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Today on the Clean Power Hour, Tim Montague welcomes back Dan Leary from Denowatts, joined by Marc Bamberger of Portside Systems, to discuss their innovative partnership in solar monitoring technology. Recorded at RE+ Boston, this conversation highlights how these companies are revolutionizing data acquisition systems (DAS) for solar sites.Dan Leary shares updates on Denowatts' growth, including their new ISO-accredited energy test service focused on standardized "energy accounting" for the solar industry. The company has expanded its capabilities to support projects ranging from 200 kilowatts to 500 megawatts, demonstrating impressive scalability.Marc Bamberger explains how Portside Systems, based in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, has evolved from being an installer of Denowatts Systems to becoming a full integration partner offering its own DAS product line. Their collaboration focuses on efficiency and effectiveness, with innovations like using ZigBee communication technology, eliminating the need for extensive field conduits.The conversation explores the recent shifts in the solar market, particularly in Maine's CMP (Central Maine Power) territory, and looks ahead to emerging opportunities in states like New York, Pennsylvania, and Maryland. Marc highlights how their installer-centric approach to DAS systems allows for quicker, more cost-effective implementations, which are especially valuable in harsh northern climates.Dan emphasizes the power of their partnership model compared to traditional turnkey packages, explaining how Portside's expertise in building and commissioning monitoring systems complements Denowatts' data analytics capabilities. This synergy ensures systems are installed correctly the first time, creating a seamless operational process.Tune in to learn how this collaborative approach represents the future of solar monitoring and how these innovations are helping speed the energy transition across the United States.Social Media HandlesDan LearyDenowattsPortside Systems Support the showConnect with Tim Clean Power Hour Clean Power Hour on YouTubeTim on TwitterTim on LinkedIn Email tim@cleanpowerhour.com Review Clean Power Hour on Apple PodcastsThe Clean Power Hour is produced by the Clean Power Consulting Group and created by Tim Montague. Contact us by email: CleanPowerHour@gmail.com Corporate sponsors who share our mission to speed the energy transition are invited to check out https://www.cleanpowerhour.com/support/The Clean Power Hour is brought to you by CPS America, maker of North America's number one 3-phase string inverter, with over 6GW shipped in the US. With a focus on commercial and utility-scale solar and energy storage, the company partners with customers to provide unparalleled performance and service. The CPS America product lineup includes 3-phase string inverters from 25kW to 275kW, exceptional data communication and controls, and energy storage solutions designed for seamless integration with CPS America systems. Learn more at www.chintpowersystems.com
A green building is a building that, in its design, construction, or operation reduces or eliminates negative impact and can create positive impacts on our climate and natural environment. We unpack the value and impact of GREEN buildings with Stephan Claasen, Provincial Head of FNB, Western Cape as the FNB Portside building we're in has received a 5-star Green Star rating from the Green Building Council of South Africa.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week we learn about a Titanic contender, keeping an eye on your phone and Josh Hartnett's range.
On this episode I sit down with Matt aka Portside Dive, a pop punk artist from Minneapolis. We talk a bit about his early starts in music and getting comfortable being a solo artist. We then dive into his sophomore EP "Closure" and the build behind it. Along the way we talk about working with Unsigned Pop Punk and his new found love of the WNBA. Be sure to follow Portside Dive and check out "Closure"!!! This episode features the songs "Been About U" and "January" from the album Closure. You can find Portside Dive at the following links: Twitter: https://x.com/portsidedive Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/portsidedive/ Bandcamp: https://portsidedive.bandcamp.com/ Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@portsidedive/ Everywhere else: https://linktr.ee/portsidedive _______________________________________ You can find Beers With Bands here: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BeersWithBands2 Twitter: https://twitter.com/BeersWBandsPod Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/beerswithbandspod/ Bandcamp: https://beerswithbands.bandcamp.com Everywhere else: https://linktr.ee/BeersWithBands Logo and Banner design by Kaylyn Chileen Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/madam.fortress.mommy/ Website: https://kaylynchileen.art Beers With Bands intro by Thomas Allen of Say Days Ago and Last Autumn Say Days Ago: https://www.instagram.com/saydaysagoband/ Last Autumn: https://www.instagram.com/lastautumnband/ --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/beers-with-bands/support
The new Pensacola City Council agenda has been released, and Mayor D.C. Reeves is recommending an amendment to the city's lease agreement with Port Warehouse 4 , LLC, which is redeveloping Warehouse #4 into an indoor sports facility and bringing pickleball to downtown Pensacola. Developer Ron Fabbro shares the details.
Dr. Patrick Jones, Portside Veterinary Hospital, and Dr. Eric Broadworth, Fuel Physical Therapy & Sports Performance LaserLife Insights host Pete Cousins welcomed two superb guests to the show: Dr. Patrick Jones, a veterinarian, and Dr. Eric Broadworth, a doctor of physical therapy. Patrick discussed his practice in general, and specifically his experiences providing laser treatments […]
Flott godtinår! Det er nyttårsafteegeeen! Gutta smeller til med ikke én, men TO cocktails, Daniel er på en megasnurr og sammen oppsummerer de hele året. Takk for at dere har lyttet trofast og kjekt! Vi setter pris på alle ratings, kommentarer, delinger osv. Love you
This episode is the recording of the only event in which all 8 candidates appeared together. It was held at the Portside at the Grand dunes meeting room and it features five minutes for each candidate to talk about their positions and issues and it features a question and answer portion with all the candidates. It is a very informative event and I hope you enjoy this look at all the candidates. Thank you to the Grand Dunes HOA for putting on this event and providing food and drinks at the event. Questions or comments at , Randalrgw1@aol.com , https://twitter.com/randal_wallace , and http://www.randalwallace.com/Please Leave us a review at wherever you get your podcastsThanks for listening!!
In Episode 5 - Part 5 of the "Proper True Yarn" podcast, Bubba Tilley unfolds a yarn so wild it almost led to divorce! Two years ago, during a golf trip to Hamilton Island, Bubba's father-in-law purchased a horse named Flop Turn River. On that very day, Bubba took a ride on another horse, but things took a disastrous turn when the horse threw its head back, breaking Bubba's hand. Despite his pleas, his wife didn't believe him until a hospital visit revealed his shattered hand needed surgery and a cast.Enter Bubba's mate Kurt Kapewell, who suggested they attend the horse race featuring Bubba's father-in-law's horse. In the six weeks Bubba was sidelined from racing, he embarked on a wild bender with his mates, ordering an extravagant array of cocktails at Portside. His intoxicated state led to a heated argument with his wife, resulting in her telling him not to come home if he was that drunk.So, what did Bubba do? He and his mates decided to book spontaneous tickets to Phuket, Thailand, while still inebriated. However, upon arriving at the airport, Bubba was so drunk that security prevented him from boarding the flight, all on a Sunday afternoon!The yarn takes a hilarious turn as Bubba and Knuckles delve into stories about accidents of another kind, sharing their experiences of "accidents" in public places. Knuckles recalls an incident in the streets of Thailand, while Bubba shares his own mishap driving through Toowoomba.But that's not all—Knuckles shares a memorable tale from his mining days involving a co-worker named Eddie, whose dedication to a game of darts took an unexpected and messy turn.The conversation then turns to polocrosse adventures while intoxicated, leading to some of the best games of Bubba's life. Bubba caps it off with a hilarious story from Jake Kapewell's 18th birthday party, where beers turned into rums and rums turned into a WWE-style spectacle, complete with a naked sprint through the bar.Don't miss this uproarious episode of "Proper True Yarn" filled with laughter, outrageous escapades, and unforgettable tales!#propertrueyarn#jockey#hangover Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Christmas in July at Girls Gone Hallmark kicks off with a review of "Christmas Sail." Listen in as Megan and Wendy review this 2021 holiday movie starring Katee Sackhoff, Patrick Sabongui, and Terry O'Quinn. Fun fact: this movie premiered on Halloween night, Sunday, October 31, 2021. Is there a Christmas movie you'd like Girls Gone Hallmark to review? Email your suggestion to meganandwendy@gmail.com. Girls Gone Hallmark is a weekly Hallmark movie review podcast hosted by Megan and Wendy. Listen as they review a 2021 original Hallmark holiday movie "Christmas Sail" starring Katee Sackhoff and Terry O'Quinn. About "Christmas Sail" "Christmas Sail" was filmed in British Columbia, Canada, including Vancouver and Gibsons at the south end of the Sunshine Coast. This movie takes place in the Pacific Northwest in the fictional town of Portside. Filming happened in July and August 2021. "Christmas Sail" was written by Katee Sackhoff's husband Robin Gadsby. Katee also served as an Executive Producer. Emma Oliver (she played Hannah) is an award-winning Canadian actress who has over 20 film/television credits. No digital snow appeared in this movie. Terry O'Quinn was delightful in the role of Dennis. We'd like to see more of him and co-star Patrick Sabongui in more Hallmark Channel movies. IMDb reviewers gave this movie 6.2/10.
How Did We Miss That? by IndependentLeft.news / Leftists.today / IndependentLeft.media
Originally recorded during the 7/2/23 Episode of How Did We Miss That?, found here: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tnrMqEk1_hU Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1344799183099845 Rokfin: https://rokfin.com/stream/36283 Rumble: https://rumble.com/v2xj3ic-nurses-strike-big-event-in-london-infrastructure-bill-tara-reade-in-russia-.html Story 1 - Fighting The Censorship Industrial Complex Fear and Loathing in the City of Westminster: CJ Hopkins https://cjhopkins.substack.com/p/fear-and-loathing-in-the-city-of Story 2 - This Week in Workers BIG Nurses Strike in Texas & Kansas? Ascension Healthcare: National Nurses United https://www.nationalnursesunited.org/press/nurses-in-texas-and-kansas-move-forward-with-historic-strikes-resisting-ascension-union-busting Non-Profit Farmers' Markets Unionizing!: Ella Fassler, Truthout https://truthout.org/articles/in-historic-first-workers-unionize-at-2-major-farmers-market-nonprofits/ Loma Linda University Medical Residents Vote Yes on Union: Alex Aamodt, Spectrum via Portside https://portside.org/2023-06-28/loma-linda-university-medical-residents-vote-yes-union Story 3 - Follow the Money: Biden's Infrastructure Bill The Infrastructure Bill: Follow the Money https://followthemoneynews.substack.com/p/the-infrastructure-bill Story 4 - Tara's “Temporary Asylum” in Russia Tara Reade: Biden accuser explains why she decided to flee the US and seek sanctuary in Russia https://www.rt.com/news/578904-tara-reade-russia-moscow/ How Did We Miss That? features articles written by independent journalists who expose corruption & worker exploitation, report on the worker organizing movement & routinely challenge establishment narratives & talking points. Watch new episodes LIVE Sunday nights at 10pm ET / 7pm PT on YouTube, ROKFIN, Rumble, Twitch, Facebook, Twitter & Telegram, reviewing a few BIG stories we haven't seen covered enough in our independent media world. A podcast version is published within a couple of days to Spotify, Apple, iHeart, Amazon + most other major platforms. Both hosts, Indie and Reef, are co-founders of Indie News Network, a collaborative family of independent content creators. Find all our links at https://indienews.network. #GetINN Credits: Co-Host, Producer, Stream & Podcast Engineer, Clip Editor: Indie Left Co-Host, Producer & Technical Director: Reef Breland Thumbnails & Outro: Bigmadcrab Intro: Joe @STFUshitlib3 & Indie Left Music: Jesse Jett Linktree: https://indieleft.media Substack: https://indiemedia.today How Did We Miss That?: https://rumble.com/c/HowDidWeMissThat How Did We Miss That Twitter: https://twitter.com/HowDidWeMissTha How Did We Miss That? Podcast: https://anchor.fm/independentleftnews/
How Did We Miss That? by IndependentLeft.news / Leftists.today / IndependentLeft.media
Story 1 - Criminalizing Journalism, NC Edition North Carolina Judge Convicts Journalists Of 'Trespassing' While Covering Eviction Of Homeless Encampment: Kevin Gosztola, The Dissenter Story 2 - Corporate Media are the Anti-Wikileaks CORPORATE MEDIA ARE THE ANTI-WIKILEAKS: Elizabeth Vos, Consortium News via Popular Resistance Story 3 - Cops Are Criminals Too! Who Knew? Police Are Abusing Civil Forfeiture Laws to Seize Cash for Themselves: Dan Alban & Daryl James, Truthout Story 4 - Rail Workers to Dems: Do NOT Gaslight Us! Railroad Workers United: “We Would Never Concede Our Right To Strike”: Ron Kaminkow, Portside via Popular Resistance Story 5 - Cop City: Tortuguita MURDERED UNARMED, No Gunpowder Residue Found No Gunpowder Residue Found on Manuel ‘Tortuguita' Terán According to DeKalb County Autopsy: Unicorn Riot Originally recorded during the 4/23/23 Episode of How Did We Miss That?, found here (Internet crashed an hour in, each stream is in 2 parts except Rumble): YouTube: Part I: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FQveIueACxA / Part II: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D2-by-pJOy0 Rokfin: Part I: https://rokfin.com/stream/33415 / Part II https://rokfin.com/stream/33445 Rumble: https://rumble.com/v2jz6di-cops-are-criminals-corporate-media-are-the-anti-wikileaks-rail-workers-spea.html All episode links found at our Substack: https://indiemediatoday.substack.com/p/how-did-we-miss-that-ep-77 How Did We Miss That? features articles written by independent journalists who expose corruption, cover the worker organizing movement & challenge establishment narratives & talking points. We stream LIVE Sunday nights at 10pm ET / 7pm PT on YouTube, ROKFIN, Rumble, Twitch, Facebook, Twitter & Telegram, reviewing a few BIG stories we haven't seen covered much in our independent media world. co-Host Indie is the Founder & Editor of Indie Left News @indleftnews & Indie Media Today Substack @IndieMediaToday. co-host Reef Breland is INN's Technical Director, creator of INN News & Reefer After Dark. Both of us are co-founders of Indie News Network, a collaborative family of independent content creators. Find all our links at independentleft.media. #GetINN #SupportIndependentMedia #news #analysis #GeneralStrike #FreeAssangeNOW #mutualaid #FreeJonathanWall #FreeLeonardPeltier #DropTheCharges #JournalismIsNotACrime #FreeDanielHale #FreeMumiaAbuJamal Credits: Co-Host, Stream & Podcast Engineer: Indie Left Co-Host & Technical Director: Reef Breland Thumbnails & Outro: Bigmadcrab Intro: Joe @STFUshitlib3 Music: Jesse Jett Wherever you are, Indie is! Linktree: https://indieleft.media ⭐ Substack: https://indiemedia.today Video Sites ⭐ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/indleftnews ⭐ Rokfin: https://www.rokfin.com/indleftnews ⭐ Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/IndependentLeftNews Social Media ⭐ Twitter: https://twitter.com/IndLeftNews ⭐ Indie Left News Facebook: https://www.fb.com/indleftnews/ ⭐ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/indleftnews ⭐ Telegram: https://t.me/indleftnews ⭐ Discord: https://independentleft.gg
Launching a new series: Portside! A bi-weekly, casual roundup of what's been happening in the Solana ecosystem. Enjoy! Today we chat about: - SBF_FTX? - Apple tax - stripe fiat onramp - phantom on Eth - #DeFi reopening - openbookdex - Chat GPT3 This conversation is made possible thanks to Streamflow. ------ THE COVE SPONSOR TOOLS:
In today's episode, Kaseba Chibweth talks with Ashley Valentin Gonzalez (she/her/hers/ella), a first-generation college student and environmentalist from Logan Heights, a neighborhood in San Diego, California. Ashley is majoring in Environmental Studies and minoring in Business Administration and Ethnic Studies at the University of San Diego and is a McNair Scholar working on a research paper on environmental racism and community mobilization in Logan Heights. With this work, she hopes to demonstrate how the resilience and need of a community through political mobilization will result in rebuilding the neighborhoods that were destroyed and disregarded by policymakers. She also serves in her local community as a Portside steering committee member for the Community Air Protection Program (AB 617), the Community Advisory Council at the Centro Cultural de la Raza, an intern for the Barrio Logan Environmental Health Coalition, and is a Youth On Root Youth Advisory Board Member. In this episode, we discuss: What is environmental racism? The reason why low-income and minority groups live closer to environmental hazards? Steps that non-residents can take to help these communities? Why should people who are not directly affected by this issue care? Connect with Ashley using the links below: Instagram Resource List Connect with Kaseba using the links below: Instagram Ready to dive in further? Check out all the places you can find us below: Top 5 Most Asked Questions On Anti-Racism Ask a question on anti-racism Follow us on Instagram Follow us on Facebook
Chef Danielle Weybright is the creator at Portside Catering, she is joined by co-owner Jeanette Armstrong. Jeanette, along with her husband Mick Kelly, are owners of Captain Mike's Beer and Burger Bar, 5118 Sixth Ave (for more about them, you can find our interview from December 2020 in our archives).At Portside Catering, Danielle creates a custom menu which serves the client in the most perfect way. We sit down with Danielle to talk about her love for the kitchen and so much more!To book Danielle and Portside Catering for your next big event, or even a small dinner party, click here to visit their website!For more on Captain Mike's, click here!To read more about the Galley – the Captain Mike's food truck, click this link!And if you have family or friends coming to town and looking for a great place to stay, check out Captain's Quarters Airbnb!This episode was recorded on October 10th at Luigi's Pizza Kitchen, 7531 39th AvenueBig thanks to our sponsors:CarBox, 1750 22nd AveNext Home Refined, 7850 Green Bay RoadFaded Barbershop for Men, 2227 63rd StLucci's Grandview 6929 39th Ave.Franks Diner, 508 58th Street. Acupuncture and Wellness of Wisconsin, 3917 47th AveKaiser's Pizza & Pub, 510 57th StLaMacchia Travel, 618 57th StUnion Park Tavern, 4520 Eighth Ave. Wink Beauty Boutique, 10909 Sheridan RoadSpecialty Nacho QueenGerb's Gift Shop, 3012 Roosevelt RdGet your Ktown Connects merchandise thanks to The Lettering Machine, 725 50th St.Drop us an email at ktownconnects@yahoo.comFind us on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter – and at ktownconnects.comTheme song performed by Dropping Daisies, written by James “Red” McLeod.Your hosts are Donny Stancato and Jason HedmanGet additional episodes early and ad-free, along with bonus material with this week's guest and more great exclusive material by becoming a patreon supporter! Click here for more!
In this episode, I speak with Alek Vernitsky, Co-founder and CEO of Portside, a next generation financial management platform for private aviation. We discuss how large the private aviation space actually is, who owns private planes, how this space operates separately from commercial aviation, and much more!
Willow Pill - I Hate People (@djroland01 Club Mix) @davismallory - Cologne @djtheogomez, @alliromusic - I Never (Original Mix) @dj-estebanlopez - Jaguar (2k21 Mix) Tom Siher, Pol Rossignani, Binomio - Running (@dj-estebanlopez & @javier-solana Remix) Geez, @dj-head-dj - Music Is My Art (Mauro Mozart Remix) @officialeddiemartinez - Dance With Me (Original mix) @dj-estebanlopez, Javier Solana - Fable 2k22 (Extended Mix) @dannyverde, Phil Romano, Anna Buckley - See The Light (Original Mix) @pedropons74 - Cafe Del Mar (Original Mix) @moussa - Guy Scheiman, Inaya Day - High Energy (Moussa Official Vocal Mix) Tiesto & Ava Max - The Motto (@enricomeloni Remix) Daniel Bovie & Roy Rox Fet Nelson -Love Me(@isaksalazar Big Room Mix) Las Bibas from Vizcaya - Sky High (@toy-armada Club Remix) Micky Friedmann, Hayla Assulin - Happy Nation (@dj-estebanlopez & @pedropons74 Remix) Beyoncé - Sweet Dreams _21 (@thiago-antony-913597629 Remix) Christina Aguilera - Genie In A Bottle _21 (@thiago-antony-913597629 Remix) Shouse - Shouse - Love Tonight (@thiago-antony-913597629 Remix) Melodika - Torn (@oscarvelazquez Remix) Allten Fellder - Deep Inside - Patrick Sandim, Fran Nunes, Rafael Rosa (@allten-fellder Rework) Kate Bush - Running Up That Hill ''22 (@thiago-antony-913597629 Remix) @dj-estebanlopez, Pablo Bravo - Siempre Bien (Original Mix) Filipe Guerra - Keep On Movin_ (@thiago-antony-913597629 Remix) @rafaelbarretodj - Una Vez Mas feat. Julie Sensacional (Original Mix) Sia - Unstoppable _22 (@thiago-antony-913597629 Remix) @pedropons74, Andrea Pol - Be My Lover (Original Mix) @nch - Rhythm Plans (Black 2 Black Paulo Pacheco & Mauro Mozart Remix) Rafael Daglar - Time to Funky (@adrian_lagunas_official Remix) Zoe - Constant Craving (@toy-armada Remix) Soundwave, Sharon O'Love - Sandstrom (@melodikaofficial2018 Remix) Jaymes Young - Infinity (@tonydelucaxxx Festival Remix) League of Heroes pres. @dancemusicprod - League Of Heroes pres. Tony Moran - Save A Prayer (Jose Spinnin Cortes SubWoofer Remix) @dancemusicprod ft Jason Walker -I'm In Love With You @toy-armada & DJ GRIND Club Mix @mstermiss - Narcotic Thrust - I Like It (JETFIRE X MISTERMISS REMIX) @dancemusicprod, Nile Rodgers, Kimberly Davis - My Fire (Tony Moran/Bissen Extended)
Kaiya is back and this week we talk about something special coming up for the Portside activation team.... See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Lightsabers originate from the Science Fiction genre and spawns from the Star Wars franchise. The dueling aspect with the lightsabers takes the fascination to the next level. It brings the roleplay entertainment of the live action fighting and learning the seven Jedi movements and stances. Join as talk with Austin Wells from Portside Rogues Academy. We discuss what Portside Rogues does, their involvement in mentoring, fighting styles and mixed martial arts, and most importantly instruction on lightsabers dueling. Please support Austin Wells at Portside Rogues https://www.facebook.com/portsiderogues/ .
How Did We Miss That? by IndependentLeft.news / Leftists.today / IndependentLeft.media
Recorded during the 1/30/22 Episode of How Did We Miss That? YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ag_jyL3U1as Facebook: https://facebook.com/4516412455125606 Twitter: https://twitter.com/i/broadcasts/1MYxNnzRvqbxw Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/videos/1281963920 Odysee: https://odysee.com/@IndLeftNews:3/how-did-we-miss-that-ep-22-01-30-22:3 Rumble: https://rumble.com/vtp1mu-wtf-bernie-canadian-trucker-and-ms-bus-driver-strikes-this-is-fine-how-did-.html How Did We Miss That? Airs LIVE on YouTube/Twitch/Facebook/Twitter/Odysee Sunday nights at 10pm ET / 7pm PT, reviewing a few stories we haven't seen much in left independent media. Co-hosted by Indie, Founder & Editor of @indleftnews & @ReefBreland, creator of @dorediscord & host of Reefer After Dark. Stories were featured in http://Leftists.today & at the top of https://IndependentLeft.News Story 1 - When “At Will” Isn't REALLY At Will Wisconsin Judge Orders At-Will Employees to Stay at Jobs: Valera Voce, The Mountain Wisconsin judge temporarily blocks employees from leaving their hospital jobs: Kevin Reed, WSWS Story 2 - Hypocrite CEOs A strange meeting at the White House: Judd Legum, Popular Information Story 3 - Monday's Assange Ruling Assange Permitted to Submit Appeal to Supreme Court: Richard Medhurst Story 4 - WTF Bernie!? & MS Bus Driver Strike Bernie Sanders town hall covers for UFCW betrayal of King Soopers strike: See no sellout, hear no sellout, speak no sellout: Alex Findijs, WSWS Bus Drivers Go On Strike To Protest Low Pay In Rural Mississippi School District: Magnolia State Live, Portside via Popular Resistance Story 5 - This is Fine! Protester Run Over in Tacoma During Anti-Homeless Rally: Jade Arquitt, Left Voice Story 6 - Canadian Trucker Strike Truckers protest vax mandate at U.S./Canada border - Ashley, CDLLife WARMINGTON: Trucker convoy took two hours to roll through town: Joe Warmington, Toronto Sun
Featuring special guest speaker, Sachin Patel, Senior Director of Metals at CME Group, this podcast explores the newly launched portside iron derivative contracts. Listen in as Argus experts Oscar Tarneberg, Business Development – Metals and Deepali Sharma, Editor – Ferrous Markets, discuss the newly launched portside iron derivative contracts on the CME. Sign up for our free Argus Metals Market Highlights
Hello Interactors,As the holiday season calls on us to shop online, it’s worth considering the cost. I’m not talking about the price of the item your mouse is hovering over, but the hidden cost of getting it delivered to your doorstep.As interactors, you’re special individuals self-selected to be a part of an evolutionary journey. You’re also members of an attentive community so I welcome your participation.Please leave your comments below or email me directly.Now let’s go…GETTING HIP TO A TIMELY TIP ON A CALIFORNIA TRIP“I think you’re transporting drugs”, my cousin said casually. “Why else would they send a 20 year old kid to New Jersey from L.A. just to drive an old station wagon across the country?” “You’re the perfect foil…a 20 year old blond kid from Iowa just doing his job…no cop would ever think to search for drugs.”It was on my mind the whole trip. Especially when I was pulled over in Nebraska for speeding. A portly County Mounty waddled his way to the car as I deftly stashed the radar detector under my seat. I watched him in my side mirror as he put on his hat while approaching the car. Cold winter wind rushed in as I rolled the window down and greeted him with the best rural “howdy” I could muster. I then asked him how fast I was going. He pulled his glasses down over his nose, looked me straight in the eye and said, “I don’t know, son, but it took me 10 minutes to catch up to you.”He was indeed curious about the New Jersey plates and why I was headed to California, but he let me go with a warning. “Take it slow, son, I’m sure those folks out West want to see you make it ok.”By the time I got to the California border, I was ready to be done. I decided to take the southern route into L.A. – the famed Route 66. I had hit a lot of snow in Colorado and was eager for sunny, dry roads. But that would have to wait. A massive ice storm met me in the high desert town of Victorville, California. I was barely able to find a place to stay for the night as the freeway was lined with cars in the ditch.The next morning the roads were bare and wet as I headed west through the pass dividing the San Gabriel and San Bernardino mountains and into the vast San Bernardino valley. It was named by Spanish colonizers who took the same route in the late 1700s, then more Europeans a century later, and fellow Iowans soon after that. This valley was once home to sprawling citrus groves that attracted winter weary farmers from the Midwest. It was still agricultural when I was inching my way toward L.A. in 1985 in a blue Oldsmobile station wagon – a suspected innocent drug smuggler.And then just last week there I was, over 30 years later, plodding my way toward L.A. down the same Interstate 10. My family and I took a trip to Southern California to visit schools for my son. A lot has changed. They paved paradise and put up parking lots, warehouses, and sprawling housing developments too. The freeways were crammed with semi-trucks as commuters blinkered their way through the lanes. They were competing for space in their hour-plus long trek to jobs in the L.A. basin.It’s a long commute to and from what is known as the Inland Empire, but the average selling price of a home is $482,000. That’s nearly half of what you’d pay in Los Angeles ($841,000), further south in Orange county ($983,000), or San Diego ($802,000).While four hundred grand is relatively low for Southern California, prices are climbing. The average price is already above what it was before the financial collapse of 2008. That’s when average single family home prices in the Inland Empire plummeted to under $200,000. The region was home to some of the worst foreclosure stories in the country. At one point, one in five homes in the area were in foreclosure. People were literally walking away from their homes. Even though housing is booming again, inventory is actually lower than it was before the collapse.Wall Street backed firms like the Blackstone Group, the Lewis Group, and Oak Tree Capital Management swooped in and bought large swaths of foreclosed homes. They’ve been renting them to those who can’t afford to buy until the price of the home reaches a level they feel they can best profit by selling. Buy low, sell high and wish the struggling family good bye. (Incidentally, the founder of Blackstone, Stephen Schwarzman, who is worth around $21 billion, was one of a handful of billionaires who continued to support Trump financially after the raid he incited on the capital. And when the Obama administration suggested Wall Street fund managers like Schwarzman pay at least as much in taxes on earned interest as ordinary wage earners, Schwarzman said Obama was waging war on the wealthy and added, “It’s like when Hitler invaded Poland in 1939.” What an odd and insensitive comparison for a Jewish man to make. But, Trump has a way of attracting odd and insensitive people.)As billionaire backed firms competed for foreclosed housing stocks, there was no chance a single individual seeking to buy a home could get in on the competition. One man in Rancho Cucamonga bid on over 200 houses but failed on all accounts. And while these outside firms were scooping up homes at $200,000 a pop as late as 2012, new housing construction was selling at $300,000 to $800,000. While this was a small fraction of the total, it incented even more developers to build more expensive homes which continue to drive up prices across the region.WORLD HYPOXIC CENTERBut the 2008 housing crisis wasn’t the first to hit the Inland Empire. Trouble was brewing even as I lumbered through the valley in the mid 1980s in that New Jersey station wagon. In 1978 California passed Proposition 13 which altered how property taxes were calculated. The law was intended to reduce property tax burdens on residents already being forced to the more affordable periphery of desirable urban centers across L.A. The Inland Empire absorbed many of those people throughout the 80s, 90s, and 2000s – and continues to attract more to this day.Proposition 13 also changed the financial dynamics between state, regional, and local economies as local tax revenues plummeted. Local governments had to find new sources of revenue resulting in these three primary (and familiar) outcomes;“1. the appearance of auto malls and big-box retail stores, and the disappearance of ‘mom and pop’ shops in virtually every community in the region;2. new relationship between land developers and municipal authorities;3. the creation of private/public development projects as potential revenue generators.”It didn’t help when a steel factory shut down in 1983 eliminating 10,000 jobs. Then, in 1991, as the Cold War threats diminished, George H. W. Bush shut down the Norton Air Force base and closed a nearby missile factory. Then, in 1993, the March Air Force base was also trimmed. Over 30,000 jobs were lost accounting for nearly seven percent of the area’s population. By the mid 1990s multi-national corporations were moving manufacturing hubs and jobs overseas. As trade imbalances mounted container ships began piling up at the Long Beach Port due south of the Inland Empire. Portside storage facilities were overwhelmed and distributors began looking to the Inland Empire for land to build new, large, modern distribution centers.Within a decade vineyards and dairy farms were replaced with warehouses. One month residents were driving by signs advertising fresh fruit and then next a block long gray box with an Amazon sign bolted to the wall. Sketchers has a single facility stretching 1.8 million square feet and hopes to expand their footprint as part of an area wide 41.6 million square feet warehouse expansion. By the end of 2013 the Inland Empire had become the Warehouse Empire of the nation accounting for 1.6 billion square feet of distribution, logistics, and warehouse facilities.Forty five percent of the nation’s imports are trained, trucked, or flown into the Inland Empire, unpacked, sorted, and reloaded onto trains, trucks, and planes that then fan out again across the nation. It’s like a logistics heart that pulses goods purchased with a single click through the veins and arteries of the nation’s transportation infrastructure.The city of Moreno Valley is building what they call the World Logistic Center. It’s a 41.6 million square foot $3 billion expanse that will feature a 2,600 acre corporate campus. While they claim it will be one of the most sustainable corporate campuses in the nation, the South Coast Air Quality District estimates the project will add an additional 30,000 heavy-duty trucks to area roads per day. That’s nothing but dollar signs for some, but nothing but trouble for most.Heavy-duty diesel trucks emit 24 times more fine particulate matter than regular gasoline engines. These are the chemical compounds that are so small they easily seep into the lungs and pollute blood streams. The State of California and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) have identified more than 40 different toxic pollutants in diesel emissions. “In 2003, the Riverside and San Bernardino counties ranked first and second, respectively, in the nation for total particulate pollution.” Between 2000-2002 Riverside’s particulate matter concentrations were 1.75 times the federal limit and more than twice the state’s standard.One 2007 study conservatively estimated that the “logistics industry expansion will cause 32-64 cases of excess mortality and morbidity valued at $247-455 million per year.” Those living closer to the freeways will be effected more. And because housing is cheapest along the noisiest and most polluted roadways, those most impacted will be those most vulnerable physically and financially – which historically are people of color and the elderly.PROPOSITION UNSEENThe Inland Empire is a regional microcosm of economic geography. It’s part of a global experiment – a worldwide economic capitalistic petri dish – that has been festering and bubbling at different scales since the 1970s. As residents were pushed out of settled areas in the L.A. basin due to rising property values, the Inland Empire became a target for sprawl. The passing of Proposition 13 cut funding for public health, education, and infrastructure forcing local governments to pursue public/private partnerships.Proposition 13 also included special provisions for commercial development, attracting opportunistic capitalists and politicians. To this day, city and county government officials across the Inland Empire continue to be investigated, charged, and tried for bribery, corruption, attempts to destroy documents, and guilty pleas. While the gentrification attracts jobs and provides much needed housing and flows money through the region, it also increases commute distances, clogs roads, and contributes to some of the worst air pollution in the country.That flow of capital into the Inland Empire is coming from state and national economic policies that started in the 1970s. Seeing an end to the post-war growth of the 1950s and 60s, the United States and their allies instituted financial deregulation that reoriented their capitalist economies. Globalization was on the rise at the same time the U.S. allowed for more foreign investment on American soil.When I was living in L.A. in the 80s, it was private and commercial Japanese investors grabbing up property and high rises in L.A. Now the top three foreign investors come from Canada, Mexico, and China. And they’re largely interested in suburban areas like the Inland Empire.The very financial regulation that created the necessary funds to build the seaports, airports, railways, and freeways that provide our economy’s circulatory system have been diminished by both parties over the last 50 years. The 1978 California Proposition 13 was a warm up act for Reagan’s failed tax-cut, trickle down theories he claimed would bring prosperity to every American. Every president since has been promising as much yet income disparities continue to grow. Jeff Bezos’ net worth has grown $65 billion since the start of the pandemic. Meanwhile, even a hint of inflation threatens to push millions more into poverty and thousands to live in their cars or on the streets.It should be noted that the logistics business in the Inland Empire would likely not exist if it weren’t for a federally funded air force base that has since been converted to air cargo airports where streams of cargo planes land 24/7. Not to mention the federal and state funded freeways crisscrossing the valley that private heavy-duty trucks use and abuse with little to no restrictions. Trucks that are driven by drivers who continually fight for their right to organize for fair wages and healthcare. And let’s not forget the federally funded internet that makes it all too easy to click a ‘buy’ button and have a package magically arrive the next day…most likely through a sprawling warehouse in the Inland Empire.Globalization – and the functional regulation of the world economy by select countries – has complicated the flow of capital through regions like the Inland Empire. It’s left small town governments stretched and starving for funds. They’re stuck begging for crumbs from money-rich corporations in exchange for favors. It’s led to criminal activity among conspiring opportunists – some of whom are simply trying to secure funds for schools.I doubt I was trafficking cocaine. I was working for one of L.A.’s oldest company’s, Platt Music Corporation. They started out selling sheet music but had morphed into a consumer electronics distributor – also known as a middle-man. If you bought a TV in a California department store in the 80s, it likely went through Platt. They had just gone public a year before I started running errands for them across the far reaches of L.A. – and the country. But then big-box stores like Circuit City and Best Buy appeared and increased competition for consumer electronics. Soon department stores were forced to negotiate their own prices directly with manufacturers. Platt folded in 1987 after 82 years of doing business in L.A. Another ‘mom and pop’ shop gone. Capitalism eating itself.CAPITAL ARRESTGeographer David Harvey put it best when he said, “Capitalists behave like capitalists wherever they are. They pursue the expansion of value through exploitation without regard to the social consequences.” And the Inland Empire, a struggling locus to distribute and focus the country’s goods, is a prime example that leads Harvey to conclude, “The accumulation of capital and misery go hand in hand, concentrated in space.”Many economic geographers contend that both perceived and real economic and social crisis are necessary for capitalism to sustain itself. Circuits of capital flowing inside the Inland Empire interact with circuits flowing outside in ways that transform the culture and shape of it’s cities. The constant expanding and contracting creates inequities and uneven development that capitalists then exploit. We often think of capitalism as a constant that can be universally applied, but in reality it thrives off of localized geographic and economic upheaval and repair – starve one area to reduce it’s value, buy low; boost investments through private capital and governmental lubricants, sell high; then seek or create the next devalued area.This process is sold to us as job creation. It can, but often at the expense of jobs elsewhere. Production of goods and services is a social process while the ownership of production, and the profits that come with it, are largely privately held. Unless there are laws in place to distribute portions of the wealth accumulation in support of the social process of production, streets crumble, cities stumble, and angry residents rumble. We’re witnessing how the concentrated accumulation of capital and misery indeed go hand in hand.We humans are really good at calculating the price of convenience, but are terrible at measuring the cost. For example, privileged car owners happily jump in the driver’s seat knowing how comfortable and convenient it is. But few stop to consider how much space a car takes up on the road, how much their tire dust is floating into the mouths of fish, or how many toxic exhaust chemicals are sucked into the lungs of that kid standing on the corner.And how many of us hesitate to click ‘buy’ knowing how nice it is to have a package delivered to our doorstep in 24 hours or less? We don’t consider the additional 30,000 heavy-duty trucks that will rumble down the local roads and freeways of the Inland Empire. Or the how local warehouse workers will make ends meet when Amazon replaces them with robots. Or what about the critters living in the foothills of the valley?Someone is thinking of them. In 2020 the Friends of the Northern San Jacinto Valley, sued Moreno Valley over further expansion of their Global Logistics Center into sensitive areas. They settled just a few weeks ago. Six hundred acres will be added to the endangered-species reserve system in exchange for enough land to build the equivalent of 40 shopping malls worth of warehouse space. The Inland Empire really is the Warehouse Empire.Maybe it’s time we pull consumerism over and slip on our hat as we saunter up to the speeding capitalist. And when they roll their window down asking how much damage they’ve done, we peer over our glasses and earnestly say, “I don’t know, son, but it’ll take generations to fix it.” Subscribe at interplace.io
California’s portside neighborhoods, which are home to many low-income residents and communities of color, have long suffered from polluted air. But supply chain bottlenecks have worsened that pollution, which has been linked to cancer, heart disease and asthma. Though community advocates have pushed for emissions reductions, demand for goods that filter through the port is still at a record high. Also on the show today: A chat with Visa’s CEO about the future of digital payments; economists weigh in on how omicron could affect the market; and why it can be hard to find a public bathroom. Join Marketplace's mission to make everyone smarter about the economy – make your year-end gift today!
California’s portside neighborhoods, which are home to many low-income residents and communities of color, have long suffered from polluted air. But supply chain bottlenecks have worsened that pollution, which has been linked to cancer, heart disease and asthma. Though community advocates have pushed for emissions reductions, demand for goods that filter through the port is still at a record high. Also on the show today: A chat with Visa’s CEO about the future of digital payments; economists weigh in on how omicron could affect the market; and why it can be hard to find a public bathroom. Join Marketplace's mission to make everyone smarter about the economy – make your year-end gift today!
Travel expert Mike Yardley talks about the portside delights in Lyttelton, Christchurch. LISTEN ABOVE
In the eighth episode of Asian Skycast, Jeffrey C. Lowe of Asian Sky Group and Asian Sky Media speaks with Alek Vernitsky from Portside and Mike Combs from Mytaverse, about how VR can be used in business aviation, as well as the future of hybrid trade shows.Main Content: (01:17-03:21): What does Portside do?(03:22-04:30): What makes Portside standout?(04:31-06:22): Introduction to Mytaverse(06:23-07:57): How long have Portside and Mytaverse been around?(07:58-12:17): How to overcome common roadblocks?(12:18-13:31): Other user successes?(13:32-17:32): Where do you see technology in two or three years?(17:33-20:07): How do you feel about the Asia market?
In this episode of the Aviation Growth Podcast, Greg sits down with Rhiannon Silvashy, who recently joined Portside as a Senior Sales Director. Portside provides flight departments and aircraft management companies with a SaaS platform that helps with reporting, expenses, budgeting, owner approvals, and more, by integrating with a number of different platforms that already exist in most flight departments. Before joining Portside, Rhiannon worked alongside Greg at Flightdocs (now ATP) for the last decade and was a major factor in the company's continued growth and success during the time. Greg and Rhiannon discuss her journey at Flightdocs, her philosophy for a successful career in “sales”, and the future of technology in business aviation. The episode can be watched on YouTube or Vimeo and the podcast is also available on Apple, Spotify, and anywhere else you may listen to podcasts. To connect with Rhiannon on LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/rhiannon-silvashy-49917124/ To learn more about Portside - https://portside.co/ To connect with Greg on LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/gregpheine/
Chicago-based Spot Meetings raises $5 million in seed funding led by Ilya Fushman at Kleiner Perkins. That follows a $1.9 million pre-seed round led by Chapter One earlier this year. Spot Meetings wants to reinvigorate our meetings and displace Zoom as the default meeting medium at the same time.Esper, raises $30 million in Series B round. Esper builds tools to enable developers and engineers to deploy and manage fleets of Android-based edge devices. The round was led by Scale Venture Partners, with participation from Madrona Venture Group, Root Ventures, Ubiquity Ventures and Haystack.Portside, an aviation startup that is building a platform for managing the backend of a corporate flight department, charter operation, government fleet and fractional ownership operation, raises $17 million funding round led by Tiger Global Management. Alek Vernitsky, co-founder and CEO of Portside stated that the new capital will be used to accelerate investment in product innovation, support further engagement with large enterprise customers and grow their global engineering and customer success teams.Enterprise app configuration platform Salto today raises $42 million in series B funding, bringing its total raised to $69 million. The company says the funds will be used to expand its capacity while growing the size of its workforce.Cognite, an industrial software-as-a-service company raises $150 million in an equity funding round led by TCV at a $1.6 billion post-money valuation. Cognite says this investment marks one of the largest funding rounds for a SaaS company in Europe and will be used to expand its platform and support hiring efforts.
Have you tried a super restrictive diet only to realize it's just not sustainable? We all have been there! In this episode of the Nutrition Made Simple podcast, Nicole Aucoin and Kenny Daniels share his weight loss story and how he transformed his health and his lifestyle through a simple, habit-based approach. In this episode, we discuss: -His journey to losing over 60 pounds in seven months -How his coaches, Sara and Melinda from Portside Fitness, helped him -What was vital to his success when changing his lifestyle. Click the link in the show notes for FREE bonuses and to find a Healthy Steps Nutrition coach near you. https://healthystepsnutrition.com/nutrition-made-simple-podcast-episode-13-how-kenny-daniels-lost-62-pounds-with-crossfit-and-nutrition-coaching-at-portside-fitness/
Labor Radio Podcast Network’s Weekly Wednesday Livestream interviews labor leaders about current labor issues with rotating hosts made up of network members. Guests for January 20, 2021 of LRPN Livestream included Joe McCartin (Kalmanovitz Initiative at Georgetown University), Mark McDermott (Labor Activist), Marc Dann (Former Attorney General Ohio), Kurt Stand (Portside), Danny Schur (Composer/Producer) LRPN Hosts: Chris Garlock (Union City Radio in Washington, DC); Kris LaGrange, (UCOMM Live); Joe Cadwell, (GRIT podcast); Patrick Dixon, (Labor History Today podcast), Alan Wierdak (Labor History Today podcast), Sound engineer, broadcast producer, and editing by Evan Matthew Papp of Empathy Media Lab. Additional Guest information: JOE MCCARTIN, on the firing of Peter Robb from the National Labor Relations Board. Joe is author of Collision Course, Ronald Reagan, the Air Traffic Controllers, and the Strike that Changed America. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_A._McCartin MARK MCDERMOTT, a longtime economic justice and labor educator; he served as Regional Representative for the Pacific NW and northern plains states under U.S. Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis. http://www.markmmcdermott.com/ MARC DANN, served as Attorney General of the State of Ohio and now leads DannLaw, which specializes in protecting consumers from various forms of predatory financing. Recent column in Working-Class Perspectives: Time to Deliver: How Biden Should Respond to the Insurrection. https://workingclassstudies.wordpress.com/2021/01/18/time-to-deliver-how-biden-should-respond-to-the-insurrection/ KURT STAND, contributor to Portside, which is celebrating 20 years: Multiracial Democracy or Fascist-Like Autocracy? https://portside.org/2021-01-18/multiracial-democracy-or-fascist-autocracy DANNY SCHUR, composer/producer of Stand! (both the 2005 hit musical and the new movie), now available for streaming. https://internationalmusician.org/danny-schur-and-stand/ Credits: Produced by Chris Garlock; Executive Producer and engineer and editor is Evan Matthew Papp from Empathy Media Lab. About the Labor Radio Podcast Network The Labor Radio Podcast Network is both a one-stop shop for audiences looking for labor content and a resource for labor broadcasters and podcasters. Resources include a weekly podcast summarizing shows produced by network members, marketing on social media, a website listing network shows and how audiences can find them, a database for contacting expert guests, access to a private listserv for Network members, and a weekly video call to increase solidarity and support amongst members. Launched in April 2020, the Labor Radio Podcast Network focuses on working class issues that are often overlooked in the corporate-controlled media. The goal of the network is to help raise the voices of working people and strengthen organized labor to demand and achieve better treatment from workplaces and elected officials. If you are a journalist interested in learning more or if you’re a labor radio or podcast producer and want to join the network, contact us at info@laborradionetwork.org. Follow the conversation on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram using the hashtag #LaborRadioPod or visit the website at: https://www.laborradionetwork.org/. FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/LaborRadioNet/ TWITTER: https://twitter.com/laborradionet INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/laborradionet/ WEEKLY PODCAST NETWORK SUMMARY: https://laborradiopodcastweekly.podbean.com/ #LaborRadioPod #1U #UnionStrong
I am joined by Kevin from Portside Munitions, a cali based gunshop that is filled with clone nerds, nightvision geeks, & lots of other memorable content.
Today on Sojourner Truth: Today kicks off what for many is week of travel and preparation for the U.S. holiday, Thanksgiving. This, despite the COVID-19 pandemic. But increasingly, those in support of Indigenous rights are referring tot he holiday as a Day of Mourning. Others are referring to it as Thankstaking. Our guest is Jacqueline Keeler, a journalist and author with Dine and Ihanktonwan Dakota roots. Jacqueline serves as Editor-in-chief of Pollen Nation Magazine, Editor of Edge of Morning: Native Voices Speak for Bears Ears and creator of #NotYourMascot. Jacqueline also has a book coming out in March looking at the political divide in the United States and its origins, entitled Standoff. The latest in what are increasingly failed attempts by Donald Trump to hold on to the presidency, even as the administration is finally allowing the Biden-Harris team to access the transition of power process. Our guest is Marjorie Cohn, professor emerita at Thomas Jefferson School of Law, where she taught for 25 years. The former president of the National Lawyers Guild and criminal defense attorney is a legal scholar and political analyst who writes books and articles, and lectures throughout the world about human rights, US foreign policy, and the contradiction between the two. Her most recent book is Drones and Targeted Killing: Legal, Moral, and Geopolitical Issues. Cohn has testified before Congress and debated the legality of the war in Afghanistan at the prestigious Oxford Union. Her columns appear on Truthout, HuffPost, Salon, Jurist, Truthdig, Portside, Alternet, CommonDreams and Consortium News, and she has provided commentary for CBS News, BBC, MSNBC, CNN, Fox News, NPR and Pacifica Radio. The crisis in Ethiopia, causing alarm across the continent of Africa. There are growing concerns about a civil war and/or massacres by the African Union. There is also growing concern in the transition team of Joe Biden. Ethiopia's Prime Minister, Abiy Ahmed Ali, who won a Nobel Prize for bringing peace between Ethiopia and Eritrea, has now unleashed his forces against the Tigray People's Liberation Front. The Front has accused the Prime Minister of a power grab and ethnic cleansing. What's going on? We speak with Dr. Gerald Horne, Moores Professor of History & African-American Studies at the University of Houston. Dr Horne has written more than 30 books. His most recently published book is The Dawning of the Apocalypse: The Roots of Slavery, White Supremacy, Settler Colonialism, and Capitalism in the Long Sixteenth Century, published in June 2020.
Today on Sojourner Truth: Today kicks off what for many is week of travel and preparation for the U.S. holiday, Thanksgiving. This, despite the COVID-19 pandemic. But increasingly, those in support of Indigenous rights are referring tot he holiday as a Day of Mourning. Others are referring to it as Thankstaking. Our guest is Jacqueline Keeler, a journalist and author with Dine and Ihanktonwan Dakota roots. Jacqueline serves as Editor-in-chief of Pollen Nation Magazine, Editor of Edge of Morning: Native Voices Speak for Bears Ears and creator of #NotYourMascot. Jacqueline also has a book coming out in March looking at the political divide in the United States and its origins, entitled Standoff. The latest in what are increasingly failed attempts by Donald Trump to hold on to the presidency, even as the administration is finally allowing the Biden-Harris team to access the transition of power process. Our guest is Marjorie Cohn, professor emerita at Thomas Jefferson School of Law, where she taught for 25 years. The former president of the National Lawyers Guild and criminal defense attorney is a legal scholar and political analyst who writes books and articles, and lectures throughout the world about human rights, US foreign policy, and the contradiction between the two. Her most recent book is Drones and Targeted Killing: Legal, Moral, and Geopolitical Issues. Cohn has testified before Congress and debated the legality of the war in Afghanistan at the prestigious Oxford Union. Her columns appear on Truthout, HuffPost, Salon, Jurist, Truthdig, Portside, Alternet, CommonDreams and Consortium News, and she has provided commentary for CBS News, BBC, MSNBC, CNN, Fox News, NPR and Pacifica Radio. The crisis in Ethiopia, causing alarm across the continent of Africa. There are growing concerns about a civil war and/or massacres by the African Union. There is also growing concern in the transition team of Joe Biden. Ethiopia's Prime Minister, Abiy Ahmed Ali, who won a Nobel Prize for bringing peace between Ethiopia and Eritrea, has now unleashed his forces against the Tigray People's Liberation Front. The Front has accused the Prime Minister of a power grab and ethnic cleansing. What's going on? We speak with Dr. Gerald Horne, Moores Professor of History & African-American Studies at the University of Houston. Dr Horne has written more than 30 books. His most recently published book is The Dawning of the Apocalypse: The Roots of Slavery, White Supremacy, Settler Colonialism, and Capitalism in the Long Sixteenth Century, published in June 2020.
Today on Sojourner Truth: Today kicks off what for many is week of travel and preparation for the U.S. holiday, Thanksgiving. This, despite the COVID-19 pandemic. But increasingly, those in support of Indigenous rights are referring tot he holiday as a Day of Mourning. Others are referring to it as Thankstaking. Our guest is Jacqueline Keeler, a journalist and author with Dine and Ihanktonwan Dakota roots. Jacqueline serves as Editor-in-chief of Pollen Nation Magazine, Editor of Edge of Morning: Native Voices Speak for Bears Ears and creator of #NotYourMascot. Jacqueline also has a book coming out in March looking at the political divide in the United States and its origins, entitled Standoff. The latest in what are increasingly failed attempts by Donald Trump to hold on to the presidency, even as the administration is finally allowing the Biden-Harris team to access the transition of power process. Our guest is Marjorie Cohn, professor emerita at Thomas Jefferson School of Law, where she taught for 25 years. The former president of the National Lawyers Guild and criminal defense attorney is a legal scholar and political analyst who writes books and articles, and lectures throughout the world about human rights, US foreign policy, and the contradiction between the two. Her most recent book is Drones and Targeted Killing: Legal, Moral, and Geopolitical Issues. Cohn has testified before Congress and debated the legality of the war in Afghanistan at the prestigious Oxford Union. Her columns appear on Truthout, HuffPost, Salon, Jurist, Truthdig, Portside, Alternet, CommonDreams and Consortium News, and she has provided commentary for CBS News, BBC, MSNBC, CNN, Fox News, NPR and Pacifica Radio. The crisis in Ethiopia, causing alarm across the continent of Africa. There are growing concerns about a civil war and/or massacres by the African Union. There is also growing concern in the transition team of Joe Biden. Ethiopia's Prime Minister, Abiy Ahmed Ali, who won a Nobel Prize for bringing peace between Ethiopia and Eritrea, has now unleashed his forces against the Tigray People's Liberation Front. The Front has accused the Prime Minister of a power grab and ethnic cleansing. What's going on? We speak with Dr. Gerald Horne, Moores Professor of History & African-American Studies at the University of Houston. Dr Horne has written more than 30 books. His most recently published book is The Dawning of the Apocalypse: The Roots of Slavery, White Supremacy, Settler Colonialism, and Capitalism in the Long Sixteenth Century, published in June 2020.
Today on Sojourner Truth: Today kicks off what for many is week of travel and preparation for the U.S. holiday, Thanksgiving. This, despite the COVID-19 pandemic. But increasingly, those in support of Indigenous rights are referring tot he holiday as a Day of Mourning. Others are referring to it as Thankstaking. Our guest is Jacqueline Keeler, a journalist and author with Dine and Ihanktonwan Dakota roots. Jacqueline serves as Editor-in-chief of Pollen Nation Magazine, Editor of Edge of Morning: Native Voices Speak for Bears Ears and creator of #NotYourMascot. Jacqueline also has a book coming out in March looking at the political divide in the United States and its origins, entitled Standoff. The latest in what are increasingly failed attempts by Donald Trump to hold on to the presidency, even as the administration is finally allowing the Biden-Harris team to access the transition of power process. Our guest is Marjorie Cohn, professor emerita at Thomas Jefferson School of Law, where she taught for 25 years. The former president of the National Lawyers Guild and criminal defense attorney is a legal scholar and political analyst who writes books and articles, and lectures throughout the world about human rights, US foreign policy, and the contradiction between the two. Her most recent book is Drones and Targeted Killing: Legal, Moral, and Geopolitical Issues. Cohn has testified before Congress and debated the legality of the war in Afghanistan at the prestigious Oxford Union. Her columns appear on Truthout, HuffPost, Salon, Jurist, Truthdig, Portside, Alternet, CommonDreams and Consortium News, and she has provided commentary for CBS News, BBC, MSNBC, CNN, Fox News, NPR and Pacifica Radio. The crisis in Ethiopia, causing alarm across the continent of Africa. There are growing concerns about a civil war and/or massacres by the African Union. There is also growing concern in the transition team of Joe Biden. Ethiopia's Prime Minister, Abiy Ahmed Ali, who won a Nobel Prize for bringing peace between Ethiopia and Eritrea, has now unleashed his forces against the Tigray People's Liberation Front. The Front has accused the Prime Minister of a power grab and ethnic cleansing. What's going on? We speak with Dr. Gerald Horne, Moores Professor of History & African-American Studies at the University of Houston. Dr Horne has written more than 30 books. His most recently published book is The Dawning of the Apocalypse: The Roots of Slavery, White Supremacy, Settler Colonialism, and Capitalism in the Long Sixteenth Century, published in June 2020.
Today on Sojourner Truth: Today kicks off what for many is week of travel and preparation for the U.S. holiday, Thanksgiving. This, despite the COVID-19 pandemic. But increasingly, those in support of Indigenous rights are referring tot he holiday as a Day of Mourning. Others are referring to it as Thankstaking. Our guest is Jacqueline Keeler, a journalist and author with Dine and Ihanktonwan Dakota roots. Jacqueline serves as Editor-in-chief of Pollen Nation Magazine, Editor of Edge of Morning: Native Voices Speak for Bears Ears and creator of #NotYourMascot. Jacqueline also has a book coming out in March looking at the political divide in the United States and its origins, entitled Standoff. The latest in what are increasingly failed attempts by Donald Trump to hold on to the presidency, even as the administration is finally allowing the Biden-Harris team to access the transition of power process. Our guest is Marjorie Cohn, professor emerita at Thomas Jefferson School of Law, where she taught for 25 years. The former president of the National Lawyers Guild and criminal defense attorney is a legal scholar and political analyst who writes books and articles, and lectures throughout the world about human rights, US foreign policy, and the contradiction between the two. Her most recent book is Drones and Targeted Killing: Legal, Moral, and Geopolitical Issues. Cohn has testified before Congress and debated the legality of the war in Afghanistan at the prestigious Oxford Union. Her columns appear on Truthout, HuffPost, Salon, Jurist, Truthdig, Portside, Alternet, CommonDreams and Consortium News, and she has provided commentary for CBS News, BBC, MSNBC, CNN, Fox News, NPR and Pacifica Radio. The crisis in Ethiopia, causing alarm across the continent of Africa. There are growing concerns about a civil war and/or massacres by the African Union. There is also growing concern in the transition team of Joe Biden. Ethiopia's Prime Minister, Abiy Ahmed Ali, who won a Nobel Prize for bringing peace between Ethiopia and Eritrea, has now unleashed his forces against the Tigray People's Liberation Front. The Front has accused the Prime Minister of a power grab and ethnic cleansing. What's going on? We speak with Dr. Gerald Horne, Moores Professor of History & African-American Studies at the University of Houston. Dr Horne has written more than 30 books. His most recently published book is The Dawning of the Apocalypse: The Roots of Slavery, White Supremacy, Settler Colonialism, and Capitalism in the Long Sixteenth Century, published in June 2020.
Today on Sojourner Truth: Today kicks off what for many is week of travel and preparation for the U.S. holiday, Thanksgiving. This, despite the COVID-19 pandemic. But increasingly, those in support of Indigenous rights are referring tot he holiday as a Day of Mourning. Others are referring to it as Thankstaking. Our guest is Jacqueline Keeler, a journalist and author with Dine and Ihanktonwan Dakota roots. Jacqueline serves as Editor-in-chief of Pollen Nation Magazine, Editor of Edge of Morning: Native Voices Speak for Bears Ears and creator of #NotYourMascot. Jacqueline also has a book coming out in March looking at the political divide in the United States and its origins, entitled Standoff. The latest in what are increasingly failed attempts by Donald Trump to hold on to the presidency, even as the administration is finally allowing the Biden-Harris team to access the transition of power process. Our guest is Marjorie Cohn, professor emerita at Thomas Jefferson School of Law, where she taught for 25 years. The former president of the National Lawyers Guild and criminal defense attorney is a legal scholar and political analyst who writes books and articles, and lectures throughout the world about human rights, US foreign policy, and the contradiction between the two. Her most recent book is Drones and Targeted Killing: Legal, Moral, and Geopolitical Issues. Cohn has testified before Congress and debated the legality of the war in Afghanistan at the prestigious Oxford Union. Her columns appear on Truthout, HuffPost, Salon, Jurist, Truthdig, Portside, Alternet, CommonDreams and Consortium News, and she has provided commentary for CBS News, BBC, MSNBC, CNN, Fox News, NPR and Pacifica Radio. The crisis in Ethiopia, causing alarm across the continent of Africa. There are growing concerns about a civil war and/or massacres by the African Union. There is also growing concern in the transition team of Joe Biden. Ethiopia's Prime Minister, Abiy Ahmed Ali, who won a Nobel Prize for bringing peace between Ethiopia and Eritrea, has now unleashed his forces against the Tigray People's Liberation Front. The Front has accused the Prime Minister of a power grab and ethnic cleansing. What's going on? We speak with Dr. Gerald Horne, Moores Professor of History & African-American Studies at the University of Houston. Dr Horne has written more than 30 books. His most recently published book is The Dawning of the Apocalypse: The Roots of Slavery, White Supremacy, Settler Colonialism, and Capitalism in the Long Sixteenth Century, published in June 2020.
Today on Sojourner Truth: Today kicks off what for many is week of travel and preparation for the U.S. holiday, Thanksgiving. This, despite the COVID-19 pandemic. But increasingly, those in support of Indigenous rights are referring tot he holiday as a Day of Mourning. Others are referring to it as Thankstaking. Our guest is Jacqueline Keeler, a journalist and author with Dine and Ihanktonwan Dakota roots. Jacqueline serves as Editor-in-chief of Pollen Nation Magazine, Editor of Edge of Morning: Native Voices Speak for Bears Ears and creator of #NotYourMascot. Jacqueline also has a book coming out in March looking at the political divide in the United States and its origins, entitled Standoff. The latest in what are increasingly failed attempts by Donald Trump to hold on to the presidency, even as the administration is finally allowing the Biden-Harris team to access the transition of power process. Our guest is Marjorie Cohn, professor emerita at Thomas Jefferson School of Law, where she taught for 25 years. The former president of the National Lawyers Guild and criminal defense attorney is a legal scholar and political analyst who writes books and articles, and lectures throughout the world about human rights, US foreign policy, and the contradiction between the two. Her most recent book is Drones and Targeted Killing: Legal, Moral, and Geopolitical Issues. Cohn has testified before Congress and debated the legality of the war in Afghanistan at the prestigious Oxford Union. Her columns appear on Truthout, HuffPost, Salon, Jurist, Truthdig, Portside, Alternet, CommonDreams and Consortium News, and she has provided commentary for CBS News, BBC, MSNBC, CNN, Fox News, NPR and Pacifica Radio. The crisis in Ethiopia, causing alarm across the continent of Africa. There are growing concerns about a civil war and/or massacres by the African Union. There is also growing concern in the transition team of Joe Biden. Ethiopia's Prime Minister, Abiy Ahmed Ali, who won a Nobel Prize for bringing peace between Ethiopia and Eritrea, has now unleashed his forces against the Tigray People's Liberation Front. The Front has accused the Prime Minister of a power grab and ethnic cleansing. What's going on? We speak with Dr. Gerald Horne, Moores Professor of History & African-American Studies at the University of Houston. Dr Horne has written more than 30 books. His most recently published book is The Dawning of the Apocalypse: The Roots of Slavery, White Supremacy, Settler Colonialism, and Capitalism in the Long Sixteenth Century, published in June 2020.
Today on Sojourner Truth: Today kicks off what for many is week of travel and preparation for the U.S. holiday, Thanksgiving. This, despite the COVID-19 pandemic. But increasingly, those in support of Indigenous rights are referring tot he holiday as a Day of Mourning. Others are referring to it as Thankstaking. Our guest is Jacqueline Keeler, a journalist and author with Dine and Ihanktonwan Dakota roots. Jacqueline serves as Editor-in-chief of Pollen Nation Magazine, Editor of Edge of Morning: Native Voices Speak for Bears Ears and creator of #NotYourMascot. Jacqueline also has a book coming out in March looking at the political divide in the United States and its origins, entitled Standoff. The latest in what are increasingly failed attempts by Donald Trump to hold on to the presidency, even as the administration is finally allowing the Biden-Harris team to access the transition of power process. Our guest is Marjorie Cohn, professor emerita at Thomas Jefferson School of Law, where she taught for 25 years. The former president of the National Lawyers Guild and criminal defense attorney is a legal scholar and political analyst who writes books and articles, and lectures throughout the world about human rights, US foreign policy, and the contradiction between the two. Her most recent book is Drones and Targeted Killing: Legal, Moral, and Geopolitical Issues. Cohn has testified before Congress and debated the legality of the war in Afghanistan at the prestigious Oxford Union. Her columns appear on Truthout, HuffPost, Salon, Jurist, Truthdig, Portside, Alternet, CommonDreams and Consortium News, and she has provided commentary for CBS News, BBC, MSNBC, CNN, Fox News, NPR and Pacifica Radio. The crisis in Ethiopia, causing alarm across the continent of Africa. There are growing concerns about a civil war and/or massacres by the African Union. There is also growing concern in the transition team of Joe Biden. Ethiopia's Prime Minister, Abiy Ahmed Ali, who won a Nobel Prize for bringing peace between Ethiopia and Eritrea, has now unleashed his forces against the Tigray People's Liberation Front. The Front has accused the Prime Minister of a power grab and ethnic cleansing. What's going on? We speak with Dr. Gerald Horne, Moores Professor of History & African-American Studies at the University of Houston. Dr Horne has written more than 30 books. His most recently published book is The Dawning of the Apocalypse: The Roots of Slavery, White Supremacy, Settler Colonialism, and Capitalism in the Long Sixteenth Century, published in June 2020.
Today on Sojourner Truth: Today kicks off what for many is week of travel and preparation for the U.S. holiday, Thanksgiving. This, despite the COVID-19 pandemic. But increasingly, those in support of Indigenous rights are referring tot he holiday as a Day of Mourning. Others are referring to it as Thankstaking. Our guest is Jacqueline Keeler, a journalist and author with Dine and Ihanktonwan Dakota roots. Jacqueline serves as Editor-in-chief of Pollen Nation Magazine, Editor of Edge of Morning: Native Voices Speak for Bears Ears and creator of #NotYourMascot. Jacqueline also has a book coming out in March looking at the political divide in the United States and its origins, entitled Standoff. The latest in what are increasingly failed attempts by Donald Trump to hold on to the presidency, even as the administration is finally allowing the Biden-Harris team to access the transition of power process. Our guest is Marjorie Cohn, professor emerita at Thomas Jefferson School of Law, where she taught for 25 years. The former president of the National Lawyers Guild and criminal defense attorney is a legal scholar and political analyst who writes books and articles, and lectures throughout the world about human rights, US foreign policy, and the contradiction between the two. Her most recent book is Drones and Targeted Killing: Legal, Moral, and Geopolitical Issues. Cohn has testified before Congress and debated the legality of the war in Afghanistan at the prestigious Oxford Union. Her columns appear on Truthout, HuffPost, Salon, Jurist, Truthdig, Portside, Alternet, CommonDreams and Consortium News, and she has provided commentary for CBS News, BBC, MSNBC, CNN, Fox News, NPR and Pacifica Radio. The crisis in Ethiopia, causing alarm across the continent of Africa. There are growing concerns about a civil war and/or massacres by the African Union. There is also growing concern in the transition team of Joe Biden. Ethiopia's Prime Minister, Abiy Ahmed Ali, who won a Nobel Prize for bringing peace between Ethiopia and Eritrea, has now unleashed his forces against the Tigray People's Liberation Front. The Front has accused the Prime Minister of a power grab and ethnic cleansing. What's going on? We speak with Dr. Gerald Horne, Moores Professor of History & African-American Studies at the University of Houston. Dr Horne has written more than 30 books. His most recently published book is The Dawning of the Apocalypse: The Roots of Slavery, White Supremacy, Settler Colonialism, and Capitalism in the Long Sixteenth Century, published in June 2020.
Today on Sojourner Truth: Today kicks off what for many is week of travel and preparation for the U.S. holiday, Thanksgiving. This, despite the COVID-19 pandemic. But increasingly, those in support of Indigenous rights are referring tot he holiday as a Day of Mourning. Others are referring to it as Thankstaking. Our guest is Jacqueline Keeler, a journalist and author with Dine and Ihanktonwan Dakota roots. Jacqueline serves as Editor-in-chief of Pollen Nation Magazine, Editor of Edge of Morning: Native Voices Speak for Bears Ears and creator of #NotYourMascot. Jacqueline also has a book coming out in March looking at the political divide in the United States and its origins, entitled Standoff. The latest in what are increasingly failed attempts by Donald Trump to hold on to the presidency, even as the administration is finally allowing the Biden-Harris team to access the transition of power process. Our guest is Marjorie Cohn, professor emerita at Thomas Jefferson School of Law, where she taught for 25 years. The former president of the National Lawyers Guild and criminal defense attorney is a legal scholar and political analyst who writes books and articles, and lectures throughout the world about human rights, US foreign policy, and the contradiction between the two. Her most recent book is Drones and Targeted Killing: Legal, Moral, and Geopolitical Issues. Cohn has testified before Congress and debated the legality of the war in Afghanistan at the prestigious Oxford Union. Her columns appear on Truthout, HuffPost, Salon, Jurist, Truthdig, Portside, Alternet, CommonDreams and Consortium News, and she has provided commentary for CBS News, BBC, MSNBC, CNN, Fox News, NPR and Pacifica Radio. The crisis in Ethiopia, causing alarm across the continent of Africa. There are growing concerns about a civil war and/or massacres by the African Union. There is also growing concern in the transition team of Joe Biden. Ethiopia's Prime Minister, Abiy Ahmed Ali, who won a Nobel Prize for bringing peace between Ethiopia and Eritrea, has now unleashed his forces against the Tigray People's Liberation Front. The Front has accused the Prime Minister of a power grab and ethnic cleansing. What's going on? We speak with Dr. Gerald Horne, Moores Professor of History & African-American Studies at the University of Houston. Dr Horne has written more than 30 books. His most recently published book is The Dawning of the Apocalypse: The Roots of Slavery, White Supremacy, Settler Colonialism, and Capitalism in the Long Sixteenth Century, published in June 2020.
Portside recommends labor radio and podcasts to check out and share with friends and co-workers. Today’s labor history: History’s first recorded strike. Today’s labor quote: John L. Lewis@wpfwdc #1u #unions #LaborRadioPod @PortsideOrgProud member of the Labor Radio Podcast Network
Adam Linnman gets updates from Vice President for Athletics, Scott Leykam
Adam catches up with SAAC President and Women's Cross Country/Track & Field, Sofia Castiglioni. They talk about the work SAAC has been doing with Special Olympics Oregon and their work on social justice through their platform, PilotsTalk.
Adam Linnman hosts Ian Solof, the long-time Head Coach for the Women's Cross Country and Track & Field teams at the University of Portland.
Adam Linnman hosts Gulliver Scott, the new Head Coach for the Women's Rowing program at the University of Portland.
Adam Linnman catches up with University of Portland Vice President for Athletics, Scott Leykam. They talk about the upcoming basketball season, new guidelines from the state of Oregon and NCAA and the spring season.
On the latest episode of the Portside Pod, Adam Linnman catches up with first year head coach, Megan Burton, of Portland Volleyball. She talks about adapting to all the changes as a head coach during a trying time, the newest additions to the team and what they have been up to over the summer and start of the fall.
Adam Linnman catches up with University of Portland Head Men's Soccer Coach, Nick Carlin-Voigt. They discuss Pilots in the Pros, training in a limited setting and more.
As a long-time resident of the Mille Lacs Lake area being involved in the fishery status and health of the surrounding area, Steve Johnson shares his insight and perspectives into the current status of the Mille Lacs Lake fishery. See omnystudio.com/policies/listener for privacy information.
In episode 48 I talk with Sara from Portside Fitness in Gulfport. Sara has operated Portside Fitness for seven years now. She discusses how her and her coaches have moved to online classes using Zoom in order to stay engaged with their members. We also talk about how to over come some of the barriers people might have to starting a workout plan. We both on agree that physical exercise plays an extremely important part in improving mental health. One way to combat any feelings of depression or anxiety associated with the Covid-19 pandemic is staying active and exercising. You can join their online program now. Hit them up on Facebook if you want to focus on and improve your health. Follow us on Social: Facebook YouTube Instagram Twitter
Doreen Arnfield & Charlene Dolan - Feel Good FestivalStuart Deane & Joe Murphy - Exchange Club Field of HonorHeather Bradley and Charlie Casey - Portside Waterfront Kitchen and Bar
Doreen Arnfield & Charlene Dolan - Feel Good FestivalStuart Deane & Joe Murphy - Exchange Club Field of HonorHeather Bradley and Charlie Casey - Portside Waterfront Kitchen and Bar
In this episode hosts Mark and Caleb talk about what the brand Portside News does and all of th social media platforms they are on --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/flannelandkhaki/support
Will drives into Boston after a fresh haircut from Steve and a plate of hash from Portside. Can you hold a trumpet sensuously? What does this podcast rank in Costa Rica? Find out on this week’s episode.
Chef Fernando Valladares of Portside Fish Co. in Irvine, California talks this week about his rise from culinary school to chef and co-owner of Portside, and why they have some "do not miss" fish tacos on their menu!
Welcome to episode 15 of the Football United vs Soccer City podcast. It is a pleasure to have you the listener downloading this podcast. The listeners of this podcast are predominantly from Australia and I thank all of the Australian listeners. And there are some consistent downloads from Spain and America and I appreciate the listeners from those countries.This episode’s interviewee played senior football in the 1970s, 1980s, 1990s and the 2000s. So he saw quite a lot of football in the local and state leagues. The man I interviewed was Lupcho Dafkovski but he is widely known as Sarge to most people in the Illawarra soccer community. His journey is not just about the players he played with and against but as he described it in the interview it was about the camaraderie amongst the people he met and played with at Wollongong United, Aris, Portside and Coniston.A delight to interview as he held nothing back and was open in terms of his experiences but additionally letting me interview him at his cafe. So my thanks and respect go out to Sarge, please enjoy the interview. Please note at the latter part of the interview another person engages in the interview and this was one of Sarge’s customers Matt, thanks to Matt for his contribution.
LongShorts - Banter on All Things Business, Finance, and People
Today we get cynical. Bigly. The headers: * What Makes Ola Unique? * The Road from Online to Offline Retail * The Ubiquity of Reliance Industries _Reference: Read More on Differential Voting Rights in India by clicking [here](https://transfin.in/differential-voting-rights-sebi-regulations-shareholder-dividend-corporate-governance)._
En este episodio, nos hicimos acompañar de Fernando Valladares, un salvaodoreño residente en el estado de California, quien ha roto esquemas con un crossover gastronómico, dándole vida como creador y fundador a dos restaurantes en el Condado Naranja: Ground House Burgers y Portside Fish Co. Fernando nos cuenta de primera mano, cómo ha sido la experiencia de darle vida a dos emprendimientos gastronómicos en un país como los Estados Unidos, donde la oferta culinaria supera la de El Salvador por leguas. No te lo perdás y tomá nota de los valiosos aportes que Fernando comparte con todos nosotros.
Millennials, people from their late 30s to early 20s, are expected to make 45 percent of home purchases in the U.S. this year. That influx is changing the way people buy and sell homes, and creating new challenges for real estate agents. iBuying, anyone? On the panel Host: Press Herald Business Reporter Pete McGuire Peter McGuire is a business reporter covering Maine trade, transportation and tourism. A proud native of the western Maine mountains, Peter has covered local news for newspapers in Oxford County, Brunswick, Waterville and Portland. He holds a bachelor’s degree in history from Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia and a Master’s Degree in International Relations from Boston University. Dava Davin, Broker and Principal, Portside Real Estate Group Dava Davin founded Portside Real Estate Group in 2012. Portside has four locations and annual sales of $310,000,000. Portside donates over $40,000 a year to Maine non-profits through hosted fundraiser events. Davin leads a sales team which sold about 100 properties in 2018, ranking them in the top five of all residential agents and teams in the state of Maine. She currently serves on the board of the Habitat for Humanity of Greater Portland and is an active member of the Greater Portland Board of Realtors, MEREDA and is a past board member of the Maine Association of Realtors and Falmouth/Cumberland Chamber of Commerce. Sue Quilty, Senior Vice President of Loan Operations, Residential Mortgage Services Sue began working with RMS as a consultant in 2014 and joined permanently in 2016. For over 20 years, Sue had her own consulting firm providing regulatory compliance, quality control and operations support to financial institutions. She brings her strong reputation with regulators and industry leaders to RMS. Sue is SVP of Loan Operations overseeing Operational Risk, Centralized Disclosing, Closing, Post-Closing and the Denied/Withdrawn Team. Michael Sosnowski, Owner + Broker, Maine Home Connection Michael, and his wife Laura, have lived in Maine since 2000. They have operated Maine Home Connection for the last five years, and were previously with RE/MAX and Keller Williams. After working for several large manufacturing companies, Michael became a sales and marketing Vice President with Sappi Fine Paper Company, which led him to relocate to Portland. Sales and marketing have always been important aspects of his career. Michael has a undergraduate degree from the University of Connecticut and an MBA from the University of Texas at Arlington. Once in real estate, Laura and Michael always aspired to own their own brokerage, focusing on advanced forms of marketing, video production and technology – all aimed at delivering a unique client experience. Not being part of any national franchise allow the Maine Home Connection to be flexible to market conditions and quick at adopting new technologies.
Dava Davin, is the owner of Portside Real Estate Group. She started out in pharmaceutical sales, as a representative working for companies such as Eli Lilly. She moved to Maine and realized that she wanted to make a professional change, and entered real estate where she successfully learned the business, started her own agency, and has grown this into what today is a multi-office powerhouse with over 60 agents. If that's not impressive enough, she is a four-time triathlon finisher, she's a philanthropic presence in the local community, and most recently she was recognized by Mainebiz as one of their women to watch in 2018. I hope you enjoy listening to her discuss her recipe for success, both personally and professionally, because it is pretty impressive. She is totally a rock star.
Once again Ben and Lucy have played the same game and discuss last weeks big release of Marvel’s Spider-Man in a packed episode. Whilst talking about their time with it they touch on Mafia 3, The Batman Arkham series, God of War, Nintendo and attachment rates, For Honor, Marvel, Def Jam, 50 Cent, Doom, Artistic Vision, Combat balance, more Batman, Tomb Raider and as a final twist Cobra Kai. Lucy kicks off the drinking with ‘Easy Tiger’, a Left Handed Giant x Garage collab. Ben also starts with a collab from Fourpure x Little Creatures, ‘Portside’. The collabs continue as and Lucy has ‘The Sky Was Pink’ from Siren x Deya. Ben breaks from the collabs to have a German […]
Once again Ben and Lucy have played the same game and discuss last weeks big release of Marvel's Spider-Man in a packed episode. Whilst talking about their time with it they touch on Mafia 3, The Batman Arkham series, God of War, Nintendo and attachment rates, For Honor, Marvel, Def Jam, 50 Cent, Doom, Artistic Vision, Combat balance, more Batman, Tomb Raider and as a final twist Cobra Kai. Lucy kicks off the drinking with 'Easy Tiger', a Left Handed Giant x Garage collab. Ben also starts with a collab from Fourpure x Little Creatures, 'Portside'. The collabs continue as and Lucy has 'The Sky Was Pink' from Siren x Deya. Ben breaks from the collabs to have a German beer from Gruthaus, the 'Heller Honig Bock'. Lucy and Ben will be at Bristol Craft Beer Festival this Saturday (15/09/18) so come and say Hi if you're around.
EP101 - Indochino CEO, Drew Green An interview with Drew Green (@Drew_Green), CEO and of Indochino. Indochino is one of the largest made to measure menswear brands globally with active customers in 50 countries. We spoke with Drew about his previous e-commerce startup Shop.CA as well as Indochino's business model, Amazon strategy, and the future of the indsutry. Don't forget to like our facebook page, and if you enjoyed this episode please write us a review on itunes. Episode 101 of the Jason & Scot show was recorded on Thursday, September 14th 2017. http://jasonandscot.com Join your hosts Jason "Retailgeek" Goldberg, SVP Commerce & Content at SapientRazorfish, and Scot Wingo, Founder and Executive Chairman of Channel Advisor as they discuss the latest news and trends in the world of e-commerce and digital shopper marketing. New beta feature - Google Automated Transcription of the show: Transcript Jason: [0:25] Welcome to the Jason and Scott show this is episode 101 being recorded on Thursday September 14th 2017 I'm your host Jason retailgeek Goldberg and as usual I'm here with your Tahoes Scott Wingo. Scot & Drew: [0:40] Hey Jason and welcome back Jason Scott show listeners this week's episode we have a really special treat for you, in a world where everyone's really scrambling to survive against Amazon we wanted to highlight a brand that is really thriving please welcome to the Jason Scott show Drew green CEO of indochino who is joining us live from Vancouver, thanks guys I appreciate you having have an assignment scratch. Jason: [1:09] It's entirely our pleasure let's get the really controversial questions out of the way early did Scott pronounce your name right. Scot & Drew: [1:16] Hey daddy daddy didn't say where to me but that's that's okay cuz I don't use the at the end of Green. Jason: [1:23] Awesome and you don't want the things we always like to start out with is get an idea of how you. [1:32] Came to your current role on so before we talk about your control can you tell us a little bit about your background and in what way does the origin story for indochino. Scot & Drew: [1:43] Yeah well I don't know what I do both because both her are bit different so you don't myself I've been in you know e-commerce. Retail for almost 20 years first company we we built up was really the time of time of my life I was told to double click in the late 90s and from there. I have this amazing journey by double-clicking New York I love being out of retail. And as you know double quick was was acquired a couple times by private equity in the Google and then went to have the privilege of. Going to a company by the name of shop.com and helping build that into a top 10 multi-category retail destination in the US and the UK and that eventually became part of. Market America which I think is that isn't IR 500. Iri R50 excuse me online Merchant sound of my own company and I really enjoyed that Journey House shop.ca here in Canada. Multi Merchant market place that has since been Amalgamated with. Several Brands under an umbrella company called emerge Commerce of which I'm sure. And you don't back in 2015 it feels like. Feels like quite a few years ago but but really only a few years ago I really got the opportunity to come into indochino. And help transform the way men dress and it's been you has been an incredible few years you know the business has tripled in size. [3:18] Are we done so probably attracted some world-class Partners investors and of course. You every success starts with a team would God just a fantastic team at the company. Your top to bottom so it's it's been a great experience indochino was founded in 2007. So you know we've been around for for just over 10 years. And have become you know the last few years have become really the market leader globally answer to what does that mean while it means that from a made-to-measure custom apparel standpoint I don't believe there's any other company in the world. I cells and produces as much as we do and so that's had somewhere very proud of but you know we treat with a lot of care and a lot of humility because you know we want to continue to build the Great business not only for the team here but. Obviously first shareholders. Jason: [4:13] Terrific some before we jump into indochino actually have a shop.ca question. [4:19] So I use them or I should say you all the time as an example of one of the the first e-commerce sites to turn their entire customer base into affiliates. [4:33] Am I being truthful there I feel like that. Scot & Drew: [4:36] Yeah that sucks yeah that's actually shop.com and and so you know that was post-acquisition that that occurred. And you know that is the that is sort of the bread-and-butter or models at that market America's built their business on and and you know they felt that that was the best application for. Shop.com I mean shop.com originated as a Marketplace not unlike. Amazon Marketplace but it was bifurcated we had both you know card transactions as well as affiliate transaction. Orly cost as it would be known but yeah Market America turned it into a almost a pure purely and consumer affiliate site after they acquired. Jason: [5:19] Don't you very cool and did you have you applied any of the the best practices from that in your current gig do you guys do like customer referrals and all that sort of stuff. Scot & Drew: [5:30] Absolutely I mean I think you know that the interesting thing about that is I think it's excessive. Going to take you out online only but it really any retail business is based on. Your consumer advocacy or or fandom as we can talk about sometimes it into Chino you're the more that you can have fans of the the product of the brand of the experience. In particular for us that in the channel the experience. Yeah really the more the more not only are you going to grow about the more efficiently you're going to grow you know when you have customers that are telling. Your friends and fam. [6:07] They had a wonderful experience and the noset friends and family coming and make breakfast it just creates a really efficient gross and so yes certainly I would say that refer-a-friend weather. Whether through paid or unpaid is probably a second biggest Channel at its cheetah and so certainly we feel like we have a ton of fans. You're talking about the Brandon and appreciate an experience we deliver, cool the server folks that may not have had the opportunity to to use the site Maybe, can I give my dog a quick picture of of indochino you you said kind of measured so does that mean someone comes to me and measure so and I know you guys have it you didn't take so long to hear what that is. [6:51] Yeah so if you think about you know bespoke or made-to-measure custom apparel. You know it's an industry that's been around for hundreds and hundreds of years you know man have gone and gotten measured and. You have been able to to create their own garment what we wanted to do was you know create a platform essentially to allow it to be mass-market to allow anybody to measure themselves. Girls online only first pick their Fabrics pick their customisations their personalization such as a monogram. You know I'm on the Garment and and really create a one-of-a-kind garment and so you know we were the first globally to ever sell made-to-measure online. [7:36] Really proud of that but we realized in 2015 and really what what I've been driving the most. [7:43] After years is you knows our success is based on an omni-channel experience and really giving customers the choice of. Did I buy online which I calls or the self-serve mode or getting a full serve experience and whatever that 70 show rooms across North America. [8:02] Yeah that's a good Segway cuz I kind of mentally put you guys in the bucket with but no bows and Stitch fix and kind of what what Andy done calls digitally native vertical Brands and then just like those guys you guys, open up the showrooms where they're kind of a smaller Outlet the no kind of a traditional retail experience and kind of different unique buying experience, so tell us a little bit more I think that's all been in your 10 year or did the company have some started. Yeah I mean we we we've essentially opened every one of our showrooms or relocated them you know 2015 to 2017. We really felt like to be. You know that the Undisputed leader and made to measure but also to compete with ready-to-wear that we needed to provide customers with an omni-channel experience and you know what it's really allowed us to do is to open an app. You know the made-to-measure experience to customers that just might not be comfortable. Making their first purchase online as it relates to a you know for the $500 purchase offer a garment and. Yes really become actually are number one acquisition Channel think about online only business is really scaling that business from a media perspective. And you know you are a retail environment not only benefits customer but it really benefits are model and creates you don't media efficiency from. [9:33] I'm back from a girl's perspective you know we'll have averaged just over 50% growth year-over-year lost. You're so 2015-2017 and we're seeing a declining across for acquisition and cost for crossbow order. From a media perspective in that you know almost entirely to do with with our our commitment to retail and channel. [9:57] I'm having not add up to you being a showroom may be described it as it's like I'm imagining 2000 square feet some some examples that kind of thing but then I've seen pictures of Foosball Tables kind of curious where that. Yeah you know every showroom that we have it as I mentioned we got 70 you going to us were in Boston we got to in New York to in the Philadelphia area. Now one in Washington one in Chicago San Francisco and Beverly Hills every showrooms a bit. Different and unique but they all have a very open Design Concepts and they all allow for you no appointment no I won't what we have isn't as appointment base model where the customer would come in. They would be masked with what we call a style guide for that hour and that's the guy that I said would help them create their at their garment they would walk them through and get the measured. They would have the customer you to pick out fabric since we got almost 300 fabrics for suits in almost 300 rabbits for shirts. So they would pick their fabric that they're stitching and pick other customisations and personalization said you know at the end really allows them to. You know create this one-of-a-kind garment that that nobody's going to be there not going to go to a party or dinner or an event and see somebody wearing the exact same everyone is is entirely unique a customer. Jason: [11:26] That's awesome. [11:29] Question about the sort of omni-channel experience so it makes perfect sense that their children's could be your top acquisition Channel you go in there you you get fitted you get that first suit and have a great experience, but I'm presuming that now you have their measurements on file and now that that customer has a lot more confidence in your brand, are you able to turn those kind of full service customers from their first experience into more cell service customers for subsequent orders is that. Scot & Drew: [12:00] Yeah that that that's exactly what happened so course you got some customers that just you don't prefer either the retail environment or our showroom environment but. You know the reason that we're investing in retail in such a big way is that the majority of our retail first customers actually come back on their second third and fourth purchase and buy online and so it Christmas really sort of official relationship with a customer. We get it right the first time. Bathroom showroom perspective but because we've gotten it right there the other entirely comfortable coming back and buy it online you know we don't have a subscription model but if you looked at. Yes they do that the repurchase rate in our business here is almost like we do you know customers are very loyal to the experience very loyal to the brand. And frankly you know what we found especially these last couple years is you're made to measure and custom apparel is becoming mainstream. And so you know a young man or or you know someone at that house that experience was made to measure is saying you know what. I no longer want to buy a suit their shirt and Blazer pair pants off the rock I want to I want to create my own, because it's not easy and it's a crime. Jason: [13:12] Cool yeah you know one thing I filled it to ask about is can you talk just a little bit about what the like sort of into end time line is for it for a customer that buys a product like you know. Scot & Drew: [13:24] Yeah absolutely so that you know what you're doing if you're doing me buying processor. You know what we are at from an internal perspective because the conversion final you know it does take some time so it's not a an instantaneous purchase your you're choosing all your selections on the Garmin. But once you've done that and you know the Garmin essentially arrives and. Right now under three weeks we've we publish for is the expectation but we've really improved that through your different Partnerships and optimization supply chain. And so if you think from start to finish your you're basically creating your own garment your own one-of-a-kind garment and receiving it and under in under 3 weeks. Jason: [14:10] Wow very cool. [14:13] In my my senses like sort of old-school made-to-measure garments when you go to a local tailor or certainly like you have some of the the International Suit house is like the. Like one of the big pain points traditionally with me to order is that there's a super long lead time. Scot & Drew: [14:33] Yeah yeah I need a Nazi that you're absolutely right I mean some. You're on some environments your weight 5 6 7 weeks for your for your garment and we've really. You got to really compete against made ready-to-wear to really be an alternative to off the rocks. You know we feel like we've got to get that that turnaround time you don't continue to optimize I continue to approve it and we don't have a timeline for it we don't have. Your specific launch date but our goal is to get at under a week. And you know once you get it under a week because think about your own experiences buying a suit even if you buy off the rock you're still going to have to get it alteration so. You know when we are at under a week in terms of production and and final delivery. You know we're entirely competitive with ready-to-wear and and just that much more appealing to two all types of consumers. Jason: [15:31] Yep that brings up another day question that so. One of the Banes of the apparel industry in general in e-commerce is the return rate is higher than we'd all like and I am curious if, the me to order it helps resolve that problem because you've got a chance to meet the customer and you you know that you have less fitment issues or you know. Part of me feels like even with a bespoke tailor and a made-to-order suit like they're often is more than one round of of adjustments if you will if I'm if I'm saying that right how do you handle that that's what it's about. Scot & Drew: [16:08] I mean neither of us are really question cuz if you know what I think back to you know the first time I took a look at this business and and the things that really jumped out to me was the fact that. You don't return rates were so low you know they were two three sometimes 4% depending on the time of the year and as you guys know and e-commerce in apparel Footwear. That's that's incredibly low number now we've actually been able to get a returns to well under 1%. I'd have been there for over a year now and again that's that's an incredible number now we do have. Alterations by a small percentage of the Guard. You know sometimes if it's not made to the customer's exact specifications will do it what we call a remake but again that's the the minority of of of the garments that we create. It's all Rino return rate as one of the most incredible things about this business because if you compare you know two other apparel or paralyze a category. You're most of the Power Rhonda you know in the twenties or even 30% from a return perspective. Jason: [17:19] Yeah I think I think most people would give us some significant body parts in exchange for getting down to a 2 - 4%. Scot & Drew: [17:25] Well I absolutely because it because it's the biggest impact online only. Apparel retailer it's it's it's very difficult and I from a model perspective it's very different. Difficult run p&l perspective then so you know where we're pretty proud of the fact that you don't return rates are so low. Jason: [17:48] And then when I scratch. [17:51] On on the general business I noticed on the website you also have weddings in your in your taxonomy and we recently had the Zola on the show so we we've done some talking about how lucrative the the overall wedding industry could be what, how are you guys playing in the wedding space. Scot & Drew: [18:11] Yeah me back that really goes to the customers that we serve an alien are number one and for the core demographic would be Millennials 65% of our transactions online. Or are serving you know that Millennial mail it's a little bit lower and in our showrooms closer to 50%. But really what we committed to a couple years ago and it's become our fastest-growing demographic is the is the wedding Market. And so you must send you message foosball tables earlier and call you know one of the things that we've done with each other room is set up a groom's lounge and that's really just serve that market. And to really become you have a place that that young man or any age men can get can get themselves in there and their groups party you know fitted for their wedding and so I would I would say that wedding is probably our fastest-growing segment. And certainly something that we're going to continue to focus on, it wouldn't be a Jason and Scott show if we didn't talk about Amazon a little bit so Jason I do a joint talk or we talk about you know, the obviously how big amazon is how much they're soaking up the growth out there but one of the big rabbits we give people on protecting yourself is to wrap a service around a product and seems like you guys, done that dude you have any fear of Amazon doing that or do you feel like this is a quadrant e-commerce are probably not going to get to, yeah I was watching you can never live live in fear you you got to. [19:46] You got to continue to innovate and continue to ideate you know whatever business you're running I think. I just have a tremendous amount of respect for Amazon and and within the apparel categories are obviously very very committed to it and doing some amazing things. You'll for us one of those things that we really. You're committed to not just to not this to differentiate ourselves from Amazon but really I would say the entire apparel category is really not. Not put forth that we're selling a product we've really focused on selling or even just providing an experience and so more and more. For our customers what we Aspire and what we try to inspire is the fact that we do provide an experience and it's it's a totally different experience than. You're going into a store going online and buying an item in that instance you really just buying a product right and and for us it's entirely different. It or whether it's you know the interactions that they have with our saw guys and how what they're trained or the you know the online experience of pretty on Garmin we've really focused on selling an experience versus a product. Call you guys have obviously caught the eye of you season an environment when it's really hard for me, she kind of companies to get funding I noticed madronas in there that's that's a really kind of real consumer Blue Chip how much, Capital if you guys raised yeah we're really we're really fortunate to have you no work last set of investors we got. [21:22] Madrona and Scott Jacobson at Madrona as my partner there. Yeah I'm deeply involved with the success of the company at Portside equity which was formerly Highland consumer is also very very involved. And our success and has been you know a big force and driving it we also out of strategic investors so we have no Diane group that's based in in China and one of the largest. And best suit manufacturers in the world owns a part of the company. We got a media company here in Canada that that took ownership in the company and will continue it to round out and look for what possible. And you lots of that say you don't really good position to be in, the best time to raise money is when you don't need it in my experience, to quick one so you kind of peaked my curiosity with the millennial kind of, concentration at any interesting observations as someone that's been in the industry for a while about in your all these kind of it's kind of funny meme that says joke around office money orders are killing this any other but they're they're obviously, not killing YouTube suits so any observations you can share about what you see in there. [22:42] Well I think there's a few different things I think number one you know it's a it's a the demographic that really takes a lot of pride in. And being their own brand and your for us I think that's why we resonates so well with Millennials you know they're able to create. You know one of a kind in the Chino which in a lot of ways becomes a representation of who they are and and their own brand and so. You know I think that that we are just the experience the product that we provide really fits into that. They're also they become and we see it in our. In our lifetime value studies and repurchase rate studies extremely loyal you know if they if they enjoy something if they like something. You know they're going to be loyal and they're going to tell their friends and so. But it is important to get it right I think that's true and in any demographic. Jason: [23:43] When it when the things it's interesting to me in the short of a custom product space which I I sort of put you in. [23:52] You know all customers but in particular Millennials in and Western CSN genze as well like the. [24:00] There seems to be a strong preference for more individualistic process products and in sort of you know Wes following the pack but. They also want people to know that it's individualistic so I I'm almost wondering like are you know that I think there's certain features in your product that, sort of reveal it's a made-to-order product as opposed to it you know looking like a ready-to-wear product like to do you find customers like. Intentionally select those pictures so that they're sort of broadcasting a little bit that they that they wearing a maid. Scot & Drew: [24:34] Yeah I mean that's not what I mean about being able to create their own brand right there not. You know they're when they're creating an indochino garment they're creating something that's truly one of a kind. And they're able to you don't put a monogram very very easily you know what that the jockey on the shirt or on other parts of the Garmin. You know they're able to pick their own lining from dozens of different choices are able to pick a fabric. And maybe mix. Fabrics you know applecross the suit and so you're really there's dozens of difference. Customisations in personalizations and if you know you kind of look at all the permutations that could be great just literally tens of millions of different types of suits. I could be created I think that's really feeling you don't know if you guys remember but I always hated you know in high school going to a party and. Bought a sweater at you know whatever retailer and then find out that there's three other guys about party with the same sweater or same jacket out of you and so yeah that doesn't happen within the Chino grated your own again one of a kind. Jason: [25:44] I totally get your point but I don't think Scott or I got invited to parties in high school very much. Scot & Drew: [25:50] I've I've seen Scott of the few parties I don't know then I don't know. Jason: [25:55] I am teasing you like to see your urine. That's one of the Leading Edge category in terms of made-to-order I do do you see that extending two more generally the other consumer products like the fact that that's a continuing Trend or do you think it will stick with you no particular vertical. Scot & Drew: [26:14] Are you know what's another great question that I do think that. A big part of the future retail is going to be more customize and personalize product and the more of that you know retailers or companies or any tractors can get away from. Commoditized product I think more success than the house and so I really do feel like at the highest level custom but I'll say is custom. Your product is is is really the future of retail in a lot of different verticals but certainly in a Peril for sure. Jason: [26:50] Yep and obviously that's that certainly helps you build a competitive moat. Scot & Drew: [26:55] You know what does I mean you'll think about competitive Moses you got to be you know aware of of what you need to do to to protect and grow the business and you know we constantly look for. What are call additional Motes if you will but you know where we're at work we're humbled by the response that we're getting from consumers right now. And we're very excited about what you know what the decades ahead are going to bring some. Jason: [27:25] Another area is our future looking that I'm always interested in and I talked a lot about fit man we talked about, in the ready-to-wear space the return rates are huge and typically the number one reason for returns are are fitment issues you obviously saw that for the subset of your customers that go to a show and they think they can get. Measured by a tailor but to enable more people to be self-service and reach more people I I imagine you're always interested in your how to best get measurements at home I know there's at least one company in the space that tries to use, the mobile phone camera for fitment and I I think you know I suspect that strongly a gimmick but I do know there's a lot of phones coming out with sort of, 3D scanning capability in that, you know I've always speculated that potentially is really useful for fitting in are you guys looking at all it does sound kind of Technologies. Scot & Drew: [28:20] Yeah we are I mean we're always looking at new ways to create and craft a perfectly fitted garment I think. You know if it's an extremely complex business right in terms of creating you no one to one product on app for Consumer bases and. Well those take that Technologies are full and you know seem to be enough to come in and out I I do think the back-end operations of how you create. You know I shouldn't Wonder one product her customer is is the most important the last thing you want to do. Is introduced the technology that you're going to end up with you know return rates that are closer to you know traditional apparel on so there's going to be a lot of Technology development around. You know how you get measurements or how we get measurements but you know how I kind of like what we're doing right now in terms of the technology that we used to. We got the garments right on a one-to-one basis. Jason: [29:21] Gotcha another Trend like in this are the Jason spaces that I've been a little interested in last quarter Adidas did this interesting pilot wear their weaving sweaters. On demand in a store and then I think it's Ministry of Supply in Boston literally have a. [29:40] A blaze or weaving machine in the store and I'm going to say Loosely they make a Blazer while you wait I think it's like a three or four hour process. [29:51] So obviously not not super convenient or scalable right at the moment but like is that a potential. [29:57] Opportunity for you or competitor for you in the future iqc the technology ever getting good enough that a lot of the stuff gets made in in real time in stores or ship same day to customers are those kinds of things. Scot & Drew: [30:09] Yeah I mean I think anything's possible as we you know as we go through the years and decades ahead of deep deep thought of being able to create. You know garment like we create but do it same day or in the store or have it delivered the same day I mean that's an incredibly. You know bold dream or delivery but you are hot for my from a super spective I do believe that were one of the fastest in terms of how we produce. Supply chain all the way through the consumer demand and like I mentioned earlier you no more costly off to my second tweaking. Because once you get it down to under a weeks you've got something very very unique and highly competitive. You know what is essentially about a 7 billion dollar Market North America on South. Yeah I've seen I'll call them campaigns or product launches that you mentioned but I think we're a little ways from being able to scale that I'm a space South. Jason: [31:12] For sure for sure it does certainly seem like that kind of you know early tip of the spear examples on which are always interesting but probably not economically viable for the last question. Anything else that has you excited or interesting about the the future of Commerce in general or or your space in particular and India. [31:31] Trans you are seeing on the horizon. Scot & Drew: [31:35] You know what man like I said as a technology e-commerce guy I'm just. I really really big fan and really interested on how retails of all day you know it's that's what's got me most excited and interested on how. Online-only Brands transition into either or not the channel environment or how do they leverage retail to drive their business I think there's going to be. Thriller credible Innovations and developments over the coming years and we hope to be part of that we think we are actually you have big part of it and Four Mile from a later shift perspective in and leaving the weather. Jason: [32:15] Terrific I think that's actually going to be a great place to, to wrap up because it is happen again we've used up all our a lot of time so Drew I really want to thank you for joining us in the sharing the indochino experience with the RR listeners and I'll remind listeners as always, you're welcome to continue the dialogue on our Facebook page if you like today show we would certainly appreciate a 5-star review on iTunes if you hated today. Scot & Drew: [32:44] Absolutely do not review cuz it was probably my fault if you hate it you guys are great I appreciate your time today. Thanks truly look forward to hearing more about the success of indochino. Jason: [32:59] Until next time happy conversing.
Local Business Stories by Alignable: Careers, Entrepreneurship, Local Business and Small Business
In this conversation with Lisa, we talk about her computer training with the military and the business knowledge she gained from her time in the corporate world. Lisa shares how she has combined both experiences to establish a marketing firm with customer satisfaction at its heart, and how to overcome fear when building your business. Get full show notes and more information here: http://bit.ly/2alMxRs
Tonight on CLE Baseball and Brews, we, very excitedly, talked about Indians left fielder Michael Brantley's return to the game AND HIT A TWO RUN HOMER. Of course, the argument of will he play on Opening Day came up (He probably will...). Also, we drove into the Marlon Byrd signing, the fire under Gio Urshela's ass being lit for third base, and what on earth is going on in the White Sox club house. Other things include OF COURSE great beer, drinking Platform porters and Portside 216 pale ales while drooling over the conversation of why everyone needs to check out a Winking Lizard as soon as possible. There was a ton more, so listen up and enjoy!
This is the last episode of 2015 of Two Brews Midwest! Matt, Paul, Keith and Eric break out some brews from all over to share and things get rowdy. Cheers!
Matt invites Keith Planitz back on the show for another episode. The gentlemen explore some of Ohio's finest as well as a tip of the hat to this weekend's VT Brewfest.
My first 3 hour set with a slight Italian flair. For a sunday sesh at Belvedere Bar, Portside, Brisbane. Right on the river, packed to the rafters! Good times were had by all. This gig required me to play some "party music" and some management requests, so look out for some 2006 style MoS tracks about ⅔ of the way. Other than that it's house / lounge / disco / funk and edits all the way. And due to some technical issues some rather embarrassing mixing in places. Oh well, that's live mixing for you :)
My first 3 hour set with a slight Italian flair. For a sunday sesh at Belvedere Bar, Portside, Brisbane. Right on the river, packed to the rafters! Good times were had by all. This gig required me to play some "party music" and some management requests, so look out for some 2006 style MoS tracks about ⅔ of the way. Other than that it's house / lounge / disco / funk and edits all the way. And due to some technical issues some rather embarrassing mixing in places. Oh well, that's live mixing for you :)