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Mark mentions: Trump Poll, Mrs. Obama?, Patsy Restaurant Owner, Sands Casino, Dems Civil War vs Trump tariffs/Oligarch factor, WH renovations, and NBC-COMCAST distancing themselves from MSNBC See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Mark mentions: Trump Poll, Mrs. Obama's Podcast, Mark gets email from BMW, Patsy's Restaurant Owner, Sands Casino, Democratic Civil War vs. Oligarchs, NYT article about DEMS position, WH renovations, and NBC-Comcast distancing themselves form MSNBC See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Mark mentions: Trump Poll, Mrs. Obama?, Patsy Restaurant Owner, Sands Casino, Dems Civil War vs Trump tariffs/Oligarch factor, WH renovations, and NBC-COMCAST distancing themselves from MSNBC
Mark mentions: Trump Poll, Mrs. Obama's Podcast, Mark gets email from BMW, Patsy's Restaurant Owner, Sands Casino, Democratic Civil War vs. Oligarchs, NYT article about DEMS position, WH renovations, and NBC-Comcast distancing themselves form MSNBC
WEBSITE: https://www.dspmediaonline.com/show/just-wondering-with-norm-hitzges/ Just Wondering is sponsored by Fluent Financial at https://www.fluentfinancial.com MORE ABOUT NORM: https://www.justwonderingpodcast.com Listen on the Go, 24/7! Download the NEW Fan Stream Sports APP on iOS and Android! Listen on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/just-wondering-with-norm-hitzges/id1702002645 Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/1XHsL9qJA4rGGKTMteLWFY?si=07cf2fa29d05404e Follow Norm on X at: @NormsClubhouse - https://www.x.com/normsclubhouse Join the NEW Fan Stream Sports Facebook group to interact with hosts and other fans: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1701025303664208 Just Wondering is also sponsored by: Goodness Steak Seasonings at https://www.bringthetasty.com/ Oh Hail Roofing at https://www.ohhhail.com/
Guest: John Doyle, Principle Intelligence Enablement Consultant at Mandiant / Google Cloud Topics: You have created a new intelligence class focused on building enterprise threat intelligence capability, so what is the profile of an organization and profile for a person that benefits the most from the class? There are many places to learn threat intel (TI), what is special about your new class? You talk about country cyber operations in the class, so what is the defender - relevant difference between, say, DPRK and Iran cyber doctrines? More generally, how do defenders benefit from such per country intel? Can you really predict what the state-affiliated attackers would do to your organization based on the country doctrine? In many minds, TI is connected to attribution. What is your best advice on attribution to CISOs of well-resourced organizations? What about mainstream organizations? Overall we see a lot of organizations still failing to operationalize TI, especially strategic TI, how does this help them? Resources: The new class “Inside the Mind of APT” “Navigating Tradeoffs of Attribution” paper Sands Casino hack 2014 "Threat Horizons - How Google Does Threat Intelligence" (ep112)
Alan Dershowitz, Harvard Law Professor, host of "The DerShow," and the author of "Get Trump: The Threat to Civil Liberties, Due Process, and Our Constitutional Rule of Law" Topic: Disney and DeSantis legal battle Bruce Blakeman, Nassau County Executive Topic: Backing the Sands Casino bid at Nassau Colisseum Congresswoman Nicole Malliotakis, Representative for New York's 11th Congressional District Topic: House passes bill to increase debt limit and cut spendingSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Brigitte Quinn has the afternoon's top local stories from the WCBS newsroom.
Mike Brennan is a Creator & Communicator, telling stories on pages & stages. His artistic journey began as a boy in New York, where he would construct heartwarming greeting cards which lit up the faces of his family and friends. From an early age, he understood the importance of serving others through his art and bringing them value, an ethos still evident in his creative practice today. Mike's portfolio showcases his versatility and creativity. He is known for his custom ‘Rockstar' pet portraits, pop culture art, yoga art, live event sketching and graphic design. He is also the author and illustrator of three self-published books: “Dear Snow: One Man's Angry Rant Against Winter,” “Dear Human: What Your Dog Is Really Thinking” and “The Art of Yoga.” Mike helps fellow creatives and content creators leverage simple, practical steps for establishing a daily creative habit. He does this via public speaking and his course “Your Artist Journey” (www.YourArtistJourney.com) where he shares key methods and principles from his own daily art making practice that spans over ten consecutive years and counting (over 2,555 works of art). He studied in New York City and graduated from the Fashion Institute of Technology and The School of Visual Arts. Mike has enjoyed working with a range of clients in the past, from major brands including Mobile, Heineken, Chase Bank, Sands Casino, to independent agencies serving boutique businesses like Tuscan/Lehigh Valley Dairies and Sportcraft. His pop culture art was spotlighted on AMC's Talking Dead, and featured on Syfy.com. His yoga art appeared in ‘The Art of Healthy Living' exhibit at the I.D.E.A. Museum, Mesa, Arizona. Mike has been a featured illustrator for meowbox, and is featured in Capsules Pictoria Volume 3, The Best Contemporary Illustrators Worldwide. He has had art represented by Galleria Miso, and featured art in the Ronald McDonald House Charities of Central Illinois. Social Handles: Instagram: @mikebone https://www.instagram.com/mikebone/ Twitter: @mikebone https://twitter.com/mikebone Facebook: www.facebook.com/MikeBrennanAD Websites: Main Site: www.MikeBrennan.me Event Sketching: www.EventSketches.com Course: www.YourArtistJourney.com Graphic Design: www.MikeBrennanDesigns.com Podcast: www.CreativeChats.me --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/borntocreatepodcast/message
Michael Barr, Scarlet Fu, and Mike Lynch discuss last week's Thursday Night Football ratings, Peyton Manning denying involvement in Denver Broncos ownership groups, and NY Mets owner Steve Cohen in talks on Sands casino near Citi Field. All that and more on this Monday edition of the Bloomberg Business of Sports. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
Bucks County Bytes presents to you the award-winning songwriter, singer, actress, and Keith Urban's favorite Raise 'Em Up tour moments, Kendal Conrad! I discovered Kendal from my friend and social media personality, George Wacker, who is known as Lehigh Valley With Love....once I went exploring Kendal's music I was in love with her voice and her Martin guitar! I reached out to her and asked if she could come on the show and tell the world her story! She has the most amazing personality, voice, and love for what she does! Kendal Conrad has such an extensive list of remarkable and outstanding performances, but the highlight really is when she performed and sang a duet with Keith Urban on stage in Bethlehem's Musicfest singing "We Were Us" as part of the Raise 'Em Up Tour and it is said this is one Keith Urban's favorite tour moments! She also joined Walker Hayes onstage to perform "Halloween" for 92.5 XTU's Ski Day at Jack Frost Big Boulder. Kendal is also International Miss Talent and won the title with her original song "Girlstrong." She has performed at the White House, Wells Fargo Center, Sands Casino, Six Flags, Hersheypark, the Bitter End, Musikfest, and the Susquehanna Bank Center for 92.5 XTU's anniversary party. Kendal has sung the National Anthem for MLB, NBA, MMA, NASCAR, and NBC's National Dog Show. She was a finalist in the NBC 10 Talent Search and a finalist in the Colgate Country Showdown. Kendal was the 2015 Country Showdown Winner for Philadelphia's 92.5 XTU. She has opened for country artists Blake Shelton, Charlie Daniels Band, Devin Dawson, Drew Baldridge, Alabama, Walker Hayes, Hunter Hayes, Brandon Lay, Carter Winter, Sara Evans, Tucker Beathard, Jerrod Niemann, Michael Ray, Thompson Square, Parmalee, Dylan Schneider, Diamond Rio, Kane Brown, Granger Smith, Phil Vassar, Craig Morgan, Rodney Atkins, Easton Corbin, Trailer Choir, Maggie Rose, Craig Campbell, Mo Pitney, Striking Matches, Old Dominion, Outshyne, Chris Cagle, and The Cadillac Three and performed personally for author Nicholas Sparks. She has played the Dick's Sporting Goods Open, the Foundry at the Fillmore, iPlay America, Jenks Club, Prospector's Saloon, One Centre Square, Sherman Theater, Sellersville Theatre, Provident Bank Park, PPL Center, Wayne County Fair, PGA Concert at the Bogey, and the Santander Arena. Kendal was an extra in the film Silver Linings Playbook where she can be seen bumping into Bradley Cooper. She starred as Holly Golightly in the exclusive post-Broadway production of Breakfast at Tiffany's at the Civic Theatre of Allentown. Kendal recorded her first EP in country star Reba McEntire's studio in Nashville. But my favorite part about Kendal is her sincere love of music and her love of the Martin guitar she plays...and I had the honor to chat with her and who she is on my podcast...her laugh and love are truly addicting and I hope you enjoy her chat as much as I did!! Kendal Conrad links:FacebookKendal Conrad MusicInstagram@kendalconradTwitter@kendalconradYouTubeKendal ConradSupport the show (https://paypal.me/msexpresso?locale.x=en_US)
This podcast tells the tale of a great trip out to LV with me and my buddy Joe and our unwitting accomplice Sam when the Rat Pack was still running around and the Sands was the place to be and we were right in the middle of it. Big fun at the Rivera where we won a HUGE amount of money, heckled Rodney Dangerfield who at the time was the biggest most famous comedian of the day. And then a night flight to the world famous chicken ranch on a banana yellow Cessna with a chicken with a golf club on its side.
You Booked It - How to create a successful entertainment career!
A highly skilled performer, Renee has danced professionally both nationally and internationally for the last 10 years performing in award winning production shows for one of the biggest cruise companies in the world and dancing at the Sands Casino in Macau, China. An enthusiastic and vibrant dancer / singer with extensive experience in big productions, corporate floorshows and sporting events in a diverse range of styles. SFX by ZapSplat
The psychological warfare between Brian and CatCat opens the show. Brian regales the group with an eventful accident in the bathroom, that to put it simply, went awry. Work struggles. Irritating video game gripes. What would you do for money. Pressed Hams, classic. Unreasonable breakfast portrayals. The ugly rug debate. The Dean Martin Live from the Sands Casino album is great and actually funny, go listen. Stay wiped friends... Twitter: @BatsBelfry Email: batsbelfrypodcast@gmail.com Recorded - 9/21/18
In part two of our series, John Carlin shared with us lessons on economic espionage and weaponized information. As former Assistant Attorney General for the U.S. Department of Justice’s National Security Division, he described how nation state actors exfiltrated data from American companies, costing them hundreds of billions of dollars in losses and more than two million jobs. He also reminded us how important it is for organizations to work with the government as he took us down memory lane with the Sony hack. He explained how destructive an attack can be, by using soft targets, such as email that do not require sophisticated techniques. Transcript Cindy Ng: In part two of John Carlin's talk, we learn more about how nation state actors exfiltrate data from American companies, costing them hundreds of billions of dollars in losses and more than two million jobs. He also took us down memory lane, describing how the Sony hack showed us how successful an attack can be by using soft targets, such as email, that do not require sophisticated techniques. John Carlin: Let me talk a little bit about economic espionage and how we moved into this new space. When I was a computer-hacking prosecutor prosecuting criminal cases, we were plenty busy. And I worked with an FBI squad, and the squad that I worked with did nothing but criminal cases. There was an intelligence squad who was across the hall, and they were behind a locked, secured compartmented door. The whole time I was doing criminal cases, about 10, 15 years ago, we never went on the other side of that door. If an agent switched squads, they just disappeared behind that locked, secured door. I then went over to the FBI to be Chief of Staff to the director, FBI Director Mueller. And when I was there, that door opened and we started to see day-in, day-out what nation state actors were doing to our country. And what we saw were state actors, and we had a literal jumbotron screen the size of a movie theater where we could watch it through a visual interface in real time. And we were watching state actors hop into places like universities, go from the university into your company, and then we would literally watch the data exfiltrate out. As we were watching this, it was an incredible feat of intelligence, but we also realized, "Hey, this is not success. We're watching billions and billions of dollars of what U.S. research and development, and our allies, have developed in losses. We're seeing millions of jobs lost." One estimate has it at more than two million jobs. "What can we do to make it clear that the threat isn't about consumer data or IP, the threat is about everything that you value on your system? And how do we make clear that there's an urgent need to address this problem?" What we did is, when I came back to Justice to lead up the National Security Division, is we looked to start sharing information within government. So, for the first time, every criminal prosecutor's office across the country, all 93 U.S. Attorneys' offices now has someone who's trained on the bits, and the bytes and the Electronic Communication Privacy Act on the one hand. On the other hand, on how to handle sensitive sources and methods, and encouraged to see, can you bring a case? This only happened in 2013. This approach is still very, very new. The FBI issued an edict that said, "Thou shalt share what was formally only on the intelligence side of the house with this new, specially-trained cadre." They then were redeployed out to the field. It's because of that change in approach that we did the first case of its kind, the indictment of five members of the People's Liberation Army, Unit 61398. This was a specialized unit who, as we laid out in the complaint, they were hitting companies like yours and they were doing it for reasons that weren't national security, they weren't nation-state reasons. They were doing things like...Westinghouse was about to do a joint venture with a partner in China, and right before they were gonna into business together, you watched as the Chinese uniformed members of the People's Liberation Army, the second largest military in the world, went in, attacked their system and instead of paying to lease the lead pipe as they were supposed to do the next day, they went in and stole the technical design specifications so they could get it for free. That's one example laid out in the complaint. Or to give another example, and this is why it's not the type of information that is required to be protected by regulation, like consumer data or intellectual property. Instead, for instance, they went in to a solar company, it was a U.S. subsidiary of a German multi-national and they stole the pricing data from that company. Then the Chinese competitor, using this information stolen by the People's Liberation Army, price dumped. They set their product just below where the competitor would be. That forced that competitor into bankruptcy. To add insult to injury, when that company sued them for the illegal practice of price dumping, they went and stole the litigation strategy right out from under them. When people said, "Why are you indicting the People's Liberation Army? It isn't state-to-state type activity. Everybody does it, what's the big deal? Criminal process is the wrong way to do it." The reason why we made it public were a couple. One was to make public what they were doing so that businesses would know what it was to protect themselves. Second, what they were doing was theft and that's never been tolerated. And so, there's a concept in U.S. law of what's called an easement. This is the idea that if you let someone walk across your lawn long enough, in U.S. law, they get what's called an easement. They get the right to walk across your lawn. That's why people put up no trespassing signs. International law, which is primarily a law of customary law, works the same way. And as long as we were continuing to allow them to steal day-in, day-out, the Director of the FBI called them like a drunken gorilla because they were so obvious in terms of who they were. They didn't care if they got caught because they were so confident there'd be no consequence. Then, we are setting international law, we are setting the standard as one where it's okay. So, in some respects, this case was a giant "No trespass" sign, "Get off our lawn." The other thing that we did, though, was we wanted to show the seriousness, that this was their day job. And so, we showed that the activity started at 9 a.m. Beijing time, that it went at a high level from 9:00 to noon Beijing time, it decreased from noon to 1:00, it then increased again from 1:00 to around 6 p.m. Beijing time, decreased on Chinese holidays, weekends. This was the day job of the military, and it's not fair and it can't be expected that a private company alone can defend itself against that type of adversary. This single case had an enormous impact on Chinese behavior, and I wanna move a little bit to the next major cases that occurred. So, that's economic espionage, theft for monetary value. We also started seeing some of the first destructive attacks. Everyone remembers Sony, and many people think of it as the first destructive attack on U.S. soil. It really wasn't the first destructive attack. The first destructive attack was on Sands Casino by what the Director of National Intelligence called Iranian-affiliated officials. Those Iranian-affiliated actors, when they attacked Sands, they did so because they didn't like what the head of Sands Casino had said about Iran and the Ayatollahs called on people within Iran to attack the company. They did a destructive attack that essentially turned computers into bricks. And it was only, actually, because there was someone quick thinking in the IT staff who was not authorized by their policy, by the way, who spotted what was occurring and essentially pulled the plug, and in that respect was able to segment the attack and keep it confined to a small to a small area, it didn't cause more damage. That didn't get nearly the attention of Sony, so let's talk a little bit about Sony. You know, I spent nearly 20 years in government working on national security criminal threats. We did enumerable war games where we war-gamed out, "What's it gonna look like if rogue nuclear arms nation decides to attack the United States through cyber-enabled means?" And I don't know about you guys but we all got it wrong, because not once did we guess that the first major incident was gonna be over a movie about a bunch of pot smokers. It's the only time...I remember every morning I'd meet with the Director of the FBI, the Attorney General to go over at the threats. That Christmas we'd all watched the movie the day before, shared movie reviews. And it's the only time in my career where I've gone into the Situation Room to brief the president on a serious national security incident and had to start by trying to summarize the plot of that movie which, for those of you unlucky enough to have seen it, not that I'm passing critical judgement, it is not an easy plot to summarize. So, why did we do that? Why were we treating this like a serious national security event that had presidential attention? The attack had multiple parts. One was, just like the attack on Sands Casino, it essentially turned computers into bricks. Secondly, they stole, so this is like the economic espionage threat. They stole intellectual property and they distributed it using a third party, the WikiLeaks-type example. Using third parties, they distributed that stolen intellectual property and tried to cause harm to Sony. Nobody remembers those two. What everybody remembers, and this is the weaponizing of the information idea, is that by focusing on a soft target like email communications, it was the salacious email communications inside the company between executives that got such massive media attention. That and, of course, the fact that it's a movie company. That lesson was not unnoticed, and so there's a lot of focus on it and we'll talk about it later. And it was used again, clearly, in the Russian attempt to influence elections not just here in the United States with our most recent election cycle, but both before that in elections across Europe. You can see them trying to use similar tactics and techniques right now when it comes to the French election. They clearly stumbled on the fact that, "Hey, it's not the information inside a company that people put great safeguards around, like their crown jewel of intellectual property. It can be the softer parts like email, like routine communications that, if we gather them in bulk, we can use to weaponize and cause harm to the company." The reason why we treated that as such a serious national security concern in the White House was because of the reason behind the attack. Just like the attack on Sands Casino, this attack on Sony was fundamentally an attack on our values. It was an attack on the idea that we have free speech. And similarly, the Russian attempts are fundamentally an attack on the idea of democracy. That's why they're attacking democratic institutions not just here in the United States, but across the world. For you, in the private sector, as we're designing and you're thinking about, you need to have products inside your system that can allow you to monitor broadly what type of attacks are occurring within your perimeter so you can get ahead of a weaponized information-type attack. That means fortifying defenses beyond those that are under legislation or regulation. In order to do that, that means figuring out and using products that are business-friendly. By that I mean, you may be the best information technology folks in the world, if your business side can't understand the tools that you're using or the risks that you're trying to describe to them, then you can't engage them on what could really harm the company most. And that's what you need to do your job, to figure out what that is. Another thing that we can work on now when it comes to responding quickly is how fast these events occur. And these days, the best practice is to monitor social media. Now, I know a couple companies that they're monitoring social media. In part, it's not just for cyber crisis, right? Every crisis moves that quickly. Some are monitoring it because a certain president of the United States right now, occasionally, will tweet something out in the middle of the night that can cause a company, if he singles you out, he can cause your share price to torpedo by the time the market opens. So certainly, a couple of companies who've actually been though that have rapid communications plans in place, and we've other clients now that just as a best practice have, essentially, a team monitoring that Twitter account from 3 a.m. to 6 a.m. so they can get a communication into the media mainstream before the stock market opens. That's the same idea when it comes to having systems in place, so you're monitoring social media for mentions of your company and then having a rapid response plan in place. That can also be majorly benefitted by you and your understanding of the system. If you spot where the data is that was stolen and think through with your business side how it can be used, you can get in front of it suddenly appearing somewhere on social media through WikiLeaks or some other site, just through Twitter and so that you're ready to have a rapid response that addresses your business risk. I want to focus a little bit, as we did, on this idea of working together, government and the private sector. I'm gonna go back to the economic espionage case for a second, the China case. When we did that PLA case, for years before when I was doing the criminal cases, I think companies didn't work with law enforcement because they figured, "What's the upside?" And I'll just talk about that China case, but that case, the indictment of the People's Liberation Army, it changed Chinese behavior, maybe not forever, but for now. It caused President Xi, I think that case, plus the response to Sony where we used the same type of response when it came to North Korea, which was...look, it was incredibly beneficial to Sony when we were able to say that it was North Korea. Until then, all of the attention was on Sony, "What did they do wrong? Why weren't their systems better? Isn't it ridiculous what their executives were saying?" After we could say that it was North Korea, the narrative changed to, "Hey, Government, what are you doing to protect us against nation-state threats?" That is why attributions can matter. And what did the government do? We applied now, for the second time, the approach that we'd applied for the first time with the People's Liberation Army of, number one, figuring out who did it. And that required working closely with the company to figure out not just what they took, but why they would have taken it, what could have precipitated the event. Number two, collect information in a way that we can make it public. And number three, use it, cause harm to the adversary. And that's why in Sony, unlike in the PLA case, we didn't have a criminal case available to us, so instead of using a criminal case you saw us publicly announce through the FBI who did it, and use that as a basis, then, to sanction North Korea. We realized sitting around the Situation Room table, lucky it was North Korea. If it had been some other cyber actor, unlike North Korea, who hadn't done so many other bad things, we wouldn't have been able to sanction them the way you could terrorists or those who proliferate weapons of mass destruction. So, going forwards, the president signed a new executive order that allows us to sanction cyber actors. The combination of that new executive order which significantly allows, to use the PLA example, you to sanction not just those who take it, but the companies who make money off of it, those who profit from the stolen information. I think it was that combination of the new executive order in place, the PLA case and the realization that we could make things public and would cause harm that caused President Xi, the leader of China, to blink and sign an unprecedented agreement with President Obama. He sent a crew, we negotiated with them day and night for several days. And they said for the first time, "Hey, we agree, using your military intelligence to target private companies for the benefit of their economic competitor is wrong, and we agree that that should be a norm that you don't do that." That caused the G20 to sign it, and since then we have seen in government and private group monitoring, there's a decrease in terms of how China is targeting private companies. Now, as some of you may be seeing, though, their definition of what's theft for private gain and ours might differ, and there's certainly sectors that are still getting hit and traditional intelligence collection continues.
Join Butch, Tai, Zito, Capt Jon, Brady Quinn, and world renound boxing historian Dr chris as they review the fights of the week and the upcoming bouts.This week Zito will break down the Klitcho fight and the boxers moves. Our special guest this week will be EDner Cherry . Edner just move up one moe fight with a win over Omar Douglas at the Sands Casino in Bethlem Pa. We will also get an update on the Hamen orginization from within.
2 parter - before and after the weigh-in's for Zach's fight at the Sands Casino in Bethlehem PA - X Fights MMA Promotion Back from Cali, Zach tells stories of their trip and Grace Gundrums epic match at Gracie Nationals in LA - Cutting weight and Zach weighs-in for his fight. http://www.finishersmma.com Produced by @RossSharrer
Kendal Conrad is a singer, actor, published writer, and award-winning songwriter. Kendal appeared on MTV and recently sang a duet onstage with Keith Urban. Kendal was featured on Keith Urban's website as one of his favorite "Raise 'Em Up" Tour moments and appeared in Keith's 2014 Video Yearbook. She is International Miss Talent and won the title with her original song "Girlstrong." She has performed at the White House, Wells Fargo Center, Sands Casino, Six Flags, Hersheypark, the Bitter End, and Musikfest, as well as the Susquehanna Bank Center for 92.5 XTU's anniversary party. Kendal has sung the National Anthem for MLB, NBA, MMA, NASCAR (televised on ESPN), and NBC’s National Dog Show. She was a finalist in the NBC 10 Talent Search and a finalist in the Colgate Country Showdown. She has opened for country artists Phil Vassar and Craig Morgan and performed personally for author Nicholas Sparks. As an extra in in the film Silver Linings Playbook, she can be seen bumping into Bradley Cooper, and she is currently playing Holly Golightly in the exclusive post-Broadway production of Breakfast at Tiffany's at the Civic Theatre of Allentown. Furthermore, she models clothes for Hughwear Apparel and is endorsed by Fancy Guitar Capos. Kendal recorded her first EP in country star Reba McEntire’s studio in Nashville this past summer.
Welcome back to another episode of Cage Side Submissions,We plan to provide you with unique and fun-filled SHOWS. News, highlights, and interviews Please feel free to call in with your questions and comments at anytime. 657-383-0267 For our Host Steve Rychel (@CSSRadio) And Co-Host Rachael Blaze Our First Guest is Titan FC Cheif Opperating Officer Lex McMahon (@LexMcMahonMMA) we will be Talking Titan FC 33 and Aerofest Lex is a former Marine and is on the board of the for organizations that will benefit from Aerofest. Our Second Guest is Cagr Fury Fighting Championships Welterweight Champion Jonavin "Spyder"Webb 7-0-1 (@Jonavinwebb) Jonavin will be defending his title MARCH 07, 2015 / SANDS CASINO, BETHLEHEM, PENNSYLVANIA, CFFC 47 Against the 7-4 Elijah"The Hero"Harshbarger Our third guest is Cage Fury Fighting Championship Middelweight Champion Tim"The South Jersey Strangler" Williams 10-1(@TimWillams185) Tim will be Defending his Title at CFFC 46 Febuary 28, 2015 / Harrah's Casino, Chester, Pennsylvania against the 20-11 Middelweight Anthony Smith Our Final guest Daniel "Dragon"Spohn 9-4(@Dragonspohn) dan will be returning to action March 06, 2015 Lifestyle Communities PavIlion, Columbus,Ohio Against the 8-8 Marcus Finch
Live from the Sands Casino in beautiful Las Vegas, it's White Tonight with Renny White! Tonight's guests: magician The Great Burton, musical guest guest Paulie Smoove and Marie Depanne.
Triologic performs Death From The Skies at Balticon 2011 with Evo Terra sitting in for Dr. Phil Plait on vocals. From left: Geo, Eric, Evo, Vinnie. ........................ The Show Notes Cool venue in York, PAIntroBalticon, Birthday, IcehouseHorrorscopesReligious Moron of the Week - Jan Eastgate from Richard Lane - Pastor Burning Villagers from Bruce PressSands Casino / GarageMortimer calls the show like he’s prone toThe History Chunk for June 1stS’more thanksShow close ........................ Mentioned in the Show Valencia Ballroom in York, Pennsylvania The parking deck death at the Sands Casino ........................ Geo's Music: stock up! The catalog at iTunes The catalog at CD Baby ........................ Sign up for the mailing list: Write to Geo! A reminder that the new portal to the Geologic Universe is at GeorgeHrab.com. Score more data from the Geologic Universe! Get George's edition Non-Coloring Book at Lulu, both as download and print editions. Check out Geo's wiki page thanks to Tim Farley. Have a comment on the show, a Religious Moron tip, or a question for Ask George? Drop George a line and write to Geo's Mom, too! Ms. Information sez, "Thanks to all for attending GeologiCon on Friday!"