuss the ins and outs of scientific conferences. Here’s what they cover: Research parasite award How much do you save when you don’t run an fMRI study They come up with an even better name than “Research parasite” Could the GOP weaponise the open science movement? Conspiracy theories Attempts to slow down science by taking science out of context The Black Goat Podcast The conference backchannel Contacting people at conferences Sitting though seminars (and not falling asleep) Twitter conferences Good presentations vs. bad presentations Starting collaborations at conferences Do conference locations matter? Periscoping conference presentations Links The research parasite award: http://researchparasite.com The GOP and science reform https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2017/04/reproducibility-science-open-judoflip/521952/ The Crackpot index http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/crackpot.html The Brain Twitter conference https://brain.tc Music credits: Lee Rosevere freemusicarchive.org/music/Lee_Rosevere/
Dr. Erin Albert, PharmD, MBA, and Kristin Eilenberg, MBA, join Pharmacy Podcast Network founder Todd S. Eury to discuss the 2017 Annual HIMSS Conference in Orlando Florida. The 2017 HIMSS Annual Conference & Exhibition, February 19–23, 2017 in Orlando, brought together 42,000+ health IT professionals, clinicians, executives and vendors from around the world. Show notes, blog post from Dr. Erin Albert: Well, I've tried to absorb as much knowledge as I can before my head explodes at #HIMSS17 this week. It's been a BLAST talking to so many rockstars of HIT and healthcare that I'm starstruck! One of the coolest new methods of learning for me at the meeting was actually co-hosting at Intrepid Healthcare's #JoinTheConversation podcast desk at Experian Health with Joe Lavelle in place of Todd Eury as a co-host of the Pharmacy Podcast for a few of the episodes. I even had a slip in the NCPDP session where I created a new word (adjudification = faster adjudication of healthcare claims. You're welcome.) What I also realized in that the harmless invite of asking people I'd only worked with on the phone or via Skype in the past to the booth was that it really boosted traffic for the space. So much so that it would be wise for orgs going to large scale meetings in the future would benefit from having live podcasting from their booths. Just saying! If you need help with this at your next big pharmacy meeting booth, I'm certain that Todd Eury would be happy to help you out, or in the broader healthcare community, Joe would. Either org is great, and podcasting is where all the cool action is these days…just ask me and my new pink socks. The other thing HIMSS did really well was having a social media team of ambassadors - I think EVERY trade show (inside or outside of pharmacy) should have one. These are digital influencers that can spread the halo of all the awesome things happening at your conference online through social portals. And let's face it – who better to spread the word on a conference than those who would be at the conference anyway, speaking at the conference, and being the awesome thought leaders that they always are? And, I'll go critical on my first profession for a moment: we don't have enough social media ambassadors in pharmacy. For whatever reason – we need more pharmacists tweeting, Facebook live-ing, Periscoping, Pinning, you name it. (And HIMSS, if you need a pharmacist for 18 into social media – I'd be happy to help!) These are the items I will definitely retain from #HIMSS17. PREVIEW SHOW: http://pharmacypodcast.com/podcast/himss-2017-preview-show/ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Periscoper, writer, and creator Anita Wing Lee returns to James Talks today. Anita has used her creative talents to make huge difference in the world - Periscoping from refugee camps to raise awareness of the refugee crisis, and combining her talents with a friend to create and crowdfund a book of stories and photographs of these refugees to raise money to support them. What we need right now are people willing and courageous enough to step out and create a new world, a better world, for all of us. Anita and I both believe strongly that we have the power to create the work, the lives, and the world we want - if only we can claim that power and use it positively. Anita and I discuss this in the podcast and explore how you and I can begin that process in our own lives and the world around us today.
On the Needles: Anna is still working on her "Kelpie Modern Hap Shawl" By Jared Flood in a Madeline Tosh DK, a green, "Nector", and "Geode"And a pair of socks. She is also crocheting a skull motif for a pillow cover. www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/kelpie-2Bethany is mid-heel turn on her second 1776 sock. Her "Shrowl" by Stephen West is her recording knitting and she finished the hand part of the purple "Into The Woods" mitt she is writing the pattern for. www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/shrowlOff the Needles: Bethany finished her "Where you lead I will follow" socks and submitted them to various KALs. www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/where-you-lead-i-will-follow-socks--gilmore-girlsIn Time Out:Anna's "Off Shore V-Neck" pullover by Bristol Ivy is still awaiting frogging. Sew A Needle Pulling Thread:Anna is starting her 31 Halloween Dresses Project and Autumnal/Seasonal curtains for her home. Spinning: Bethany finished spinning her "Cookie Monster" fiber of unknown content. She also plied it with other random singles that were taking up space on her bobbins. Knetflix & Knit:Anna watched "Women in Gold" staring Helen Mirren and Ryan Reynolds. She is reading "Going Postal" by Terry Pratchett and "Skid Road" by Murray Morgan. Bethany watched some "One Tree Hill" and "Parks and Recreation." Her new television obsession is Logo Tv's "Finding Prince Charming" and "RuPaul's Dragrace All Stars."In Rehearsal/Performance:Anna is involved in the production of "Alcestis" by Irrational Robot Bureau at the Slate Theater 9/16-10/1. www.facebook.com/irrationalrobotbureau/?fref=tsBethany's boyfriend, Nic, designed the lights for Tacoma Little Theatre's production of "The Underpants" by Steve Martin. www.tacomalittletheatre.comEvents: Bethany and Anna will be attending the Oregon Flock and Fiber Festival Sept. 24-25 in Canby, Oregon. Bethany and Anna will be Periscoping their adventures throughout the weekend!Bethany and sisters will be attending Geek Girl Con at the Washington State Convention Center October 9th. Bethany, Anna, and Bethany's mom and sisters will be participating in the PNW Yarn Crawl on October 23rd. flockandfiberfestival.comgeekgirlcon.comwww.pnwyarncrawl.comFall Favorites:Anna's faves include: crunchy leaves, apple cider, pumpkin muffins, fires in the fireplace, wearing handknits, Halloween and Thanksgiving, movies such as "Little Women" (1994 Winona Ryder), "Beetlejuice" and "Nightmare Before Christmas". Bethany's faves include: a 2 pump pumpkin spice, 2 pump chai, soy, no water, chai tea latte, pumpkin cream cheese muffins, flannel with leggings and rubber boots or wellies, movies such as the "Harry Potter" series (especially "Order of the Phoenix") "Casper", "Hocus Pocus" and "Practical Magic."Find us on Periscope, Twitter, Facebook and Instagram as Backstage Knitting Podcast! Join our Ravelry group and introduce yourself!!
On the Needles: Anna is still working on her "Kelpie Modern Hap Shawl" By Jared Flood in a Madeline Tosh DK, a green, "Nector", and "Geode"And a pair of socks. She is also crocheting a skull motif for a pillow cover. www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/kelpie-2Bethany is mid-heel turn on her second 1776 sock. Her "Shrowl" by Stephen West is her recording knitting and she finished the hand part of the purple "Into The Woods" mitt she is writing the pattern for. www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/shrowlOff the Needles: Bethany finished her "Where you lead I will follow" socks and submitted them to various KALs. www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/where-you-lead-i-will-follow-socks--gilmore-girlsIn Time Out:Anna's "Off Shore V-Neck" pullover by Bristol Ivy is still awaiting frogging. Sew A Needle Pulling Thread:Anna is starting her 31 Halloween Dresses Project and Autumnal/Seasonal curtains for her home. Spinning: Bethany finished spinning her "Cookie Monster" fiber of unknown content. She also plied it with other random singles that were taking up space on her bobbins. Knetflix & Knit:Anna watched "Women in Gold" staring Helen Mirren and Ryan Reynolds. She is reading "Going Postal" by Terry Pratchett and "Skid Road" by Murray Morgan. Bethany watched some "One Tree Hill" and "Parks and Recreation." Her new television obsession is Logo Tv's "Finding Prince Charming" and "RuPaul's Dragrace All Stars."In Rehearsal/Performance:Anna is involved in the production of "Alcestis" by Irrational Robot Bureau at the Slate Theater 9/16-10/1. www.facebook.com/irrationalrobotbureau/?fref=tsBethany's boyfriend, Nic, designed the lights for Tacoma Little Theatre's production of "The Underpants" by Steve Martin. www.tacomalittletheatre.comEvents: Bethany and Anna will be attending the Oregon Flock and Fiber Festival Sept. 24-25 in Canby, Oregon. Bethany and Anna will be Periscoping their adventures throughout the weekend!Bethany and sisters will be attending Geek Girl Con at the Washington State Convention Center October 9th. Bethany, Anna, and Bethany's mom and sisters will be participating in the PNW Yarn Crawl on October 23rd. flockandfiberfestival.comgeekgirlcon.comwww.pnwyarncrawl.comFall Favorites:Anna's faves include: crunchy leaves, apple cider, pumpkin muffins, fires in the fireplace, wearing handknits, Halloween and Thanksgiving, movies such as "Little Women" (1994 Winona Ryder), "Beetlejuice" and "Nightmare Before Christmas". Bethany's faves include: a 2 pump pumpkin spice, 2 pump chai, soy, no water, chai tea latte, pumpkin cream cheese muffins, flannel with leggings and rubber boots or wellies, movies such as the "Harry Potter" series (especially "Order of the Phoenix") "Casper", "Hocus Pocus" and "Practical Magic."Find us on Periscope, Twitter, Facebook and Instagram as Backstage Knitting Podcast! Join our Ravelry group and introduce yourself!!
On this week's episode, Alex and Brandon chat about preteen awkwardness. Brandon's schedule finally freed up enough to make some time to return to the show, and his salt levels have reached new highs. The boys kick off their reunion with a few unboxings, most importantly the August 2016 Marvel Collector Corps subscription box, this time themed after Spider-Man. Alex decides to try Periscoping the event once more, so head over to his Twitter account, @AtariAlex, to check out the video version. After that Brandon starts a great discussion with his pick for the letter K in this week's ABC's of Geekdom segment, Kylo Ren. After that, Alex gets started with corrections from last week's show, including Star Wars, Pokémon, Paper Mario, Sesame Street, Human Target, and Avatar.After the break, they talk about the news from the past week, including new trailers for Rings and The Return of the Caped Crusaders, Michael Pena returning for Ant-Man and The Wasp, Zendaya being cast as Mary Jane Watson in Spider-Man: Homecoming, the debut of the Super Saiyan Rosé form, Riri Williams' superhero name reveal, the Black Flash, Legion's tie in to the X-Men media franchise, Justice League Dark, The Rival coming to The Flash, Savitar possibly not coming to The Flash, a new tv show based on The Departed, some casting announcements for Gotham, and rumors about a new James and the Giant Peach movie. After all of that, Alex talks about some of the things he's been up to lately, namely, watching Firefly and playing Bioshock. With all of that covered, the boy's return to the second part of their personal histories of what made them the nerds they are today. This week, they cover their middle school years and things get awkward.Last but certainly not least, Brandon has decreed that we will all watch Avengers: Age of Ultron and discuss every excruciating detail on the podcast, The merits of this movie have been a point of contention among our two hosts for several years, so you should watch the movie and send in your thoughts to make your opinion heard! Don't forget to follow us on Twitter @AtariAlex and @Megsikouicorean. Send us emails with questions, comments, criticisms, or pretty much anything else to read on the show: abcpodcast92@gmail.comIntro Music: Metal guitar cover of Dr. Wiley's Castle Theme from Mega Man 2 by Nirreman Feat. Lee DuffyTransition Music: Metal guitar cover of Green Greens from Kirby's Dreamland by DiseasedProjectOutro Music: Guitar cover of Staff Roll Theme from The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker by CSGuitar89Check them all out, they make amazing music!
IN THE NEWS This week, Uncle Tim, Spencer and Jessica chat about: Gabby's secret knee injury (3:30): "Broken knee" and absentee father storylines continue to muddle Gabby Inc. waters - NY Times and Mercury News McKayla Maroney wasn't randomly Periscoping, she was on her way to surprise some little gym nerds at a Trials watch party! Skinner Gate 2.0 (17:47): Miss Skinner (and now her coach) continue to get in trouble on Twitter. British Olympic teams strategy (28:00) The decades of black gymnasts who paved the way for Simone Biles Could we have had an African-American Olympic champion in 1984? Tutya Yilmaz (TUR) and Jossimar Calvo were the highlights of the ill attended/post-terrorist attack World Cup in Turkey. Russian Cup: the provisional Olympic team and the potential impact of the McLaren report (48:00) Mustafina had a weird thing on bars, here's the video Romanian Nationals: was it smart to choose Catalina Ponor as the sole Olympic competitor over Larisa Ilordache? Anda Butuc’s onodi mount on beam is everything On the men’s side, Marian Dragulescu hurt his ankle, but should be okay Chusovitina won a vault World Cup with her Produnova Emma Larrsson from Sweden had big band version of Sex & the City floor music Why were so many people confused and outraged after the US Team was announced? NBC's coverage of the Olympic Trials is at least partially to blame. (1:29:00) Read Cordelia's full analysis and math proof about the US Olympic team decision. Here is a little piece of her work: “To take the top 3 on every apparatus, a 7 person team would be needed. The selection committee has to optimize the team score within a 5 person team, while ensuring there are at least 4 solid or better scores on each apparatus. The only combination of these top 7 gymnasts plus Ashton Locklear that meets the criteria is the team the selection committee chose. 1. Biles 248.25 2. Hernandez 241.65 3. Raisman 240.85 4. Douglas 235.25 5. Kocain 233.5 6. Smith 232.55 7. Skinner 232.1. As it turns out, the Olympic team that was chosen is composed of the top 5 AAers over the two competitions with the next two AAers as alternates (which includes #2 on VT) and the #2 on UB as an alternate. They could stop there, but they need to ensure that the team of 5 gymnasts has the highest scoring potential." CONTEST Win: The End of the Perfect 10: The Making and Breaking of Gymnastics’ Top Score – from Nadia to Now by Dvora Meyers What: Write a new rule for the next quad How: #Endofthe10Book @GymCastic on Instagram or Twitter Deadline: Sunday, July 31st at midnight. RELATED LINKS 2016 OLYMPIC TRIALS PART 1: THE NIGHT OF UBER IMPORTANT WATER CUPS by Spencer SUPPORT THE SHOW Join Club Gym Nerd here. Buy one of our awesome shirts here. RELATED EPISODES 2016 Olympic Team and Coaches Episode 33: Simone Biles & Her Coaches 161: Women’s Finals Recap with Aimee Boorman and Christian Gallardo Episode 77: Aly Raisman Episode 41: Laurie Hernandez & Coach Maggie Haney 151: Danell Leyva Episode 32: Sam Mikulak & 2013 Men's NCAA Championships 2014 Winter Cup: Chris Brooks on Broken Bones, Blaniks, and Rio Episode 35: Jake Dalton 72: John Orozco 187: McKayla Maroney Getting to the Games: A Checklist 201: Men’s Olympic Trials and P&G Champs Preview Gymbuster: Domestic vs. International Scoring 200: Alicia Sacramone 162: Wrap Up of the 2015 P&G Championships 160: PG Championships Women’s Prelims Recap Episode 48: Kyla Ross Episode 58: Charlotte Drury, Fall Euro Series & NCAA De-commits Episode 31: Elise Ray 148: Shannon Miller Episode 28: Kristen Maloney Episode 55: Worlds Wrap Up & Ferlito-Gate Episode 54: Event Finals Recap from 2013 World Championships Episode 53: All Around Finals Recap from Antwerp World Championships Episode 52: Triumph & Heartbreak Prelims Recap from Antwerp Worlds 114: Fallout From Gymnastike’s Handling of Maroney Hack & Tumble Episodes 3 and 4 with special guest Jenni Pinches! Episode 16: Elizabeth Price 146: Taylor Rice and The 2015 NCAA Championships Episode 9: Chellsie Memmel, Swiss Cup & FIG Presidential Proposals Episode 37: Julie Zetlin 81: Jenny Hansen Episode 15: Joan Ryan Author of Little Girls in Pretty Boxes Douglas Family Gold on Oxygen Podcast Recaps Douglas Family Gold: Finale DFG: World Selection Camp DFG PODCAST: Last Days of Summer Douglas Family Gold: A Companion for Gabby Douglas Family Gold S1E2: Graduation Day Douglas Family Gold: The First Hurdle Douglas Family Gold Preview Show
IN THE NEWS In the news, Uncle Tim, Spencer, Lauren, Cordelia Price (aunt of 2014 World Cup Series Champion and 2012 Olympian alternate Elizabeth "Ebee" Price), Casey Magniesum and Jessica chat about: Why each and every gymnasts was chosen as an alternate or team member. Why Marta didn't go with the highest scoring team available. Which gymnasts hit 8 for 8 this weekend. Everything that happened behind the scenes: Zac Lawson finally added to the permanently banned list at USAG website GymSplaining Parade of Olympians Concert Best signs and t-shirts seen in the audience U.S.Slay t-shirts from Evan and his crew Aly’s coaching is judging her at Olympic Trials Parents: teach your kids to be good fans. Being a good fan is supporting the athlete, not making the athlete notice you. Maroney live Periscoping during Trials Event host, John Macready, learned a new game and we were horrified. Why FloGymnastics isn't here covering Trials; the USOC pulled their parent company's credentials. Every competitors' performances analyzed and discussed. Cordelia describes how Elizabeth Price's family handled her being fourth all-around but named an alternate to the 2012 Olympic team--much like MyKayla Skinner SUPPORT THE SHOW Join Club Gym Nerd here. Buy one of our awesome shirts here. RELATED EPISODES 187: McKayla Maroney Getting to the Games: A Checklist 201: Men’s Olympic Trials and P&G Champs Preview Gymbuster: Domestic vs. International Scoring 200: Alicia Sacramone 162: Wrap Up of the 2015 P&G Championships 161: Women’s Finals Recap with Aimee Boorman and Christian Gallardo 160: PG Championships Women’s Prelims Recap 77: Aly Raisman Episode 48: Kyla Ross Episode 58: Charlotte Drury, Fall Euro Series & NCAA De-commits Episode 31: Elise Ray 148: Shannon Miller Episode 28: Kristen Maloney Episode 33: Simone Biles & Her Coaches Episode 55: Worlds Wrap Up & Ferlito-Gate Episode 54: Event Finals Recap from 2013 World Championships Episode 53: All Around Finals Recap from Antwerp World Championships Episode 52: Triumph & Heartbreak Prelims Recap from Antwerp Worlds 114: Fallout From Gymnastike’s Handling of Maroney Hack & Tumble Episodes 3 and 4 with special guest Jenni Pinches! Episode 16: Elizabeth Price 146: Taylor Rice and The 2015 NCAA Championships Episode 9: Chellsie Memmel, Swiss Cup & FIG Presidential Proposals Episode 37: Julie Zetlin 151: Danell Leyva 81: Jenny Hansen Episode 15: Joan Ryan Author of Little Girls in Pretty Boxes Douglas Family Gold on Oxygen Podcast Recaps Douglas Family Gold: Finale DFG: World Selection Camp DFG PODCAST: Last Days of Summer Douglas Family Gold: A Companion for Gabby Douglas Family Gold S1E2: Graduation Day Douglas Family Gold: The First Hurdle Douglas Family Gold Preview Show Selection Criteria RELATED PHOTOS Podium Training photo gallery here. Night One photo gallery here. Night Two photo gallery here. RELATED VIDEOS Watch this week's playlist from Team USA on YouTube here. Or watch the NBC archived broadcast here. Watch Deanna Hong's new video in the 4 Years Later series on Jordyn Wieber here.
* Main Topic: We have "Toren of Terror" in the Diva house! Toren's Bio: He was raised in Florida with a strong love for all things Disney. Toren shares this love with all of his many followers on his social media by Periscoping in the Disney parks. EARS the News: •Episode 5 of Indiana Jones •Star Wars Pressed Pennies •MUPPETS come to MK!! •Pandora Interactive Plant Life Magical Merriment: This is our Game section where you'll find out which Diva earns her EARS this week! * This weeks Game is Build Your Ultimate Disney Theme Park Need more Dish on our Guest? PERISCOPE/ Twitter/Facebook/Instagram: @tfjrecords Divas Dish Diz Sponsors: Upon a Star Travel &Concierge ~ Customized Disney travel planning for your family! Let our team customize a magical vacation for your family - there is no additional cost to you when you book a package with our team! Sugar Fox Flowers ~ Customize your wedding/event cakes with our made to order edible Sugar Flowers. Turn your DIY cakes into ShowStoppers! Upcoming weekly Guests: * Ken Storey ~ @TomMorrowsMouse podcast * Bill & Diane Maguire ~ @ParktalkPodcast & @MouseFanDiane * Gijs Van Winkelhof @Gijsmusic * And many more!!! Need more Dish from our Divas??? You can find them at: Co-Host: Jennifer Novotny: Upon A Star Travel &Concierge ~ www.disiningmemories.com Co-Host: Christine Fox: @ChristineFox @SugarFoxFlowers@Foxmomof4 ~ www.sugarfoxflowers.com Social Media: Kally Lavoie: @Miss_K_Lavoie Katrina Rios: @katrinarabbit87 Ashley Brady: @wdwsthrnbelle ~ Disney SouthernBelle Megan Corcoran: @MegsMagicTravel~ Megansmagicaltravelblog.wordpress.com
Gary goes Live on Periscope as we review, the most recent Line Of Duty, the welcome return of Scott & Bailey and Britain's Got Talent.
Gary goes Live on Periscope as we review, the most recent Line Of Duty, the welcome return of Scott & Bailey and Britain's Got Talent.
This one is special. We're recording live from a hotel room on the semi-annual Nozbe Reunion. With live audience, the marketing team Periscoping us, and Michael finally got a proper mic! This week, we're talking about improving ourselves and our company, about feedback loops, about honest feedback, and about re-learning constraints so we can focus our work on things that actually matter.
Lee Aase, The Mayo Clinic's director of Social Media Networks, was due for the procedure and volunteered to have his own colonoscopy broadcast live -- an event that attracted some 3,000 viewers (not including those who watched during the 24 hours Periscope sessions are available after they're finished).Continue Reading → The post FIR Interview: Mayo Clinic’s Lee Aase on Periscoping his colonoscopy appeared first on FIR Podcast Network.
Sponsored by: Cache-Advance.com Feb 24, 2016, In tonight’s episode of the Geocaching Podcast: The guys discuss their perceptions about Periscope during geocaching and how it is progressing. Also some helpful dos and don’ts of geocaching video creation. Be sure to check it out! Please share with other geocachers. We meet on Wednesday nights at 9:30PM … Continue reading EPISODE 440 – Periscoping Geocaching / Geocaching Videos – Dos and Don’ts →
Chit chat about both wins against Edinburgh Capitals and Dundee Stars. And yes non-believers...finally, the points arrive for Manchester Storm in the team's first four point weekend (well, for the league). Listeners chip in with their comments on what's going wrong on Storm's track record for conceding so many goals, including the hashtag - #FreeSteveWilcock... Plus the team discuss the Elite League's latest policy on Periscoping during games, as well as moves elsewhere across the EIHL - notably Belfast Giants. This episode features the away traveller Nick Barlow, the beer drinker Simon Harris, the broadcaster Clare Freeman, the #FreeLucas governor Paul Tracey and the tugger Stephen Packer. Also available on iTunes. Contains silly innuendos from the start but don't worry the kids probably won't understand.
Andrew makes it safely into the Mating Habits Studio to help me discuss problematic friends who may be keeping new people from joining your social circle. We go over some tell-tale signs of "Gatekeeping" and how the lack of new people entering your friend groups might have something to do with the unwelcome environment you've unknowingly created. Andrew puts the "fun" in work function and becomes a new uncle! I'm doing guest spots, discovering new podcasts, and watching X-Files. Our Meetup Group, Trigger Warning: Geeks! is in danger, girl - and I don't have a good solution. We did a Periscope thing! Yet another new game, Who's Pickup Line is it Anyway? is the perfect game for live audience participation, and we actually had some live audience participation! We may be Periscoping again in the future, so download the free app to your smart phone and follow @MatingHabits - we'll follow you back, I promise :) Tables are flipped over stupid restaurant policies and folks doing good works for the sole purpose of posting about them on social media. LINKS! Geektitiude PodcastCock Tales Over Cocktails PodcastDestiny Ghost Stories Podcast Mating Habits of the Modern Geek: Love and Dating within Your own Species - your comedy source for relationship advice for geeks and nerds.
GeoGearHeads; The weekly show for Geocaching and Location-Based Gaming
(of "") joins and to discuss live streaming of geocaching adventures for the two hundred eighth edition of the GeoGearHeads. Some of the live streaming apps discussed were , , (this archives live feeds from the previous two but doesn't stream live), , , , and . submitted the "" article and asked a couple questions (Darryl mentioned his in response to one of those). Mark of the "" podcast shared a couple of blog posts titled "" and "." Darryl referred to the Gizmdo post "" about the data usage of these apps. Scott talked about Periscoping from the "" () geocache in an F-14. Then the accounts for the panel are; Congratulations to for submitting the winning response for this week's question. Thanks to for their donation of this week's gift! The live video session from this Google+ Hangout On Air can be found on . Subscribe to the feed: Social Media: Voicemail: +1 206-350-3647Email:
This Week.. Who’s that trip trapping over my bridge Muggled while NOT Geocaching A Moan-A-Lot exclusive Climb a mountain from your armchair Last Week.. GC5YEGQ - KIKUCHIS KASTLE KACHE by Kikuchis. Periscope video: http://www.ohbeep.com/kastle (Doctor D manages to insult ‘muricans) GC3H3TD - Phooning in Derby by Grant & LisaX GC5DR7B - Off Beam by TeamSummers1. Periscope video: http://www.ohbeep.com/derbymicro (More offensiving) https://youtu.be/K9iR6sLwDKY Discussion about How To Fix Geocaching blog post on www.ohbeep.com - go to www.ohbeep.com/fixgeocaching to read the full post. Main complaints we’ve noticed from Geocachers: Traditionals aren’t what they used to be New geocachers are to blame for the poor quality of caches hidden New cachers don’t know what they’re doing New cachers ask stupid questions Established cachers are cliquey and unwelcoming Ask Dr D.. From Brilang Dear Dr. D. Is Wales a separate country from England? Why/why not? Are there border guards & crossings? From StridentUK You’re going for a “troll” cache under a footbridge. You touch the container just as you lose your footing and... plop… the cache falls straight in to the fast moving stream and starts bobbing down the river. What could you do? (What “should” you do?) Dumb Stuff Geocachers Do.. Get muggled during a Periscope recording showing a cool #sightsofgeocaching. GC43CQN Hard Boiled Egg for Tea by cerises and Team-Triplet Periscope videos: http://www.ohbeep.com/muggle1 http://www.ohbeep.com/muggle2 Also going out Geocaching, at night, without a torch whilst also Periscoping for all to see the dumbness. GeoPauls Video Of The Week.. #blamemoanalot.. A rare moment caught on film. Moan-A-Lot smiling. Even rarer, Moan-A-Lot dancing. Thanks to Kathryn Trevor for sharing this with the whole of Facebook. https://www.facebook.com/kathryn.trevor/posts/10156316023295331 GGH Tips.. Want to watch the journey of a #Geocaching.com trackable? You can click on the the "View in Google Earth" link from the trackable's page to download a KML file which opens in Google Earth allowing you to fly along the stops. That was just one of the many fun topics in "GGH 162: Randomize XXXI." http://cacheamaniacs.com/ggh-162-randomize-xxxi Ey Up Me Duck Challenge/ Our attempt at the November Challenge failed miserably. www.ohbeep.com/meetingplace GC5M9RH - Memories Series – Our Meeting Place (re-sited) by Ey up me duck Decembers Challenge For those in Notts, they have to find 2 of the new Christmas caches that are going out daily. For others, 2 caches with Christmas related words in title. From Lucie Meelen Hello lovely lads. Here is my entry for the Christmas-related Cache Challenge. Someone has to go for the religious side of Christmas, and it might as well be me. So my two are "Christchurch" (how much more Christmas-related can you get?) and "Father, Son and Holey Post". And just in case you're not at all religious and/or a Life of Brian fan, I realised when doing the screen shot that my next cache could also be construed as Christmas-related! "Brian Revisited". Thank you and a very happy Christmas to you both and the rest of the family. smile emoticon xxx Patreon.. Thank you DarryW4 and Gary Robbins for their support of the show News.. Reported bomb found outside Rohnert Park gym turns out to be geocaching stash (From pressdemocrat.com) Mountain Day marked with release of Google Street View images of Snowdon (From grough.co.uk) Armchair mountaineers can now make the journey to the top of Wales’s highest peak from the comfort and warmth of their homes. Snowdon’s main paths are among those that can now be seen on Google’s Street View service. Geocaching on Emmerdale (BananaSource actually had to scrub his ears and eyes with bleach after watching this) Feedback.. From Tony Liddell Dr D’s Facts of the Uselessness.. New York build on Bristol Nylon named after New York and London Channel tunnel could have been built 100 years ago The Obligatory Doctor Who Bit.. 14 brilliant Easter eggs you might have missed in Doctor Who series 9 (From radiotimes.com) Ask Dr D or share your feedback Comment on the shownotes Email feedback@ohbeep.com (audio files welcome) Please connect with us Subscribe, rate, and review in iTunes Join the Facebook Page Follow us on Twitter
Welcome to the episode where Marsh and Pat talk and talk about how much they love roleplaying games and would marry them if they could!
Welcome to the episode where Marsh and Pat talk and talk about how much they love roleplaying games and would marry them if they could!
I've realized I've been lying about how much I work. I say I work 4 hours a day – 25 hours a week. But really, is that true? I won't say I've been lying, but with everything I do – admin, emails, sales activities, content creation, I DO work about 4 hours a day. But a few years ago, I decided and started to believe that I COULD make A LOT of money and a helluva impact through doing what I love – writing, speaking, putting myself out there. And that belief has come TRUE. A lot of the stuff I do you could classify as "work," but to me – it's more than that. It's a ritual.I don't remember half of the "work" I do! When I get up – I spent 30 mins as journalling. But that's not "work," right? Then there's my writing – I spend AT LEAST 1- 2 horus a day on writing. So that's at least 6 and a half hours a day "working." For me, my writing is how I grow my tribe – if I don't write, I DON'T SELL! Then there's filming videos, Periscoping, reading – I DON'T consider that work. That's at least another 45 minutes / 1 hour a day. 7.5 hours every day. THEN there's working out. That's not work either – BUT I get ideas when I'm in the middle of a workout. It clears my mind – it's my MEDITATION. Another 30 minutes of work! There's 8 hours every day. My day and schedule ALWAYS changes. All of this might not be w"work," but IT ALWAYS ADDS UP. It always ties in. And that's what matters. • Work doesn't stop after admin, emails, or sales activities • Being an entrepreneur is a LIFESTYLE • When you love what you do, it's not a clock-in-clock-out job, it's much more than thatEXERCISEWhat can you DECIDE to have in your life that you'd be able to call 'work'? What would YOU like your day to be made up of, and therefore be able to call 'work'?Don't miss out on more butt-kickin' and truth from Kat! Sign up for Kat's Daily Asskickery message + TRUTH at katloterzo.com.Join the tribe of REVOLUTIONARY leaders who are called to live an extraordinary and purpose-driven life, and download a free copy of one of Kat's Amazon best-sellers as your welcome gift!Life is NOW. Press Play!Kat xPS. Want more of Kat, now, plus help in making more money online faster in a way that suits you? http://goo.gl/Huf4lc
In this episode I celebrate the Kansas City Royals winning the World Series and I begin Periscoping the recording of the podcast. We discuss my views on Florida and nightlife at the beach while I engage with the viewers of the Periscope feed. I secure a date with one of them!! Download the Periscope app to tune into the live video feeds when I record the podcast. It works with your twitter feed as well, so, follow me on Twitter and Periscope @brianrileycomed Check out the website for all the information about my comedy at www,brianrileycomedy.com
This week on The Little Radio Show we talk about Twitter's new “buy” button; we have an interview with Leticia Manzano from the Houston Area Women's Center about Domestic Violence Awareness Month, and we reminisce on ghost stories in celebration of Halloween. In the In Case You Missed it Segment (ICYMI) we talk about changes in LinkedIn, with LinkedIn Groups becoming private. And … did you hear the story about the drunk driver who was Periscoping herself and gots arrested? Her viewers called the police on her. You can find the complete story on CNN, after you listen to the show. Twitter has rolled out their “Buy” button, making it possible to purchase from select ecommerce providers without ever leaving Twitter. What does this mean for us as conspicuous consumers, and for business owners? You can read more about this new feature in the Twitter announcement, or find out how to implement this for your business. October is Domestic Violence Awareness Month. To talk about this we invited Leticia Manzano from the Houston Area Women's Center (HAWC) to join us on the show. She provides us with more information about the services and programs HAWC offers. They are located at 1010 Waugh Dr., Houston TX 77019. Their hotline is 713-528-2121. And getting in the spirit of Halloween, we talk about ghost stories, scary moments, and other things that go bump in the night. “The Little Radio Show” is on HMSNetRadio.org on Thursdays at 2 pm (CST). The show hosts are Sandra Fernandez (@sandrasays), Juan Alanis (@juanofwords), and Anjelica Cazares (@la_anjel). Subscribe to the Podcast via (RSS), on the iTunes channel or on our Stitcher channel, and keep up with new episodes. Subscribe to the Blog and keep up with new posts. The show's website can be found at thelittleradioshow.com.
John Derby and Travis Spencer discuss the importance of having a good support staff around you. Then they cover trending topics including Lamar Odom, woman suing her nephew, Playboy, Billy the Kid and Periscoping while driving drunk. From the failed athlete's perspective they analyse week 5 in the NFL, the Cubs and the MLB Playoffs and of course Eric Bledsoe's new parking spot! Jesse McIntosh delivers his favorite part from last weeks episode, and finally an anonymous speaker tells of Zac Efron's plane etiquette! #baseball
It was the unexpected season one finale and we went live mother fuckers! Periscoping the show with the help of the Ghetto Caster 3000 the Webonauts touched base with some past guests and discussed their ridiculously grandiose plans for the year to come. We briefly peek into the Quaidhole again to try and remember when we actually started this journey in the first place.
Trichologist, Dr. Keith Harley chats with Ioana about How he has become successful in the Beauty Industry. He also shares incredible #SuccessBombs while Periscoping with our listeners.
I want to give you a quick recap of what happened during the certification and I want to show you what happened the very first time I accidentally Periscoped. On today’s episode Russell talks about the event and what some of the best parts were and why it was so amazing. He also shares his strategy with Periscope and the plans he has for it. Here are some interesting things to listen for: Why there were a few people that didn’t get anything out of the event and why that reflects more on them than it does on Russell. A few highlights from the Certification Event, including the best part. And what Russell’s strategy for Periscope is and why he thinks it will be successful. So listen below to hear what Russell is starting to do with Periscope. ---Transcript--- Hey everyone. This is Russell and welcome to Marketing in Your Car. All right. So I’m excited for today and for everything and for so much fun stuff. So I guess my call today with you guys, I got a couple of things to talk to you about and we need to discuss. So first is I feel bad. I was going to vox you guys…or not vox you guys, I was going to give you some messages during the certification event last week but it went so crazy and it was amazing and I just ran out of time and I had people – I was driving around in the mornings and anyway, needless to say, it was a smashing success. Of the 120 people there, everyone had an amazing time except for four people which I was going to do a whole podcast about – I was going to call it The Anatomy of a Loser but I thought I’m just going to focus on the good. Four people didn’t… one of them went through all four days. The last day he showed up and said he got zero value from the entire week so far and wanted a complete refund which basically means he’s a stone cold unethical liar because I had other people crying saying it changed their whole life and it was amazing. I was going to break down why I don’t like this person now. Actually you guys want to know why? Well, I want to keep this positive but anyway, it’s funny because the guy left and he said, “Hey, do you mind if I stay the last day.” No, you freaking are refunding. We’ve supported you, my entire team has been working with you. We have been here literally until 4 or 5 o’clock in the morning every single morning helping you. Of course he didn’t show up for those which is kind of funny. He skipped all the night sessions and didn’t do the homework assignments or any of the other projects and he wants a refund. Then has the nerve to say, “I got zero value from this. I’m going to try to make some more money. That way I can invest in Russell’s higher ticket programs later on.” My response was: “No, we do not allow losers into our higher end programs.” People who, freaking, will use your time for four of the five days of the event and then the last day come and ask for a refund after they didn’t do the assignment, which we pulled an all-nighter on Thursday and people loved that. That was the best part. That was annoying. The other person is one of my friends. He sent three people from his team, three women and I will – anyway, they didn’t show up for the last three days and they went home and told Perry that it was a complete waste of their time. They didn’t show up for the last three days. So outside those four people who I will deem losers and I shouldn’t say it. That’s not nice. But that’s how I feel. It was really upsetting. That you can go through and have this amazing experience… we have literally – I had people coming to me crying at the end about the experience. We help people build out entire businesses and they had a chance to work with the clients. It was, as a whole, one of the best events we’ve ever done. I just had 4 people of 120 that are coming with that attitude and by the way happened to be the four people who didn’t freaking show up and do the work and it’s just – anyway, that’s how life is, right? So there you go and that’s why I didn’t honestly message you guys because I was frustrated by those people. I didn’t want that to cloud it. Now you guys got the cloud but now the cloud is gone. Everything else was amazing. It was awesome. We had – my favorite part of it was on Thursday. We brought in three business owners and I consulted those businesses in front of them and kind of mapped out funnels and then all those guys, we got done like 6 o’clock at night. They had to go out and pull an all-nighter and they got to pick which one of the three funnels they like the most. We had a chiropractor, someone who owns a certification program and someone who’s doing survival info products. So they got to see my map of the funnel and then they can make up their own if they wanted and they had to create the entire thing, all the pages, all the funnel, all the sequences and literally people – some people didn’t go to bed. They pulled all-nighters. They worked the whole thing and then the next day on Friday, everyone who had killed themselves building funnels, they had everyone kind of vote and we picked the top three in each category and the top three got to present it for the entire group and for that business owner and then the business owner picked who they thought was the best and they won a $1000 cash prize. We had big old stacks of $1 bills. It was so much fun and it was amazing. I can’t even tell you like some of these people what they built, how amazing it was. They built funnels and had ideas and concepts I never even dreamt of and it was just – gall, it was amazing! And then obviously salt that off with the dude who comes back and said that he didn’t learn anything. Oh, how did the hack-a-thon go for you last night? I went to bed. Well, you missed the most important part. So yeah, it makes sense that it didn’t have any value for you. Anyway, just makes me laugh. It was interesting. I went to Tony Robbins’ Date with Destiny which is Tony is the best on earth. It’s a five or six-day event and in the last day he does a session. He was like, “Who here has not had a breakthrough in the last five days?” and sure enough like 20 people raised their hands and it was kind of awesome. Tony went through and just made them all look like idiots in a nice way or basically like help them see they had breakthroughs but they just weren’t intelligent enough to notice it, right? Anyhoo, so there’s my rant. It’s over. Let’s focus on the positive. So this is what I’m talking about today because this is something that I think is crazy exciting and I feel like I’ve missed the boat on some things and I don’t want to miss the boat on this. I don’t want you to miss the boat on this. So a couple of things. First off, a lot of you guys know Gary Vaynerchuk and I watched him as he grew Wine Library TV from nothing to this huge thing and his whole thing was like “I do a video every day. I’m consistent. Every day I do a video.” Alright… I thought that was kind of cool and I think my big takeaway from that was consistency, consistency. And then I heard a little while ago that there’s a guy, I think you guys know him, his name is Eric Worre. And he – I don’t know if this is true, this is my understanding what I heard happened but he was kind of a good guy, making money but not like the biggest name on earth and he went and he hired Gary Vaynerchuk and Gary basically said make a video every day. Be consistent. So he did and now five years later, he has done a video every day for five years and he has got – he does these live events where he gets 10,000 people signing up. He did a webinar last month with Tony Robbins. He had over 100,000 people register and it’s insane. Eric Worre is a smart dude, genius, really nice guy but I don’t feel like he’s the most charismatic leader in the world. I wouldn’t have – you might be watching his videos and like OK. But I was like “how has this dude got so many people that follow him?” and it’s consistency, right. So I’m going to do that with Marketing in Your Car. This is the most consistent I’ve ever been with a content publishing platform and I like it but it’s kind of like it’s delayed publishing. I record it. You might listen to this a week from now or two weeks from now or six weeks from now. One thing I do like about podcasts that has been really interesting is that I’ve done, like I don’t know, 150 episodes or something for the last like three years and people will come and they join Marketing in Your Car and then they go on these binges. Like one of my coaching clients, one of like the coolest people I’ve met this year. His name is Noah. He was just messing with me. He’s like, “Hey, man.” Him and his wife, they’re amazing coaches and entrepreneurs and they drive around the country in like an RV and they just work from wherever they’re at, right? Which is super cool and he said – he said, “I went on the Marketing in Your Car binge and listened to like half of the episodes in three days,” which is cool. It’s funny. If you look at our stats, that’s what happens. People come in, listen to one to two episodes and they like it and they binge and they go through the entire like last three years of my life. It’s kind of cool because – anyway, so I like that part of it. It’s kind of cool. But one thing that I don’t like is just it’s not instant, right? Not instant like if I want to send you a message, it doesn’t necessarily mean you’re going to get it right away. Like we did – a couple of weeks ago, I did the whole like – my number one entrepreneur supplement. I wanted to kind of test this. If I send this out, how many responses do I get? How long does it come? What’s interesting is I got a lot better response from that than I had assumed I would which is cool but there has been a long drag on it. There’s this drag that I’m still getting people coming in now and I will probably get those people coming in for the rest of my life. It’s kind of interesting. How there’s that drag… So there’s that. I remember when Twitter first came out. It’s like I don’t get it. I remember hanging out with Frank Kern. We were doing a project together and so I flew out to his offices and we talked about Twitter and he’s like, “The coolest thing is I tweet and wherever I tweet, within like five minutes, there’s a thousand visitors go to wherever I just tweet about.” I was like, “That’s kind of cool. It would be nice to be able to get 1000 clicks anytime you wanted just by tweeting something, right?” And obviously Twitter kind of came and went and most of those guys don’t tweet or twit or whatever you call it. They don’t do that anymore, right? But conceptually, I said that’s really cool. So I started getting Twitter and I got all excited. By that point, like nobody cared and I’m assuming people still tweet or twit, whatever you call it. But I don’t even know. So I kind of missed that platform. Now Periscope, so this is my entrance into Periscope, right? So that has been happening for the last like month or so and I keep seeing different people popping on it and the first time I was – I downloaded the app and somebody was like, “Hey, you should Periscope.” And I’m like; I don’t know what that means. Downloaded the app, I found it was hooked to Twitter, so I integrated it with my Twitter account, or whatever. Anyway, one day I’m driving around. My phone bleeps and I look down and it’s one of my friends, Stacy Highland, and she’s like – it said Stacy is starting – she’s – whatever, she’s Periscoping live. I was like I don’t know what that means. So I clicked on it and it popped up and instantly I’m talking – I’m watching her talk and she’s like, “Oh, hey Russell just logged in,” and she said, “How is it going?” and I’m driving around in Boise for the next like five, ten minutes and she’s just like sharing this really great training and then it ended. I was like that was the coolest thing. I just – my phone beeped. I clicked the button. I’m watching her stream live and then she’s done and I was like there’s this instant thing where I could push – where she pushed content to me. I didn’t even know how it popped on my phone honestly. So that was kind of cool. So then I was like OK, I want to figure this Periscope thing out but I hadn’t had time yet. Now, fast forward like a month later or a couple of weeks later, which is yesterday actually, I was working on Actionetics. I was building out my email sequence in there and I was editing the footer in my email to have like here’s my Twitter following and my Facebook and all those things and I was like I’m going to add my Periscope thing. I don’t even know what my Periscope thing is. So I opened my phone app and I’m clicking around and also accidentally clicked the button for like to publish and I click on this thing and within like – within a minute, I had 50 people. I didn’t even know who these people are and how they found out about it. I don’t even know. I hooked this up to Twitter, so maybe they saw me tweet it because I think Periscope tweeted it out. Anyway, 50 people are on and we were just hanging out and talking and sharing some cool stuff and that fast I had this instant like direct channel to people instantly and I could – I had their focus and their interest and it was awesome. Then when it was done, I think that Twitter stores it for like a day and then it kills the video. So I sent it to my brother. I’m like hey, every time I do the Periscope, you got to grab it. We’re going to turn it into a video. That way I can post it on my blog and I can now start doing all the other stuff. But I’m like, this is now a platform where I could publish daily where – so what I’m going to do now is every day at the end of the day, when I get – I’m doing Marketing in Your Car usually when I’m driving to the office or driving home but typically I’m driving to the office and I’m sharing my thoughts for the day and just cool ideas and then I’m going to start using Periscope when the day is over. Hey guys, this is what I did today and I will just kind of show off the cool stuff I’m doing and just use it as kind of an over the shoulder – like this is what I’m doing today. This is what I got done. This is what I’m working on. It’s exciting. Just share with people and see what you’re actually doing. I also want to use it as a way to amplify my content. So like I’m trying to get to a point where I’m doing like a blog post every – a couple of times a week or we’re doing – everything we’re doing and it would be cool like to use Periscope. Hey guys, I just wrote a blog post. This is what it’s about. If you like that, go over there and comment. I’m using this as a tool to live stream – in live real time to go get people to go comment on my post and my Facebook thing or whatever it is. I don’t know yet. But that’s kind of the concept. So I’m excited for it. If you are a Periscoper, come check me out. Come – I think you just got to go to Periscope. You just go in there and you search for @russellbrunson. And then my brother is storing them all on our blog which is blog.dotcomsecrets.com. We haven’t really launched that yet but its happening and all the Marketing in Your Carare there along with the transcripts. A bunch of cool stuff is happening over the blog soon. So anyway, I’m excited. I think Periscope is cool. I think that you guys should all start looking at it. That’s one of my big initiatives I’m going to be doing. I will try to do a Periscope a day and hopefully in five years from now, I will be like Eric Worre and have events with 10,000 people at it and I can get 100,000 people show up on webinars. So that’s my goal and hopefully you guys use this as a platform too because I know it’s here. I know there’s going to be a ton of competition. Facebook is coming out with one, a bunch of them are coming out with one. The reality is it does not matter which one you use. Just pick a platform and stick with it because that’s the key is just being consistent. So I picked my platform. I don’t care which other one comes out. I’m focusing there and we’re going to start growing this thing out and come hang out with me on Periscope. Thanks everyone. I’m out of here and I will talk to you guys all soon.
I want to give you a quick recap of what happened during the certification and I want to show you what happened the very first time I accidentally Periscoped. On today's episode Russell talks about the event and what some of the best parts were and why it was so amazing. He also shares his strategy with Periscope and the plans he has for it. Here are some interesting things to listen for: Why there were a few people that didn't get anything out of the event and why that reflects more on them than it does on Russell. A few highlights from the Certification Event, including the best part. And what Russell's strategy for Periscope is and why he thinks it will be successful. So listen below to hear what Russell is starting to do with Periscope. ---Transcript--- Hey everyone. This is Russell and welcome to Marketing in Your Car. All right. So I'm excited for today and for everything and for so much fun stuff. So I guess my call today with you guys, I got a couple of things to talk to you about and we need to discuss. So first is I feel bad. I was going to vox you guys…or not vox you guys, I was going to give you some messages during the certification event last week but it went so crazy and it was amazing and I just ran out of time and I had people – I was driving around in the mornings and anyway, needless to say, it was a smashing success. Of the 120 people there, everyone had an amazing time except for four people which I was going to do a whole podcast about – I was going to call it The Anatomy of a Loser but I thought I'm just going to focus on the good. Four people didn't… one of them went through all four days. The last day he showed up and said he got zero value from the entire week so far and wanted a complete refund which basically means he's a stone cold unethical liar because I had other people crying saying it changed their whole life and it was amazing. I was going to break down why I don't like this person now. Actually you guys want to know why? Well, I want to keep this positive but anyway, it's funny because the guy left and he said, “Hey, do you mind if I stay the last day.” No, you freaking are refunding. We've supported you, my entire team has been working with you. We have been here literally until 4 or 5 o'clock in the morning every single morning helping you. Of course he didn't show up for those which is kind of funny. He skipped all the night sessions and didn't do the homework assignments or any of the other projects and he wants a refund. Then has the nerve to say, “I got zero value from this. I'm going to try to make some more money. That way I can invest in Russell's higher ticket programs later on.” My response was: “No, we do not allow losers into our higher end programs.” People who, freaking, will use your time for four of the five days of the event and then the last day come and ask for a refund after they didn't do the assignment, which we pulled an all-nighter on Thursday and people loved that. That was the best part. That was annoying. The other person is one of my friends. He sent three people from his team, three women and I will – anyway, they didn't show up for the last three days and they went home and told Perry that it was a complete waste of their time. They didn't show up for the last three days. So outside those four people who I will deem losers and I shouldn't say it. That's not nice. But that's how I feel. It was really upsetting. That you can go through and have this amazing experience… we have literally – I had people coming to me crying at the end about the experience. We help people build out entire businesses and they had a chance to work with the clients. It was, as a whole, one of the best events we've ever done. I just had 4 people of 120 that are coming with that attitude and by the way happened to be the four people who didn't freaking show up and do the work and it's just – anyway, that's how life is, right? So there you go and that's why I didn't honestly message you guys because I was frustrated by those people. I didn't want that to cloud it. Now you guys got the cloud but now the cloud is gone. Everything else was amazing. It was awesome. We had – my favorite part of it was on Thursday. We brought in three business owners and I consulted those businesses in front of them and kind of mapped out funnels and then all those guys, we got done like 6 o'clock at night. They had to go out and pull an all-nighter and they got to pick which one of the three funnels they like the most. We had a chiropractor, someone who owns a certification program and someone who's doing survival info products. So they got to see my map of the funnel and then they can make up their own if they wanted and they had to create the entire thing, all the pages, all the funnel, all the sequences and literally people – some people didn't go to bed. They pulled all-nighters. They worked the whole thing and then the next day on Friday, everyone who had killed themselves building funnels, they had everyone kind of vote and we picked the top three in each category and the top three got to present it for the entire group and for that business owner and then the business owner picked who they thought was the best and they won a $1000 cash prize. We had big old stacks of $1 bills. It was so much fun and it was amazing. I can't even tell you like some of these people what they built, how amazing it was. They built funnels and had ideas and concepts I never even dreamt of and it was just – gall, it was amazing! And then obviously salt that off with the dude who comes back and said that he didn't learn anything. Oh, how did the hack-a-thon go for you last night? I went to bed. Well, you missed the most important part. So yeah, it makes sense that it didn't have any value for you. Anyway, just makes me laugh. It was interesting. I went to Tony Robbins' Date with Destiny which is Tony is the best on earth. It's a five or six-day event and in the last day he does a session. He was like, “Who here has not had a breakthrough in the last five days?” and sure enough like 20 people raised their hands and it was kind of awesome. Tony went through and just made them all look like idiots in a nice way or basically like help them see they had breakthroughs but they just weren't intelligent enough to notice it, right? Anyhoo, so there's my rant. It's over. Let's focus on the positive. So this is what I'm talking about today because this is something that I think is crazy exciting and I feel like I've missed the boat on some things and I don't want to miss the boat on this. I don't want you to miss the boat on this. So a couple of things. First off, a lot of you guys know Gary Vaynerchuk and I watched him as he grew Wine Library TV from nothing to this huge thing and his whole thing was like “I do a video every day. I'm consistent. Every day I do a video.” Alright… I thought that was kind of cool and I think my big takeaway from that was consistency, consistency. And then I heard a little while ago that there's a guy, I think you guys know him, his name is Eric Worre. And he – I don't know if this is true, this is my understanding what I heard happened but he was kind of a good guy, making money but not like the biggest name on earth and he went and he hired Gary Vaynerchuk and Gary basically said make a video every day. Be consistent. So he did and now five years later, he has done a video every day for five years and he has got – he does these live events where he gets 10,000 people signing up. He did a webinar last month with Tony Robbins. He had over 100,000 people register and it's insane. Eric Worre is a smart dude, genius, really nice guy but I don't feel like he's the most charismatic leader in the world. I wouldn't have – you might be watching his videos and like OK. But I was like “how has this dude got so many people that follow him?” and it's consistency, right. So I'm going to do that with Marketing in Your Car. This is the most consistent I've ever been with a content publishing platform and I like it but it's kind of like it's delayed publishing. I record it. You might listen to this a week from now or two weeks from now or six weeks from now. One thing I do like about podcasts that has been really interesting is that I've done, like I don't know, 150 episodes or something for the last like three years and people will come and they join Marketing in Your Car and then they go on these binges. Like one of my coaching clients, one of like the coolest people I've met this year. His name is Noah. He was just messing with me. He's like, “Hey, man.” Him and his wife, they're amazing coaches and entrepreneurs and they drive around the country in like an RV and they just work from wherever they're at, right? Which is super cool and he said – he said, “I went on the Marketing in Your Car binge and listened to like half of the episodes in three days,” which is cool. It's funny. If you look at our stats, that's what happens. People come in, listen to one to two episodes and they like it and they binge and they go through the entire like last three years of my life. It's kind of cool because – anyway, so I like that part of it. It's kind of cool. But one thing that I don't like is just it's not instant, right? Not instant like if I want to send you a message, it doesn't necessarily mean you're going to get it right away. Like we did – a couple of weeks ago, I did the whole like – my number one entrepreneur supplement. I wanted to kind of test this. If I send this out, how many responses do I get? How long does it come? What's interesting is I got a lot better response from that than I had assumed I would which is cool but there has been a long drag on it. There's this drag that I'm still getting people coming in now and I will probably get those people coming in for the rest of my life. It's kind of interesting. How there's that drag… So there's that. I remember when Twitter first came out. It's like I don't get it. I remember hanging out with Frank Kern. We were doing a project together and so I flew out to his offices and we talked about Twitter and he's like, “The coolest thing is I tweet and wherever I tweet, within like five minutes, there's a thousand visitors go to wherever I just tweet about.” I was like, “That's kind of cool. It would be nice to be able to get 1000 clicks anytime you wanted just by tweeting something, right?” And obviously Twitter kind of came and went and most of those guys don't tweet or twit or whatever you call it. They don't do that anymore, right? But conceptually, I said that's really cool. So I started getting Twitter and I got all excited. By that point, like nobody cared and I'm assuming people still tweet or twit, whatever you call it. But I don't even know. So I kind of missed that platform. Now Periscope, so this is my entrance into Periscope, right? So that has been happening for the last like month or so and I keep seeing different people popping on it and the first time I was – I downloaded the app and somebody was like, “Hey, you should Periscope.” And I'm like; I don't know what that means. Downloaded the app, I found it was hooked to Twitter, so I integrated it with my Twitter account, or whatever. Anyway, one day I'm driving around. My phone bleeps and I look down and it's one of my friends, Stacy Highland, and she's like – it said Stacy is starting – she's – whatever, she's Periscoping live. I was like I don't know what that means. So I clicked on it and it popped up and instantly I'm talking – I'm watching her talk and she's like, “Oh, hey Russell just logged in,” and she said, “How is it going?” and I'm driving around in Boise for the next like five, ten minutes and she's just like sharing this really great training and then it ended. I was like that was the coolest thing. I just – my phone beeped. I clicked the button. I'm watching her stream live and then she's done and I was like there's this instant thing where I could push – where she pushed content to me. I didn't even know how it popped on my phone honestly. So that was kind of cool. So then I was like OK, I want to figure this Periscope thing out but I hadn't had time yet. Now, fast forward like a month later or a couple of weeks later, which is yesterday actually, I was working on Actionetics. I was building out my email sequence in there and I was editing the footer in my email to have like here's my Twitter following and my Facebook and all those things and I was like I'm going to add my Periscope thing. I don't even know what my Periscope thing is. So I opened my phone app and I'm clicking around and also accidentally clicked the button for like to publish and I click on this thing and within like – within a minute, I had 50 people. I didn't even know who these people are and how they found out about it. I don't even know. I hooked this up to Twitter, so maybe they saw me tweet it because I think Periscope tweeted it out. Anyway, 50 people are on and we were just hanging out and talking and sharing some cool stuff and that fast I had this instant like direct channel to people instantly and I could – I had their focus and their interest and it was awesome. Then when it was done, I think that Twitter stores it for like a day and then it kills the video. So I sent it to my brother. I'm like hey, every time I do the Periscope, you got to grab it. We're going to turn it into a video. That way I can post it on my blog and I can now start doing all the other stuff. But I'm like, this is now a platform where I could publish daily where – so what I'm going to do now is every day at the end of the day, when I get – I'm doing Marketing in Your Car usually when I'm driving to the office or driving home but typically I'm driving to the office and I'm sharing my thoughts for the day and just cool ideas and then I'm going to start using Periscope when the day is over. Hey guys, this is what I did today and I will just kind of show off the cool stuff I'm doing and just use it as kind of an over the shoulder – like this is what I'm doing today. This is what I got done. This is what I'm working on. It's exciting. Just share with people and see what you're actually doing. I also want to use it as a way to amplify my content. So like I'm trying to get to a point where I'm doing like a blog post every – a couple of times a week or we're doing – everything we're doing and it would be cool like to use Periscope. Hey guys, I just wrote a blog post. This is what it's about. If you like that, go over there and comment. I'm using this as a tool to live stream – in live real time to go get people to go comment on my post and my Facebook thing or whatever it is. I don't know yet. But that's kind of the concept. So I'm excited for it. If you are a Periscoper, come check me out. Come – I think you just got to go to Periscope. You just go in there and you search for @russellbrunson. And then my brother is storing them all on our blog which is blog.dotcomsecrets.com. We haven't really launched that yet but its happening and all the Marketing in Your Carare there along with the transcripts. A bunch of cool stuff is happening over the blog soon. So anyway, I'm excited. I think Periscope is cool. I think that you guys should all start looking at it. That's one of my big initiatives I'm going to be doing. I will try to do a Periscope a day and hopefully in five years from now, I will be like Eric Worre and have events with 10,000 people at it and I can get 100,000 people show up on webinars. So that's my goal and hopefully you guys use this as a platform too because I know it's here. I know there's going to be a ton of competition. Facebook is coming out with one, a bunch of them are coming out with one. The reality is it does not matter which one you use. Just pick a platform and stick with it because that's the key is just being consistent. So I picked my platform. I don't care which other one comes out. I'm focusing there and we're going to start growing this thing out and come hang out with me on Periscope. Thanks everyone. I'm out of here and I will talk to you guys all soon.
World Champion, Simone Biles breaks the execution score world record at the 2015 P&G Championships in Indianapolis. © Christy Linder We are in Indianapolis for the 2015 P&G Championships (AKA the US Artistic Gymnastics National Championships). This episode was recorded from a live Periscope broadcast which you can watch below (coming soon). We will be Periscoping again after the women's finals on Saturday night! Download the Periscope app to watch live on Saturday night! On this podcast with special guest, 2012 Junior National Champion, Lexie Priessman, Lauren Hopkins, Cordelia Price and Dvora Myers we chat about: It was not as bad as the 2011 Splatfest but 2015 splatfest Gabby Douglas looked unshakable until the last event. Marta is not going to be happy. What the results tell us: everyone under the top 5 are very very very closely matched. Brenna Dowell smacked the haters upside the head with her BRILLIANT performance on every apparatus but especially with her 6.7 difficulty bar routine! WE SCREAMED WITH JOY! Simone had an uncharacteristic and surprising, especially to her, fall on floor but she came back to break the execution score world record on vault with a 9.85 from her stuck Amanar! Mykayla Maroney doesn't have a heart condition, Marta is misinformed. We told you Maggie Nichols was the one to watch and her second place finished confirmed our genius prediction.... along with her magnificent work. Aly Raisman and Kyla Ross had off night but vowed to face Marta together to make it less painful. Nia Dennis may have mad the most successful gym change ever because she placed third on vault and beam and had one of the most exciting, if uncontrolled bar routines of all time! It was like watching Pegan or Zonderland do high bar. Full details on every junior from the rock steady dependability of Jazzy Foberg, Gabby Perea and Morgan Hurd to the shinning star of Laurie Hernandez, Sydney Johnson-Scharpf and Ragan Smith. Listener Meet-Up When: Immediately following Senior Women's Finals on Saturday, August 15th. Where: LOCATION CHANGED! New Location: McCormick & Schmick's at the Hilton Indianapolis Hotel & Suites, 120 W Market St, Indianapolis What: Meet your fellow gym nerds and win some GymCastic podcast swag 159: 2015 Championships Preview Show 156: Pan Am Games Event Finals and Secret Classic Preview Secret Classic: What Does Success Here Mean 106: Biles and Ross Dominate the 2014 US Secret Classic 2014 Senior Secret Classic Competition Photo Gallery 2014 Junior Secret Classic Competition Photo Gallery Photo Gallery of Podium Training at the 2014 Secret Classic 105: Chicago Secret Classic Preview, Cuba is Back & Nadia Promotes Adult Gymnastics Episode 42: The 2013 Secret US Classic from Chicago Episode 41: Laurie Hernandez & Coach Maggie Haney Episode 9: Chellsie Memmel, Swiss Cup & FIG Presidential Proposals 148: Shannon Miller Episode 28: Kristen Maloney Episode 31: Elise Ray Episode 33: Simone Biles & Her Coaches Episode 48: Kyla Ross 61: Katelyn Ohashi Clears The Air 77: Aly Raisman Periscope videos coming soon!
Ben speaks with Jonathan Pollinger, Social Media Expert who likes “Connecting people and watching the resulting magic”. He talks about his real world social networks, his thoughts on Periscope, a live streaming video app, and a 2 fundamental tips everyone should follow in any social interaction.
Hosts: The Gillinator, Brandon KrumGuests: Arnold Schwarzenegger and others on the red carpetIt is time! Arnold is "old but not obsolete" in Terminator Genisys, now in theaters, and we love it! It's not perfect, but we talk about everything in this epic length episode: our favorite scenes, missed opportunities, and even some healthy criticism. We also play some of our interviews from the Holllywood red carpet since Gillinator was there for all the action, even Periscoping for Arnold! The first half or so is spoiler-free, but then we go into the last half of the movie and what we'd like to see in future Terminator movies. Now go see Terminator Genisys while it's in theaters! Already did? See it again! Like ARN? Help us get bigger and ballsier by rating and reviewing us in iTunes, and sharing us with other Arnold fans!Contact us: arnoldradionews@gmail.com@ArnoldRadioNews@gillinator@KRUMstudios@TheArnoldFans@WayneBastrupEpisode Links:Randy Jennings' T5 reviewArnold on Red CarpetChris Hardwick & Brett AzarLaeta Kalogridis and Patrick Lussier (writers)Wayne Bastrup & Shad GaspardOmaze Contest page to win a day blowing shit up with ArnoldThe Best Sites in Life:TheArnoldFans.comTAFs Facebook PageDaniel Marshall CigarsArnocorpsOrder NEW SOB Posters!Wheel of Pain Push-Ups App!
JJ wastes his time talking about the Dirty Dogg Saloon in Scotsdale.Mike wastes his time Periscoping. And the both waste time talking about; NOT talking about GOT spoilers but about people who DO spoil! But we give away NO spoilers! , sports spoilers, fire in Big Bear, Donald Trump, presidential visits to L.A., the 2016 presidential race, is Bernie Sanders the real life Jed Bartlet, and more. So come waste time with us, won't you?
In this episode, I talk about Periscope and facebook groups, and how they can help you grow your biz.
For today's incredible episode, the darling Eugene Cordero sits in with Julian for a conversation covering his move to L.A. from New York, UCB, his show Other Space, taking chances, and a hunchback. We also learn what GLOB is, how Julian feels about pizza, and Eugene's theory that some definitions are covering up mistakes. Eugene is an actor, comedian, and on several teams at UCB. If you are in the Los Angeles area, check out his shows here: http://eugenecordero.com/ and everyone ever should watch Other Space on Yahoo Screen. Follow Eugene Follow Word With Friend Remember, we are Periscoping 1/2 of every episode! And as always, subscribe, rate, review, and share us with your parents!
Tech and Tools Dominate The Future of Marketing - #SMACTALK Episode In this week’s episode of SMACTalk (Social, Mobile, Analytics and Cloud), Brian Fanzo and I discuss the growing importance that tools and technology are playing in the world of marketing. With Brian heading off to Social Shake Up, the annual Social Media Today event in Atlanta, we started pondering the biggest challenges that enterprises and business are having with marketing and as it turns out we firmly believe it comes down to this one thing: Marketing historically has been a very unscientific profession. There certainly is science behind the subject as a whole, but for many companies marketing came down to a lot of trial and error. This was certainly the case before social media, digital and data became so prevalent. However, with this emergence of information and data, marketers can no longer get away with just operating on feel. We have hit a point where marketing has to be done with proper tools AND proper goals. In this podcast we discuss how the hospitality industry has done a great job of leading this trend with their use of social data. Brands like Marriott now use social listening to make sure that brand sentiment is positive, complaints are responded to and VIP’s are given memorable experiences that they can choose to share with their communities. Brian even shares an anecdotal experience of his arrival in Atlanta… “After showing up first thing in the morning, hours before the hotel was supposed to give me a room, I was outside Periscoping and I mentioned that the hotel didn’t have a room ready (not complaining). During my live stream the hotel entered into the conversation and thanked me for my patience and it wasn’t long after that the room was ready.” Brian’s story was a great example of how social listening and engagement can be used as a tool to create better marketing and better customer experiences. Just consider how we are now sharing this story as earned media and how it may positively impact the brand? However, this goes far beyond just hospitality. The need to use data and information to create better programs for marketing between brands and their consumers is critical in every industry. In the future companies aren’t going to invest in anything they cannot measure. So for marketing technologists it comes down to using tools and technology to build trust and results in their marketing efforts.
Looper and ResortLoop.com Blogger Rebecca Toon reviews her whirlwind trip to Walt Disney World! She talks Star Wars Weekends AND the Magic Kingdom's 24 hour event! Lots of fun talk about the crowds, costumes, cast members, attractions, the new Hub, and let's not forget Periscoping from the parks! We will even hear if she makes it safely back home! Staying awake for 24 hours?: “Please stand clear of the doors”! Thank you for downloading Episode 219 of ResortLoop.com! This episode of ResortLoop.com is brought to you by the Joffrey’s Coffee & Tea Company! Email or call in your own special open for the show! Voicemail: (414) WDW-LOOP
It begins. Adam is challenged to Periscope his life. Sara begins her transition into crazy cat lady courtesy of Instagram. Follow Adam's Periscope progress by following @assemblerfm. Catch up with Sara on Instagram at @masqueradejane and find Jef, as always, on Twitter as @jefholbrook. To see our next live show, please visit Assembler.FM/live.Replay the live broadcast here: https://youtu.be/te0C9FETr8QMore info about #Periscope vs. #Meerkat: http://www.engadget.com/2015/03/26/periscope/Find Us: Assembler FM:Twitter: https://twitter.com/assemblerfmInstagram: https://instagram.com/assemblerfmTumblr: http://assemblerfm.tumblr.comAdam:Currently on #Periscope assignment at https://twitter.com/assemblerfmSara Lynn:Instagram: https://instagram.com/masqueradejane/Jef:Twitter: https://twitter.com/jefholbrookBonus: Crazy show setup "diagram":
Dan and Lauren talk about the new Meerkat vs. Periscope live-streaming app war, a supposed Net-A-Porter deal, and why the fashion and tech industries are still sometimes weirded out by each other.
In this completely unedited episode, Kyle and Brian talk about Periscope while Periscoping, social media, and the benefit of off-the-cuff #content. They also write a musical.
Iain and Donna talk about live Periscoping and Clean Reader – the most offensive app of the moment. They then go on to share 10 things that you should all be doing while they take a little maternity/writing break. It's a bit like actual advice. You'll like it. Finally, it's podcast highlights time.