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Ep 247: Reconsidered: 12 - Sarah Stern Original Airdate: 03/30/20 On the evening of December 3, 2016, police received a report of an abandoned vehicle on a bridge in Belmar, NJ. It didn't take long for them to discover that the car belonged to 19 year old Sarah Stern. Air and water searches were conducted immediately, but turned up no sign of Sarah. The initial theory was that she had taken her own life, however we would come to find out that something far more sinister had happened to Sarah. Women & Crime: Reconsidered is where we revisit our episode catalog and bring new insights, behind the scenes or updates. Sources for Today's Episode: Credits: • Written and Hosted by Amy Shlosberg and Meghan Sacks • Produced by James Varga • Audio Editor, • Script Editor, • Music by Dessert Media Help is Available: If you or someone you know is in a crisis situation, or a victim of domestic, or other violence, there are many organizations that can offer support or help you in your specific situation. For direct links to these organizations please visit https://womenandcrimepodcast.com/resources/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
No início de dezembro de 2016, a jovem de 19 anos Sarah Stern desaparece. Depois de muitas buscas, nada foi encontrado. A polícia suspeitou de suicídio. Um de seus melhores amigos, Liam McAtasney, disse à polícia que a relação de Sarah com seu pai era conturbada. Posteriormente a polícia descobriria que na verdade Liam era o culpado pela morte de sua amiga.
In 2016, 19-year-old Sarah Stern disappeared from her home in New Jersey, sparking an investigation that would uncover far more than anyone expected. What seemed like a simple missing persons case quickly turned into something more sinister, involving the ultimate betrayal and a shocking connection to those closest to her. As the investigation unfolded, the truth about Sarah's disappearance became more complicated than anyone could have imagined. Who could have done this to someone they once called a friend? Thanks for tuning in Can't Handle Fam! Thanks for listening friends! Subscribe to stay up to date with our weekly episodes released every Wednesday. Come join us here: PATREON https://www.patreon.com/c/canthandlethecrimeandscandal/membership INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/canthandlepodcast?igsh=em1jZ2duemw4eTlv&utm_source=qr YOUTUBE https://youtu.be/uRG0uLTPd2g?si=NjgEdW7w7hQV2dUT FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/share/su9iNJcC4LQXuyqK/?mibextid=LQQJ4d Contact Canthandlepodcast@gmail.com
When 19-year-old aspiring artist Sarah Stern goes missing just weeks before Christmas 2016, investigators initially suspect she may have died by suicide or run away from home. Then, in January 2017, one of Sarah's former high school classmates comes forward with chilling information that leads to an undercover police sting and the shocking arrests of two very familiar faces. Armed with a bombshell, caught-on-tape confession from one of the suspects and the damning testimony of the other, Monmouth County, New Jersey prosecutors face the uphill task of trying to secure a murder conviction without a body for only the second time in the state's history. Features interviews include Sarah's father, detectives and prosecutors, along with complete access to archival materials detailing the search and the undercover sting operation.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
"Les liens qui libèrent vs les relations qui enferment. (...) Les liens d'amitié, de compagnonnage, sont autant de force(s) et le film parle tellement de ça." Déborah Saïag"C'est hyper joyeux. C'est rassurant de savoir que ma partenaire a une amitié (ou sœur, frère etc), une relation extrêmement forte, parce que je ne suis pas toute seule, responsable.. On traverse tellement de choses." Mika TardMes chères auditrices, mes chers auditeurs, accrochez-vous, vous allez tomber en amour ❤️
Am 3. Dezember 2016 wird ein verlassenes Auto auf einer Brücke entdeckt. Die 19-jährige Sarah Stern ist spurlos verschwunden. Was zunächst wie ein Unfall aussieht, entpuppt sich als mysteriöser Kriminalfall, der die Ermittler vor ein Rätsel stellt. Solltet ihr mich unterstützen wollen oder einfach Interesse daran haben den Fall visuell aufbereitet zu sehen, schaut einfach hier vorbei: https://www.youtube.com/insolito Ansonsten könnt ihr mich natürlich auch gerne bei Instagram abonnieren: https://www.instagram.com/insolito_yt/ Ich wünsche euch einen schönen Morgen, Mittag oder Abend
Bertrand Lesguillons vous présente la nouvelle comédie "God Save The Tuche" avec Jean-Paul Rouve et Sarah Stern. Il présente les films "Présence" avec Lucy Liu , "5 Septembre" avec Peter Saarsgard, Ben Chaplin et le film iranien "Mon Gâteau Préféré".
Bertrand Lesguillons vous présente la nouvelle comédie "God Save The Tuche" avec Jean-Paul Rouve et Sarah Stern. Il présente les films "Présence" avec Lucy Liu , "5 Septembre" avec Peter Saarsgard, Ben Chaplin et le film iranien "Mon Gâteau Préféré".
4 ans après Les Tuche 4, la famille composée de Jeff, Cathy, Wilfried, Stéphanie, Coin Coin et mamie suze est de retour avec God save the tuche.Pour ces nouvelles aventures, tous débarquent en Angleterre, pour le meilleur et pour le pire ! Jean-Paul Rouve succède à Olivier Baroux à la réalisation. L'occasion d'y apporter un peu plus de sa touche personnelle et de son humour.Pour parler de cet épisode 5, AlloCiné a rencontré avec les fils et la fille Tuche : Pierre Lottin, Théo Fernandez et Sarah Stern.Crédits :Journaliste : Brigitte BaronnetMontage : Arthur CattinSi ce podcast vous a plu, laissez nous des étoiles, un commentaire, et abonnez-vous à notre chaine AlloCiné ! Hébergé par Audion. Visitez https://www.audion.fm/fr/privacy-policy pour plus d'informations.
Sarah Stern was a 19-year-old college student living in Neptune City, New Jersey, when, in December 2016, she suddenly vanished. Her disappearance sparked immediate concern, where it was unknown whether she took her life, ran away, or was met with foul play. Through speaking with her best friend, Liam McAtasney, investigators thought it might be plausible that she took her life or ran away, considering he was telling them how unhappy Sarah was and that she was planning on fleeing to Canada to get away from her father. However, a few weeks after she disappeared, a friend of Liam's came forward to the police that he believed Liam may have killed her and staged her disappearance. A sting operation was conducted, and within hours, they retrieved a videotaped confession from Liam, who explained, in detail, how he murdered Sarah with the help of his friend Preston over some money that Sarah had found a few months prior. This confession led to the arrests of both Liam and Preston, and Preston ultimately agreed to a deal where he would testify against Liam in exchange for a lesser sentence. Both men are behind bars, and unfortunately, Sarah's body has never been recovered from the water where they tossed her body. Please consider donating to the Sarah Stern Memorial Scholarship for The Arts Fund: https://fundrazr.com/SarahSternSchola... Donations will be matched through 12/27/24: https://www.higherhope.org/donate Check out my foundation, Higher Hope: Higher Hope Foundation: https://www.higherhope.org/ Shop my Merch! https://kendallrae.shop This episode is sponsored by: Our Place - promo code: TCKR Rocket Money SKIMS Nutrafol - promo code: KENDALLRAEGIFT Check out Kendall's other podcasts: The Sesh & Mile Higher Follow Kendall! YouTube Twitter Instagram Facebook Mile Higher Zoo REQUESTS: General case suggestion form: https://bit.ly/32kwPly Form for people directly related/ close to the victim: https://bit.ly/3KqMZLj Discord: https://discord.com/invite/an4stY9BCN CONTACT: For Business Inquiries - kendall@INFAgency.com
PASS! The Cranberry Sauce, it's Episode 408 and we are definitely more certain about what a pilgrim is than a mulberry bush. Today Em takes us to Maryland for the haunted Hampton House where the ghosts seem to move themselves in. Then Christine brings us the upsetting and plot twist filled case of Sarah Stern. And to all the Cygnets and Scorpios out there, Christine is here for you… and that's why we drink!Don't miss the last chance to see our Pour Decisions Tour for this year in San Francisco and San Diego THIS WEEK! Get your tickets at: www.andthatswhywedrink.com/live ______________________ Exclusive $45-off Carver Mat at http://AuraFrames.com Use code DRINK at checkout to save! This exclusive Black Friday Cyber Monday deal is their best of the year, so don't miss out! Stop wasting money on things you don't use. Cancel your unwanted subscriptions by going to RocketMoney.com/DRINK Enjoy the holidays while keeping your financial goals on track with Chime. Open your account in 2 minutes at http://chime.com/DRINK Chime. Feels like progress. Go to BlueNile.com to shop Blue Nile, the original online jeweler since 1999! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Sarah Stern, executive director of the Maple Leaf Centre for Food Security, discusses, among other topics, the state of food insecurity in Canada, its disproportionate effect on the disabled community, and the role for public policy to lower food insecurity in general and among disabled Canadians in particular. This episode was made possible by the Maple Leaf Centre for Food Security and the generosity of listeners like you. Donate today. The Hub Dialogues features The Hub's editor-at-large, Sean Speer, in conversation with leading entrepreneurs, policymakers, scholars, and thinkers on the issues and challenges that will shape Canada's future at home and abroad. If you like what you are hearing on Hub Dialogues consider subscribing to The Hub's free weekly email newsletter featuring our insights and analysis on key public policy issues. Sign up here: https://thehub.ca/join/.
I denne ukens episode skal jeg ta for meg en sak som omhandler svik, penger og narsissisme, og jeg må kan se for meg at du som lytter kommer til å kjenne på både frustrasjon og irritasjon over enkelte av tingene som skjer i denne saken - det ble i hvert fall jeg da jeg gjorde research til episoden.
Just before 3am, police found Sarah Stern's abandoned car on the side of a bridge. After speaking to her best friends, they had worries about her state of mind and thought might have jumped. But it soon became obvious, that those closest to her, actually had something to hide… Our email is for business enquiries only. https://linktr.ee/trulycriminal1 Sources
19-year-old aspiring artist Sarah Stern is first reported missing when her car was discovered abandoned on a bridge. Investigators begin to focus on Stern's childhood friend as a suspect after they cue in on troubling statements and omissions made during his police interviews. However, an up-and-coming filmmaker is willing to go undercover to help the case, which leads to the capturing of a chilling confession. The Interrogation Tapes was produced by ABC News Studios in partnership with 20/20. The series is now streaming on Hulu. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Can you believe we've done 70 of these? Mike is back in the storyteller's seat this week to talk about the senseless murder of Sarah Stern by two former classmates. A confession was captured on video and the story is ridiculous and outrageous. Much of the information for this story is taken from the confession tape available here Follow us on Instagram @MAFPodcastShow Email us at MAFPodcastShow@gmail.com --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/murder-amongst-friends/support
David Pepose Interview Comic Reviews: DC Bad Dream: A Dreamer Story GN by Nicole Maines, Rye Hickman Shazam! 10 by Josie Campbell, Emanuela Lupacchino, Mike Norton, Trish Mulvihill Marvel Deadpool 1 by Cody Ziglar, Roge Antonio, Guru eFX Spider-Man: Shadow of the Green Goblin 1 by J.M. DeMatteis, Michael Sta. Maria, Chris Sotomayor Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur GN: Wreck and Roll by Stephanie Williams, Asia Simone Marvel Unlimited Infinity Paws 1 by Jason Loo, Nao Fuji Dark Horse Minor Threats II: The Fastest Way Down 1 by Patton Oswalt, Jordan Blum, Scott Hepburn, Ian Herring Usagi Yojimbo: The Crow 1 by Stan Sakai, Hi-Fi Image Geiger 1 by Geoff Johns, Gary Frank, Brad Anderson Hack/Slash: Kill Your Idols by Tim Seeley, Stefano Caselli, K. Michael Russell Redcoat 1 by Geoff Johns, Bryan Hitch, Andrew Currie, Brad Anderson Rook Exodus 1 by Geoff Johns, Jason Fabok, Brad Anderson Dynamite Red Sonja: Empire of the Damned 1 by Steve Niles, Alessandro Amoruso IDW Dungeons and Dragons: Ravenloft – Caravan of Curses 1 by Casey Gilly, Amy Chase, Jose Jaro, Silvia Califano, Eryk Donovan, Sarah Stern, Maria Keane, Cris Peter, Valentina Pinto, Adam Guzowski Godzilla vs. Mighty Morphin Power Rangers II 1 by Cullen Bunn, Baldemar Rivas, Andrew Dalhouse TMNT Saturday Morning Adventures: April Special by Erik Burnham, Sarah Myer, Luis Antonio Delgado, Jack Lawrence Valiant Brittania: The Great Fire of Rome by Peter Milligan, Alvaro Papagiani, Mariano Morales, Exequiel Fernandez Roel, Ludwig Olimba Livewire and the Secret Weapons by Steven Grant, Miguel Sepulveda, Emiliano Urdinola, Emilio Utrera, Exequiel Fernandez Roel, Leo Lujan, Ludwig Olimba OGNs Black Justice the Awakening by David Washington Continental Drifter by Kathy McLeod Lost and Found by Mei Yu Meet Me at Mercer Street by Booki Vivat Monkey King and the World of Myth by Maple Lam Sky and Ty: Howdy Partner by Steve Breen Timid by Jonathan Todd Additional Reviews: Batman the Adventures Continue vol 3, Invincible s2, Barry, X-Men '97 ep4, Wifwulf Kickstarter News: Ed Piskor, new Elseworlds mini by DeMatteis and Leonardi about Jason Todd, new Matrix movie by Drew Goddard, Supergirl director, Lumberjanes Kickstarter, Silver Surfer cast, Tales of the Empire coming Star Wars Day, Mike Mignola launches new shared universe from Dark Horse, McKeever comes to Mad Cave, Liefeld memoir, IDW woes, Dynamite gets the Terminator license Thoughts on license material Trailers: Dead Boy Detectives, Tales of the Empire Comics Countdown (03 Apr 2024): 1. Bad Dream: A Dreamer Story GN by Nicole Maines, Rye Hickman 2. Love Everlasting 14 by Tom King, Elsa Charretier, Matt Hollingsworth 3. Batman 146 by Chip Zdarsky, Michele Bandini, Alex Sinclair 4. Rook Exodus 1 by Geoff Johns, Jason Fabok, Brad Anderson 5. Traveling to Mars 11 by Mark Russell, Roberto Meli 6. Birds of Prey 8 by Kelly Thompson, David Lopez, Javier Pina, Jordie Bellaire 7. Usagi Yojimbo: The Crow 1 by Stan Sakai, Hi-Fi 8. Spider-Man: Shadow of the Green Goblin 1 by J.M. DeMatteis, Michael Sta. Maria, Chris Sotomayor 9. Monkey King and the World of Myth GN by Maple Lam 10. Continental Drifter GN by Kathy McLeod
This episode we're discussing our Favourite Reads of 2023! We talk about our favourite fiction and non-fiction books we read this year! Plus: Our favourite comics, video games, documentaries, podcasts, and more! You can download the podcast directly, find it on Libsyn, or get it through Apple Podcasts or your favourite podcast delivery system. In this episode Anna Ferri | Meghan Whyte | Matthew Murray | Jam Edwards Favourite Fiction For the podcast Anna The Majesties by Tiffany Tsao (Episode 172 - Domestic Thrillers) Jam Mapping the Interior by Stephen Graham Jones (Episode 184 - Horror) Matthew Kurosagi Corpse Delivery Service Omnibus, vol. 3 by Eiji Otsuka and by Housui Yamazaki (Episode 184 - Horror) The Best American Mystery and Suspense 2023 edited by Lisa Unger and Steph Cha (Episode 186 - Suspense Fiction) Meghan The Salt Grows Heavy by Cassandra Khaw (Episode 176 - Fantasy) Not for the podcast Jam Heaven's Design Team by Hebi-Zou, Tsuta Suzuki, & Tarako Naked mole rats do not die of old age Owls' ears are at asymmetrical heights Tarsiers have two tongues Accidental Elephant (YouTube) Matthew Ammonite by Nicola Griffith Lambda Literary Award for Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror (Wikipedia) Meghan What Moves the Dead by T. Kingfisher Anna Daisy and the Duke by Elizabeth Cole (The Wallflowers of Wildwood) Favourite Non-Fiction For the podcast Matthew Cobalt Red: How the Blood of the Congo Powers Our Lives by Siddharth Kara (Episode 174 - Economics) Meghan Goldenrod: Poems by Maggie Smith (Episode 182 - Lyric Poetry) Anna They Are Already Here: UFO Culture and Why We See Saucers by Sarah Scoles (Episode 178 - Aliens, Extraterrestrials, and UFOs) Jam Histories of the Transgender Child by Jules Gill-Peterson (Episode 170 - Gender Theory & Gender Studies) Not for the podcast Meghan Prairie Fires: The American Dreams of Laura Ingalls Wilder by Caroline Fraser Anna Never Enough: When Achievement Culture Becomes Toxic – and what we can do about it by Jennifer Breheny Wallace Jam The Girl I Am, Was, and Never Will Be: A Speculative Memoir of Transracial Adoption by Shannon Gibney (also discussed in Episode 181) Matthew Thirty-One Nil: On the Road With Football's Outsiders: A World Cup Odyssey by James Montague Other Favourite Things of 2023 Anna If Books Could Kill The Meme Stock Cult (patron episode) & two parter on Nudge Folding Ideas - This is Financial Advice (YouTube) Two Point Hospital / Campus Oxygen Not Included Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art Jam Nimona (film) Shuna's Journey by Hayao Miyazaki Matthew Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands by Kate Beaton Nier: Automata (Wikipedia) Meghan Ten Candles Le Plonguer - Stéphane Larue Runner-Ups Jam Games The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom (Wikipedia) Baldur's Gate 3 (Wikipedia) Redactle Lakelore by Anna-Marie McLemore (Episode 176 - Fantasy) Boy Island by Leo Fox (comic released via 133 installments on Instagram; link is installment #1) Changing my name (legal procedure) Best Bakery Style Chocolate Chip Cookies Recipe (cookies) Moon (celestial body) Matthew Comics Box of Light, vol. 1 by Seiko Erisawa Cryptid Club by Sarah Andersen The Girl from the Other Side: Siúil, a Rún Deluxe Edition, vol. 1 by Nagabe Incredible Doom, vol. 1 by Matthew Bogart and Jesse Holden Mimosa by Archie Bongiovanni Steeple, vols. 1-3 by John Allison, Sarah Stern, and Jim Campbell Superman Smashes the Klan by Gene Luen Yang and Gurihiru Superman's Pal, Jimmy Olsen: Who Killed Jimmy Olsen? by Matt Fraction and Steve Leiber Books Boss Fight: Jagged Alliance 2 by Darius Kazemi Limbo: Blue-Collar Roots, White-Collar Dreams by Alfred Lubrano Chop Suey Nation: The Legion Cafe and Other Stories from Canada's Chinese Restaurants by Ann Hui Before We Were Trans: A New History of Gender by Dr. Kit Heyam The Caped Crusader: Batman and the Rise of Nerd Culture by Glen Weldon The Space Between Worlds by Micaiah Johnson A Fire Upon the Deep by Vernor Vinge Games Hitman: World of Assassination Trilogy Yakuza 0 (Wikipedia) Tetris Effect Bayonetta (Wikipedia) Video Essays The Future is a Dead Mall - Decentraland and the Metaverse - Folding Ideas Panzer Dragoon Series Retrospective - A Complete History and Review - I Finished A Video Game Meghan Quit Like a Woman: The Radical Choice to Not Drink in a Culture Obsessed with Alcohol by Holly Whitaker Taste: My Life Through Food by Stanley Tucci Onley's Arctic: Diaries and Paintings of the High Arctic by Toni Onley Vita Sackville-West's Sissinghurst: The Creation of a Garden by VitaSackville-West and Sarah Raven Hell-Bent: Obsession, Pain, and the Search for Something Like Transcendence in Competitive Yoga by Benjamin Lorr A Sand County Almanac and Sketches Here and There by Aldo Leopold and Charles W. Schwartz Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands by Kate Beaton Made-Up: A True Story of Beauty Culture under Late Capitalism by Daphné B. Witch King by Martha Wells Bad Fruit by Ella King Other Media We Mentioned Thirsty Mermaids by Kat Leyh Theme Hospital (Wikipedia) 25 Food/Cooking Non-Fiction Books by BIPOC Authors Every month Book Club for Masochists: A Readers' Advisory Podcasts chooses a genre at random and we read and discuss books from that genre. We also put together book lists for each episode/genre that feature works by BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, & People of Colour) authors. All of the lists can be found here. Niqiliurniq: A Cookbook from Igloolik by Micah Arreak, Annie Désilets, Lucy Kappianaq, Glenda Kripanik, and Kanadaise Uyarasuk New Native Kitchen: Celebrating Modern Recipes of the American Indian by Freddie Bitsoie Cooking for the Culture: Recipes and Stories from the New Orleans Streets to the Table by Toya Boudy Cooking from the Spirit: Easy, Delicious, and Joyful Plant-Based Inspirations by Tabitha Brown tawâw: Progressive Indigenous Cuisine by Shane M. Chartrand with Jennifer Cockrall-King Start Here: Instructions for Becoming a Better Cook by Sohla El-Waylly 50 Pies, 50 States: An Immigrant's Love Letter to the United States Through Pie by Stacey Mei Yan Fong Modern Native Feasts by Andrew George Jr. Cook Korean!: A Comic Book with Recipes by Robin Ha A Foodie's Guide to Capitalism by Eric Holt-Giménez Chop Suey Nation: The Legion Cafe and Other Stories from Canada's Chinese Restaurants by Ann Hui Korean American: Food that Tastes Like Home by Eric Kim Indian-Ish: Recipes and Antics from a Modern American Family by Priya Krishna with Ritu Krishna 100 Million Years of Food: What Our Ancestors Ate and Why It Matters Today by Stephen Le A Splash of Soy: Everyday Food from Asia by Lara Lee Eat, Habibi, Eat!: Fresh Recipes for Modern Egyptian Cooking by Shahir Massoud The Mexican Home Kitchen: Traditional Home-Style Recipes That Capture the Flavors and Memories of Mexico by Mely Martinez Mi Cocina: Recipes and Rapture from My Kitchen in México by Rick Martinez Food-Related Stories by Gaby Melian Stuffed and Starved: Markets, Power and the Hidden Battle for the World Food System by Raj Patel Farming While Black: Soul Fire Farm's Practical Guide to Liberation on the Land by Leah Penniman Plantcakes: Fancy + Everyday Vegan Cakes for Everyone by Lyndsay Sung Chef Tee's Caribbean Kitchen by Chef Tee Vegetable Kingdom: The Abundant World of Vegan Recipes by Bryant Terry Cooking with the Wolfman: Indigenous Fusion by David Wolfman and Marlene Finn Give us feedback! Fill out the form to ask for a recommendation or suggest a genre or title for us to read! Check out our Tumblr, follow us on Instagram, join our Facebook Group, or send us an email! Join us again on Tuesday, January 2nd when it's time for trains, planes, and automobiles (and bicycles) as we discuss non-fiction books about Transit and Transportation! Then on Tuesday, February 6th just in time for Valentine's day we'll be discussing the genre of Humourous/Funny Romance.
Join America's Roundtable (https://americasrt.com/) radio co-hosts Natasha Srdoc and Joel Anand Samy with Sarah Stern, founder of The Endowment for Middle East Truth (EMET), a pro-American and pro-Israel think tank dedicated to educating policy makers in Washington and the general public about the importance of Israel to the United States in their common struggle against radical Islam. EMET's upcoming event 2023 The Rays of Light in the Darkness will honor the 2023 Speaker of Truth honorees and celebrate the 75th anniversary of the founding of the State of Israel. americasrt.com (https://americasrt.com/) https://ileaderssummit.org/ | https://jerusalemleaderssummit.com/ America's Roundtable on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/americas-roundtable/id1518878472 Twitter: @emetgirl @ileaderssummit @AmericasRT @NatashaSrdoc @JoelAnandUSA @supertalk America's Roundtable is co-hosted by Natasha Srdoc and Joel Anand Samy, co-founders of International Leaders Summit and the Jerusalem Leaders Summit. America's Roundtable (https://americasrt.com/) radio program - a strategic initiative of International Leaders Summit, focuses on America's economy, healthcare reform, rule of law, security and trade, and its strategic partnership with rule of law nations around the world. The radio program features high-ranking US administration officials, cabinet members, members of Congress, state government officials, distinguished diplomats, business and media leaders and influential thinkers from around the world. Tune into America's Roundtable Radio program from Washington, DC via live streaming on Saturday mornings via 65 radio stations at 7:30 A.M. (ET) on Lanser Broadcasting Corporation covering the Michigan and the Midwest market, and at 7:30 A.M. (CT) on SuperTalk Mississippi — SuperTalk.FM reaching listeners in every county within the State of Mississippi, and neighboring states in the South including Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana and Tennessee. Listen to America's Roundtable on digital platforms including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon, Google and other key online platforms. Listen live, Saturdays at 7:30 A.M. (CT) on SuperTalk | https://www.supertalk.fm
Welcome to Cryptic Soup, your after-dark podcast filled with nightmares that haunt the daylight. From murders, to crimes, to cryptids, to anything in between, you can learn about what might be going bump in the night. In this week's episode, join Thena and Kylee to talk about the horrific murder of Sarah Stern. Sarah was murdered by someone she considered a close friend for $50,000. When Liam McAtasney found out he was getting a much smaller amount than this, he was quick to spill the beans about the entire event, but later pleaded innocence while saying the entire thing was actually a horror movie plot. Still to this day Sarah's body has not been recovered, and Liam's parents deem him innocent. Our sources for this weeks episodes: 20/20, Season 41 Episode 26, “Sarah Stern” True Life Crime, "Suicide or Sinister Scheme? The Sarah Stern Case'' by MTV Dateline, Season 27 Episode 33, “The Betrayal of Sarah Stern” by NBC https://www.app.com/story/news/local/courts/2023/02/03/sarah-stern-death-murder-liam-mcatasney-conviction-upheld/69866758007/ https://abcnews.go.com/US/mother-jersey-man-convicted-murdering-childhood-friend-sarah/story?id=61365934 https://abcnews.go.com/US/liam-mcatasney-sentenced-life-parole-murdering-friend-sarah/story?id=63869375 https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/sarah-stern-new-jersey-college-student-murder-friend-liam-mcatasney-sentence-court-guilty/1537853/
Join us on a gripping journey into the heart of a small coastal town as we delve deep into the chilling case of Sarah Stern's murder. In this true-crime podcast, we explore the enigmatic circumstances surrounding the 19-year-old's sudden disappearance, the relentless search for answers, and the shocking revelation that would leave a community in shock. Uncover the secrets, motives, and twists in this tragic tale of betrayal, deceit, and a relentless pursuit of justice. We'll scrutinize the actions of suspects and delve into the lives of individuals like Liam McAtasney and Preston Taylor, whose involvement in this haunting case will leave you astounded.Sources:Dateline “The Betrayal of Sarah Stern”https://abcnews.go.com/US/mother-jersey-man-convicted-murdering-childhood-friend-sarah/story?id=61365934https://www.the-sun.com/news/6136287/what-happened-to-sarah-stern/Support the show
Sarah Stern's death was a mystery. Was it suicide? Did she flee the country? Until one day, a blatant confession shocked the community. If you have any thoughts on this case or any other case, or just want to get in touch with Savannah about the show, email her at killerinstinctpodcast@gmail.com. Watch the podcast on YouTube: https://bit.ly/KillerInstinctYT Don't forget to subscribe to the podcast for free wherever you're listening or by using this link: http://bit.ly/KillerInstinctPod If you like the show, telling a friend about it would be helpful! You can text, email, Tweet, or send this link to a friend: http://bit.ly/KillerInstinctPod Follow Savannah on IG: @savannahbrymer Follow Savannah on Twitter: @savannahbrymer Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
In this episode Samir Kalra speaks with Sarah Stern, the founder and president of the Endowment for Middle East Truth, a think tank and policy institute based in Washington DC. They speak about the parallels between growing antisemitism and rising Hinduphobia, the US-Israel relationship, and efforts to strengthen the Israel-India relationship. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
They say money changes everything. It certainly did for 19 year old Sarah Stern. After Sarah's mother passed away and she found a stash of "old" cash, two of her closest friendships took a very dark turn. Despite the appearance of being life long close friends, Liam McAstney and Preston Taylor conspired as to how they would get Sarah's money for themselves. Tune in as Savannah shares this unbelievable tale of betrayal including clips of Liam's confession. Meanwhile, Elysia passionately defends Sarah's dog and finds humor in her own worst prom date story. Spoiler, Preston turned out to be worse. Join the conversation! Find us on Instagram and Facebook! Sources:
In this episode Samir Kalra speaks with Sarah Stern, the founder and president of the Endowment for Middle East Truth, a think tank and policy institute based in Washington DC. They speak about the parallels between growing antisemitism and rising Hinduphobia, the US-Israel relationship, and efforts to strengthen the Israel-India relationship. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this gripping episode of her True Crime series, psychologist Emma Kenny examines the disturbing and mysterious case of Sarah Stern's murder, a case rife with unanswered questions and unsettling revelations.
How well do you think you know your friends? Would you trust them with your secrets or more importantly... your life? When 19-year-old Sarah Stern went missing, police questioned those closest to her and were stumped at what they discovered. Surprise! Kylie goes solo with this bonus episode! We had extra time and we decided to fill it! Join in on the conversation by friending us on Facebook "Sipping with Snapped a true crime podcast" or follow us on Instagram @sippingwithsnapped or twitter @sippingsnapped or send us an email sippingwithsnapped@gmail.com and please visit our website www.sippingwithsnapped.comSupport the showSupport the show
Comic Reviews: DC Knight Terrors: First Blood 1 by Joshua Williamson, Howard Porter, Brad Anderson Knight Terrors: Batman 1 by Joshua Williamson, Guillem March, Tomeu Morey Knight Terrors: Black Adam 1 by Jeremy Haun, Nick Filardi Knight Terrors: Poison Ivy 1 by G. Willow Wilson, Atagun Ilhan, Mark Morales, Arif Prianto Knight Terrors: Ravager 1 by Ed Brisson, Dexter Soy, Veronica Gandini Knight Terrors: The Joker 1 by Matthew Rosenberg, Clark and Lex OGN by Brendan Reichs, Jerry Gaylord Marvel Captain America 750 by Tochi Onyebuchi, RB Silva, Jesus Aburtov, Jackson Lanzing, Collin Kelly, Carmen Carnero, Nolan Woodard Captain Marvel: Dark Tempest 1 by Ann Nocenti, Paolo Villanelli, Java Tartaglia Edge of Spider-Verse 4 by B. Earl, Taboo, Juan Ferreyra, Daniel Kibblesmith, Chriscross, Andrew Dalhouse, Alex Segura, Enid Balam, Elisabetta D'Amico, Craig Yeung, Brian Reber Extreme Venomverse 4 by Peach Momoko, DJ Bryant, Alvaro Lopez, Alex Guimares, Alyssa Wong, Ken Niimura Thor Annual by Collin Kelly, Jackson Lanzing, Ibraim Roberson, Dan Brown X-Men: Before the Fall – Sinister Four by Kieron Gillen, Paco Medina, Edgar Delgado, Fer Sifuentes-Sujo Marvel Unlimited Li'L Rocket 5 by Stephanie Williams, Jay Fosgitt Brute Force by Paul Scheer, Nick Giovannetti, Geoffo, Dee Cunniffe Image Swan Songs 1 by W. Maxwell Prince, Martin Simmonds Untold Tales of I Hate Fairyland 1 by Skottie Young, Aaron Conley, Sarah Stern, Dean Rankine, Weird Work 1 by Jordan Thomas, Shaky Kane Mad Cave Under the Influence 1 by Eliot Rahal, Stefano Simeone Scout Puc the Artist and the Myth of Color 1 by Miles Greg, Garrett Richert Titan Heat Seeker: A Gun Honey Series 1 by Charles Ardai, Ace Continuado, Jose Zapata, Asifur Rahman Doctor Who: Doom's Day 1 by Jody Houser, Roberta Ingranata ComiXology Pop Culture Presents by Brock Parks OGNs Rock Gods of Jackson, Tennessee by Rafer Roberts, Mike Norton, Allen Passalaqua Merry-Go-Round by Sergio Rossi, Agnese Innocente Trackers Presents Captain Nick and the Explorer Society: Compass of Mems by Michelle McCann, Tony Deis, Grey Allison, Thomas Pitilli, Lukas Ketner, Liezi Buenaventura Additional Reviews: Secret Invasion ep3, Over My Dead Body, Remina, Colonel Weird and Little Andromeda, Ghost and Molly McGee, Danger and Other Unknown Risks, Shadow of the Batgirl, My Adventure With Superman premiere News: Strange Planet coming to Apple TV, MJ officially becomes Jackpot, new Snyder/Albuquerque series coming from ComiXology, Jennifer Garner returning as Elektra for Deadpool 3, Black Panther video game in development Comics Countdown (04 Jul 2023): 1. Daredevil 13 by Chip Zdarsky, Marco Checchetto, Matt Wilson 2. Rock Gods of Jackson Tennessee OGN by Rafer Roberts, Mike Norton, Allen Passalaqua 3. Love Everlasting 9 by Tom King, Elsa Charretier, Matt Hollingsworth 4. Swan Songs 1 by W. Maxwell Prince, Martin Simmonds 5. Hairball 4 by Matt Kindt, Tyler Jenkins, Hilary Jenkins 6. I Hate This Place 10 by Kyle Starks, Artyom Topilin, Lee Loughridge 7. Phantom Road 5 by Jeff Lemire, Gabriel Walta, Jordie Bellaire 8. TMNT: Armageddon Game 8 by Tom Waltz, Vincenzo Federici 9. Adventures of Superman: Jon Kent 5 by Tom Taylor, Clayton Henry, Jordie Bellaire 10. No/One 4 by Kyle Higgins, Brian Buccellato, Geraldo Borges, Mark Englert
It's our one year anniversary and what better way to celebrate than with a double header.This episode covers the disappearance of two young woman in the prime of their lives. Donna Kay Cloud was just 19 when she disappeared without a trace in 2016. Little is known about the time leading up to her disappearance. In the same year Sarah Stern vanishes also at the age of 19. Did she run off to start a new life or was something more devious at play?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yy5BU3nomYkhttps://abc13.com/missing-person-donna-kay-cloud-disappearance/1686719/https://charleyproject.org/case/donna-kay-cloudDateline S27:E33https://people.com/crime/sarah-stern-case-man-choked-her-threw-body-off-bridge/ (https://people.com/crime/sarah-stern-case-man-choked-her-threw-body-off-bridge/)https://thecinemaholic.com/sarah-sterns-murder-who-killed-her-how-did-she-die/ (https://thecinemaholic.com/sarah-sterns-murder-who-killed-her-how-did-she-die/)https://www.nj.com/monmouth/2023/02/friend-who-killed-sarah-stern-dumped-body-from-jersey-shore-bridge-has-appeal-rejected.html?outputType=amp (https://www.nj.com/monmouth/2023/02/friend-who-killed-sarah-stern-dumped-body-from-jersey-shore-bridge-has-appeal-rejected.html?outputType=amp)https://www.the-sun.com/news/6136287/what-happened-to-sarah-stern/amp/ (https://www.the-sun.com/news/6136287/what-happened-to-sarah-stern/amp/)Support the showAs always we want to thank each and every one of you for the continued support! If you haven't done so already please follow us on Facebook and Instagram. We would also LOVE if you would write us a review on apple podcasts! XOXO,Ashley & Sierra CLICK HERE⤵️⤵️⤵️https://linktr.ee/weeklydoseofwicked?utm_source=linktree_profile_share<sid=6148575e-7853-4821-ae73-dc352c3340ab
In December 2016, a man called 911 after spotting an abandoned car on a bridge. 19-year-old Sarah Stern usually drove the vehicle—but now, she was missing. Did she leave voluntarily? Or was she the victim of a terrible crime? If you'd like to learn more about the cases covered in this episode, head to www.spotify.com/disappearances. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
On a December evening in 2016, a man called 911 when he spotted an abandoned car on a bridge. Police discovered that 19-year-old Sarah Stern of Neptune City, New Jersey, usually drove the vehicle. She was now missing, and police needed to determine if she had left the car voluntarily or was the victim of a crime. If you'd like to learn more about the cases covered in this episode, or learn more about Missing and Unidentified Persons Awareness Month, head to www.spotify.com/disappearances. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
On a December evening in 2016, a man called 911 when he spotted an abandoned car on a bridge. Police discovered that 19-year-old Sarah Stern of Neptune City, New Jersey, usually drove the vehicle. She was now missing, and police needed to determine if she had left the car voluntarily or was the victim of a crime. If you'd like to learn more about the cases covered in this episode, or learn more about Missing and Unidentified Persons Awareness Month, head to www.spotify.com/disappearances. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Sarah Stern, founder and president of the Endowment for Middle East Truth (EMET), explains why the passage of this bill is so important for protecting Jewish college students. Learn more at https://emetonline.org/
This week Shan tells us the extremely heartbreaking story of Sarah Stern. She was only 19 years old when her life was taken from her in an act of betrayal that no human should ever come to know. Follow us on Instagram, @murderroadtrippod; Email us your funny/spooky/whatever stories murderrt@gmail.com DISCLAIMER: This podcast contains explicit language & graphic descriptions of crime scenes. Listener discretion is advised. Make sure to leave a review :) https://www.nj.com/monmouth/2017/02/timeline_of_the_disappearance_and_killing_of_sarah.html https://medium.com/crimebeat/from-best-friends-to-murder-the-case-of-sarah-stern-f10999a1902f https://open.spotify.com/episode/5kVUy7eZwP8G9E9ccDWhO8?si=a808c7976cff4841 https://open.spotify.com/episode/3jlIs1X0L5vSiaY47UaOcX?si=eaa5fa43f20f4258
This week Sarah tells the tragedy of what greed can really bring people to do to not only random people, but even their closest friends. If you see this, hug your friends a little tighter today and let them know how much you truly love (and would never harm) them! Be mad with us, as always, for this saddening tale of a young life lost too soon. SOCIALS: Instagram: @puzzlingpod Facebook: Puzzling Podcast Gmail: puzzlingpod@gmail.com Tiffany's Instagram: @tiffeppxo Sarah's Instagram: @sarahmariepierce EMAIL: to send suggestions to! puzzlingpod@gmail.com --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/tiffany-epp/support
This week we sit down with yet another friend of the pod, Michelle Duffy from Life Time. We catch up on the upcoming kickoff for the 2023 Life Time Grand Prix and some of the changes in store for athletes and fans. Episode Sponsor: Athletic Greens Support the Podcast Join The Ridership Automated Transcription, please excuse the typos: [00:00:00] Craig Dalton: Hello, and welcome to the gravel ride podcast, where we go deep on the sport of gravel cycling through in-depth interviews with product designers, event organizers and athletes. Who are pioneering the sport I'm your host, Craig Dalton, a lifelong cyclist who discovered gravel cycling back in 2016 and made all the mistakes you don't need to make. I approach each episode as a beginner down, unlock all the knowledge you need to become a great gravel cyclist. This week on the show, I'm excited to welcome back Michelle Duffy from lifetime to talk about the lifetime grand Prix for 2023. I know this show. Isn't all about racing, but I'm a fan of the sport. I love riding. I love participating in my own way at the back of the pack. But also like following the front of the pack. And I found that the lifetime grand Prix added a lot of fun to my 2022 fandom. As I was able to follow the battles throughout the year. And even after the season, I was able to relive some of those moments through a YouTube series that lifetime published about the grand Prix that allowed us to get behind the scenes with some of the athletes and see some of the personalities and some of the action and drama we might not have seen. As a casual fan, the lifetime grand Prix is back for 2023. They've made some tweaks to the number of events you can now drop to events. So I wanted to have Michelle back at the beginning of the season to just talk about some of those changes. To reflect on the action from 2022 and just generally catch up. Michelle puts a lot of energy into the gravel cycling community, and I'm always happy to highlight those efforts. Before we jump in, I do need to thank this week. Sponsor athletic greens. Athletic greens and AIG. One is a comprehensive daily nutrition made from simple, powerful ingredients. It's made up of 75 high quality, whole food sourced ingredients. Carefully curated to nourish all the body's systems holistically. As many of you know, I've been an athletic greens user for many, many years, predating the podcast. So I've been super stoked that athletic greens has been a big partner for what I do The key to ag one is that it replaces key health products in one simple scoop. AIG one combines nine health products working together as one, replacing your multivitamin. Multimineral. Pre and probiotics. Immunity support and more, that means ag one does more for your body and saves you time, money and confusion compared to taking multiple unique products. And that is a hundred percent key for me. I do one scoop in the morning, mixed up with a little bit of ice, and I feel like I've got some of my nutritional basis started before I've even begun the day. If you're interested in learning more about athletic greens, go to www.athleticgreens.com/the gravel ride. For podcast listeners, our friends at athletic greens have given us a free year supply of vitamin D and five free travel packs. If you ordered today. Simply visit athletic greens.com/the gravel ride to get your age. The one on the way today. With that said let's dive right into my conversation with Michelle Duffy. [00:03:23] Craig Dalton: Hey Michelle, welcome back to the show. [00:03:25] Michelle Duffy: Thank you for having me back. [00:03:27] Craig Dalton: It's good to see you. I was looking back in my notes and it looks like it was just, just a little less than a year ago. We sat down at Sea Otter, which was the first event of the inaugural lifetime Grand Prix. [00:03:40] Michelle Duffy: Yes. It's crazy to think it's almost the otter time again. [00:03:44] Craig Dalton: I know I've been getting the emails and I'm like, gosh, I gotta get my stuff together, and it's exciting to have it kick off. [00:03:51] Michelle Duffy: Oh yeah. It's like the kickoff of everyone's cycling year. I feel like. [00:03:56] Craig Dalton: And such a big one at that with all the, the expo activity and the so many different forms of racing going on, it literally does cover like every discipline of cycling. I feel like. [00:04:07] Michelle Duffy: I, yeah, that's what's so special, like from the industry perspective, mountain biking, road gravelly, everyone's together. Um, so I'm really looking forward to getting back to Monterey. [00:04:17] Craig Dalton: Yeah, for sure. I thought it would be a good opportunity to just sit down with you again and reflect back on that inaugural season of the Lifetime Grand Prix. Such a interesting series to kind of infuse into the gravel world, and I'm sure you learned a lot along the way. I just wanted to sort of get your basic reflections of the season. Maybe some of the key moments that you'd highlight. [00:04:42] Michelle Duffy: Yeah, definitely. And I'm, I'm excited that sometime has passed too. We, we definitely reflected immediately after and during. Um, but now that sometimes passed and we're heading into the new year, it feels. There's been more time to sit back and think about, you know, both constructively, what we would've changed, but also celebrate our wins, which is often hard at times, um, because you're always looking for ways to be better. But, uh, enough times pass that. I think we have a clearer vision of what went right and wrong and [00:05:15] Craig Dalton: Yeah. Yeah, and I know, I know from hearing from some of the athletes that you guys were collecting feedback along the way, which was great as well. I know you went into this whole process really talking to athletes, getting a lot of feedback. It was difficult to make a series that was gonna make everybody happy, whether it was the events or the points or what have you. But it seems like in evidence from talking to athletes, you guys really went out there and just asked questions and got feedback along the way, which is great. [00:05:49] Michelle Duffy: Yeah. I think in the ideation phase it was easier for us to speak to those athletes that are, you know, in our networks, right? Like, Preexisting relationships. Um, but that doesn't necessarily cover all of the participants that were in the Lifetime Grand Prix. So it was important for us at just over the halfway point, we collected feedback and then, um, at the end of the season, both face to face and through email and phone call, have had many a conversation with athletes and brands and, um, just trying to understand needs. But at the end of the day, we have. I mean, 75 to 80% of last year's field is back with us this year. So while there were definitely areas for us to, to work through, I also feel like that that's a win. Right. Um, having so many of our inaugural class back. [00:06:42] Craig Dalton: just to set the stage a little bit, so last year's series was 30 men and 30 women. in the series. The series was, and correct me if I'm wrong here, six events with the option to drop one score. [00:06:57] Michelle Duffy: That's right. Yes. [00:06:59] Craig Dalton: Okay. So looking back at 2022, what were some of the biggest surprises that you found throughout the year? [00:07:07] Michelle Duffy: Um, I think some of the, the major surprises were just the nuances that go into building a series like this. Um, , you know, these events were preexisting for us. So in terms of operationally executing the series, um, that, that comes second nature to the team. But all of the other nuance that comes with building a series, especially one that kind of grew to be, I mean, I don't wanna use, you know, too premium of a word choice here, but, that did become kind of this revered thing in, in North America in just a year. Um, there were many a time where we had internal conversations and we're like, okay, what are we building? Like, what can, what can the lifetime Grand Prix be if we, um, focus and invest in this properly? And not just financially invest, but. , you know, that gathering the insights, investing the resources and time, um, to really lay the groundwork to build something that can be huge for American cycling five, seven years down the road. And I think that was the biggest surprise, just like how much it took off and continued. Uh, think we're still seeing like new. New, um, comers to the series through some of the content that we've created and like the momentum there. Um, but then also just the, the nuance that became a, a bit intimidating at times. [00:08:44] Craig Dalton: when, when you think about sort of the goals you set out for, uh, for the Grand Prix last year. Were you guys successful in achieving them and what were they? Are you looking to kind of, I know you're looking obviously to foster the growth of off-road cycling in the United States. You're presumably also looking to continue to grow the, the Lifetime brand and those specific lifetime events. Has it had that type of net effect? [00:09:11] Michelle Duffy: I think so. Well, no, I, I, I do believe, yes, it has, um, our primary goal with the Lifetime Grand Prix is to create fans. I, I mean, most simply put the word we use internally as fandom, but to regenerate the interest from not. Professional cycling enthusiasts, but people who ride a bike to care about what's going on at the, the front of the pack. And like, why, you know, why does, why should the journey person care? Um, I think it creating fans creates more professionalism around a sport. And, you know, more professionalism inspires youth to wanna ride a bike, be like x to be like Keegan Swenson or Hailey Smith. And. . If we can create that, if we can create more fans of the sport from a particip participatory perspective and then also inspire more youth to want to stay on a bike, then we're inadvertently fostering the growth of the sport of cycling from a mass participation perspective as well. Um, and do I think we accomplished that? I think yes, but I think it's a long-term commitment to truly, uh, be able to make change. We did, and I think Keegan says this in the docu-series, like there is maybe in the last few minutes of the big sugar episode, people came up to him who previously didn't know who he was, and they. he inspired them to get on a bike or they became a fan of him through the Lifetime Grand Prix. And that's, that's what we're trying to create, um, this like symbiotic relationship between math participant and elite athlete coming together in one place, a shared goal. Um, and then with the Doerries, which I'm sure. Get into at some point. But we did create this six episode docu-series that lives on YouTube. By YouTube because there's no barrier of entry because to create fans, you need to eliminate barriers. Um, that audience has, has grown. We're up and over 350,000 views across the series right now. And, you know, we don't have 350,000 participants at our events. Right? So they're coming from else. [00:11:28] Craig Dalton: Yeah. That's amazing. I mean, I think going back for a minute, definitely the structure of the season allowed fans to. , like look forward to something. I think prior to the existence of this type of series, you might see someone do well at Unbound and then totally lose them for the rest of the year. So this was a really nice way as a fan to kind of just start to get familiar with the names and have something to look forward to for that next event in the series. And definitely for me, like it did accumulate over the course of the year so that everything got more interesting. Post crusher in the tusher to figure out, well, who could possibly win this entire series, and, uh, particularly on the women's side. It was just really exciting throughout the entire year. [00:12:18] Michelle Duffy: Um, yeah. And, and while Keegan rode away with it for a first, for the men's side, there was also a really tight, um, tight field there going on leading into big sugar. So both for the women's and men's, um, overalls there a lot was riding on that last event, which made it really interesting to follow through the whole. [00:12:40] Craig Dalton: Yeah, and I think what was interesting with only one potential, um, event to drop at the onset, when I heard that, that seemed totally reasonable. But when you saw injuries and illness come into play and people being forced to drop races early in the season, it really did become, uh, pretty onerous for them to make sure that they did well at every remaining event. [00:13:04] Michelle Duffy: Absolutely. And that, that did, um, come into play when leading into 2023 and some adjustments we've made. [00:13:11] Craig Dalton: Yeah, and we can get into that. Since you did mention the, the Call of a Lifetime series, which was super well produced. I mean, just speaking from my own perspective, I very much enjoyed watching it, and I encourage everybody to do so on YouTube because you did get a glimpse at some of the interpersonal relationships of the riders, some of the. Rivalries that exist out there, and just general insight into the personalities. I know originally at the beginning of last year, um, you were working with flow bikes. I'm trying to do some live coverage. Had the call of the Wild Series also been in the works for the entire year or was that something that happened in lieu of flow? Not really being able to get into the action as you had hoped. [00:13:54] Michelle Duffy: We were focused on both initiatives. So we contracted Shannon with cold collaborative, uh, prior to Sea Otter, and he was out there recording already. Um, actually, , that was our primary focus, and then later in the conversation flow came in and um, we were excited to be able to provide both opportunities. Um, obviously that didn't pan out all year, uh, but the cold collaborative and Call of a Lifetime series was always in the works. [00:14:24] Craig Dalton: Got it. It must have been pretty challenging that for them to kind of figure out which athletes to focus on. Were they, were they filming across the board with numerous athletes and we only ended up to getting to see a couple storylines just given the amount of time they had for the episodes. [00:14:40] Michelle Duffy: Um, I think this was a, a challenge and a learning, but can't, I mean, there's no way that we can really storyline across. 60, 70 athletes. So we'll take a, a slightly different approach this year into to mining those stories. But we pretty much got to meet everyone that spent time on camera. Um, the cold collaborative team, we, we trusted, we trust them and, um, put. Them in a position where they had creative freedom because they are so amazing at what they do. And so they did mine a lot of the stories and really there's a lot of focus, of course, on the front of pac because it was a more consolidated story for us to be able to tell. Um, some adjustments we're looking for towards next year is like, uh, widening that net and ensuring that we're telling the stories of not just those in the top five with the preexisting platform, but you know, mirroring the. Fully supported professional athlete with the young rider that's still in college because That's interesting for people too. [00:15:48] Craig Dalton: Yeah, for sure. I mean, across all those athletes, I'm sure there's, last year there was 30 great female stories, 30 great male stories that could have been told, [00:15:57] Michelle Duffy: Exactly. [00:15:59] Craig Dalton: but that's awesome. And it sounds like that project is gonna continue through this year. [00:16:04] Michelle Duffy: Yep, we're, we're finalizing exactly what our content plan looks like and hopefully we can go out with that soon. You know, we, something that was hard for us all years. We were investing all of this time, effort. Energy finances into producing Call of a Lifetime. But there was no product really to show for it until, you know, the end of end of 2022, beginning of 2023. Um, but this year, now that we've set the, the groundwork, we'll be able to go out with what our, what our plans are. And we are working right now with Shannon on developing something really cool for [00:16:39] Craig Dalton: Yeah, I think that's, there's an interesting opportunity there. Cause I had, I sort of totally forgot frankly, about like the possibility of a video series and then when you announced it earlier this year, I was super enthusiastic to watch it. But, I would've probably liked to have seen snippets from other athletes earlier in the year, even if it's just on social media, just to get to know them and again, increase my fandom of someone that I wasn't familiar with prior to the season. [00:17:06] Michelle Duffy: Yep, exactly. And we, we partnered with Mazda and, and have a multi-year commitment with them to produce these athlete vignettes. So we did dig a little bit deeper into six of their stories, and those are available on YouTube as well. Um, shameless plug, but, uh, we'll be digging in and, and telling more stories. This year, um, whether that's from the Grand Prix perspective or just the community that rallies around the Grand Prix, I think both of those are really interesting and, um, throughout the planning of the Grand Prix, it was important for us to outline like, who is our audience. And I always talk about it in this like reverse funnel where you have your bullseye, that's this person's an avid cyclist and they know who is winning the events. And then it kind of, the net gets broader, um, from there. But it's important that the content that we're creating doesn't just speak to the preexisting cycling. , um, which I think the series does a really good job of being relatable, broader than that. But if you take that out, then it's like, okay, who, what about the person that rides a bike, but maybe they don't necessarily participate in events? What inspires them to wanna participate in events? And then it's set further than that. It's like the outdoor recreator. I'm a backcountry skier, but I understand the content that you're producing. And now I'm inspired to get on a bike. And so like they're all kind of working. making someone a fan, but first they need to get on a bike. And then when they get on a bike, they participate and then they get to meet the athlete. And, um, then they really care about what you're produc. [00:18:37] Craig Dalton: Yeah, that's true. You know, it's interesting, I was talking to an athlete yesterday and I think one of the challenges, obviously like the, the marquee distance and the professional distance of these races is quite challenging. Regardless of whether it's an Unbound 200 or the climbing at Crusher and the Tusher, they can seem very intimidating, obviously, to the new athlete. Yet almost all these events, probably all of 'em do have shorter distances, which are. To be more inviting for the recreational athlete to pin on their first number. And I think there's probably an opportunity for all of us in in interested in events to kind of continue to embrace and make sure that audience feels welcome and accomplished for finishing a 40 mile event. They don't need to do a 200 mile event. [00:19:23] Michelle Duffy: Exactly. Yeah. And that's the Grand Prix is so amazing and uh, we were already seeing more elites coming to the events and that kind of inspire the Grand Prix, right? It's like this is happening, people are making a living off of participating in these events and we can ignore the fact that it's happening or we can create something. produces good for the mass participant as well, because at the end of the day, the, the paying customer or a mass participant like that is the ethos of the event. That's the person that's one supporting the events in the business that we're creating. They're supporting the communities that they're visiting, and we, we can't get, we can't let the Grand Prix distract us from like what the actual heartbeat of the event is. And that'll be important for us this year in storytelling as well as like, This is happening at the front of the event, and that's super special. And let's let you peek behind the curtain and understand that, you know, Sarah Stern felt a ton of pressure going to all of these events the same way. You probably put a lot of pressure on yourself going to these events, but, but it's different. But you can relate, um, But also what about the community that's making up these events? Because that is what the elites are coming to be a part of. It's not the in, it's the inverse for some, some are now coming to some of these events because the elites are there, but the elites wanted to come to be a part of the mass participant experience. Um, so it'll be really important for us to, I mean, never lose focus of that. That's our north. [00:20:54] Craig Dalton: Yeah, it's been interesting as some of the announcements came out around the changes of for Unbound and the professional and the rules as they apply to the Mass Start and Arrow bars, how clearly you guys were conscious of the fact that. , just because you're making a decision for the professional athletes doesn't mean that same decision should apply to the recreational athletes, specifically around the idea of arrow bars. I thought that discussion was quite interesting. [00:21:23] Michelle Duffy: Yeah. And look like there's no right answer to a lot of these things because the space is evolving and gravel cycling while it has existed for. At, well, it's existed forever. You could always ride on gravel, but as a quantifiable sport for 15 plus years, you know, going on 20 years now, that's still new. It's junior, like the game of basketball has existed for over a century. Um, so we're still in this like new phase. The athlete, the professional. , you know, we've been trying to listen and make decisions that are the best decisions for the safety of the athlete and the integrity of the event. Um, that doesn't mean it's the solution for everyone right now. And as we were going through, what does, you know, arrow bars or no arrow bars and all the, like the drama, um, surrounding the elites as they're figuring out what it means to be an elite in the sport. is the person that's coming from Alabama that's gonna take them, you know, the maximum amount of time to complete 200 miles, and they're gonna ride majority of the event out there solo. And they need to have the ability to be in comfort positions just for them to get across the finish line. And that's always been a part of the experience. So while we were having a lot of internal debate and external debate, when we stepped back and thought about it, it's like, well, who's to say? if they're, I've always stood really strong in like, no, they're coming out here to experience the mass participant experience, and that's why the elites started to come. At the same time, they're making a livelihood and we need to ensure that in order for them to continue to make that livelihood, we're providing. an experience that, you know, someone taking them out with arrow bars in the first seven miles doesn't make or break the paycheck that they bring home. That's not the case for everyone. So if we separate these two starts, it allows us to ensure that the integrity of the event for those that are racing for their livelihood and their paycheck , um, we can isolate that experience. [00:23:41] Craig Dalton: Yeah, [00:23:42] Michelle Duffy: And, you know, we made the joke like, we're gonna get you the heck outta Dodge, but like, let's get the. out of there, and then we can provide the same experience we've provided for 16 years to everybody else. [00:23:54] Craig Dalton: yeah. And I mean, obviously it's up to each individual rider to make good decisions around when they should be in arrow bars. That's the challenge, right? Like some, it's like they're perfectly fine if you're out there by yourself, but cornering and doing the things that you shouldn't do in Aerobars, that's just, people just need to make good choices there. [00:24:11] Michelle Duffy: Yeah. Agree. And, and there's other events in our portfolio that remove, we are removing the use of Arrow bars in general, an event like Crusher has never allowed Arrow bars because you climb up and you descend and there's never a time that you're on flats and should be in arrow bars in that event. [00:24:28] Craig Dalton: Yeah. The other thing that obviously you've had to grapple with is just, uh, the women and men starting together or separate. Do you wanna talk about like, the thought process behind how that's panning out this year? [00:24:42] Michelle Duffy: Yeah. I mean, continuing to, to listen. I think there. I mean, there's been a couple years now of debate on what is the right, the right way to approach at a mass participation event, the start of the women to ensure that they have a level playing field. Um, our approach is varying, depending on course, uh, speaking for, you know, sea Otter and Schwam again, and Crusher, for example. Women do have their own start. , but for an event like Unbound, they've always been in with the masses and there's just a huge difference between the field sizes and um, that many people rolling out of Emporia as well as from a media coverage perspective. It's super challenging. Um, To cover and we, I think, have done a very good job of making a cognizant effort to ensure we assign a team specific to the women. However, to give that like equal playing field from a media coverage perspective, a safety perspective rolling out of town, and then also an awareness of where the competitors are. For Unbound, the women will have their own elite women will have their own separate. two minutes after the elite men and eight minutes before the masses. Uh, an event like Big Sugar or the Rad we're still evaluating, but that very well could be a mass. A mass start there. [00:26:08] Craig Dalton: yeah. I think it's super interesting and a lot of event organizers I've spoken to this year. Are just playing around with different models and I think to your point, a lot of it will be course dependent. A lot of it will be just affording tens of minutes with the women having their own isolated experience, cuz obviously once. The rest of the mass participants start several minutes before. Eventually there will be intermingling and there will be the same types of drafting opportunities that have been in the sport forever for the women. But I do think it's meaningful that the women will be able to understand who is ahead of them, who is behind them at that moment in time in which integration happens. And then most of the women athletes that I've spoken to kind of acknowledge that, you know, there's a strategy around drafting with men, and sometimes you're gonna get in over your head and you're gonna go too hard. But that might be an investment in your strategy to get ahead early on in the race and then plug away on your own while others will roll the dice and play the strategy a little differently. [00:27:11] Michelle Duffy: Yeah, exactly. And. , um, I think through, through the Grand Prix. I hope and, and believe that it has also deepened the field, um, of women out there. And if you look at an event like Big Sugar, we saw more women riding together at big sugar. Granted, there were points on the line, and so a lot of them did stay together. But I mean, there was a pack of nine women in places, you know, two through 10 working together for, for much of that event. And, um, we haven't seen that at a, at a lot of events. Usually the women are dispersed, so I think their strategies are changing as. [00:27:55] Craig Dalton: Yeah. Yeah. And I, yeah, I mean, and all this comes into play in the background with the points of the Grand Prix in general, like how they need to ride, how aggressive they need to be on a, on a particular day. I do imagine that you'll start seeing athletes just really taking a lot of risk because they've got nothing to lose. Like you think about Page. Big sugar, like she had nothing to lose at that point, to roll the dice and go long in solo and see what happened. [00:28:22] Michelle Duffy: Yeah, exactly. [00:28:24] Craig Dalton: Yeah. As you look back to 2022, and I know we've drifted a little bit into 2023 already, but were there any sort of favorite or surprising moments that stood out for you? [00:28:34] Michelle Duffy: Yeah, I mean, you just touched on one, but, uh, Paige on Weller and Brayton Langs wins at Big Sugar and Schwam again, I. Love the underdog dark horse story. Um, PA both Paige and Braden were, I mean, transparently were fringe riders for us in the selection process going into 2022. Um, There were a few team members, myself included, making cases for each of them as to why they should be selected. And, um, they were, they were both dark courses and, um, it was really, really special for not just myself, but members of our team to see those two take a win. You know, Braden being the youngest male in the field last year and an up and coming talent, you just love to see and hope that it inspires. The other individuals riding in his age range, where it'll often we see drop off on the bike, um, you know, if they can, you know, see what he's accomplishing. Maybe it inspires them to keep riding or those young riders that have looked up to him. And this year we have even younger riders as part of the Grand Prix. And then someone like Paige coming from a running background. We dug into, into her during the application process and saw, you know, she was fifth at gravel world on a borrowed bike and , she was doing some eSports on Swift and, um, there was potential there we thought. And to see that come to fruition for her was really, really special. [00:30:10] Craig Dalton: Yeah, and super cool. I had her on at the end of last year just to see her be afforded the sponsorship support to really lean into it and not have to, you know, do double duty between her work and the hospital is, it's great to see. [00:30:25] Michelle Duffy: Yeah. Agree. I mean, I think that's the case for, for both of those two, honestly, that those wins for both Braden and Paige. I think. Um, Allowed them, the opportunity enabled, helped enable them to have some of the sponsorship opportunities that they have this year, [00:30:44] Craig Dalton: Yeah. [00:30:45] Michelle Duffy: and it switched things up. We were talking about the same few riders all year because that top three was kind of interchanging, so that was cool [00:30:53] Craig Dalton: Yeah, absolutely. So as we talk about 2023, what are kind of the major changes that have happened kind of structurally in the Grand Prix that we should be aware of? [00:31:04] Michelle Duffy: Yeah, I think our goal with the Grand Prix, is to keep things simple so that people can follow it. Um, you know, no slight to, to the world tour, but it can be hard to follow things like the Tour de France because if you're not ingrained in the sport, it's like how many points did they get? And what does this Jersey mean Um, our goal is really to keep things simple so that, you know, those that are new to following cycling can follow it and, and. Still the goal this year we evaluated our point structure because right now it's just waterfall point structure. Um, your points are the inverse of your place. So last year we had 30 men and women. So if you finished first, you got 30 points. If you finished second, you got 29. And so it flowed. So this year we decided to keep the point structure the same. Um, however we are. , uh, looking at 70 athletes, 35 men and 35 women. So an extra five men and women. Um, I think we're gonna stay at this number. Uh, I don't, you know, next year's I hope isn't gonna be 40 and, and so on. Um, but the intent for that change is the drop off that occurred throughout the year. Um, by the end of the season, we had just over 20 men and 20 women remain. . And so our, our goal is to have, you know, a, a deep field and ensure that it's, it's deep across every event. So that extra five on each side, also just based on demand, uh, felt like the right move. And then additionally, instead of six events, um, we are going to have seven, one of which we called the wild cards. So Grand Prix athletes applied for the series before we revealed what that seventh event will be. And noting that our intent is that our events do. So next year, um, in 2024, I don't, it may not just be the wild card event that rotates. We may switch up all of the events. Um, you know, we'll probably have a few, like an Unbound and a Leadville and a big sugar that would remain. But we could see some of the other events, uh, switching up each year. Um, but one will remain a wild card in which athletes don't know what it will be. and, um, they can drop two events instead of one. And this was something, this was a decision that we made after overwhelming feedback in our surveys around, um, some of the challenges. And you mentioned it earlier in the call with injury and sickness. Um, Were forced to drop out even if they weren't prepared because maybe they, uh, flattered and dnf at an event and that still counts. But then they got sick and had to miss an event. Like they're pretty much out of the points now because they have two zeros on their scorecard. So allowing them the ability to miss two events for everything we're hearing is like athletes intend to come to just about every event. Um, but the other thing that it does allow, , and this is important, is understanding that our season is demanding and it spans from April to October and it is the primary focus on, on the calendar. But there are other events that, um, there's either sponsor obligations to attend or just like for the health of the sport. It can't just be lifetime events that these riders are attending. So, Hope and obviously expect that athletes are showing up to, to at least five and, and hope they come to more than that, but it does allow if there's a conflict with another event them to go and attend that event as well. [00:34:51] Craig Dalton: Yeah, like everything, I think it's just gonna be interesting to see whether it, it, you know, in many cases this past year, it would've allowed, you know, like Payson or someone who had to miss two events to be competitive in the standings, having missed those two events. But for athletes that it were healthy throughout the year. If we start seeing strategy around dropping an event, knowing that they have to, you know, they're, I think with the exception, Unbound and maybe crusher that have their own very specific skillset, maybe that is required for them. You know, whether some people just opt out of one or two of those just saying, Hey, I'm not a climber. It's not worth burying myself to try to be competitive and crusher because I have these two drop races that I can apply. [00:35:36] Michelle Duffy: I do think that's true, and I kind of view that as like the negative to having the two drop events. But I think it's the right move. We believe it's the right move. Um, just for like the health of. The athlete. What we also don't want to happen is an athlete feel like, like Pete, he wrote on a broken hand at Sea Otter because he knew that like with his wife expecting there was a chance he was gonna miss another event. So it was really important for him to finish that event. Um, whereas like knowing that there could have been two drops, like we don't want an athlete, Hannah Otto, she. Unbound consciously. Like she didn't want to bury herself at Unbound. And then she followed concussion protocol, but felt the pressure to it to participate in, um, schwa again, because otherwise she'd be out of the series and she did not, you know, enjoy the experience out there. And it was probably premature. Would she have made a different decision had we. allowed two drops last year maybe. And I think that's something that's also really important I didn't touch on is the, just the overall health of the athlete. And we heard that too in the feedback like there's pressure to show up and race sick because you, you could have only dropped one event. So I think this change will, I mean, it's seemingly well received. The negative is. You know, athletes that aren't good on a mountain bike, and so they're just gonna drop two mountain bike events and or like, not wanna bury themselves like you said. So they're gonna skip unbound and let Bill. That's, we hope that we don't see too much of that, but risk like those, that those that were in the top 10 pretty much were consistent in their attendance across the whole series. [00:37:24] Craig Dalton: Yeah, I think it strikes the right balance. I mean, obviously we'll have this conversation a year from now and we'll see how it came to play, but I don't suspect, to your point, like the people at the front end of both categories, they're not gonna make, they're not gonna drop things willy nilly. In fact, I was speaking to a professional athlete yesterday and they were like, look, if someone was hyper-competitive in the Grand Prix and did not do un. There may very well be an asterisk in their victory at the end of the year to say like, but they didn't do this one thing, [00:37:55] Michelle Duffy: Yeah. Yeah, I agree. I think just looking at, at the overall scorecard and talking to many of the athletes, it's like, well, of course we're gonna show up to all of the events. Like that's our intent. Because if you can knock off a. A bad day, a 10th place that could make or break your odds of being in the top three. [00:38:15] Craig Dalton: Yeah. Yeah, for sure. You mentioned the expansion of the rider numbers from 30 to 35 in each category. Um, super cool to see. Did you see like a different profile of athlete, whether it be different nationalities or what have you start to come to the table this year? Cause I understand, and you commented on this earlier, that, you know, the first year it was the first year, people didn't know. It seemed like it was gonna be a great idea, but I did talk to a few athletes. Well, I just dunno how it's gonna pan out. I already had my schedule figured out, so I didn't, didn't apply. Just curious like what this year's application looked like and, and what were your takeaways from it? [00:38:53] Michelle Duffy: Yeah. Well, we had more applications in year two than year one and more qualified applicants. And I don't, I don't mean to, um, that as a, any, uh, derogatory, uh, towards the VA first year's applications, but in year one there was a lot of. either jokes, , some, some people that were, I don't know if they were joking around or, you know, just not in contention. Um, at the everyday cyclist, you know, some applicant applications that said things around, like, I've applied for the Leadville lottery four times and this is, you know, just another opportunity for me to, to apply. Um, there was also a lot of, uh, like sub. Applications that came through in the first year. And of course there were dozens of elite applications that came through because look at the depth of field. I think in year two what we saw happen is elites, many, many of them, um, that live here in the US and Canada, but then also internationally. And then we had to make some hard decisions around like equal athlete, um, athletic ability. Someone lives internationally versus domestically. And we do have an international field this year with riders coming from, you know, South Africa and Australia and um, Canada and a few other countries. But, uh, those that were like fringe , we, I, we did prioritize domestic, um, because. you know, our, our hope is to create some, some heroes here in the us. [00:40:42] Craig Dalton: Yeah, that's interesting. Sometimes it's easy to forget that lifetime is a business as well. And you know, growing an international audience only has certain value to you guys versus domestic audience. [00:40:55] Michelle Duffy: Yeah, and it's actually like we talked about that at length because. Having all of these different countries represented would be really cool. But beyond the business piece of it, it's like the health of cycling fandom in Europe is doing just fine. But if you have a bike race in Europe, like. And you can get access to the downtown of a major city and you have tens of thousands of people show up to cheer 'em in and they're lining the streets. You have a bike race here and it's like, look at like road cycling. They're far and few between. There's barely any fans that show up. And so the goal, like we're, we can't lose sight of the goal and that's to make sure that we're converting people who live here into fans of the sport. Not even. from a future participatory perspective, but just in, you know, to become fans simply. [00:41:51] Craig Dalton: Yeah. Yeah, that makes sense. One of the things we didn't dig into was the addition of that wildcard event and what that wildcard event ended up being. Can you talk about which event you selected and why? [00:42:05] Michelle Duffy: Yeah, we selected an event in Trinidad, Colorado going into its third year called the Rad Dirt Fest. Um, it is a gravel event. The distance is 110 miles, and it's a high altitude, gravel, gravel race. Um, the difference between this and like a big sugar beyond the altitude is it's, uh, big long climbing miles and. It's fast gravel, . It's, you know, champagne gravel, as they say. It's, it's almost like road in many ways. It's not very technical at all. Um, we. . There's a few reasons why this became the Wild Card. Part of it is schedule because our 2023 event calendar is already planned, and we wanted to give some breathing room between events because some of our events kind of stack up against one another. For example, like Tahoe Trail, mountain Bike Race is the week after Crusher and the Tusher. Um, so getting from Utah to Tahoe, and coming right off of Crusher, like that just wasn't super viable. So if you like go through the list, there's also like some Northwood events that we have, like lut in 99 er, but they're already going up there for Schwam again. So wanna be mindful of travel costs because while it's not expensive to stay in cable, Wisconsin, it's expensive to get there, and um, to have someone, to have a rider go up for loosen as well, like that's just a big. , it has a big impact on them and travel. The travel expenses to do the series are super high. So those were factors as well as like we do care deeply about the communities that these events are taking place in. And Trinidad is a community that. is up and coming. I kind of view it as like an Emporia many years ago with a completely different personality. It's a hidden gem right on the border of New Mexico. It's funky, spunky, artsy down home. Like if there, if Lifetime was capable of producing a grassroots, gravel event, the Rad Dirt Fest, is it? And after seeing the. Elation out of athletes after Schwam again, which is like a good down home mountain bike event up in northern Wisconsin. This feels like the gravel version of that. It's just, it's truly like an endearing, eclectic place. And the vibes are good and the just, it's a, it's such a fun event. Um, our team actually says it's like one of our favorite events in the portfolio. and then selfishly, like, I hope the event grows . I'll just be be honest about that. Like we're into the third event, uh, third year and, um, that wasn't the deciding factor at all. But I really do hope that the event grows because I really will. Even Trinidad as a community, they're, they're being heavily invested in right now, just from people moving out of Denver. But, um, hopefully they can, they can keep up, keep up with that. They've been a boomer bus town, but they're really focused on outdoor. [00:45:16] Craig Dalton: Yeah. It's a town that listeners of the podcast may be familiar with because we had, uh, local one Del Roka on who. Developed the original Trinidad Gravel field guide and put down some amazing routes down there, and came on the podcast just to talk all those things about the community. So I do think it's really interested and, and I'm excited to see that event grow as well, and hopefully just contributed to that town and that community in the same way that Unbound has contributed to Emporia. [00:45:45] Michelle Duffy: Yeah. Juan has kind of been that, um, steer head in that, in that community and, and showing people. These roads, you can go out and, and utilize them with your bicycle and, uh, you know, the big hu hunting culture around there, but how are we celebrating outdoor rec? And they've also just brought in really great figureheads for their, like, economic development and, um, outdoor recreation, et cetera. So I, I, I'm excited to see how that town. [00:46:16] Craig Dalton: Yeah. On that, on that decision to make the Rad Fest, uh, the wildcard event. You mentioned the many things that kind of went into that. One of the kind of things that have been hanging over the Grand Prix for a few years is just this balance of mountain bikey gravel racing. How are you guys trying to strike that balance? Because obviously adding another pure gravel event into the series isn't making it any more technical for the mountain bike cruise. [00:46:45] Michelle Duffy: Yeah, it's not, and that could change in 2024. Um, I think it's important to note that like this is an off-road series surrounding mass participation events and some of the like super technical type courses that have kind of been thrown our way. It's like, well that doesn't necessarily always cater to the mass participant. And that's the most important thing is that we're marry. This series with mass participation events. So like that is one factor. The second is there's seven events, so there's gonna be an off kilter there between mountain bike and gravel, but um, that can change every year. And maybe we'll see more mountain bike in 2024. Um, I think that there's a good chance that we will, but, for this year. I mean, it's an off-road series. I, I think there's so many sensitivities and I totally respect all of the elite athletes. So I say this tongue in cheek, but I'm also like, you guys get over it. Like this is the lineup and it's gonna be a good time. And I mean, yeah. [00:47:58] Craig Dalton: I think one of the most exciting things that you've revealed in this podcast is just the notion that 2024 could look a lot different. [00:48:06] Michelle Duffy: Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I think that's like part of the, the freedom that we have because we're playing within the confines of like all of these events are, are lifetime events and it's, you know, the same team working on the production of the event and the Grand Prix, and it gives us the ability to be flexible now. five years down the road, are we ending up in a structure that it doesn't have as much freedom because this thing's so established that it has to be the same events? I don't know the answer to that question, but um, we're still in test phase and that's what I think, you know, earlier I said we've had time to celebrate some of our wins. I think that. So important, like early on we definitely received some, you know, there was like tension and criticism and like welcome all of it from, you know, athlete and fan alike. It's also so important to remember and like communicating even to our teams that are on the frontline, like. , these are humans putting on the event. And we're humans that are really just trying to, and supported by a company who is also just trying to make a difference. Like the Grand Prix is not a revenue driver for our, for our company, but we're trying to align ourself with like positive change in cycling and there's gonna be growing pains with that. Um, but I don't even view them as growing pains. Right. It's like they're just, it's a developmental. Of, of establishing something that hopefully changes the face of North American cycling. And you know what? There's a couple more series on the calendar this year, and I think that's really rad. I, I don't wanna attest that to the Grand Prix, but I think it's super cool to see that other groups are thinking in the same way, whether that's like happening on the road with the N C L, whether that survives or not. But they're trying. And you have the group that's putting together a true mountain bike series around the country and like all of these different things are gonna start to create more fans in, in the us and that's super cool. It's, we're really, I feel like everyone in, in the cycling space right now, like what a cool time to be involved in, in. [00:50:17] Craig Dalton: Yeah, a hundred percent. Like I think we all need to be thankful for Lifetime's involvement in this series and everybody else who's putting energy into North American cycling because agree, like. I think we're in a great place in terms of the equipment and the joy that gravel bikes can bring to athletes. I think there's plenty of great events out there in the world, but it takes a lot of energy and financial commitment to make these events happen and you guys are putting a lot of money behind this series and investing in growing fandom in the United States, and that's amazing because I think we do need more fans of racing. I'm quick to acknowledge like this podcast is definitely not about the front end of the pack for the most part. Well, I certainly enjoy talking to the professional athletes and learning how they get into the sport at the end of the day, like it's really the, the mass participant that gets me most excited cuz that's certainly where I sit in these events. Um, so it's super cool that you guys continue to invest and I appreciate you taking the time and just walking me through last year and this year and hopefully we get to see each other in a few months down in Monte. [00:51:20] Michelle Duffy: I know we will. Thank you, [00:51:23] Craig Dalton: Thanks, Rashelle. That's going to do it for this week's edition of the gravel ride podcast. Big, thanks to Michelle for joining us and bringing us up to speed on the lifetime grand Prix. We are now just around the corner from the first event in April. And I'm excited. As I'm sure some of you are to watch the action. Down at the seawater classic and kick off another year. Big thanks to athletic greens and AIG one for supporting the podcast. Simply visit athletic greens.com/the gravel ride. And you can get that free one-year supply of vitamin D and B12. If you're interested in connecting with me. Please visit the ridership. That's www.theridership.com. Or if you have a moment, ratings and reviews are hugely appreciated in the podcast game, it really helps with our discoverability. Until next time. Here's to finding some dirt under your wheels
Comic Reviews: DC Batman vs. Robin 5 by Mark Waid, Mahmud Asrar, Jordie Bellaire DC/RWBY 1 by Marguerite Bennett, Megan Hetrick, Marissa Louise Shazam: Fury of the Gods Special – Shazamily Matters by Zachary Levi, D.J. Cotrona, Colleen Doran, Freddie Williams II, Andrew Dalhouse, Faithe Herman, Amanda Deibert, Erica Henderson, Tim Seeley, Jorge Corona, Sarah Stern, David Sandberg, Scott Kolins, John Kalisz, Ross Butler, Josh Trujillo, Andrew Dillon, Grace Caroline Currey, Damian Fulton, Nick Filardi, Adam Brody, Kenny Porter, Mike Norton, Allen Passalaqua, Henry Gayden, Scott Godlewski, Alex Guimaraes Marvel Spider-Verse Unlimited 39 by Stephanie Williams, EJ Su, Pete Pantazis Alligator Loki 20 by Alyssa Wong, Robert Quinn, Pete Pantazis Cosmic Ghost Rider 1 by Stephanie Phillips, Juann Cabal, Espen Grundetjern Hallows' Eve 1 by Erica Schultz, Michael Dowling, Brian Reber I Am Iron Man 1 by Murewa Ayodele, Dotun Akande Murderworld: Game Over by Jim Zub, Ray Fawkes, Netho Diaz, Lorenzo Tammetta, Matt Milla Rogue and Gambit 1 by Stephanie Phillips, Carlos Gomez, David Curiel, Federico Blee Spider-Gwen: Shadow Clones 1 by Emily Kim, Kei Zama, Triona Farrell Spider-Man: Unforgiven by Tim Seeley, Sid Kotian, Edgar Delgado Infinity Comics Image Phantom Road 1 by Jeff Lemire, Gabriel Walta, Jordie Bellaire Boom Buffy: The Last Vampire Slayer Special by Casey Gilly, Joe Jaro, Maria Keane, Lea Caballero, Joana Lafuente Dark Horse Skull and Bones: Savage Storm 1 by John Jackson Miller, James Mishler, Christian Rosado, Roshan Kurichiyanil AWA Red Zone 1 by Cullen Bunn, Mike Deodato Jr, Lee Loughridge Dynamite Barbarella: The Center Cannot Hold 1 by Sarah Hoyt, Riccardo Bogani, Werner Sanchez AfterShock All Night and Every Day by Ray Fawkes, Andrea Frittella, Sara Colella Scout And We Love You by Fell Hound OGN Trick Pony by Greg Lockard, Anna David, Lucas Gattoni Carmilla the First Vampire by Amy Chu, Soo Lee Ray's OGN Corner: New Kid by Jerry Craft Additional Reviews: We Have A Ghost, Mando 3.1, Picard 3.3, Thor and Loki: Double Trouble, Devil's Hour News: Marvel Super-Stories, Tenement now ten issues, Omninews, Battle Chasers returns, Stranger Things stage production, Hellboy cast, Marvel uniting Alien/Predator/Planet of the Apes under a new imprint (20th Century Comics) with possible additions, Good Asian being adapted into a TV series, TMNT movie casting, Discovery ending with s5, new Bendis project Trailers: Haunted Mansion, Peter Pan and Wendy, TMNT Mutant Mayhem Comics Countdown (01 Mar 2023): Radiant Black 22 by Kyle Higgins, Eduardo Ferigato Human Target 12 by Tom King, Greg Smallwood Stargirl: The Lost Children 4 by Geoff Johns, Todd Nauck, Matt Herms Spider-Man 6 by Dan Slott, Mark Bagley, John Dell, Edgar Delgado I Hate This Place 6 by Kyle Starks, Artyom Topilin, Lee Loughridge Where Monsters Lie 2 by Kyle Starks, Piotr Kowalski, Vladimir Popov Action Comics 1052 by Dan Jurgens, Phillip Kennedy Johnson, Leah Williams, Marguerite Sauvage, Rafa Sandoval, Lee Weeks, Elizabeth Breitweiser, Matt Herms Phantom Road 1 by Jeff Lemire, Gabriel Walta, Jordie Bellaire Detective Comics 1069 by Si Spurrier, Ram V, Dexter Soy, Stefano Raffaele, Miguel Mendonca, Caspar Wijngaard, Ivan Reis, Adriano Lucas Batman vs. Robin 5 by Mark Waid, Mahmud Asrar, Jordie Bellaire
You know what they say, the saddest thing about betrayal is that it never comes from your enemies...Ronda: Barbara and her husband Michael Mastromarino were a perfect couple with a fairytale life. That is until Michael betrayed Barbara in the most unimaginable, and frankly bizarre, way possible. Pam: We're headed back to New Jersey this week as I tell you about Sarah Stern and how her best friend since middle school betrayed her for a small sum of money... who needs enemies when you've got friends like Liam McAtasney and Preston Taylor? Sources:Ronda:TV show- Love, Honor, Betray S1:E1 Podcast - Swindled: Michael Mastromarino NY TimesOprahNY Daily News NPRPam:The SunAPPNJ.comABC News (1)Inside Edition ABC News (2)YouTube - NJ.comMusic: Big Foot by Gvidon on Pixabay (Go check it out!)
Welcome back to another ride on the Hot Mess Express! After a couple weeks off we are back with a new case for our crimeaholics. So buckle up, grab a cocktail and get comfy. Today we bring you the case of Sarah Stern. A teenager that went missing with seemingly no trace. Hear her story and the outcome then stay tuned for some Mardi Gras facts in our last call. Socials: Instagram- tequilashewrote Tiktok- tequilashewrote Facebook- tequila, she wrote Twitter- tequilashewrote Patreon- tequilashewrote Email- tequilashewrote@gmail.com Resources: https://www.the-sun.com/news/6136287/what-happened-to-sarah-stern/amp/ https://people.com/crime/sarah-stern-case-man-choked-her-threw-body-off-bridge/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/tequilashewrote/support
Hi Friends! There are some bad friends out there, but no friends are as bad as Preston and Liam. I can't believe what they did to their “lifetime best friend” Sarah for just $10,000. Love you so much and please be safe out there! Hope to be seeing you very soon x o Bailey Sarian Watch the original video here and don't forget to subscribe to my YouTube @BaileySarian! Tik Tok: https://bit.ly/3e3jL9v Instagram: http://bit.ly/2nbO4PR Facebook: http://bit.ly/2mdZtK6 Twitter: http://bit.ly/2yT4BLV Pinterest: http://bit.ly/2mVpXnY Youtube: http://bit.ly/1HGw3Og Snapchat: https://bit.ly/3cC0V9d Discord: https://discord.gg/BaileySarian
This week Kayla messed up the audio and that's why the episode was delayed!! Sorry for the delay listeners and thank you so much for coming back to us!! This episode Kayla details the horrific circumstances surrounding the disappearance and murder of 19 year old Sarah Stern. This week we will have you questioning whether you really know who your friends are, and what their real intentions are. Scroll below for sources as usual, but also check out the TikTok links to the confession of the murderer. Connect with us: Insta: @whoresforhorror Twitter: @whrs4horror Gmail: whores4horror69@gmail.com Send a voice message: https://anchor.fm/mariah-kay/message Sources: https://heavy.com/news/preston-taylor-today/ https://theblast.com/123658/the-murder-of-sarah-stern https://thecinemaholic.com/sarah-sterns-murder-who-killed-her-how-did-she-die/ https://www.the-sun.com/news/6136287/what-happened-to-sarah-stern/ https://people.com/crime/sarah-stern-case-man-choked-her-threw-body-off-bridge/ https://abcnews.go.com/US/liam-mcatasney-sentenced-life-parole-murdering-friend-sarah/story?id=63869375 TikTok Confessions: (Part 1) https://www.tiktok.com/@truecrimetimeglobal/video/7128452631034498310?is_from_webapp=v1&item_id=7128452631034498310 (Part 2) https://www.tiktok.com/@truecrimetimeglobal/video/7128453231432322310?is_from_webapp=v1&item_id=7128453231432322310 --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/mariah-kay/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mariah-kay/support
It was in the early morning hours of Saturday, December 3, 2016 when 19 year old Sarah Stern's car was found abandoned on a bridge in New Jersey. The car was reported by a few passers-by, and when police responded they could see the car wasn't damaged in any way, it had just been left abandoned, keys still inside. It appeared to be a suicide, but as police spoke with Sarah's friends, the possibility that she'd run off to Canada seemed to be likely. It wasn't until a big break in the case that police realized things were much more sinister than that. Sources: NJ.COM | Family searching for Sarah Stern found her Suspected Killer's phone. Turns Out He Dropped it at the Crime Scene App. | Sarah Stern Murder: The 5 Most Disturbing Quotes from Confession Video (Kala Kachmar) App. | Sarah Stern Murder: A Shooting Star Text to her Dad, and Then Forever Silence (Kathleen Hopkins) Heavy | Anthony Curry: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know NJ Courts | State of New Jersey VS. Preston O. Taylor App. | Sarah Stern Murder Trial: Small Details Led to Liam McAtasney's Conviction (Kathleen Hopkins) App. | Sarah Stern Murder Trial : What Happened Each Day (Kathleen Hopkins) Sponsored by: BetterHelp! Visit www.BetterHelp.com/CREEPERS today to get 10% off your first month. Hello Fresh! Visit www.Hellofresh.com/CREEPERS65 and use code CREEPERS65 for 65% off AND free shipping! Framebridge! Visit www.Framebridge.com and use promo code CREEPERS to save an additional 15% off your first order! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In the early morning hours of December 3rd 2016 a 911 call was placed reporting an abandoned 1994 Grey Oldsmobile car left on the Belmar, NJ Route 35 Bridge above the Shark River. Responding officers ran the license plate in their system and find that the belongs to a Michael Stern, so they give him a call. He answers, but he's all the way in Florida. Police wanted to know then who had been driving the car. He responded, my daughter, referring to his 19 year old daughter, Sarah Stern. This is her story. Sarah Lee Stern Scholarship Fund: https://www.gofundme.com/f/sarahleesternscholarship Resources: Paula Zahn Season S19 E3 Go Fund Me: https://www.gofundme.com/f/sarahleesternscholarship 911 Call: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vycddxXD3WI Confession: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ejpQN3TguhM https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/199270566/carla-stern https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/194800782/sarah-lee-stern https://www.app.com/story/news/local/people/2019/12/13/sarah-stern-murder-scholarship-fundraiser-concert-keeps-sarah-alive/4408324002/ https://www.nj.com/monmouth/2017/02/hold_--_pair_charged_with_killing_sarah_stern_appe.html https://twitter.com/Sarah_Lee_Stern https://www.thefreelibrary.com/Strangled+%26+thrown+off+a+bridge+-+all+for+a+shoebox+full+of+money%3B...-a0595400776 https://www.nj.com/monmouth/2017/02/teen_went_with_sarah_stern_to_bank_before_he_stran.html https://www.app.com/story/news/local/courts/2022/02/17/sarah-stern-murder-preston-taylor-loses-appeal-reduced-sentence/6838886001/ https://www.njcourts.gov/attorneys/assets/opinions/appellate/unpublished/a2155-19.pdf?c=hHI https://abcnews.go.com/US/liam-mcatasney-sentenced-life-parole-murdering-friend-sarah/story?id=63869375 Music Used: Walking with the Dead by Maia Wynne Link: https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Maiah_Wynne/Live_at_KBOO_for_A_Popcalypse_11012017 License: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Monkeys Spinning Monkeys by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://filmmusic.io/song/4071-monkeys-spinning-monkeys License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license Lobby Time by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3986-lobby-time License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license Our Links: Website: https://themurderdiariespodcast.com/ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/themurderdiariespod Buy Us a Coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/mdiariespod Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/themurderdiariespod/ TikTok: https://vm.tiktok.com/ZTdgBwpV1/
This week we look into the disappearance and potential murder of Sarah Stern. When Sarah discovers a large amount of cash hidden in her home, she unknowingly puts a target on her back. However, she appeared to be making plans to run away, but then her car was found abandoned atop a bridge and police immediately thought they had a suicide on their hands. So, was it suicide, a run away, or foul play? Well, a shocking video recording gives everyone the answer. Crime Vault: Minute 5:52 is where the confession tape is played. Highly recommend you check it out! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ejpQN3TguhM --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
This week we cover our favorite themes from our past episodes and Taylor finally tells the story of BTK. While Sydney covers the murder of Sarah Stern. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/gonnasoundweird/support
Last week on the Bachelorette we saw Men Tell All (which was a snooze fest). One thing that we can always count on from the Bachelorette, is the bromance between the men. Danielle is telling a story based on friendship. Sarah Stern went missing in December of 2016. Her friend, Liam, was the last to see her alive and his alibi checked out, so he was law enforcement's greatest asset. It wasn't until another friend came forward, agreed to go undercover to record Liam, that the true story was brought to life. Liam had a disgusting plot to take Sarah's life for money. (Story Starts at: 8:59) CONTENT WARNING: Suicide Links Discussed in the Episode: Sarah Lee Stern Scholarship Fund You can always connect with us at: linktr.ee/CrimeandRoses. There you can see links to our podcast and social media platforms. You can support the podcast by becoming a Patreon Member at: www.patreon.com/CrimeAndRoses. We have several levels of membership, and we truly love you, mean it. Always feel free to email us at: CrimeandRoses@gmail.com. Send us true crime story suggestions and any questions or comments you may have. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/crimeandroses/support
When 19-year-old Sarah Stern's car is mysteriously found on a New Jersey bridge, a former classmate comes forward with information that helps authorities discover what happened. (OAD 3/2/2019) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
We are on episode 25 and super excited about the growth and activity we have seen on our downloads and socials lately. So, thank you all for that and all the shoutouts. We love hearing from you guys and interacting with everyone. Today's episode is the murder of 19-year-old Sarah Stern from Neptune, New Jersey. Her car was found abandoned on a bridge in the early hours by an Uber driver. Her case remained cold for over two months with theories swirling around as to what might have happened to Sarah. It wasn't until a young man came forward with information that broke the case wide open. However, her body has still yet to be found. Sources: 1.) https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/the-betrayal-of-sarah-stern-s-27-ep-33/id1244348213?i=1000439125577 2.) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OTZqguL5dbA (part 1) 3.) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BztMgcNgobk 4.) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ejpQN3TguhM (the confession tape) 5.) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I3_ahzhlD5M (part 2) 6.) https://abcnews.go.com/US/liam-mcatasney-sentenced-life-parole-murdering-friend-sarah/story?id=63869375 7.) https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/sarah-stern-new-jersey-college-student-murder-friend-liam-mcatasney-sentence-court-guilty/1537853/ Check us out on our socials: Instagram: https://instagram.com/teacherstalkcrime TikTok: @brantyyy_ and @southern.math.teacher Buy me a Coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/ttcpodcast Email Us: teacherstalkcrimepodcast@gmail.com Star Student information and where you can donate: Sylvester Williams IG: @therealsylvester1 Cashapp: $walkwithsylvester MERCH REMINDER - JULY 18th (crew necks, t-shirts, tumblers)
True Crime Psychology and Personality: Narcissism, Psychopathy, and the Minds of Dangerous Criminals
True Crime Personality and Psychology True Crime Psychology and Personality is a podcast that profiles criminal personalities, discusses personality disorders, and examines real life events from a scientifically informed perspective. Want more mental health content? Check out our other Podcasts: Mental Health // Demystified with Dr. Tracey Marks Healthy // Toxic Cluster B: A Look At Narcissism, Antisocial, Borderline, and Histrionic Disorders Here, Now, Together with Rou Reynolds Links for Dr. Grande Dr. Grande on YouTube Produced by Ars Longa Media Learn more at arslonga.media. Produced by: Christopher Breitigan. Executive Producer: Patrick C. Beeman, MD Legal Stuff The information presented in this podcast is intended for educational and entertainment purposes only and is not professional advice. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In December 2016, 19 year old Sarah Stern disappeared from her car, which was found abandoned on a bridge in New Jersey. For two months, no one knew what happened to her, until a classmate came forward and shocked the community. Buy our MERCH here! https://www.inhumanpodcast.com/merch If you enjoy our podcast, please leave us a rating and review! Follow us on Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok @inhuman_podcast and join our Facebook group (Inhuman Podcast). If you have questions or case suggestions, send us an email at inhumanmonsterpod@gmail.com! Check out our website to submit listener stories or case suggestions, and to see all sources for this episode! https://www.inhumanpodcast.com/ -------- SPONSORS -------- Get 10% off your first month at BetterHelp using our link: betterhelp.com/inhuman Get a free extra month of BarkBox, the monthly subscription service for your pup, by using our link: www.BarkBox.com/inhumanpod.