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For 43 we had local North Florida legend Carl Naegele. You may have heard once upon a time there being this massive skate-haven nestled under the trees, tucked away, amongst the palmettos and southern pine trees. A true Hessian Haven, just a stones throw from the World Golf Village in St. Augustine, FL. Well, Carl Naegele is the man that owns that legendary property, and although the ramps have rotted away. Carl salvaged everything he could, grabbed materials from Rick Morgan when he had to tear down his ramps, and now has a clear path to set the final phase of skate madness on a property that has been in his family for years.We discuss his skateboarding roots, play "News With Idiots", and had an overall rad conversation. We enjoyed it, we hope you do too!
In this episode we stop by to chat with our friend, Rick Morgan, who leads marketing at Work at Home Vintage Experts. WAHVE places qualified, remote insurance talent … Read More » The post Leaders Challenged to ‘Reinvent' the Workplace appeared first on Insurance Journal TV.
In this episode we stop by to chat with our friend, Rick Morgan, who leads marketing at Work at Home Vintage Experts. WAHVE places qualified, remote insurance talent … Read More » The post Leaders Challenged to ‘Reinvent' the Workplace appeared first on Insurance Journal TV.
– The Insurance Marketing Organization Podcast with Seth Greene Episode 049 Rick Morgan. Rick is Chief Marketing Officer of WAHVE. During Rick's insurance career, he has been an underwriter, insurance agent, publisher, management consultant, sought after speaker, vendor marketing executive, and association CEO. He is the co-creator of SilverPlume and was proclaimed by InsuranceBroadcasting.com and the Insurance Media Association as one of the 100 Most Powerful People in Insurance in North America and received the Wade S. Dunbar Jr. Technology Advocate award in 2019. He served on the board of directors of the Independent Insurance Agents and Brokers of New York and was interim CEO of Applied Client Network (formerly ASCnet). He was SVP of marketing of Applied Systems; and co-owner of Automation Management Group, publisher of The Automated Agency Report (TAAR). Listen to this insightful IMO episode with Rick Morgan about WAHVE and his experience in the insurance field! Here is what to expect on this week's show: - How WAHVE was started and how the organization became the matching service for the insurance industry. - The current status and culture of WAHVE and how the company operates. - The biggest challenges WAHVE has faced and how Rick has helped the company grow and overcome these challenges. Connect with Rick: Guest Links: Website- https://wahve.com/leadership/rick-morgan LinkedIn- https://www.linkedin.com/in/rickjmiv Twitter- https://twitter.com/rickjmiv Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Today I will be speaking with a couple from Arkansas who make a very good living as Workampers by conducting surveys of retail and commercial properties. These are not public opinion surveys, rather detailed descriptions of office buildings and strip malls which show locations of various features, like light poles, electric meters and sprinklers. Terri and Rick Morgan are from Texarkana, Ark., and they have been RVing for about three years. When they started, Rick was a commercial plumber employed by company in Baton Rouge, but Terri was bored just sitting round their RV all day. So, she got a Workamping job at the campground's office. However, the Morgans really enjoyed traveling, but both jobs confined them to one area. So, after seeing an advertisement for a Workamping gig with a company called ID Plans, which is based out of Tampa, Fla., they applied and got the job. Now they travel around the nation conducting physical surveys of commercial buildings for property management companies. They document square footage, parking spaces, lighting, signage, and meters for water, gas and electricity as well as everything else that can be found in, on or around an office building, retail store or strip mall. This information is beneficial for property managers because if there is a problem, it's easier for building owners to get it fixed if they can accurately describe the equipment and where it is located. The couple has permission to boondock in the parking lot at properties they are evaluating during their three- to four-day stays. Then, they move on to their next assignment at whatever pace they desire. There is a lot of flexibility built into the system. For example, they took most of December off just to travel and play. Training is provided by the company and Workampers given company-owned tablets with special software installed so they know what needs to be documented. A new couple is matched to experienced surveyors so they can follow along and watch how a survey is completed. Then, at the next assignment, the new couple does the work while an experienced couple offers advice or points out something that was missed. Terri and Rick have visited all but 10 states on their journey. They get to select assignments in areas they want to visit and the company pays a mileage rate as they drive from Point A to Point B. They've had some interesting challenges along the way, such as having a generator quit on them during the middle of a job. Terri and Rick have since installed solar power to their RV, which is making their lives even more enjoyable. Working as surveyors for ID Plans sound like it would be interesting work and relatively easy for someone with good attention to detail. It pays very well, too. The Morgans earn between $2,000 and $6,000 per week, depending upon the size of the assignment and the level of documentation they need to provide. Terri and Rick are basically performing detective work in trying to find resources and determine what's powering them, whether the lights are running on photocells, timers or switches. They do have to use equipment like an amp meter to test the wattage of outlets. But, it's not too difficult to do and easy to learn the steps to completing a survey. If you're interested in learning more about getting a traveling Workamping job with ID Plans, visit www.idplans.com. I interviewed Mark Braddy, the company's director of operations, about this time last year. You can listen to that interview on Episode 112. Terri offered some great advice for people considering the RV and Workamper lifestyle. She said they often overthink the details, which drags out a decision to start until it's too late for them to begin. So, do it now! Terri and Rick are documenting their own adventures in a blog and videos posted to www.whereintheworldarethemorgans.com. It allows friends and families to keep up with their adventures and also provides information for other W...
Hank Hanegraaff, president of the Christian Research Institute and host of the Bible Answer Man broadcast, reflects on the passing of our dear brother Rick Morgan. Absent the body, he is present with the Lord (2 Corinthians 5:8). One day when Jesus returns a second time, Rick's soul will return to his body and his body will be resurrected immortal, imperishable, incorruptible (1 Corinthians 15). Though he is no longer in flesh, he continues as one of that great cloud of witnesses. St. Paul said, because we are surrounded by those witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders the race marked out for us (Hebrews 12). Which is precisely what Rick did in his life, including substantial contribution to the work of the Christian Research Institute. As CRI's webmaster, Rick constantly resolved to accomplish all to the glory of God. Rick contracted COVID-19, along with his wife Cindee, who is the daughter of Walter Martin, CRI's founder. But Rick did not make it. Please pray for Cindee and their family through this profound heartbreak.
Welcome to the FIRST podcast episode of 2022! In this episode of the Ridiculously Amazing Insurance Agent Podcast, we talk to the incredible Rick Morgan of WAHVE about this very sticky issue of hiring and keeping talent in this industry. WAHVE (Work At Home Vintage Experts) recognized that this was an issue years ago. As baby boomers started to transition out of full-time work, the founders saw years and years of specialized experience simply leaving the insurance industry and the gap that would follow. Now, they are like a dating service for agencies in need of solid, seasoned talent. Listen along as Rick takes us through top hiring practices, ways to align remote work with what you need in person, and how to get the right remote talent for your business.
Jen chats with Rick Morgan to talk about his energy industry journey, starting in the 70's gas crisis, and his passion for passing his wealth of knowledge to the next generation.
Earlier this year, Seattle-based cybersecurity firm ExtraHop made headlines when the company was acquired by Bain Capital Private Equity and Crosspoint Capital Partners for $900 million. Despite the deal, which closed in July, co-founder and Chief Technology Officer Jesse Rothstein told the Business Journal ExtraHop is still considering an IPO. ExtraHop offers network detection and response (NDR), which allows clients to police their networks for bad actors. Its customers include the Home Depot and Ulta Beauty. Rothstein and fellow co-founder Raja Mukerji, ExtraHop's chief customer officer, were both architects at F5 Networks before founding ExtraHop. In 2016, Rothstein relinquished his CEO role to Arif Kareem and stepped into his current CTO role. The Business Journal sat down with Rothstein to talk about the company's future, the cybersecurity landscape and the power of bedtime stories.
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Sometimes God allows opposition to prevail. Pastor Rick Morgan explains why.
The post Rick Morgan – Tear Down the Wall! appeared first on Fourth Avenue COC.
With a sermon series on comebacks, we are excited to welcome Rick Morgan to preach in our series. Rick is the Pastor and Community Engagement Coordinator at the Jackson Interfaith Shelter. Rick’s work includes helping our neighbors in Jackson make a comeback from homelessness. Rick most looks forward to loving and serving the people of Jackson county, in part, because he sees the shelter’s work as living out Jesus’ call to serve, especially the less fortunate. Sermon preached by Rick Morgan, Pastor and Community Engagement Coordinator at the Jackson Interfaith Shelter, on Sunday, May 16, 2021 at the First Baptist Church of Jackson, MI. Learn more about FBCJXN at https://fbcjxn.org. Want to connect more with us, fill out our virtual connect card at https://www.fbcofjackson.org/connect/ How can we pray for you? Let us know at https://www.fbcofjackson.org/prayer/
This week, Bank Innovation sat down with Truist CIO Scott Case to discuss his efforts during the merger of BB&T and SunTrust. “As we’re working through the merger, we’re taking the opportunity to modernize as we go, wherever we can,” Case said. Meanwhile, banks all over North America are coming up with new ways to take in customer feedback and improve their mobile apps. Find this and more in today’s edition of the Weekly Wrap, featuring JJ Hornblass, Bianca Chan and Rick Morgan for the week ending Dec. 4, 2020.
The general view of Nineteenth Century European narrative is somehow incomplete. The literary critics who set up the canonical banquet table of the XIX century novelists made name tags for only a few: Balzac, Dickens, Dostoyevsky, Tolstoy, Flaubert, Zola and Henry James. Meanwhile writers of equal talent, like Benito Pérez Galdós —considered the most important fiction writer in Spain after Miguel de Cervantes— were not even contemplated as possible guests. In this episode, Germán Gullón, literary critic, writer and Professor emeritus of Spanish Literature at the University of Amsterdam, presents the life, work and significance of this outstanding figure in Spanish culture. With readings of Galdós by Heilet van Ree. Presented by Maria Jenell Nicolas Books and publications about Benito Pérez Galdós Nobelprize.org: Benito Pérez Galdós at the Nomination Archive Berkowich, H. C., Pérez Galdós: Spanish Liberal Crusader, Madison, University of Wisconsin, 1948. Bly, Peter A., ‘Galdós as Traveller and Travel Writer’, The Tenth Annual Pérez Galdós Lecture, Sheffield, The University of Sheffield, 2010. Dendle. Brian J., The Spanish Novel of Religious Thesis, 1876-1936, Valencia - Princeton, Princeton University - Castalia, 1968. Dupont, Denise, Realism as Resistance: Romanticism and Authorship in Galdós, Clarín, and Baroja, Bucknell, Bucknell University Press, 2006. Gilman, Stephen (1981), Galdós and the Art of the European Novel: 1867-1887, Princeton, Princeton University Press, 2014. Gullón, Germán, ‘Sentimental Genetics: The Birth of the Human Intimate Sphere (Miau)’, The Third Annual Pérez Galdós Lecture, Sheffield, The University of Sheffield, 1999. McKinney, Collin, Mapping the Social Body: Urbanization, the Gaze, and the Novels of Galdós, Charlotte, University of North Carolina Press, 2010. Pattison, Walter T., Benito Pérez Galdós, New York, Twayne, 1975. Percival, Anthony, Galdós and his Critics, Toronto, University of Toronto, 1985. Ríos-Font, Wadda C., The Canon and the Archive: Configuring Literature in Modern Spain, Bucknell, Bucknell University Press, 2004. Sackett, Theodore A., Pérez Galdós. An Annotated Bibliography, Albuquerque, University of New Mexico Press, 1968. Snow, C. P., The Realists. Eight Portraits, New Yok, Macmillan, 1978. Tsuchiya, Akiko, Images of the Sign: Semiotic Consciousness in the Novels of Benito Pérez Galdós, Columbia, University of Missouri Press, 1990. Walton, L. B., Pérez Galdós, London, Dent, 1927 English editions of Galdós’ works Trafalgar and The Battle of Salamanca [La batalla de Arapiles], translation by Rick Morgan, Bath, Brown Dog Books, 2019. Tristana, translation by Margaret Jull Costa, New York, NYRB Classics, 2014. Our Friend Manso [El amigo Manso], translation by Robert Russell, New York, Columbia University Press, 1987. Fortunata and Jacinta: Two Stories of Married Women, translation by Agnes Moncy, New York, Penguin, 1986. The Shadow [La sombra], translation by Karen. O. Austin, Athens, Ohio, Ohio University Press, 1980. The Disinherited [La desheredada], translation by Lester Clark, London, The Folio Society, 1976. Miau, translation by J.M. Cohen, London, Methuen, 1963. Torment, translation by J. M. Cohen, New York, Farrar Straus&Young, 1953. The Spendthrifts [La de Bringas], translation by G. Woolsey, London, Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1951. Saragossa: A Story of Spanish Valor [Zaragoza], translation by Minna Caroline Smith, Boston, Little and Brown, 1899. Doña Perfecta, translation by Mary Jane Serrano, with an Introduction by William Dean Howells, New York, Harper&Brothers, 1894-1895. Lady Perfecta, translation by Mary Wharton, London, T. Fisher Unwin, 1894. Marianela, translation by Mary Wharton, London, Digby, Long, 1893. Marianela: A Story of Spanish Love, translation by Helen W Lester, Chicago, AC McClurg, 1892. The Court of Charles IV [La corte de Carlos IV], translation by Clara Bell, New York, William S Gottsberger, 1888.
This week marked the first-ever Banking Automation Summit, which featured speakers from PNC, Wells Fargo, Truist, Citi and other financial institutions. The conference touched on topics like lending automation, KYC and AML processes, and optical character recognition. The Bank Innovation team touches on the key takeaways from the event in today's edition of the Weekly Wrap, featuring JJ Hornblass, Bianca Chan and Rick Morgan for the week ending Nov. 13, 2020.
While election officials continue to count votes in key battleground states, Bank Innovation editors revisited the 2020 election implications on fintech issues like bank charters, open banking and public credit reporting. This week also saw new numbers from Zelle and Venmo, with the two payments networks reporting third-quarter volume of $84 billion and $44 billion, respectively. Find this and more in today’s edition of the Weekly Wrap, featuring JJ Hornblass, Bianca Chan and Rick Morgan for the week ending Nov. 6, 2020.
Bank Innovation sat down this week with Christian Kitchell, Bank of America’s head of AI solutions who also leads Erica. “Ultimately, what we want to do is be able to get to a universe of one, which is to say, every client will have a unique experience based on their situation, their needs, their relationship with us,” he said. Startups, meanwhile, are targeting customer relations management and consulting functions with artificial intelligence. Ahead of Banking Automation Summit on Nov. 9-10, Bank Innovation editors spoke about the role of automation in financial services and gave a preview to some of the topics to be discussed at the summit. Find this and more in today’s edition of the Weekly Wrap, featuring JJ Hornblass, Bianca Chan and Rick Morgan for the week ending Oct. 30, 2020.
In this episode, I interview my Dad! We discuss his transition into living a healthier lifestyle and how that's allowed him to continue playing competitive baseball at 65 while feeling 10 years younger! Aside from the physical benefits of a healthier lifestyle, we also discuss how his cognitive performance has INCREASED! At the end, he gives his advice to anyone who thinks they're getting too old for something.
This week, Bank Innovation sat down with Don Cardinal, managing director of the Financial Data Exchange, to talk about the adoption of API-based data sharing. One way to get more small and mid-size banks to adopt API-based data sharing, according to Cardinal, is to get more core providers using the technology standard. Banks like Regions and Umpqua, meanwhile, are moving ahead with new technology initiatives. Find this and more in today’s edition of the Weekly Wrap, featuring JJ Hornblass, Bianca Chan and Rick Morgan for the week ending Oct. 23, 2020.
Sibos 2020 took place this week in a digital format. During a conference on robotic process automation, industry leaders discussed both the challenges and the opportunities of this technology. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, meanwhile, is trying to get charters into the hands of fintechs through a proposed payments charter. “There’s at least an acknowledgment among some of the members of Congress that there’s a real problem this is trying to solve,” said Brian Knight, director of innovation and governance at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University. Find this and more in today’s edition of the Weekly Wrap, featuring JJ Hornblass, Bianca Chan and Rick Morgan for the week ending Oct. 9, 2020.
Affirm is pushing further into new loans after an initial pullback during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic. “We feel there is in fact a broader product fit for e-commerce-based, point-of-sale lending across the entire consumer segment than what we used to see pre-COVID,” said Sandeep Bhandari, chief strategy and risk officer at Affirm. Fintechs like Nova Credit and CredoLab, meanwhile, are using new technology to reach underbanked consumers. Find this and more in today’s edition of the Weekly Wrap, featuring JJ Hornblass, Bianca Chan and Rick Morgan for the week ending Oct. 2, 2020.
It seems consumers need bank branches less than before. A Plaid study showed 80% of consumers now say they can bank without a branch. Banks like Citibank and Silicon Valley Bank, meanwhile, are launching new platforms out of internal incubators. “We have seen from the research we have done with our clients and investor partners that there is tremendous value in us developing new solutions and new businesses to meet their top needs,” said Melody Dippold, managing director and head of innovation at Silicon Valley Bank. Find this and more in today’s edition the Weekly Wrap, featuring JJ Hornblass and Rick Morgan for the week ending Sept. 18, 2020.
Banking and fintech leaders came together for the fully virtual Bank Innovation Build this week. The conference featured speakers from Wells Fargo, Ally, TD and more, as well as a fireside chat with Vanessa Colella, chief innovation officer at Citi and head of Citi Ventures. Discussions revealed that banks and fintechs alike are not slowing down their innovation operations during the COVID-19 pandemic. In this edition of the Weekly Wrap, Bank Innovation editors Bianca Chan and Rick Morgan discuss the major takeaways from Build with Royal Media CEO and BI Executive Editor JJ Hornblass.
Some of the biggest banks in North America are integrating accounting into their online banking platforms for small businesses. It’s a strategy that eliminates manual data entry for small business clients and helps the bank own more of the client relationship. Bank Innovation also spoke with JPMorgan Chase CIO Rohan Amin this week. “Artificial intelligence, quantum computing and machine learning will radically improve the way we can analyze data to make better business decisions and deliver contextually relevant insights to our customers,” Amin said. Find this and more in today’s edition the Weekly Wrap, featuring Bianca Chan, Rick Morgan and Youmna Hobeiche, chief growth officer at Troc Circle, for the week ending Sept. 4, 2020.
Weekly Wrap: Credit card customer satisfaction falls, and tech jobs move inland Bank Innovation EditorsAugust 28, 2020 Customer Experience, Payments, Premium, Video Image via Pixabay Customer satisfaction with credit card issuers has dropped since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic due to card terms and a lack of communication, according to a report from J.D. Power. Tech jobs, meanwhile, are popping up outside of traditional hotspots like Silicon Valley and New York. A report from Mendix indicated counties in New Jersey and South Dakota had the biggest gap between developer jobs and available talent. Find this and more in today’s edition The Weekly Wrap, featuring Bianca Chan, Rick Morgan and Michael Seaman, CEO and co-founder of SwipeSum, for the week ending Aug. 28, 2020.
American Express and Kabbage made headlines this week with reports the card company is looking to acquire the fintech for $850 million. Industry thinkers point out Kabbage could provide AmEx with a strong technology platform and the ability to reach new clients. Big banks, meanwhile, spoke with Bank Innovation about the spikes in mobile adoption they are seeing since the pandemic began. Find this and more in today’s edition of The Weekly Wrap, featuring Rick Morgan and Jeffrey Tower, vice president of marketing and business development at ChargeAfter, for the week ending Aug. 14, 2020.
Fintech funding rebounded during the second quarter. According to a report from CB Insights, funding increased 17% quarter over quarter to $9.3 billion from $7.9 billion in the first quarter. Fintech lenders, meanwhile, are trying to gain deeper customer relationships with bank accounts, while big banks are working to make their voice chatbots conversational. Find this and more in today’s edition of The Weekly Wrap, featuring Bianca Chan, Rick Morgan and Arcady Lapiro, founder and CEO of Agora Services, for the week ending Aug. 7, 2020.
Varo Money officially announced today it is shedding the “banking startup” title, as the company has finally received its banking charter after a three-year journey. Whether more fintechs will follow suit remains to be seen. “A banking charter comes with capital requirements and regulatory oversight that will not be appealing to all fintechs,” said Julie Hill, a professor at the University of Alabama School of Law who focuses on banking and commercial law. Startups Remitly and TransferWise, meanwhile, scored big funding rounds and boosted their valuations. Find this and more in today’s edition of The Weekly Wrap, featuring JJ Hornblass, Bianca Chan, Rick Morgan and Patrick Kandianis, CEO and co-founder of Quatromoney, for the week ending July 31, 2020.
Banks may be losing their edge when it comes to CX, at least according to a new report from Sitel Group. “While the retail industry quickly implemented practical online solutions such as click and collect to meet changing customer needs, banking and financial services fell behind,” Sitel Group said in a financial services industry snapshot of the report. U.S. Bank, meanwhile, reported during its second-quarter earnings that 77% of its customers are using digital channels. Bank Innovation also sat down this week with Chris Tremont, executive vice president of virtual banking at Radius Bank, to discuss the bank’s technology roadmap. Find this and more in today’s edition of The Weekly Wrap, featuring JJ Hornblass and Rick Morgan, for the week ending July 24, 2020.
Credit unions are rejecting some of the big core providers and instead choosing startups to overhaul their technology. Royal Oak, Mich.-based banking software company Bankjoy has grown its customer base by 50% since the start of the pandemic. Point-of-sale lending, meanwhile, is continuing its rapid growth trajectory. Afterpay announced it is launching in-store capabilities this week, while Visa also made a move into the space, and MoneyLion announced plans to do the same. Find this and more in today’s edition of The Weekly Wrap, featuring JJ Hornblass, Bianca Chan, Rick Morgan and Johan Envall, vice president of sales and business development at COVR Security, for the week ending July 17, 2020.
Zelle is moving beyond peer-to-peer and pushing into business-to-consumer territory. “Not only we, at Wells Fargo, but Early Warning and its network banks have seen a significant increase in businesses using disbursements with Zelle,” said Michelle Ziolkowski, head of global payables in treasury management at Wells Fargo. Big banks, meanwhile, are adopting fusion centers to enlist different departments to work together to fight cybersecurity threats. Finally, INV Fintech startup gravityAI has launched out of private beta, and its two-sided marketplace for algorithms is "open for business." Find this and more in today’s edition of The Weekly Wrap, featuring JJ Hornblass, Bianca Chan, Rick Morgan and gravityAI founder Daniel Huss, for the week ending July 10, 2020.
This week, MBLM released its 2020 Brand Intimacy Study. Financial services ranked 11th out of 15 industries when it comes to emotionally connecting with customers. Citizens Bank, meanwhile, is transforming its technology core through a data-driven personalization engine. “We’ve created what we call a ‘data intelligence platform’ that pulls together information on our customers, but sometimes the analytics is the easy part,” said Beth Johnson, chief experience officer at Citizens. Find this and more in today’s edition of The Weekly Wrap, featuring JJ Hornblass, Bianca Chan, Rick Morgan and InterGen Data CEO Robert Kirk, for the week ending June 26, 2020.
I sit down with life long skateboarder, Rick Morgan, to discuss everything from skateboarding to politics to life. We discuss the importance of WCS sanctioning events and The Vert Series.
Ric Moore was a photographer at Playboy Magazine for over 20 years. His skills allowed him to be a part of the first ever rock concert for in the former Soviet Union in 1987. Ric has always followed his heart to find interesting career choices for himself from teaching at Oklahoma University, Playboy Photographer, student pilot and owner of his own plane, student of improv and stand-up comedy, and now a proprietor of a dispensary (RedBub Medical MJ) in the OKC area after learning the benefits of medical THC and CBD. RedBud Medical MJ FB Pagehttps://www.facebook.com/redbudmedicalmjdispensary/KBMD CBDhttps://kbmdhealth.comGut Check Project Connecthttps://gutcheckproject.comAtrantilhttps://lovemytummy.com/spoonyNancy husband and wife may kiss the bride connectivity care whenever you need video chatting with the doctor right from your phone so I don't need stitches thank you Dr. United healthcare health plan benefits may vary well good check project with your host Dr. Ken Brown hi Eric regularly had Jeff Collins on the board Chef Patrick somewhere back there in the booth and here at the GCP we all check our ego at the door and nothing is off the table it now episode 11 can I do today episode 11 I think if we ever use that model of nothing is off the table today show is really going to demonstrate that I think were to go all over the place today then no joke I really hope that the audience has been growing the emails that keep coming in and what they see today is that we know we would talk science talk health they were taught a lot of fun we that we had some great shows about charity getting back feeling better today it's, laughter is the best medicine yes so this is our guest today it's super interesting guy before we even begin talking about that I want to have a riddle for you a riddle riddle okay I do you know what a Playboy photographer the grounded pilot comedian and medical marijuana all having, they are hard to major in there are hard major in but that's not the answer okay I don't know what the answer is yes Rick Moore is going to solve the riddle for nice nice he brings back and brings all that together take schedule around the nuked a new marker that we gave in the the Josh of some trades instead of the jack of all trades show the Josh of some trades he is is mediocre at everything that's awesome if you want to be entertained today to be a great show Rick Moore brings well he brings lot energy he's got some fantastic stories and well I think will be will be captivated I hope that we stay on top but what's awesome is that a guy like this she's been watching several shows and he has expense with stem cell yes she got his pilot's license and we got a pilot on events then select but on then of course Rick is now actually the owner of Redbud medical MJ in Oklahoma City just opened it and like a true entrepreneur that is doing things he just jumped in with both feet and said sure I'll get my license I need a girl license to get a grow license and now he's got this dispensary called Redbud medical MJ and what's amazing about it is he actually is the first dispensary to be carrying my baby up front you and our CBD KPMG health CVD the only physician recommended CBD available right now amazing and Rick is already a mighty big fan a rec.to what this kind can experience I feel like that I kind of already know not him so much because of the journey of doing just a bunch of different things it's kinda cool to meet somebody else who's like by doing this and now like doing that because it's it's a lot of fun there's not a whole lot of is not a whole lot of podcast or broadcasting training in anesthesia school yet and I saw him walk in with a big cup of coffee so you want to listen to the rest of the show because what we ADD people are severely caffeinated something function happily, hey I J I am ready for erected to join us here and hit the bottom of the hour but first I Screwed up last week we start up the show by saying that we were going to develop a contest and yes Martha Karen James several others I get your email we didn't make good on the contest there were going to create so were going to do at this time but I love the fact we had people email to maybe just email trick in the comfort of the Contessa so here it's we thought about it delight when hundred dollars hundred dollars that's very important I love doing things when and when it takes very little effort in this is all that you have to do so here's our contest step one gut check project go to YouTube search gut check project you'll find our channel deal you'll see little blue microphone says KPMG on the top so go to YouTube go to the gut check project channel step two subscribe subscribe to the gut check project all that does it doesn't cost you thing it basically just means every time we have a new episode and publishes it goes into your YouTube account you always be made aware hey there's an episode here that you may want to check out step three just take a screenshot whether you do with your phone over the do with your computer just take a screenshot and save it somewhere you hang onto it and I'll get to that here in just a moment so step number four you just go to get check project.com you click connect send us a message and I made a little drop down that says I subscribe to GCP that's all you have to do send us a message say hi say hello love the show whatever you wish to do and then you send that message so alright so that what step step five below what we are five steps of five step five steps to win step five just repeat that same sequence with iTunes so you get you to you got iTunes you just can subscribe to the gut check project on both of those sent as an email saying that you didn't and that at the end of June to randomly select five winners five winners five winners they will all receive the fantastic newly released only physician recommended branded CBD KB MD CBD whether you want natural flavor or sentiment doesn't matter what's the going value of that retina MSR money is actually $89 we have it for 79 but they get it for free just stop there my excluded from entering this does this sound like a really good thing you've Artie subscribed event but he simply just subscribe and then you're already entered to win E and you get to tell us do you want natural or sentiment and then that's one month supply one supply right there and then you also get a one month supply about Sean Teal packaged sent to you just are saying thanks and don't stop there you want to enter a few more times have your kids do the same thing have your spouse your friends your parents whomever just have them subscribe to gut check project channel on YouTube and iTunes go and sin is a message through such a project.com you'll see connect send us a message and then once we have all of those we can't wait to welcome our new and growing family to the gut check project I love that I think it sounds like a great thing so for us ADD people let's walk to the five-step superquick Subic number one what is go to YouTube and tried to get check project channel number two what is subscribe number three take a screenshot with your phone or computer number four go to gut check project.com click connect and send us a message that says I subscribed and number five repeat the same steps as iTunes why you have to say that picture is if we select your name were just going to send you message and say hey you one since you picture send that picture you got and that's it and share with everybody share with anyone so there's probably people out there that know one or the other trying to lure CBD limited white super important have both at the same time we found out that the polyphenols and all trying to actually help raise your own endo- cannabinoids so these two work together CBD trunk he'll go hand-in-hand because they help each other out so if you want these people that scared of losing I have a way that nobody can win 100% of the time how's that wealthy go to love my Tommy.com/spoony yes putting coats poorly you get a huge discount on our front field so there's another contest that you're guaranteed to win every time every single time you do that and you get the benefits of polyphenols to include exercise recovery to include gut health brain health and while you there go to KB MD health and get yourself a bottle of CVD easy enough Deacon everyone's a winner if they just follow the steps it's really all it is so why don't you take us out of contest mode and tell us a little bit about what's going on in the brown household in the Brown household so this past weekend me and Lucas traveled to balmy Houston for a big turn big tennis tournament Pollyanna super proud of him he actually won the whole thing I love you and I mean there's we that's the beauty of tennis you get out there loaning you you win with grace and you lose with grace and this time you know fortunately pulled off anyone I did get my first taste of what happens when the monsoon shows up to Houston from drive 20 like 3 feet of water in a second that with this with your driving and just started coming down the like oh my goodness now I see why people talk about flooding in Houston it's like a bowl just collects everything with the street literally was a foot of water with only 15 minutes with nuts Houston people are tough that's not even the first time is even happened I mean inches it seems like that's every few years they take on a serious flight was just two years ago they had to Harvey right yeah me that was now get this wrong so we would've correct rebels like over 50 inches of rain in just five hours or something that is not how many homes were washed away crazy this is crazy I mean that kind of puts everything in perspective you know we we worry about the day-to-day digital little annoyances but it would stuff like that happens it's puts all in perspective the year that that Marine I moved from Houston area we lived in league city it did it flooded a maybe a month after we had left there and deed the home that we had in Lake City was I think two and half or 3 feet in the water and the I remember there was a story about Ewa of a worker in one of the high-rises downtown happened to me in the basement just does doing what she was doing and is she was leaving the water came so fast that she tried to basically leave 00 and elevator Mencius it's wild how quickly and there really was a close to sea level to just flood so fast it really does but so would it was awesome to see Lucas when that it was Mother's Day as well we were for your good the gift to his mother was winning this tournament so my daughter was also playing in the terminal so so it was a big tennis we jump to the brown household she did well didn't win it but Jill did well always growing process so what happened in the rigor household so for both of my boys both active add both of them had a basketball tournaments last weekend one of them was was outside of Fort Worth in Mansfield and the other was all down in San Antonio so Marine I had already committed to packing up and enrolling with the other the old one down to San Antonio go see gauge plate and my mom was gracious enough to accommodate getting Mac back and forth his games over the weekend and dad they both both played great and base well engaged in the clinical sure to win their tournament I think Mac was one game short of when there's also but again just another great round of a basketball for both of them but it is I did not like they don't really enjoy it when you have come the big family holiday or some it's recognizing you got that because it's you want to bounce things you want they want your spouse to be able to enjoy the time with both of her kids and then at the same time you want to be able to touch base with your mom so my boys you said well we're just going to arbitrarily move Mother's Day to Monday and they ended up selecting a they got Demaray some fresh oysters we had tuna steak we had some great vegetables the life is gluten-free and so we went got some great gluten-free dessert her to enjoy she had a great time and they are all going to go ride go carts together as is mom and boys said this coming weekend so this will be the activity my mom and I going to meet for dinner we actually haven't had our exchange yet so I think they were going to get this weekend and then but as a family what were doing I think you're doing and also his generosity feeds old generosity feeds that's us we could have a small leaking yeah baby bathwater member right deadly rockabilly were going to go and Ron Ron is put together a fantastic service where he goes to different communities and helps people feed the needy in the area and you just come together if you are a company that's giving of your time or just a family you can go participate you put in some hours in the morning packing meals getting stuff together raising money to feed people the need to eat and signed up down so that's I told her that that was actually on this week and that's really awesome giving back that's important to you absolutely Ron of mod pizza Ron so it's can't I can't wait to see everyone this week and on Saturday that's really awesome I was you jump into my science article which is all about CBD and depression is really cool and something picks me this news article it's all over the news right now you may be seeing it where it says study skipping breakfast increases risk of heart disease by 87% so if you're someone out there and you're getting on Huffington Post are you looking at USA Today or Fox News or something the study came out now I it so happens that I follow a guy that I really respect Peter Addie a cardiothoracic surgeon really cool blue doors on Joe Rogan all the time and you know he's somebody that lives he lives the same way that that I like you look at the data he says this appears to work this doesn't he is a big proponent of circadian rhythm eating which is what Saturn handled it all his research on its we got great data to show that actually eating within a restricted time widow is much healthier for you ship builders like history office because I'm looking at this and I got to thinking that looking back Peter Addie actually sent a blog out this morning on this and the origin of breakfast is the most important meal of the day we ever told that before I've heard a lot that was actually generated by General Foods in 1944 for the launch of grape nuts how that worked like okay guys here's the problem we have an awful tasting cereal it's like chili rocks yeah but you know it's the it's the bosses to the came up with that we have to figure way to get people to eat this crap so how do we do it let's launch a campaign that says breakfast is the most important meal the day and it's Doc so these news outlets there picking up on this study right here and when you actually look at it there doing the same thing that we discussed about other types of studies like when I looked it retrospective analysis of this is a study of a study yeah so what they did is they looked at a it was a large with colored prospective cohort study where they have been following the same group of people for years and years and years and they looked at them after 19 years and then decided what they died and then I looked in the on the questionnaire somehow that questionnaire did you eat breakfast did you not a breakfast so those that ate breakfast apparently lived 87% decrease in mortality those that breakfast so it's really funny what they didn't discuss so this is one of those examples were it's like everything I get it these websites and stuff you have to grab your attention chair they have to sit there and do this little is the resume read anything the studies want to be dramatic so that they get published so what they did is they looked at this cohort of people 19 years later and it also Eric Rieger dies 19 years from now it's like to be breakfast yes no oh wow he lived X money is more sure they didn't they tried to account for extraneous factors with a column but yet was I will that just means a lot of things what they did note is this this is pretty funny those that didn't eat breakfast tended to be unmarried okay smokers heavy drinkers and come from low income areas it did this is not apples to apples to know it's not that's why you picked me off dad because these things come out I've got data now I'm personally I'm a circadian rhythm theater meeting that I try and wait at least 12 hours between turning on my digestive system sure so I believe that based on section pandas data that is really good that intermittent fasting essentially this is what it's called also but trying to do it through circadian rhythm meeting let your body shut down but it wake up then you can feed it for instance if you eat about four hours before you go to bed melatonin starts to rise a little bit and it turned your pancreas off when you eat you stop that process right so there's a reason why when we were cavemen you would quit eating at a certain time because there is no sun you will find the food our bodies are built to do that so then we know that there's all this incredible data Melanie Avalon who does the intermittent fasting intermittent fasting progesterone on the broadcast which you can ask you back on here really really soon I was really absolute love that girl yes she's awesome that is a great example we have people out there that are looking at the science but nobody's publishing it's not going on Fox news here is the worst part this is published in the Journal of cardiology that is garbage and that's it that's a garbage approach to add to really sensationalize that the piece in the it appears to me you may as well say that study reveals that Ted serial killers at one point were 10 issues I mean seriously that's it that's the only application is no control well it's it's it's it's so frustrating because all the good is looking back when you have people out there that are currently doing the science right now right when you look at that you know what quite honestly I don't even need science only 90 as I know that Hugh Jackman got ready to be Wolverine by doing intermittent fasting and that's proof he's just man we saw ejectment so you know he got yet link so what's what's interesting is that they'll even get into the actual relative risk so healthy users they didn't analyze like what people were eating for breakfast I made in any of yeah that's really important to and so remember this is General Foods and so it's like old we go back to eating lucky charms in the morning is the study says that some people do want to decrease my mortality by 80% 87% when you actually get the numbers in the study if you look at the relative risk the relative risk and those that ate breakfast was 10.7% those that didn't 12.2 so it's a it comes into you know it's the quick bake type thing that's not all is so let me ask you so that listeners can have a little bit of a take away if somebody does want to continue to eat breakfast and obviously I think what we were saying here is if your intermittent faster and you wait until certain time of day the evidence doesn't show that there's anything wrong with that whatsoever and then the other thing to take away is there there are those who do like to still eat breakfast I'm actually one of them I could move my window up of when I eat during the day that's kind of mimed my window not at that were never adjusted but what would you recommend that somebody start off the day of eating it's obvious I gotta be great Mr. Lucky charms, could you also let's yeah I mean I don't know it's the General Foods woman came up with that statement right sure I'm trying to get little label and I'm thinking is that on cocoa puffs is that on fruity pebbles right is cookie crisp they have a serial when I grew up cold cookie Chris sure hoping you went anywhere either still here yeah that's right Orton frosted flakes frosted it's not it's not Angel notes on Angel hair that's on the sugar but I made it but it it's it's right and I thought about that not that long ago about how many bowls of cereal is a kiddo.put away we all ate cereal I don't think a thing about it in the what was it the Capt. crunch berries eat me save all the berries in the end and then and then you yeah you take out the berries down the certainty of your slurp up the milk as it takes great was all baited and sugar and then even though you did the roofer your mouth run from Cap'n Crunch dull beat up, like it cannot get good heart, we have to crunch good hurt was wrong liking talk I haven't had great cereal my house now but it's it's it's weird that we are all conditioned to think that that was all okay and really looking back at it change the way that I consume breakfast in the morning for years I don't get fatigued I'm not starving by the time lunch comes round either on the bacon and eggs coming out yet so let's meet when I sit and think about this and unfortunately I think that when you have the Journal of American cardiology putting this out there and I get it somebody took a lot of time to look at the data link yet but the data says that some like yeah but the responsible news outlets are not sharing it the way that should be just exactly right and when we sit on top of this it's not just its breakfast it's what you eating for breakfast because remember what happens is when you have a highly absorbable carbohydrate sugary sugar sugar is a pro-inflammatory thing which is everything in moderation that's cool carbohydrates are dark are good for you but what happens is you eat it and this is required I discussed this with my patients all the time the sugar gets absorbed your pancreas sees this rise in trigger goes oh I need to produce some insulin and insulin slowly rises to match the spike but then that gets absorbed right away so your sugar drops but your insulin is a hormone that folks around and it's your body feels bad now and then it becomes a cycle of I need to get something me now because I don't feel good and then you eat that doughnut literally the worst thing you could do is eat a glazed donut a cup of coffee because the coffee actually turns on your metabolism you metabolize that don't quicker you have that spike insulin horrible things when people tell me that the likable man I've really tried to greeted in sugar but I really I I have hypoglycemia no you don't writer John of hyperglycemia what you have is a correct response to the sugar that you're eating so insert their name all the cereals I remember absolutely crashing in grade school but crash sure yeah 10 o'clock to strong lawful yeah if your bid if you ever being honest and you had a high sugar breakfast as a kid and he think about how much you wanted to get to lunch both to relax and then taking more food there really wasn't natural but I had I knew no better in all we got one minute one minutes giving to add to that study just to say that next week the one that I really went deep diving into which is supercool so if you know anybody that has depression or anxiety to the next week as I want to review a just published article where it looks at how CBD on the cellular level convict your depression that's fantastic in any course you have any questions that you'd like to I have answered a CBD and depression same thing K BMD health.com go to connect submitted so let's start start the process where people have Artie, taken the liberty of posing some questions so here in about 20 seconds we are going to be joint here the next half-hour by Rick Moore be prepared for some great stories of pilot a photographer for Playboy and entrepreneur hilarious guy we will see you here in about two awesome if you are trying to quit drinking or doing too many drugs listen to me you don't know me and will never meet I had a problem like you want I drank and used a party a little too much till it got out of control and almost ruined my life I realize I needed help to fix my problem before totally destroyed me if you tried to fix your drinking and drug problem and you know you can't do it alone you need to call the national treatment advisors they'll immerse you into a 30 day program to replace your old habits with new habits and totally change your life and if you have PPL private health insurance the entire program may be covered fix your problem right now before it gets any worse get clean call now and learn more 800-296-1252 800-296-1252 800-296-1252 800-296-1252 never forgotten apparel is more than just a premium women's and men's clothing line it's a movement to remind us to wear American-made and serve those who serve us our heroes never forgotten apparel gives 20% of their total sales to nonprofits that support homeless veterans and off-duty firefighters and 50% to individual veterans and firefighters in need nationwide checkout never forgotten apparel.com use promo code Matt and ATT and get 15% off your purchase Dr. Kim Brown here a host of project with my cohost Eric Rieger I see in my practice that I'm trying to is a whole lot more than just loading product yes it is a whole lot more than just exploding because the polyphenols if you find in trying to think of these polyphenols do these polyphenols help you have more energy and polyphenols are great sounds like it's to help a lot more people than just loading go to let my family.com/commercial value of money on on the talent those guys need training like no other we are back how their second half-hour to my right now is Rick Moore and as we dubbed him the Josh of some traits yes so Rick Moore we vote thank you for sending over your resume there's a few things that are really impressed with Rick Moore written or is the only man to ever make a pancake on a waffle iron thank you impressive I heard that you counted to infinity twice it was tough but you know I just kept going and I power through it that what I thought was impressive but that that time that you beat the sun in a staring contest it you know my eyes are there little itchy now actually they are but I was impressed earlier when you came in but because I did not know this when written or enters a room he doesn't turn the lights on he turns the dark off I say Luke I'm your father backwards in my mind and yeah that's how it works so is also known as he's written which you know what I've always wanted to say that Rick Moore bench pellet just a little bit about who you are well okay I I'm a little modest I never go out like in a situation and say oh you know what I'm a Playboy photographer I never do things like that but it was something that I earned and I felt really strongly about was really happy about that was a very long-term goal and it's so important you know when you're a kid achieving little things so that when you're older you can focus on something and at your doctor your anesthesiologist you urinate think these are the same thing those things are long-term goals and it takes a perseverance to get their Playboy photographer it sounds all fun and great but it doesn't just you know people think wow you know I was in the grocery store line and somebody said hey by the way you want to be a playboy photographer as I Why not you know yeah that did not happen and the pilot I'm still it lets you going to bed because I've seen your pictures and it's really impressive when people hear that they just think oh is a playboy photographer but the reality is how to get into photography it's EA you're welcome to cut me off at any time but I started out when I graduated from high school wasn't sure what to do my grandfather became ill in California and I had no experience with this but my father promoted me to caregiver and so I went out and I took care of him as he was terminally ill with prostate cancer while I never really knew the guy and it was amazing we bonded together we had the best time to guy had all these Oklahoma sayings like breath like a bird on the grapevine the whistle and through the trip you know that Stan and Harold were you when you were doing I was 17 and and while turning 18 I turned 18 that summer and when he passed away my father had come out it became too much for me to really he went back into the hospital care facility and that I would just go visit him and my father came back in and after he passed my father gave me his camera and you know I think most teenagers there really looking for something like I want to play guitar nothing man no matter how many lessons I had nothing and different things like that you want to stand out in some way and for some reason the genetics that I received I had a technical side in an artistic side and at that time a film camera which is very different from a digital camera had certain hurdles that you had to you had to be able to fly over those and so my technical side was able to do that my artistic side for my mom just she gave me a natural eye for composition and immediately I broke something on the camera there were no instructions it was completely manual no light meter so I would just go and ask every camera salesman I confront why did the picture not work and it was a great conversation as well it was very interactive and my mom gave me any of them, that maybe this camera was really old special know you know what I think it's a great path because the problem with of and it the incredible cameras of today they just taken pictures the most important thing about photography first is your eye and some people can just you know the cameras doing so many things automatically for them they have a great eye but when you have to do everything yourself you really have to look at what light is doing and what shadow is doing and those are what make a great photograph of flattering photographs and unflattering photographs to dramatic photograph a flat boring photograph and so by starting from that basic foundation where I met the guy that shot a lot of the Marlboro ads okay and in his talk he he doesn't use a light meter he just used those sheets that came with a package of film and he knew light so well he knew the military it was F-16 enough 125 why do I need a light meter that's what it is file and that's consistent every single day that it's sunny at that time a day is always the same exposure on that he so so what was your first pay did the photographer wow that was so long ago you know what I did was then we didn't talk about any of this but I worked on my Masters at OU and something that was more astounding to a friend of mine we went on a trip to Columbia's I taught his friend in college I was an instructor is also working on massacres that he didn't care anything I find always get a be saying the Playboy thing all the time never mention because this is my buddy Rogers Prof. in college while what a professor I was an instructor but that was an awesome awesome experience of the whole communication thing is awesome so when I left that instead of going on in that direction becoming a scholar which would've been ill-fated I went towards my dream of photography I started assisting in Dallas and I assisted for I thought it was gonna be probably two months was five years and that's where I got my photographic education there were tremendous incredible photographers in in Dallas and I focused on assisting the ones that had gone to a particular school in California there were two great schools the art center school design and Brooks and I assisted probably every photographer in Dallas that graduated from the Art Center in Sandy getting 80,000 of the two months and then suddenly now turns into five years what what what kept you going you know it was the knowledge and I was getting paid like I I'd I didn't realize I mean I was a lazy teenager you know I could lay in front of the television for a very long time that a problem the gap my mom even told her I said no mom I feel guilty and she had something written for me and in calligraphy the time you enjoy wasting is not wasted time and later in life she said I knew you were going to be a busy person and I knew that that time wouldn't always be there for you what was the baby bathwater lecture that that guy that I that I think is amazing that neuroscientists Jack yeah his name is Jack we heard this great lecture that she's a neuroscientist and him talking about how in the periods of what people would describe as boredom oh yeah Tom's genius so we don't allow ourselves to be bored we don't allow ourselves to sit there and let our minds wander like that if you've got a very creative mind know so there so sit in front to get what I would say that you lazy it just seemed like you were subconsciously planning what will happen you know what's interesting about that is in this current day an and in my I drive to South Texas nine hours every month for my mom and and come back and during that time most audiobooks but I I and there do not I'm not learning anything your science fiction but I've noticed that I used to just drive and just you know you'd blank out and then you'd start daydreaming and you start thinking of things I've been I've been pondering that a flight you know what I really need to have that time back where I'm bored and my mind wanders because that is it is really important that's where a lot of cool stuff comes from so you're doing this I mean ultimately I'm interested how would we go from there to be one of the best Playboy photographers when you're done covers you do that for years of where we go from there to actually get into be the the chosen one to do Playboy photography by the way let's go had mentioned something this is pre-Photoshop oh yeah no yeah yeah when I heard that yeah what we're talking a little earlier I was like oh yeah Photoshop did not exist they did have you know and the thing about being the difference between a Playboy photographer in a fashion photographer at that and that. In film fashion photographer could shoot a roll of 36 frames get to frames that were spectacular like the everything just came together and then the other 34 frames were mowed as a Playboy photographer what everyone has the screamo I'd love to do that the editors of Playboy and we do this seminar together now where I get to talk with him what he Gary Cole he was the head Playboy editor of all photography for like 35 years and he said you know it wasn't our job to be friends with the photographers it was our job to get the most out of them and so if I sent 1036 frames and one frame was out of focus or poorly composed or you couldn't she clearly see the eyelashes of the model under loop I was in trouble so a Playboy photographer had to be able to get 36 frames not two in focus composed perfectly lit and the only variations are what the model brought to it you know like our interaction and what you are saying about will how did I get to be a playboy photographer it has to do with the ability first somebody to become at ease okay in an awkward environment most Playboy models were not models they were girls next door I did a lot of the castings met a lot of the girls before hand they had never done anything like this shirt and so my longtime assistant and I as I was an assistant to a Playboy photographer we weren't serious onset we words trying to figure out who is going to get a date we were laughing we were focused on trying to do a great job in the model could she could feel that unit interviewing somebody with the cam you're getting the best out of them yes we were doing everything to support her make her feel safe and after a while you know we are cracking up the crew is cracking up makeup artist stylist we are all just this is our work and were comfortable with it and the model would kind of feel that and after a while just like you know okay I'm great I'm good with all this and that's very different from a guy with a camera trying to replicate those photographs of support they missed a couple thoughts come to mind and one of them is obviously that the guy with the camera has to be probably the center of great interaction received by the model so that they know they're having a conversation with the same person who has right the camera another one is whenever you take you back to when he said all 36 frames had to be on point essentially don't have anything out of focus so it sounds to me like whenever you are taking those you're pushing the button you wanted ever every single one of those was executed with purpose it wasn't a string of hold the button down and you hear the cheat sheet cheat sheet you have the camera it's this is a shot that I want I've got it I've got this person in their best present mode etc. make any comment to me I how do you Eddie commit to pushing the button and try to hit 36 and 36 times while the other thing you just mentioned about the focus this is pre-autofocus so yeah and so you are focusing on somebody you're involved in that dynamic and so it for me it I it's it's easy for me to have a conversation it's easy for me to operate a camera doing both is a bit of a stretch yeah and so that you know that something that I had to work on during those five years of being an assistant I assisted a Playboy photographer and I watched him and it was really funny because I would set up as lights I would do all this and and I thought okay have got this and then I would do my own test and I didn't have it and how do I not have this and he told me after about a year is very generous with me and he said I have a fudge factor I don't I don't go by the light meter I go by what I feel the exposure should be and he was really good at directing you know doing this multitasking and so I was able to learn that way you know by watching and listening do you feel like having to commit to each one of the pictures that you took we made our made you make certain that the conversation was far more personal because your just like he said you directing your helping them make this image exactly how you know that it's going to pass muster so the conversations really gone versus just standing there, losing some your personality hitting the button over and over again with with quote unquote throwaways which he didn't have you didn't want throwaways you wanted every yeah I couldn't have trouble right and end that I mean it's I'm not saying that lightly I got in trouble like I got you know people don't realize when a Playboy editor once the best out of you right it's not necessarily gentle because kits you can't have self-doubt either you have to be in the flow state is what I'm thinking like you have to get yourself in the in in a certain place because of your doubting of your letters that you like that it's going to show up that's the I think that's what's so impressive about why there's certainly world renowned photographers and everybody that has a camera trying to be one there's there's a gift there somewhere that when you know my father was a geologist and then he became an entrepreneur he didn't want to work for the man he wanted to do his own thing and he became a builder and real estate investor he could not understand why I wanted to be a photographer and unfortunately he passed away and 92 from a glioblastoma but he got to see me in the zone one time we were traveling to California together and we were at a rest stop and I saw something and it was very weird for anyone to see something in that environment and II went into the zone and he got to see and I didn't know he was seeing it after we got the car we started driving his like I I get I get it now want to be a photographer because I you were so in that you know and then he saw the photographs in the Bloom way it was not you note it wasn't what you saw with her neck at night what's what's in the frame how I exposed it and you member the exact feeling that you had when you're in that zone oh yeah describe it to everything else goes away I'd say it's kind of like meditation you know where I see what can be in that photograph but in the days of film you can't see what's going to happen and I like what separated the men from the boys and film photography is shooting negative film had a lot of latitude you could be off a lot shooting slide film or chrome film you couldn't be off at all and so I shot chromosome because that's why I aspired to shoot for a magazine I aspired to be one of those guys and that's what they shot when you were in that that. When you're in the flow state was it hot will look like what was there like how did you feel describe didn't you know what you wish and I can say this for my play wishes because it happened so often while I was shooting I wasn't hungry I wasn't hot I wasn't called I wasn't thirsty I was just in it after I finished shooting I was like after that had gone away for a little while that I was starving and I was tired and I needed to sit down and rest but while I was in that zone it was you know your your basic needs are met you know you don't need stuff the reason why I'm trying to get you to think of the exact moment in the mood that you were in we Eric and I were lucky enough to meet up with a guy named Michael burn off last week you were to ask you to in Scottsdale and she is a neurolinguistic programming expert oh interesting and opaque and when you are describing this or describing a time how many years it was how man that would've been like 1990 so 1990 you're describing it to me like earlier like it happened yesterday you have that memory burned sure thing one of the things about NLP is that I'm just learning this but this is what something I would get really good at because doing exactly what you just said you were in a flow state NLP has something called anchoring where what you do is you repetitively really feel that emotion whatever motion it is whatever motion you want to Tony Robbins does this every says he has his pre-stage warm up that's is anchoring routine so that he gets his he can increase or decrease as energy by doing a was called anchoring. So like that moment right there if you think about that really think about you to flow state and then do a physical movement to connect your brain to something people tap the leg to climb surface they do different things and you really believe it then you can train your brain to go into that flow state when you want it's really cool stuff but I sought they are unlike while the ability to do that will go that that's off-topic to get out so so that's what you do this which is always it's always that moment when a father is your maybe he was worried about you at all. To delete something she testing as he had been an amateur photographer and an amateur inventor and he was he became a father and he had to quit and put away childish things and focus on what he had to do to put food on the table her and he was a great guy great provider smart guy and I didn't realize how me and my friends he meant toward an eye I continue to run into it I would not of you know I ran into a guy that I'd seen in 20 years is out of never bought real estate if it not been for your father and you know it it that didn't happen for me until later in life where I wanted to pursue my own dream and my father was so loving and concerned about me that he went to other people to tell them to coach me on not becoming a photographer he wanted me to skip that step and go on to being an entrepreneur and to invest in real estate and a banker will president of a bank called me in young guy had a great camera system had a dark room outside of his house you know Rick I'm president of this bank I can afford any camera I want I can do photography on trips and you know what that's what you should do and I said my dad's been talking to you and and my dad was funny he would take vanilla from Mexico was pure vanilla then when you you can only get a chemical extract United States take out and give that all the bank tellers everyone at the bank everyone knew him by his first name and you know he was just a great guy with camaraderie and stuff I guess only ask a favor is no problem but I was like yeah how's my dad it's you do you have any regrets about spending the first part of your career doing photography for the other sheriff which ties into the other guest we've had on the show know know it was you know you have these different dreams or goals I just saw on on Facebook they ran a picture in Brownsville of this hotel that I was no longer just browse a lifeguard there and my brother is a lifeguard so I wanted to get sick I gotta be a lifeguard and then a friend of mine Greg had taught while he was working on his Masters like I want to do that and then it's like that happen for me and it was I never thought I'd really want to teach although my mother was a teacher there was one of the most rewarding experiences of my life it was just awesome photography specifically as a Playboy photographer you know you and I we have spoken a little bit about this before about I had stage fright really extreme stage fright from my mom wanting to endear me with cultural foundations evinces front like you do like to speak in public you did note that she put me on tap and ballet at four I had a rather high but the entire time I did not order aside and so you know I'm I'm dressed in this feather cost tailored to his word what you're becoming a photographer you can step in and yeah yeah so my God Sadie was a big auditorium at University of Oklahoma and four years old four years old and I remember this I do not enter this feeling I've been fighting this feeling my entire life so I've done a lot of other things but yeah the curtain opens ears like for me as a kid it look like a thousand people I didn't either never learn the dance I did know a recital was and so the girl next to me is so sweet I remember that she was turning and she was trying to coach me to turn saws turning out of step with everyone else her and my brother yelled way to go Rick Meyer audience burst out laughing so whatever I would do anything from then on it that always happened so it like I was at a Christmas play in a rural school and they had real animals and I was a shepherd was the third Shepherd and I had a real cheap in my sheep it turned out was a jackass and didn't want to move this is the nativity scene I think yeah okay yeah everyone's on stage course of third Shepherd and I'm up there wrestling with that she and I had to grab it by its front hooves and pull it down the whole thing so people are already laughing I had to pull it and wrestle it on stage and put my foot on it while they're singing silent night and it's saying is going to be you know sent to slaughter something and yeah everyone cracked apples like yeah this just does not go really well just think about that the debt looking up when you're describing this you have this memory that you can never shake the movie central intelligence with the rock now no well basically the Rockies massive but she overcompensated his whole life because of one bad experience and whenever he gets insecure he think about that that's not what that's exactly what you had significant stage fright and is that the reasons that's crazy but because that you have no problem with that of a creep up when you were both models and stuff like that when your basement and Saiz did the camera allow you to never have the feeling I didn't experience it one on one or with groups I experienced it when I would step on stage be in front of a microphone be in front of a camera that kind of thing when I was going to have to stand up and and that's why I started doing classes acting classes improv classes well I took the acting class and it was way out of my league and a really great person and there said you know what I know this great acting coaches names Don shook and he has a talent for someone like you I know that feeling that he did he really did pretty good actor for a photographer yeah whatever were trying to do different business things like that's not bad for about Dr. CRA does almost adequate training is is you make a great website that will help you that's Larry's so obviously you are you are looking for something now to move beyond photography we got about a minute here till this segment ends will take it over but is going to be a lot more to come Rick with the way that you move from photography to where you are today so how many years did you do the photography with the shop for Playboy for 20 years and then while I was doing that I was also free to shoot commercial worksite shot commercial work all over and was it just a great run is really you know fantastic career in those 20 years when the technology started to change how does that make you feel you know I think all of us were just thinking it was amazing and and fantastic but it actually killed the whole business of being a you know the the professional photographer role that I got to have kind of no longer exists but it was great while it lasted and I there are new avenues people are inventing new things you know but it's a it's a new world than the availability of digital images just on the line it online how people can find your how just you just change them is change the landscape just Russell is fighting a shot I uploaded my computer I press auto enhancement to the redeye out you can just do only that this concert will talk about later 30 years ago I shot it on film with the camera didn't have autofocus and I was at guitar convention and in Dallas watching the guy stand in front of everybody very rudely take pictures and watching the screen of the camera as it automatically focused exposed and balanced and the images were great that's the end of this half-hour Rick is going to tell us a little more about moving on to some other greener pastures this is the only 24 hour take anywhere platforms dedicated to food and fun clear spoony this hour from Townhall.com, where now learning more about Pres. Trump soon to be released immigration reform plan would shift to favoring immigrants with high level skills degrees and job offer instead of those with family already in the US officials say now get roughly 2/3 of all grade cards just 12% have been awarded based on merit the plan would also end the diversity Visa lottery which offers green cards to people from countries with historically low rates of immigration to the US the proposal will focus also on beefing up border security that's correspondence Akamai gone another of the president's judicial nominees has been confirmed Korean immigrant Kenneth Lee taking a seat on the ninth US circuit Court of Appeal is a conservative constitutionally minded nourished just kind liberals complained the presence been packing the courts with may feel a little lonely in his role his college writings critical homosexual sex and affirmative-action foretell a career in which you will often be at odds with the liberal still in control of perhaps the most progressive court in all the land buying new report New York City's mayor says he's in the race Bill de Blasio running for president Democrat announced his bid with a video released by his campaign early Thursday morning in announcing his candidacy de Blasio is seeking to claim a role on the national stage that is alluded him as mayor of the biggest US city the 58-year-old could face obstacles and distinguishing himself in a field crowded with left-leaning Democrats he also faces skepticism at home recent poll found 76% of New Yorkers say they believe he should not run Ken Lorman reporting on construction rose 5.7% last month led by single-family home building on Wall Street this hour the Dow is up 207 points yes and P 26 points higher the NASDAQ up 66 barley stories@townhall.com take the pain out of ordering your diabetic testing supplies with diet Thrive diatribe ships the testing supplies you need directly to you when you need them best of all with plans starting as low as 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800-245-0823 all right now that number again is 800-245-0823 are you tired of high cable TV rates sign up for dish today and get a $500 bonus offer while supplies last plus locking your price for two years guaranteed call American – your dish authorized retailer now 800-570-6630 800-570-6630 – 800-570-6630 offers required critical negation 20 from early termination fee instructions apply call for okay were back with the second hour of the gut check project episode number 11 we are joined with Rick Morgan to get back to his story here in just a moment quick reminder if you want your daily polyphenols go ahead and grab the world's only NSF approved for bloating and abdominal discomfort relief I tried deal you can do so@lovemytummy.com/spoony use code spoony to save a lot of money and in fact Dr. Ken Brown here knows a little bit about it what about trying to outrun feel so we all about trying to realizing that there is an unmet need in a natural solution to heal people's guts basically attributable our something like that or get bloated after you and now after the end of the science we realize are so much more to it because the polyphenols the same molecules that are in the Mediterranean diet they actually help do a lot of things and that one of them is decrease information information ultimately is the root cause of all problems so so well your bloated today or never you can always benefit from daily polyphenols and you can get your milligrams your daily milligrams of arch on TL's polyphenols and love my tummy.com/spoony use coats many disabled of money and by the way you scoots pretty this is this is this is a secret you win that's the contest yelled as spoony hundred percent chance you can win a giant discount hundred euros a winner every time nobody has written back into didn't work I note SPOONY definitely and remind you of the contest all all listeners out there don't forget you simply need to go to YouTube and find the gut check project channel subscribe screenshot it send to us it got check project.com that I subscribe and if we choose you name it is said they had to send us the screenshot you get a free Bala Voltron deal and a free bottle of KB MD CBD the only physician approved CBD on the market we were just really back to Rick right now we were just talking about the fact that due to a traumatic tap and ballet experience when you're four years old carried over and felt some significant stage fright we do know that CVD does this of the study on how about next week does help with both anxiety and depression I will take a little right now what you get back into it and talk about why you decided to take acting classes will and on that note I'm from the generation where you know we were given antibiotics like vitamins my vegetables came out of a can I have Nestlé's quick you know sugar the generation that's going on right now I will say my crap is happening my lot that's how I grew up and and so I didn't know what good biome was I didn't know anything about Pro probiotics I just knew that when I ate beans bad things happened and so when Bino came out I saw that I was in oh I was in a drugstore and my father and said if you ever find anything I love being sweeping still love me and so I got this bottle and I which the checkout stands, scared is kind of like buying something you kind of herb are embarrassed about and I I went up to the the check out is this older lady super nice intrapsychic disease work being no really and there was there is a lady behind me and I was super embarrassed and she goes you know what you could save 1/4 on this is supposed be no check whatever cashiers stand was 25 I was just turning redder and redder but that was at beginning and since then you know the altar until the CBD oil like more and more you know your gut is that's the foundation that's where everything happens and so my gut was a real mess and I heard part of the melatonin conversation I want to hear more that because I've had sleep problems and just the whole gut health is something that I didn't have for a long time and that's something that you know it it's it's really important well by us but we always say that all health begins and ends in the gut and I do want to say that we mentioned at the beginning of the show that you own Redbud medical MJ in Oklahoma City yesterday the first dispensary which carries my CBD and my baby up front feels that a right that's right you want to kill some got together is what we put these together if you wanted a little geeky about it given your clients command you like why so miss you like because gut health is really important because information starts in the gut and CBD decreases that but what upfront yield as the polyphenols yes raise your own Amanda mind which is your own endo- cannabinoid so it actually stops the enzyme that breaks down when we don't sleep we go through stressful periods this enzyme called FAA H goes up you actually decrease your own endogenous under cannabinoid so that's why they go together and that's actually how I got into the side to see beauty but that's if somebody comes in your store so this is a whole new world and the thing is Redbud is it's a medical MJ dispensary cannabis and CBD and trying to add we have people that you know it it it's not you know there's that perception about how it's this is all a charade to get high and it's not we have real people coming in with real problems we are not doctors you know and this it's so weird that this is this whole new field that the cloak is being pulled off of after 80 years and were all just starting and my former former girlfriend is a PhD in neuroscience and she's she's constantly when we have this conversation she's like Rick your nuts need of these this studies have not been done on this yet Mike yeah but it's happening you know this is happening without studies where things are happening in the store will talk about my manager's father whenever so my manager imagine if we actually had like a producer that was to stay on script my life is squirrel I so Christie her father and I've known Kristi and her family since the early 90s Christie is your partner in the business right she's my manager she and I dated in the 90s and she has her own and her sister's their own Playboy fame they were in a big pictorial and 97 for Playboy magazine and you know really really you know cool background in everything but her father was it a former Oakland city police officer and he was he waited way too long he was smoking a cigar sitting on his chair watching TV didn't go to see the doctor in time had stage IV esophageal cancer so stage IV means that it is already spread in the survival of that is pretty low so he was given he couldn't swallow anything day the facility but feeding tubes in forum and he hated the hated everything his mind wasn't clear at the time he wasn't cooperating he did one round of chemo and they sent him home and said you know what there's really nothing we can do for him and so Christie sisters took upon themselves to become his caregivers and through dispensary we were able to get him Rick Simpson oil and to get them CBD so let Eric explain what Rick Simpson will is because you're actually very knowledgeable in this Rick Simpson and my understanding is that Rick sits and basically came up with a protocol that is high concentrated THC light and so I think that his theory was that it was going to disable the ability for the either the propagation or the replication of cancerous cells and how they were to prove all that I'm not exactly sure but I do know that it's almost like distillate in terms of THC so just like you would take a liquor and you're starting with the raw material in the new course hafted cooking mash and then bright distilled down my understanding is basically Rick Simpson oil is just highly concentrated THC and then they use it for kiddos who have a really bad seizures all kinds of different things like that so the sisters basically put a few drops of that and CBD oil in a teaspoon gave it to them and were just like were not going to just let them die and after three days his throat started clearing and he was able to swallow his own saliva after for five days the THC kicked his appetite in an that some other stories that I'm aware of in my past oath of any way that works really well the THC kicks in appetite and and lowers nausea so he asked for a doughnut they gave him half a doughnut and he ate it then he asked for more I started feeding him so after two weeks he went to see the doctor didn't just saw the nurses he had gained 16 pounds bag weeks in two weeks I'll ask him what he was doing and he said while meeting I had Corona and fried chicken before I came in six is not the optimal diet but the sisters were just trying to give him whatever he wanted to eat and put weight on tonight, your weight gain which tells a lot to me from from a scientific standpoint so he gained that much weight naturally appear to time there is something that is very well known its tumor wasting syndrome the tumor itself actually uses up all the energy actually goes into a catabolic state that's how come people get cancer even if it's not a cancer of the esophagus will lose a profound amount of weight when you said two weeks first thing I thought of is that to shrink double the tumor the tumor wasting process was stopped it shrank by 50% while sure their measurements and they took the feeding tubes out and so Ito that's I don't have a background for measuring an Avis in a scientific way but you know things like acupuncture evolved out of a pragmatic approach and I think that's what's happening and it may have been happening in the past and we didn't know about it because a patient like that the doctor might ask him will have you do this when they can't say because in Texas a vague cartridge is a felony Rick Simpson oil highly concentrated telling a felony I mean that's not just sad to me that's criminal so we had to leave with addresses with joy Beckerman we talked about was Sean when he was on Christmas song Christmas song we've covered this a lot because when when you see something that powerful I see it in my patients when I the fact that until the farm bill passed technically CBD also help derive CBD which is a perfectly legal to what things were timeout that shut Patrick brought up was the fact that depression and anxiety and things have been increasing ever so through technology check Patrick through something out there he goes do you think that start happening when they criminalize the hemp industry and we quit putting it in food we quit because then we were losing a lot of those vital cannabinoids right well I myself you know we been talked about how cool it was for me to be a playboy photographer and all that that ended in 2011 the Chicago office was she was close down much like the movie the secret life of Walter Mitty Ben Stiller almost everything that happens that movie-shot in Iceland but you know I wasn't really the photographer character is much as I was also the Ben Stiller character or is always dreaming of doing things but everything that happens to them in that movie pretty much happened at the Chicago office was never fired I was never I didn't quit the office that I worked for ceased to exist and 300 people that made that work were no longer there and that happened my mom became ill my friend of mine that I as I became a caregiver for my mom that saw this happening I asked what your mom is sick with so memory problems dementia we try to get a proper diagnosis diagnosis she couldn't handle the die at that time to really tell us what it was and basically what that doctor was saying was just depressing us so my brother and I became her co-caregivers and my brother he's a very pragmatic guy and he took her off of one pharmaceutical after another until she was only on blood pressure so she takes I give her it set 369 Omega balance in a gluten-free waffle in the morning and put coconut oil on that she get CBD in her coffee she takes a vitamin shake it has everything in it is so she gets that everything I would add is that there was a study they came out with absorbable tumor with a 2 to 2 parties that have dementia and because to work itself is brutally absorbable right but there is there certain brands that actually cross the blood brain barrier and that actually show that the one group that took that had improved me
Most real estate investors want to use other people’s money (OPM). Why use their own, when they can use OPM to put into deals? Why risk your own money, when you can push it onto someone else? Find real estate investors willing to lend money, especially to flippers. Today, Clint Coons of Anderson Business Advisors talks about lending with Paul Jackson and Rick Morgan of Residential Capital Partners. Highlights/Topics: Expertise, knowledge, and relationships with investors and banks allowed Rick and Paul to offer a lending service to make profits vs. doing the buying and flipping themselves Accounting is the language of business; dollars are going out and coming in Residential Capital Partners: Originated in 2009, during the downturn when banks sold bad assets and took in Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) money We Buy Ugly Houses: HomeVestors attract new franchisees and grow its business; Rick and Paul use franchise to underwrite debt acquisition of single-family distressed paper Millenials want to rent, instead of buy a place Problems for Property Flippers: Hard money lender puts deal together; shock sets in when money for rehab isn’t available Residential Capital Partners offer consistent delivery, clear communication, description of how money is priced and structured, and do what’s promised Keeping the cash in borrower’s pocket is key to staying healthy in fix-and-flip business Residential Capital Partners primarily do cosmetic types of rehab loans Residential Capital Partners’ Loan Process: Citizens profit, protect, and act as collateral Why do flippers fail? First rule of business: Whatever happens, live to fight another day Take this to Heart: Paul and Rick want people to be profitable and successful Resources Residential Capital Partners HomeVestors Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) Trulia Zillow House Hacker HUD Clint Coons Anderson Advisors Tax and Asset Protection Event
Well after 3 tries Lori and I got it done! It's coming out a little late in the week, but talking with Rick makes it well worth the wait. ;-) We talk about Rubber from 2010. In this inventive twist on low-rent revenge flicks, a car tire named Robert rolls through the desert Southwest, using its strange psychic powers to blow everything up. But when Robert spies a gorgeous woman, he decides to take a chance on love. (Lifted from Netflix) Rubber - Trailer https://youtu.be/IVZ0B4iDS8w Kin Official Trailer #1 https://youtu.be/20VUDnKZvwU THREE BILLBOARDS OUTSIDE EBBING, MISSOURI | Official Red Band Trailer https://youtu.be/Jit3YhGx5pU VENOM - Official Trailer https://youtu.be/u9Mv98Gr5pY Lori's Crawling Chaos https://www.pressherald.com/2019/01/14/alien-looking-disk-of-ice-on-presumpscot-river-has-westbrook-buzzing/?fbclid=IwAR2bNNtKcseCNlHy1z6CY4qyuMwMXiBrCiklseM6-z3PYApZ7fDoKvHDbpc
So, it's a stretch to call this a Short Topic. Really it's just an excuse to talk to a friend I've never met in person, Rick Morgan. We talk a little about what it was like to go to video stores back in the day, and in usual form (for me anyway) the conversation goes all over the place, ending in us getting ready to talk about Rubber. Ric Radio https://www.facebook.com/groups/345897886265389/
House of Whacks What happens when the Mob takes over your podcast? Whatever they want to happen! It’s a new format for House Of Whacks, where Rick Morgan is being forced to place his show in the hands of some gangsters. Less of a podcast and more like a radio show, and a cast of fellow podcasting stars makes for an entertaining romp for you ears.THE SHOW MUST GO ON!! Guest stars: Dave Zee from The Exploding Heads Podcast, Joey Columbo from The Horror Mafia Podcast, Jamie J. Sammons from The ABC’s Of Hidden Horror, Dan Bone from The Podcast On Haunted Hill, the Wych from The Wych VS. The Doomsday Clock, and Mark Allison from The Hail Ming Power Hour. The post Rik Radio Archives:House Of Whacks Episode 7: The Take Over appeared first on Legion.
Join your host Duncan Under The Stairs discussing all things Horror on The Podcast Under the Stairs. This week Duncan is joined by Rick Morgan of Short Bus Cinema & Dude Looks Like the 80's to look at two movie he is bringing Under the Stairs because he knows how much I love Italian Genre cinema. So sit back, relax and get ready to listen to some bizarre chat about to lesser known Italian zombie genre fare in reviews of Zombie Holocaust (1978) & Burial Ground (1981). Intro – 0 - 3mins 25secs Introducing My Guest - 4mins 40secs - 13mins 20secs Zombie Holocaust - 14mins 45secs - 57mins 10secs Burial Ground - 58mins 5secs - 1hrs 39mins 45secs Closing Out the Show- 1hrs 39mins 45secs - End Closing Song - My Green Neighbour - Destrage The grading follows the Netflix rating style of 1 = Hated It, 2 = Didn’t Like It, 3 = Liked It, 4 = Really Liked It & 5 = Loved It Zombie Holocaust Rating: Duncan: 4 Ricky: 4 Burial Ground Rating: Duncan: 5 Ricky: 4 Thanks to Ricky for coming on the show. Our new A3 Baz v Horror Posters are available to purchase!! If you are interested in owning one then email podcastunderthestairs@gmail.com for details!! All prices include postage and packaging in special poster tubes with mail drops on Wednesdays and Saturdays each week until I'm sold out. Baz v Horror Poster: UK: £15 USA: $20 Baz v Horror & TPUTS The Void Poster COMBO UK: £20 USA $26 Paypal: gentik_tool@hotmail.com Check out the show on iTunes, TuneIn & on Stitcher Radio. The Podcast Under the Stairs is a proud member of Legion Podcasts. Please leave us feedback on iTunes, podcastunderthestairs@gmail.com and follow us on Facebook & Twitter.
This is podcast #2 of The Month of Maynagement Systems and we have industry veteran Rick Morgan who is the Senior Vice President of Aartrijk. Join this unscripted conversation between Jason Cass and Rick Morgan as they discuss why agents need to use an agency management system, and why everyone in the agency must be fully invested and involved in the process of their management system.