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Tom's Midday Newsmaker guest today is Anne Arundel County Executive Steuart Pittman, Jr. Last November, he was elected to a second term. Pittman has a history of working for progressive causes, but on some issues, he is more aligned with pragmatic centrists. A first-time office holder when he won election to his first term in 2018, he was tapped by another elective first-timer, Gov. Wes Moore, to serve as the Master of Ceremonies at Moore's historic inauguration in Annapolis. Steuart Pittman joins us on Zoom from Annapolis to discuss his second-term agenda for Anne Arundel County, and his legislative priorities for the final weeks of the Maryland General Assembly.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
En este episodio, te hablaremos sobre un extraño encuentro que tuvo lugar en Falkville, donde un Sheriff creyó haber visto a un ser de otro mundo. También te contaremos de la extraña desaparición de Tracy Pittman, un misterio que tiene muchísimas dudas, y muy pocas respuestas. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Razorback Football had some good news to start spring practice as they get big time cornerback Jeheim Singletary signed out of the transfer portal. Hog Basketball had some rumors spreading on social media today, but none of it came out to be true...yet. John Nabors reacts to the Arkansas Baseball team finding ways to win despite major injuries piling up on the pitching staff. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Will is back in town and the guys have plenty to discuss. They break down the SEC revelations from the NFL Combine and discuss the overreactions galore. What did Bryce Young's weight mean? Should Anthony Richardson's blistering showing matter? And what about Jalin Hyatt only running a 4.4-second 40? The guys discuss it all. Arkansas coach Sam Pittman joined the show to discuss how he went about hiring his new coordinators, finding the right guy to develop KJ Jefferson, Rocket Sanders' rise and much, much more. The guys close with #BoldAndBrash: 2023 SEC Tournament edition and Lad of the Week.
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'RHOA' star Drew Sidora and Ralph Pittman call it quits after nearly 9 years of marriage. Plus, Chris Brown pulls a Bad Bunny and throws a fan's phone, and does Madonna have a new boo? Tune in to today's Dish Nation for more!
EMERGENCY! RING THE ALARM! SOUND THE BELLS! How often do I give you guys an EMERGENCY episode?! I was minding my business today at work, stressing over my afternoon meetings when all of a sudden… BOOM! Ralph Pittman files for divorce from Drew Sidora?! HUH?! No, wait, Drew got there first?! WHAT IS HAPPENING! You know I had to have my RHOA partner-in-crime Emily Hanks of the “She Speaks Bravo” podcast here with me to FLIP OUT! It's another Thursday mini episode, so GET INTO IT! Follow Emily on Instagram! Check out Emily's Podcast (on Apple Podcasts)! Check out Emily's Podcast (on Spotify)! Check out Emily's YouTube! SPONSOR FREE EPISODE! *** HEY! Some of you have asked how you can show your appreciation for all of the content provided by your mama's favorite Black geek. How about you buy me a beer/coffee? CLICK HERE TO SUPPORT! *** New episodes of “Reality & Comics Too” are released every Monday, Wednesday, and Thursday! DON'T FORGET TO SUBSCRIBE, RATE, AND REVIEW! I LOVE 5 STARS! EMAIL ME AT REALITYCOMICSTOO@GMAIL.COM! FOLLOW ME ON INSTAGRAM! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
College football insider Tom Luginbill joins the show on the Farm Bureau insurance guest line to talk college football coaches. Tom talks about Arkansas's Sam Pittman as he enters this coming season with significantly less resources. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Join me as we discuss the soon to be divorce of Drew and Ralph --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
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Born and raised in North Carolina, Zach Pittman has overcome the odds. Soon after getting his college degree and MBA, he found his passion in real estate. In just 2 years he was able to build a 6 figure rental income by investing in properties in 3 states mixing a rent by the room model, rental arbitrage, and an apartment complex. Zach has also founded GHP Capital and is also a loan officer. He has a goal to impact 8 million people around the world by teaching simple real estate strategies through his HomeBuyer League, which is an educational platform simplifying real estate with step-by-step formulas people can follow to learn things such as wholesaling, rehabbing properties, room to room renting, subleasing, Section 8, raising private money, commercial deals, and others.FOLLOW ZACH:https://www.thehomebuyerleague.com/https://www.facebook.com/zachfpitthttps://www.linkedin.com/in/Zpittman/https://www.youtube.com/ZachFPittmanhttps://www.tiktok.com/@zachfpittSUBSCRIBE IF YOU'RE LOOKING TO BUILD WEALTH THROUGH OPPORTUNITIES IN THE REAL ESTATE INDUSTRY✅ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDX0H8Hg3IFnR6enlI0Ywxg?sub_confirmation=1LEARN ABOUT REL FREEDOM & HEAR MORE REAL LIFE STORIES
Chris and Kathleen talk with Rebecca F. Pittman, author of several bestselling books. Her popular History and Haunting series of books have been spotlighted on various TV, radio, and podcast forums. She is a former TV talk show host, muralist, escape room owner, game creator, and runway model who finds mysteries irresistible. BOOKS:*The History and Haunting of Salem: The Witch Trials and BeyondThe History and Haunting of the Stanley HotelThe History and Haunting of the Myrtles PlantationThe History and Haunting of Lemp MansionThe History and Haunting of Lizzie BordenThe History and Haunting of the Palace of Versailles
This podcast hit paid subscribers' inboxes on Feb. 22. It dropped for free subscribers on Feb. 25. To receive future pods as soon as they're live, and to support independent ski journalism, please consider an upgrade to a paid subscription.WhoDave Scanlan, General Manager of Eaglecrest, AlaskaRecorded onFebruary 13, 2023About EaglecrestClick here for a mountain stats overviewOwned by: The City of JuneauLocated in: Juneau, AlaskaYear founded: 1975Pass affiliations: Indy Pass, Powder Alliance, Freedom PassReciprocal partners:* 3 days each at: Anthony Lakes, Diamond Peak, Hilltop, Hogadon Basin, Lookout Pass, Monarch Mountain, Mount Bohemia, Mount Sima, Mount Ashland, Skeetawk, Skiland* 1 unguided day at Silverton* Eaglecrest has one of the most extensive reciprocal networks in America. Here's an overview of everything that's included in a season pass, which debuted for this season at $576. While there's a ton of overlap, adding an Indy Pass onto this would give you another 50-plus ski areas:Closest neighboring ski areas: Eaglecrest's website reminds us that “There are no roads into Juneau, Alaska— you have to live here, fly, or ferry to experience this powder paradise.” There are no other ski areas nearby. So stay for a few days and enjoy it.Base elevation: 1,130 feetSummit elevation: 2,750 feetVertical drop: 1,620 feetSkiable Acres: 640Average annual snowfall: 350 inchesTrail count: 36 (40% advanced/expert, 40% intermediate, 20% beginner)Lift count: 4 doubles – Eaglecrest also plans to add a pulse gondola, which will likely be ready for the 2025 summer season and 2025-26 ski season.Why I interviewed himThis podcast started, as so many of them do, with me asking one question: what is going on here?Every ski area is different, but some are more different than others. Mount Bohemia, with its complete absence of grooming and snowmaking and $109 season pass. Perfect North, which sits on southern Indiana farmland but processes more than 10,000 skiers on a busy day and employs 1,200 workers in the winter – bigger numbers than some Western alphas. Black Mountain of Maine, which, over the past decade, has undergone the largest expansion of any New England ski area – with zero promotion, masterplanning, or fanfare.And here's Eaglecrest. This ski area up in Alaska. But not just regular Alaska. Isolated coastal Alaska. Where roads don't go. You have to fly or take a ferry. There, for some reason, is where the 49th state chose to locate its capital, Juneau. The state's residents have voted many times to move the capital. But it remains. It is a gorgeous place, mountains launching dramatically from the water. There are 31,000 people there. And one ski area. Eaglecrest is big enough to stir curiosity, but not big enough to draw skiers in volume from the mainland, who have dozens of larger ski areas to bounce between. It is an Indy Pass member, a Freedom Pass member, a Powder Alliance member. It has a dozen reciprocal partnerships besides. Almost anyone can ski there – almost no one does. So what is this place? This city-owned ski area at the end of civilization? And what does it want to be? And how does it plan to get there?I had questions. Scanlan had answers. This is a good one.What we talked aboutFifteen straight days of snow is just how they roll in Southern Alaska; the Pineapple Express; if you think Alaska is all dark and subzero weather, think again; skiing in fishing gear; “we don't have the big testosterone bro-brah attitude”; is Juneau ski bum paradise?; where a crowd on a Saturday pow day is a dozen early-risers ahead of you in the maze; Midwest pride; bump skiing at Wilmot; when “you fall in love with it not for the hype of a powder day, but for the feeling you get when you're on your skis or snowboard”; a young vagabond in the ‘90s; Hope Alaska; founding the Mountain Rider's Alliance to help small ski areas; the potential for resurrecting the long-lost Manitoba Mountain, Alaska; Skeetawk (Hatcher Pass); moving to and running Mt. Abram, Maine; what it's like to compete with Sunday River; hardcore New England; Maine nice; landing a dream job at Eaglecrest; reworking the primitive snowmaking system; the pros and cons of running a city-owned ski area; whether Eaglecrest could ever survive without city subsidies; massive summer potential; easier to get to than you think: “If you live in Seattle, you can be sitting on the chair at Eaglecrest before most days you could be sitting on the chair at Crystal”; fly and ski free with your boarding pass; pushing back against locals who want to keep the place secret; why Eaglecrest has so many reciprocal partners and how effectively that's drawing skiers to Alaska; why you saw an Eaglecrest booth at the Snowbound Festival in Boston; Indy Pass; comparing the coming Eaglecrest gondola installation with how the Lone Peak Tram transformed Big Sky in the 1990s; 20,000 daily summer visitors to a town that has 30,000 residents; “how do I take advantage of this amazing opportunity to put the cash in the pocket that I need to turn Eaglecrest into the best ski area in the world?”; why low-capacity lifts will continue to be Eaglecrest's default; the drive to begin relocating quality used ski lifts from Europe to North America; breaking down Eaglecrest's soon-to-be-installed fixed-grip pulse gondola; where the gondola's top, bottom, and midstations will sit; how much larger Eaglecrest's trail footprint will get; “I do carry some guilt of polarizing our ski community” by putting a lift into what's now hike-in terrain; why the ski area needs investment to survive; thoughts on the future of the four double chairs; visiting and riding the future Eaglecrest gondola in Europe; massive upgrades for the lift; how the gondola will work with the Mt. Roberts Tram; a gondy timeline; potential for a beginner carpet; and how much the official count of 36 trails undersells the resort's terrain. Why I thought that now was a good time for this interviewEaglecrest is, as noted above, one of the continent's most aggressive Megapass-Reciprocity players. That makes it an important mountain in an important Storm sub-narrative: how can you ski as much as possible, at as many ski areas as possible, for as little money as possible? While Eaglecrest's network (50-ish partners), and pass price-point ($576 early-bird for 2022-23) don't quite drop it into the Ski Cooper realm ($329 early-bird for this season and 61 partner ski areas), it nonetheless acts as a powerful enabling device for skiers with an adventurous bent and a small degree of logistical savvy.The question, of course, is why Eaglecrest bothers. The place is marooned along the North American coast, one of the few non-island cities unreachable by road from the rest of the landmass. I'm sure some Eaglecrest locals journey south by plane and orchestrate a ski loop through the continental West. But I'm not sure if that's the point here. Rather, Eaglecrest is trying to get skiers to come to them, to realize that if they hop a plane two-and-a-half hours north, they can land in the Great Unspoiled and have a powder-draped ski area to themselves.The goal is to create long-term skiers. Tourists, you know. And once they've seen what the place is now, they'll be revved up to return once Eaglecrest runs a new-used pulse gondola from its base to the top of Pittman's Ridge. That will bring lift service to the ski area's full 1,620-foot vertical drop for the first time and, more importantly, open hundreds of new acres of terrain skier's left of the current boundary.If you're not familiar with a pulse gondola, you may have seen them at Snowmass or Steamboat – they run with little groups of cabins together, and are typically used in America more as transit lifts than ski lifts (the Snowmass lift mostly takes passengers up the village, and Steamboat's lift moves skiers up from a cluster of condos down the mountain). These are fixed-grip lifts, but travel at tram speeds – Scanlan estimates the base-to-summit ride at around seven minutes. The lift will travel in three pods of 15-passenger cabins and will have a mid-station, off of which Eaglecrest could eventually build a learning area with carpets, Scanlan tells me. The yellow line here shows where the gondola will run on the mountain - the red lines represent the current lifts:The lift has been controversial. It's 34 years old, and operated at Austria's Galsterberg Ski Area until last April. It cost approximately $2.5 million to purchase and transport, and will cost an additional $5.5 million to install. It will operate at a far lower capacity than a modern detachable gondola, which is what most U.S. ski areas use. Critics say the gondola competes with the private sector – in particular, the Mount Roberts Tramway.Scanlan addresses each of these points in our conversation, with a nuanced analysis of Juneau's thumping summer tourism season and how Eaglecrest can both act as a relief valve and boost its own long-term goal of financial independence.Questions I wish I'd askedTwo points I wanted to discuss that I didn't get to: how much the gondola will cost, and Eaglecrest's very low lift ticket prices, which top out at $68. The ski area breaks down the cost in an FAQ on its website:Q: I've heard about a $2 million cost and a $7.5 million cost. Which amount is correct?$2 million [it ended up being $2.5 million] covers the initial purchase, transportation, and preliminary engineering of the Austrian pulse gondola. The funding ordinance currently under review is for this sum.$5.5 million covers the cost of installation and additional infrastructure. Eaglecrest may eventually seek this sum as a loan to be paid back by summer operations. This number will be refined in the months ahead as we continue work with the Eaglecrest Board and Eaglecrest Summer Task Force to examine the business case and evaluate future costs.Why you should ski EaglecrestBecause this might be it. Survey the West: it's full. Colorado High Country, the Wasatch, Tahoe, the Seattle and Portland day-drivers, Jackson, Mammoth, Big Sky – it's traffic or it's ticket limits or it's sticker-shock pricing or it's rivers of people or it's the raw cost of living and everything else. Or it's several or all of these factors, blended, to frustrate the romance of mountain-town living.Not that rustic snowy backwaters don't remain. But they are backwaters. Places like Turner, Montana, 2,110 vertical feet and 1,000 acres but lodged in the wilderness between Schweitzer and Whitefish. Sunrise Park, Arizona, 1,800 feet of vert and 1,200 acres, but marooned 90 miles from the nearest interstate highway and so dysfunctional that a huge chunk of the mountain sat inaccessible for five years after their monster triple chair broke down (it now takes three lift rides to reach that same terrain).But look north. Look at this:If you haven't watched yet, let me pull one stat: Scanlan says on this video that a busy day at Eaglecrest – a weekend powder day, for instance – might draw 900 skiers. For the day. There's more people waiting in the average McDonald's drive-through line than that.“Yeah Brah but it's small.”Watch the video, Brah.“Yeah but it gets like half the snow of Mt. Tahoe, where my boys ride Brah.”Watch the video.“Yeah but it's in Alaska and I don't see the point of skiing in Europe when I can ski right here in U.S. America.”Brah, watch the video.As mainland Western U.S. skiing boils over, Eaglecrest remains on a low simmer. And while you'll need an airplane to get there, you land in a state capital, with all the infrastructure and life conveniences that attend such a place. Juneau is a small city – 31,000 people – but an important one, with abundant stable government and industrial fishing jobs. It's big enough to host a woo-hoo walkable downtown and all the standard American big-box claptrap on the outskirts, small enough that unloading every skier in the valley onto Eaglecrest's access road won't be enough to clog the drain. And when you arrive, you just ski. No parking drama. No lines. No Powder Day Death Matches. Just. Ski.Yes, the lifts are old and slow: four fixed-grip doubles. Yes, accessing the full vert requires some hiking. Yes, coastal snow is not Wasatch snow. And yes, the total skiable acreage does not match your big-mountain Western destinations. But: recalibrate. Reset your expectations. Stripped of the hoards and the Hunger Games mentality they inspire, skiing is something different. A 10-minute lift ride is not so intolerable when you ski right onto the chair. Six hundred forty acres is plenty when it's mostly ungroomed faces sparsely cut by the local bombers. Three hundred fifty inches is sufficient when it tumbles over the mountain in lake-effect patterns, a few inches every day for weeks at a time, refreshing and resetting the incline day after day.Eaglecrest is going to get bigger, better, and, probably, busier. That gondola will change how Eaglecrest skis and, eventually, who skis there. It's not a destination yet, not really. But it could be. And it probably should be – we're rapidly moving past the era in which it makes sense for city tax dollars to subsidize a ski area. There are plenty of examples of publicly owned ski areas operating at a profit, and Eaglecrest should too. Go there now, before the transformation, to see it, to say you were there, to try that different thing that gets at what you're probably looking for in the mountains already.Podcast NotesOn the gondolaWe referenced a note Scanlan penned shortly after taking delivery of the gondola. Read it in full here.On Manitoba MountainScanlan tells the story of trying to resurrect a small ski area called Manitoba Mountain near Hope Alaska. It had operated with up to three ropetows from World War II until the lodge burned down in 1960. Skimap.org has archived a handful of concept maps circa 2011, but Scanlan moved to Maine to take over Mt. Abram before he could re-open the ski area:On Skeetawk/Hatcher PassScanlan and I discuss a recently opened Alaska ski area that he refers to as “Hatcher Pass.” This is Skeetawk, a 300-vertical-foot bump that finally opened in 2020 after decades of failed plans. Here's the ski area today:And here's a circa 2018 concept map, which shows where a future high-speed quad could run, connecting, in turn, to a high-alpine lift that would transport skiers to 4,068 feet. That would give the ski area a 2,618-foot vertical drop.On the impact of the Big Sky tramIt's hard to imagine, but Big Sky was sort of Small Sky before the ski area broke out the Lone Peak Tram in 1995. That project, which acted as a gateway to all-American pants-shitting terrain, transformed the way skiers perceived the mountain. But the tram was bigger than that: the lift accelerated the rapid late-90s/early-2000s evolution of U.S. skiing as a whole. An excerpt from this excellent history by Marc Peruzzi:As unpolished, friendly, and authentic as Big Sky was in the early 1980s, it was a timid place known within Montana for stunning views, but exceedingly gentle pitches. Big Sky was the yin to rowdy, chute-striped Bridger Bowl's yang. And it was struggling. Annual skier visits hovered around 80,000. The mountain wasn't on the destination circuit. The business was losing money. Bound up skiing wasn't working. …it's easy to overlook the fact that the Lone Peak Tram was and is the most audacious lift in North American skiing history. It was such a bold idea in fact, that John Kircher had to agree to the purchase without the approval of his father, and Boyne Resorts founder, Everett who disapproved vehemently with the project. The audacious claim is not hyperbole. The Peak 2 Peak Gondola in Whistler (it came 20 years later) might sport a longer span, but it was a far more straightforward installation and it's more of a people mover than a ski lift. The Jackson and Snowbird trams serve serious terrain, but they run over a series of towers like traditional lifts. The Lone Peak Tram is an anomaly. Because it ascends a sheer face, the lift features a continuous span that's unique in North America. No other design would work. Beyond the challenges of the cliff, the routine 120mph hour winds in the alpine would rip chairs off cables and smash tram cars into towers. …By 1996, the year the tram opened, the skiing nanny state was crumbling. … At the forefront of this change was the Lone Peak Tram. It changed the mindset of the ski industry. But that change was bigger than the sheer audacity of the lift and the terrain it served—or even the fact that Big Sky's patrol had figured out how to manage it. The Lone Peak Tram didn't just make for good skiing, it made good business sense. Whereas Kircher is quick to credit Montana's frontier culture for the actual construction of the tram, Middleton discounts the cowboy element and insists it was a strategic long-term business play to elevate the ski experience. But two things can be true at the same time, and that's the case with the Lone Peak Tram. …In the years after the Lone Peak Tram opened, expansion into steep terrain became commonplace again. Sunshine Village's Delirium Dive opened in 1998. Then came the hike-to terrain of Aspen Highlands' Highland Bowl; Crystal Mountain's “inbounds sidecountry” in the Southback zone, and its 2007 Northway expansion; and more recently Taos Ski Valley in New Mexico finally strung a lift to Kachina Peak, which as with Lone Peak had been hiked for years. Any skier worth their weight would add the Headwaters at Moonlight to that list.This video tells the story just as well:The context in the podcast was the incoming Eaglecrest gondola, and whether that lift could have the same transformative impact on Eaglecrest. While the terrain that the new-used Alaskan lift will serve is not quite as dramatic as that strafing Big Sky, it will reframe the ski area in the popular conversation.On ski pornI don't write a lot about athletes, obviously, but Scanlan mentions several that he skied with at summer camps on the Blackcomb Glacier back in the ‘90s. One is Candide Thovex, who is like from another galaxy or a CG bot or something:On old-school Park CityScanlan talks about the summer he helped yank out the “old-school” Park City gondola and install the “Payday six-packs.” He was referring to the Payday and Bonanza sixers, which replaced the mountain's two-stage, four-passenger gondola in the summer of 1997. Here's the 1996 trailmap, showing the gondy, which had run since 1963:And here's the 1997-98 trailmap, calling out the new six-packs as only a 1990s trailmap can:On old-school AltaModern Alta – the one that most of you know, with its blazing fast lifts and Ikon Pass partnership – is a version of Alta that would have been sacrilege to the powder monks who haunted the place for decades. “The ski area for traditionalists, ascetics, and cheapskates,” read one Skiing Magazine review in 1994. “The lifts are slow and creaky, the accommodations are spartan, but the lift tickets are the best deal in skiing, especially when Alta's fabled powder comes with them.” Here's what Alta looked like in 2000, the year before Sugarloaf gave way to the resort's first high-speed chairlift:This is the Alta of Scanlan's ski-bum days, “before the high-speeders came in,” as he puts it. Before the two-stage Collins lift took out Germania (which lives on at Beaver Mountain, Utah), a longer Supreme killed Cecret, and a new Sunnyside sixer deleted Albion, which served Alta's boring side. Before a peak-day walk-up lift ticket ran $179 (throw in another $40 if you want to connect to Snowbird). They do, however, still have the stupid snowboard ban, so there's that.On previous GM Matt LillardScanlan and I discuss his immediate predecessor, Matt Lillard, who is now running Vermont's Mad River Glen. Lillard joined me on the podcast three years ago, and we briefly discussed Eaglecrest:On GunstockScanlan compares Eaglecrest's operating and ownership models to Gunstock, noting, “we've all seen how that can go.” We sure have:On Eaglecrest's fly-and-ski-free programHere are details on how to cash in your boarding pass for an Eaglecrest lift ticket on the day you land in Juneau. Alaska Airlines offers similar deals at Alyeska, Bogus Basin, Red Lodge, Red Mountain, Schweitzer, Marmot Basin, and, shockingly, Steamboat, where a one-day lift ticket can cost as much as a 747.The Storm publishes year-round, and guarantees 100 articles per year. This is article 14/100 in 2023, and number 400 since launching on Oct. 13, 2019. Want to send feedback? Reply to this email and I will answer (unless you sound insane, or, more likely, I just get busy). You can also email skiing@substack.com.The Storm explores the world of lift-served skiing all year long. Join us. Get full access to The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast at www.stormskiing.com/subscribe
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The guys did something a bit different. They held a draft for SEC offensive coordinators. With 10 new OCs in the conference, they dug into the backgrounds of each and how much they like/question about what they bring to the table. The Buzz's John Nabors joined the show to discuss all things Hogs. What's Sam Pittman's future? Is KJ Jefferson an NFL player? And what's a realistic expectation with a favorable schedule in 2023? The guys close with work travel in #FiguringItOut and Lad of the Week.
George Noory and author Rebecca Pittman discuss the infamous murder case from the 1890s where Lizzie Borden was acquitted of murdering her father and stepmother with an axe, her motives for committing the crime, and Pittman's discovery of new evidence that strengthens her belief that Borden was actually guilty.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Arkansas head coach Sam Pittman is entering his fourth year with more staff changes and roster turnover than ever before. How critical is this spring for the the head Hog? HawgSports beat man Andrew Ellis also joins host Trey Biddy to discuss the upcoming baseball season, and we will of course talk Hog Hoops, as well. All that and more on today's episode of HawgSports LIVE... To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Today's episode features a special conversation surrounding self-love and acceptance with Self-Love Activator Vicki Pittman. In this conversation, we discuss the importance of self-love and how it goes beyond just self-care. The conversation delves into the societal and cultural expectations that can make it challenging to prioritize self-love. Vicki highlights the need to assess our thoughts and strategies and make adaptations when necessary and emphasizes that individuals are masters of their own needs, but it takes willpower and compassion to act on them. We talk differentiating self-love from self-care and outline the three components of self-love practices: intentional practice, mindful focused energy, and devotion towards developing those skills. Dive into learn more about Vicki and this important conversation! More about Vicki: Vicki Pittman is a toddler mom of 1, active duty military spouse, former Pilates Studio owner and teacher trainer, weightlifter to 90's hip hop, tarot & oracle loving card slinger, and a Self-Love Activator and Wellness Coach to her busy, go-getter female clients. Radical self-care, boundaries, and soul level alignment in regards to her work and relationships became non-negotiables after becoming a first time Mom in her late 30's and navigating the stresses of the pandemic. Now fully present and leading with joy each day, she's helping her L.E.A.P. 12-Week Self-Care Program clients drop their people pleasing/perfectionist ways and start living with more joy, self confidence, personal time and energy than ever before. Vicki is a Self Love Activator and Wellness Coach to her busy professional women and Super Mom clients. Where she helps them embody alignment in all parts of their life (body, mind, and spirit) so they can truly manifest their desires and live them out in full joy and with zero guilt or shame. In her LEAP Coaching Program- a 12 Week Self Love Activation, she teaches her clients how to stop people-pleasing and putting everyone else's needs above their own so they can finally develop a consistent morning spiritual practice, get their exercise schedule locked in, and learn how to be kinder to themselves even when they fuck up. Learn more about Vicki and her program offerings: Follow her on Instagram! Learn more about the L.E.A.P Program
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In this episode, I have a conversation with Rachel Pittman about all the layers involved when you transition from having a riding-focused partnership with your horse to a non-riding partnership. We both share our stories of navigating arthritis with our horses and the things that came up for us and our horses as we were forced to shift goals with them. If you are someone who isn't riding your horse or is contemplating not riding your horse then I think you will get a lot out of this episode and realise that you aren't alone. But, you can get through this and it will all be more than ok. If you would like to connect with me you can do so via: www.confidentequestrianprogram.com https://www.instagram.com/felicitydavies_/ https://www.facebook.com/felicitydavieshorsemanship https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCnpWzrLLy3oZ-Ds3kSTkMZA
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SEC Mike Bratton (@MichaelWBratton) recaps the biggest news in the SEC following the second National Signing Day! South Carolina wins National Signing Day, lands 5-star athlete Nyckoles Harbor (1:00), Shane Beamer discusses landing the 5-star jumbo athlete (2:30), Lane Kiffin explains his strategy of adding multiple transfer QBs this offseason (14:00), Sam Pittman discusses the new players added to the Razorback roster (18:00), Pittman on the new coaches he hired this offseason at Arkansas (22:00), Billy Napier fails to provide much clarity when it comes to the Jaden Rashada saga in Gainesville (29:00) Advertising inquiries: thatsecpodcast@gmail.com All show music comes via Nashville band Crimson Calamity; check out their work by clicking the link below: https://open.spotify.com/artist/29HGeJEcYHBJlyt4xIcLBw?si=GJoEOr0YSoeqWkrjhCc0Ug Donate to cousin Shane's beer fund via CashApp: $thatSECpodcast We have t-shirts for sale! Check out our merchandise store featuring shirts, hoodies, stickers, coffee mugs, pillows, phone cases and more: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/thatsecpodcast?ref_id=19055 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
#Arkansas #ArkansasRazorbacks #Hogs #Hawgs #WPS #ArkansasRazorbacksPodcast #GoHogs #HitThatLine #WooPigSooie #RazorbackPodcast #ArkansasPodcast #HogPodcast
We talk Tom Brady, Pittman, Hog Hoops, DQ has a sponsor now and JW calls in.
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Many things in life can feel very heavy to deal with at times, you might find yourself feeling weighed down, but how about pastors, ever considered how they feel in ministry? Ministry can be filled with so many incredible moments, witnessing weddings, baptisms, newborn children joining families at church, the sound of children laughing in the halls after Sunday school...but ministry can also be filled with so many heavy, painful and difficult moments. Many pastors walk around smiling, putting on a strong smile to bring comfort to their congregations, while hiding the pain and heaviness of their roles. Join us today as our guest, Pastor JR Pittman opens his heart and shares some of the darkest and heaviest moments in his ministry journey. He shares a candid glimpse into what the weight of ministry looks like and the physical, mental and emotional struggles that come along with it. This is the second episode with Pastor JR, he has wonderful words of hope and encouragement that everyone need to hear and he invites you to know that you are not alone in some of the struggles you might be going through in your own life. Part 3 and conclusion to JR's story. To see all the KINGDOM REEL Podcast Episodes visit our website at www.kingdomreel.com
Sam Pittman has finalized his entire coaching staff for the 2023 season. There was a lot of turnover heading into year 4, but did he make the right moves to make his Razorbacks better this upcoming season? Some Hog fans don't overly enjoy Eric Musselman's antics on the sidelines during games. They feel it's a bad look for everyone involved including the Arkansas program. Does it really matter how he acts on the sidelines if the Hogs keep winning? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Many things in life can feel very heavy to deal with at times, you might find yourself feeling weighed down, but how about pastors, ever considered how they feel in ministry? Ministry can be filled with so many incredible moments, witnessing weddings, baptisms, newborn children joining families at church, the sound of children laughing in the halls after Sunday school...but ministry can also be filled with so many heavy, painful and difficult moments. Many pastors walk around smiling, putting on a strong smile to bring comfort to their congregations, while hiding the pain and heaviness of their roles. Join us today as our guest, Pastor JR Pittman opens his heart and shares some of the darkest and heaviest moments in his ministry journey. He shares a candid glimpse into what the weight of ministry looks like and the physical, mental and emotional struggles that come along with it. This is the second episode with Pastor JR, he has wonderful words of hope and encouragement that everyone need to hear and he invites you to know that you are not alone in some of the struggles you might be going through in your own life. This is part 2 of a 3 part episode. For all KINGDOM REEL episodes visit our website at www.kingdomreel.com
In season eight of the Millennial Pastor Podcast, Jon Wren is our Guest Host! On today's episode, he interviews Megan Pittman on her current ministry assignment. We thank Megan for her vulnerability and willingness to share her journey with us. Her story is a gift. Book link: 365+ Prayers from the saints of the Church --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/millennial-pastors/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/millennial-pastors/support
On today's episode, I'm talking to physical therapist Dr. Margaret Pittman about building the next generation. Margaret is a physical therapist at Momentous Sports Medicine and an adjunct assistant professor of physical therapy at George Washington University. She's doing a lot to make sure that the next generation of physical therapists are exposed to the field and see themselves represented within it. She's a board member of Minority Women in Sports Medicine started by former guest, Andrea Durham, as well as an Executive Board Member of the USC Biokinesiology and Physical Therapy Black Alumni Association. Additionally, she's currently back in school herself, working towards her MBA at GW, making sure she has the tools she needs to see her visions through.We talk about:The challenges of negotiating early on in your career.How goals become reality when you share them with others who can help advocate for you.Why it's okay to pivot and just because it's not now doesn't mean never.If you'd like a little help with your next negotiation, grab my free to guide to negotiation specifically written for women working in male-dominated fields like sports medicine and athletics!You can find the show notes and more resources at https://madamathlete.comKeep an eye out for new content or let us know what you'd like to see next by following us on social:Instagram: @theMadamAthleteFacebook: @MadamAthleteTwitter: @MadamAthlete
Many things in life can feel very heavy to deal with at times, you might find yourself feeling weighed down, but how about pastors, ever considered how they feel in ministry? Ministry can be filled with so many incredible moments, witnessing weddings, baptisms, newborn children joining families at church, the sound of children laughing in the halls after Sunday school...but ministry can also be filled with so many heavy, painful and difficult moments. Many pastors walk around smiling, putting on a strong smile to bring comfort to their congregations, while hiding the pain and heaviness of their roles. Join us today as our guest, Pastor JR Pittman opens his heart and shares some of the darkest and heaviest moments in his ministry journey. He shares a candid glimpse into what the weight of ministry looks like and the physical, mental and emotional struggles that come along with it. This is the second episode with Pastor JR, he has wonderful words of hope and encouragement that everyone need to hear and he invites you to know that you are not alone in some of the struggles you might be going through in your own life. This is part 1 of a 3 part episode. For all KINGDOM REEL episodes visit our website at www.kingdomreel.com
Celebration Church Orlando
Kendall Briles was reportedly going to TCU to be the new offensive coordinator, but at the time of this video no announcement has been made officially. Yet Arkansas has officially announced Dan Enos as their new OC. So did Kendall Briles & Jimmy Sexton get played by Sam Pittman? SEC Officiating released a statement saying how they screwed up a major call in the Razorback game against Missouri this past Wednesday night. Kudos to them for acknowledging they screwed up, but it doesn't make it any better when the Hogs still lost the game. HUGE thank you to getting to 5000 subscribers on YouTube! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
BOOKS:*The History and Haunting of Salem: The Witch Trials and BeyondThe History and Haunting of the Stanley HotelThe History and Haunting of the Myrtles PlantationThe History and Haunting of Lemp MansionThe History and Haunting of Lizzie BordenThe History and Haunting of the Palace of VersaillesWEBSITE/LINKS:www.rebeccafpittmanbooks.comBOOK TRAILERhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=68aL88lH1_U
Host Tom Foley invites Aisha Pittman, Senior VP of Government Affairs at National Association of ACOs. They discuss the key elements of interest in the recently passed Omnibus and the key ACO related measures in the 2023 physician fee schedule. Aisha also describes how ACOs embrace remote patient monitoring. Concluding with what's on the horizon for ACOs in the future. To stream our Station live 24/7 visit www.HealthcareNOWRadio.com or ask your Smart Device to “….Play Healthcare NOW Radio.” Find all of our network podcasts on your favorite podcast platforms and be sure to subscribe and like us. Learn more at www.healthcarenowradio.com/listen
If you want to become who you are suppose to be it's important you learn how to find your voice. This is the episode that will show you how. Today I sit down with Amanda Pittman. She is a the founder of Confident Woman Co, author, speaker and believer in Christ. We will be discussing the following:⭐️Paying the price of discomfort ⭐️ Why you should stop assuming you have more time left than you do⭐️ 4 steps to building confidence and finding your voice & so much moreTo connect with Amanda visit her Instagram here:https://instagram.com/amandaapittman?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y=Grab my NEW COURSE Podcast Secrets Revealed here
Check it out on Spotify: https://spoti.fi/33Z4VsE Check it out on Apple: https://apple.co/3AHc2DT Serial entrepreneur and managing member of the real estate investment firm GHP Capital, LLC. Zach is also a licensed loan officer for Rapid Mortgage Company. He has acquired investment property across three states with experience in various strategies including wholesaling, rehab, and property management. He spends his free time with family, vacationing, cooking, or reading in-depth nonfiction books. Dreams: Financial Freedom Situation for the Family. Directly impact 8 Million People Have an amazing spanish villa overlooking the water in Spain. Introduce Them to: A Video Editor. Making a Connection with one of the top realtors in the country to do a course in the Home Buyer league. Favorite Book, Movie, or Podcast: Favorite Movie is Forrest Gump Favorite Podcast is the All in Podcast Favorite Book is The Alchemist. Think and Grow Rich. The Millionaire Fast Lane. Contact them at: Zach@thehomebuyerleague.com www.Zpittman.com
Amanda Pittman is an author, speaker, entrepreneur, the Founder of Confident Woman Co., a ministry that equips women to stand confidently upon the finished work of Jesus. https://www.instagram.com/amandaapittman/
Kendall Briles leaves Arkansas to become the new offensive coordinator at TCU just weeks after saying he was coming back in 2023. Razorback fans have a right to be upset at how everything went down Sam Pittman reportedly has already hired former Hog OC Dan Enos to replace Briles. Enos worked with Pittman at Arkansas back in 2015 and is coming from coaching QBs from Maryland. Is this an upgrade for the Hogs? Razorback Basketball drops another game on the road to Missouri but the officials made sure to help out the Tigers as much as possible down the stretch of the game. Who wants to watch a college basketball game where 56 fouls are called? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Season 3 of the Wellness Chisme Chat starts with a conversation about Latina and BIPOC preventative health care. Our host, Dr. KAY, welcomes Lesline Pittman for a second time to the Wellness Chisme Chat. Yoga Coach @leslinepittman joins us as she drops the knowledge from her perspective as a busy mom and RN working to build healthy communities. Together we chat about all things, including preventative health, which should include the core 4 areas of care. Primary Care Dentist OBGYN (for those with a uterus) Therapist Other chisme we share: The need to find more joy in life Connecting the affirmations "I am worthy" and "I am healthy". You are worth investing in yourself and your health. Ways to lean on your community to create space for preventative care Leave a review with your thoughts on the content of our podcast and any ah moments you would like to share! More about our Guest, Lesline Pittman: Leslie's Gift to you: 30-Day Wellness Reset Join Lesline for a 30-day reset, where you will receive a 30-day DIGITAL filled planner and weekly accountability partner. After this reset, you will have a clear mind and feel less stressed. Wellness Chisme Podcast Ep 1. Wellness Means...Freedom featuring Lesline Pittman IG: @leslinepittman TikTok: @leslinepittman Website: www.leslinepittman.com ******************************************************************************************* Connect with Dr. KAY at La Brega Wellness Take the Latina Personality Quiz: www.latinapersonalityquiz.com Instagram: @labregawellness Tiktok: @labregawellness YouTube: @labregawellness Website: www.labregawellness.com Get Your Free 25-min Rest, Reset, Renew Restorative Yoga class from Dr. KAY Just making sure... This podcast and website represent the opinions of Dr. Kelly Alvarado-Young (KAY) and her guests on the show and website. The content here should not be taken as medical advice. The content of this podcast is for informational purposes only. Please consult your healthcare professional for any medical questions. Views and opinions expressed in the podcast and website are our own and do not represent that of our places of work. While we make every effort to ensure that the information we share is accurate, we welcome any comments, suggestions, or corrections of errors. In no way does listening, reading, emailing, or interacting on social media with our content establish a doctor-patient relationship. ¡Dalé! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/labregawellness/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/labregawellness/support
Check it out on Spotify: https://spoti.fi/33Z4VsE Check it out on Apple: https://apple.co/3AHc2DT Serial entrepreneur and managing member of the real estate investment firm GHP Capital, LLC. Zach is also a licensed loan officer for Rapid Mortgage Company. He has acquired investment property across three states with experience in various strategies including wholesaling, rehab, and property management. He spends his free time with family, vacationing, cooking, or reading in-depth nonfiction books. Dreams: Financial Freedom Situation for the Family. Directly impact 8 Million People Have an amazing spanish villa overlooking the water in Spain. Introduce Them to: A Video Editor. Making a Connection with one of the top realtors in the country to do a course in the Home Buyer league. Favorite Book, Movie, or Podcast: Favorite Movie is Forrest Gump Favorite Podcast is the All in Podcast Favorite Book is The Alchemist. Think and Grow Rich. The Millionaire Fast Lane. Contact them at: Zach@thehomebuyerleague.com www.Zpittman.com
Celebration Church Orlando
John Nabors discusses the things he learned about NIL dealing with the University of Arkansas, what are some of the misconceptions about NIL, players entering into the transfer portal almost never have anything to do with money, what challenges players & schools are facing each year, Sam Pittman bringing in some high quality WRs on campus, and Razorbacks travel to Nashville to take on Vandy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
This week on Real Talk with Rachael I'm talking with Amanda Pittman. Amanda is the author of Stand in Confidence and the devotional 100 Days of Life-Changing Confidence, speaker, entrepreneur, and the Founder of Confident Woman Co., a ministry that equips women to stand confidently upon the finished work of Jesus. Through Confident Woman Co., Amanda hosts retreats, conferences, online events, podcasts, videos, and more. Amanda lives near Dallas, Texas with her husband, Michael, and her two children, Elijah and Lily. Key Points from Our Conversation: Our job is obedience, God's job is the outcome. Our job is faithfulness, God's job is fruitfulness. Clarity leads to confidence and confusion leads to insecurity. Many times we lack clarity because we lack connection to God. We're more connected to the world so we can't see God or ourselves clearly. The more connected to God we are, the more confident we are. You can find confidence that lasts in a standard that never changes – the sacrifice of Jesus. 4 components of confidence – Clarity – knowing your identity and design will help you know what to do Connection – first with God, then with others. Involve God in who you surround yourself with Competency – the more competent you are, the more confident you are. Do the work of healing and finding freedom from your past by renewing your mind Conviction – It's the "why" that drives you. We need to be others-focused. We get insecure when we focus on ourselves. As Christians, we don't have to discover who we are - we are a new creation, children of God - you just have to embrace it. We don't have to search within ourselves to find meaning - we find meaning in the sacrifice of Jesus Christ which demonstrates His love for us. We must internalize it. Instead of attempting to change your behavior, focus on reorienting your identity. Renew your mind by identifying yourself with righteousness rather than sin. God does not have a speaking problem, but we often have a listening problem. If you are a child of God, you can hear His voice if you will create a space that allows you to tune out others and hear His still, small voice. Let's Get Real Practical: When praying about this section, God gave me two things to focus on - "rest and hear." Rest is a commandment for our well-being. It's a gift and where we can best hear God's voice. This week ask: How can I rest in my work? "God, show me pockets of rest in my day." What does a Sabbath day of rest look like in this season? "Holy Spirit, what are you whispering to me today?" Connect with Amanda: website | Instagram | Facebook Connect with Rachael: website | Instagram | Facebook
It's Thanksgiving, 2006, and a 911 call comes into a dispatcher in Memphis, TN. Jeffery Scott tells the dispatcher that his wife is unconscious and has been for some time. Scott would claim his wife suffered from alcoholic ketoacidosis. But could there be a monstrous side to Jeffery Scott? Join Olivia Cornu and John Conner as they dive deep into the dark to discuss the murder of Ashley Pittman Scott. Will this case be enough to make you...check the locks? Follow Us: Instagram Twitter Join Our Facebook Group Subscribe to our Patreon Visit our website Subscribe and Review on Apple Podcasts Check the Locks is Supported By: Audible: Enjoy 30 Days for Fee and Support Check the Locks Great Lakes Kids Apparel: Use code "LOCKS" to get 20% off Your First Order Post-production editing courtesy of Mat Halliday of Mat Halliday Audio Production Sources: Jeffrey Scott v. State of Tennessee State of Tennessee v. Jeffrey Scott Memphis Jury Convicts Man Of Killing Former Bossier City Resident | News | ktbs.com American Monster S8E1 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/checkthelocks/message
Celebration Church Orlando
Celebration Church Orlando
Episode No. 582 of The Modern Art Notes Podcast is a holiday clips episode with artist Lari Pittman. Museo Jumex in Mexico City is presenting "Lo que se ve, se pregunta," a retrospective of Pittman's work that descends from a 2019 version of the exhibition that originated at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles. The exhibition was curated by Connie Butler; the Mexico City presentation was coordinated with Adriana Kuri Alamillo. It is on view through February 26, 2023. This program, the second of two, was taped in 2019 on the occasion of the debut iteration of this project, “Lari Pittman: Declaration of Independence,” at the Hammer. The exhibition revealed Pittman's engagements with America's history and with issues and subjects that have been core to our history and identity, including landscape, violence, citizenship, belonging and more. The excellent exhibition catalogue was published by DelMonico Prestel. Amazon and Indiebound offer it for $50-65. Pittman is one of America's most-honored artists. His work is in the collection of virtually every important American art museum. Pittman has received awards from the International Association of Art Critics, the Skowhegan Medal, and he has been granted three National Endowment for the Arts fellowships. His work has been featured in many important international exhibitions, including Documenta and the Venice Biennale. For images, see Episode No. 415.
Episode No. 581 is a holiday clips episode with artist Lari Pittman. Museo Jumex in Mexico City is presenting "Lo que se ve, se pregunta," a retrospective of Pittman's work that descends from a 2019 version of the exhibition that originated at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles in 2019. The exhibition was curated by Connie Butler; the Mexico CIty presentation was coordinated with Adriana Kuri Alamillo. It is on view through February 26, 2023. This program, the first of two, was taped in 2019 on the occasion of the debut iteration of this project, “Lari Pittman: Declaration of Independence,” at the Hammer. The exhibition revealed Pittman's engagements with America's history and with issues and subjects that have been core to our history and identity, including landscape, violence, citizenship, belonging and more. The excellent exhibition catalogue was published by DelMonico Prestel. Amazon and Indiebound offer it for $50-65. Pittman is one of America's most-honored artists. His work is in the collection of virtually every important American art museum. Pittman has received awards from the International Association of Art Critics, the Skowhegan Medal, and he has been granted three National Endowment for the Arts fellowships. His work has been featured in many important international exhibitions, including Documenta and the Venice Biennale. For images, see Episode No. 415.
SEC Mike Bratton (@MichaelWBratton) is joined by Steven Lassan (@AthlonSteven)! Texas A&M flips 4-star QB Marcel Reed from Ole Miss; Lane Kiffin trolls as expected (1:00), Sam Pittman discusses why Travis Williams is the man to lead Arkansas' defense and is open regarding the changes that need to happen in Fayetteville (5:00), South Carolina QB Spencer Rattler interesting comments about playing in the Gator Bowl (15:00), Athlon Sports Senior Editor Steven Lassan joins the show! (19:00), thoughts on Billy Napier's Year 1 at Florida, should Gator fans be concerned? (19:30), better fit for Devin Leary, Auburn or Kentucky? (33:00), Kentucky poised to be the SEC's most improved team following recent moves? (35:00), which team is getting hurt the most from portal losses, Texas A&M or Arkansas? (37:00), thoughts on Arkansas hiring Travis Williams? (41:30), thoughts on Zach Arnett being named Mississippi State head coach (47:00), Mizzou vs. Wake Forest bowl preview & what Missouri fans can expect in 2023 (53:00) Advertising inquiries: thatsecpodcast@gmail.com Please help support the show by taking advantage of our sponsor's offers: PRIZE PICKS - Daily Fantasy Sports (Matching initial deposit up to $100 with promo code: SEC PRIZE PICKS Link https://app.prizepicks.com/sign-up?invite_code=SEC All show music comes via Nashville band Crimson Calamity; check out their work by clicking the link below: https://open.spotify.com/artist/29HGeJEcYHBJlyt4xIcLBw?si=GJoEOr0YSoeqWkrjhCc0Ug Donate to cousin Shane's beer fund via CashApp: $thatSECpodcast We have t-shirts for sale! Check out our merchandise store featuring shirts, hoodies, stickers, coffee mugs, pillows, phone cases and more: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/thatsecpodcast?ref_id=19055 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices