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Coming Down the Pipe... [0:00] - The Season 20 intro for The Pipeline Show [1:12] - Guy begins the episode this week with playoff updates and player signings. [14:19] - With the WHL's Draft arriving in under 3 weeks, it's time to get some insight on the players eligible for this year's draft. Broadcaster Dave Dawson from HN Live is our guide. [45:01] - The USHL playoffs are underway so Ryan Sikes is back on the program to tell us which teams and players we should expect big things from on the way to the Clark Cup. Also, how does the USHL look in terms of the 2025 NHL Draft? [1:08:21] - Let's put a bow on the 2025 NCAA Hockey season by having a conversation with Sean Hogan, the Executive Director of College Hockey Inc to recap the 2025 Frozen Four, look ahead to next year in Las Vegas, how the transfer portal is being used, potential news Div 1 programs and a lot more.
During Hour 4 Sean Hogan from College Hockey Inc joined the show teeing up this weekend's Frozen Four in St. Louis. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In Hour Two, Mike Halford and Jason Brough talk about Ivan Demidov's potential impact on an already intriguing Montreal Canadiens season. How do KHL talents translate to the NHL, and what situations can the Canucks still make the playoffs? Then, Sean Hogan joins to break down the NCAA competition we've seen so far, and what the Frozen Four shall bring. What to make of the CHL ruling, and how much it changes both Junior hockey, and NCAA hockey. This podcast is produced by Andy Cole and Greg Balloch. The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Media Inc. or any affiliate.
Choosing the right path in hockey can be a challenge, but it can also unlock incredible opportunities on and off the ice. How can aspiring hockey players and their families make informed decisions about their futures? What makes College Hockey an unmatched avenue for development, education, and long-term success? In this episode of Mitlin Money Mindset®, Larry Sprung hosts Sean Hogan, Executive Director of College Hockey Inc., to discuss the unique development opportunities provided by College Hockey. They explore the challenges and benefits of this pathway, its role in shaping young athletes' futures, and the resources available to guide families along the way. Sean emphasizes how College Hockey empowers players to excel both athletically and academically while keeping doors open for life after sports. Sean discusses: The mission of College Hockey Inc. and its role in promoting NCAA hockey across North America The benefits and structure of the College Hockey pathway compared to other development paths Why the average rookie age of 23 is crucial for understanding hockey's developmental timeline The impact of education and NCAA graduation rates on long-term success for hockey players Resources and strategies for families navigating the junior hockey system and NCAA eligibility And more! Resources: Mitlin Financial The JOY and Productivity Journal by Lawrence Sprung Download Your Free Copy of the Couple's JOYful Money Guide Connect with Larry Sprung: LinkedIn: Larry Sprung Instagram: Larry Sprung Facebook: Larry Sprung X (Twitter): Larry Sprung Connect with Sean Hogan: LinkedIn: Sean Hogan College Hockey Inc. Sean Hogan (@coach_hogan) - X About our Guest: Sean Hogan has coached hockey at the youth, junior, intercollegiate and international levels. He joined College Hockey Inc. in 2019 as the Director of Education and now serves as the organization's Executive Director. Sean has extensive knowledge in regards to the NCAA college hockey landscape and his primary responsibility is promoting NCAA hockey to talented athletes and families. Disclosure: Guests on the Mitlin Money Mindset are not affiliated with CWM, LLC, and opinions expressed herein may not be representative of CWM, LLC. CWM, LLC is not responsible for the guest's content linked on this site.
In episode 40, we have Executive Director of College Hockey Inc. Sean Hogan on the podcast to talk about College Hockey Inc. and what they do. In the episode: -What players, parents and coaches need to know about the recruiting process -How college hockey changed over time -What the future looks like for college hockey To learn more about College Hockey Inc. or get in contact with Sean visit https://www.collegehockeyinc.com/
The best horror quiz show around. What is the Professional Horror Podcast Quiz Show? That's correct. This episode, your lovely host Chris Donovan has assembled his friends, Sean Hogan, Nichole Cava, reigning champ Megan Pendagast, and fresh blood Julia Pendagast to test their horror braaains. Chris will test their knowledge on horror comics, the works of Clive Barker, not so final girls, and much more! Join us, to see if anyone can dethrone Megan Pendagast as the champ of horror trivia!
During Hour 4 College Hockey Inc.'s Executive Director Sean Hogan joined the show breaking down the changing landscape of NCAA and junior hockey. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In Hour 4 we were joined by Sean Hogan from College Hockey Inc. and again heard from Daily Faceoff Insider Frank Seravalli. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Coming Down the Pipe... [0:00] - The intro for Season 20 of The Pipeline Show [1:12] - Guy has a quick intro segment with CHL top 10, NCAA top 20 and U17 update [8:19] - Scott Wheeler from The Athletic has released his first 2025 NHL Draft rankings, we talk about the upcoming CHL vs NTDP games and the CHL/NCAA ruling as well. [42:04] - The 2025 Draft Spotlight gets pointed towards Swift Current to feature 6'5 defenceman Peyton Kettles who was given a 'B' rating by NHL Central Scouting. [59:18] - Sean Hogan is the Executive Director of College Hockey Inc and he updates everyone on the changes to the junior/college hockey landscape.
Sean Hogan, the executive director of College Hockey Inc, joins the show to talk about the NCAA changing its eligibility rules, and what it means for hockey at the development level
AJ and Matt start the hour by looking at some of the best (and worst) matchups from Week 10 in the NFL. Then they're joined by Sean Hogan, the Executive Director of College Hockey Inc, to discuss the NCAA's eligibility change. They wrap up the hour by hearing from Sens head coach Travis Green
Richie Hogan Book Launch 8 (Sean Hogan) on CRKC 31.10.2024
Critic and author Kim Newman and filmmaker Sean Hogan
Two years after the announcement that Veeva and Salesforce would part ways, Life Sciences organizations are racing to evaluate their options and select their CRM partner before the 2025 cutover. Jen is joined by Vynamic's Life Sciences Commercial Operations Lead, Jeremy Shirey, and Tech & Digital Transformation Service Lead, Vince Annerhed-Harris as well as special guests, CodeScience's CEO, Mike Utell, and Chief Revenue Officer, Sean Hogan, to discuss how Life Sciences leaders should approach this decision and transition to minimize disruption and maximize business value.For more information about CodeScience, visit their website: https://www.codescience.com/For more information about Vynamic's work in Commercial Operations and Tech & Digital Transformation, visit: https://vynamic.com/ Podcast Tags: healthcare, life sciences, healthcare technology, healthcare news, Veeva, Salesforce, tech and digital transformation, CRM, commercial operations, CodeSciencePanel – Jen Burke, Jeremy Shirey, Vince Annerhed-Harris, Mike Utell, Sean HoganResearch & Production – Jen Burke, Jeremy Shirey, Vince Annerhed-HarrisRecording & Editing – Mike Liberto, Rachel SkoneckiFor additional discussion, please contact us at TrendingHealth.com or share a voicemail at 1-888-VYNAMIC.
Coming Down the Pipe... [0:00] - The NEW intro for Season 20 of The Pipeline Show [1:13] - Guy kicks off the second decade of The Pipeline Show with some news and notes before getting to the guest list. [20:09] - The new Executive Director of College Hockey Inc is Sean Hogan who joins to discuss taking over the big chair from Mike Snee. We get his perspective on a number of college hockey topics. [38:04] - Steven Ellis from Daily Faceoff checks in with his early thoughts on the news lawsuit against the NCAA by a junior player with small ties to the OHL. Our main focus is on last week's 2024 Hlinka Gretzky Cup and which players stood out for him. [1:06:57] - The 50th season of the North American Hockey League is about to begin. President and Commissioner Mark Frankenfeld is back to help set up the new season including the addition of 3 new teams and some talk about Canadian involvement.
Pop, Indie, Dubstep, Rock, Hip Hop, Country, R'n'B, Indie by musicians of the Ojibwe, Oji-Cree, Nisenan, Washoe, Métis, Taos Pueblo, Yup'ik, Mi'kmaq, Mohawk, Inuk, Anishinaabe, Cree, Comanche, and Osoyoos Nations. Brought to you by Tunes From Turtle Island and Pantheon Podcasts. If you like the music you hear, go out and buy/stream some of it. :) All these artists need your support. Tracks on this week's show are: Natasha Fisher - High Hopes Aysanabee & Ruby Waters - Video Games Audiofreq & Darksiderz - HIT IT (BLAUW) Electric Religious - Setting Sun Ph8 w/ The Bees & Locasts - Sedna Jacquie Daniels - Girls Can Be Outlaws Too Byron Nicholai - How To Kill Brenton David - Working It Out Angel Ann Julian & Shift from tha 902 - Summer 2024 Tracy Bone & Sean Hogan & Joey Pringle - Paradice Is Where We Park It The Bloodshots - The Bay Blues Twin Flames - House Of The Rising Sun Semiah - Withdrawals Drezus - Cover My Shoulders Kwabid & CHA$E - nematodes LOCVHONTVS & Tiago Vasquez - Your Life Indian Giver - White Yuppie Scum Nige B feat. Artifice, The Visionary & Txreek - Remarkable Micki Free - When The Devils At Your Door DJ Vadim & Deuce Eclipse & Abstract Rude - Like the Wind pt2 Calling All Captains - Sunbeam Paskal Suraj & El Suchi - Eye Of The Storm Migize Nodin & KidCree - still here Donavon Woods & William Prince - I'm Just Trying To Get Home Francis Baptiste - Lazy Lake All songs on this podcast are owned by the artist(s) and are used for educational purposes only. All songs can be found for purchase or streaming wherever you get your great music. Please pick up these amazing tracks and support these artists. More info on the show here.
Sean Hogan, College Hockey Inc new Executive Director! Plus, we check in with Peter South on a few important topics! Join Scott & Paul on ITHSWpodcasts.Podbean.com, or wherever you get your favorite podcast! For more, click like and subscribe and go to IceTimeHockeyWest.com
The new executive director of College Hockey, Inc., is Sean Hogan. He joins the radio show on his second day in his new role to talk about a lot of different and important topics affecting the college game.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On this week's Tech Thursday episode, UC ANR's Andy Lyons and Sean Hogan detail DroneCamp, the largest and most extensive drone training for collecting agricultural field data, coming up next month.
Vidste du, at Deep Rock Galactic er dansk, og et af de mest succesfulde spil fra Danmark? Denne uge har vi besøg af ingen ringere end Søren Lundgaard, og det navn siger dig måske ikke så meget, men Søren er en af folkene bag spillet Deep Rock Galactic! Deep Rock Galactic er et af de mest succesfulde danske spil nogensinde, og Søren er direktør på studiet Ghost Ship Games, der står bag titlen. Lyt med og hør hans inspirerende historie, og selvfølgelig også når vi diskuterer alle nyhederne fra denne uge. Blandt andet har Sea of Thieves-udvikleren Rare skabt en helt ny bæredygtig kontorbygning, og jeg havde fornøjelsen af at snakke med Rares direktør Craig Duncan om det. Det spændende interview kan I også høre i denne episode. I denne episode diskuterer vi blandt andet: - Fallout-succesen fortsætter - Fallout 4 er det bedst sælgende spil i Europa - Sea of Thieves har passeret 40 millioner spillere - PlayStation UI og trophies kommer til PC - Embracer Group splittes i tre selskaber - Xbox lader "Blizzard være Blizzard" - Todd Howard vil ikke sætte dato på hverken Elder Scrolls 6 eller Fallout 5 - Xbox og Meta indgår samarbejde - Mafia-prequel annonceres snart - Rare har bygget bæredygtigt studie - Deep Rock Galactics succeshistorie Alt det, og meget, meget mere. I denne episode medvirker Søren Lundgaard, Mark Elsberg, Janus Hasseriis, Craig Duncan, Sean Hogan og Morten Urup. Tusind tak fordi du lytter med.
A quiz show to test your horror knowledge. What is this year's Professional Horror Podcast Quiz Show? That's correct. This episode Chris Donovan has brought his friends Megan Pendagast, Carolyn Drake-Coyle, Nichole Cava, and Sean Hogan back to see if they can handle this year's installment of the PHP Quiz Show. He will test their knowledge of found footage, SyFy originals, all things R.L. Stine, and more! So join us as we find out if anyone can dethrone Sean to become the reigning champion of horror trivia!
Russia launched its largest drone strike to date on Ukraine over the weekend. VOA's Arash Arabasadi provides details while correspondent Anna Chernikova in Kyiv tells us how the strikes led to a sleepless night for residents in the Capitol. As Ukraine's forces continue their counteroffensive, mines and explosives threaten its people in de-occupied regions. Myroslava Gongadze tells the story. A Russian woman who wants to run for president says the Kremlin should end the conflict in Ukraine, free political prisoners and undertake major reform to repair the division between Russia and the West. We'll hear from Reuters correspondent Sean Hogan on the Russian woman who wants to run for president.
Join me as I bring my husband, Sean Hogan, back onto the podcast after attending his first mastermind event. *sorry the audio is echoing --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/wantingtowealthy/support
Screenwriter Stuart Wright talks about the new folk horror film TO FIRE YOU COME AT LAST with the writer/director Sean Hogan and "3 Films That Have Impacted Everything In Your Adult Life"A WARNING TO THE CURIOUS (1972) THE EXORCISM (1972)BABY (1976)SAT SEP 30, 2023 - TO FIRE YOU COME AT LAST plays Beyond Fest - THE BIGGEST GENRE FILM FESTIVAL IN THE US https://www.americancinematheque.com/now-showing/to-fire-you-come-at-last-and-other-folk-tales-9-30-23/“55 movies across 15 days adds up to a true celebration of the theatrical experience - the very mission at the heart of the American Cinematheque,” said American Cinematheque Director of Programming and Creative, Grant Moninger. “It is an honor to give back to the incredible film-loving community that supports us year round and the city that was literally built by Cinema.”THURS 12 OCT, 2023 - TO FIRE YOU COME AT LAST plays Mayhem Film Festival https://www.mayhemfilmfestival.com/line-upFull Festival Passes are still available for £85, giving you access to all films and events from this year's festival. Individual tickets and Frankenstein ticket packages (where you can select four films for the price of three), are now also available. For more information, and to book tickets and passes, please visit www.mayhemfilmfestival.com. For Frankenstein ticket packages, please visit Broadway's box office or contact them on 0115 952 6611.Mayhem Film Festival takes place at Broadway, Nottingham on 12-15 October 2023."3 FILMS THAT HAVE IMPACTED EVERYTHING IN YOUR ADULT LIFE" is a podcast by screenwriter Stuart Wright that explores the transformative power of cinema. From emotional masterpieces to thought-provoking classics, each episode delves into the films that have had a profound impact on our personal growth and perspective. Through engaging storytelling, critical analysis, and cultural commentary, Stuart aims to uncover the lasting influence that movies have had on his guests. Please join him on an emotional journey through the world of film and discover how just three movies can change the direction of a life, cement memories you will never forget or sometimes change how you see the world."3 FILMS THAT IMPACTED EVERYTHING IN YOUR ADULT LIFE is about those films that made you fall in love with film. The guest selects their trio of movies and we talk for 5 minutes, against the clock. When the ALARM goes off for five minutes we move onto the next film.Please consider leaving a five-star review wherever you get your podcasts if you enjoyed this. It really helps the Britflicks Podcast grow and others to discover it.CreditsIntro/Outro music is Rocking The Stew by Tokyo Dragons (www.instagram.com/slomaxster/)Podcast for www.britflicks.com https://www.britflicks.com/britflicks-podcast/Written, produced and hosted by Stuart WrightSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/britflicks-com-podcast/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
It's time for one of those huge episodes. Well, it's a three parter anyways. 1960 was an incredible year for horror movies, well as far as the big hitter films are concerned anyways. The highs are really high & the lows are surprisingly abundant.. But, what do I think was the very greatest horror movie that came out during 1960? Well, here we have the top 10. The worst 3. A slew of also rans. Some awesome mates. Some special guests. Several pints of beer and over 5 hours of running time split over 3 episodes. This is 1960, A Year In Horror.0.33 - The Virgin Spring (w/ Sean Hogan)36.54- Eyes Without a face43.59 - Psycho (w/ Kelly McNeely)1.35.26 - Outro
Join me as we learn my husband's, Sean Hogan, side of the story. He shares with us his business, learning path and mentors in constructions and agriculture. *Sorry for any weirdness with the audio* --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/wantingtowealthy/support
Piece image Indigenous in Music with Larry K - Lacey Hill in our Spotlight Interview (Alternative Folk) From: Larry K Email Series: Indigenous in Music with Larry K Length: 01:56:00 Welcome to Indigenous in Music with Larry K, This week we welcome from the Six Nations of the Grand River Nation. Singer, writer and composer, Lacey Hill is in the house. She has just released her new album “The Moon,” and her current single “Conduit” is climbing the charts. Lacey is featured in our current issue of the SAY Magazine, visit us on our music page to read all about her at www.indigenousinmusic.com/lacey-hill-interview. Enjoy music from Lacey Hill, Samantha Crain, Kanen, Under Pressure, Janaina Lima, Melody McArthur, Celeigh Cardinal, Lancelot Knight, Tracy Bone, Tee Cloud, Teagan Littlechief, Sean Hogan, Crystal Shawanda, Meridian Brothers, Qacung, Airjazz, Irv Lyons Jr, Captain Planet, Chico Mann, Aterciopelados, Thiaguinho, Iceis Rain, Indian Calling, The Halluci Nation, XAXO, BuffySainte-Marie, Low Budget Rock Star and much much more. Visit us on our home page at www.IndigenousinMusicandArts.org and find our all about us and our programs and visit our SAY Magazine Library with all our featured guests.
The march with the Column is taking place this coming weekend in Cahir which will commemorate the first march under arms of Sean Hogans Flying Column in Jan 1921. Safe House families who kept and fed the men of the column and the Local Active Service Unit of the IRA will also be remembered. Historian and author Tom Hennessy was live in studio to talk to Fran about it on Wednesday's Tipp Today.
On Wednesday's Tipp Today we celebrated Rachel Blackmore's historic win at Cheltenham! Geraldine and Caroline shared some amazing mum stories with us ahead of Mothers Day this weekend. Dr Miriam Delaney on the rising instance of bone fragility in younger people. Jo and Chloe on Mothers day, Historian Tom Hennessy on the upcoming Sean Hogan commemoration, our Garda slot with Tipp Gardai, Dr Mary Ryan on her new book, "It's Probably Your Hormones" and our gardening expert Ultan Nesbitt answers all of your gardening queries.
Welcome to Indigenous in Music with Larry K, This week we welcome from the Six Nations of the Grand River Nation. Singer, writer and composer, Lacey Hill is in the house. She has just released her new album “The Moon,” and her current single “Conduit” is climbing the charts. Lacey is featured in our current issue of the SAY Magazine, visit us on our music page to read all about her at www.indigenousinmusic.com/lacey-hill-interview. Enjoy music from Lacey Hill, Samantha Crain, Kanen, Under Pressure, Janaina Lima, Melody McArthur, Celeigh Cardinal, Lancelot Knight, Tracy Bone, Tee Cloud, Teagan Littlechief, Sean Hogan, Crystal Shawanda, Meridian Brothers, Qacung, Airjazz, Irv Lyons Jr, Captain Planet, Chico Mann, Aterciopelados, Thiaguinho, Iceis Rain, Indian Calling, The Halluci Nation, XAXO, BuffySainte-Marie, Low Budget Rock Star and much much more. Visit us on our home page at www.IndigenousinMusicandArts.org and find our all about us and our programs and visit our SAY Magazine Library with all our featured guests.
On this week's episode, we speak with Sean Hogan, Senior Director of Athlete Relations at College Hockey Inc. (2:56). We also have a conversation with Surrey Eagles forward and Sacred Heart University commit Jake Bongo (21:33). The BCHL Podcast is presented by Finning.
A super fun horror quiz show. What is this episode of the Professional Horror Podcast? That's correct! This episode, Chris Donovan has invited four of his friends: Megan Pendagast, Carolyn Drake-Coyle, Sean Hogan, and Nichole Cava to test their horror braaaains to see who will win the first ever Professional Horror Podcast Quiz Show! He will test their knowledge on horror musicals, Stephen King, scream queens, and more! So join us for this hilariously fun time as these four battle it out in a game of horror trivia!
Sean Hogan and David Chote join Elliott to discuss what's been happening in Qatar. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Today we meet Sean Hogan. Trials and tribulations were prevalent on Sean's journey. However, he never stayed down and continues to push forward with the help of writing, his family and community. Enjoy! Music in this episode: What I Did Was ( Sean Hogan ) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-exQInkhFMI Hold On (prod by Riddiman) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y8uUbYvhtBA Mortal (prod by Riddiman x Joe Leytrick) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8kvCH48h0bU Spaceman (prod by Riddiman) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ysYEeg1Nj9k --- 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/felix-arroyo2/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/felix-arroyo2/support
Still having a few issues with Zencastr, so this is another Skype special. Audio quality doesn't dictate guest quality, however, and talking to Sean Hogan was a blast. We discuss King's old-school ghost story, Bag of Bones, and how the gothic and the modern turn into an underrated King tour-de-force. I was a huge fan of Sean's book England's Screaming, which we discuss at length, and we get some tasty indicators of where the sequel, Twilight's Last Screaming is going. Sean Hogan is a UK writer and filmmaker. He has written award-nominated books of cinema metafiction Twilight's Last Screaming, The Fatal Shore, England's Screaming and Three Mothers, One Father, and his feature credits include the films Future Shock! The Story of 2000AD, The Borderlands, and The Devil's Business. Check out his blog for Arrow films here and his blog here. Thanks to everyone at Black Shuck Books for setting this up, and thanks to SLP for the tech production. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/theconstantreaderpodcast/message
Episode 600 is here. Thank you for your support and ears. Here's to another 600.Screenwriter Stuart Wright talks to filmmaker and author, Sean Hogan, about his brilliant new book TWILIGHT'S LAST SCREAMING.Get you copy direct from the publisher https://blackshuckbooks.co.uk/tls/5 Great American Horror Films featured in Twilight's Last Screaming:Messiah of Evil (1973) Shudder SubscribersFebruary (aka The Blackcoat's Daughter) (2015), rent on PrimePoor Pretty Eddie (aka Redneck County) (1975), rent on PrimeThe Possession of Joel Delaney (1972) “Invaded from the outside by a maniac who is dead” Blu ray #93 from the Imprint CollectionThe Wind (2018) rent on PrimeSee Sean Hogan at DUKEFEST THE RETURN 31 July – 3 Augusthttps://thedukemitchell.uk/2022/06/23/dukefest-2022-the-return-festival-line-up/You can buy me a cup of coffee & support this independent podcast that I host and produce at https://app.redcircle.com/shows/ae030598-6b83-4001-8a29-5e5dd592ed26/sponsort Please consider leaving a five-star review wherever you get your podcasts if you enjoyed this. It really helps the Britflicks Podcast grow and others to discover it.CreditsIntro/Outro music is Rocking The Stew by Tokyo Dragons (www.instagram.com/slomaxster/)Podcast for www.britflicks.com. Written, produced and hosted by Stuart WrightSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/britflicks-com-podcast/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
The Cine-Lit team once again delve into the world of fiction as we have author Sean Hogan on the show to tell us all about his new book, Twilight's Last Screaming. This book, like its predecessor, England's Screaming, brings together fictional characters from horror cinema (and beyond) and through a series of short stories tells a new story that spans the history of America and features an eclectic range of cinema's greatest heroes and villains. Twilight's Last Screaming can be purchased direct from the publisher Black Shuck Books - https://blackshuckbooks.co.uk/tls/ - or wherever books are sold. -Become a Cine-Lit Subscriber - https://www.patreon.com/cinelitPatreon Subscriber Link - https://open.acast.com/public/patreon/fanSubscribe/6485274-Check out the Cine-Lit website for additional content and further reading: https://cinelitpodcast.wordpress.com/Edited by Steve Woodward at https://podcastingeditor.com/ Get bonus content on Patreon See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Sean Hogan is a critic, screenwriter and film director, but I'm talking to him mainly about his two books of metafictional nightmares: England's Screaming and Twilight's Last Screaming. Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/writers-on-film. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Join Scott and Paul for another episode of College Hockey West Live! Tonight, we welcome College Hockey Inc's Sean Hogan to the show. We are talking growth, changes and the overall health of college hockey. For more, click like and subscribe and go to www.IceTimeHockeySW.com.
The boys were joined by former Oakland University, University of Arizona, and Ohio University Head Coach, a two-time ACHA national champion, and the current Director of Athlete Relations for College Hockey Inc, Sean Hogan for this week's episode. Sean provides a detailed look at his ACHA coaching career which led him to some high profile programs.
With roots just down the road in Owen Sound, this weeks spotlight shines on Jeff Catto and his latest single, “Friend.”Tune in for Jeff's chat with Jackie tomorrow at 4:30pm EST as they talk all about the powerful meaning of the song and about his brand new EP “Songs for my Wife.”"Jeff Catto has returned to his roots with a new brand of wholesome, high energy and heartfelt set of country songs. This dynamic artist currently calls the beautiful community of Woodstock, Ontario home. Catto delivers an infectious blend of singer-songwriter pop/rock country that has been compared to and influenced by notable artists such as, Dierks Bentley, Niko Moon, and Jason Aldean.On January 10th, 2022, Catto is set to release the third single off his upcoming EP “Songs For My Wife,” called ‘Friend.' Inspired by mental health and the struggle he is no stranger to, it's also influenced by the strength of his wife, who helps him continue to hold on and stand tall through it all. Throughout the song, Catto also shares a gentle reminder that you're loved and that there's someone who will walk through the trenches with you, if you, yourself are going through it. This powerful song was written by Catto & Jonathan Turner and produced by Catto & Ariel Delgado at his home studio, Rocky Mountain Creative.Catto's current release dedicated to his wife and all the lovebirds out there, ‘Want You Even More' (2021) has exceeded 100k streams across all digital platforms and was added to Sirius XM. His dynamic debut song, written about his daily life, his big beautiful family and his fun household, ‘Round Of Life' (2021) has accomplished over 170k streams on Spotify alone. Catto has been writing songs for over 18 years with 15 charting singles on Christian radio. He was also named a Canadian Gospel Music Association (CGMA) Nominee for, "Best New Artist" (2018). Catto has opened for Aaron Pritchett, Gord Bamford, Deric Ruttan, Sean Hogan, Jake Matthews, Diane Chase, Gil Grand, Kira Isabella and Jason McCoy. Catto also co-wrote Aaron Pritchett's single, 'Summertime.' In the new year, Catto is taking a new venture out west with his wife and six kids - he'll be calling Calgary, Alberta home! He says, “if there's a place and opportunity to be creative, I'll be going to it and I'll be taking it.”
Sad news for Hollywood and the music industry, as Meatloaf passed away, so we played some 'I'd do anything for love' on the show and talked about his incredible presence on screen and with the amazing albums he made. Also, Pete Davidson is apparently missing rehearsals on SNL because Kim K is taking up his time, and she's becoming UN-LIKED around the building... allegedly! We encourage ppl to continue to donate to the BCSPCA Kelowna Casorso branch, fresh off of the #BettyWhiteChallenge to help out your favourite local animal shelter or charity. We speak to Sean Hogan about it. A 98 year old mom moved in to help her son in a senior's retirement home. We talk about the Super Bowl halftime show, the 3Cs in life and how Karly needs to get out this week!
Who says we have to decline as we get older? Let's talk about what it really means to age gracefully in a very special conversation + bonus episode at the start of this new year! We can't talk about dreaming, planning, reflecting + resetting, all the new year things while neglecting a conversation about the very thing that makes everything possible in life, our health + wellbeing. In today's episode I'm not just excited, but SUPER EXCITED to bring you a conversation with my partner going on 18 years, my bestie, my love, my fiance Sean Hogan. You might have caught Sean as one of my early podcast guests back in 2019. During the pandemic, Sean decided at the age of 62, he wanted to use this time of lock-down to get back in shape. With gyms closed, he created an entire workout routine in just 20 minutes a day from our home gym aka our bedroom, that has put him in the best shape of his life at 63. He's going to share tips with you on how he not only lost weight, built strength, balance and how he healed all his aches and pains. Sean's also sharing his go to supplements and other habits that in response to the shock on people's faces when they realize he's 63 not 45. If you want to learn even more you join Sean next week, where he's hosting his first 5 Day Training Challenge for Free. Reclaim Your Health & Fitness after 40 in just 15 minutes a day from home. Monday through Friday, January 10 - 14, Sean will be sharing a daily training video and going LIVE to answer your questions on Zoom. Sign up here! You can find all things Sean Hogan at fitnesswithsean.com on instagram @seanhoganfitness facebook.com/fitnesswithsean You can find all things Marisa and Creative Thursday creativethursday.com and on instagram and facebook @creativethursday
Hello! I'm Sean Hogan, a journalist from New Zealand and welcome to the Good Guys podcast. It's a show of conversations to inspire men into prioritising our wellbeing and transforming our approach to mental health.By now we all know the horrible stats, but we need more stories. We need the pathways and tools to put ourselves and our minds first.Throughout this series you'll hear from those who have tackled adversity, or faced the full force of mental distress.They'll also be guides to getting help and on all facets of life to help us become better blokes.I'm on this journey with you, so join me as we discover the Good Guys and ways to better ourselves too. Need help? Please reach out to one of these contacts.Free call or text 1737 any time for support from a trained counsellor.Lifeline – 0800 543 354 (0800 LIFELINE) or free text 4357 (HELP).Suicide Crisis Helpline – 0508 828 865 (0508 TAUTOKO).Healthline – 0800 611 116Youthline – 0800 376 633, free text 234 or email talk@youthline.co.nz or online chat.thelowdown.co.nz – or email team@thelowdown.co.nz or free text 5626.What's Up – 0800 942 8787 (for 5–18 year olds).
Encore: Welcome to Indigenous in Music with Larry K. Tonight we have in the house from the Mohawk Nation, Kiawentiio, she's a singer, songwriter and actress, and has just released her newest album “In my Head.” She'll be in our spotlight to tell us all about it. Kiawentiio is featured in our current issue of the SAY Magazine, visit her on our page at http://indigenousinmusic.com/kiawentiio-interview. Also music from Kiawentiio, Samantha Crain, Chances, Indian City, 1915, Jace Martin, Mexican Institute of Sound, Nancy Sanchez, De Madrudada, Shon Denay, Dawn Avery, Robbie Robertson, Cary Morin, Pura Fe, Burnstick, Julian Taylor, Don Amero, Tracy Bone, Sean Hogan, Robert Mirabal, Alan Syliboy & The Thundermakers, Quantum Tangle, Lydia Kepinski, Eadse, CJAY GRIZ & EarthChild, The Spiritual Warriors, Young Medicine, Thana Redhawk and much much more. Visit us on our music page at IndigenousinMusic.com and our homepage at indigenousinmusicandarts.org. We have underwriting opportunities available. Indigenous in Music, a non-profit, section 501(c)(3)
Slice of Life exhibition - Sean Hogan discusses the exhibition that gives an overview of the Dunedin Study and celebrates its major findings.
Welcome to Indigenous in Music with Larry K. Tonight we have in the house from the Mohawk Nation, Kiawentiio, she's a singer, songwriter and actress, and has just released her newest album “In my Head.” She'll be in our spotlight to tell us all about it. Kiawentiio is featured in our current issue of the SAY Magazine, visit her on our page at http://indigenousinmusic.com/kiawentiio-interview. Also music from Kiawentiio, Samantha Crain, Chances, Indian City, 1915, Jace Martin, Mexican Institute of Sound, Nancy Sanchez, De Madrudada, Shon Denay, Dawn Avery, Robbie Robertson, Cary Morin, Pura Fe, Burnstick, Julian Taylor, Don Amero, Tracy Bone, Sean Hogan, Robert Mirabal, Alan Syliboy & The Thundermakers, Quantum Tangle, Lydia Kepinski, Eadse, CJAY GRIZ & EarthChild, The Spiritual Warriors, Young Medicine, Thana Redhawk and much much more. Visit us on our music page at IndigenousinMusic.com and our homepage at indigenousinmusicandarts.org. We have underwriting opportunities available. Indigenous in Music, a non-profit, section 501(c)(3)
Dan Breen was married on the 12th June 1921, during the War of Independence, to Brigid Malone, a Dublin Cumann na mBan woman and sister of Lieutenant Michael Malone who was killed in action at the Battle of Mount Street Bridge during the 1916 Rising. His best man was Sean Hogan. Niamh Hassett is an author and historian and she spoke to Fran on Tipp Today this morning.
We have been following the progress of Songwriter, Séamus Doran's musical project centered around the centenary of the “Decade of Revolution." The latest song in the collection tells the story of the great Sean Hogan. Fran chatted to Seamus about the new song and the project.
Tracey Hogan joined Fran on Tipp Today to chat about his late grandfather Sean Hogan and the memories he had of him.
We have been following the progress of Songwriter, Séamus Doran's musical project centred around the centenary of the “Decade of Revolution”; The latest song in the collection tells the story of the great Sean Hogan and we will launch that on the programme tomorrow. Ahead of that, and as part of our coverage of the events of the War of Independence, I spoke to historian, Johnny Connors at his home in Borrisoleigh about Sean Hogan.
Conor Sweetman reports. He talks to historian Sean Hogan about the romance between Dan Breen and Brigid Malone during the Irish War of Independence.
This episode returns to the story of Seumus Robinson, Dan Breen, Sean Hogan and Sean Treacy. Known as the Big Four, these IRA volunteers had come to prominence after playing a leading role in the Soloheadbeg Ambush often considered the opening shots of the war. After five months on the run, the police captured Sean Hogan. Given the eighteen year old almost certainly faced a death sentence, Robinson, Breen and Treacy resolved to free him. This would lead to the famous Knocklong Ambush, a daring escape attempt. While two people were killed and several seriously wounded, Knocklong would prove a key moment in the escalation of the conflict. The Dan Breen poster mentioned is available at www.irishhistorypodcast.ie/product/breen/Additional research was by the archivist and historian Sam McGrath, sound was by Jason Looney, additional narrations are by Aidan Crowe and Therese Murray and the artwork for the series is by Keith Hynes. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
I talk to Sean Hogan about his book England's Screaming and a shared horror universe.
This week a great chat with Sean Hogan! His new single is out now "You Can't Cry You Can't Laugh" Find him on line at www.seanhogan.net
Sean Hogan calls in from sunny St. Augustine, Florida to share his landscape lighting tips for Trent’s home and yard. Sean is an exterior illumination expert with NiteLites and an expert surfer. Tune in to learn exterior lighting tips for your home, with a few surfing tips along the way. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Sean Hogan calls in from sunny St. Augustine, Florida to share his landscape lighting tips for Trent’s home and yard. Sean is an exterior illumination expert with NiteLites and an expert surfer. Tune in to learn exterior lighting tips for your home, with a few surfing tips along the way. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Imagine you are tired from 17 holes of unrelenting frustration. At the last hole, on your last legs, you tee up and swing. Somehow, your driver, which until now was only two heartbeats from a watery grave, doesn't merely strike the golf ball, but goes through it in such a way that the tee hardly budges. Many people have had that moment. Some people know that moment is teachable. But few people know how to teach it like David Leadbetter's right-hand man, Instructor Sean Hogan. From episode #157 of GOLF SMARTER, Sean shares tips, stories, and much more.
Join Scott and Paul as they talk NCAA Hockey in the Desert SW. Tonight, we welcome Sean Hogan from College Hockey Inc. For more, click like and subscribe and go to www.IceTimeHockeySW.com.
Born April 21st, the youngest of three boys, Colin Amey hails from Dunnville, Ontario but spent most of his childhood in Whitehorse, where the cold Canadian Yukon did nothing to cool his driving passion to be a singer and songwriter.At a young and early age, Colin's early influences came from listening to the radio and watching the hits on MuchMusic, where the performances of Bryan Adams and Bruce Springsteen inspired his young heart. In the small town of Marmora, Ontario, at the Country Fair, three-year-old Colin Amey won Second Prize in the Annual Junior Talent Show, giving a heartfelt rendition of 'Delta Dawn'. He continued to enter local and regional talent competitions, usually placing first, hands down.When the family moved and settled back in Ontario, Colin began a stretch of singing demos and jingles in a small studio, then released his first single in 1988, a pop power ballad “Gonna Last Foreve”, with a video to follow that received national airplay.The stage was set, and he began writing material to record his first CD, released a few singles that received some airplay and started on his way to being hooked on songwriting. Colin eventually teamed up with the legendary Barry Brown (formerly of Family Brown) to collaborate on his second album, gaining radio recognition with two singles that included the title track 'What My Heart Don't Know' and 'If I Didn't Call It Love'.This radio awareness of his career garnered Colin two nominations that included Independent Male Artist and Rising Star at the Canadian Country Music Awards.Looking for new direction, Colin moved into the Greater Toronto Area, and began collaborating with Thomas Wade, Jamie Warren and also with Brian Allen who co-penned the hit song, 'What About Love' for the American Rock band, Heart. Colin continued to co-write with the likes of Dean McTaggart, known for penning the hit song, 'Birmingham' performed by Amanda Marshall, and songwriter Tim Taylor, who's written many hits with and for the likes of Aaron Pritchett, Gord Bamford & The Road Hammers, just to name a few. The year 2006, brought the release of his third album 'Getaway' produced by award winning producer, Rick Hutt, with credits for his work with Tom Cochrane, Northern Pikes, Gil Grande, and Jamie Warren. The "Getaway" record spawned half a dozen radio singles, including the title track, which was added on medium rotation at many major market radio stations nation wide. Over time, Colin continued writing with good friend, Thomas Wade and sang on numerous demos and recording projects, which eventually led to the formation of "Wade Amey Wade." In November 2011, they released the Christmas single, "I Can't Wait for Christmas" and donated all download sales to the Sean Hogan's Christmas Wish. In 2012, when Wade Amey Wade disbanded, Colin was free to pursue his solo career once again. In 2013, Colin released a 5 song EP, entitled "Just Do What You Do" which included a remake of the mid 80s hit from Kim Mitchell, "Go For A Soda" which coincided with a video released to Youtube. Over the past several years, Amey has been releasing singles to radio and iTunes, including "Sunday Drive, Drinkin' Time”, “A Million Tears Ago”, and “Welcome To the World" which happens to be a very personal song about the very day his daughter, Ryleigh was born. With the current global pandemic, like many other artists, Colin is performing online shows on Facebook Live, and currently gearing up to release a brand new single cowritten with Hamilton guitarist and band mate, Darren Lachance. The track is entitled “Life Goes By” and will be going to radio in early July of 2020. https://colinamey.ca/https://www.facebook.com/ColinDAmeyhttps://www.allmusic.com/artist/colin-amey-mn0001936210https://twitter.com/colinamey1?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthorhttps://www.instagram.com/colinamey1/?hl=enhttps://music.apple.com/us/artist/colin-amey/83934322https://open.spotify.com/artist/67irjD3ABHK8fvIqnr4Ugp
We’re taking a page from Philip Defranco’s A Conversation With podcast today and playing the most personal card game we’ve ever found. Pulling from 4 decks for deep questions on friendship, working together, and relationships. See our Show Notes and Things of the Week below!
In this slightly more collaborative edition of OnProcess, we begin by diving in with the founder and creator of a very unique and now worldwide movement and workshop series called Open_collab. In a nutshell Open_collab is a series that focuses on serendipitous events utilising random image-making processes that provoke unexpected juxtapositions and chance encounters. During the episode we speak with the acclaimed artist, designer, educator and founder of the project Patrick Thomas, who brings us through the genesis and ethos behind its origins. We also get on the show Chris Norman of 313RGB and Wayne Smith who are creators, educators and designers based in Melbourne, they bring a fascinating perspective having run the last in person Open_collab before the pandemic lockdown. This episode gives a really unique peek behind the curtain of both Patrick's vision for the platform, but also the steps of running the workshop itself. We also talk about some of the key ingredients and principles that make a successful collaboration possible and dig into the love of unpredictability and spontaneity in a creative world that is more traditionally known for control. Introducing: Patrick Thomas, 313RGB & Wayne Smith On Open_collab Patrick Thomas patrickthomas.com open-collab.org Chris Norman 313rgb.com Wayne Smith waynesmith.design Links Melbourne Design Week Magda Ksiezak Magda's OnProcess episode Sean Hogan of Trampoline: Walkbook Rida Abbasi Olivia Chen Daren Bent Phillip Glass Tales from the Loop Kraftwork "We are the Robots" Sam Aaron Live DJ using SonicPi SonicPi Quotes (Patrick) "It's accidents that somehow is of crucial significance to the development of Open_collab" (Chris) "It's easy to engage someone when you're really excited about what's going to happen and what it could be." (Patrick) "I've always said the working process is as important as the outcome." (Patrick) "At this stage I don’t really feel like it's mine anymore, It's collaborative, it's something that everybody is developing together." (Patrick) "Connecting with people, I think it's one of the great joys in life." (Wayne) "The forms actually become completely new forms." - Original Theme Music by Devin Luke - devinlukemusic.com Stay In Touch onprocess.com @onprocesspodcast If this episode helped you in any way, we would love your support. The best way to support us is by Subscribing to the show in iTunes and writing us a review. Thanks for listening.
Cine-Lit take a left turn away from our historical deep dives, and this episode Adam and Darrell are delving into the fictional history of England's Screaming. The new book from the author Sean Hogan and the excellent PS Publishing, 'England's Screaming' attempts to weave together the fictional history of some of British horror's most fascinating characters.England's Screaming is available to buy from PS Publishing - https://www.pspublishing.co.uk/englands-screaming-hardcover-sean-hogan-5047-p.aspThree Mothers, One Father is available to buy from Black Shuck Books - https://blackshuckbooks.co.uk/shadows-20/Check out the Cine-Lit website for additional content and further reading: https://cinelitpodcast.wordpress.com Get bonus content on Patreon See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Originally from Ireland, Sean Hogan is the Director of Instruction at Leadbetter Golf Academies at ChampionsGate (Orlando FL). He has worked with PGA TOUR and LPGA winners and is recognized as a Golf Magazine Top 100 and Golf Digest Best in State instructor. Sean talks about Power off the Tee in this podcast. He shares five simple tips to gain extra yards. In the discussion is dives into: 1. Club-fitting. 2. Golf Swing Angle of Attack. 3. Pivot and Coil. 4. Speed, and Overspeed Training. 5. Ground Reaction Forces and how to use them.
Tipperary historian Sean Hogan on the 'supernatural manifestations, accompanied by cures’ that attracted thousands of pilgrims to the Tipperary town in 1920.
Tipp Today: Sean Hogan chats from Denmark by Tipp FM Radio
Screenwriter Stuart Wright talks with filmmaker and author Sean Hogan about his new book, the metacritical review of British horror films since 1945 - ENGLAND'S SCREAMING & his European semi-sequel THREE MOTHERS, ONE FATHER Out now ENGLAND'S SCREAMING https://www.pspublishing.co.uk/englands-screaming-hardcover-sean-hogan-5047-p.asp THREE MOTHERS, ONE FATHER https://blackshuckbooks.co.uk/shadows-20/ Also out now DEATH LINE https://www.pspublishing.co.uk/death-line-hardcover-by-sean-hogan-4388-p.asp DEVIL'S BUSINESS http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rCIhAa6jCSc LITTLE DEATHS https://www.amazon.co.uk/Little-Deaths-Exclusive-Directors-Cut/dp/B00D48ZQEA
Sean Hogan of Hoem & Associates in San Francisco reports that employees at top clients, including Google, Twitter, and Facebook, are working from home. Positive work continues in facilities and lack of occupants making it easier on the installation crews and increased productivity. He is having material issues from overseas suppliers including wood from Italy.
FICO is launching a new credit model in the summer of 2020. A whopping 110 million Americans will likely see their credit scores change. This is a great time to familiarize your self with how credit scores are calculated and used. I’m joined by Sean Hogan, Mortgage Banker and Sales Manager at Home Loan Investment Bank to discuss this important topic.
College Hockey Inc. Director of Education Sean Hogan joins Bernie Corbett to discuss his new role and his path to joining CHI.
Chris Chang is joined by Sean Hogan, Victor Waters and Simon Plumb to pick over the week’s football here and overseas.
In this episode we explore the world of obtaining a mortgage. A lot has changed in the mortgage market. Lenders have tightened credit standards, and the strength of the housing market has driven home prices higher. Also, the Federal Reserve has been on a steady schedule of raising short-term interest rates and plan to continue that path until at least the middle of 2019. To gain better insight into the mortgage market and discuss strategies, I am joined by Sean Hogan, Mortgage Banker and Sales Manager at Home Loan Investment Bank. Sean is a 20-year residential mortgage veteran who has helped people obtain financing to purchase their dream home or refinance an existing one.
Ron Huddleston, Chief Partner Officer at Twilio, joins the AppChat Podcast to discuss the importance of building out ecosystems and the differences he has seen building multiple ecosystems for various companies. Other subjects include breaking down various ecosystem models, how Huddleston's previous experience prepared him for working at Twilio, and the importance of trust and credibility in the industry. Here are the key topics, with timestamps, as well as the full interview transcript: Key Topics 00:00-01:58 Introducing the AppChat and our guest, Twilio's Chief Partner Officer Ron Huddleston 1:59-3:28 The challenges of indirect software sales 3:29-8:43 The importance of software companies building out an ISV and/or SI ecosystem 8:44-12:34 The differences in building out an ecosystem for Salesforce and Microsoft 12:35-17:10 The differences between a pure, cloud-based ecosystem, and a hybrid model including cloud and on-premise 17:11-20:02 How much Huddleston uses his previous experiences building ecosystems for Twilio, and how much he has to continue to discover and invent 20:03-25:54 The importance of trust and credibility when building out ecosystems 25:55-29:06 Building an app and sticking to the commitment you made to your ecosystem 29:07-30:22 Closing out and how to get in touch Full Transcript Intro: 00:01 You're listening to the AppChat, a podcast focused on SaaS growth strategies, plus successes in the Salesforce ecosystem, and beyond. Here's your host, CodeScience CEO, Brian Walsh. Brian Walsh: 00:14 All right. We're back on the AppChat Podcast. And today, I'm joined by Ron Huddleston, who, Ron, you have an incredible background when it comes to building out ISV ecosystems. Let me get this right. So you're currently the Chief Partner Officer at Twilio. Ron Huddleston: 00:31 Yeah. Brian Walsh: 00:32 Before that, CVP, One Commercial Partner organization at Microsoft. Ron Huddleston: 00:35 Yeah. Brian Walsh: 00:36 SVP of the AppExchange at Salesforce. Ron Huddleston: 00:38 Yep. Brian Walsh: 00:39 And started the OEM, ISV program at Oracle, where you were vice president. Ron Huddleston: 00:44 Yes. Brian Walsh: 00:45 Are there any bigger partner programs in the world to run than that? Ron Huddleston: 00:51 Amazon, maybe, now? Brian Walsh: 00:53 Maybe now, yeah. Ron Huddleston: 00:54 Yeah. Yeah, they're breaking new ground. But the Microsoft thing was definitely a big one. They've all been really fun. I do think that the folks at companies that get to build ecosystems, ISV, or SI, or any type of partner ecosystem, I think that it's probably the most fun job you can have at a bigger technology company, because you get exposed. It's not the same thing over and over. You get to really understand how to work with other folks and understand what's important to them. And so I stuck with it -- it was probably my 20th job at Oracle -- and when I found it and started building it, I just realized it was the most fun, like exciting, interesting, technically satisfying, from a business perspective, satisfying thing you could really do. So just from a personal perspective, I think it's probably the most fun you can have in cloud technology for a job. Unless you're like the CEO of a startup, or doing what you're doing, like building things. But if you're going to work for somebody else, I think it's a great job. Brian Walsh: 01:59 But I mean, I find that sometimes indirect sales, especially indirect software sales, can be extremely challenging. Like you're not actually doing that final license sale. You're lining up the partners and enabling them. I mean, is there something wrong in your head? Ron Huddleston: 02:14 No, there's not. It does carry its own set of complexities. But the strange thing is, whether it was on-premise or the cloud, those complexities repeat each other over, and over, and over again. So there really, after 20-odd years of doing this, there's not much you haven't seen, because where things get complicated is around human behavior, not necessarily around bringing really great solutions, and great partners, and technology together to solve problems. That's kind of the easy part, just to like address customer problems. Where things get a little crunchy is how human start, where things can get complicated, is when you're aligning different people, different organizations, different teams. That's where things get a little more complicated. I think everything up to that is not as complicated. But again, it's a pattern. And the patterns tend to repeat themselves. So you can sort of see around corners, the longer you do these kind of things, which makes it easier every time. This is, what, my third, fourth- Brian Walsh: 03:18 Fourth one. Ron Huddleston: 03:19 It kind of makes it a little easier every time you do it because you know, I probably made 10,000 mistakes. And you only make the same mistake three or four times. Brian Walsh: 03:29 Eventually, you get it right. So why an ecosystem? I mean, there's a huge amount of effort and investment. Why is it important for a software company to actually build out an ISV and/or SI ecosystem? Ron Huddleston: 03:44 Yeah. There's a lot of reasons. It depends on, are we talking about the technology company themselves that want to build an ecosystem? Brian Walsh: 03:51 Yeah. Ron Huddleston: 03:52 So you have to be a bigger company in order to do that, obviously. It's really hard to do it, otherwise. You can certainly build a small, little portfolio of folks that you work with if you're a smaller company. But there's nothing better than a broad ecosystem because it does a couple things. First things first is, if there's any way, shape, and form you're trying to prove out the sort of platform nature of the technology that you're trying to provide, the long road to get to that level of credibility is trying to do it yourself; trying to hire all the people in the world with the right expertise to sit down with a customer and explain to them, "No, bet on us. We're future-proofed. And you can do all of these things with us. We're a platform," it is really hard. The easier way to do it is to work with an ecosystem of technology, or IP, ISVs, and SIs; and the ones that are trusted in the space, that are maybe already trusted by the customers that you want to serve, and work with them to have them understand how your platform can help. And then build what's essentially, if those are the ingredients, then you know, the recipe book is how all those ingredients come together to help essentially cook a meal, like serve a beautiful meal for the customer, right? And so that's why it's a cool job. You get to be the chef, kind of. That's a good analogy, I'm going to use that analogy -- 20 years, I just discovered a new analogy. But you know, if you think about it that way, as ecosystems, as, you know, sure, you can call it one broad ecosystem, but really, it's a bunch of small solution maps, or what I was just calling recipes. It's a group of technologies, partners, companies, expertise, that solve particular problems. And no one company can really solve anything complicated on their own, really. Like it is just hard to do that over, and over, and over, and over again. You know, if you want to be broad-based, it makes it ... If you want to be a broad solution, like a platform, it makes it really hard to also solve problems, complicated problems, by yourself, right? If you want to stay really narrow and be like a really verticalized application or SI- Brian Walsh: 06:12 You can go super deep. Ron Huddleston: 06:13 You can go super deep. You can solve things on your own. But if you want to be big and broad, it's just the permutations of options are almost impossible. That's why ecosystems are so important. They drive credibility, but they also are the only way to solve really hard, complicated problems if you're trying to solve a lot of them. Those are the two reasons that it's great for the partner, or the platform, but it's great for all these companies that are sort of looking. It's great for cutting-edge companies. Like in the cloud, it was a wonderful thing. People actually all start relational databases. Like there were a lot of companies that were building up relational database practices back in the day. And there were these little, small startups that were building relational databases, or were driving Java for, like J2EE or something. Brian Walsh: 07:05 Yep. Ron Huddleston: 07:05 And I know this is going to sound really old. Brian Walsh: 07:07 We, you and I sound ancient right now. But keep going. It's great. We're reminiscing. Ron Huddleston: 07:10 Yeah. But the point was these companies, these smaller companies that would never have -- it was going to be a long time until they were big enough to where people really get exposed to them. Having an ecosystem, being part of a partner's ecosystem, of a vendor, a big platform's ecosystem, helped the companies that were the best, the most innovative, had the best technologies, sort of punch above their weight class, and could help change the market really quickly. So it's this symbiotic relationship between these platform players that need partners for the two, you know, for lots of reasons, but the two reasons I highlighted; but it's also great for partners, for ISVs and SIs, because it helps the best rise to the top. It helps the best innovate. And you know, it also, if you are the type of SIs or ISVs that are specialized in a particular place or industry, it helps you get access to customers where you might not get access before. So it's a real symbiotic thing when it's working really well, and nothing stands in the way, and there's no friction. And it's really just about sort of, you know, matchmaking. Like, you know, you're a cook. All your ingredients are great. You cook the best stuff. Everything, your oven works. Your waiters are awesome. I guess waiters would be sales in this analogy, right? Brian Walsh: 08:31 Yeah. Ron Huddleston: 08:32 Yeah. The waiters understand stuff. Brian Walsh: 08:35 Sales ops are your line chefs, right? Ron Huddleston: 08:37 Right, there you go. I'll work this analogy out at some point. I think it has legs. I'm thinking about it. Brian Walsh: 08:44 There's always an interesting thing, like if I compare where Microsoft has embraced their ecosystem, and I look at where Salesforce has, around capital efficiency, right? Because in the Salesforce world, there was almost no investment, outside of VC investment, almost no investment of, "Hey, let's invest in you to bring this product to market." Whereas we've seen, even on the Oracle and Microsoft side, lots of investment into ISVs to help them get started with an ecosystem. Ron Huddleston: 09:09 Yeah. I think Salesforce would argue, particularly back in the day when they were building it up, when we were building it up, where we didn't really have as much market presence. There are two things that companies can do to invest in you. They can certainly invest time or technology, but they can also -- I'm sorry, they can certainly invest money or technology, but they can also invest time and access. And at Salesforce, the way I pulled the AppExchange together was, you know, there were limitations around technology, and dollars, and investment dollars, which eventually got solved in one way, or shape, or form. But there was really very little limitation to time and access that could be provided. And so the big strength that Salesforce had at the time was, they were leading in the cloud. So they had, they were innovators, had access and had a sales organization. So a lot of the beginnings of that ecosystem were built around people receiving essentially go-to-market support, help, and guidance from Salesforce, in return for their technical investment in building something with Salesforce. And that was the trade-off that they made. Microsoft is a different beast, and they grew up through partners, and they always had partners. But they'd gotten to such a point where they were so dominant in the marketplace that they'd essentially become demand fulfillment. The partner channel was super optimized for really educated customers to come in and want to buy something. And they would go to very specific partners that would then fulfill that. And it was very educated demand fulfillment to a very educated market, which is entirely different than what we were setting up the One Commercial Partner team to do, which was to create demand. So, instead of having 1,000 points of connection with super-specialized partners, have partners that could show up in front of customers and say, "What problem do you have? What question do you have for my answers?" And then they could represent the full cadre of everything that Microsoft could do. You know, it's a huge technology portfolio. So they were just really limited historically because partners had to sort of pick their lane and stick with it. And so one of the things that's a great thing we did there, was break that down and only create very few lanes. So partners were expected to really lead the way and create demand. But in order to do that, we also had to change the finances. We had to change economics. We had to create a lot of incentives for the direct sales organization to work with them, which is a big part of it, too, because selling stuff, versus taking orders, is expensive. And so we had to make sure the partners could make money doing it. And so in that particular case, you know, the trade-off was, being able to represent Microsoft across the board is a tough thing to do, but if they'd invest their time, and energy, and attention, in learning how to sell and create demand, we made the economics work so that they could get a payback, which is a little different. It's almost the opposite of what Salesforce was doing. And so they're just very different situations. Brian Walsh: 12:29 Got it. Ron Huddleston: 12:30 But like I said, you know, you do this long enough, you've seen almost everything. Brian Walsh: 12:35 Well, let's actually study one more difference within that, which is you had a pure, cloud-based model. And then within Microsoft, you actually had this hybrid. You had cloud, right, like this emerging cloud ecosystem with Office 365 and Dynamics. You also had this gigantic on-prem, you know, basis of licenses. Is there a huge difference between those two types of ecosystems? Or are they basically the same? Ron Huddleston: 12:59 No. There really isn't. I mean, the economic models are different. But enough folks, I would say 8 years ago, 10 years ago -- God, 10 years ago, 15? I don't know ... Like 2008, 10 years ago, 2007, 2006, '07, '08, that's when the financial model differences, forget the technical differences, the relationship differences, the functional selling -- Brian Walsh: 13:24 Customer success, all that stuff. Ron Huddleston: 13:25 All that stuff, the actual financial models of how people expected to generate revenue and make a living, being a technology company or a consulting company, they were so different between cloud and on-prem that moving financial models was the primary thing holding people back from taking the step to the cloud. People liked the technology, but they couldn't take the jump. Like a lot of companies failed because they tried to put a foot in both camps, and you just couldn't. There's one financial model, on-prem, it's very short-term focused; one financial model, cloud, is very longterm focused. And if you're trying to serve both masters, you'll make bad, suboptimal decisions. And so I had a bunch of rules about the cloud. One of them was, you have to pick one or the other. You have to like, divest to one or the other. I think those days have changed, where even if people are doing a lot of on-prem stuff, like there's even the Microsoft SIs, or resellers, they've worked it out in such a way, through financing, through managed services, through something that they're emulating software as a service, financially. And so the technological flip is just a matter of time and opportunity. It wasn't a matter of this big burden, I'm sorry, barrier, an obstacle which is changing their whole financial model, which is really hard. I mean, I literally had sought out, the same way you guys were product development outsourcers, I'd sought out financial development outsourcers, as well, that helped to finance companies through the gap, like the two or three-year revenue gap when they make the transition, because the financial model transition was a lot harder than the technical transition, back in the day. Now, I don't think it's as hard. At Microsoft, it's, you know, some of the companies are so big, I think that the inertia is probably harder than the finances, you know? Just the daily grind, inertia of things makes things tough. Brian Walsh: 15:17 And I think some of your work in there really paid off; the Lighter Capital helping with MapAnything. Ron Huddleston: 15:22 Oh, yeah, I bet they made a crushing at that. Yeah. Brian Walsh: 15:26 Yeah. And now, I think Series D, and they're gigantic. Ron Huddleston: 15:29 Is Lighter Capital doing pretty well? I haven't talked to those guys in a while. Brian Walsh: 15:32 I think they're doing great. Ron Huddleston: 15:34 It's a great business model, I mean. Brian Walsh: 15:35 It is. Ron Huddleston: 15:35 Yeah. Brian Walsh: 15:36 It's interesting. They were so far ahead on that non-equity based funding for it. And now, I see Indie.vc. I see a lot of players coming in. Ron Huddleston: 15:44 Yeah. No, it's a good way to do it. Here at Twilio, there's so much. The funny thing is, it really feels a lot like the initial cloud, call it, revolution in 2007-08. Brian Walsh: 15:57 Yep. Ron Huddleston: 15:58 It's just in communications. And there's a lot of folks that are in the exact same spot; not that they're in financial, a big financial difference, model-wise. But telecommunications is like a different financial model, in a weird way. It's very like, usage oriented. It's got spikes. It's got a lot of weird things they're not used to, particularly if people are selling cloud seat kind of stuff. It's just a different sort of world for them. And a lot of folks don't have specialization in a lot of these things. And so, you know, building things like PDOs and financial development outsourcers are things that we're going to have to do here at Twilio as well, because there's thousands and thousands of ISVs and SIs that, whether they know it or not, are going to be using Twilio in the next couple years, because it just fits. Everybody who's moved to the cloud, there's probably an opportunity -- and touched a customer in some way, shape, or form -- there's an opportunity for them to work with Twilio. And you know, we've just got to make it easier. That was one of the things that, you were around at Salesforce when we did that, too. We just made it easier for people. Brian Walsh: 17:04 Totally. Well, let's jump into Twilio while we're here. You're assembling an amazing team. Ron Huddleston: 17:10 Yeah. They're good people. Brian Walsh: 17:11 It seems like you're applying all of your lessons from the past, you know, experiences building an ecosystem. How much do you have to continue to discover and invent? How much of this is just pulling out your playbook and running with it? Ron Huddleston: 17:24 You know, a lot of it is playbook stuff. I will say, the difference between communications technology, like it carries a lot of legacy with it. Like there is, you know, a whole lot of underlying technology that, if you're unfamiliar with it, which I am, you know, like the seven layers. That's just, there's a bunch of crazy stuff. Brian Walsh: 17:45 Yep. Ron Huddleston: 17:45 If you're unfamiliar with it, there's a lot going on there that has significant material impacts on business models that could work or couldn't work. So you bring the same playbook, and then you have this set of realities, constraints, and the technology as it exists, that then make things viable or not viable. And it is, you know, it's fundamentally a bit of a different thing, because it's a very API-forward company, which leads people down a lot of weird roads. Like what is an SI? What is an ISV? Which, by the way, we can get philosophical on this. Brian Walsh: 18:23 How do you differentiate? Ron Huddleston: 18:26 Like at Salesforce, people would just like get their heads wrapped around an axle, because you know, back in the day, when we were creating the partner program, I always tried to explain reselling, and OEMing, and trying to get like, I think, Veeva kept it on their first contract to sell Salesforce underneath their technology set. People were like, you know, "The technology is staying here. These are ours, it's in our -- this isn't the Salesforce," what do they call those things? I'm sorry. Do you remember those, at Salesforce, they have a name for the PODs that- Brian Walsh: 18:59 The ORGs? Ron Huddleston: 19:01 Not the ORGs, but whatever. It's Salesforce property. We're running it in our own data centers. Brian Walsh: 19:07 Right, in a POD. Ron Huddleston: 19:07 So how are you reselling anything? I'm like, "Well, it's, you know," even, and then licensing, which is just a human, you know, construct. It's not real. Like all these things, applying them to the cloud, it's semi-nonsensical, but it is a way to put these constructs together, and rules together, that help enable ecosystems to exist and thrive. There's something that they can sell, that they can put margin on, that they can build a business on. There's something that they can learn about, and then configure, and then leave with the customer. If you don't have the concepts of ownership, and passing ownership, and control, which don't make a lot of sense when you think about like a multi-tenant cloud, but if you don't have those things, you can't build businesses. And so, you know, a lot of it is building the faith that these human constructs exist, and that you can sell them, which for API companies, is a new thing. Like, I don't think AWS even does that yet. Brian Walsh: 19:59 No. But- Ron Huddleston: 20:00 It's weird, I know that I'm like waxing philosophical, but it is a- Brian Walsh: 20:03 But I mean, it all comes down to trust, right? Ron Huddleston: 20:06 Yeah. Brian Walsh: 20:07 You have to build trust with this partner that you will create these things, that you gave them your word, that they can actually invest millions of dollars to go forward with it. Ron Huddleston: 20:16 Yeah. Trust and credibility, in this space, is kind of what it's all about. And it's a thing about companies, too, is you know, they can, over time, their perspective on the importance of ecosystems and what the value is can change. But if you're leading up those ecosystem efforts, like you've got to try hard as hell to live up to the commitments, and consistencies, and visions that you put out there -- to the point where you're willing to sort of, you know, throw yourself in front of a train to make sure that like, you know, people don't change the philosophies you put in place, because people are betting their lives, their businesses, on what you're laying out as the vision and value of the partner program you're putting out there. And you're making these commitments, and anything that drives inconsistency, anything that's not committed, anything that violates trust in those things is a huge, huge problem. Like you know, you can spend years building up the trust that's required to build an ecosystem. And in one day, you can blow it. So that's, by far, the most important thing that you need people to understand who are setting up partner programs, or building teams, or you know, maybe looking to hire someone to build up their organization. Make sure that she or he, you know, the first thing out of their mouth needs to be like trust and consistency because without that, none of the rest of this really matters. Brian Walsh: 21:48 Yeah. And it's also, I think, the confidence that these larger organizations are actually going to stay in it, right? Ron Huddleston: 21:54 Yeah. Brian Walsh: 21:55 You know? This is not going to be a one-year test, then we're going away, because we're asking the likes of major companies to actually invest their future in this opportunity. Ron Huddleston: 22:04 Yeah. And you know, a lot of them don't take the jump and wait a year, wait two years, to see. I mean, the cloud took forever. It took four or five years for the bigger companies to jump. Brian Walsh: 22:15 Yep. Ron Huddleston: 22:15 But now, things are happening a lot faster. But there'll still be some companies that'll wait a year or two to jump. But you'll recall this, the ones that made it first in the cloud, the ones that were really successful were all the first ones, the people who moved fast. The consulting companies that moved fast, the ISVs that moved fast, the companies that jumped in there and took the risks were the ones that succeeded in the end. The ones that played on the sidelines, unless they were super dominant, they were playing catch-up, and still are. Brian Walsh: 22:44 And you watch the outcomes and success of those. ServiceMax, I mean, that was coming about when Service Cloud wasn't even fully baked, and almost a billion dollar exit. Veeva went public. DocuSign just went public. Ron Huddleston: 22:56 Yeah. Those were all the early ones, yeah. Brian Walsh: 22:58 Yep. They all came in. All right. So there is a PayPal Mafia: Peter Thiel, Elon Musk, Reid Hoffman. Ron Huddleston: 23:06 I don't know any of them very well. Brian Walsh: 23:08 Yeah, I know, but that's your social circle, I'm sure. You go surfing with them. I propose that there's actually an AppExchange Mafia as well now. We have you out there, Avanish at ServiceNow, Leyla took back over of the AppExchange, Todd Surdey is now at FinancialForce, Sean Hogan at Nintex, Brian Snyder at GE. That original crew, those people who were there on those early, Wild West days, are out there in the SaaS ecosystems. Ron Huddleston: 23:36 Yeah. Ross Eberhart's over here. Mike Rosenbaum's running product over there. Like, yeah, and a lot of trust amongst all those people. And we will, I'd love to work with any of those people. Avanish and I are always trying to figure out how we can do stuff. That's just a great group of people that, I think a lot of them learned a ton through that phase. There's even some folks that were from Oracle that are still in the Mafia, if you're going to call it that. Like, because Molly Bellero Fischer is still doing it. Ross is still doing it. Anders is still doing it. Ryan Begin's still doing it. Annie Heppberger, I think, runs partners now for Oracle. Brian Walsh: 24:23 Brent Floyd. Ron Huddleston: 24:24 Yeah. There's a lot going on; Kevin Walsh is still doing it. He's an Oracle person. Yeah. There are- Brian Walsh: 24:30 Joanne Pantuso is still doing it. Ron Huddleston: 24:32 That's right. Once you get a taste of working in ecosystems and partners, you don't really want to do other stuff, just because it's so fulfilling to help companies do something new, and grow, and to be part of their story. It's really fun. Like I said in the very beginning, in the opening when we were talking, if you could, you know, I had a lot of, I probably had 15 different jobs at Oracle. And this was by far the most fun. And I was a young man back then. And I had decided like, this is the thing I wanted to do. If I was going to work for somebody else, this is it, because there's no beating it. Like there's nothing, there's really not beating it once you get it going. That's why Twilio is so exciting, by the way. It's like the new Wild West. Brian Walsh: 25:13 Yep. Ron Huddleston: 25:13 It just reminds me of like the cloud. And a lot of those people are the same people, the Mafia you just mentioned, there's a lot of those same people that all recognize the same thing I do. Which means like, you're not running around saying, "Oh, trust me. This happened before." There's a bunch of people here that have lived it and are like, "Oh, my God. This is so interesting. It's exactly the same. And let's-" Brian Walsh: 25:34 We get to do it right the first time, this time. Ron Huddleston: 25:35 Yeah, yeah. Here's the thing -- we did it right before. I think I'd argue the Microsoft One Commercial Partner is set up the right way. We'll do it right here, it's just things are happening much faster. Instead of taking three or four years, it's happening in like 12 months. Brian Walsh: 25:52 Wow. Ron Huddleston: 25:53 It may be faster. It's crazy. Brian Walsh: 25:55 Well, and strategically, like technology-wise, adding in the whole serverless infrastructure, so you can host code now. You've got Flex, so you can start building out sort of UIs and the whole thing. Ron Huddleston: 26:05 Yeah, it has a face. Yep, that's a real thing. You'd be surprised how much having a face matters to LOB leaders, versus developers. Brian Walsh: 26:12 And I bet it also adds to some of the defensibility of it, right? Like, there's less attrition as you start adding even more and more layers, people can get deeper into your system, rather than just an API. Ron Huddleston: 26:23 Yeah. The thing about Flex, the most interesting part about Flex is the underlying technology. I don't want to give percentages, but I'd say a vast majority of the underlying technology has been around, you know, started 10 years ago, and it's been enhanced ever since. The moment that Flex came out, where it was a way to put a face, a UI, on what was possible in Twilio, the interest was a thousandfold, because it opened up people's minds to what Twilio was. Versus an API, which is a very difficult thing for non-developers to understand. You put a UI on it and explain what it is, you've just cracked open a huge market that should have been already there. It's just, people didn't understand what this, what Twilio could possibly do. And Flex wrapped that up nicely. Now the challenge is, when a platform, an API platform, which is a beautiful offering for SIs and ISVs, because it's like the cookbook that you need to do anything, which is just perfect for a partnering system. Brian Walsh: 27:21 And it's so damn easy to use at Twilio. Ron Huddleston: 27:23 Yeah. When you build an app, though, you, no matter what, unless you're picking exactly the right space, are probably going to bounce up into some elbows of people that have already built on your platform. And so, same problem at Salesforce, same problem at Microsoft, when you start expanding what you do and putting, you know, faces on things, and making new applications, like you mentioned Service Cloud and ServiceMax, that is a, you've got to tread very slowly, and know what you're doing, and make very considered decisions, because the chance that you are violating a commitment that you made to your ecosystem is probably very high. Now Twilio had never had a partner program, and really made a ton of commitments in that direction. But understanding the effects of things like this, and what's important, and what's not, is critical to our business going forward. And George and Jeff totally get it and understand. And so the idea of having governance, like a buy-build partner governance, and the impact that doing any of those actions, besides partner, if you buy or build, taking all that into consideration is one of the reasons why I feel really good about being here. Because they're super dead serious about it. And what they're focused on is, if they do buy or build, they're doing it underneath, like on the platform layer. Like even Flex, sure, it's a face. It's a UI. But if you really look at it, it's like an SDK for a UI. You know what I mean? It's not really a -- you could technically use it out of the box, but no one will. Brian Walsh: 29:02 Right. It's just the starting point. "Here, let me help you imagine this." Ron Huddleston: 29:06 Right, yeah. Brian Walsh: 29:08 That's fantastic. Well Ron, thank you very much for joining us. What's the best way, if somebody either wants to find a great job in an ecosystem, or they're looking to partner with Twilio, for them to get ahold of you and your team? Ron Huddleston: 29:20 If people want to do either of those things, the best way to get partnering going is to go online, and go to "become a partner," and go to the community. And then you'll get routed to like the person that you'll, you know, one of the 50-odd people that you'd be dealing with in to learn and become a partner. And there's people that are there just to quickly follow up and make sure you know how to do it and what's important. But if you're interested in getting a job, you can email me at rhuddleston@twilio.com, because we're hiring. We're going to hire another, you know -- lots. We're in super hiring phase right now. Brian Walsh: 29:59 Fantastic. Well, Ron, thank you very much for taking the time today, and glad we got this scheduled, and finally do it. Ron Huddleston: 30:04 Yeah, no. I'm very, very impressed by your fancy equipment and the level of professionalism in putting this podcast together. Brian Walsh: 30:11 Hey, look, I've grown up just as much as you have, okay? Ron Huddleston: 30:15 Yes, clearly you have. Brian Walsh: 30:18 All right, Ron. Thank you so much, everybody. Ron Huddleston: 30:20 All right. I'll see you around the water cooler. Bye. Outro: 30:22 Thanks for listening to this episode of the AppChat. Don't miss an episode. Visit AppChatPodcast.com, or subscribe on iTunes. Until next time, don't make success an accident.
Paul Goodwin directed and edited the fabulous 2000AD documentary, Future Shock, and he joins me in the book club to discuss the behind the scenes process of making the film and all of the great extras on the Blu-ray.Get your copy from Arrow Films, and check out producer Sean Hogan's We always find ourselves in the sea which is currently showing on ShudderYou can find a list of episodes so far and all the upcoming books on the Facebook page, follow the podcast on Twitter, or email me comments and suggestions to MCBCpodcast@gmail.com If you cannot see the audio controls, listen/download the audio file hereDownload hereRight click and choose save link as to download to your computer.
Sean Hogan's uniquely authentic blend of alt-country and modern rustic pop immediately caught the attention of Country radio and music fans across Canada, leading to his first Canadian Country Music Association award for Independent Male Artist of the Year in 1997. Hit single after hit single (Slow Turning, Sure Fire Love, Dream Vacation, Angeline, I’d Rather Have You, Centered, Catalina Sunrise, A Cowboy’s Heart, and Suck It Up to name a few) became staples of Country music radio. Eighteen Sean Hogan music videos aired on CMT Canada. Sean has stories to tell & new music to share with us!
One of the most Organized people I know! In this episode I invite Sean back to talk with me about "Designing Your Life". We learn about Sean's dislike for the word organization, what he disdains and Marisa loves, along with our recommendations for a simpler life that as we discover has nothing to do with clearing out your junk drawer. Sean Hogan: seanhoganwriter.com Creative Organization Challenge: bit.ly/ctgetyourtimeback
Sean Hogan, actor, writer, Groundling, Improv and Comedy Sketch writing teacher and my man, joins me for a long conversation. We're keeping it really, real; talking about everything from how Sean overcame painful shyness and a childhood trauma to become a Comedian, why mistakes are meant to happen, how to survive the devastating feeling of failure and why it might be good for you? to defining your {not someone else's} version of success, oh and you know, we touch upon that little topic of the afterlife. seanhoganwriter.com
Filmmaker Sean Hogan talks to host Stuart Wright about 5 Great British Horror Films, his book about Brit horror classic - DEATH LINE and his new short film - WE ALWAYS FIND OURSELVES IN THE SEA WE ALWAYS FIND OURSELVES IN THE SEA enjoys it's World Premiere at the launch night of the book: YULETIDE TERROR: CHRISTMAS HORROR ON FILM AND TELEVISION on Dec 14th at Horse Hospital, London Info: The Miskatonic Institute of Horror Studies – London Date: 14 December Time: 7:30pm-10pm (Doors 7pm, no admittance after class starts at 7:30) Venue: Horse Hospital Address: Colonnade, Bloomsbury, London WC1N 1JD Prices: £10 advance / £11 on the door / £8 concs www.miskatonic-london.com http://www.miskatonic-london.com/events/yuletide-terror-christmas-horror-on-film-and-television/ Podcast from www.britflicks.com "Carefree" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Gaslamp Funworks by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a CC Attribution 3.0. incompetech.com/music/royalty-fre…isrc=USUAN1100826.
Host Stuart Wright speaks with filmmaker and author Sean Hogan about a book he's written about one of the best British horror films ever made - DEATH LINE (1972). Or does it have more in common with the American New Wave of horror that exploded in the 70s with the likes of Night Of The Living Dead and Last House On The Left? The book is OUT NOW Get one of the 500 limited hardback copies at http://www.pspublishing.co.uk/death-line-hardcover-by-sean-hogan-4388-p.asp Podcast from www.britflicks.com "Carefree" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Gaslamp Funworks by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a CC Attribution 3.0. incompetech.com/music/royalty-fre…isrc=USUAN1100826.
We’re on Patreon!Patreon is a platform that allows you, the listener, to provide monthly support for the show in exchange for rewards! Our Patreon page has tons of support levels for $2 to $40, and our rewards include a weekly After Show, monthly hangouts, and more. Our top patron this week is Make Build Modify, and we'd like to welcome our new patrons: Matt Williams and Darren Mattes!What are we working on?Johnny: Published DIY floating shelves, working on collab with Seth’s Bike HacksJames: The bench. And a new wall in the shopEvan and Katelyn: walnut quick connects, refillable tea light candle holder, collab with Sean Hogan, Garage AC + 3d printed back draft prevention damperShow Topic: Special Guests Evan & KatelynNelsoncrafttx: If you had to choose 1 YouTuber that you would say got you interested in creating videos, who would it be?bryceroebe: which tool or technique are you afraid to try, and why?prewittcustomcreations: what materials have you not worked with yet that you are wanting to?WillWorkForTools: do you have any best practices or advice to balancing a new startup YouTube channel while working full-time.The Cutting Bore: doing it part time for me has been a hell of a hustle outside of my full time job. How are you guys managing it day to day?WillWorkForTools: you seem somewhat unique in the YouTube maker space where you're making videos but also selling some of your projects. Would you mind discussing the strategyWhat’s new/what are we watching/reading?Johnny: Heath KnucklesJames: Vo2 Max Productions Ultra Running, WimbeltonEvan and Katelyn: Gravity Falls, Sean Hogan, Katie Ryan "I smell like beef"Favorite tool/product this week?Johnny: Sennheiser AVXJames: Narex 500 gram Brass Carving MalletEvan and Katelyn: Taz6 and Lulzbot mini 3D printer, Rode videomicro
We're bad to the bone! Sean Hogan is back on the show with host Chris Donovan for an odyssey of awful. In this episode we talk about our favorite affronts to the basic tenents of storytelling. Movies that failed on many levels but succeeded in winning our hearts. We'll see magic shows and musicals and mysteries, oh my! Sean and I have a lot to talk about today, so what are you waiting for? Join us for talk of killer sheep, claymation bears, dinosaur detectives, and dominatrixes. Yeah, it's a weird episode...
In PX28, Jess Noonan and Peter Jewell interview Sean Hogan of ISPT. The views expressed are his own and not those of ISPT. Sean has been involved in development since the mid 1980's starting off designing nightclubs and now oversees major urban renewal projects. He is an active participant in industry bodies and has experience across Australia. He has a passion for good design that suits the needs of users and improves the urban fabric. Sean makes suggestions on how to improve the supply of affordable housing and makes robust observations about the state of our cities and town planning practices. Music: Intro - 'Walk right up' Ladi6. Midbreak - 'Green and Gold' Takuya Kuroda. Outro - 'Mais Que Nada' Segio Mendes & Brasil 66'. Podcast originally released August 2017, remastered November 2017. For more information visit www.planningxchange.org.
In PX28, Jess and Peter interview Sean Hogan. Sean has over 30 years experience in the design and development industries. He contributes to a variety of industry committees and oversees an extensive portfolio of development projects. He describes how his life events have shaped him. He also outlines a new method to improve the supply of affordable housing.
It's good to be bad! We all enjoy watching good horror movies but there's something about getting together with some friends and watching an awful horror movie that can't be beat. To celebrate that feeling, I joined with one of my best friends to talk about a movie that will add some energy to everyone's 'Bad Movie Night'. Join Sean and I as we accept the challenge of discussing Rock 'N Roll Nightmare, a movie with bad Australian accents, polite Canadian harbingers, weird looking puppets, and tons of awful sex scenes. So get your friends together, grab a Coca Cola Classic, and get ready to jam out because here at PHP, we live to rock!
Director Paul Goodwin & Producer Sean Hogan delve into the creation of their passion fuelled documentary history of the Galaxy's Greatest Comic, 2000AD.
Join hosts Sam Ashurst and Dan Martin in this second edition of the Arrow Video Podcast as they discuss the upcoming release of Richard Franklin’s PSYCHO II. In addition to the main feature, Sam and Dan also make film recommendations including ROAD GAMES, SCREAM PRETTY PEGGY, LADY BATTLE COP, THE LAST OF SHEILA, BLOW OUT and Christopher Nolan’s DUNKIRK, whilst the Extra Features section covers the latest Arrow Video news, emails and an exclusive interview with Sean Hogan, producer of FUTURE SHOCK! THE STORY of 2000 AD.
Britain's ground-breaking 2000 AD comic introduced a raft of vital artists and writers along with indelible characters like Judge Dredd, Halo Jones, Strontium Dog, and more. The documentary Future Shock! The Story of 2000 AD (2014) tells the story of the ups and downs of this influential work.Director Paul Goodwin and producer Sean Hogan discuss the creation of Future Shock!.Josh Hadley joins Mike to reminisce about comics and the film adaptations of various 2000 AD stories.Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Special Guests: Paul Goodwin, Sean HoganGuest Co-Host: Josh HadleyBritain's ground-breaking 2000 AD comic introduced a raft of vital artists and writers along with indelible characters like Judge Dredd, Halo Jones, Strontium Dog, and more. The documentary Future Shock! The Story of 2000 AD (2014) tells the story of the ups and downs of this influential work.Director Paul Goodwin and producer Sean Hogan discuss the creation of Future Shock!.Josh Hadley joins Mike to reminisce about comics and the film adaptations of various 2000 AD stories.Links:Buy or Rent Future ShockFollow FutureShockDoc on TwitterVisit the official Future Shock websiteVisit the official 2000 AD website
The Groundlings Theater in LA has forged stars like Kristen Wiig, Will Ferrell, Melissa McCarthy and more. It has also been home to Sean Hogan who gives a brutal recount of the relentless process of being groomed for shows like Mad TV and Saturday Night Live. We learn why Sean wouldn't hang out with Ben Stiller and are privy to his personal message for Chris Kattan.
Writer/director Sean Hogan talks to Britflicks.com's Stuart Wright about his contribution to the horror anthology: Little Deaths, challenges with the BBFC and his 2000AD documentary. Out on DVD 12 August 2013. More from Britflicks see www.britflicks.com Intro/Outro music: Gaslamp Funworks by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a CC Attribution 3.0. incompetech.com/music/royalty-fre…isrc=USUAN1100826. Permissions beyond the scope of this license are available at incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/licenses/.
Writer/director Sean Hogan talks to Britflicks' Stuart Wright about his segment of the horror anthology: Little Deaths, censorship challenges posed by the BBFC and his 2000AD documentary.LITTLE DEATHS is out on DVD 12 August 2013. Intro/Outro music:Gaslamp Funworks by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a CC Attribution 3.0.incompetech.com/music/royalty-fre…isrc=USUAN1100826.Permissions beyond the scope of this license are available at incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/licenses/.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/britflicks-com-podcast/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Sean Hogan stops by to talk the upcoming draft and we also talk the week in Nationals baseball, our starting pitching "regression", Harper, Lombardozzi, the return of Morse, and much more.
We talk the week in Nationals news, first cuts, Lidge's comments, and who we think will be on the opening day roster. We have a great interview with former Nationals closer Chad 'The Chief' Cordero and Sean Hogan drops in for the show to go through the farm system.