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Gisel Fattore, ex coordinadora del (SIVER) del Instituto Nacional del Cáncer @rosca_casta 18-3-2025
UNAS CUANTAS VERDADES con Mariano Obarrio 12-03-2025 Entrevistas a: Fernando Carbajal @FCarbajal2021 (Diputado Nacional por Formosa. Democracia para Siempre) Gisel Fattore (Ex Coordinadora del Sistema de Vigilancia Epidemiológica y Reporte del Cáncer (SIVER) del Instituto Nacional del Cáncer) Oscar Agost Carreño @oagost (Diputado Nacional por Encuentro Republicano Federal)
Gisel Fattore (Ex Coordinadora del Sistema de Vigilancia Epidemiológica y Reporte del Cáncer (SIVER) del Instituto Nacional del Cáncer) Unas Cuantas Verdades @marianoobarrio
Join Jason Siver, an expert in automotive insurance and overlanding enthusiast, as he dives into the world of insuring overlanding vehicles. In this informative podcast, Jason shares his extensive knowledge of how to properly insure your overland rig to ensure peace of mind during your off-road adventures. From understanding the unique needs of overlanding vehicles—whether they're modified with custom gear or are fully outfitted for long-distance travel—to exploring coverage options like comprehensive, collision, and specialty insurance, Jason breaks down the complexities of navigating the insurance landscape.Tune in to make sure your overland adventures are protected, whether you're crossing deserts, navigating rugged mountain passes, or embarking on a global road trip. Jason Siver's expert insights will help you ensure that your vehicle, your gear, and your journey are covered—every mile of the way.
Ukrainos pajėgos per savaitę užėmė apie tūkstantį kvadratinių kilometrų Rusijos teritorijos. Rusija evakuoja gyventojus, tačiau ukrainiečių operacijos sustabdyti nesugeba. Ekspertai sako, kad įsiveržimas į Kurską parodė Rusijos gynybos silpnumą. Visgi kai kas mano, kad Ukrainos ataka tėra paskutinis bandymas pasiekti geresnes sąlygas taikos derybose ir primena avantiūrą.Ar Ukrainos įsiveržimas į Kursko sritį pakeis karo eigą?Laidoje dalyvauja Buvęs kariuomenės vadas Jonas Vytautas Žukas, buvęs karo instruktorius Andrejus Šildiajevas, VU Komunikacijos fakulteto docentas Mantas Martišius ir buvęs specialiųjų operacijų pajėgų karininkas, gynybos ekspertas Aurimas Navys.Ved. Liepa Želnienė
Visą dieną LRT kartu su Ukrainai paramą renkančiomis organizacijomis ir visuomenininkais kviečia aukoti saugaus kario rinkiniams skambinant numeriu 1485 (auka – 5 eur) ir adresu radarom.lt.Nuo karo prieglobstį radę ukrainiečiai Lietuvoje buriasi į organizacijas, kuria įvairias bendruomenines iniciatyvas ir verslus. Su kokiais iššūkiais susiduria?LRT Radijo bendradarbis Ukrainoje Eldoradas Butrimas tiesiogiai iš Charkivo pasakoja ten sutiktų ukrainiečių istorijas.Ved. Darius Matas
Welcome back! For this episode we are diving into the latest pop culture news and we are reviewing the latest episode of Amazons " Invincible" Subscribe for more Movie, Tv Show, Video Game News every day! =========================== Lets Connect
This week the Cybermen return in Doctor Who: Nightmare in Silver. You may wish to contribute to the show's running costs, it's Patreon is here https://www.patreon.com/tdrury or buy me a coffee here https://ko-fi.com/timdrury The show is also on Facebook please join the group for exclusive behind the scenes insights and of course also discuss and feedback on the show https://www.facebook.com/groups/187162411486307/ If you want to send me comments or feedback you can email them to tdrury2003@yahoo.co.uk or contact me on twitter where I'm @tdrury or send me a friend request and your comments to facebook where I'm Tim Drury and look like this http://www.flickr.com/photos/tdrury/3711029536/in/set-72157621161239599/ in case you were wondering.
Kevin Heffernan is 1/5 of the comedy group Broken Lizard and has made cult classics like Super Troopers, Beerfest, Club Dread, and the upcoming Quasi out on Hulu on 4/20. Kevin is also the Showrunner of the hit sitcom Tacoma FD on TruTV and streaming on HBOMax.Show NotesKevin Heffernan on Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/heffernanrules/Kevin Heffernan on IMDB - https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0373571/Michael's Online Screenwriting Course - https://michaeljamin.com/courseFree Screenwriting Lesson - https://michaeljamin.com/freeJoin My Watchlist - https://michaeljamin.com/watchlistAuto-Generated TranscriptKevin Heffernan:That meeting that we first had with you guys. Yeah. And we, we were at Dave, we were at we were at the three Arts offices. Yep. AndAnd I remember this cuz I was like, you know, let me and I, and you know, maybe you've come to realize this, but let, and I were, were a little bit more insecure about our knowledge about how to make a TV show cuz we hadn't done it before. Right. And and I remember I kept in the meeting, we would have conversations like, he would keep saying things like well I don't know. Cause we only make movies, you know, I don't know. Cause he's gonna make movies. Right. I kept saying that. And what I was trying to say was, I don't know anything about tv. Right. But your partner Sivert, he, he threw that back in my face at one point. He does. He said, but I don't know. Cause I only make TV, you know. Oh my God. Thought was the funniest fucking thing. I thought it was so fucking funny. Michael Jamin:Oh, thank God he didn't take the meeting.You're listening to Screenwriters Need to Hear This with Michael Jamin.Hey everyone, it's Michael Jamin. Welcome back to Screenwriters Need to Hear This, the podcast. I got another great guest for you everyone. Hope everyone's sitting down. It's Kevin Heffernan. He's also my boss, so I'm gonna be extra nice for this. But IKevin Heffernan:Like to think we're coworkers, Mike. Well,Michael Jamin:He likes to say that, but meanwhile he makes him, makes me bring him lunch. I like to and rub his feet while he eats it. I like toKevin Heffernan:But then you get somebody, you get somebody younger to bring you lunch to bring Correct. Isn't that the way it works?Michael Jamin:And rub my feet. Yes. Right. Just kickKevin Heffernan:It down.Michael Jamin:Fine. Kevin, let me give you a proper introduction for those. Okay. Who never, ever heard of you. First of all, he's the star and showrunner of Tacoma fd. We're in season four. We just finished season four right now. But also you may know him from from a million million movies. Supert Trooper. Supert Trooper Two Club, dread Slam and Salmon Beer Fest. Quai he's one of the founding members of, and I'm of Broken Lizard, which is a comedy troop. And he's also an actor. Everyone, please welcome to the show, Kevin Heffernan. Ron, can I applaud? You should definitely applaud, dude. Thank you so much. I, I have to say, and I've said this to you many times publicly, but I gotta say it, that everyone is listening. I always give you and Lemi a lot, so much credit for what you guys have done because like, the way I see my career, I feel like, I guess I'm like a Hollywood insider in the sense that I got hired by someone to be on a show and then I rose up the ranks. And then about halfway through my career, I noticed I was no longer working for Hollywood Insiders. I was working for basically Hollywood outsiders. People who made their own career and made themselves so desirable that Hollywood came to them and said, Hey, will you do stuff for us? And that's what I feel like you guys have done.Kevin Heffernan:Well, it's a little bit like I guess that's part of the, in front of the camera thing that gives you a little extra allure, I guess. I don't know. Or so, or a way to it does made,Michael Jamin:I think so. But when you started broken, you know, when you guys did your first broken lizard movie, you were just, you know, you guys did it on your own. Yes.Kevin Heffernan:Yeah.Michael Jamin:I mean, talk about that. How did you make that happen? You guys were just nobody's.Kevin Heffernan:Yeah, I mean, well we, we were a, you know, a group that was, I guess we were kind of self-contained. You know, a lot of people, they get out of school, whatever it is, and they, they kind of join some other entity whether it's, you know, some performance thing like the Groundlings or they go to a film school or whatever it is. And we just did it. Our, you know, we had five, well we had more, at the time it was like eight or nine folks. And then after we graduated from Colgate University, we went to New York and we started doing live shows and, and just doing everything soup to nuts. You know, we would, did did the acting and then directing, they're producing the editing and the writing and that, that's how kind of we cut our teeth in order to, you know, and then it was just kinda like, you know, Hey, let's make some short films. Let's, you knowMichael Jamin:Where were you showing these films?Kevin Heffernan:Yeah. And then we would show the films during our live shows. So we would do, you know, sketch shows, you know, in New York City and the Village or whatever. And we'd haul this like 800 pound you know, 32 inch tv into the room. And, and then we would just shoot these short videos. And they're essentially designed to show while we were able, you know, gives us a chance to change costumes and stuff, you know what I mean? It was, oh, it was a chance for us to have a, have a costume change and then we would start showing these videos. And then those were the things that always seemed to be really popular.Michael Jamin:And these were in like, small venues, like how big, how many seats?Kevin Heffernan:Yeah, I don't know. 80, you know, would,Michael Jamin:And how would you get people to show up?Kevin Heffernan:Well, we, you know, we went to Colgate, which is kind of a, kind of a big drinking school. And so and a lot of people migrate, you know, when they, it's in upstate New York, so they'll graduate and they'll, they'll move down to New York City. So there was this network of people from our school who were kind of big drinkers and, and young and, and we just kind of put out the word and all the friends would come, you'd get, you know, 50 people in the room. And I remember after the first weekend, the, the place, we were doing a place called the Duplex, which I think is still there. It's in like Christopher or Sheridan Square or something like that. Christopher Street. And the show would end and the bar, the guy who owned the club would walk in and the table would be full of empty beer bottles just full . And and he'd be so happy. And he kept offering us more, you know, gigs more nights or whatever. And it was basically cuz our friends came and they drank beer and they had laughs and, and were youMichael Jamin:Hitting the door? Or how, how were you charging?Kevin Heffernan:Yeah, yeah. We, well probably, we probably got some real shitty deal. You know, we probably had some horrible deal. I mean, it was like we were begging for stage time around town, you know? And and these guys, you know, let you start on a Monday night, you know, or whatever, whatever shitty time is, or, you know, Monday at 10 o'clock or whatever, you know, Uhhuh and do the show. And, and we'd get our friends to come and then it was Wednesday night, and then it was Friday night, and then it's, you know, Hey, you're doing the whole weekend. You know, and it kind of, kind of grew that way, but, and that was, and we learned to write sketches mm-hmm. when we were doing that, you know? And then did youMichael Jamin:Kind of, did you kind of learn in college though, when you were, you were writing sketches in college though?Kevin Heffernan:Yeah, we, we kind of self-taught. We, we, it was kind of later towards the end of our college careers where we started this comedy group. And my buddy Jay Chen Sekar, who's, you know, still in the,Michael Jamin:There he is. Oh, we're gonna plug that Quasi is the movie plugKevin Heffernan:That, but that's him. That's Jay ChenMichael Jamin:Important. That's the most important one. I've left that one out.Kevin Heffernan:Yeah. But that's him. And then he had had some background in Chicago at the IO in Second City and things like that, doing improv. And always wanted to do a show at Colgate. And so he had gotten the opportunity through some student theater group. There was a guy who was like, Hey, why don't you put up a show? And he was like, ah, I don't wanna do it. I don't wanna do it. And then ultimately, I think they gave him like 500 bucks, Uhhuh . And he decided to put together a group of people, and he and I were very close friends. And he knew that I was interested in something like that. And so we put together this group of folks, and it was probably like 15 people at that point in time and, and just started this comedy group. And we didn't know, like we didn't know how to do improv. We didn't know how to write sketches, we know any of that stuff. And it was just, JayMichael Jamin:Took one class, basically, and he's like, I'll, I'll teach you guys how to doKevin Heffernan:It. Well, he, he didn't, he wasn't even the teacher, you know, like he did. Yeah. Like, he did a, a summer, like likeGuys. Yeah. And he's like, yeah, I'll try this. And we were miserable. I mean, we were horrible. But the, the thing in, in colleges and, and you probably have the same thing, it's like, you know, I think a lot of comedy is, is is the, you have to laugh out of shared experience, right? So the audience says, Hey, I know that happened to me. You know, that's why they laugh, right? So at college, it's a very insular world that you can do that. So you can make fun of that professor and that security guard and that, you know, fraternity, sorority, whatever it is. And, and that's the thing that you learn to write and that everyone laughs at. And so that's how we started where you would just, you'd make fun of people on campus and people love it. And then you, in that way, you learn how to write and, and do characters and whatever, and Right.You know, whatever. We were all fans of Saturday Night Live and Monty Python and whatever. And I think, you know, the idea was let's just try to do that. And it was very simple because it was a, it's like given a wedding toast, you know? It's like, you know, everyone's on your side, right? Everyone wants to laugh together, the same thing. And, you know, we started doing these shows there, and they were just super popular because there was nothing like it there. And people were, were happy to see us make fun of, you know, that professor or that, butMichael Jamin:Then at some point though, you had to branch out to a larger audience, though.Kevin Heffernan:Well, that's the, that's the, the terrifying thing is we got to, we moved to New York City afterwards and realized you couldn't make fun of the dean or the professor or whatever. You had to figure out what the things are that more people would laugh at. And I think, you know, that's the little of a learning curve. But we did that, and then you just start writing sketches and, and we started making these videos. ButMichael Jamin:Then how did you still, how do you make this jump from, you know, selling tickets to friends, to selling tickets to strangers, basically?Kevin Heffernan:Yeah. I, it's just, I guess it's just word of mouth is, is the way, is the way it happens. Where it's like, I, I, I remember, you know, people would bring their friends, you know, from high school and their other friends and whatever it is, and then all of a sudden you have a group of people who are into it, you know? And and then you'd have, you know, agents start to come and industry people start to show up. And really, theyMichael Jamin:Were trying to show up. You, they weren't, this is fascinating to me. So you didn't even invite them, they would just show up.Kevin Heffernan:Yeah, well, you know, I mean it was kind of a fun time in New York at the time where there was kind of these two, there are different movements that were kind of happening. And one of 'em was the independent film movement, which was, you know, big. It was the Kevin Smith and, and you know, that kind of stuff where you, everyone was making, you know, low budget films. And then it was also, you know, kind of the growth of the comedy group. Again, I guess, you know, where U C B was just, just starting up in New York. And there was another group called The State that was doing stuff in they were outta nyu and they were doing shows. And so there were different kind of like, there was kind of a lot of burgeoning kind of comedy groups that were kind of in that same era. And, you know, people catch on. There was a, you know, M T V wanted to make a sketch comedy show, and they started scouting all these comedy groups, and they picked this group, the state, and they made the, they made their comedy show. So there was a, you know, there were a lot of people out there that had an appetite for, for this kind of thing. And, and you know, we were trying to capitalize on him.Michael Jamin:And the whole time you str all you guys were struggling, but you, you were also attending law school at the sameKevin Heffernan:Time? I did. I went to law school. I, I I I was working at a law firm for, for a couple years out of school. And then, yeah, I went, I ended up gonna law school during the day. Right. And then we would do these comedy shows at night. And they never, they're very different worlds, you know, like, but I remember one time we were taking a tour of the courthouse with my law school class, Uhhuh . And somebody walked up to me who had seen the live show, Uhhuh , who was like, Hey, you are the comedian Kevin hen, da da da da. Not that I was famous anyway, but this guy just happened to be in, and everyone in my law school class has looked at me and like, who the fuck are you ? Like, they had no idea that I was, had that other thing going on. So. AndMichael Jamin:Did that change the way they looked at you after? Like, they,Kevin Heffernan:I think a little bit. I mean, I was, you know, I, I was not a, a great participant in the law school world. I was kind of a back bencher. I'd sit in the back row and I didn't really, I might crack a joke here and there. And so, but then, yeah, I think, I think they probably got a feeling of like, oh, maybe this is not his his highest priority, this law school thing. DidMichael Jamin:You, well, did you pa take the bar?Kevin Heffernan:I did, yeah. I took the bar. Yeah, I did. I we took the bar. Well, I graduated from law school, and then we made our, I graduated from May, and we were preparing to shoot the first feature film we ever made. We were preparing to shoot it in June. And so I started studying for the bar and I realized, oh, I can't do this. I can't do this stuff. And so I went to my dad and I was like, I'm not gonna take the bar exam. And he's like, what? Are you crazy? And I was like, you know, he goes, you get all, you're gonna get all through law school and you're not gonna take the party time. I was like, well, I'm gonna take it, but I'll take it, you know, six months from now or a year from now. Right. You're not gonna do that. And I said, I will, I will. And he said, you know, he said, that's insane. You don't take the ball down to the goal line and not cross into the goal. You know, youMichael Jamin:Do it, you figure you're in the New York Jets. That's how they,Kevin Heffernan:That's, that's right. You know, there's some people who just don't get in the end zone . And so I, and so we did it. So, but so we made the movie and then six months later I went back and I took the bar exam and I passed it. So,Michael Jamin:See, you're a good boy now, but how did you raise the money for the movie?Kevin Heffernan:Well, that, like I was saying before, that was that era of like, people were bankrolling movies on credit cards, you know, and it was like you know, Kevin Smith or whoever it was, they, you know, made clerks for $30,000 or whatever it was, you know what I mean? So we at the time, j Chan Sacar had taken a couple N Y U film classes, and he was very much into it. He also had got started working with this guy as a, as an intern at this office of this lawyer. His name was John Slots, who had went on to become this huge, you know, independent film, you know, movie producer, icon type of a guy. And he represented all those guys, the link laters and, you know, the Kevin Smiths and Rodriguez, all these guys are making these kind of, you know, el mariachi, you know, they're making these movies, you know. And so he got into his head like, let's try to do this. And so basically we went around and we charged, I think the movie we made was called Puddle Cruiser, which was about 250,000 bucks. And most of it was charged on credit cardsMichael Jamin:Between the five of you.Kevin Heffernan:Well, well, Jay did most of it. And then some of us did some stuff in, and then some, and people got like, some of their families kicking, you know, five grand here or whatever. But the thing with Jay was that, his name is Jay Chanter Sekar. And his parents were doctors. And for some reason, the credit card companies started to thought that maybe he was a doctor and they started sending him, they would send him these credit cards and, you know, he was a day, right? You'd get a credit card in the mail, you know what I mean? And you'd be like, ah, whatever. And you use it. And so he u you know, he just charged him up and but he,Michael Jamin:And he wasn't worried about like ever paying it back. I mean,Kevin Heffernan:You know, I, I think ultimately he probably was, but that's just what everybody was doing. Like, they were just putting the stuff on credit cards and that's what we did. And we, you know, charged the camera package on credit cards and we did all that stuff. HeMichael Jamin:Needed that much. That's a lot of money. I'm surprised you couldn't do for less.Kevin Heffernan:Well there are a couple things to it. Like, number one, we shot on 35 millimeter, right? Which was unusual. Cause that's a very expensive film format. And at the time, people were shooting 16 millimeter and other things, something called Super 16. They're shooting all these things. And but we wanted shoot on 35 just cuz we thought we could ha make the movie have more commercial appeal. Right. And so we did that. And and then also it's just, you know, a lot of those movies were kind of like the adventure of one man or whatever. And we had like, you know, we al it's always been our problem. We have five storylines with five guys and whatever. So the movie's always kind of expanded a little bit. But yeah, so we went up to Colgate University we had written a, a, a, a romantic comedy like set in a college.And we went up to Colgate University and we said, Hey, can we shoot this film? And we went, we made a big pitch to the dean, you know, former students, you know, doing this thing. And he said, Nope. And then he said, you're, you're not, you're, we're not gonna let you do it. And we said that, but that's crazy. He said, look I'm the guy who puts my name on this thing, and you know, you're gonna come here up here and make an animal house and then we're gonna look like assholes. And then, and so we're like, but we would never do that. You can read the script, blah, blah, blah. And so essentially what we did we went back and, and we told our friends, it's like, like I said earlier with the people we're all drinking, it's a very networky school.And we just reached out to everyone and we said, please reach out to this dean and tell 'em you support alumni's you know in the arts. You, you support alumni in the arts and that kind of thing. And it was the, it was the age of the fax machine. Mm-Hmm. . And they just, we gave out this guy's fax number and he just started getting, he got probably like a thousand fax from faxes from you know, alumni and wow. And finally he caved. He's like, okay, all right. You can do it. Just don't have the school's name anywhere in, in in the movie. Like, okay, what about insurance? You have to worry about that. Who, who is you? Yeah. Yeah. That's part, I mean, that's part of film. You know, you, you buy insurance. Okay. You paid for that wasn't, wasn't called.Okay. No, well, they wouldn't let us. They were very adamant about us, you know, using as little of their facility as possible. They, you know, we were hoping we, they would give us a dorm for us to stay in. They wouldn't do that. And we couldn't house anybody on the campus or any of that kind of stuff. So, but it's so what I, it's just so scrappy of you guys. It really is. It's just, yeah. Yeah. No, I I, it's totally scrappy and I, I give chance se a lot of credit for that. He, you know, he was very much in that camp of like you know, let's go make a movie however we can. And and we did. And, and you know, we didn't no idea what we were doing. And, and we didn't know where to put the camera.We didn't know any of that stuff. And we had, you know, we had some professional crew folks that came that we hired, you know, from New York City, and they came up there and, you know, the DP and the Grip and the gaffer were guys who were a little bit more experienced than we were. And and, and we just shot this thing. And then we didn't even know how to edit it. We've never, you know, edited a movie before and you just learned as you did it, man. And we did. So what we did, then we came back, we were and our buddy was a NYU film student. We would, he would sneak us in at night to the NYU film department, and we would use the edit machines. And at the time, at the beginning it was Steam Back. So it was like literally the film, you would put the film and cut the film. You know what I mean? Yeah. I mean, don't do that anymore. But that, that, that was the end of that era. But we started cutting our films that way. And then, and then we turned, you know, on this particular movie called Puddle Cruiser, we moved over to computer editing, which was just starting then.Michael Jamin:So, wow. See what I, well, and I wanna talk about Quasi, which by the way, so Quasi Drops, this is your latest movie. It drops on four 20 on Marijuana Day Yeah. On Hulu. And everyone should go sit your, you know, whatever. It's, make sure you watch this movieKevin Heffernan:Marijuana Day,Michael Jamin:But, well, I saw, I don't even know how much you changed cuz I went to a, a screening of it, what was it, a year ago? How long was that?Kevin Heffernan:It was yeah, it was March. It was March. Wow. Of of 20 21, 2 20 22.Michael Jamin:And maybe there was, was there maybe a couple hundred people who went to that? Who Yeah,Kevin Heffernan:We, we you know, we like to do that, to do the test screens to see where the laughs are or whatever. And we got about 200 folks. We did a screening room, screening Room, Warner Brothers, and then and itMichael Jamin:Went great. Every, I mean, everyone was laughing, everyone. So I'm, yeah. I don't even know howKevin Heffernan:Much, which is terrifying because you know, that the movie, and you saw that version is, that's the, like, that was like the two hour plus cut. Right. You know, and that's when you just, you know, you throw it out there and just see what hits what sticks, you know, andMichael Jamin:And aKevin Heffernan:Lot did it with that one. And then since that version you saw mm-hmm. , you know, we've been through doing test screenings. We get notes from everybody at the studio, all that kind of business, and we've whittled away another half an hour.Michael Jamin:Do you, do you find the Oh, really took a half hour? You finding you have more notes the more, the bigger the budget or No?Kevin Heffernan:No, I don't think so. I mean, there's more fear, there's no question about that. You know, we, we, we, but we've never kind of like really kind of moved in that world a little bit. You know, we, we, we were very, we made, we remade the Dukes of Hazard, we did the Dukes of Hazard movies for Warner Brothers. That was like the biggest thing that we did budget wise, where that's like, you're spending 60, 70, 80 million and then all the decisions become very precious and, and very much my committee. But for us, I think the beauty is we've always functioned at a budget level where people kind of leave you alone. Right. You know, like, they might get adamant about something or whatever. You know, we, we had a few things on this movie that they were, they felt very strongly about. And we, you know, we'll go back and forth, but for the most part, you know, we've never been in that horrible situation of, youMichael Jamin:Know, t Sibert and I, we, we prefer the world of low budget for that reason. Yeah. Do you guys feel the same way?Kevin Heffernan:Yeah. I mean, you, you just kind of fly under the radar screen. You know, it's like you know, when, when we made the movie Beer Fest, you know, we made it at Warner Brothers and at the same time they were making like the first like, huge Superman reboot and, you know, the budget of our movie was like a week of catering, you know? Yeah. On that Superman movie. And they were so worried about that stuff that they don't, they don't care. Not they don't care, but they just, you're not a high priority. So like, they do yourMichael Jamin:Thing. Bigger problems. Yeah. One of the fun things that I love, I I by watch 'em all your movies and it's, I, I don't know if you know, if you think about this, but to me it's like fun to see the same guys playing different roles, often two different parts in the same movie. And it's just, I don't know, do you, are you aware of how much like joy that gives Keep people?Kevin Heffernan:Yeah, no, I mean, we love it cuz like, we'll do that too. Like when we would go from movie to movie and intentionally try to put guys into different kinds of characters, Uhhuh, , you know, and, and, and that was the reason why. Cause we thought it was so fun to see guys do different things. I mean, this movie's a great example because we do play multiple parts and guys play different kind of characters. But after we shot Supert Troopers, like for example like Jay Chanter Sekar who directed it, you know, and it was a hard thing. It's a hard thing to direct a movie, you know, it was just kind of for a million bucks and whatever, and you're always, you know, fighting the clock and you're always fighting whatever. And so he would always kind of get dower at times, you know, and, and we'd have to remind him in his performance, Hey man, pick it up.You know, we're doing a comedy, don't worry about that. Put that shit behind you. Whatever. Uhhuh . And so after Supert Troopers, you know, his character is a very straight kind of guy. We made a movie called Club Dread, and it was like, let's go in the opposite direction. And we intentionally wrote Jay as like a Ponzi, British raaf, Farian tennis player, Uhhuh . And so with the intention of like, let's give him a character that's completely opposite of what he was. Right. And it ends up having the effect of being very cool, I think for people who like the movies cuz they see people play different kinds of characters, you know,Michael Jamin:But how do you guys even do that with five, because you have five equal partners writing. Like how do you decide who comes, is one person pitching an idea? How do you get five people on board to do anything?Kevin Heffernan:It's, it's pretty hard. I think it's, I think we're lucky that we started doing it together in college. Probably like, if, if we had been assembled like in, you know, at age 35 or whatever, never fucking made, it was like, you know, it's like putting a like a, like a like the monkeys together or something, or whatever, you know what I mean? I, I don't know that we would ever have been able to do that. Cuz yeah, there's fights and whatever, but I I I think it's really always come out of making each other laugh. And if, and if the rest of the guys laugh, then you're like, oh, okay. I I think that's, and you know, and, and the cra fights, you know, from casting point of view, we started getting into this practice and we did it from Super Troopers on where, for the most part, we don't cast the movie when we're writing it. And we don't cast the movie till way later in the game because you, you find out that, you know, if you know what the part you're playing, then you kind of start writing for yourself and your own part. But if you don't know, then you write for everybody. Right?Michael Jamin:Oh, is that right? So, yeah.Kevin Heffernan:And so we made a very conscious effort early on that we would push, like, there, there are sometimes now like movie quasi, you know Lemi, we knew Lemi was gonna be the title character, but I think most of our movies, it's like we wait till later in the game after the script has gone through multiple drafts, and then we cast it. AndMichael Jamin:Then how do you decide who, I mean, how do you, what if I wanna be theKevin Heffernan:Whatever that happens too. I mean, we, we I remember Super Troopers, you know, we wrote it, we wrote Mel multiple drafts. It was with many different companies and there are many different places, and we never really cast it. And then we decided we would sit down and we, the five of us, we sat down at a table and everyone read the different parts. And then it was a conversation. It's like, you know, I think, I think you're that guy, you know? And and luckily there was never a, a big fight. And then now it's like, you know, like in the movie quasi, there's a couple characters and it was like, Hey, I thought, you know, soda, you should be that guy and Jay should be this guy. And they were like, nah, no, you know, I think he'd be much better at that guy. You know, and they were right. You know, so it was like, it kind of, it's the mindset of what's doing best for the movie, which is nice. Right. right. And so we've never really gotten into those big fights because we just cast it later, you know? Is thereMichael Jamin:A procedure though, when you guys do? Is there like a vote? Or like, how do you, how do you agree to settle shit?Kevin Heffernan:Yeah, I mean, I think like, usually it's, I guess it's the director who's kind of settles it, but it, it, no, it's just, it's just by side who's the director by democracy , becauseMichael Jamin:You guys have also also, you know, swapped sometimes, you know, you direct sometimes, you know, sometimes Jay directs andKevin Heffernan:Yeah. I mean, I guess we've done like seven seven kind of proper broken legend movies and he's directed five of them. Yeah. And I've done two of themMichael Jamin:Now. Since you've done two, I don't know why you do two. Isn't it exhausting? I mean it's, it's exhaust, it's a full-time job being a director, but then to also act Yeah. It's, it's twice as exhausting.Kevin Heffernan:Yeah. It's, it's, it is kind of exhausting. And you know, the funny thing on this movie I played two characters. We all played two characters, right? Mm-Hmm. . And there's, there was some days where my two characters were having scenes with each other. Yeah. And like, you're standing there and you're like, you're acting against yourself and you're directing the thing. Yeah. And it was just like, you're like, what the fuck? Like, your head's gonna fucking explode. You're like, what am I doing here? ? And like, the beauty of it is we have these five guys, we have the support thing. And so Lemi will be there, Chan Sa I'll be there and they'll be like, Hey, you know, you should look, look out for this or whatever. You know, there's a good support group where Right. Luckily you're not, you're not hanging out there alone.Michael Jamin:And you've directed many episodes of Tacoma FD Do, how much do you, you know, what do you, what do you think, do you, what is your, what do you prefer writing, directing, acting? Do you have a preference?Kevin Heffernan:I don't know. I, I always think of it as like as like the seasons, you know, it's like whenever it's winter you want it to be summer, or whenever it's summer you wanna be winter. Yeah. Like, I always feel that way. Like whenever I'm doing one of the jobs, I'm like, God, I wish I was writing right now. Yeah. . But I mean, I think that's the beauty of the, the hyphen thing. It's like, you know, it's like you know, I just got through the editing process, right? And then which is a whole thing. And, and, and then by the, we've been doing six months and then by the end of that you're like, Ugh. And now you know, we're working on a project with you mm-hmm. , and we're working on a project with the Republican lizard guys. And you start moving back into the writing mode and you're like, oh, thank God this is fucking great. Right? Yeah. Yeah. And then whatever, three months from now they're like, God, I wish I was shooting. You know, ,Michael Jamin:It's a shooting is ex especially being directory is exhausting. You gotta be the first one there and the last one out.Kevin Heffernan:Yeah. And then you gotta prepare for the next day. You gotta prepare. You should, at least you should, you know.Michael Jamin:Yeah.Kevin Heffernan:You know, but a again, like, you know, part of it that's nice is the all-encompassing kind of thing of it where it's like I don't necessarily have to expend all the director energy directing an actor mm-hmm. , because I'm doing it. And I don't have to spend, I don't spend a lot of energy translating between a writer and a director and an actor. Which also is a, I think a lot of a director's job is these kind of like interpersonal mm-hmm. , you know, figuring out how to do that because we kind of do it all, you know, so there's something kind of nice to that, you know.Michael Jamin:Yeah. Well, I guess, I mean, and I, again, I give you a lot of credit. It's cuz it'sKevin Heffernan:Well, but like, when you, when you're having a problem on the set, for example, right? Mm-Hmm. and then you know, some scenes not working or whatever it is, and you're in the middle of it as the actor writer and the director, you just kind of cart blanche to, to try to fix it. You know what I mean? Yeah. It's not like you have to bring a committee together to try to fix something, you know? Right. There's something nice to that there's something nice to that.Michael Jamin:Do you, now, this Tacoma was pretty much your first was your, was it was your first TV venture, but now, you know, I know, I, I knowKevin Heffernan:How it was. Yeah. I mean, it was the first one that went, you know, like Yeah. The thing is that Lemy and I, you know, for many years, and you know, this, I mean, for many years we, we had been making TV or developing TV shows and selling scripts and Yeah. And you can go there. I mean, I think we sold a different script, like something like eight years in a row mm-hmm. Into, into TV season, you know what I mean? Right. And they just don't go, they don't go, they don't go for whatever reason. You know, like I remember one year we sold one to I think it was B, c and we were so excited about it, and then we found out that they bought 80 scripts. Oh, . Yes. And they're, and they're gonna shoot three of them. Right. Right. And what we found out was that these networks a lot of times will just kind of preemtively buy scripts Yeah. In order to be able to control the market. And, and it doesn't cost them a lot just to have a bunch of things you know, options. Yeah. And then, you know, you're, oh fuck. So I, I think as time went on, we were trying to figure out like, what's, how do you get to the next step? Like how do you write the TV script that they're gonna shoot?Michael Jamin:Yeah.Kevin Heffernan:You know? Mm-Hmm.Michael Jamin:, what did you figure out? I mean,Kevin Heffernan:Well, it, it's partly who you do business with. So like when we pitched com, we pitched everybody, we pitched the big networks and the little networks and you know, the one that they were the most excited about and the most that you got the vibe that this, they're gonna shoot, this thing was true tv.Michael Jamin:Right.Kevin Heffernan:And, you know, we could have sold it to Fox or whoever it is, but we knew that those people were gonna shoot it. And that's the battle.Michael Jamin:They told you that. I mean, some orKevin Heffernan:Essentially, I mean, it's like we, you can also know, like, you can say, you can find out how many they buy. Right. And out of those, how many they shoot, and out of those, how many get on the air and, and somebody like True who's a smaller network, they can't go out and buy 80 scripts. You know what I mean? Right. So what they do is they'll, they'll buy three scripts and you know that you have a damn good chance if it's three scripts, you know,Michael Jamin:We would, when we sold shows back on network, you'd be optimistic at first, and then you'd read in the trades what someone else sold the show, maybe with some actor attach or director. And you'd go, all right, that's one less slot. You, you just knew it, you just knew that's one less thought to buy. Yeah.Kevin Heffernan:Yeah. And then you get to things like, let me and I were talk about this morning, we were like trying to remember, there was a a, we sold a script one year about stay-at-home dads. Right. I think it was called Kept Men and the Stay-Home Dads. And our wives had great jobs and we, we would just stay at home, take care of the kids, whatever. And it's an idea that everyone has had. And I remember we, we sold it somewhere, I can't remember, it was N B C or B ABC or whatever it was. And then we found out, I think it was B nbc, we found out that there were three other stay-at-home dads scripts that had sold Uhhuh to nbc. And then we found out that like, you know, one of the producers was Jimmy Fallon, one of the producers was Ellen, you know, one of the, it was, you know, whoever. And you knew then that your fortunes are getting, you know, less favorable. Yeah. And then ultimately they pick one of those, you know, they're an nbc they're gonna pick the Jimmy Fallon project mm-hmm. . Cause Jimmy Fon is one of their superstars. And, and, and, and you know, so your, your discouragement kind of goes down as he gone. But that was always the thing was like, how do you get from the point where you sell that script to you make that script, which is really why we're in this business.Michael Jamin:Yeah. Right. And and your eyes are higher. Well, it's, it's, so, it's, I was, I would, I was gonna say your eyes are higher up getting a TV show made than a movie, but you've gotten a movies made. So what am I doing? Yeah.Kevin Heffernan:I mean, I, I guess it depends on what the market has been. I mean, they're just, sometimes, I, I only say that because I feel like it's shifting a little bit again now, but there's certainly, you know, when the streamers came in on top of the broadcast people, there were more opportunities, I feel like mm-hmm. . And at that point the films were shrinking for a number of reasons, just that it's so expensive to put a movie out. Yeah. you know, that, that as the movie companies get bigger they will not take chances on certain comedies. You know, like we, when we made Beer Fest at Warner Brothers, we were like, why don't you guys just make a shitload of, you know, 15 million comedies and try to make a lot of money outta 'em? And then cuz they said, cuz we'll make one Harry Potter and it'll make more money than 115 million comedies. Right. Everyone'sMichael Jamin:Swinging for theKevin Heffernan:Home run. Yeah. And, and that's why, and that's what we'll do. And so there was a lot of that vibe. So I think that's part of why, you know, we were like, you know, let's take a shot at tv. There's a, there's a better home for comedy. You know, at that point, I think. Yeah. and it, and it was, you know, and, and when we sent up for True tv, you know, their, their motto has kind of changed. But at the time they were trying to build a comedy network and they had Andrea Savage and Amy Sedaris and, you know, Bobcat Golf Weight and all these guys had shows. Yeah. And they were, that they were trying to make these comedy shows. So it seemed like a good, a good fit for us.Michael Jamin:And I had a question, I just now now I just lost it, but, oh, I was gonna say. So, but you also have acted on other, you've guest art on plenty other, on other shows, Goldberg, but Yeah. Do you, but do you prefer, like, do you have a preference even, I don't know, doing other people's material, your material? Do you care at all?Kevin Heffernan:I, I, I don't mind people's material, but I love writing our material and doing our material. You know, it's like, it's like the, it's like the standup thing. It's like, you know, the beauty of doing standup is that you can write a joke and then perform the joke and get the reaction from the crowd. I, I kind of feel the same way about performing our own material, you know?Michael Jamin:But I know you and you guys used to do a lot of performing standup, but you don't, you haven't done that in quite a while and you don't, what's the plan? Do you miss that at all or what?Kevin Heffernan:Sometimes I do. Sometimes I do. You know, I think it was something that we I mean some of the guys in our group have a background like, you know, chance Sakar has, you know, stand background or whatever. But I had never had it really. And then it was that last, it was the last writer strike whatever, 2008, 2009, whatever was that, when was that? Like,Michael Jamin:It was 2008. What? Yeah. What did you guys do during that?Kevin Heffernan:Well, we were, you know, we had made our movie of Slam and Salmon and we had to make it independently cuz no studios were buying. And then, you know, nobody's making a TV shows. We couldn't sell anything. We couldn't write anything. And so we had one of these kind of live standup agents who was like, look, you guys have notoriety now. You can go around and do a show, you know? Yeah. And, and make money. You know. And so it was like, oh, okay. And so we put together this show in, I think it was 2008 or 2009, you know, come in, in the strike. And we went on tour and we did whatever, I, I can't remember, we did like 20 or 30 show cities or whatever it was. And and it was like it, it, it, it kind of morphed over time.But it was like, you know, we would put our Supert Troopers uniforms on and go do a supert trooper sketch mm-hmm. . And then a guy would do, you know, 10 minutes of standup and then we'd do a beer fest sketch and then guys would do 10 minutes of standup and then whatever. And so I think that was when the vibe for live comedy for us kind of really grew. We were like, oh, this is great. This is cool. And there's an audience. Like there's a, there are fans of ours. It's not like we have to go Yeah. TheyMichael Jamin:Come see you. Yeah.Kevin Heffernan:Yeah. Like we used to go and, you know, walk around Washington Square Park and hand out fucking postcards. Come see our show, come see our show come now. We don't have to do that. You know? So Isn't that amazing? That was nice. And so then that's why we got into standup cuz cuz we started doing that. And then I, I had never really done standup and I had a blast. And then it got to be the end of that tour. And then it was, the agent was like, does any of you guys, you guys still wanna go do some standup? I'll book you. And then lemme like, yeah, we'd love to. Let's do it. And so we went probably for eight or nine years we traveled.Michael Jamin:Now when you were doing this, were you literally on the road? Were you on the road the whole time? Were, were you fly back and forth to California?Kevin Heffernan:No, no. We were like you know, 40 year old guy standups, you know, it's like if we were the 20 year old standups, we would be like in a car driving around, but we would No, you'd go out, you'd do two weekends a month or whatever, you know, and you'd go out and you'd do, you know, a Thursday, Friday, Saturday showsMichael Jamin:And then flyKevin Heffernan:Back. And then fly back. Yeah. Yeah. And so but you know, probably eight or nine years we did it, you know, we would do, you know, I don't know, maybe 20 weekends in a year.Michael Jamin:Hey, it's Michael Jamin, if you like my videos and you want me to email them to you for free, join my watch list. Every Friday I send out my top three videos. These are for writers, actors, creative types. You can unsubscribe whenever you want. I'm not gonna spam you and it's absolutely free. Just go to michaeljamin.com/watchlist.It's, it's so interesting. I again, cuz you guys are just like, when I hear so many times, you're like, people are like, well, how do I sell my screenplay? And my voice is always, you don't and just do what you're, build it yourself, do it. Stop asking for permission, and that's exactly what you guys did. You just did it.Kevin Heffernan:Yeah.Michael Jamin:You know?Kevin Heffernan:Yeah. I mean, that's the same advice that we give people too. It's like, you know, and whatever the, the, the kind of the world changes a little and you know you know, there are different ways to do your own thing. You know, I mean, when we started, people didn't have camera phones or Right. , you could haveMichael Jamin:Made that movieKevin Heffernan:Equipment or you know,Michael Jamin:You instead of 250,000 you could have made that movie Yeah. For a fraction of that. Right?Kevin Heffernan:Yeah. Yeah. And, and so people, I think people do have that opportunity and, and, you know, they can go shoot a movie on their phone or whatever it is. And I mean, in that way, you, you at least learn how to write and act and where to put a camera and how maybe how to light something or whatever. Its Right. Right. but that, that's what we always say to people is, is do that. You know, write your own stuff and go do it.Michael Jamin:Do you find, because I mean, I'm jumping around here, but you ob you collaborate a lot either with five or four other guys, or sometimes you work with Lemy or with the writing set. Is it, you know, do you find that you don't, that you know, you don't really get to use your voice that you're always, it's, it's more collaborative? Do you miss or do you crave doing something just with your own voice or anything?Kevin Heffernan:I don't know. I never thought about that. No, I don't think so. No. I like, I like the collaboration thing. Right. I, I don't, I mean, whatever we've worked together for, what, four years now? I don't, I'm not super precious. I, I, and I, I I'm not like a dig my heels in guy I don't think. Maybe I am, maybe you'll tell me differently. But I think, you know, I think I, I, I like, I love getting, you know, seeing other people write some good jokes and whatever. Right, right. It's a, and I think it's probably born out of the fact that I've always been in a group, you know, and I've always been with these five, you know, I was with these five guys and, you know, you learn the value of having other people's perspectives and whatever. So I, I don't know. I, you know, I like standup. I, I, I really enjoyed it and it was fun and it was fun to go and tell stories and whatever, but I, you know, I don't know if there's something I I like more about, probably about the TV or movie worldMichael Jamin:Because even directing, like as a showrunner, you could, you still have ultimate the final say on anything. So if you had someone else direct, you do, I know you have other people direct episodes, but I wonder like, you know, why, I guess why, you know, what's the, what's the appeal of doing it yourself when you still have ultimate control anyway?Kevin Heffernan:Right. Right. You mean like, why not have more people?Michael Jamin:Yeah, I mean I, no, I, IKevin Heffernan:Just think, well that's, that's, youMichael Jamin:Know, exhausting. It is. That's,Kevin Heffernan:That's O C D and control and control issues, Michael.Michael Jamin:Oh, so that's why you, cuz you really want, you just want to get it done. YouKevin Heffernan:Well, no, that's what my kids will say. They'll say that I have control issues. That's right. May, that may be the case that I, I like to do things myself, but,Michael Jamin:Oh, well. But, but, but that's what that kind of speaks to what I'm talking about is like, okay, well you're do you are getting your voice across cuz you ultimately making, well, you know, so many decisions. But yeah. And so I don't know what, what advice do you have for, for young people breaking in? Do you, you know, are you getting swarm by this? You know?Kevin Heffernan:Yeah. It, I mean, you know, it happens. I mean, you get it right? You get people and they wanna send you. IMichael Jamin:Get it. But you, I'm, I think you might get different questions from me. You're, you're, well, IKevin Heffernan:Guess, I guess other, you know, I mean, yeah, I get other questions.Michael Jamin:You get recognize you walk on the street and people know who you are andKevin Heffernan:So Yeah. How do I become an actor, you know, and get that. Yeah. And, you know and it's hard. Like I, you know, I try to help people out, but I, you know, you know, there's not, there's like a, some sort magic bullet. Like, you know, guys in this industry, I mean, no matter how long you've been there, you me, every day we try to figure out how to keep our careers going. Mm-Hmm. You know what I mean? , it's like, yeah. It's like I got enough trouble, you know, trying to get what I, you know, I don't know what my next project is, you know? Right. And, and it's and every, it's a fight. I don't care if you're Martin Scorsese or whatever, it's always a fucking fight. Yeah. And so, you know, you try to impress it on people, but you don't wanna be, you know, the doom and gloom guy.You know, I, I, I did a, our buddy who's a producer, rich Perlo, who produced these our movies, he teaches a class at Columbia and, you know, LUMY and I zoomed into the class the other day and there's a lot of those questions, you know, and, and I, we got off and I was trying, I said to him, God, I'm to Rich who teaches the class. I said, I'm really sorry. I hope we didn't come across as these doom and gloom guys. Cuz we, you know, our point was it's very hard and you gotta work hard and nobody's gonna give it to you. Mm-Hmm. , you know, there's like all these kind of like, you know, myths of you know, being discovered this, that, the other thing. But it's like, you know, we've been pushing the rock up the hill for, for many, many years. Yeah. And it's just accumulation of relationships and experiences and whatever that kind of get you going that way. You know,Michael Jamin:It's, it's, yeah. Sometimes people say to me though, they wanna send me scripts. I, I'm not the guy, I I'm not the gatekeeper. I'm not the guy. I'm, I'm the same guy as you are. Try Kevin Heffernan:Trying to Yeah. You want me to do, you know, I mean, and, and you know, like you can't read their script cuz then you do violate various kind of legal things, you know?Michael Jamin:Yeah. I'm not doing that. Yeah.Kevin Heffernan:Yeah. And I remember the first time we ran into that, I think we we had just gone to college and Jay and I wrote like all these spec jokes and sent 'em to the Letterman show. Mm-Hmm. . And they just, and you, like four days later you get the envelope back unopened. Yeah. with a return to sender thing on it. And there's a, a form letter, it says, we do not read unsolicited material, you know? Yep. Oh,Michael Jamin:That's, that's the end ofKevin Heffernan:That. And so that's, you can't even, you can't do it that way. So you just have to work. And I, I tell these guys also, you know, you think about some of the people who work with us, like in our writer's room, right? It's like we have this great woman Hannah who she, you know, wants to be a writer and she wants, or at least wants to work in the industry. And, and you know, we said, well, you know, you can start, you know, at the bottom. That's how, that's how you do it. You know. And so she came and she was, you know, an intern unpaid for a while, and then she was a pa and she worked right up and da blah da. And then, you know, she got to do some stuff in our writer's room, you know, essentially the secretarial elements of it, you know, which she did last year. And and that's the way you do it. You know, you start at the grunt level and then you make relationships and you keep going, , you work yourMichael Jamin:Way, right? People wanna start at the top, Mike, you don't get to start at the top. You gotta start. No.Kevin Heffernan:And you meet all the people on the way up. You know, the guy who is my, now my, my PR guy, my PR agent, who's a pre reputable guy in the business now. He's like, I don't know if you remember, I met you, you know, many years ago. And I was like, is that right? And he goes, yeah, I was an assistant on the desk of this producer mm-hmm. that you guys are doing a project with. And you would come to the office and you'd like, oh. And he said, you're very nice to me. And I, I was like, oh, glad, I'm glad to hear that. Yes. and . Now here's that guy. He's, you know, this big PR guy who, you know is very successful in the business, you know? So it, it's just, you know, there's no way that people are gonna put their script in there and become this, you know, the next Oscar winner until they work theirMichael Jamin:Right pe people are gonna think that you have listened to me talk on social media. And I know for a fact you haven't because you're saying that I've already said, which is Oh, okay. You know, I told a story as well where I was, I can't, we were going to pitch a show and the person we're meeting with is young executive. He goes, you know, we, we've met before. And I'm like, oh no. I'm like, cause I don't remember the guy. And I'm like, already, I just tanked the meeting. And he goes, yeah, I was a, I worked on a desk and you were nice to me. And I was like, oh, thank God. You know, you gotta be nice to people cuz they, you've gotta be nice to people cuz they're not gonna stay in that deskKevin Heffernan:Correctly. That's why I tell everyone, you wanna know the key to Hollywood, be nice to the assistance. Yes. Because they're, they are the gatekeepers and then ultimately they will move on to other jobs. Yeah. So they benefit you in many different ways, but if you're just a nice personMichael Jamin:Yeah, I say that as well. Don't kiss my ass, kiss the ass of the assistant. They're the ones I'm gettingKevin Heffernan:The door.Michael Jamin:Yeah. I'm not gonna help you. But they might help you.Kevin Heffernan:But then it's all, you know, whatever. It's all relationships. We, you know, I, like you said, I didn't do a, we'd never made a TV show before, you know? And we relied on certain people like you to help us do that. SoMichael Jamin:Now, and now you don't need us anymore. But don't, don't.Kevin Heffernan:Well I, I like to, I like to have you though.Michael Jamin:You like to have my little nap, littleKevin Heffernan:Laptop. No. You know, it's funny, I, I vividly remember that meeting that we first had with you guys. Yeah. And we, we were at day, we were at we were at the three arts offices. Yep. And and I remember this cuz I was like, you know, let me and I, and you know, maybe you've come to realize it, but lemme and I were, were a little bit more insecure about our knowledge about how to make a TV show cuz we hadn't done it before. Right. And and I remember I kept in the meeting, we would have conversations like, he would keep saying things like well I don't know cause we only make movies, you know, I don't know. Cause we gonna make movies. I kept saying that. And what I was trying to say was, I don't know anything about tv. Right. But then your partner Sievert, he, he threw that back in my face. . At one point he said something he said, but I don't know cause I only make tv, you know. Oh my God. That's the funniest fucking thing. I thought it was so fucking funny. Michael Jamin:Oh, thank God he didn't tank the meeting.Kevin Heffernan:No, no. I mean, I, I thought it was hysterical because that's exactly how it sounded. Uhhuh . But but we all knew what we were really saying to each other. You know what I mean? Right, right. But good cause you know, he, he made a joke of it and I thought that was very funny. I I always remember that. I alwaysMichael Jamin:Think about that. Oh, that's so funny. Cause he, he'd be embarrassed. I think if you, if you mentioned that we had a meeting once, I don't wanna say what it was, but it was not a, it was on a Disney show and you know, and he didn't want the job, but it was a job. And and he tanked. Siver tanked. He didn't mean to, he just kept on putting his foot what wasn'tKevin Heffernan:Intentional tanking.Michael Jamin:Right. He was not intentional tanking . And, and actually thank God he did. Because after that we got What did he do?Kevin Heffernan:Like what did you do to tank it? Like what was it, was he just saying bad shit?Michael Jamin:He was trying to, he was trying to be not, he was basically saying, how do you know if this is funny? Like, he's basically saying, none of this is funny to me. How do you know if it's funny?Kevin Heffernan:Okay.Michael Jamin:That's coming out. And it was just the funniest thing. And he was trying to cover up and, and I was trying to help him dig outta this hole. And it was just getting worse . And afterwards he felt terrible. He felt, cuz it's not what he was trying to do, he just felt terrible about it. But it worked out for the best.Kevin Heffernan:And you clearly did not get the job.Michael Jamin:We did not get the job. No one, only an idiot would hire after that job. But and I, I didn't make him feel bad. He felt terrible. But I was like, don't, don't worry about it. This is not the job for us.Kevin Heffernan:. . See, you don't want it. Like, if they don't get, you know, you don't wantMichael Jamin:Yeah, it was, it was a, it was very awkward. But we doKevin Heffernan:That in a lot in our careers though. Like, I feel like there was certainly, and certainly in that time period I talked about where we were just selling, you know, TV scripts. You re you think about like, I I just want to, I just need to make some money. I need to do this. I need you going to get this door and whatever. And then, I don't know, there, I think that point in time where we started doing standup and whatever, I was just like, ah, fuck, fuck it man. I can't, we had been hired so many times to write scripts for people and, and you know, it didn't go anywhere that they, you're like, what the fuck, who the fuck is this person giving me comedy notes? Mm-Hmm. . And finally you're like, Ugh, I don't wanna do that anymore. Yeah, yeah. I just wanna make a TV show.Michael Jamin:Yeah. And, and, and, and you get, you know, it's actually, I I think it's, it's more gra I don't know, I say this never having made a movie, but I don't know. It's like you get to shoot it, you write it and then you shoot it and then it's up in the air in a matter of months. And they get Yeah. You could do work in film, not you guys, but most people work in film and they never get a, you know, anything shot. They can have aKevin Heffernan:. Yeah. I mean that's the Yeah. But that, that's, that's also the weird thing about movies too. And, well, it's a little different when these movies now this, this streaming stuff is just a little bit different. It's, it is a little bit more in the TV world, but movies are kind of like gotta, I don't wanna sound like a, I'm shitting on it or whatever, but I, it's, I love it. But there is like this thing with this, this buildup and you've worked on this thing for years and then it gets to that first weekend and then that's it. Whether it's, you know, successful or not successful, you're done.Michael Jamin:It's all about opening weekend.Kevin Heffernan:Yeah. It's over. Like, you know, like, there's not like a, and I'm not saying that in a bad way, I'm just saying it's like, it's like, it's like kinda stepping off a cliff, you know what I mean? And then you're done. Like tv, the beauty of like Tacoma 13 weeks in a row, you got in something new story that's coming out.Michael Jamin:Right. And it can buildKevin Heffernan:And it can build and it's a new thing. ButMichael Jamin:Never whatKevin Heffernan:Understood that finite thing, you know?Michael Jamin:But I never understood that with a box office. If you tank on your opening weekend, like, well why can't it build, grow? Like why can't it grow in the second weekend? Why can't, the word of mouthKevin Heffernan:Why can, and it does at times, but it doesn't ma like the, the metric the bar is, is how you do in that first weekend. So like,Michael Jamin:That's what you're measured up. But why don't they consider the overall gross? I mean, I don't, you know.Kevin Heffernan:Yeah. I, it just, it doesn't know. I don't know. Cause it, it just, it's all pushed by that opening weekend. You know, like our, like our movie like Super Troopers. It did, you know, it did okay. It did nothing. Nobody who we were. But you know, it was at the height of the kind of DVD era, which is they were, you know, printing money in that era. This movie studios were. Yeah. And we would see, you know, quarterly reports for, you know, Fox or whatever and Super Troopers would be listed in them cuz it would be making so much money for them. Yeah. Not in theatrical, but on the DVD market. Right. And you're like, well, why aren't we though? You know, the guys that you sing about. And it's, it's cuz it's still the industry still driven by opening weekend.Michael Jamin:It's so Still is. Yeah. Because it became a cult hit. I mean, you guys are, you know, you really have a, a cult following. I mean, and then loyal, you know, they, they show up you're fans.Kevin Heffernan:Yeah. And so that, that was the great thing. So this trailer came out and in the first 24 hours at 8 million views.Michael Jamin:Is that right? Yeah. How did, how did that now where did they drop where? Okay. How does that work when they drop a trailer on the, we
Briuselyje tęsiasi Europos Vadovų taryba, kur aptariama karinės paramos Ukrainai didinimas, Rusijos atsakomybė už karo nusikaltimus. Vienas iš klausimų – ir galimas įšaldyto Rusijos turto panaudojimas Ukrainos atstatymui.Ką manote apie Lietuvoje planuojamą įvesti nekilnojamojo turto mokestį? Jai tokio mokesčio įvedimui bus pritarta, jis palies maždaug pusę Lietuvos gyventojų. Paskambinkite, pasidalinkite savo įžvalgomis.Kas vilnietį atviliojo į Alytų ir kodėl mažesniame mieste auginti verslą lengviau? „Pinigų kaina“ pradeda laidų ciklą supažindinantį su vis kitos apskrities verslo atstovais, jų požiūriu į verslą ir ieškos atsakymo, kur lengviau kurti verslą: didmiestyje ar regione? Šįkart Alytaus verslininkai: įmonės „Glassbee“ vadovas A.Urbonas ir „Stronglasas“ vadovas A. Jakštas.Praėjusiais metais Airiją ir Jungtinę Karalystę paliko dvigubai daugiau lietuvių, nei į jas išvyko. Kas tai lemia?Kinijos lyderio Si Dzinpingo trijų dienų vizitas Rusijoje rimtų rezultatų nedavė. Bet Vladimirui Putinui – tai itin reikalingas politinio palaikymo ženklas, o pačiam Si Dzinpingui – galimybė pristatyti Kiniją taikdarės vaidmenyje. Jau kiek anksčiau Pekinas pasisiūlė tarpininkauti Kijivo ir Maskvos taikos derybose. Vakarai skeptiškai žiūri į Pekino norą – pristatytame taikos plane nenumatyta, kad Rusija turėtų išvesti savo karius iš visos Ukrainos teritorijos.LRT radijo premjera: atlikėja Angelou pristato pavasarišką singlą „Saulė“ ir skelbia apie naują karjeros etapą su „Warner Music“.Ved. Rūta Kupetytė
Episodio de Radio por la Memoria basado en un dibujo de la casa soñada hecho por Susana Siver. Locución: María Eugenia Díaz. Realización integral: Yazmín Aboud, Julieta Fernández Gasulla, Carolina Mansilla y Micaela Mazziotti, estudiantes de la materia Práctica Integral Radio 2, Primer Año, comisión A, Turno Noche, profesor Diego Zambelli, carrera de Producción y Dirección para Radio y Medios Audiovisuales, ISEC, 2022.
Vi blir kjent med Siver, diskuterer animasjonsfilmer og går inn på de mindre kjente teatrene i Bergen! I studio: Heidi, Synne og Siver
On the new mid-week edition of the All Things Bama Podcast, Mason Smith and Hunter de Siver talk about former Alabama players in the Super Bowl. Then, the two discuss Alabama basketball ahead of its home game against the Florida Gators. Catch all the episodes here, on the BamaCentral Podcast Network.
In this episode of the Captain Paul Watson Foundation podcast, we will be speaking with Haans Siver. Utilizing her experience from being a former member of the Sea Shepherd crew, she brings a wealth of knowledge and enthusiasm to her new role as Australian Coordinator. Join us as we speak with Haans about the Captain Paul Watson Foundation down under!paulwatsonfoundation.orgSupport the showhttps://www.paulwatsonfoundation.org/https://shop.paulwatson.com/
Sydney Siver is a PhD Candidate in Industrial/Organizational psychology and works as people analytics consultant in an industry setting. Sydney joins the podcast to talk about how she knew she wanted to go into industry before she went to grad school, what her role as a people analyst is like, and how current grad students can prepare for a career in industry while still in grad school. If you're in the social sciences or do human-focused research generally and you want to find your place in the business world after grad school, you'll get a lot out of today's episode. Connect with Sydney on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ssiver/
Resources: Please list these at the top of the Libsyn Show Notes Follow Us on YouTube Everything Coworking Featured Resources: The SEO Action Guide Masterclass: 3 Behind-the-Scenes Secrets to Opening a Coworking Space The Everything Coworking Academy Community Manager University Creative Coworking Partnerships: How to negotiate and structure management agreements from the landlord and operator perspective Resources Mentioned in this Podcast: Chelsea Siver on LI Workspace Collective Ocala Workspace Collective on Instagram
Ekaterina Siver is the managing owner of Fifth Avenue, which exclusively represents top luxury interior brands in Russia: Liaigre, Promemoria, Arclinea, Bruno Moinard editions, Loro Piana Interiors, etc. The refined interior involves a meticulous job performed by the hardworking experts at the variety of stages. Ekaterina knows how to make your interior elegant, stylish and comfortable. FIND EKATERINA ON SOCIAL MEDIA Facebook | Instagram ================================ SUPPORT & CONNECT: Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/denofrich Twitter: https://twitter.com/denofrich Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/denofrich YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/denofrich Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/den_of_rich/ Hashtag: #denofrich © Copyright 2022 Den of Rich. All rights reserved.
Russia & China Publicly Declare "We Are Ready To Team Up"...We Discuss... Russian President Putin and Chinese leader Xi Jinping met in Uzbekistan where they reaffirmed their commitment to strengthening their relationship and putting their mark on the “global scale.” To buy Gold and Siver follow these instructions... Many people have asked me about a good gold and silver person. This is from my friend Andrew who happens to have one of the best Gold and Silver companies in the country. It's Beverly Hills Precious Metals. For our audience, you not only get a good deal, great product, and more…but you can actually text Andrew directly and he will take care of you himself. His instructions are: Please have them text me at 310-433-3524. They may also go to www.bh-pm.com and click on “first-time customer”. Then they can fill out the online form. When you fill out the form or speak to the people there, please let them know Pastor Todd Coconato sent you. This helps the ministry as well. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Help us fund the operation here: www.ToddCoconato.com/give Get up-to-the-minute news here: www.Remnant.News Download our new app at www.ToddCoconato.com/app Follow Pastor Todd here: www.toddcoconato.com/findme Go to our store for special deals for Remnant Warriors here: https://remnant.news/hanews/deals-for-remnant-warriors/
This Week wave sailing Maui ripper Levi Siver!
Lietuvos diena: Kijevas nutraukė diplomatinius santykius su Rusija.Kokios sankcijos pajėgios sustabdyti Rusijos pajėgas?Kiek toli ir kiek giliai į Ukrainą numatęs veržtis V. Putinas?Minskas neigia, kad Baltarusijos pajėgos dalyvauja įsiveržime į kaimyninę valstybę. Virš Ukrainos uždaryta oro erdvė.Ved. Darius Matas
Nedidelis molėtiškių Vilmos ir Alvydo Putnų pieno ūkis negali pasididžiuoti galinga brangia technika ir moderniomis technologijomis. Užtat visą laiką gyvena be skolų, o kuklesnės technikos ir būtinų įrenginių tokiame šeimos ūkyje pakanka.Danijoje, Norvegijoje ir Anglijoje darbavęsis ignalinietis jaunasis ūkininkas Viktoras Ežerskis suprato, kad svarbu ne tik sėkmingai auginti gyvulius, bet ir sugebėti juos realizuoti. Dažnai ūkininkai čia ir suklumpa: parduoda gyvulius už supirkėjo pasiūlytą nedidelę kainą. Kokį kelią rinkosi Viktoras Ežerskis?Įdomu žinoti. Kretingos žiemos sode žiemą skina kvapnesnius ir saldesnius negu atvežtiniai bananus. Pasakoja Kretingos muziejaus Gamtos skyriaus vedėja Jurgita Tertelienė.Ved. Regina Montvilienė
You are listening to the RRP Porch Talk Podcast Shade & Shenanigans Edition. Big Whit and Rocky Road kick it with the Southfield Mayor #KenSiver following his re-election discussing the highlights and what is to come. This is the last studio episode for Porch Talk. We will be taking a hiatus and will return bigger and better. Co-hosts: Whitney, Senaca, GP, and Black @mywhitneyb @jabari_mfn_darkoe34. @blackco81@that_is_gp Please feel free to donate, help us expand our podcast. Refer to ROCKYROADMEDIA.COM for donations, advertisement, and sponsorship. The RRP Porch Talk Podcast airs LIVE every Saturday on YouTube, Facebook @rrpporchtalk, and ROCKYROADMEDIA.COM https://www.youtube.com/c/PorchTalk WE WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU! Call us during our LIVE show at 248-854-9850 Sound off in the comments and give us your thoughts. Also, let us know what you would want us to address for future podcasts. #Rockyroadproductionsllc ROCKYROADMEDIA.COM To listen to previous podcast episodes https://anchor.fm/rrpporch-talk To watch the podcast https://www.youtube.com/c/PorchTalk Follow us on social media https://rockyroadmedia.com/rrpsocialnetwork/ Join our Facebook Group https://www.facebook.com/groups/rockyroadproductionsllc Support Rocky Road Productions LLC GOAL is $200,000 For more info and donate options click the following link https://rockyroadmedia.com/donate/ #RRPPorchTalkPodcast #RRPPorchTalk #RRPPTPodcast #RRPPT #ShadeandShenanigans #RRPPTShadeandShenanigans #DetroitPodcast #raw #uncensored #urbanpodcast --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/rrpporch-talk/support
Siūloma pasienio su Baltarusija savivaldybėse įvesti nepaprastąją padėtį, po šimtų migrantų bandymo jėgą įsiveržti į Lenkiją. “Manau, kad pasiūlymas savalaikis, geriau pasiruošti iš anksto”, - sako Varėnos rajono meras Algis Kašėta. Tačiau kol kas Vyriausybė šio klausimo nesvarstė.
In this first part of the episode, podcast hosts, Levi and Brandon, interview army Veteran, Trever Siver. Trever candidly discusses trauma, mental health, and substance use. Trever recounts his childhood, time in the army as a cook, and his battle with addiction and journey to sobriety.Trever was born and raised in Iowa. While in high school, Trever decided to join the army and served from 1999 to 2004, being stationed in Korea and Germany. Trever survived multiple traumatic injuries where he was introduced to opiates to manage the pain, eventually leading to a long-term battle with substance use. With the support of Dr. Miller at the VA, Trever worked to overcome addiction and continues to receive services from the VA. In the second part of the episode, hosts interview Levi's hometown friend and army Veteran, Henry Uken. Henry speaks openly about his experiences in the army, the traumatic brain injuries he sustained during deployment and the symptoms he still experiences today. He also details his recovery with substance use disorder and mental health treatment after being discharged. Henry Uken grew up in Perry, Iowa with Levi Sowers. Henry served in army until May 2013, where he was deployed multiple times in both Iraq and Afghanistan. While serving, he sustained multiple blast injuries, resulting in traumatic brain injuries. After his discharge, Henry struggled with the change from military life into civilian life. Henry began using methamphetamine, which he identifies as a coping mechanism. He found a passion for disk golf, and his pursuit of the sport encouraged him to begin recovery. Henry is now in recovery and sober for two years. More than 1 in 10 Veterans are diagnosed with substance use disorders. Veterans Affairs provides substance use treatments for Veterans battling substance use problems. VA offers medication options, counseling and therapy services, and treatment for related health conditions to substance use. Substance abuse and suicide are significantly connected. Veterans managing substance use disorders are more than twice as likely to die by suicide than other Veterans. Individuals who struggle with substance use disorder are more likely to be depressed, engage in high-risk behaviors, and struggle with social and financial problems. Click the link to learn more about the connection between substance abuse and suicide. The VA is dedicated to supporting Veterans. VA offers mental health services for Veterans managing PTSD, depression, anxiety, Military Sexual Trauma (MST), etc. Veterans can receive counseling, therapy, and or medication treatment either in person or via the telemental health program.
This week Ken welcomes singer, performer, all around personality and force of nature Peppermint to the show. Ken and Peppermint discuss remote controls, the single most 1992 image ever, how the 80s didn't end in 1990, pop culture delays, the rise of cable TV, MTV, breaking the Summer barrier, getting ready for OJ Simpson, Melrose Place, Beverly Hills 90210, Universal remotes, Real World Homecoming, how Kevin was right, Rodney King, same accent, different place, MTV's House of Style, Nickelodeon, the invention of 'tweens, SNICK, Roundhouse, New York TV, Star Trek TNG, Highway to Heaven, I Was a Middle Aged Werewolf, Quantum Leap, how slow older shows can be, The X-Files, horror movies, Marcia Cross, Traci Lords, Heather Locklear, Siver, rock and pop, hip hop, ska, compilation soundtracks, MTV Spring Break, Salt N Peppa, En Vogue, Eternal: The En Vogue of the UK's song Stay, strange mixes of genres, being inspired by the Spice Girls 2 Become 1 to move to Manhattan, allies, Pedro Zimora, how amazing Norm is, Chocolate Bunny Paintings, collecting art, KayBee Toys clearance bin, The Real World New York, the evolving discussions of race, NEEDING a Real World LA reunion, Tammy, WHERE IS DAVID??, going straight to YouTube, desperately needing Becky back in the house, how cool Mohammad is, and renting the Real World houses on Air BnB. Be sure not to miss Peppermint's new single Here for It which has a PERFECT vibe for a 1992 discussion https://youtu.be/xcUvJ-STKM8
En fredning vender spillet på hovedet for to deltagere, der ellers havde lagt store planer for at smide en tredje ud. Taktikken tager til i spillet og deltagerne må virkelig være på dupperne,
Aptariame naują Adam Curtis referatą apie pasaulį - Can't Get You Out Of My Head, pražiūrėjome visas aštuonias valandas ir nepatingėjome panagrinėti. Dar paminime Vasario 16 ir Rimantės hero's journey atgal į Lietuvą. Jeigu nors kiek patinka mūsų podcastas kviečiame paremti mus patreone, aciu!! : patreon.com/telefonoshow instagram.com/telefonoshow
Aired Jan 18, 2015: Kid Nate & Zane Simon of http://BloodyElbow.com give the immediate post-fight reaction, review & analysis on UFC Fight Night Boston featuring Conor McGregor vs. Dennis Siver.
In der heutigen Podcastfolge begrüßen wir Dennis Siver, den ersten Deutschen UFC-Fighter jemals. 10 Jahre lang konnte sich der Vollprofi in der UFC beweisen und zählte zu den Besten seiner Gewichtsklasse. In seiner Karriere konnte Dennis Siver 80% seiner Kämpfe für sich entscheiden und stand sogar schon dem zweifachen Weltmeister Conor McGregor im Oktagon gegenüber. Viele denken negativ über Mixed Martial Arts und wissen gar nicht, worauf es in diesem Sport wirklich ankommt. Fakt ist jedoch, dass die Community dieser Sportart rapide wächst und gerade drauf und dran ist, den allbekannten Boxsport vom Podest der beliebtesten Kampfsportarten zu verdrängen. Heute klärt Siver dich auf! Zum einen, was die UFC und die damit verbundene Kampfsportart eigentlich ist, wie er es geschafft hat, bis in die Königsklasse vorzudringen und wie ein Leben als UFC Fighter verläuft. Zum anderen gibt er ein paar echt wertvolle Tipps zu den Themen: Disziplin steigern, Wettkampfvorbereitung, Ernährung, Schlaf - all das sofort für dich und auf dein Leben anwendbar. Du musst also nicht zwingend auf einen Vertrag in der UFC hinarbeiten, aber wenn du in die Königsklasse deines Faches willst, sei dir der heutige Podcast wärmstens empfohlen. Aber vorweg, der Kampf am Ende des Tages oder der Paycheck am Ende des Monats, ist auf diesem Weg immer nur die Spitze des Eisbergs. Viel Spaß beim Hören dieser Podcastfolge! Karl Ess, vom Unternehmer für Unternehmer Vereinbare hier dein kostenfreies Erstgespräch mit Karl Ess und seinem Team aus Experten: https://live.essundpartner.com/termin-podcast
Pirmojo turo rezultatus komentuoja rinkimų kartelę įveikusių partijų vadovai Gabrielius Landsbergis, Ingrida Šimonytė, Ramūnas Karbauskis, Viktoras Uspaskichas, Gintautas Paluckas, Aušrinė Armonaitė ir Viktorija Čmilytė-NielsenLaisvės partija paneigia sociologų prognozes ir įsiveržia į Seimą. Studijoje Laisvės partijos lyderė Aušrinė Armonaitė.Į Seimą nepatenka Lenkų rinkimų akcija. Šis ir kiti pirmojo rinkimų turo netikėtumai„Baltijos tyrimų“ vadovės Rasos Ališauskienės ir VDU docento Andžejaus Pukšto akimis.Kokie pirmojo turo rezultatai vienmandatėse apylinkėse ir ko galima tikėtis po dviejų savaičių? Gabrieliaus Grubinsko pasakojimas.Ar tai, kad pavardė tokia pati kaip labai žinomos asmenybės, padeda patekti į Seimą, domisi Edita Vitė.Ved. Deividas Jursevičius
Focusing on the the tell tale signs of when man is given a time out nature hill so we can change the environmental ordeal witness tge signs of the times!
Gavin and I rank each Pixar movie using the Gold silver Bronze ranking system. Prepare to take a trip down memory lane as well as hear our top pics!!0:00-13:35 Bronze 13:36-29:30 Silver29:31-50:00 Gold Excluding Top 350:00- End •••Top 3
Labas! Aš Aurelija ir tu klausaisi BreakingFit podkasto, kuriame su įvairiais žmonėmis, atletais, treneriais ir kitų sričių specialistais kalbame sporto, mitybos, atsistatymo, sveikatos, psichologijos ir šiaip gyvenimiškomis temomis. O mūsų naujajame epizode svečiuojasi Gintas Petrikas. Gintas tapo žinomas visiems, prijaučiantiems CrossFit, nuo pat pirmųjų savo varžybų. Tada rodos iš niekur išdygęs sportiško sudėjimo vyrukas pateko į finalą tarp pačių stipriausių Lietuvoje ir nusinešė 6-ąją vietą. Dabar, po 2,5 metų Gintas gali didžiuotis ne viena prizine vieta Lietuvoje ir svetur. Jo prakaitas dar nespėjo nudžiūti nuo 1-osios vietos medalio, kurį pelnytai laimėjo Baltarusijoj, Minske rengiamose varžybose “Minsk throwndown 2019”. Visi, bent kiek žinantys Gintą, gali patvirtinti, kad jis turi ne tik daug jėgos, bet ir spinduliuoja ramybe. Sporte retai pavyksta jį pamatyti susierzinusį ar tuo labiau piktą, net jeigu nesiseka varžybose. Tad iš kur ta galia ir pasitikėjimas savimi ateina, kuo gyvena vienas stipriausių CrossFit atletų Lietuvoje ir kokie jo planai šiandien išgirsite šiame epizode. Tad nieko nelaukdama, kviečiu paklausyti!
Trečiadienį atsistatydinus Rusijos vyriausybei, šalis jau turi naują premjerą. Tuo metu apžvalgininkai svarsto, ką galėtų reikšti toks žingsnis bei Rusijos prezidento Vladimiro Putino skelbiamos konstitucijos pataisos. Didžioji dalis neabejoja, kad tai tik figūrų perstumdymas, ruošiantis 2021 m. Dumos ir 2024 m. prezidento rinkimams.Filipinuose valdžia evakuoja šimtus tūkstančių žmonių, o gyventojams belieka laukti, kada išsiverš netoli sostinės Manilos esantis Taalio ugnikalnis. Pelenus jis jau spjaudė savaitės pradžioje, nuo kurių nukentėjo tūkstančiai žmonių. Pokalbis su šiuo metu Filipinuose esančiu lietuviu. Greitu metu popiežius Pranciškus turėtų priimti sprendimą, ar leisti Amazonijos regione kunigais šventinti susituokusius diakonus. Tuo metu popiežius emeritas Benediktas 16-tasis naujoje knygoje apie celibatą pasisako griežtai prieštaraudamas kunigų santuokoms. Visgi - ar keičiasi bažnyčios požiūris į celibatą?
195 Gran Sur, Mauricio Terracina, Siver Rose, Cafe Tacvba by Vive Latino
Your Boy Q gives you the News and the Notes of the day, also shares his interview he did with Christopher Gabriel @CGProgram on twitter from 940 ESPN in Fresno, then your calls Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Your Boy Q gives you the News and the Notes of the day, also shares his interview he did with Christopher Gabriel @CGProgram on twitter from 940 ESPN in Fresno, then your calls Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Diva Tech Talk interviewed Liz Siver, former Microsoft executive for the U.S. Central Region, now General Manager for NeoPollard Interactive, a breakthrough company, leading transformation of state lottery systems online. Liz credited her “network: the people I knew and encountered” for introducing her to technology. She attended the University of Dayton, graduating with a degree in English. “I kept it simple. It was hard to identify all opportunities, so I took a generic path.” Liz worked her way through college. Among other assignments, she worked for Girl Scouts of Western Ohio; government of Montgomery County in Ohio; Berry Yellow Pages; and the university in a fund-raising role. Post-graduation, Liz entered fund development, at Hospice of Michigan, largest state provider of care to those facing end-of-life challenges. “Whether it was grant-writing, special event planning or working with donors, it was an array of interesting experiences.” After 5 years, “my network came to me,” alerting her to an opportunity as an event manager for the launch of The Somerset Collection in Southeast Michigan. She worked for Forbes Properties managing that massive development and hired The Disney Company to implement the mall launch. Through more networking Liz moved to her next challenge, as a marketing manager at Deloitte, a global professional services organization, providing audit, tax, consulting, enterprise risk and financial advisory services to companies, worldwide. “I spent the majority of my time on the audit side of the house, driving business development,” she said. After 3 years at Deloitte, “my network came to me again,” Liz said. A PR firm worked with both Deloitte and Microsoft and connected Liz to one of the largest technology companies, of the 21st century. Two decades ago, “Microsoft had 23,000 employees, and now the company has 170,000 employees,” marveled Liz. “I went from learning technology to embracing and selling what the potential of technology could be. Fun times!” Liz’s Microsoft tenure spanned 18 years, and 11 different roles. “The theme was learning, developing; and always be networking, keeping your eye out on the next potential opportunity to learn and grow.” She spent a lot of time on the road and jumped at any chance to lead teams or projects with diverse teams, as many as 100 people. She also spearheaded the development of the Central Region’s Microsoft Women’s Leadership organization. Liz “had the privilege” of spending time with (then-CEO) Steve Ballmer, “who always had a passion” for Detroit, and Southeast Michigan. “He was a visionary. That vision became really broad.” Liz loved and learned from tenure at Microsoft. But, when she considered transitioning, “we had sold all states on ‘the cloud’. At my age, and career point, I thought ‘I have more to give. ‘What I wanted to do was to learn something new. And if I had the privilege of trying to transform an industry, wouldn’t that be exciting?!” In a year of self-discovery, Liz said “the opportunity presented itself to run a joint venture.” She assumed the management of NeoPollard Interactive, with a parent company in Tel Aviv and Michigan-based HQ in Lansing. NeoPollard is 50% owned by Israel-based NeoGames and a Winnipeg, Canada company in the lottery industry for decades. “They have gaming legacy and deep relationships, globally, in the lottery industry.” The company, “born online” and currently employing 82, works with state lotteries to move into the cloud; and “then provides services to be successful.” In current mobile device-dominant environments, NeoPollard is trying to “help state lotteries build an additional opportunity for people to play the lottery” outside of traditional “cash and carry retail environments.” What inspires Liz is “the money from state lotteries goes to all the great causes” funded within each individual state. In addition to doing good, “the fun part is transformation” ---- the opportunity to marry technology passion with belief in what technology can do for humanity. While NeoPollard has dominant market share, they are only currently in four of 50 U.S. states. “I am excited about being on the front end of the industry.” Over her career, Liz has developed leadership philosophies. One is “be authentic. You can’t be anything better than yourself.” Also “my responsibility as a leader is figuring out how I make others great.” In defining personal strengths, Liz says that “defining a business opportunity and its challenges, and then understanding how to address those challenges with the right people, partnerships and solutions” is one of her personal attributes. She strives to “be present” at all times. Throughout her career, Liz feels fortunate that “networking with other women exposed me to interesting people, interesting thoughts; and I like to ‘lean in’ to help people get support.” For Liz, “it is not about work/life balance, it is about work/life blend.” The mother of twin daughters, Liz wants her daughters to be open-minded and “able to think through an opportunity, weigh the risk and reward of things, and realize the importance of just getting out there, and making an impact.” One of Liz’s favorite axioms is “attitude is altitude.” According to her, “how you show up every day, in your personal life, or your professional life is incredibly important to the people you touch.” For Liz, the best approach to every situation is “a super-positive attitude and open-mindedness.” This is particularly important in driving innovation because “many people are not where you are.” She also is clear that it is “important to say: I don’t know everything.” She fears the day that she would ever become risk averse. “I would say to my ‘younger self’, take more risks! Open doors can present closed doors which then present other open doors. You need to have some grit.” Knowing all this, Liz places emphasis on “the ability to recruit other people” to “the cause” who have appropriate skills, appetite for innovation, drive and agility. Liz also places strong value on empathy, in colleagues and her children, and spends time supporting the development of that in both. “We’re too harsh, today, in passing judgement. At the end of the day, we’re all just people, and should be supporting each other.” Liz was raised in a tradition of “giving back.” She is Vice President of her teenage girls’ high school sports organization; sits on different committees in her church parish; and is co-chairing South Oakland Shelter’s efforts to house the homeless, through her church. “Your words and your actions mean everything,” said Liz. “Always give back.” Make sure to check us out on online at www.divatechtalk.com, on Twitter @divatechtalks, and on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/divatechtalk. And please listen to us on SoundCloud, Stitcher, or your favorite podcasting channel and provide an online review.
Елена Кленингер / Elena Kleninger
Felicity chats with Sea Shepherd crew member, Haans Siver about her inspirational dedication to protecting the world's oceans.
A Phil Svitek Podcast - A Series From Your 360 Creative Coach
Imagine two men biking, one at a rapid pace and the other at a leisurely pace. How long do you think it takes them to bike 25 miles? The answer might surprise you, as it surprised me (Phil Svitek), because the answer is there's not much of a difference. The biker that sped would only pull ahead by a minute or two. That may sound like an abstract math problem but it's actually not. It's a story that entrepreneur Derek Sivers shared on the Tim Ferriss podcast. When I heard this story, I had an epiphany, incidentally much like Tim. For years I'd approached all my work from a knock it out quick standpoint. I'd rush as fast as I could. At times that left me tired and the work somewhat to be desired. Because I was tired, I was slower with my next tasks, and then even more slower with the one after that. Sad to admit, I got angry at times too. At myself, sometimes at others. In terms of the work, I luckily have an insane amount of stamina and determination to accomplish projects. But year after year, it took a toll on me. Upon being told Siver's story, I realized I was the biker who sped through the 25 miles. All to “just get it done.” More importantly, I realized there was a better way to knock out action steps without exhausting myself. That's the lesson I share with you today and it can be summarized in four simple words - no hurry, no pause. Discover what that truly means and how it can change your life. Comment below with any questions or comments you have. Full Transcript: https://philsvitek.com/no-hurry-no-pause/ Apple Podcast: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/a-phil-svitek-podcast/id1211417581?mt=2 AfterBuzz Contact Page: http://www.afterbuzztv.com/contact-faq/#toggle-id-18 Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLd-Q6qZNFcQ9MJLXMMpSCJcjPAq-5lepX SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/phil-svitek Facebook: http://facebook.com/philippsvitek Google Podcast: https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy82ZGIwYWEwL3BvZGNhc3QvcnNz Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0Ac7WjgaGaIAmc4nEZJFIY Stitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/anchor-podcasts/a-phil-svitek-podcast Anchor: https://anchor.fm/phil-svitek Phil's Instagram: http://instagram.com/philsvitek Juliet's Instagram: http://instagram.com/bonjourjuliet Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/philsvitek
Flyin' Brian J is joined by the live viewers on MMA mania's Facebook page to break down every fight scheduled to go down at UFC Fight Night 112. Additional topics include Cyborg vs Anderson and MayGregor. Chiesa vs Lee (2:25) Boetsch vs Hendricks (10:31) Herrig vs Kish (14:45) Christensen vs Reyes (18:03) Means vs Garcia (21:28) Penn vs Siver (23:42) Guida vs Koch (26:43) Esparza vs Moroz (30:43) Powell vs Horcher (32:31) Vettori vs Miranda (37:16) Gordon vs Quiñones (39:43) Stansbury vs Kimball (41:03) Martin vs Case (45:05) Flyin' Brian J on Facebook : http://www.facebook.com/flyinbrianshow MMA mania on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MMAmania MMA mania on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/MMAmania MMA mania on the Web: https://www.MMAmania.com
Today's show raises our awareness to a whole new level. Not only do we highlight the amazing gifts animals have to share with us, we also take the discussion beyond our planet and tune into how expansive and amazing this Universe really is! I have had the absolute pleasure to share this show with our wonderful guest of honor, psychic to the stars and celebrated psychic teacher and author, AMELIA KINKADE!! LOVE WINS! Amelia Kinkade is the happiest horse whisperer alive! She is the coach of the world's most glorious Olympic level show horses and just proved that LOVE, GENTLENESS, COMPASSION, PRAYER, RESPECT, DANCE, MUSIC and HUMOR can make horses FLY! Her most celebrated horse-clients (and friends) just won the GOLD and SIVER medals in the grande prixs of the Longines Global Championships in Rome, Vienna and Doha, Quatar! You can find more about her and all the wonderful things she is doing for the world at her website: https://www.languageofmiraclesinstitute.com/ Today's QUOTE: "When we express the wisdom of the animals, we hear the beauty of our hearts." SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT!! Amelia Kinkade has AMAZING BOOKS for purchase on Amazon! Her books are translated in a variety of languages. Amelia and I would love to have it translated in Portuguese. If you have any insights as to how we can do this, please send me an e-mail: isabella@isabellaaallard.com THANK YOU SO MUCH!!! * Come join our Facebook Group, Awaken to Brilliance * Be part of an uplifting global community of people, who are here to support you to shine your brilliance. You will also receive daily guidance to inspire you to live your best day! Facebook Group Awaken to Brilliance Isabella Allard To receive your FREE gift, ‘Your Guide to Brilliance’ simply go to: http://www.isabellaallard.com/ Subscribe to get notified for the next show. Please share and rate the show on i-tunes :) Help spread our message globally. Your contribution matters. What you do influences the success of the show. Thank you so much! Enjoy the show! Wishing you a fantastic day! Love, Isabella
Congratulations to Angel Deanda #GKO9 Middleweight champion .. Bellator announces huge pay per view event ... UFC releases fighter and Bellator picks them up.. Local Michael Mcdonald is one of the fighters picked up by Bellator .. BJ to fight Siver on the same card as Hendricks vs Boetch ... California's Athletic Commision 10 point plan to combat weight cut problems... Conor gets fine reduced and Nate will see a refund of a percentage of fine paid... MyMMANews.com with George Sullivan ... A-Rod is given rights to all UFC gyms in Miami Dade county in Florida .. #WSOF35 ... #UFN106 .. #Invicta22 ...
I go over the current events in MMA including: Mcgregor vs Mayweather, Conor's NSAC fine, UFC 210, Lewis vs Hunt, Penn vs Siver, Bellator's PPV, and much more. youtube.com/fightfangaming for gameplay!
The annual mega-sode is here, as we put a bow on the 2016 season, giving out our Vikings awards and demerits! We then dive a bit into free agency and the draft. Finally, we'll wrap things up with fan interaction and pass out our 2016 Gold, Siver, and Bronze star of the year to our loyal listeners for their great interaction all year! Also on Stitcher and Double Twist! facebook.com/purplemafiashow @purplemafiashow paladinolive@yahoo.com Call into our Phone Lines at:209-736-7877
Friday Morning Podcast with Southfield Mayor Ken Siver
Dr. Christie Siver, an Assistant Professor of Political Science from The College of Saint Benedict St. John's University joins us to talk about the Women's Debate Institute and drones!
A threat on the ground and on the feet, Dennis Siver is looking to get back on track when he faces Tatsuya Kawajiri in the co-main event of Fight Night Berlin.
The UFC returns to Sweden this Saturday for UFC On Fox: Gustafsson vs. Johnson. We begin by previewing all of the fights on the card, including the main event Light Heavyweight title eliminator between Alexander Gustafsson and Anthony "Rumble" Johnson. Then we recap last weekend's record breaking UFC Fight Night: McGregor vs. Siver event, and last weekend's Bellator and World Series of Fighting cards. Finally, we discuss a huge week in MMA news including BJ Penn's arrest, Dave Herman's arrest, Mirko Cro Cop re-signing with the UFC, Kimbo Slice signing with Bellator, Thiago Silva signing with WSOF, the retirement of Cung Le, Wanderlie Silva's lawsuit, and more. Hosted by Steve Jeffery, Dave Abraham, and Greg Persson. Listen to us Wednesday nights at 6:30pm on CFMU 93.3 FM, and online at http://www.thehammermma.com, Last Word On Sports, The Itunes Store, Stitcher, MMAPodcast.com, find @SteveJeffery on Twitter, or just email us.
Mark O'Toole on Conor McGregor's win over Siver, Shane Byrne talks Munster and Leinster, Graham Geraghty analyses Dublin v Meath and Keith Andrews on Arsenal's Etihad win
AfterBuzz TV’s UFC hosts Jay Tan, Daria Berenato and George Hermoza discuss UFC’s Fox Sports 1 fight in Boston where McGregor takes on Siver. Follow us on http://www.Twitter.com/AfterBuzzTV “Like” Us on http://www.Facebook.com/AfterBuzzTV For more of your post-game wrap up shows … Read the rest The post UFC on FOX | McGregor vs. Siver | AfterBuzz TV AfterShow appeared first on AfterBuzz TV Network.
We take a look at UFC featherweight Dennis Siver's technique the tools that he has in order to take the win home from Fight Night Boston.
UFC Fight Night: McGregor vs. Siver is coming up this Sunday night, and We're back live in studio to break down all of the fights including the Conor McGregor vs. Dennis Siver main event, and the Donald Cerrone vs. Ben Henderson co-main event. We also discuss all of the week's MMA news including more on the Jon Jones cocaine story, a ton of interesting fights booked for the UFC Welterweight division, title implications for the Anderson Silva vs. Nick Diaz fight, this weekend's Bellator and World Series of Fighting events, and more. Hosted by Steve Jeffery, Dave Abraham, and Greg Persson. Listen to us Wednesday nights at 6:30pm on CFMU 93.3 FM, and online at http://www.thehammermma.com, Last Word On Sports, The Itunes Store, Stitcher, MMAPodcast.com, find @SteveJeffery on Twitter, or just email us.
Kicking in Zubaz: A non-douchebag kickboxing, MMA and boxing podcast
Camaro Kev starts off 2015 with major boxing news, GLORY kickboxing news and previews UFC Fight Night: McGregor vs. Siver.
Adam is joined again by Ben Sinfield and Marcus Dredge to preview UFC Fight Night 59 in Boston. We talk Siver's chances, McGregor's hype, Cerrone's badassery, the UFC allowing Lloyd Irvin fighters to compete, Jon Jones "rehab", undeserved title shots/pointless trilogies, Adam's bladder, a "where are they now" segment on a former UFC prospect and Ben and Marcus end the show on some inspiring words.
The Notorious" Conor McGregor is on a mission to take over. See what sets this Irishman apart. Watch McGregor vs Siver on FOX Sports 1, LIVE from Boston, January 18 at 10pm ET.
The Notorious" Conor McGregor is on a mission to take over. See what sets this Irishman apart. Watch McGregor vs Siver on FOX Sports 1, LIVE from Boston, January 18 at 10pm ET.
I episode 85: Nettavisens Martin Busk, de overraskende utviklingene i weltervektdivisjonen og UFC Fight Night Boston I ukens MMA-revyen har vi med oss Nettavisens MMA-journalist Martin Busk, og snakker med han om Jones’ kokainskandale, legalisering av proffboksing og fenomenet Conor McGregor. I lytterspørsmålssegmentet tar vi naturligvis opp Jon Jones-saken, og utviklingene her. Vi snakker også om stakkars Rory MacDonald, som ikke kan sies å være annet enn på riktig sted til feil tid. Vi får et noe kåseribasert innlegg angående svenske utøveres potensielle år i 2015, og toucher innom både hypetoget til Uriah Hall og lønningen til Nate Diaz. UFC Fight Night Boston står for døren, og vi navigerer deg gjennom hva du har lyst til å se, og hvorfor. Kan Conor McGregor vinne overbevisende, eller er MMA-gudene så onde at de gir seieren til Siver, og tuller til hele UFCs plan for 2015?
Octogon n°138 - News et focus sur l’UFC Fight Night 59 « McGregor vs Siver » Pensées émues aux victimes de Charlie Hebdo et des évènements tragiques des jours suivants Retrouvez-nous sur Facebook, Twitter, Itunes et sur www.podcast-octogon.fr Merci de votre écoute Prochain épisode le 18/01 ;-)
Talking about all things UFC and MMA just a few hours after watching UFC 182. The much hyped main event between Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier, Cowboy Cerrone's massive wind up kicks, and was this an underwhelming card to start the year? Also looking forward to McGregor v Siver and UFC 183, plus we talk the debt of Kron Gracie and retirement of Tim Sylvia. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
UFC Minute host Lisa Foiles updates fans on Holly Holm's replacement for UFC 181 and reveals how you can get your tickets for Fight Night Boston: McGregor vs. Siver!
On January 18, the UFC comes to Boston as rising superstar Conor McGregor faces UFC veteran Dennis Siver. Tickets on sale this Thursday at Ticketmaster: http://bit.ly/13WIA7v
Tonight on Alchemist Radio, I’ll discuss UFC 179 and the Jose Aldo-Chad Mendes fight and preview Titan FC 31 which takes place on Friday night at the USF Sundome in Tampa, FL. The card will be headlined by a five round lightweight title bout between Mike Ricci and Yoshiyuki Yoshida.My first guest is coming off his first professional loss, but has nothing to hang his head about. Featherweight Charles Rosa battled UFC veteran for three rounds at UFC Fight Night 53 in Sweden. It was not only his UFC debut, but he took the fight on a week’s notice. Rosa and Siver put on an exciting three round fight that netted each man an additional $50k for winning the Fight of the Night award.Welterweight Tyler Stinson is a veteran of Bellator, Strikeforce and the WSOF. He has a record of 27-10 and will look to win his 28th fight when he faces Jose Figueroa on the main card of Titan FC 31. Stinson certainly knows how to finish his fights as he has won 19 by KO/TKO and six via submission. They will lead off the televised portion of the card which will air on the CBS Sports Network beginning at 10pm EST. Figueroa is a former M-1 lightweight champion and presents a tough test for Stinson.Tune in live at 7pm EST/4pm PST
Tonight on Alchemist Radio, I’ll discuss UFC 179 and the Jose Aldo-Chad Mendes fight and preview Titan FC 31 which takes place on Friday night at the USF Sundome in Tampa, FL. The card will be headlined by a five round lightweight title bout between Mike Ricci and Yoshiyuki Yoshida.My first guest is coming off his first professional loss, but has nothing to hang his head about. Featherweight Charles Rosa battled UFC veteran for three rounds at UFC Fight Night 53 in Sweden. It was not only his UFC debut, but he took the fight on a week’s notice. Rosa and Siver put on an exciting three round fight that netted each man an additional $50k for winning the Fight of the Night award.Welterweight Tyler Stinson is a veteran of Bellator, Strikeforce and the WSOF. He has a record of 27-10 and will look to win his 28th fight when he faces Jose Figueroa on the main card of Titan FC 31. Stinson certainly knows how to finish his fights as he has won 19 by KO/TKO and six via submission. They will lead off the televised portion of the card which will air on the CBS Sports Network beginning at 10pm EST. Figueroa is a former M-1 lightweight champion and presents a tough test for Stinson.Tune in live at 7pm EST/4pm PST
Am Wochenende findet mit der Rückkehr der UFC nach Schweden der nächste Event des Marktführers in Europa statt. Auf der Card der UFC Fight Night 53 in Stockholm steht auch Dennis Siver, der deutsche Vorzeigekämpfer im MMA Sport. Wir hatten die Möglichkeit wenige Tage vor dem Event mit dem 35-jährigen zu sprechen. Nach einer Niederlage gegen Cub Swanson und einem nicht gewerteten Sieg über Manny Gamburyan, versucht Siver sich in den Rankings wieder in die Top 10 der Featherweight Division zu kämpfen. Die aktuelle Nummer 11 der Gewichtsklasse trifft beim Event auf den ungeschlagenen Amerikaner Charles Rosa, nachdem die schwedische Commission seinen eigentlichen Ersatzgegner Taylor Lapilus abgezogen hat. Ursprünglich sollte Siver gegen Robert Whiteford antreten. In unserem Interview erfahrt ihr, wie sich Siver zu diesen Änderungen für seinen Kampf am Samstag, der Entwicklung des Sports in Deutschland und vielen weiteren Themen geäußert hat…
Am Wochenende findet mit der Rückkehr der UFC nach Schweden der nächste Event des Marktführers in Europa statt. Auf der Card der UFC Fight Night 53 in Stockholm steht auch Dennis Siver, der deutsche Vorzeigekämpfer im MMA Sport. Wir hatten die Möglichkeit wenige Tage vor dem Event mit dem 35-jährigen zu sprechen. Nach einer Niederlage gegen Cub Swanson und einem nicht gewerteten Sieg über Manny Gamburyan, versucht Siver sich in den Rankings wieder in die Top 10 der Featherweight Division zu kämpfen. Die aktuelle Nummer 11 der Gewichtsklasse trifft beim Event auf den ungeschlagenen Amerikaner Charles Rosa, nachdem die schwedische Commission seinen eigentlichen Ersatzgegner Taylor Lapilus abgezogen hat. Ursprünglich sollte Siver gegen Robert Whiteford antreten. In unserem Interview erfahrt ihr, wie sich Siver zu diesen Änderungen für seinen Kampf am Samstag, der Entwicklung des Sports in Deutschland und vielen weiteren Themen geäußert hat…
Am Wochenende findet mit der Rückkehr der UFC nach Schweden der nächste Event des Marktführers in Europa statt. Auf der Card der UFC Fight Night 53 in Stockholm steht auch Dennis Siver, der deutsche Vorzeigekämpfer im MMA Sport. Wir hatten die Möglichkeit wenige Tage vor dem Event mit dem 35-jährigen zu sprechen. Nach einer Niederlage gegen Cub Swanson und einem nicht gewerteten Sieg über Manny Gamburyan, versucht Siver sich in den Rankings wieder in die Top 10 der Featherweight Division zu kämpfen. Die aktuelle Nummer 11 der Gewichtsklasse trifft beim Event auf den ungeschlagenen Amerikaner Charles Rosa, nachdem die schwedische Commission seinen eigentlichen Ersatzgegner Taylor Lapilus abgezogen hat. Ursprünglich sollte Siver gegen Robert Whiteford antreten. In unserem Interview erfahrt ihr, wie sich Siver zu diesen Änderungen für seinen Kampf am Samstag, der Entwicklung des Sports in Deutschland und vielen weiteren Themen geäußert hat…
Brandy speaks to Amalie Vandelier, an Account Supervisor with Ketchum in New York, about the PRSA Silver Anvil Awards called Flight of the Penguins which involved FedEx and the Audubon Society which involved returning penguins to a New Orleans aquarium .
Fakultät für Biologie - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU - Teil 02/06
Wed, 6 Dec 2006 12:00:00 +0100 https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/6180/ https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/6180/1/Schroeder_Andreas.pdf Schröder, Andreas
The guys are watching some of UFC Fight Night Oklahoma City live, and day dreaming about the other parts. Listen in as they cover: UFC Fight Night OKC, Chiesa vs. Lee, Boetsch vs. Hendricks, Herrig vs. Kish, Tim Means, BJ Penn, Siver, Guida, Bellator MMA, Chael Sonnen, Vandy, Mitrione vs. Fedor, Larkin, Pico, and Nicky Ryan vs. Paolo Miyao. We had fun.
First, Kevin and Raf jazz about UFC Fight Night McCregor vs. Siver, and make some "Bold Predictions." Then they talk to Army National Guard BJJ maniac Adam Lamp (Zenith Jiujitsu). Fresh off his recent competition at the Fort Bragg Military Combatives Tournament, Adam tells the guys what his experience was like, and how he trained his dog to help him with guard retention. Finally, the guys come back from watching UFC Fight Night, and check in on how their bold predictions turned out. Listen in.