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Every day, with few exceptions, I eat a handful of nuts. Usually a combination of almonds, walnuts, pecans, cashews, and pistachios. And they taste good for sure. But I'm responding mainly to research showing that consumption of nuts is related to less chronic disease. In particular, eating nuts lowers levels of inflammation related to heart disease and diabetes, and may improve cholesterol levels among other benefits. So, I saw it as welcome news that someone has just published a book about nuts, all aspects of nuts, actually. Today we're joined by NPR, food Writer Elspeth Hay author of a new book called Feed Us with Trees- nuts, and The Future of Food. And I had no idea. Nuts were so interesting until I dove in a little bit. Elspeth has gathered stories from dozens of nut growers, scientists, indigenous knowledge keepers, researchers and food professionals. She writes that humans once grew their staple crops in forest gardens of perennial nuts, such as oaks, chestnuts, and hazelnuts in these species. Particularly important to the environment as well as to human wellbeing. Interview Summary Elspeth, thanks so much for joining us and for writing such an amazing book. Thank you so much for having me. And it sounds like you have the same habit as my dad. He makes sure to eat a little bit of mixed nuts every night, ever since I can remember for his health. Let's start by having you describe your book. Tell us about Feed us with Trees. Why did you write it and what's it about? I wrote it because I've been reporting on food in the environment for a long time, a little more than 15 years. And I had never heard anyone mention anything about eating acorns until a few years ago. And someone sent me a TEDx talk by a woman in Greece named Marcie Mayer, and she said, you can eat acorns. And not only that, but they're a super food nutritionally, and one of humanity's oldest foods. And I live in this giant oak forest that's protected on Cape Cod as part of the Cape Cod National Seashore. And I had always seen this forest as a sort of impediment to local food production, right? There's all this land that can't be farmed. And all that time, it turns out there was food literally raining down on my roof, underfoot in my driveway, and I just wasn't equipped to see it. The stories that I had grown up with hadn't mentioned that. And so that was a real eyeopener for me and I just couldn't stop thinking about it and I kept researching. So, have you started consuming acorns? I have, yes. I've collected them the past probably five falls and, you know, oaks do something called masting. Some years they have a really big production and some years smaller production. Some years I've gotten more than others. But I have started processing them at home and experimenting with different ways of using the flour. And I've also ordered online acorn oil. There are actually three food products that you can make from acorns. You can make starch, which works just like corn starch or potato starch. Thickens things. You can make flour and with some species you can make oil. It's actually a pretty diverse crop. That's so interesting. You know, I have a series of oak trees right outside my window and I never thought that they might be producing food I could consume. It's so interesting to hear your history with that. Yes, I mean I had no idea. And it turns out that actually acorns are very similar to olives in the way that they need to be processed. They're very high in these compounds that are very bitter, called tannins, just like an olive. I had the experience once of going to Italy with my husband, and we saw this olive grove and we thought, oh cool. Olives growing right here. And we picked one off the tree and he put his in his mouth and immediately spat it out and said, oh, that's awful. Tannins are not something that we want to eat. They don't taste good, but obviously they haven't hampered the olives rise to glory in terms of a human food source. And Acorns need the same kind of processing. So, tannins are water soluble. You pull them out with water. You know, you always get olives in brine, right? And so Yes, just started learning more about how to work with them and then also more about our relationship with oak trees. And I started seeing them differently in that light too. Going from sort of the species that I'd always seen as natural and wild and better off without humans, to actually understanding that we have a really long history with oak trees and in some places, they actually really depend on us. So that was total game changer for me. There's more to the story than oaks and acorns. Tell us what you learned about the history of humans eating nuts like acorns, but also things like chestnuts and hazelnut. Yes, I was really surprised. At first, I thought, okay, this is going to be an isolated thing where some people in really hilly areas or areas that aren't good for row crops are eating these nuts as staple foods. But when I looked back, actually all over the Northern Hemisphere in a huge variety of cultures, people have been in relationship with these nut trees as a staple food for a lot of the past 12,000 years. So, there's records in Japan of this ancient society that was sort of the first known chestnut cultivators in Japan. The burr size increased a lot. The nut size increased a lot during that early era of cultivation. There's a really interesting history of chestnut cultivation throughout Europe during what we call the quote unquote dark ages, although I'm starting to think maybe it was lighter than we thought during that time. There was a lot of cool stuff happening with Agroforestry. And in some areas of Europe, people ate an average of 330 pounds of chestnuts per person, per year. To put that in perspective, today, the average American eats about 150 pounds of grains per person per year. So that is a pretty serious level of chestnut consumption. You know, it's called in some places the bread tree. And I just started finding all these examples. There was a time in the British Isles known as the Nut Age, between about 7,000 and 5,000 years ago. There were just all these examples of different people at different times tending to these trees and harvesting a huge amount of food from them. You've written that trees like oaks and chestnut and hazels and also humans are what ecologists call keystone species. Yes. Tell us what you mean by that and how such species play an outsized role in local ecosystems. So, a keystone species, the first time I ever heard of them I think I was in Jamaica, and someone was talking about the sea urchins on the reef and the beach there. And it turned out that when they disappeared, for a variety of reasons, this whole ecosystem fell apart. And there's different types of keystone species, but a keystone species is as important to its ecosystem as the keystone in a Roman arch, right? So, if you pull that keystone out, you have this cascade of effects where everything kind of falls apart. And oaks are a huge life support tree. I don't know if listeners have heard of the work of entomologist, Doug Tallamy. He's done some really interesting studies on different families of plants and how much life they support by looking at insects. And in most counties where they occur, oaks are the top life support plant in North America. They're this incredibly important basis of the food chain. They provide food for a ton of insects. Those insects in turn feed birds and mammals and other creatures. And you know, at first as I am learning all this, I thought, okay, great oaks are important. Well, you know, I kind of already knew that, but that's exciting that we can eat from them. But then I started getting to know some fire practitioners. Especially an indigenous man in present day Northern California named Ron Reed. And he's a member of the Karuk Tribe there. And he started telling me about the relationship between cultural fire, prescribed fire, and oak trees. And what I learned is that oaks and human fire have actually been in relationship for millennia. And there's this whole, on the east coast, this hypothesis called the Oak Fire Hypothesis. And most ecologists that I've spoken with ascribe to it and believe that the reason that white oak and hickory have been this sort of dominant forest type through a lot of Eastern North America for the past 9,000 years, despite some really dramatic climate changes, is because humans have burned to keep them dominant on the landscape. And that in doing that we actually play a role as a keystone species too, right? So, if our fire is supporting this incredibly important keystone species, oaks, and other nut trees, we're in the category that they call ecosystem engineers. Mm-hmm. So, a beaver is an example of an ecosystem engineer, right? You take the beaver out of the wetland and the whole thing falls apart. And a lot of fire historians and ecologists see us as the fire animal. And historically, in a lot of different ecosystems, that has been our largest and most important role is creating ecosystems for other wildlife habitat, for other wildlife, with fire. So, it sounds like there was a time in human history when humans would selectively burn other things in order to protect these trees. Yes, and truly not just these trees. If you look at other places, other continents, there's human burning in Australia, there's human burning in the Amazon, there's tons of examples. But around here where I live, at least in New England and in the East, fire has been used intentionally to keep these nut trees dominant. Because what happens is. oaks are a mid-succession species. If folks don't know a lot about succession, early is like bare dirt, right? When we have an open field that's been plowed up, that's the beginning of succession. And then it proceeds all the way to an old growth forest. And oaks, if they get shaded out, they're not a particularly shade tolerant species. So, a lot of these nut trees like that kind of middle, sweet spot of succession. Where it's still a little open, there's still plenty of sun for regeneration. And so that can be intentionally preserved with fire or with other methods. But that's been a major one historically. Well, that's so interesting. In your book, you draw a comparison between the yield from these trees to more modern agriculture or industrial farming of things like corn and soybeans. That tell us about that. That's a very interesting point to make. Yes. I spent a lot of time on what I started calling the yield thing because it seemed really important, right? If these trees are actually a viable alternative to the industrial monocultures that we're struggling to maintain, well then, they need to really feed us, right? There needs to be enough food. And there are a number of different ways to look at it. I think, you know, one thing that we don't talk about a lot is when we talk about a monoculture of corn, for instance, I think the record, I'm not going to remember the exact statistics. But the average is maybe12,000 tons per acre or something. But there have been these huge records, and what we don't talk about is that yield is a ratio, right? If land is the limiting factor for us to produce food. And we're just talking about what's coming off this one acre, but we're not talking about the land it took to produce the fertilizer. We're not talking about the land it took to produce the tractor or the fuel or all these other inputs. And when you factor those in, those high yields completely disappear. When we actually look at how much land we need to produce food, an ecosystem based on these keystone trees will always produce the most because they produce the most life, right? And, you know, we tend to get caught up in other measures, but ultimately life comes from photosynthesis and these relationships between different species. And when you have a piece of land that is producing an abundance of life, you also have an abundance of food. And I broke the yield question down in a lot of different ways, but there have been some direct comparisons between oak savannah versus cornfield ecosystems and the amount of photosynthesis and food production that's happening. And the oak ecosystems, I mean, if you just think about the size of an oak tree and its photosynthetic capacity versus the sort of short grass, it can do a lot more. Well, if you happen to park your car under an oak tree, you get a good sense of exactly how many acorns one can produce. Yes, it's quite a bit. And actually, another cool thing about acorns, is that because of the tannins, which are kind of a pain, right, for processing. People often wish they didn't have these tannins. But tannins are an incredible preservative. So, from a food security standpoint, if you gather some acorns and you dry them out a little, just by letting them sit in an airy, dry spot, they can store for decades. So, even if the acorn production isn't consistent year to year, like say a hazelnut or a chestnut or a field of corn might be. Those fluctuations are not as big of a deal because of that food security potential. There's a lot of different ways to break it down. But I was a skeptic, a yield skeptic. And by the end of the research, I felt quite confident in saying that these trees produce plenty and it's definitely not a yield issue why we moved away from them. Well, I'm glad you decided to dive into the yield thing because it's actually very interesting once you get into it. Let's talk about something else that you wrote about. A little-known part of US history. You wrote that in the not-so-distant past, the US government considered keystone nut trees as a solution to some of our biggest environmental and economic challenges. I had no idea about that. Tell us about it and what happened. I had no idea either. When I first started researching the book, I went on this trip through Appalachia talking to different people who had some knowledge of this stand of trees that was planted in between the late 1920s and the 1960s by a guy named John Hershey. And I just thought, oh, cool, I'll go see these old nut trees. This sounds really interesting. But what I learned when I got there and started talking to the folks who had found where the trees were and were sort of caretaking them, was that Hershey was part of, Roosevelt's depression recovery plan. And he had this experimental fruit and nut tree nursery where he had ads in the newspaper and people all over the eastern seaboard were sending in entries of their best nut seeds, best trees. He got these genetics that probably represented, you know, hundreds if not thousands of years of human breeding in the east. And he started planting these experimental nurseries. And as part of Roosevelt's tree army, not only were they planting trees to try to prevent erosion and reforest areas that have been cut over. They were also planting these nut trees and seeing them as a really viable solution to hunger, to environmental crises, and to reviving rural economies. And unfortunately, Hershey ended up getting cancer. His other buddy who was doing the program with him got in a fight with one of the Roosevelt administrators, and the program fell apart. Also, World War II began. So that was another reason that things kind of fell apart. But for a moment there it was at the highest levels of government. The officials saw, wow, this could actually solve a lot of problems at once. And I think it's a bummer that it didn't catch on then. But it's not too late now. We still have a lot of problems as we unfortunately all know. And these trees still offer a lot of solutions. So given the long human history of this, the story of indigenous cultures becomes really fascinating. And you've talked about how the indigenous cultures tended oak trees and other trees with what you called forest farming. And I'm interested in that concept and if you would tell us what that means and also, why haven't these things caught on? And why don't most Americans eat acorns or even know that one can eat them? So, the history of forest farming in the US is pretty long and violent. Our government has pursued a policy of trying to eradicate a lot of these indigenous food production systems because people are easier to control when they're hungry and when they don't have access to the resources that they need. We often talk about our industrial style of farming that we have today as inevitable, right? Oh, well, these older methods didn't produce enough food and so we had to transition from quote unquote hunting and gathering to farming. And what I found as I looked through the history is that is a completely made-up story. Instead, what was happening is that as Euro-American colonists kept trying to expand our land base, you know, kept trying to move West, force into new areas, is that it was very hard to gain access to more land without also using violence and a tactic that, some historians have called a feed fight. Targeting indigenous food production and then forcing survivors to assimilate into grain crop culture. And that, we've been told was because it was a way of producing more food. But in fact, often it yielded less food and was actually a war tactic. And there's a lot of talk right now about regenerative farming and there's also a lot of talk about racial healing and having real conversations about racial history in the US and trying to move forward. And I think that this food aspect is really key to that conversation. And if we want to build a better future, it's something that we really have to reckon with and talk about, you know? We can't change what happened, but we also can't move forward without knowing what happened and really understanding it. So interesting how the history of this particular food was so shaped by politics, colonialism, things like that. And also by things like Mr. Hershey getting cancer and, you know, his, his colleague having a fight. I mean, it's just an incredibly interesting history and it's too bad that it played out like it did for a million tragic reasons. But whoa, that's interesting. I found some of the historic literature just totally confounding and fascinating because there would be, you know, sometimes the same people would be commenting on how they'd gotten to present day California. You know, these Euro-American soldier, settlers, they got there. They couldn't believe how much food there was. You know, wild geese, as far as you can see, wild oats as far as you can see, salmon filling up the rivers. And then in the same letter sometimes saying these indigenous people don't know how to produce food. They have nothing to eat. It was a really important reminder to me of the importance of stories and the stories that we internalize. Because I can now think of examples in my own life of, you know, I live in this national park and on the website of the National Park, there's one page about the importance of human fire in the ecosystem of this place over the past 10,000 years. And on another page of the same website, there's a description of this natural, pristine wilderness, that is supposedly also here. Of course, those two things can't really both be true. But until I started learning all this about oaks and these other trees, that didn't set off any alarm bells in my head. And we all have internalized narratives that we forget to question. For me, for whatever reason, these acorns have been this huge opener of like, okay, what else am I missing? What else do I need to reexamine about the stories around food that I've grown up with and the stories around our relationship with the living world around us. Because there's a lot of layers there to unpack. Well, there sure are. One other thing I wanted to ask you about, because you brought up this issue earlier of forest succession. And in that context, tree pruning is an interesting topic. And you write that tree pruning, this could happen by fire, or it could also happen with other things like pollarding. I didn't know what pollarding was. But those could hold some surprising opportunities when it comes to food production and climate change. And you write that regularly pruned and burned landscapes aren't like the typical old growth forest that we often associate with climate solutions. So why is this? So, we often think of old growth forests as simply a forest that looks really old, right? The trees are tall and they're broad. And there are forests that can be really old but can be in an earlier stage of succession. So, what happens with a lot of these interactions over time where people are either burning or coppicing or pollarding, which I'll define for your listeners. Because I also had no idea what those words meant when I first started researching. But coppicing is where you cut a woody plant back to the ground year after year. It could be every year. It could be in a rotation of every eight or 15 or 20 years to produce new stems. Like it's a plant that will resprout. And pollarding is the same idea but was often done in systems where livestock were also involved. You're cutting much higher off the ground, typically above animal head height, so that they can't graze those tasty young shoots. And there are a lot of traditionally managed forests in Europe that have been managed with coppice and pollard. What's happening is when we produce food in a farm field, right? We're taking succession back to zero every year. We're re plowing the field. Every time we do that the carbon that the plants had stored in their roots and had sent down to the soil gets burped back out into the atmosphere. I talked to a great soil scientist about this, and he was just like, oh, it's carbon dioxide burps everywhere. It's awful. But when we work with these woody plants where you're not taking out the roots, you're not taking out the trunk necessarily, if you're pollarding, right? You're leaving these trees. And these trees can get really old and really big around the trunk, and then they're getting pruned up top and sending out these new shoots. It is more like giving the plant a haircut. You're not killing it back. You're not losing all that carbon that's stored in the soil. And you're kind of renewing its youth and vigor. There are some studies indicating that trees that are coppiced and pollarded can actually live longer than trees with no human interaction. And so, there's this really fine line between, you know, too much interference where we're messing up the succession cycle of the forest and taking it back to zero. And maybe some interference, but not going all the way back to zero. And that has huge climate implications. Bio Elspeth Hay is the author and creator of Feed Us with Trees and the Local Food Report on NPR, and proponent of place-based living. Deeply immersed in her own local-food system, Elspeth's work focuses on food, the environment, and the people, places, and ideas that feed us. She spent the past 15+ years interviewing local food producers, harvesters, processors, cooks, policymakers and visionaries about what it means to be human and live thoughtfully in place. In the process, she's come to understand that we humans are, in fact, perfectly adapted to a wide range of places—and to believe that reconnecting with our home ecosystems is both the great challenge and great joy of our times. In addition to her work as a writer and public radio host, Elspeth is deeply immersed in the local food system of her own home community of Wellfleet, MA on the Outer Cape. She is part of the team behind the Wicked Oyster restaurant in Wellfleet, a co-founder of the Wellfleet Farmers Market, co-founder of the newly launched Commons Keepers, and a passionate student and teacher of place-based living.
La victoire est historique. La tribu karuk et quatre autres nations autochtones ont obtenu le démantèlement de quatre barrages installés au siècle dernier sur leur fleuve, la Klamath, un cours d'eau qui prend sa source dans l'Oregon et rejoint le Pacifique en Californie.En obtenant ce démantèlement, après des décennies de spoliation et de procédure, ils retrouvent une partie de leur territoire, de leur culture et, espèrent-ils, leur poisson sacré. Composante essentielle de leur alimentation, les saumons avaient disparu des eaux de la Klamath à cause de ces barrages. Les saumons sont dorénavant libres de remonter le fleuve pour se reproduire.Dans cet épisode du podcast « L'Heure du Monde », la correspondante du Monde en Californie, Corine Lesnes, nous replonge dans ses reportages le long de la Klamath et raconte cette victoire qui s'inscrit dans le mouvement dit du « renouveau indien ».Un épisode de Marion Bothorel. Réalisation : Florentin Baume. Musiques : Amandine Robillard. Présentation et rédaction en chef : Adèle Ponticelli. Dans cet épisode : extraits d'interview de Ron Reed, d'une vidéo de Swiftwater Films diffusée le 24 janvier 2024 sur Youtube, et d'un discours prononcé par le gouverneur de Californie Gavin Newsom le 18 juin 2019.Episode diffusé le 2 octobre 2024. Hébergé par Audion. Visitez https://www.audion.fm/fr/privacy-policy pour plus d'informations.
The Atlanta Braves swept away the defending National League Champion Arizona Diamondbacks over the weekend, but were dealt a serious injury blow as Spencer Strider's season appears to be over. Grant McAuley discusses the ramifications of the Strider news and sizes up where the Braves can turn to fill those rather large shoes in rotation. Meanwhile, the Braves offense has done some big things, including a few key comebacks on the young season, and they were at it against Arizona. Marcell Ozuna, Jarred Kelenic and others are off to hot starts, but everyone seems to be finding ways to contribute. On Monday, April 8, the Braves will commemorate the 50th Anniversary of Hank Aaron's record-breaking 715th home run. Grant McAuley talked to several of Aaron's teammates in advance of that big night at Truist Park. You'll hear from Tom House, the man who caught No. 715, as well as Ralph Garr, Ron Reed and Marty Perez on this edition of From The Diamond. Aaron's friends share their memories from that history making night and his impact on their lives. From The Diamond will air live on 92-9 The Game in Atlanta on Sundays from 5-7 pm ET. You can also subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. Every episode of the show and more great Braves coverage is available at FromTheDiamond.com.
1977 NLCS Meeting up for the first of two consecutive NLCS battles in 1977 and 1978, the Philadelphia Phillies (101-61) and the Los Angeles Dodgers (98-64) face off with games one and two at Dodger Stadium, and the final three (if necessary) at Veterans Stadium in Philly. The Phillies captured their second of three consecutive NL East titles behind the stewardship of Danny Ozark. The Fightin's had the best lineup in the NL, and they were stacked at nearly every position. Michael Jack Schmidt was his typical outstanding self (38 HR 101 RBI .274/.393/.574 151 OPS+), but it was Greg ‘the Bull' Luzinski (39 HR 130 RBI .309/.394/.594 156 OPS+) who finished runner-up in MVP voting. The mid-season trade for former Cardinals OF Bake McBride bolstered are already strong outfield core with Garry Maddox and the Bull. Larry Bowa and Bob Boone provided excellent defense and timely hits, while platoon hitters like Jay Johnstone, Tim McCarver, and Davey Johnson crushed their opportunities. ‘Lefty' Steve Carlton picked up his second career Cy Young by leading the NL in wins, but the rest of the rotation left a lot to be desired. These Phillies were able to win over a 100 games because Danny Ozark could turn to a dominant bullpen, with 4 guys (Gene Garber, Ron Reed, Tug McGraw, and Warren Brusstar) sporting ERAs in the 2s. With a high-powered offense, a true ace, and a lights-out bullpen, this is a modern team to be reckoned with. In his first full year as manager of the Dodgers, Tommy Lasorda led this storied franchise back to the playoffs. His lineup packs a punch to rival the Phillies, with four 30+ home run hitters (Steve Garvey, Ron Cey, Dusty Baker, and Reggie Smith). The corner infielders (Garvey and Cey) both drove in 110+ runs, while the corner outfielders (Baker and Smith) provided more in on-base and slugging, with Smith leading the NL in OPS+ and finishing fourth in MVP voting. Where the Dodgers had the greatest edge over the league was with their pitching staff, who collectively had a 3.22 ERA, 20% better than league average. All 5 of their starters pitched over 200 innings with above average ERAs and double digit wins. Tommy John led the way with 20 wins and a 2.78 ERA. The bullpen was not as reliable as Philadelphia's, but that is partially because they weren't relied on as frequently. The pitching matchups will be as follows: Game 1 @ LAD - LHP Tommy John (20 - 7 2.78 ERA 220 IP) vs. LHP Steve Carlton (23 - 10 2.64 ERA 283 IP) Game 2 @ LAD - RHP Don Sutton (14 - 8 3.18 ERA 240 IP) vs. Jim Lonborg (11 - 4 4.11 ERA 157 IP) Game 3 @ PHI - RHP Larry Christenson (19 - 6 4.06 ERA 219 IP) vs. Burt Hooton (12 - 7 2.62 ERA 223 IP) Game 4 @ PHI - LHP Steve Carlton vs. LHP Tommy John Audio clips from Youtube linked below Game 1 - Vin Scully on KTTV Game 2 - Russ Porter and Jerry Doggett on KTTV Game 3 - Harry Kalas, Richie Ashburn, and Andy Musser on WPHL-TV Game 4 - Dick Enberg and Don Drysdale on NBC (plus Kalas on WPHL-TV) As always, shout out to Baseball Reference and SABR for statistics, boxscores, background information, and much, much more. Catch you next time, P.C.O.
We get into those questions and much more with my guests: Hall of Fame Instructor Jim McLean, former Tour Player and all-time great Analyst Frank Nobilo, the Starter at 23 US Opens Ron Read, and PGA Tour Advance Rules Official Stephen Cox. Jim McLean has been inducted into 4 Hall of Fames. His list of awards and accolades as an Instructor are too numerous to list. I get Jim's thoughts on how we can build confidence in ourselves and our game's, how to raise our play to tournament level, and the one thing we can do today to lower our scores this weekend. Frank Nobilo won 14 times around the world, he finished in the Top 10 of all 4 majors, and is now an all-time great Analyst. We discuss why PGA Tour players are overpaid, what could happen if the PIF/PGA Tour partnership doesn't go through plus, we go back to his T4 finish in the 1994 US Open at Oakmont, and what it was like being on the course at Augusta National as Greg Norman was collapsing in 1996. Ron Reed worked for the USGA for over two decades and was the Starter at the US Open from 1986 to 2010. We hear his memories of announcing Arnold Palmer in Arnie's final US Open at Oakmont in 1994, who Ron thought was the most nervous player he ever saw standing on the first tee (his answer will surprise you), being there for Payne Stewart's triumph in 1999 and Phil's heartbreak in 2006. You'll also hear the heartwarming story of presenting Tom Watson's caddie Bruce Edwards with the flag from the 17th green from the 1982 US Open. We also get the story of the beaver who halted the 1990 US Amateur Public Links tournament. Follow Ron on Twitter @golfdinosaurrr and get his book, Starting the US Open, Shinnecock to Pebble Beach online at www.ronread.com or on Amazon. Stephen Cox has been a PGA Tour Rules Official since 1997. We hear about some of the unpopular rulings he's had to give out over the years and the players who didn't agree with him. We learn about the job the Rules Officials do which goes way beyond riding around in a golf cart handing out penalties. They are responsible for course setup and playing conditions and sometimes they are working on those things a year in advance of the tournament. We also discuss the rule he thinks the USGA & R&A need to take another look at. You can follow Stephen and his peers plus send them your rules questions on Twitter @pgatourrules.
Ray Dunne opens the vault! He shares a John Chaney memory, a Ron Reed story and brings it back to the 2016 World Series.
(0:00-11:23) Andrew broadcasts live from Temple University's campus and asks what you need to see from the Eagles in this upcoming stretch of games. (11:31-31:11) Ray chimes in on what he would like to see from the Eagles over the next six weeks. The phone lines are opened to weigh in too. (31:15-51:15) Temple Men's Basketball new head coach Adam Fischer joins Andrew to talk about men's hoops. Ray Dunne opens the vault! He shares a John Chaney memory, a Ron Reed story and brings it back to the 2016 World Series. Temple Women's basketball coach Diane Richardson and player Aleah Nelson join Andrew down on campus. (51:23-1:17:23) Jeff McLane joins the show to share his thoughts on the Eagles area of concerns, what he expects from this stretch of games and his opinion on Jalen Hurts injury. (1:17:26-1:36:24) It's NBA slop season! Today there's some Sixers slop. Who would you like the Sixers to get? (1:36:32-2:01:08) Callers talk about the Sixers and the Eagles Cowboys rivalry conversation from yesterday's show. Temple University's president Richard Englert joins Andrew live from the campus. (2:01:11-2:51:08) The Sixers and Eagles talk continues. What do you need to see from the Eagles over the next six weeks?
Ron Reed joins Bill for the whole hour.
When it comes to innovation, the education industry typically isn't the first that comes to mind — but Ron Reed is trying to change that. He's the Founder and Executive Producer of SXSW EDU, an annual event that fosters innovation and learning within the education industry. SXSW is well-known for its tech conference, music festival, and independent film festival, but it covers a wider range of topics, including the education event that's held in the days before the tech conference. Ron talks about the role of technology in education, the conversations that are being had ahead of SXSW EDU 2023, and what the future is going to bring to both education and SXSW EDU specifically.Episode Highlights: What SXSW EDU is and what it strives to achieve The origin story of How SXSW EDU began and how it is continuing to grow and evolve How Ron and his partners decided to make alterations and improvements to the event as it grows The rise of education technology and how it has continued to evolve since Ron's days selling educational material on laser video discs What's is coming up in SXSW EDU 2023 Opening up the discussion around mental health in education Resources: Learn more at sxswedu.com Connect with Ronald Reed on LinkedIn Follow SXSW EDU on Twitter Learn more and get the full show notes at: 3PillarGlobal.com
The impact of Ron Reed's work can be felt all across the state, from Vermillion to Pierre to the Black Hills. For over five decades, Dr. Reed has worked tirelessly and behind the scenes to enrich the lives not only of individuals with special needs but of all South Dakotans. He joined Marci Burdick for a conversation about his life's work.In this episode, you will hear:The way Ron navigated challenges to provide the best life possible for his daughter Kathleen.The impact he had in creating special education systems in South Dakota,And the drive to do good that has inspired Ron throughout his career and life.“Anything is possible if you just open the right door,” –Ron ReedGovernor Richard Kneip described Dr. Ron Reed as “a visionary in terms of identifying and dealing with the challenges and problems in education.” Ron served at a pivotal moment in the national fight for disability rights as he advocated for and led the state's implementation of Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, the first disability civil rights law enacted in the United States. Follow us for more stories of Dream Chasers at:Facebook: www.facebook.com/SDhalloffame Instagram: @sdhalloffame Website: www.sdhalloffame.org
As we continue to revisit our favorite episodes of Trending in Ed through the years, this week we're rolling back to March of 2019 when Mike Palmer met with the organizers of the SXSW EDU conference in Austin while the conference was taking place. Speaking of which, please upvote our PanelPicker submission for the upcoming SXSW EDU 2023 conference so we can continue our string of lively and thought-provoking conversations about the future of learning while engaging with a live audience at the conference. In this episode, Ron and Greg frame up the concept of a convergence zone as it relates to an education conference. We explore how they engage with a wide cross-section of education stakeholders and how that community is driving the continued growth and evolution of the conference. We also learn what was capturing Greg and Ron's imaginations then and how it still resonates now despite the many changes in recent years. Subscribe to Trending in Education wherever you get your podcasts. Visit us at TrendinginEd.com for more insightful perspectives on the future of learning.
We continue our series of interviews with the state's new hall-of-famers. Ronald Reed is being honored for his contributions to education, including his implementation of a disability civil rights law.
Dei reacts to the Phillies win last night and previews tonights game vs the Nationals. Ron Reed and Bake McBride are added to the Phillies Wall of Fame as well. Dei also talks about the Eagles, Dick Vermeil, multiple sports athletes and more.
It's U.S. Open week and our guests this week are Dave Sadlowski, Head PGA Professional at Ruttger's Bay Lake Lodge and Ron Reed longtime starter at the U.S. Open and author of ‘Starting the U.S. Open from Shinnecock to Pebble Beach'
Join Caroline Wilson and Corrie Perkin for Ep 221.This podcast is proudly presented by Red Energy - most satisfied customers 11 years in a row. This week Caro and Corrie pay tribute to two influential Melbourne identities – it's vale to Sally Chirnside and Ron Reed.We reflect on the Queen's Platinum Jubilee – what did it teach us about the monarchy of the past and the future and who are our favourite royals?In the Cocktail Cabinet for Prince Wine Store – Myles has some special recommendations for Corrie who's hosting a wine maker for lunch soon.· Craiglee Shiraz 2017 from Sunbury· Frankland Estate Isolation Ridge 2017 from WA· Michael Hall Sang de Pigeon Chardonnay from SA.Use the promo code MESS at checkout instore or online to receive a listener discount - head to the dedicated Don't Shoot the Messenger page HERE.BSF;The Magician's Assistant by Ann PatchettFirst Lady (Streaming on Prime)Yoghurt and Spiced Roasted Salmon Tortillas from Simply by Sabrina Ghayour - recipe HERE or below.Caro's Grumpy about the state of Melbourne's muddy parks this week and in 6 Quick Questions we discuss;We also chat about political snubs, favourite winter colours and Corrie is singing the praises of her new Monte slippers in new shearling material, keeping her comfy and warm inside AND outside of the house. For a listener discount of 15% - head to www.montestore.com and use the promocode DONTSHOOT15 at checkout.To receive our weekly email which includes recipes SIGN UP HERE.For videos and pics make sure you follow us on Instagram, Facebook or TwitterEmail the show via feedback@dontshootpod.com.au.Don't Shoot the Messenger is produced by Corrie Perkin, Caroline Wilson and produced, engineered and edited by Jane Nield for Sports Entertainment Network.Yogurt and Spice Roasted Salmon BY SABRINA GHAYOURThese little salmon bites are something I've made time and time again over the years and this method of roasting them at a high temperature ensures you get a little charring on the outside yet perfectly cooked salmon on the inside. Leftovers also make a great addition to your lunchbox the next day. Serves 4Ingredients500g skinless salmon fillet, cut into 4cm cubesFor the marinade:4 tablespoons Greek yogurt1 tablespoon garlic granules1 heaped tablespoon rose harissa1 teaspoon ground turmeric1 teaspoon paprikaFinely grated zest of 1 unwaxed lime and a good squeeze of juice1 teaspoon olive oilGenerous amount of Maldon sea salt flakes and freshly ground black pepperTo serve:Tortilla wrapsSliced tomatoesFinely sliced onionCoriander leavesGreek yogurtStep 1Preheat your oven to its highest setting (with fan if it has one). Line a baking tray with baking paper.Step 2Mix all the marinade ingredients together in a mixing bowl. Add the salmon and turn until well coated in the marinade.Step 3Spread the salmon out on the prepared baking tray and roast for 10 minutes until cooked through. Remove from the oven and serve immediately with tortilla wraps, tomatoes, finely sliced onion, coriander leaves and Greek yogurt.
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Today on the Listing Agent Lifestyle podcast, we're talking with Ron Reed from Madison, Wisconsin, and finishing out our Getting Listings trifecta of shows. We started with Tony Kalsi and his four year case study, showing the ROI from doing Getting Listings in one neighborhood. Then Chuck Charlton showed how continuing with the program for 10 years works out. Today we have Ron Reed who joined us just over a year ago and in that one year, he really took off. He got his first listing in the first month of following the Getting Listings program, even before his free trial of GoGoAgent.com, even ended, and he's gone on to parlay that into a bigger area that he's mailing to. Ron's a disciplined executor and I love that about him, but he's also very astute in measuring and tracking results of everything he does. You're really going to enjoy this conversation. Links: Show Notes GoGoAgent.com Be a Guest Listing Agent Lifestyle Book Listing Agent Scorecard
The full interview with Ron Reed.
January 27, 2021 was host Ron Reed's last day on the job as Head Chef at the Pacific Theatre Diner, and tonight he and Jack Nicholson mark the one year anniversary of that occasion by looking back at some of Ron's favourite shows, and the music that enhanced their distinctive Soul Food flavour. The Casino, The Foreigner, Tent Meeting, A Bright Particular Star, and more - tasty tunes from skits that schmeck.
In today's podcast, I'm going to share an interview with honorary flipping genius club member, Ron Reed from Leavenworth, Kansas to discuss his first wholesale deal that made a $12,500 profit. Earn a FREE Flipping Genius Award!Tell us all about a completed deal using one of Jerry's methods.http://FlippingGeniusClub.comFREE 8 Week Training Program https://flippingmastery.com/8wpodGet 100 Seller Leads With Free Skip Tracing For $1.00:http://100sellerleads.com -----------------------------------------This podcast was originally released on YouTube. Check out Jerry Norton's YouTube channel, with over 750 videos on all things wholesaling and flipping! https://www.youtube.com/c/FlippingMasteryTV About Jerry Norton Jerry Norton went from digging holes for minimum wage in his mid 20's to becoming a millionaire by the age of 30. Today he's the nation's leading expert on flipping houses and has taught thousands of people how to live their dream lifestyle through real estate. **NOTE: To Download any of Jerry's FREE training, tools, or resources… Click on the link provided and enter your email. The download is automatically emailed to you. If you don't see it, check your junk/spam folder, in case your email provider put it there. If you still don't see it, contact our support at: support@flippingmastery.com or 888) 958-3028. Wholesaling & House Flipping Software:https://flippingmastery.com/flipsterpodMake $10,000 Finding Deals: https://flippingmastery.com/10kpod Get 100% funding for your deals! https://flippingmastery.com/fspod Mentoring Program: https://flippingmastery.com/ftpod Get Paid $8700 To Find Vacant Lots For Jerry: https://flippingmastery.com/lfpod FREE 30 Day Quickstart Kit https://flippingmastery.com/qkpodFREE Virtual Wholesaling Kit:https://flippingmastery.com/vfpod FREE On-Market Deal Finder Tool: https://flippingmastery.com/dcpod FREE Wholesaler Contracts: https://flippingmastery.com/wcpodFREE Comp Tool:https://flippingmastery.com/compod FREE Funding Kit: https://flippingmastery.com/fkpod FREE Agent Offer Sheet & Scripts: https://flippingmastery.com/aspod FREE Cash Buyer Scripts: https://flippingmastery.com/cbspodFREE Best Selling Wholesaling Ebook:https://flippingmastery.com/ebookpodFREE Best Selling Fix and Flip Ebook:https://flippingmastery.com/ebpod FREE Rehab Checklist:https://flippingmastery.com/rehabpod LET'S CONNECT...! FACEBOOK: http://www.Facebook.com/flippingmastery INSTAGRAM: http://www.instagram.com/flippingmastery
We welcome YOU back to America's leading higher education podcast, The EdUp Experience! In this episode, YOUR guest is Ron Reed, Founder & Executive Producer at SXSW EDU, YOUR special guest cohost is Dr. Julie White, President at Pierce College Fort Steilacoom, YOUR host is Dr. Joe Sallustio, & YOUR sponsor is Unmudl! Joe & Julie talk to Ron all about SXSW EDU & what the conference experience will look like in March, 2022. Ron Reed, Executive Producer of SXSWedu, has been involved in educational publishing and technology since graduating from the University of Texas. In 2006, he established R L Reed Consulting, an independent consulting firm specializing in strategic K-12 sales and marketing. In that role, he produced several educational panels at South by Southwest Interactive, focusing on digital instructional content and open education resources. The experience led him to launch SXSW EDU in 2011. Make sure to be the first person to claim YOUR school on Unmudl! Thank YOU so much for tuning in. Join us on the next episode for YOUR time to EdUp! Connect with YOUR EdUp Team - Elvin Freytes & Dr. Joe Sallustio ● Learn what others are saying about their EdUp experience! ● Join YOUR EdUp community at The EdUp Experience! ● YOU can follow us on Facebook | Instagram | LinkedIn | Twitter | YouTube Thank YOU for listening! We make education YOUR business!
Episode five features The 33-Year-Old Rookie, Chris Coste who recalls the day he got his call to the big leagues and the parade down Broad Street that followed. Larry Bowa shares memories of a 1980 battle with the Dodgers and talks about unsung heroes from ‘80 like Randy Lerch and Ron Reed. Green Legion Radio's, Chris Sack, on the 2021 Phillies.
“Do more and do better and learn from others and have the honest conversation.” Ron Reed, Founder and Executive Producer, SXSW EDU, and Liz Stein, Principal, Liz Stein Consulting, discuss the evolution of education and the importance of professional development for teachers and also the upskilling for any workforce. Both guests highlight how this past year has forced teachers and students to pivot and the changes that have occurred in how teachers teach and students learn. In order to shape the future, it is important to take a beat to figure out how to smartly move forward.
In this episode of EdTech Today, SXSW EDU executive producers Ron Reed and Greg Rosenbaum detail their pivots this past year and share valuable insights for any ed exec who creates, exhibits, or attends edtech events.Keynote sessions convene the SXSW EDU Online community each morning, bringing together powerful voices for discourse on a topic impacting education. This year, the keynote lineup spotlights incredibly timely and important discussions for all education stakeholders.Commencing SXSW EDU Online, as previously announced, Oprah Winfrey and Dr. Bruce Perry will lead the opening keynote discussion on the impact of childhood trauma on who we become, the decisions we make, and how healing must start with one question ‘what happened to you?' Ms. Winfrey and Dr. Perry have co-authored a book on the topic, What Happened to You?: Conversations on Trauma, Resilience, and Healing, which will be released in April.Newly announced, Kimberly Bryant, Founder and CEO of Black Girls CODE and Reshma Saujani, Founder and CEO of Girls Who Code will be in conversation for Wednesday's keynote discussion on the gender gap in computing and programming, especially in underrepresented groups.On the final day of SXSW EDU Online programming, author Nic Stone and Brittany Hogan, Director of Educational Equity and Diversity at Rockwood School District, will give their individual and collective thoughts and ideas about how diverse literature can change the hearts and minds of students in the keynote, Empathy in Equity: Author and Educator. Join the keynote speakers directly after their session for a live Q&A you won't want to miss.Join Us for SXSW EDU OnlineSecure your pass for SXSW EDU Online, March 9-11, 2021 at the current rate of $139 before passes sell out. SXSW EDU Online also offers group and student discounts.Sign up for the SXSW EDU email update for all the latest news and be sure to follow us on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and Instagram for the latest news and updates.
Ron Reed and Greg Rosenbaum from SXSW EDU return to join Mike just before SXSW EDU 2021 begins on March 9th. You can learn more about the conference at https://www.sxswedu.com/ We talk through our history together with this being the third time Ron and Greg have joined us on the show. We take time to reflect on the challenges and transformations of the past year and get their thoughts on the opportunities around moving online and the shifts in thinking required to make the most of the online format. Greg talks about the shift from "serendipity to intention" and Ron provides a broader read on the impact of the past year and how that will be reflected in the themes and topics of SXSW EDU 2021. And we also talk about Oprah Winfrey's Keynote with Dr. Bruce Perry on their upcoming book, What Happened to You?: Conversations on Trauma, Resilience, and Healing. It's a riveting conversation that gives a window into the many challenges we've faced and the new perspectives we're arriving at in difficult times. If you like what you're hearing, subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and follow us at TrendinginEducation.com.
Confidence is such a deep topic that I had to bring on one of my good friends, Ron Reed, for a comeback episode! Not only is he one of the smartest people I know, his podcast is literally called, "Earning Confidence." There's so many tangible tips and golden nuggets hidden in today's episode you'll definitely need to go back and re-listen so you can take notes. We share some dark and very personal facts about our life experiences, but it's not meant to scare anyone into thinking they NEED to be in this dark place in order to build a confident identity. Let me know what YOUR biggest takeaway was from today's podcast and maybe we can answer a handful of your questions during a future episode! Have a great Friday ya'll! #iamteamFFIT
A veteran of the sports journalist world, Ron Reed is a recently retired sports journalist and author with more than 50 years experience. Having covered most major sporting events in his time, Ron shares great experiences around international sport, Australians at the Olympics, the coming of age of women's sport and anecdotes from dealing with some big names in sport. He's recently released a book titled "War Games" where he talks about his father Private William Cecil Reed who was a prisoner of war in Nagasaki and survived that horrific event when tens of thousands of others did not.
Many Inklings fans know and love J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis both for their imaginary worlds (Narnia and Middle-earth) and for their legendary friendship. In this week's episode, Drs. Crystal and David C. Downing sit down with Ron Reed—Founding Artistic Director of Pacific Theatre in Vancouver, BC—to discuss his play, Tolkien, which dramatizes how Jack and Tollers became such close companions as well as how their friendship almost fell apart.
The heart felt sharing a Psalm --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/alfredo-noble/support
We are excited to bring you a live question and answer session with professional resume writer Ron Reed. After spending many years as a New York City-based recruiter and realizing that there was a massive need for résumé writing services Ron decided to start his own company. What makes me unique is that I am able to pair my writing skills with my recruitment background. Additionally, I am recognized as a Certified Professional Résumé Writer by the Professional Association of Résumé Writers & Career Coaches. I understand the psychology of recruiting. I understand how a recruiter reads a résumé. I understand what they want to see and how they want to see it. I understand how to minimize the red flags and concerns that are running through the recruiter's mind. Ron Reed.
If you suffer from climate grief, you know what it's like to feel hopeless, alone, or bewildered by society's business-as-usual response to our existential threat. Wanting those feelings to go away is normal, but grief can lead to awareness and compassion in ways that actually advance political action and climate solutions. Paradoxically, grief can also provide a kind of strength and clarity when conventional hopes are shaken. As climate activist Tim DeChristopher once said, “In happy times the weight of despair is oppressive, but in stormy times that weight is an anchor that can get you through.” This episode explores the value of grief as a way to overcome collective denial as we move into an uncertain climate future. While most environmentalists are urging us to focus on hope, Dr. Jennifer Atkinson points out that grief and hope aren't mutually exclusive, and for many, grief may even be our best ally in an age of climate crisis"Many of us spend our whole lives running from feeling with the mistaken belief that you cannot bear the pain. But you have already borne the pain. What you have not done is feel you are beyond that pain."—Kahlil GibranWritten and narrated by Jennifer AtkinsonMusic by Roberto David RusconiProduced by Intrasonus UKSupported using public funding by the National Lottery through Arts Council EnglandDr. Jennifer Atkinson is a professor of environmental humanities at the University of Washington, where she leads seminars that help students cope with the despair, anger, and anxiety that arise from environmental loss and mass extinction. Her teaching and research have helped activists, scientists, and students build resilience to stay engaged in climate solutions and avoid burnout. She has also spoken to audiences across the U.S. about the global mental health crisis arising from climate disruption, and advocated for addressing emotional impacts in the fight for environmental justice. This episode introduces some of the experiences and insights behind that work, and explores how we can move the public to action by addressing the psychological roots of our unprecedented ecological loss.References and Further Reading:Jalal al-Din Rumi. The Essential Rumi. HarperOne; Reprint edition, May, 2004Carl Zimmer. Birds Are Vanishing From North America. New York Times, Sept. 19, 2019Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES). Nature’s Dangerous Decline ‘Unprecedented’; Species Extinction Rates ‘Accelerating.’ May 6, 2019Kulp, S.A., Strauss, B.H. New elevation data triple estimates of global vulnerability to sea-level rise and coastal flooding. Nature Communications 10, 4844 (2019).Emily Atkin. The Blood-Dimmed Tide: Climate change is poised to alter the face of global conflict. The New Republic, September 16, 2019.Brad Plumer. Carbon Dioxide Emissions Hit a Record in 2019, Even as Coal Fades. New York Times, Dec 3, 2019.Paola Rosa-Aquino. The life-altering, world-ending topic they’re still not teaching you about in school. Grist. June 4, 2019.David Corn. It’s the End of the World as They Know It: The distinct burden of being a climate scientist. Mother Jones, July 8, 2019.Head, Lesley, & Harada, T. Keeping the heart a long way from the brain: The emotional labour of climate scientists. Emotion, Space & Society, 24, 34–41 (2017).Livia Albeck-Ripka. Why Lost Ice Means Lost Hope for an Inuit Village. New York Times, Nov. 25, 2017Indigenous Peoples, Lands, & Resources. Bennett, T. M., Maynard, S., Cochran, P., Gough, R., Lynn, K., Maldonado, J., Voggesser, G. Wotkyns, S., & Cozzetto, K. Climate Change Impacts in the United States: The Third National Climate Assessment (297- 317). U.S. Global Change Research Program. 2014.Cunsolo, Ashlee. "Climate Change as the Work of Mourning." Mourning Nature: Hope at the Heart of Ecological Loss & Grief. Ed Cunsolo & Landman. McGill-Queen's University Press, 2017.Scaramutti, Carolina, Vos, S., Salas-Wright, C., & Schwartz, S. "The Mental Health Impact of Hurricane Maria on Puerto Ricans in Puerto Rico & Florida." Disaster Medicine & Public Health Preparedness. Nov 2018.Ron Reed and Kari Norgaard. Emotional impacts of environmental decline: What can Native cosmologies teach sociology about emotions & environmental justice? Theory & Society 46 (463–495) November 2017.Good Greif NetworkClimate Psychology AllianceStephen Running, The 5 Stages of Climate Grief. Numerical Terradynamic Simulation Group Publications. 173. 2007Douglas Burton-Christie. The Gift of Tears: Loss, Mourning, and the Work of Ecological Restoration. Worldviews 15.1 (29–46) 2011.Martín Prechtel.The Smell of Rain on Dust: Grief and Praise. North Atlantic Books. April 14, 2015.Chris Jordan. This Image Shows the Tragedy of Mass Consumption – But Change is Possible HuffPost, April 1, 2018. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
If you suffer from climate grief, you know what it's like to feel hopeless, alone, or bewildered by society's business-as-usual response to our existential threat. Wanting those feelings to go away is normal, but grief can lead to awareness and compassion in ways that actually advance political action and climate solutions. Paradoxically, grief can also provide a kind of strength and clarity when conventional hopes are shaken. As climate activist Tim DeChristopher once said, “In happy times the weight of despair is oppressive, but in stormy times that weight is an anchor that can get you through.” This episode explores the value of grief as a way to overcome collective denial as we move into an uncertain climate future. While most environmentalists are urging us to focus on hope, Dr. Jennifer Atkinson points out that grief and hope aren't mutually exclusive, and for many, grief may even be our best ally in an age of climate crisis"Many of us spend our whole lives running from feeling with the mistaken belief that you cannot bear the pain. But you have already borne the pain. What you have not done is feel you are beyond that pain."—Kahlil GibranWritten and narrated by Jennifer AtkinsonMusic by Roberto David RusconiProduced by Intrasonus UKSupported using public funding by the National Lottery through Arts Council EnglandDr. Jennifer Atkinson is a professor of environmental humanities at the University of Washington, where she leads seminars that help students cope with the despair, anger, and anxiety that arise from environmental loss and mass extinction. Her teaching and research have helped activists, scientists, and students build resilience to stay engaged in climate solutions and avoid burnout. She has also spoken to audiences across the U.S. about the global mental health crisis arising from climate disruption, and advocated for addressing emotional impacts in the fight for environmental justice. This episode introduces some of the experiences and insights behind that work, and explores how we can move the public to action by addressing the psychological roots of our unprecedented ecological loss.References and Further Reading:Jalal al-Din Rumi. The Essential Rumi. HarperOne; Reprint edition, May, 2004Carl Zimmer. Birds Are Vanishing From North America. New York Times, Sept. 19, 2019Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES). Nature’s Dangerous Decline ‘Unprecedented’; Species Extinction Rates ‘Accelerating.’ May 6, 2019Kulp, S.A., Strauss, B.H. New elevation data triple estimates of global vulnerability to sea-level rise and coastal flooding. Nature Communications 10, 4844 (2019).Emily Atkin. The Blood-Dimmed Tide: Climate change is poised to alter the face of global conflict. The New Republic, September 16, 2019.Brad Plumer. Carbon Dioxide Emissions Hit a Record in 2019, Even as Coal Fades. New York Times, Dec 3, 2019.Paola Rosa-Aquino. The life-altering, world-ending topic they’re still not teaching you about in school. Grist. June 4, 2019.David Corn. It’s the End of the World as They Know It: The distinct burden of being a climate scientist. Mother Jones, July 8, 2019.Head, Lesley, & Harada, T. Keeping the heart a long way from the brain: The emotional labour of climate scientists. Emotion, Space & Society, 24, 34–41 (2017).Livia Albeck-Ripka. Why Lost Ice Means Lost Hope for an Inuit Village. New York Times, Nov. 25, 2017Indigenous Peoples, Lands, & Resources. Bennett, T. M., Maynard, S., Cochran, P., Gough, R., Lynn, K., Maldonado, J., Voggesser, G. Wotkyns, S., & Cozzetto, K. Climate Change Impacts in the United States: The Third National Climate Assessment (297- 317). U.S. Global Change Research Program. 2014.Cunsolo, Ashlee. "Climate Change as the Work of Mourning." Mourning Nature: Hope at the Heart of Ecological Loss & Grief. Ed Cunsolo & Landman. McGill-Queen's University Press, 2017.Scaramutti, Carolina, Vos, S., Salas-Wright, C., & Schwartz, S. "The Mental Health Impact of Hurricane Maria on Puerto Ricans in Puerto Rico & Florida." Disaster Medicine & Public Health Preparedness. Nov 2018.Ron Reed and Kari Norgaard. Emotional impacts of environmental decline: What can Native cosmologies teach sociology about emotions & environmental justice? Theory & Society 46 (463–495) November 2017.Good Greif NetworkClimate Psychology AllianceStephen Running, The 5 Stages of Climate Grief. Numerical Terradynamic Simulation Group Publications. 173. 2007Douglas Burton-Christie. The Gift of Tears: Loss, Mourning, and the Work of Ecological Restoration. Worldviews 15.1 (29–46) 2011.Martín Prechtel.The Smell of Rain on Dust: Grief and Praise. North Atlantic Books. April 14, 2015.Chris Jordan. This Image Shows the Tragedy of Mass Consumption – But Change is Possible HuffPost, April 1, 2018. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Today on the Listing Agent Lifestyle podcast, we're kicking off the New Year with a very special episode, revisiting Ron Reed. If you've been with us since the beginning, you'll remember Ron was one of the first episodes on the podcast, and he was famously the guy who got his very first listing, and sold it before his 30-day trial at GoGoAgent even expired! He's developed that into amazing things over the last three or four years, and we had a great conversation about something we in GoGoAgent called Market Maker Monday. Ron's been the greatest adopter of this strategy. We have a whole thread in our forum where we post the results of sharing Market Maker Monday emails, and in this episode, we talk about the results people have been posting, and the psychology behind being a market maker. As a case study, Ron has some great numbers from the first year of people who responded to him, and what's happened with them over the three years since. It's another great example of winning through consistency. Links: Show Notes GoGoAgent.com Listing Agent Scorecard Listing Agent Lifestyle Book Be a Guest
For this week's extra, Mike is joined by Ron Reed and Greg Rosenbaum from SXSW EDU to talk about trends in learning and education over the past 10 years as the conference gears up for its 10th anniversary run in March 2020. What has changed over the years and what has remained the same? What's it like to run a learning conference as part of SXSW? How is SXSW EDU operating in a way that is inclusive and representative of the community and how does it continue to explore the cross disciplinary nature of the education landscape in the 21st Century? You'll hear about all of this and also get some news about the launch of a dedicated Podcast Stage featuring a live recording of Trending in Education which is on tap for SXSW EDU in the coming Spring. Have a listen to learn more! And join us next March in Austin if you can https://www.sxswedu.com/attend/ !
As the newest member on the Mod3rn Fitness™ coaching staff, Coach Ron is definitely one of the most experienced members on staff. He brings a ton of knowledge, experience, and value to every call he's a part of and we're excited for the rest of the world to hear his story today! Listen as he walks you through what seems like a scripted movie with all the highs and lows of a perfect drama. At one point in his life, he was overweight and eventually he decided that his life was worth more than that. He used his passion for CrossFit and Nutrition, to get himself off of the medications prescribed by the doctors. He recently just became a Certified Level 1 CrossFit instructor as well! Make you stay all the way through the end when he drops some major knowledge for you to sit on after listening to this episode. Happy Friday! #iamteamFFIT Lastly, please help us spread this movement by leaving us a review on iTunes, Google, and Facebook we’d truly appreciate your support! https://g.page/Mod3rn-Fitness/review https://www.facebook.com/mod3rnfitness/reviews/ https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/just-ffit-podcast/id1464897298 Thank you all in advance!
Join Wallace Santos, CEO and Founder of MAINGEAR, and Ron Reed as they announce and take a deep dive into the MAINGEAR Element, designed in colloboration with Intel, and the MAINGEAR Classic Backpack. Powered by the 9th Gen Intel i7-9750H and NVIDIA RTX 2070 Max-Q the ELEMENT delivers an incredibly fluid gaming experience paired with an ultra-smooth, narrow bezel 144hz 15.6 IPS display. With 32GB of DDR4 memory and 2TB of blazing fast NVMe storage the ELEMENT is optimized for the modern gamer and content creator. The ELEMENT has been inspired by minimalist design philosophy, using its thin profile and timeless materials to rebel against the dated, overly aggressive gamer aesthetic of yesterday. Learn more at: maingear.com/element
Ron Reed, Nick Pavano and Brent Fisher discuss privacy in smart devices, the redemption of No Man's Sky, streaming platforms, Ninja's move to Mixer, and Tesla implants.
:19 - The Indians swept the Tigers and they are set to take on the Kansas City Royals. It’s pretty obvious the Indians have had a favorable schedule of late, but are there too many division games per season? What can be done? 3:42 - This weekend is the All-American Soap Box Derby, and FirstEnergy has agreed to renew its sponsorship of the event. CEO Chuck Jones called in to talk about the partnership. 10:10 - President Trump has confirmed the United States shot down an Iranian drone. What will this lead to, if anything? The panel discussed the current matters, as well as going back a few years to the Iran Deal. 15:22 - The weather will be scorching hot this weekend, so why not cool off in a movie theater and watch a(nother) Disney reboot? Our movie guy Scott Wynn chats about The Lion King on its 25th anniversary, as well as the Top Gun: Maverick trailer. 17:51 - As mentioned above, it’s Soap Box Derby weekend, and Ray sat down off the air with Ron Reed, author of the new book A Look Back, which chronicles the days of the derby from 1946 to 1959. Be sure to follow us on our various social media platforms. Facebook: 1590WAKRakron Instagram: @1590WAKR Twitter: @1590WAKR, @Rayinthemorning, @TonyMazur
Ron Reed, Brent Fisher and Sean Cadet explain the differences between the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 20 Series and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 20 Super series of graphics cards.
Wallace Santos, Ron Reed, and Brent Fisher discuss the latest in gaming culture and the No Man's Sky community, Google's latest adventures, cloud gaming, the future of video games and failed energy drinks on this episode of On the Bench. Watch On the Bench live every Friday at 5 pm Eastern on any of MAINGEAR's channels: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MAINGEAR Periscope: https://www.periscope.com/MAINGEAR Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/MAINGEAR Mixer: https://www.mixer.com/MAINGEAR YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MAINGEAR Follow us on our other social platforms: Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/MAINGEAR Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/MAINGEAR
More from AZ with host, Guy Rodgers with Pinnacle Forum, who brought in Ron Reed, a manufacturing consultant, who's story of how this Forum has transformed his life and business is one that'll truly resonate.
More from AZ with host, Guy Rodgers with Pinnacle Forum, who brought in Ron Reed, a manufacturing consultant, who's story of how this Forum has transformed his life and business is one that'll truly resonate. The post Pinnacle Forum: A Testimony appeared first on iWork4Him Podcast.
It's On the Bench! MAINGEAR's weekly podcast about the latest in tech, pc hardware, gaming and more! Join Wallace Santos, Ron Reed and Brent Fisher this week as they see who's E3 prediction was spot on and who was absolutely wrong. We also give out awards for multiple categories for E3. Watch On the Bench every Friday on any of MAINGEAR's channels: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MAINGEAR Periscope: https://www.periscope.com/MAINGEAR Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/MAINGEAR Mixer: https://www.mixer.com/MAINGEAR YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MAINGEAR Follow us on our other social platforms: Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/MAINGEAR Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/MAINGEAR
It's On the Bench! MAINGEAR's weekly podcast about the latest in tech, pc hardware, gaming and more! Join Wallace Santos, Ron Reed and Brent Fisher this week as they discuss Apple's WWDC and Mac Pro announcements as well as their E3 predictions. Watch On the Bench every Friday on any of MAINGEAR's channels: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MAINGEAR Periscope: https://www.periscope.com/MAINGEAR Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/MAINGEAR Mixer: https://www.mixer.com/MAINGEAR YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MAINGEAR Follow us on our other social platforms: Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/MAINGEAR Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/MAINGEAR
It's On the Bench! MAINGEAR's weekly podcast about the latest in tech, pc hardware, gaming and more! Join Wallace Santos, Ron Reed and Brent Fisher this week as they discuss Computex 2019 and AMD's bombshell announcement of 3rd gen Ryzen with the 3000 series of CPUs. Other topics also include Intel's 10nm laptops, Quake II rtx, Adblockers, Call of Duty: Modern Warfare, and Wallace's Jeep. Watch On the Bench every Friday on any of MAINGEAR's channels: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MAINGEAR Periscope: https://www.periscope.com/MAINGEAR Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/MAINGEAR Mixer: https://www.mixer.com/MAINGEAR YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MAINGEAR Follow us on our other social platforms: Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/MAINGEAR Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/MAINGEAR
On the Bench is MAINGEAR's weekly podcast hosted by Ron Reed, starring Wallace Santos and Brent Fisher. In this episode of On the Bench, the crew talks about John Wick, the new VYBE colorways and WoW Classic. Subscribe and Follow us on Social Media! We're @MAINGEAR on all platforms... Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MAINGEAR Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/MAINGEAR Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/MAINGEAR Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/MAINGEAR Mixer: https://www.mixer.com/MAINGEAR YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MAINGEAR
On the Bench is MAINGEAR's weekly podcast hosted by Ron Reed, starring Wallace Santos and Brent Fisher. In this episode of On the Bench, the crew benchmarks the Intel Core i9-9900K in the new MAINGEAR VYBE pre-configured system (Stage 4). Stick around to hear about how to get into MAIGNEAR's Be Next streaming and partnership program. Enter the giveaway to win an Intel Core i9-9900K: https://www.maingear.com/promotions/i... Get your own MAINGEAR VYBE here: https://www.maingear.com/custom/deskt... Subscribe and Follow us on Social Media! We're @MAINGEAR on all platforms... Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MAINGEAR Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/MAINGEAR Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/MAINGEAR Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/MAINGEAR Mixer: https://www.mixer.com/MAINGEAR YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MAINGEAR
Join Wallace Santos and Ron Reed in the return of On the Bench: Episode 33! With a deep dive into the new pre-configured VYBE Desktop PC, including bringing APEX to the new chassis, and MAINGEAR's #BeNext program, you won't want to miss this episode of MAINGEAR's On the Bench.
We had the great pleasure of sitting down with Ron Reed, Founder and Executive Producer, and Greg Rosenbaum, General Manager, of the learning conference SXSW EDU. Ron and Greg share the origin story of SXSWEdu and explore the emerging trends they've seen over the first nine years of the conference. We talk community building, the power of convergence zones and the ways in which innovation in learning and education is evolving. We also touch on mindfulness, social and emotional learning, and the whole teacher movement as core parts of the emergent zeitgeist of festival. If you made it to SXSW EDU this year, this is a wonderful capstone conversation for the experience. If you didn't make it, listening is a fantastic way to get a sense of what Greg and Ron are trying to accomplish and how it feels to be a part of it.
Ever wonder what it takes to plan and run an 8,000 person conference? While attending SXSW EDU this week, Vadim got a chance to speak with the founder of the conference, Ron Reed. This episode covers the origin story of the education conference and how Ron saw a big opportunity to build a community for people interested in improving education. In our conversation Ron explains why the original event was double the expected size, and talks about how the conversation has changed over the years around education. We also dive into what it takes to plan and run a conference of this magnitude, which grew to about 8,000 attendees in 2019. Vadim also had a chance to watch the keynote address from renown author and New York Times columnist David Brooks, and found out how Ron was able to get David to speak at this year's event. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
(22:58) On this episode, we interview Ron Reed, executive producer of SXSW EDU. Listen to learn more about the event, teaching as a creative enterprise, and how teaching and learning have changed over the past 10 years. For more on SXSW EDU, visit https://www.sxswedu.com/ ©2018 Texas Association of School Boards, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
This week on MAINGEAR's On the Bench: Wallace Santos and Ron Reed reveal the all new FORMA Gaming Chair line. On the Bench is a weekly technology, hardware, gaming, and esports talk show brought to by the people at MAINGEAR, Inc. The show is live streamed on our various social media platforms every Thursday at 5pm Eastern. Video on Demand is available on those platforms as well as here on YouTube. This stream and video on demand are Powered by NVidia GeForce.
This week on MAINGEAR's On the Bench: Wallace Santos and Ron Reed unbox the Intel i9-9900K and NVidia GeForce RTX 2080Ti.
Wallace Santos and Ron Reed talk about this week's hot topics on MAINGEAR's On the Bench: Episode 29. Topics included: Wallace's trip to NVidia, Google's pixel launch, Intel's CPU refresh and the Windows October Update.
Wallace Santos and Ron Reed talk about this week's hot topics: Anti-swatting, VR immersion, Surface products, Teck Decks, the Windows 10 October Update, glass bridges and life advice.
Ron founded Reed Résumés in 2014 after spending 7 years as a New York City-based recruiter. He realized that there was a massive need for résumé writing services. He has viewed hundreds of thousands of résumés and conservatively, less than 5% could be considered absolutely flawless. More concerning to him though was, the vast majority of résumés are stunningly underwhelming. Given how competitive the job market is, he realized that he is uniquely positioned to do something about it. Website: https://www.brutallyhonestpodcast.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brutallyhonestpodcast/?hl=en Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Brutallyhonestpodcast/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/Harrison_Baron Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/brutallyhonestpodcast
Ron Reed, writer/director of Pacific Theatre's Tolkein and Jacques Lalonde fills us in on what he's up to.
Today on the Listing Agent Lifestyle podcast we're talking with Justina Courtney, from Burlington in Canada, just outside of Toronto. Justina is a newer real estate agent, coming up on a year. She's been with us at GoGoAgent since January, and has been mailing the Getting Listings program in very specific areas. She's really going all in on trying to get listings in a particular townhouse area, so we talked a little bit about the strategy behind that. She’s following a program we developed with Julie Matthews here in Winter Haven, mailing a multiple week sequence, at the peak listing time of the market, where people are mostly listing their homes. Julie went from a 0% market share in a particular area to having generated five of the next 24 listings that came on the market. A 20% market share. Both Justina and Ron Reed are duplicating that process and we're watching it all unfold in our GoGoAgent forum right now. So, today we talked a little about that, and then we talked about some strategies for Justina to generate business now, while waiting for the Getting Listing program to kick in. I think you're really going to enjoy this. Justina's going to be a great story. She's doing all the right moves, and she's got the disciplined execution to make it all happen. Links: Show Notes GoGoAgent.com Be a Guest Listing Agent Lifestyle Book
Welcome to The Listing Agent Lifestyle Podcast. My name is Dean Jackson and I'm excited because today we've moving on in a series focusing on your business. We started off the podcast with a series of three episodes looking at people who are a little further down the road in this listing agent lifestyle. We kicked it off with Tony Kalsi, who's just finished the four year case study to show what happens running the Getting Listings program, and how it created 11 times ROI on the investment over that time. Then we talked with Chuck Charlton, who's 12 years down the road and the impact these things we're talking about has had on his business. Then last week we talked with Ron Reed, who was a new GoGoAgent user last year. He very quickly, even in the 30 day free trial got his first listing and went on to generate $55,000 from one area, starting with 400 homes. Now, I want to focus on talking about your business. I've been getting emails from people who have listened to the first few episodes saying, "Wow, this is really interesting. Tell me more, how do I take the next step? Where do I start? How do I go to that level?". One of those emails from Tony Fabiano in Toronto. I reached out to Tony and said, "Tony, let's do this. Let's come on and let's spend an hour and we'll talk about what's going on in your business. We'll talk about the elements of the listing agent lifestyle. We'll do some analysis on where the opportunities are in your business." We just wrapped up that conversation. I'll tell you what, Tony couldn't be a nicer guy. We had a great conversation. He's really thoughtful. He's got a really good handle on where his business is coming from. He's primarily, which is a testament to who he is as a person, a repeat and referral business. He's got a nice business doing 30 plus transactions this year. We dug in, looked at the numbers, decided what the key metrics are that driver those results, and how to maybe move the needle a little bit. The hour went very quick. We had a great conversation. I look forward to hearing great things from Tony over the next year, so stay tuned and enjoy this episode. Links: Show Notes GoGoAgent.com
Ron founded Reed Résumés in 2014 after spending 7 years as a New York City-based recruiter. I realized that there was a massive need for résumé writing services. I have viewed hundreds of thousands of résumés and conservatively, less than 5% could be considered absolutely flawless. More concerning to him though was, the vast majority of résumés are stunningly underwhelming. Given how competitive the job market is, he realized that he is uniquely positioned to do something about it. Website: https://www.brutallyhonestpodcast.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brutallyhonestpodcast/?hl=en Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Brutallyhonestpodcast/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/Harrison_Baron Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/brutallyhonestpodcast
Welcome to the listing agent lifestyle podcast. My name is Dean Jackson and today, we have Ron Reed with us from Madison, Wisconsin. Ron is finishing out our Getting Listings trifecta of shows that we started with Tony Kalsi and his four year case study, showing the ROI from doing Getting Listings in one neighborhood. And then Chuck Charlton who showed how continuing with the program for 10 years works out. So today we have Ron Reed who joined us just over a year ago and in that one year, he really took off. He got his first listing in the first month of following the Getting Listings program, even before his free trial of GoGoAgent.com, even ended, and he's gone on to parlay that into a bigger area that he's mailing to. Ron's a disciplined executor and I love that about him, but he's also very astute in measuring and tracking results of everything he does. You're really going to enjoy this conversation. Links: Show Notes GoGoAgent.com
Ron Reed, SXSWedu Executive Producer, discuss the 5th anniversary of this international conference and festival in Austin, Texas.
Around 25 years after SXSW’s first festival, Ron founded an education component to the annual conference and called it SXSWedu. To this day, he is the executive producer of SXSWedu. We had Hannah Nyren sit down with Ron to discuss the conference’s history, its current initiatives, and its future. Full story: https://edtechtimes.com/2017/03/03/sxswedu-founder-ron-reed-shares-how-it-all-began-what-to-expect-next-week/ Music: Giving Tree by Podington Bear, licensed under a Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 International License. http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Podington_Bear/Daydream/Giving_Tree_1206
Ron Reed is a Karuk dipnet fisherman and a cultural biologist for the Karuk Tribe of California, where he develops plans for eco-cultural revitalization, leads youth cultural education camps, and fosters collaborative research at the nexus of traditional ecological knowledge and western science. Ron plays a critical role in increasing public awareness about the impacts of colonization on the spiritual and physical health of his people and on the ecological integrity of the Karuk ancestral lands. He is a co-founder of the Karuk-UC Berkeley Collaborative and works with the nearby tribes, UC Berkeley and the USDA on the Klamath Basin Tribal Food Security Project. In this episode, Ron talks with Devon about re-discovering traditional knowledge, the trouble with and power of expertise, and renewing the forest and our culture with sacred fire. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
An underrated album for sure. Ron Reed joins the show to talk about Geddy's solo album.
Ron Reed is back to talk about his (and probably your) favorite album, Moving Pictures! This is a jam packed episode about a jam packed album, enjoy!
Ron Reed joins the show to discuss Neil's drumming and his gear. Ron lists his top 10 drum moments from Rush's catalog. Enjoy the show!
Ron Reed, CEO of NWP Services Corporation joined Critical Mass Radio Show to talk about how his firm is helping middle market companies in the multifamily operations industry maximize their company's cost recovery and sustainability. Dr. Jack Singer, author of his latest book "The Financial Advisors Ultimate Stress Mastery Guide" returns to Critical Mass Radio Show to highlight some of the major stressors effecting physical and mental stress to executives and CEO's running middle market companies.