Podcasts about springers

  • 70PODCASTS
  • 98EPISODES
  • 43mAVG DURATION
  • 1MONTHLY NEW EPISODE
  • Jul 4, 2025LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about springers

Latest podcast episodes about springers

Sportsnet Today 960
Jays Latest w/ Adnan Virk + Textline Takeover!

Sportsnet Today 960

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2025 46:21


To kick off hour two of Sportsnet Today, Logan Gordon and Shan Virjee are joined by Sportsnet's Adnan Virk to catchup! The guys start things off with discussing Joey Chestnuts 17th win at Nathans National Hot Dog Eating Contest early Friday morning. Next, the guys shift to the Toronto Blue Jays and discuss their recent winning ways, taking first place in the AL East, Springers brilliance, and much more!(29:47) Later on, It's time for Textline Takeover! Whether it's the best Stampede food, pet names, or 960 dunk tank candidates, Shan & Logan give their thoughts on the listeners most burning questions! Any contests mentioned within episode have now closed.The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the hosts and guests and do not necessarily reflect the position of Rogers Media Inc. or any affiliate. Catch every episode of Sportsnet Today live on Sportsnet 960 from 1-3pm MST! Hour 1 Music: Island Life - Atomic Drum AssemblyHour 2 Music: Egozi - Jell O Logan: @Fan960Logan on X Produced by Cameron Hughes and Shan Virjee.

Ireland on the Fly
Conor Arnold on the Blackwater's May run and where have all the springers gone?

Ireland on the Fly

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2025 37:02


With the salmon run beginning in earnest this month, the Blackwater's Conor Arnold joins us this week to tell us about the unique May salmon that arrives in the river, and whether the spring run's decline could actually herald an increase in the back-end? Plus, Tom has a mayfly update from Corrib, and we'll be bringing you more mayfly updates from across the country over the next few weeks so stay tuned for those. Keep up to date with all the latest Ireland on the Fly on https://www.IrelandontheFly.com and get regular updates on https://Instagram.com/IrelandontheFly.

Outdoor Line
Hour 2: Get out to the Amazing Queen Charlotte Islands!

Outdoor Line

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2025 41:33


Brian Clive VP of FishQCL.com on the amazing and productive Queen Charlotte Islands! // Northwest Outdoor Report Brought to you by 3riversmarine.com! // Duckworth Wheelhouse Kevin John of HolidaySports.com Springers, SJ lings and halibut, trout and kokanee! // Poulsbo RV’s Really? Where? Get a trailer for your salmon camp!

sj springers queen charlotte islands
Driven Golf Podcast
43 - Hayden Springer on Purpose, Perseverance and the PGA Tour

Driven Golf Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2025 91:03


Jim sits down with PGA Tour professional Hayden Springer to discuss his journey through professional golf and the profound impact of his daughter Sage's life on him, his family and others familiar with her life's story. The conversation explores Hayden's development from junior golf in Texas to competing on the PGA Tour and the personal resilience that has shaped his career.Hayden reflects on the lessons learned between his first and second years on tour, including the importance of experience, course management, and short game mastery. He shares stories from his standout moments, including shooting a rare 59 at TPC Deere Run and a recent strong finish at Torrey Pines, and the role that confidence and process have played in his progression.The heart of the episode centers around Sage Springer, Hayden and his wife Emma's daughter born with Trisomy 18. Despite devastating medical predictions, Sage lived for over three years, inspiring countless people with her joy and strength. Hayden opens up about the life lessons, deepened faith, and strengthened family bonds that Sage brought into their lives.The Springers' journey also led them to create the Extra To Love Foundation, which supports families navigating Trisomy 18 and Trisomy 13 diagnoses. Hayden shares how Sage's spirit continues to drive his purpose on and off the course.In Angle of Attack with Andrew Lewis, Andrew & Jim discuss the importance of staying rooted to a "home base", as demonstrated by recent successes from Justin Thomas and Scottie Scheffler.The Driven Golf Podcast is brought to you by FlagBag Golf Company and StrackaLine yardage books. Use code ‘DRIVEN' to receive 20% off your StrackaLine yardage book order or mention ‘Driven Golf' when ordering a FlagBag golf bag to receive a free custom headcover with your order.⁠@flagbaggolf⁠ on InstagramFlagBag Golf: ⁠https://flagbaggolfco.com/⁠StrackaLine: ⁠https://www.strackaline.com⁠Resources:Join the ⁠Driven Golf Podcast Group⁠ on Facebook for more discussions. Subscribe to the Driven Golf Analytics YouTube channel: ⁠Driven Golf Analytics YouTube Channel⁠. And please check out the all-new DRVN.Golf website for all of our content.Check out ⁠Andrew Lewis's YouTube channel⁠ for more content.Guest: Hayden Springer (@haydenspringer14; @extratolove)Host: Jim Colton (@drivengolfanalytics) & Andrew Lewis (@andrewlewisgolf)Producer: Joseph Kay (@joseph_kay)Music: "Extra to Love (Sage's Song)" by DG Beat Labs (@dgbeatlab)

NachDenkSeiten – Die kritische Website
Musk und Weidel – Viel Lärm um nichts

NachDenkSeiten – Die kritische Website

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2025 12:29


Wenn man in den letzten Wochen die Medienberichterstattung zum laufenden Wahlkampf konsumiert hat, könnte man glatt auf die Idee kommen, es gäbe nichts Wichtigeres, als die „Einmischung“ des US-Milliardärs Elon Musk. Der hat sich auf seiner Plattform X, in einem Gastartikel in Springers WELT und gestern Abend mit einem live übertragenen Gespräch mit Alice WeidelWeiterlesen

The John Batchelor Show
WATCHING SEVEN MONTH-OLD CHARLIE LEARN FROM FIVE YEAR-OLD SAILOR: 1/4 A Dog's World: Imagining the Lives of Dogs in a World without Humans, by Jessica Pierce and Marc Bekoff

The John Batchelor Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2024 7:34


WATCHING SEVEN MONTH-OLD CHARLIE LEARN FROM FIVE YEAR-OLD SAILOR:    1/4  A Dog's World: Imagining the Lives of Dogs in a World without Humans, by Jessica Pierce and Marc Bekoff  https://www.amazon.com/Dogs-World-Imagining-without-Humans/dp/0691196184 What would happen to dogs if humans simply disappeared? Would dogs be able to survive on their own without us? A Dog's World imagines a posthuman future for dogs, revealing how dogs would survive―and possibly even thrive―and explaining how this new and revolutionary perspective can guide how we interact with dogs now. 1658 SPRINGERS

The John Batchelor Show
WATCHING SEVEN MONTH-OLD CHARLIE LEARN FROM FIVE YEAR-OLD SAILOR: 2/4 A Dog's World: Imagining the Lives of Dogs in a World without Humans, by Jessica Pierce and Marc Bekoff

The John Batchelor Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2024 8:21


WATCHING SEVEN MONTH-OLD CHARLIE LEARN FROM FIVE YEAR-OLD SAILOR:    2/4  A Dog's World: Imagining the Lives of Dogs in a World without Humans, by Jessica Pierce and Marc Bekoff  https://www.amazon.com/Dogs-World-Imagining-without-Humans/dp/0691196184 What would happen to dogs if humans simply disappeared? Would dogs be able to survive on their own without us? A Dog's World imagines a posthuman future for dogs, revealing how dogs would survive―and possibly even thrive―and explaining how this new and revolutionary perspective can guide how we interact with dogs now. 1828 SPRINGERS

The John Batchelor Show
WATCHING SEVEN MONTH-OLD CHARLIE LEARN FROM FIVE YEAR-OLD SAILOR: 4/4 A Dog's World: Imagining the Lives of Dogs in a World without Humans, by Jessica Pierce and Marc Bekoff

The John Batchelor Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2024 7:34


WATCHING SEVEN MONTH-OLD CHARLIE LEARN FROM FIVE YEAR-OLD SAILOR:    4/4  A Dog's World: Imagining the Lives of Dogs in a World without Humans, by Jessica Pierce and Marc Bekoff  https://www.amazon.com/Dogs-World-Imagining-without-Humans/dp/0691196184 What would happen to dogs if humans simply disappeared? Would dogs be able to survive on their own without us? A Dog's World imagines a posthuman future for dogs, revealing how dogs would survive―and possibly even thrive―and explaining how this new and revolutionary perspective can guide how we interact with dogs now. 1900 SPRINGERS

The Exit Planning Coach
Dan Springers Blueprint for Seamless Owner Exits Reduced

The Exit Planning Coach

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2024 32:49


Podcast Summary:Mastering Business Transitions: Insider Secrets from a Wealth Planning ExpertDan Springer's Blueprint for Seamless Owner ExitsIn this insightful episode of the Exit Planning Coach podcast, host John F. Dini interviews Dan Springer, Director of the Wealth Planning team at MacLean Financial Group. Dan shares insights on his firm's comprehensive approach to exit planning for business owners, detailing their proprietary "Master Planning Program" - a flexible one-year process covering personal financial planning, contingency planning, business analysis, and strategic visioning. He emphasizes the importance of meeting clients where they are, determining their unique "call to action," and building strategic partnerships to provide holistic services. Dan also introduces the TEAMS acronym (Transition planning, Execute, Adopt, Measure, Success) and discusses strategies for cultivating referrals. He discusses strategies for cultivating referrals. Throughout the discussion, Dan underscores the critical need for a structured, client-centered approach to exit planning,  and streses the value of integrating tools like ExitMap into their practice.

The Hunting Dog Podcast
Bad Habit Kennels with Amelia Baxter/ Springers and Cockers

The Hunting Dog Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2024 73:34


Amelia operates Bad Habit Kennels. It may sound like she works with rescue dogs, but it is quite the opposite. She trains and campaigns Field trial Springers and Cockers. In a relatively short time, Amelia has put her mark on the Flushing dog trials. 

Monday Moms
Christian Bolar is a rising Highland Springs star for both the Springers and the Singers

Monday Moms

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2024 1:01


We have all seen athletes who secretly wish to be musicians or singers, and musicians who would love to be athletes. What we rarely see is a dynamic blending of the two talents. But the folks at Highland Springs High School see it every day in Christian Bolar. Bolar won all 20 games in which he started at quarterback for the Springers' junior varsity team. When he got to the varsity team, he switched positions to receiver to continue contributing as much as he could. "People come up to me and they're like, ‘Man, you're always at football. You're always...Article LinkSupport the show

Lads Anonymous
#36 - Bed Springers, these things will spring you out of bed in the morning...

Lads Anonymous

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2024 66:04


PAPYRUS charity: https://www.justgiving.com/page/poppywalk (please donate here) Drill music, Joshua v Dubois, more tales from the A, and of course, Bed Springers… Dilemma: Sexting never hurt anyone Something Only You Know: Royal Marine HARD core. Please send us your suggestions for an episode's main subject! Our next topic... The Titan! Do you have a connection, story or have an idea what actually happened to the Titan? Any conspiracy stories? Have you done anything mad like that, super adventurous and scary? Send us your stories or something you want to share on the topic - email: ladsanonpod@gmail.com If you have any Dilemmas that you want advice on, step into the circle of trust: mailto:Ladsanonpod@gmail.com Is there 'Something Only You Know' - we want to know your story, let's hear them: mailto:Ladsanonpod@gmail.com (all submissions will remain anonymous - no face, no case). Follow Lads Anonymous: Instagram: https://bit.ly/47DEwic TikTok: https://bit.ly/3S0w8DB Twitter: https://bit.ly/4b232fI Facebook: https://bit.ly/3uNYN7n Threads: https://bit.ly/43vQNoD If you enjoyed this episode, please follow us on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, and leave a review or rating. Love Ricky and Flav x Lads Anonymous intro track and jingles by Alexander Canwell (Engineer Al): https://spoti.fi/3w5fnQB Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

GraveYard Tales
284: Cincinnati Music Hall

GraveYard Tales

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2024 77:57


This week we look into the Cincinnati Music Hall! As we've learned, music venues, theaters, etc. are always super haunted with some interesting stories…. This place is no different!  Sponsors CBDistillery – CBDistillery.com (Code: GRAVE) Green Chef – greenchef.com/graveclass (Code: graveclass) MeUndies – MeUndies.com/graveyard  Check out our sources below for more info and to continue learning! Please Rate & Review us wherever you get your Podcasts!  Mail us something:  GYT Podcast PO Box 542762 Grand Prairie, TX 75054 Leave us a Voicemail or shoot us a text! 430-558-1304 Our Website WWW.GraveYardPodcast.com Patreon https://www.patreon.com/GraveYardTales Youtube: Youtube.com/c/GraveYardTales Rumble – GraveYard Tales Podcast Do you want GraveYard Merch?!?! Go to https://www.teepublic.com/stores/graveyard-tales?ref_id=22286 to get you some!  Visit Podbelly.comto find more shows like us and to get information you might need if you're starting your own podcast. Thank You Darron for our Logo!! You can get in touch with Darron for artwork by searching Darron DuBose on Facebook or Emailing him at art_injector@yahoo.com Thank you to Brandon Adams for our music tracks!! If you want to hear more from Brandon check him out at: Soundcloud.com/brandonadamsj Youtube.com/brandonadams93 Or to get in touch with him for compositions email him at Brandon_adams@earthlink.net Our Contacts WWW.GraveYardPodcast.com Email us at: GraveYardTalesPodcast@gmail.com Find us on social media: Twitter: @GrveYrdPodcast Facebook: @GraveYardTalesPodcast Instagram: @GraveYardTalesPodcast Sources https://friendsofmusichall.org/cincinnati-music-hall-history/ https://www.cincinnatiarts.org/music-hall https://friendsofmusichall.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Transcript-of-Springers-latter-Some-views-about-a-Musical-Hall-building.pdf https://friendsofmusichall.org/cincinnati-music-hall-history/features-of-music-hall/is-music-hall-haunted/ https://npiweb.com/Blog/Posts/haunted-places-series-cincinnati-music-hall

Scalf Life
Episode 362: N5- From Springers to High-Tech: An Airsoft Veteran's Tale

Scalf Life

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2024 142:55 Transcription Available


Send us a textEver wondered how the world of airsoft has evolved from its humble beginnings to the high-tech sport it is today? Join us as we sit down with N5, an airsoft veteran who started playing back in 2003, when Springers and plastic BBs were all the rage. Listen to his amusing story of an airsoft game played inside a smoke-filled townhouse and the vast differences between the rudimentary gear of the past and today's sophisticated equipment. You'll also hear personal updates from our host, including his recent neck surgery and the challenges of managing pain without heavy medication.Our discussion shifts to the personal side of injury and recovery, with N5 sharing his own ordeal with a troublesome foot injury. From the initial misdiagnosis to the painful rehab journey, N5 opens up about the physical and emotional toll of long-term injury recovery. But it's not all gloom – hear about the unwavering support from the airsoft community, including uplifting stories of camaraderie and encouragement. Influential figures like Spaz and YouTuber Mayday-san make appearances as we emphasize the importance of a welcoming and supportive community in making airsoft a rewarding experience.Lastly, we explore the origins of N5's name, influenced by the Mandalorian series and his father's ham radio call sign, offering a glimpse into his military upbringing and the impact it had on his personal development and parenting style. From memorable encounters with seasoned airsoft players to in-depth discussions on gear customization, video editing, and the transition to different social platforms, this episode is packed with engaging stories and insights. And don't miss out on our intriguing talk about remote-controlled helicopters and the potential for future collaborations in the airsoft community. This episode is a treasure trove for any airsoft enthusiast!https://twitter.com/n5warrior_Support the showThank you everyone for the support. Don't forget to leave a rating on whatever podcast app you listen to this on. It helps get this suggested to others with similar interests. Podcast SponsorsSKIRMESHhttps://www.instagram.com/skirmesh_airsoft/https://play.skirmesh.net/public/homeJACKAL TACTICALhttps://www.instagram.com/jackal_tactical_airsoft/https://www.otherworldmilsim.com/https://www.jacktac.com/ Watch all of our podcasts hereYouTubehttps://www.youtube.com/@TriFectaAirsoft/videos Spotifyhttps://open.spotify.com/show/6kHBeKRqtOSe0K1BrkoRs1?si=f8bca440f29b4fe3 Rumblehttps://rumble.com/c/TriFectaAirsoftMerchhttps://my-store-e7676e.creator-spring.comSub to YouTube Channelhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqMpG3H_J70S_H8TlI9Onog?sub_confirmation=1...

Addicted Fishing Podcast
Tibutary Springers

Addicted Fishing Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2024 18:35


The boys talk Tributary Springer fishing.    ▶ Follow Us On Instagram: http://bit.ly/addictedfishingIG ▶ Help Us GROW!

Vintage Classic Radio
Saturday Matinee - The Aldrich Family (Grab Bag at Springers Hardware), The Great Gildersleeve (Auto Mechanics) & Jack Benny Show (Listening to the World Series on Radio)

Vintage Classic Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2024 88:48


This Saturday on Vintage Classic Radio's "Saturday Matinee," we begin with "The Aldrich Family" in the episode titled “Grab Bag at Springer's Hardware,” originally broadcast on November 18, 1948. In this humorous escapade, young Henry Aldrich finds himself entangled in a mix-up during a promotional event at Springer's Hardware Store, leading to a series of comic misunderstandings. The episode features Ezra Stone as the mischievous Henry Aldrich, supported by Jackie Kelk as his best friend Homer Brown, House Jameson as his father Sam Aldrich, and Katharine Raht as his mother Alice Aldrich. Following that, we will enjoy "The Great Gildersleeve" with the episode “Auto Mechanics,” which first aired on February 8, 1942. The episode takes a comedic turn when Gildersleeve decides to save money by learning auto mechanics, leading to unexpected chaos and car troubles. This delightful mix-up stars Harold Peary as the bumbling Throckmorton P. Gildersleeve, along with Walter Tetley as his nephew Leroy and Lurene Tuttle as Marjorie. We'll conclude with "The Jack Benny Show" and the episode "Listening to the World Series on Radio," which was first heard on October 10, 1948. In this episode, Jack Benny struggles hilariously to listen to the World Series amidst constant interruptions. The episode is a comedic highlight with Jack Benny himself, Mary Livingstone, Eddie 'Rochester' Anderson, Phil Harris, and Dennis Day bringing laughter and light-hearted moments to the audience. These episodes promise to bring laughter and a touch of nostalgia to our listeners, encapsulating the charm and wit of classic radio entertainment.

Go Flush Yourself
Episode 2: Springers, Breeders, and Upcoming Season

Go Flush Yourself

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2024 34:41


Matt and Jared talk about why they currently have springer spaniels, finding a breeder, theories on bird dog breeder websites, and plans for the upcoming hunting season. Go Flush Yourself is an upland hunting podcast focusing on hunting with flushing dogs. On top of hunting, training, and living with flushers, we also discuss shotguns, upland hunting in general, and gear. If you want to hear more about labradors, cockers, goldens, springers, and the rest of the flushing breeds check us out! We are also an ad-free podcast and are supported purely by our listeners. If you want to help support us, please consider becoming a Patreon member.   Hosted by Jared Kirk and Matt Millbauer   Browse and purchase Go Flush Yourself merch.   Check us out on Instagram, Facebook, and X/Twitter or email us.

projectupland.com On The Go
English Springer Spaniel: Breed Characteristics, Abilities, and History

projectupland.com On The Go

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2024 13:06


My first-ever interaction with an English Springer Spaniel was when my wife, Emily, brought one home. When considering which dog breed our first hunting dog should be, we ultimately landed on the one with which Emily was most familiar. She grew up with Springers, and consequently, that is where we landed. At that time, we weren't aware of the differences between bench and field bred dogs. Perhaps unsurprisingly, as our involvement in bird hunting deepened, so did our knowledge of the breed. Our first dog, Dixie, was most likely a bench bred dog. Bench bred dogs are those who are bred with the goal of placing in the show ring. I say most likely because she came from an inconspicuous farm litter but was physically more similar to a bench dog (we'll get into that in a bit).  As Dixie got older, we got on a list for a field bred Springer Spaniel. These dogs are bred with the rigors of field trials and hunt tests in mind; hence the term field bred. Our first field bred dog, Timber, died from a gastrointestinal fungal infection before her second birthday. At that point, we got Fern. Then, roughly a year later, Wild, who has the same mother as Timber, joined our family. 

Outdoor Line
Hour 2: Ryan Lampers of the StHealthy Hunter on Salmon, Halibut, and Bear Hunts 

Outdoor Line

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2024 38:55


Tom and Joey are joined by the StHealthy Hunter Ryan Lampers to get you ready for local Salmon and Halibut fishing and to hear the story of his latest bear hunt, and they check in on Cowlitz River Steelhead and Springers with Todd Daniels of Tall Tails Guide Service. 

The Back of the Bird
The Back of the Bird Episode 116 - Thomas Whitty

The Back of the Bird

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2024 50:37


On today's episode of the Back of the Bird, the boys sit down with Thomas Whitty of the Rochester Knighthawks. We discuss his time in Junior, his return from injury, and his current job at his family winery. Other topics include: - Donny Newsletters - Donny is back broadcasting - Cross Canada Walk As always, this episode is brought to you by Cottage Springs. Check out the new "Springers" and enjoy the box lacrosse action all summer long.

KFBK Outdoor Show
KFBK Outdoor Show March 9 Hr 3

KFBK Outdoor Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2024 38:09


The last hour of the show is full of fish-- 9 lb. rainbow at Camanche caught on crappie jig; Big crappie suspending off shore at Camanche; New Melones rainbows; Pyramid Lake cutthroat trout; Washington State steelhead; More Camanche trout; Upper Sacramento (Redding) rainbows; Shasta Lake bass; Folsom Lake salmon and trout. Bob talks about the Springers (salmon) due late March in Columbia River.

Ducks Unlimited Podcast
Ep. 557 – Uncovering Flushing Dogs with National Champion English Cocker Trainer Jordan Horak

Ducks Unlimited Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 29, 2024 55:37


On this episode of the Ducks Unlimited podcast, host John Gordon interviews English Cocker Spaniel specialist Jordan Horak. He shares insights into the these dynamic little dogs capabilities, highlighting their skills both as upland bird flushers and waterfowl retrievers. Learn more about the unique traits and hunting abilities of English Cockers, and flushing dogs in general for those more familiar with the retriever breeds.www.ducks.org/DUPodcast

Buds N Blue Jays
YARIEL RODRIGUEZ YOU ARE A BLUE JAY

Buds N Blue Jays

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2024 63:25


The Blue Jays have FINALLY made a big impact move to their team adding cuban RHP Yariel Rodriguez to the team. In this episode we break down what it means for the team should we use him as a starter or reliver? Just how good can this guy be? How many games will he start for us this season? Plus! we break down minor adds such as Alan Zheng Carter and Brian Serven from the Cubs as well as take a look at the international prospects the Blue Jays signed. Then give some thoughts on some potential milestones the Blue jays could reach this season, from Chris Bassitt strikeouts to Springers stolen bases and even a spicy take about John Schnider. Be sure to like the video and subscribe to the channel!

RNLI 200 Voices
141. Doggy Paddle: Reverend William Docherty

RNLI 200 Voices

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2024 12:46


When Shaddah the dog chased a ball into the sea, he was quickly swept out. His owner relives the anxious wait for a dog with no off-switch Shaddah is a cross between a Labrador and a Springer Spaniel. And as anyone who knows Springers knows, they love the water. One March day at Seaton Sluice in Northumberland, Shaddah's enthusiastic nature got him into trouble. Determined to retrieve an elusive ball, the black dog was the same colour as the water he was swept out by. And his owner, Reverend William Docherty, had lost sight of him. Reverend Docherty talks about the moments he was forced to consider the prospect of having to go home without his beloved pet. 200 Voices is produced by Adventurous Audio for the RNLI    Interview by Adventurous Audio Soundtrack composed and performed by Jon Nicholls    The RNLI is a charity celebrating 200 years of saving lives at sea - find out more at RNLI.org/200     

Drive with Joel & Fletch
The Best Springers, Hugh Jackman, Minns vs Moore, Eddie Jones, England get flogged in the cricket - 27/10/23

Drive with Joel & Fletch

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2023 40:01


A rare Friday with Fletch on the Run Home and he let's us know about his night with Ronald McDonald house. He also got into their best spring rolls in Sydney and a radio quiz with a difference. The boys also talk Pickleball, Olympics and England getting flogged at the World Cup Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Drive with Joel & Fletch
Best Springers with Fletch and Missile featuring Claire Wheeler, The Professor James Rochford and Dean Watling - 27/10/23

Drive with Joel & Fletch

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2023 126:21


Friday's Run Home and it's a rare Friday appearance for Fletch who is back from his charity work. We chat to Matilda Clare Wheeler of the back of their big win in Perth. The Professor James Rochford is back from France also to talk Rugby World Cup and SEN Track Analyst Dean Watling has all the weekend racing tips. Key moments: Fletch at Ronald McDonald House yesterday (2:25) Missile's Supermarket Conundrum (8:35) Fletch found the best Spring Roll (13:35) Irish Radio Quiz Show (15:15) Reviewing the England team getting flogged in the World Cup (24:55) Bazball collapse vs Eddie Jones Wallabies failure (28:00) Olympic Canadian Fraudsters (36:20) Helmet To Helmet (39:45) NRL News Update as PVL is in the USA (41:48) What have you stolen and who have you had dinner with? (49:45) Missile at the GQ photoshoot (57:15) Sun Yang is back in the pool (01:00:15) Sports Update as the Matildas win and goals in the Europa League (01:01:20) Fletch picks his Roosters back line (01:11:03) Heading to the Rim with Fletch (01:17:29) Matildas Star Clare Wheeler (01:19:11) SEN Track Analyst Dean Watling previews Randwick, The Valley and the Cox Plate (01:28:21) The Professor James Rochford is back from France (1:39:56) *time codes approximate Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Autocrat- A Roman History Podcast
3- A Typhon Approaches

Autocrat- A Roman History Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2023 25:03


After the downfall of her children, Gaia has a trick up her sleeve- Typhon, her monstrous child with Tartarus. Get ready for a story of lullabies, single combat and far too much impromptu surgery, plus confusion between the podcasters about which son of Zeus is actually which! Sources for this episode: Celoria, F. (1992), The Metamorphoses of Antoninus Liberalis: A translation with a commentary. London and New York: Routledge- Taylor and Francis Group. Cooke. T. (1728), The Works of Hesiod, Translated from the Greek (Volume II). London: Printed by N. Blandford. Doglioni, C., Innocenti, F. and Mariotti, G. (2001), Why Mt Etna? Terra Nova 13(1): 25-31. The Editors, Encyclopedia Britannica (2023), Echidna (online) [Accessed 14/10/2023]. Evelyn-White, H. G. (1943), Hesiod: The Homeric Hymns and Homerica. London: William Heinemann Ltd. Frazer, J. G. (1921), Apollodorus: The Library (Volume I). London: William Heinemann. Guerber, H. A. (1929), The Myths of Greece & Rome: Their Stories Signification and Origin. London: George G. Harrap & Company Ltd. Kazhdan, A. P., Tablot, A.-M., Cutler, A., Gregory, T. E. and Ševčenko, N. P. (1991), The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium: Volume 1-2-3. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Riley, H. T. (1889), The Metamorphoses (Ovid), Literally Translated Into English Prose, With Copious Notes and Explanations. London: George Bell & Sons. Rouse, W. H. D. (1940), Nonnos Dionysiaca. London : William Heinemann Ltd. Wheelwright, C. A. (1844), Pindar. New York: Harper & Brothers. Author unknown, The British Museum (date unknown), Ancient Egyptian gods and goddesses (online) [Accessed 14/10/2023]. Author unknown, Wikipedia (date unknown), Ceto (online) [Accessed 10/10/2023]. Author unknown, Wikipedia (date unknown), Haemus Mons (online) [Accessed 10/10/2023]. Author unknown, Wikipedia (date unknown), Phorcys (online) [Accessed 10/10/2023]. NOTE: As we touched upon in the episode, echidnas are spiny monotremes living in Australia which split from the platypus approximately sometime between 17 and 88.9 million years ago. Augee, M., Gooden, B. and Musser, A. (2006), Echidna: Extraordinary egg-laying mammal. Collingwood, Australia: CSIRO Publishing. Rowe, T., Rich, T. H., Vickers-Rich, P., Springers, M. and Woodbourne, M. O. (2008), The oldest platypus and its bearing on divergence timing of the platypus and echidna clades. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 105(4): 1238-1242.

Upland Nation
Pro trainer: why a pen is your best training tool, and use a femur bone to teach retrieving

Upland Nation

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2023 79:17


Pro spaniel trainer Todd Agnew of Craney Hill Kennels answers questions about cockers and Springers, Labs, and puppy training. We do a deep dive into how dogs think and why we ought to think about that, a foundation for retrieving training, and how to break commands into manageable pieces and why. In addition to a few hunting tips, he'll outline the most important aspects of a habitat for finding birds. Todd outlines how to build a relationship with your dog - and why it is the critical first factor in training, and how a cow's femur bone is critical to retrieving training. "Road Trip" helps get your s*#t together in the truck, and listeners chime in on their favorite post-hunt libations. Please visit our sponsors: Sage & Braker Mercantile, Pointer shotguns,, @midwayusa, #midwayusa, Midway USA, Mid Valley Clays and Shooting School, TrulockChokes, HiViz shooting systems, Purina Pro Plan Sport and FindBirdHuntingSpots.com.

The Lab
The Inspiring World of Gun Dogs: A Journey Through Field Trials and Dog Training with Mark Hairfield

The Lab

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2023 63:25 Transcription Available


Episode #001 When I first ventured into the world of dog training and hunting, I was fortunate to meet an incredible mentor, Mark Hairfield. Together, we reminisce about our humble beginnings, Mark's 42-year career in field trials with dogs, and our shared love for gun dogs and the great outdoors. Join us as Mark imparts his wisdom on what it takes to make a dog a field champion in the AKC and his ultimate goal of qualifying dogs for national events.We also explore the role of luck in field trials and the appeal of training level-headed British Labs and Springers. Mark shares his journey with his Springer Spaniel, Badger, whose legacy set the bar high for future generations of hunting dogs. With over 250 Open All Age points and 60 Field Champions produced from his frozen semen, Badger's incredible intelligence and skill have left an indelible mark on the dog training world.As we celebrate the camaraderie among fellow enthusiasts and the inspiring world of gun dogs, listen in for Mark's insights on balancing competition with client support and the importance of fostering a strong sense of community. We hope you enjoy this episode and walk away with a greater appreciation for the dedication, passion, and expertise it takes to excel in the dog training and hunting world. Visit https://www.cornerstonegundogacademy.com to learn how to train your retriever.

The Tokyo Black Podcast
The Tokyo Black News and Review ep 238 pt 1 - Springers Final Thought

The Tokyo Black Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2023 61:33


In this part we talk Russian war strategy, new drug resistant bacteria, Alec Baldwin set to wrap up Rust, NYC is sinking, tipping culture gettin crazy, Mexican flour festival, Jerry Springer leaves all his assets to a surprising person, KFC eleven herbs and spices allegedly leak, Bud Light keeps takin L's, couple who smelled like weed denied entrance to upscale restaurant, and much more! Check us out Facebook here: https://www.facebook.com/TokyoBlackHour/   Check out the Youtube Channel here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCX_C1Txvh93PHEsnA-qOp6g?view_as=subscriber Follow us on Twitter @TokyoBlackPod Get your apparel at https://tkbpandashop.com/  You can also catch us Apple Podcasts, Google Play, and Spotify Check out Every Saturday Morning here https://www.everysaturdaymorning.fun Check out The Basic Caucasian Podcast here https://www.youtube.com/user/dgriffin156

Fish Hunt Northwest
Fish Hunt Northwest Episode #62, Guest Bill Monroe Jr. Columbia River Springers and Oregon Ocean Opportunities out of NOF

Fish Hunt Northwest

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2023 33:30


On this Episode, Host Duane Inglin flies solo, as Tommy is off. Duane welcomes guest Bill Monroe Jr. owner at Bill Monroe Outdoors. The boys talk about how difficult the first part of the season on Columbia River Springers, has been. Then they get into a good discussion on some of the seasons that have been set, coming out of North of Falcon as it pertains to the Oregon Coast, the ocean opportunities and Buoy 10. Duane closes out the show with several mentions of events you may want to attend..... And for good reason-

Down and Back
Canine Mythbusting: Fact, Fiction, or Folklore?

Down and Back

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2023 25:21


In this episode, we dig deep into the depths of dog lore to separate fact from fiction. If humans understood all the wags of a dog's tail there might not be so many misconceptions about what they prefer to eat, whether or not they want that giant hug, or if they really play poker. But, the better we get to know our favorite dogs, the more myths we're able to bust. More importantly, the better humans understand their dog's needs, signals, and communication, the stronger the bond between us becomes.   Bonafide Bits Great Danes are actually German, not Danish. In 2023, Bobi, a Rafeiro do Alentejo in Portugal, was verified to be the world's oldest dog at 30 years old. You really can teach old dogs new tricks, as expertly demonstrated by 95 Border Collies at the Clever Dog Lab in Austria. Dogs can see color, but are more likely to see blue and yellow toys than popular red or orange toys. Plants in the Allium family, particulary onions, are toxic to all dog breeds but more toxic to Japanese breeds such as Akitas and Shiba Inus.   Featured Breeds: Bernese Mountain Dog Big, powerful, and built for hard work, the Bernese Mountain Dog is also strikingly beautiful and blessed with a sweet, affectionate nature. Berners are generally placid but are always up for a romp with the owner, whom they live to please. The Bernese Mountain Dog is a large, sturdy worker who can stand over 27 inches at the shoulder. The thick, silky, and moderately long coat is tricolored: jet black, clear white, and rust. The distinctive markings on the coat and face are breed hallmarks and, combined with the intelligent gleam in the dark eyes, add to the Berner's aura of majestic nobility. A hardy dog who thrives in cold weather, the Berner's brain and brawn helped him multitask on the farms and pastures of Switzerland. Berners get along with the entire family and are particularly gentle with children, but they will often become more attached to one lucky human. Berners are imposing but not threatening, and they maintain an aloof dignity with strangers. Discover more about Bernese Mountain Dogs at AKC's Bernese Mountain Dog Breed Biography.   Chihuahua The Chihuahua is a balanced, graceful dog of terrier-like demeanor, weighing no more than six pounds. The rounded “apple” head is a breed hallmark. The erect ears and full, luminous eyes are acutely expressive. Coats come in many colors and patterns and can be long or short. The varieties are identical except for the coat. Chihuahuas possess loyalty, charm, and a big-dog attitude. Even tiny dogs require training, and without it, this clever scamp will rule your household like a little Napoleon. Compact and confident, Chihuahuas are ideal city pets. They are too small for roughhousing with kids, and special care must be taken in cold weather, but Chihuahuas are adaptable as long as they get lots of quality time in their preferred lap. Discover more about Chihuahuas at AKC's Chihuahua Breed Biography.   Chinese Crested  With their spotted pink skin, spiky “crested” hairdo, furry socks, and feathery tail, you can't mistake the sweet and slender Chinese Crested for any other breed. This frolicsome, ultra-affectionate companion dog is truly a breed apart. The Chinese Crested, a lively and alert toy breed standing between 11 and 13 inches high, can be hairless or coated. The hairless variety has smooth, soft skin and tufts of hair on the head, tail, and ankles. The coated variety, called the “powderpuff,” is covered by a soft, silky coat. Besides the coat, there's very little difference between the powderpuff and his undressed brother. Both varieties are characterized by fine-boned elegance and graceful movement. Cresteds are as fun as they look: playful, loving, and devoted to their humans. The hairless has its advantages: there is no doggy odor, and for obvious reasons shedding isn't much of a problem. Both varieties are attentive housemates, totally in tune with their family. Discover more about Chinese Crested at AKC's Chinese Crested Breed Biography.   Irish Wolfhound The calm, dignified, and kindly Irish Wolfhound is the tallest of all AKC breeds. Once fearless big-game hunters capable of dispatching a wolf in single combat, Wolfhounds today are the most serene and agreeable of companions. Discover more about Irish Wolfhounds at AKC's Irish Wolfhound Breed Biography.   Great Dane The easygoing Great Dane, the mighty “Apollo of Dogs,” is a total joy to live with — but owning a dog of such imposing size, weight, and strength is a commitment not to be entered into lightly. This breed is indeed great, but not a Dane. Discover more about Great Danes at AKC's Great Dane Breed Biography.   Rafeiro do Alentejo The Rafeiro do Alentejo is an excellent farm and estate watchdog. He is also a very useful livestock protector, being more vigilant at night and very serious when guarding territory or any other property entrusted to him. He has a calm and confident expression. Since the beginning of the breed's history, Rafeiros Alentejanos were used in packs as hunting dogs for big game, though this function has gradually disappeared over time. More recently, the breed is a guard dog for property and livestock, watching sheep and cattle. They also often work alone in prairies and will defend the herd against any intruders. Hailing from Portugal, the Rafeiro do Alentejo is a large-sized dog, powerful, rustic, sober, and calm. He moves with a heavy, slow roll. His coat is short or medium-length and thick, straight, and dense. They can be black, wolf gray, or fawn, with or without brindling, always with white markings; or white with patches of these colors. Discover more about Rafeiro do Alentejo at AKC's Rafeiro do Alentejo Breed Biography.   Akita Akitas are burly, heavy-boned spitz-type dogs of imposing stature. Standing 24 to 28 inches at the shoulder, Akitas have a dense coat that comes in several colors, including white. The head is broad and massive and is balanced in the rear by a full, curled-over tail. The erect ears and dark, shining eyes contribute to an expression of alertness, a hallmark of the breed. Akitas are quiet, fastidious dogs. Wary of strangers and often intolerant of other animals, Akitas will gladly share their silly, affectionate side with family and friends. They thrive on human companionship. The large, independent-thinking Akita is hardwired for protecting those they love. They must be well-socialized from birth with people and other dogs. Discover more about Akitas at AKC's Akita Breed Biography.   Shiba Inu An ancient Japanese breed, the Shiba Inu is a little but well-muscled dog once employed as a hunter. Today, the spirited, good-natured Shiba is the most popular companion dog in Japan. The adaptable Shiba is at home in town or country. Brought to America from Japan as recently as 60 years ago, Shibas are growing in popularity in the West and are already the most popular breed in their homeland. Their white markings combined with their coloring (red, red sesame, or black and tan) and their alert expression and smooth stride make them almost foxlike. They're sturdy, muscular dogs with a bold, confident personality to match. Discover more about Shiba Inus at AKC's Shiba Inu Breed Biography.   German Shepherd Dog There are many reasons why German Shepherd Dogs stand in the front rank of canine royalty, but experts say their defining attribute is character: loyalty, courage, confidence, the ability to learn commands for many tasks, and the willingness to put their life on the line in defense of loved ones. German Shepherd Dogs will be gentle family pets and steadfast guardians, but, the breed standard says, there's a “certain aloofness that does not lend itself to immediate and indiscriminate friendships.” Discover more about German Shepherd Dogs at AKC's German Shepherd Dog Breed Biography.   Siberian Husky The graceful, medium-sized Siberian Husky's almond-shaped eyes can be either brown or blue and sometimes one of each, and convey a keen but amiable, and even mischievous expression. Quick and nimble-footed, Siberians are known for their powerful but seemingly effortless gait. Tipping the scales at no more than 60 pounds, they are noticeably smaller and lighter than their burly cousin, the Alaskan Malamute. As born pack dogs, they enjoy family life and get on well with other dogs. The Sibes' innate friendliness renders them indifferent watchdogs. These are energetic dogs who can't resist chasing small animals, so secure room to run is a must. An attractive feature of the breed: Sibes are naturally clean, with little doggy odor. Discover more about Siberian Huskies at AKC's Siberian Husky Breed Biography.   Golden Retriever The Golden Retriever, an exuberant Scottish gundog of great beauty, stands among America's most popular dog breeds. They are serious workers at hunting and fieldwork, as guides for the blind, and in search-and-rescue, enjoy obedience and other competitive events, and have an endearing love of life when not at work. Discover more about Golden Retrievers at AKC's Golden Retriever Breed Biography.   Labrador Retriever The sweet-faced, lovable Labrador Retriever is America's most popular dog breed. Labs are friendly, outgoing, and high-spirited companions who have more than enough affection to go around for a family looking for a medium-to-large dog. Labs are famously friendly. They are companionable housemates who bond with the whole family, and they socialize well with neighbor dogs and humans alike. But don't mistake his easy-going personality for low energy: The Lab is an enthusiastic athlete that requires lots of exercise like swimming and marathon games of fetch, to keep physically and mentally fit. Discover more about Labrador Retrievers at AKC's Labrador Retriever Breed Biography.   English Springer Spaniel The English Springer Spaniel is a sweet-faced, lovable bird dog of great energy, stamina, and brains. Sport hunters cherish the duality of working Springers: handsome, mannerly pets during the week, and trusty hunting buddies on weekends. Discover more about English Springer Spaniels at AKC's English Springer Spaniel Breed Biography.   Otterhound Big, boisterous, and affectionate, the Otterhound was bred in medieval England for the now-outlawed activity of otter hunting. This scarce breed is known for its dense shaggy coat, webbed feet, an acute sense of smell, and affinity for swimming. Discover more about Otterhounds at AKC's Otterhound Breed Biography.   Portuguese Water Dog The bright and biddable Portuguese Water Dog was bred to be an all-around fisherman's helper. The robust, medium-sized body is covered by a coat of tight, low-shedding curls. They are eager and athletic companions built for water work. Discover more about Portuguese Water Dogs at AKC's Portuguese Water Dog Breed Biography.   Chesapeake Bay Retriever The Chesapeake Bay Retriever, peerless duck dog of the Mid-Atlantic, is an American original who embodies the classic traits of a good retriever: loyal, upbeat, affectionate, and tireless. The Chessie is famous for his waterproof coat. Chessies are strong, powerfully built gundogs standing anywhere from 21 to 26 inches at the shoulder. A male can weigh up to 80 pounds. The distinctive breed trait is a wavy coat that is oily to the touch. Chessies are solid-colored, either chocolatey brown, sedge, or deadgrass, with keen yellow-amber eyes that nicely complement the coat. Chessies are more emotionally complex than the usual gundog. Chessies take to training, but they have a mind of their own and can tenaciously pursue their own path. They are protective of their humans and polite, but not overtly friendly to strangers. Chessies make excellent watchdogs and are versatile athletes. A well-socialized Chessie is a confident companion and world-class hunting buddy. Discover more about Chesapeake Bay Retrievers at AKC's Chesapeake Bay Retriever Breed Biography.   Nova Scotia Duck Tolling Retriever The smallest of the AKC's retrievers, the Nova Scotia Duck Tolling Retriever is intelligent, affectionate, and eager to please. Play fetch with a tireless Toller until your right arm falls off, and he will ask you to throw left-handed. The little gundog with the big name is the smallest AKC retriever, standing ideally 18 or 19 inches at the shoulder. The Toller's trademark is a coat of stunning crimson, ranging from golden red to a dark coppery color, with white markings. Strong and agile, Tollers are medium dogs: medium in size, bone, and coat length. The almond-shaped eyes project an alert expression. Tollers are upbeat athletes who require outlets for their boundless vigor: hunting, hiking, camping, and, of course, swimming (for which they are ideally suited, down to their webbed feet). Tollers are smart, handsome, affectionate companions, but these red tornadoes can be recommended only to those with enough time and energy to keep them usefully occupied. Discover more about Nova Scotia Duck Tolling Retriever at AKC's Nova Scotia Duck Tolling Retriever Breed Biography.   Dachshund The famously long, low silhouette, ever-alert expression, and bold, vivacious personality of the Dachshund have made him a superstar of the canine kingdom. Dachshunds come in two sizes and in three coat types of various colors and patterns. The word “icon” is terribly overworked, but the Dachshund, with his unmistakable long-backed body, little legs, and big personality, is truly an icon of purebred dogdom. Dachshunds can be standard-sized (usually 16 to 32 pounds) or miniature (11 pounds or under), and come in one of three coat types: smooth, wirehaired, or longhaired. Dachshunds aren't built for distance running, leaping, or strenuous swimming, but otherwise, these tireless hounds are game for anything. Smart and vigilant, with a big-dog bark, they make fine watchdogs. Bred to be an independent hunter of dangerous prey, they can be brave to the point of rashness, and a bit stubborn, but their endearing nature and unique look have won millions of hearts the world over. Discover more about Dachshunds at AKC's Dachshund Breed Biography.   Pembroke Welsh Corgi Among the most agreeable of all small house dogs, the Pembroke Welsh Corgi is a strong, athletic, and lively little herder who is affectionate and companionable without being needy. They are one of the world's most popular herding breeds. Discover more about Pembroke Welsh Corgis at AKC's Pembroke Welsh Corgi Breed Biography.   Basset Hound The Basset Hound stands no higher than 14 inches at the shoulder but, with his remarkably heavy bone, powerful little legs, and massive paws, he possesses big-dog strength and stamina. Bassets are famous for a large, domed head that features extremely long, velvety ears, mournful eyes, and a wrinkled brow, which give the breed the look of a sad clown. Built more for endurance than speed, the Basset moves in a deliberate but effortless manner. The breed's scenting ability is uncanny; it's said that among dogs only the Bloodhound's nose is more accurate. Mild and agreeable at home, the Basset is stubborn on the trail and barks in a loud, ringing voice. Although they may not be wildly demonstrative in their affections, they are steadfastly loyal. Discover more about Basset Hounds at AKC's Basset Hound Breed Biography.   For more information about a specific breed visit the breed's parent club or AKC.org.   Shareables Dogs are not color blind, they just see colors differently from humans. Blue and yellow toys stand out more than other colors. Used as scent atomizers, the sweat glands on a dog's skin are not used for evaporation or cooling. A dog's wagging tail is an effective communication tool, as long as you don't come in at the tail end of the conversation.

Outdoor Line
Hour 2: Buzz Ramsay on Columbia River Springers

Outdoor Line

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2023 40:06


Tom and Joey get you ready for Spring Shrimping with Bob Buchannan of Beau-Mac, and they check in on the Columbia River with Buzz Ramsay.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Buds N Blue Jays
ELITE MATT CHAPMAN IS HERE! Feeling Royal after a series win in KC

Buds N Blue Jays

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2023 36:54


In episode 89 of Buds N Blue Jays the buds react to the Blue Jays first series win of the season winning 3 out of 4 agaisnt the lowly Kansas City Royals. Lots of stroylies to come out of this one including how good are Matt Chapman and Daulton Varsho right now, Kikuchi had a great first start! Plus what in the world do we do with Berrios? Any concerns about Belt or Springers slow start? Is Vlad getting EVEN BETTER? That some news and notes, Look and MILB opening day and we signed a new OF as well! Subscribe to the channel

WRINT: Geschichtsunterricht
WR1475 Attentat auf Rudi Dutschke

WRINT: Geschichtsunterricht

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2023 35:28


Eigentlich war er ja Sportreporter bei Springers “BZ”. Matthias von Hellfeld erzählt. Die passende Ausgabe “Eine Stunde History” läuft am 10. April 2023 auf DLFnova.

Monday Moms
Gametime Henrico: March 27-April 2, 2023

Monday Moms

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2023 6:28


Deep Run High School The Wildcats softball team is 2-4 after a 23-9  victory over Highland Springs (1-6) last Monday, and a nail biting 4-3 loss to Hanover (6-0) last Wednesday. Against the Springers, Alana Collier had five RBIs, Charlotte Boswell had three RBIs, and Jessica Kolkhorst had two RBIs. Against the Hawks, Gabby Chrapek led the way, going 3 for 4 with a double. Teagan Baulsir was 1 for 3 with a double and two RBIs, and Lily Zehmer was 1 for 3. Deep Run's next matchup will be against Tucker (2-5) April 11. Freeman High School Freeman's baseball...Article LinkSupport the show

Addicted Fishing Podcast
Talking Springers and Shortbus Flashers

Addicted Fishing Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2023 13:19


Cameron talks Spring Salmon with JT from Shortbus Flashers.   ▶ Follow Us On Instagram: http://bit.ly/addictedfishingIG ▶ Help Us GROW!

Outdoor Line
Hour 2: Brock Huard on the Outdoor Line Listener Trip

Outdoor Line

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2023 41:19


Tom and Joey are joined by Brock Huard to tease a special mystery guest for this year's Outdoor Line listener trip to Peregrine Lodge, and they get you ready for spring Steelhead, Springers, and Kokanne with Cameron Black of Addicted Fishing. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Fish Hunt Northwest
Fish Hunt Northwest Episode #53, Boggan's Oasis Interview, Josiah Darr on Steelhead & Springers and Info From WA St. Legislators

Fish Hunt Northwest

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2023 59:24


On this weeks episode, Host Duane Inglin, flies solo, as Tommy Donlin is out... Duane has a short interview with the new owners at Boggan's Oasis on the Grande Ronde River. Then Duane walks through the tie-up and rigging of a Bobber-Doggin Lite, set up. Next, Duane welcomes Guest, Josiah Darr owner at JDarr's Guided Fishing and the guys discuss Oregon Coastal Steelhead and the 2023 Springer outlook. Finally, Duane gives his takeaway form a couple meetings he had earlier in the week, with WA St. Senator Kevin Van De Wege and St. Representative JT Wilcox.

The Sports Huddle
Highland Springs Head Coach Loren Johnson Joins

The Sports Huddle

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2022 12:31


Loren took some time to chat with Matt after the Springers' 19-14 win over Stone Bridge. The win not only clinched a berth into the state final, but it was also a bit of revenge.

ESPN Richmond Podcasts
Highland Springs Head Coach Loren Johnson Joins

ESPN Richmond Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2022 12:31


Loren took some time to chat with Matt after the Springers' 19-14 win over Stone Bridge. The win not only clinched a berth into the state final, but it was also a bit of revenge.

Border To Border with Matt Josephs
Highland Springs Head Coach Loren Johnson Joins

Border To Border with Matt Josephs

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2022 12:31


Loren took some time to chat with Matt after the Springers' 19-14 win over Stone Bridge. The win not only clinched a berth into the state final, but it was also a bit of revenge.

The Rush Hour with Dobbo Catch Up
FULL SHOW | Fun in Springers | Lobbing Plants | Black Friday

The Rush Hour with Dobbo Catch Up

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2022 36:25


Dobbo was given strict instruction not to throw flowers on stage at his wife's dance recital, was he able to help himself?See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Luisterrijk luisterboeken

In deel 3 van de Mike Snow-reeks, bevinden we ons in het jaar 2442 in een stad in de toekomst, met toekomst. Mike Snow is een springer...Uitgegeven door SAGA EgmontSpreker(s): Sam D'Hondt

First Up with Landsberg & Colaiacovo
Steve Phillips on the Yankees' extended slump, Springers' ongoing injury concerns & Hader's struggles

First Up with Landsberg & Colaiacovo

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2022 11:17


TSN MLB Analyst Steve Phillips joins First Up to chat about the Blue Jays taking three of four games in their series against the New York Yankees. Phillips shares his thoughts on if the AL East crown is within reach for the Jays with the Yankees struggling so badly, how the Jays can best manage George Springer's ongoing injury issues, why Josh Hader has struggled since being acquired by the San Diego Padres, and more.

OverDrive
Matheson on Blue Jays vs Twins, Springers leadership & improvement from Berrios

OverDrive

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2022 12:47


Blue Jays reporter for MLB.com Keegan Matheson joined OverDrive to chat about Whit Merrifield's vaccination status, his importance to the team and what he brings for the Blue Jays, the leadership from George Springer over the last 2 seasons and if Berrios is getting back to the form he was in last season, Bichette's batting troubles and more!

Buds N Blue Jays
THIS IS OUR HOUSE! Jays Red Sox Series Recap

Buds N Blue Jays

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2022 31:13


Boy was this series win needed. Jays played a hard fought battle against Boston and take 2 out of 3 games. In this episode we talk about the Benches clearing after Kirks HPB, Gausmans FU performance, Chapmans hitting approach Springers leadership, the bullpen woes and more. Plus they talk about Vlads wrist injury the Sergio Romo signing prospect notes and more! and we preview the super rare 5 game series agaisnt the Rays. Happy Canada day everyone and lets go Blue Jays

SWR2 Archivradio - Geschichte in Originaltönen
Axel Springer spricht mit 70 Jahren über sein Leben | 2.5.1982

SWR2 Archivradio - Geschichte in Originaltönen

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2022 12:00


Axel Cäsar Springer war der mächtigste Zeitungsgründer und -verleger der alten Bundesrepublik. Er erfand die Rundfunkzeitschrift "Hör zu", das "Hamburger Abendblatt" sowie im Alter von 40 Jahren das mit Abstand erfolgreichste deutsche Boulevardblatt: die Bildzeitung und Bild am Sonntag. Am 2. Mai 1982 – Springers 70. Geburtstag führte Dietmar Riemer im Süddeutschen Rundfunk mit ihm das folgende Interview.

Fish Hunt Northwest
Fish Hunt Northwest Episode #30 Ocean Halibut, Eastside Springers & Puget Sound Spot Prawns

Fish Hunt Northwest

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2022 75:10


On this weeks Episode, Host Duane Inglin and Co-Host Tommy Donlin have been on the road and very busy. They start off recapping the 2nd annual FHN & Summit Lake Community Kids Trout Derby. Also a review and look ahead to Tommy's outing on Westport Halibut. Additionally Duane just got back from the Eastside of WA St. fishing Lake Roosevelt with Planer Boards. Also, the boys just had a heck of a successful day on the Shrimp Grounds, Puget Sound... Tons going on this week... All that, Plus a great interview with guest Bill Herzog on his efforts to obtain a Yakima River Spring Chinook..... Check It OUT!

Gate 14 Podcast
Episode 7: Alek Manoah is a BAD man ft Tyler Heineman

Gate 14 Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2022 74:28


On this episode we break down the Red Sox series, discuss fans that sit in their designated seats in an empty stadium, why we shouldnt worry about Bo, and Springers incredible series (0:00-27:37), then the Tyler Heineman interview (27:38-1:05:14) and a breakdown of the Astros series. 

Jonesin for the Outdoors
Springers are King

Jonesin for the Outdoors

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2022 16:55


Join us today as we relaunch our podcast under the new name Jonesin for the Outdoors! We are so excited to bring this content to you. Like before we plan on bringing you great fishing content from throughout the Northwest, but this time its definitely not just about the fishing. We plan on bringing you lots of hunting content. On todays episode Kyle has a chance to talk with Jones Sport Fishing guide Barry Howard. Barry is currently fishing Spring Chinook in the Columbia River Gorge and fishing the past 3 days has been on fire. So join in, sit back, and hopefully you can learn a few things from Barry. Make sure to give this podcast a like and a download, as it helps us out a ton.

The Brother Cousins
Episode 026: Bridging Generational Gaps - Springer Brothers with a Fresh Take

The Brother Cousins

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2022 85:38


Welcome to April! We are excited to introduce our new topic for the month! This month we will be discussing the topic of cross generational Christianity and hearing from different guests from different age groups on how we can value the age diversity in the Church. This week we have invited a set of brothers to the BROCO family. Jared and Jeffrey Wells interview Isaac and Isaiah Springer, a pari of brothers from the Tulsa, OK area. These two brothers are both around 20 years old and have been involved in the Lord's work for a few years now. One is newly married, the other newly engaged. Isaac is one of the hosts of the King's Advocate Podcast, which we love! Look them up on Youtube and Facebook. In this episode, we discuss:

The Brother Cousins
Episode 026: Bridging Generational Gaps - Springer Brothers with a Fresh Take

The Brother Cousins

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2022 85:38


Welcome to April! We are excited to introduce our new topic for the month! This month we will be discussing the topic of cross generational Christianity and hearing from different guests from different age groups on how we can value the age diversity in the Church. This week we have invited a set of brothers to the BROCO family. Jared and Jeffrey Wells interview Isaac and Isaiah Springer, a pari of brothers from the Tulsa, OK area. These two brothers are both around 20 years old and have been involved in the Lord's work for a few years now. One is newly married, the other newly engaged. Isaac is one of the hosts of the King's Advocate Podcast, which we love! Look them up on Youtube and Facebook. In this episode, we discuss:

Outdoor Line
Hour 1: April Halibut, Springers, Kokanne, Bass, and Trout!

Outdoor Line

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2022 43:55


Tom, Rob, and Joey look at all the exciting local opportunities that April brings, and they look at the Fallout from the North of Falcon Season Setting Process.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Fish Hunt Northwest
Fish Hunt Northwest Episode #22 Columbia River Springers with Bill Monroe Jr. also Brian Lynn , Sportsmen's Alliance WA St Spring Bear Hunt "NO GO"

Fish Hunt Northwest

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2022 59:06


On this weeks Episode of Fish Hunt Northwest, Host Duane Inglin and Co-Host Tommy Donlin get down to the finite details to be successful on Columbia River Spring Chinook with outfitter Bill Monroe Jr. owner Bill Monroe Outdoors. Then, the boys have a serious conversation about the recent decision handed down by the WA St. Fish and Wildlife Commission cancelling the Spring Bear Hunt for 2022. What does this decision show about the current Commission and what does the future hold for hunting in WA St. guest Brian Lynn, Sportsmen's Alliance weighs in.

Outdoor Line
Hour 2: Eric Linde on Columbia Springers

Outdoor Line

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2022 41:50


Tom, Rob, and Joey get ready for Coastal Lingcod with Dave Johnson, they get the latest on Columbia Springers from Eric Linde, and they say goodbye to friend and colleague John Clayton.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Campus 2 Canton
Future Freshman Podcast Episode 4: Spring Practice Springers

Campus 2 Canton

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2022 57:39


Brandon (@CFFUniversity) is joined by fellow Campus2Canton contributor Jared (@CFF_Jared) to talk about some freshmen that have been making some noise at early spring practices.

Unmade: media and marketing analysis
The Unmade podcast: Andrew Jaspan on his new publishing venture 360Info

Unmade: media and marketing analysis

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2021 52:22


Welcome to Unmade.In the latest episode I talk to one of Australia's most credentialed media executives, Andrew Jaspan, about his newest venture, 360Info.Jaspan's greatest career achievement to date was founding The Conversation, which has provided an editorial platform for academics globally. However, he departed in 2017 in acrimonious circumstances.During his career, Jaspan has also edited some of the world's best known news publications including The Age in Australia and The Observer, The Scotsman, and The Big Issue in the UK.Like The Conversation, 360Info will once again tap into academic expertise and make it accessible to news outlets. Jaspan is the founder and editor.During the interview, Jaspan explains his vision for 360Info, including how it differs from The Conversation. He also discusses the lessons he learned over his exit from The Conversation.And as a former Murdoch editor, Jaspan shares his views on News Corp's net contribution to society.Audio production on Media Unmade comes courtesy of Abe's Audio, the people to talk to about voiceovers, corporate videos and commercials.The podcast can be heard via the player above, or by searching for Unmade in all major podcast apps.TranscriptTim Burrowes:Welcome to The Unmade Podcast. I'm Tim Burrowes. Today's guest has one of the most impressive resumes in global publishing, Andrew Jaspan. Maybe best known in Australia as the founder of The Conversation and a former editor of The Age, but in the UK, he was as well known for editing big mastheads, including The Observer, The Scotsman, and The Big Issue, among others. Now he's back with another Australian launch, 360Info. Like The Conversation, it has a foot in the world of academia, but with a different model.Tim Burrowes:Andrew, welcome along, and let's start here. Now, you strike me as one of the few editors who's also got the commercial chops to launch a profitable publishing venture, if they wanted to, yet you're going the not-for-profit route again. Why?Andrew Jaspan:Well, Tim, first of all, it's really good to be talking to you again. We've known each other for a while in Australia, I think pretty well around the time Mumbrella started. Can I just say that, and I'm saying this in all honesty, the question you've just asked me is the same question that my wife asks me every time I do one of these. She keeps saying, "Why can't you do something that's going to make some money?" Because I tend to go for not-for-profit.Andrew Jaspan:So, let me kind of unpack that a little bit. If I wanted to do this as a for-profit, which I could have done, I would've had to raise substantial sums of money. In this case, we have five million Australian to last us three years, although we do hope to raise more money. Now, to go and raise five million on the money markets, particularly if you go to venture capitalists, they expect a couple of things, as you know. One is a good return, and two is to probably flip the company in between three to five, and them for them to exit and sell it on to somebody else. So, that's problem number one. It puts a very high bar on you having to perform.Andrew Jaspan:The second issue is that, if we were for profit, our authors and we can come onto this later, our researchers working universities worldwide, they would all say, "That's fine. We have no problem with you being for profit. After all, all the academic journals, the McMillans, the Springers, et cetera, they're all for-profits." And what they do is, they pay their authors. So, they would expect to be paid. That would kind of double or triple our burn rate, and it would just make it pretty well unfeasible.Andrew Jaspan:Here, the only money I need to raise is to hire editors, professional editors, and producers. And I just couldn't make this work another way. The other thing is that we're playing in the public good space. To me, the public interest/public good space requires that you make your information as widely available as possible. And that means no paywalls, the ability for information to flow freely. That is the antithesis, in a sense, of a commercial play, which is probably seeking to get either a paywall erected, or to write a lot of advertising alongside the content, and so on, so forth. So, that was the antithesis of what we wanted to do here.Andrew Jaspan:So yes, I'm afraid to say I've gone back to the not-for-profit well, and my life at home remains a bit of a misery on that front.Tim Burrowes:Well, we might touch on the funding a little bit more in a moment, but firstly, maybe you can actually explain the concept of 360Info.Andrew Jaspan:Absolutely. In a way, Tim, it might be useful to say how this differs from my last play, which was The Conversation. There are certain similarities, in so far as we're working with researchers, but where we are different is as follows. The first thing is, we are trying to look at information in the global whole, as it were. So, not to look at information that begins and ends at the borders.Andrew Jaspan:If you take most media, it tends to be about a country in which they operate in. And the reason for that is, the business model is around advertising and advertising is sold by territories, or countries, or cities, or states. What happens in, if you take where I live, in Australia, the job of say The Melbourne Age was to attract an audience in Melbourne, and you sell them Melbourne products. The sister paper in Sydney, The Sydney Morning Herald, will do the same thing.Andrew Jaspan:And what you do every morning, when you're editing one of these papers, is you think what will attract me a Melbourne audience? And it tends to be about issues in the city or region, and ones that are outside are dropped. And what I wanted to do was to take a different approach and just say, "Look, what if we actually tried to approach information without borders?" Because there are lots of stories. The obvious ones today are COVID, which knows no borders. Carbon dioxide knows no borders. Climate issues knows no borders. The fish in our oceans know no borders. Et cetera. So, why don't we look at some of these bigger issues in a different way?Andrew Jaspan:The second thing is, I wanted to get away from the breaking news cycle, because breaking news in any newsroom, as you all know, tends to suck the oxygen out of that newsroom, because everybody rushes to cover what's breaking today or this week. And what I wanted to do was to refocus the editorial, not on breaking news but on the big issues, the big challenges, the most pressing problems the world faces. And I've obviously mentioned the two big ones right now are COVID and climate. There's also water, food, energy. And then we go into issues like human trafficking, refugees. There's a whole bunch of other softer issues, as well, that dominate the most wicked, difficult problems the world faces. So, I wanted to look at those, unpack those problems, really try and understand them from different perspectives around the world.Andrew Jaspan:And secondly, utilizing the scientific method or the research method is not just to try and understand the problem, but also find a fix to those problems. And again, returning to COVID, if I may, when the COVID-19 virus came along, initially nobody knew what it was. And in record speed time, about three months, scientists were able to do some genomic sequencing tests and actually understand the virus and then gave it a name. And once you understand the nature of the virus, you can then build the antivirus. So, I wanted to use a similar approach, which is understand each of those problems in real depth and then say, "How are we trying to address them or fix them?" That's something that journalism doesn't tend to do, because journalism is much more of a reporting game, whereas research has a different timeline, longer timelines, trying to understand and fix world problems. So, that's the second big difference.Andrew Jaspan:And the third one, if I may, is that instead of launching a website, which is a B2C play, what I wanted to do instead-Tim Burrowes:(Business to consumer.)Andrew Jaspan:Business to consumer. What I wanted instead to do is to become a supplier of content to other people's websites, so that's kind of known as a B2B play. We are a wholesaler or supplier of content. Other people pick it up, they repackage it re-edit it as they wish, and then they push it out to their readers or consumers. We are not in the retail game, and the retail game for media is one of social media marketing, taking ads on Google, doing search engine optimization, all those kind of tricks to try and get eyeballs to visit your site and not somebody else's site.Andrew Jaspan:What we've put in place instead is, we've started off with over 750 content partners around the world who've signed up to take our content and use it much like a Reuters news wire or an AAP or an AP. They just take a feed. They see our content, they pick up what they want. They can use it as it suits them, and bingo, off you go.Tim Burrowes:Well, let's take a hypothetical piece of content, then. Could you maybe just talk us through the stages, right from conception and commissioning, through to the stages that piece of content would do, in order to then end up on a publication somewhere?Andrew Jaspan:Okay. So, it's a really important question, but I have to unpack it for you because it's quite a complex issue. Again, I will wanted to rethink the entire supply line for information, as it were. What we do in terms of ideas is, as you and I will have done when we lead a morning conference or whatever, is the people sitting around the room would sort of talk about what they've read overnight, or what they're have seen in their specialist areas, and report into the editor. And we'll all sit around the table and go, "Okay, let's do this. Let's not do that. And let's try and move on that story immediately and push the other ones back to later in the day." And so on and so forth.Andrew Jaspan:I've taken a much more circuitous, or the slow route, towards content creation. The first thing we do is, I don't know if you're familiar with the sustainable development goals. There are 17 of them.Tim Burrowes:Yes.Andrew Jaspan:What we're working towards is having what we call a consultative or reference panel for each one of those 17, which, the people who really understand each one of those those problem areas. And we draw them from global north, which are the richer countries and the global south, the developing countries, to get a balanced view of it. We go to them with an idea, and we say, "Okay, we'd like to look at, whatever." And they come back to us.Andrew Jaspan:For example, the one we're working on now is, how do we address bushfires or wildfires around the world? What you do initially is you, you say, "This is what we're thinking of doing." They come back and say, "You are looking at the wrong angle, here. You need to look at this and you need to speak to X." And so on and so forth. We then move from an outline brief, as we call it, to an agreed brief. Which is where we've consulted with people, we've got the ideas. Sometimes they give us the names of people to go to.Andrew Jaspan:Then the next thing is, having agreed on what we're going to cover, we then go and seek people to write on the subject. And the authors that we use must have an accredited post with a university. The reason for that, by the way, is that we want people who have been screened as it were by each university and people who have to sign up to all sorts of research codes of conduct, as well. So, that's part of our sort of test, to make sure these people really know what they're saying and have deep research expertise.Andrew Jaspan:Once we go and find those people, then we write them a note, saying, "We'd like you to write X number of words by a certain deadline." And we remind them, "This is not an opinion website, so we are not looking for your opinion. We want everything to be research-and-evidence-based.Andrew Jaspan:Once we've set those deadlines, we chase them up. We give them about a week to 10 days to write. We get the content in. We re-edit it into essentially a Reuters style, because we're operating like a news wire. Again, we're not interested in first person accounts with their voice. It's a news wire neutral voice. When the content is ready, it's sent back to them because we can't publish without an author's sign off. And once they've agreed to it, bingo, out it goes.Andrew Jaspan:The last bit is, everything else is released under embargo to our 750 end users. And the reason for that is, we like to give them three or four days to be able to read our content, and then decide how they want to use it, and then push it out themselves.Tim Burrowes:And the style of the content, would it sit, and I'm thinking say for instance it ends up in a newspaper masthead, whether that's in print or online, would it be likely to sit more naturally as a news article or as a feature, do you think?Andrew Jaspan:As a news feature. One of our biggest users is The Press Trust of India. And the editor-in-chief there said, "Look, this is absolutely wonderful because we are very good at breaking news and we run a lot of opinion, but what we don't have is news features." And he suggested, which is what we've done now, that we released this content on a Thursday or Friday, because he said the Friday in the weekend papers tend to have more space to carry features. And that's the space we're playing into.Andrew Jaspan:So, slightly longer, but at the end of the day, we operate under creative commons license four, which is called a remixed license. Which means that they can take our content, much as you would take Reuters, for example, and just use as much or as little as you want. You can just take the first paragraph. You can take the whole thing, to whatever suits the outlet's appetite for the story.Tim Burrowes:Now that's interesting. As a bit of a side note, I remember in the day, back in the days with Mumbrella, where we used to take a lot of The Conversation's content, sometimes you were a bit nervous if you did need to sort of re-angle it a bit, just to make it more relevant for our audience. And I always felt, under Creative Commons, that I probably wasn't supposed to.Andrew Jaspan:No.Tim Burrowes:So, it's interesting that you have a different sort of license this time around.Andrew Jaspan:Yes. That's called a no derivative license, so it means you cannot change anything. You have to keep everything as it is. That's the requirement for its use. Whereas we operate under license four. It's a different one, which is called a remix license, which allows our end users to edit it.Andrew Jaspan:Now, I have to tell you, there is a risk in all that because they can edit it in a way that the author wouldn't be happy. But if you think of Reuters, everything that comes from Reuters carries the author's byline, and very rarely do newspapers or outlet use the entire Reuters 800 or 1000 words on something. It tends to be cut back to whatever they've got space for.Andrew Jaspan:Yeah, so operating the way we do, which is under license four, where people can remix, does add some risk, in so far as people could actually change some of the meaning as the author intended. However, it does make our content much more easy to use and more flexible, for whatever spaces that either online or in-print people have space for.Tim Burrowes:And something else I suppose I find myself thinking about, obviously with Creative Commons, as you say, it means that anybody can republish without needing to sort of pay for it. I think about maybe, I don't know, a competitive situation like Australia, where let's say there's a really good piece on water security, for instance.Andrew Jaspan:Yeah.Tim Burrowes:And both The Sydney Morning Herald and The Australian would love to run it. Now, it'd be quite unusual for both titles to carry the same piece. How do you think about things like geographic exclusivity? Is there anything you're working on in that way, in terms of who you choose your partners to be?Andrew Jaspan:The short answer, Tim, is we don't want to pick favorites, really. So, we have no special deals. Everything is under it in embargo, a strict embargo, which means everybody gets at least three days notice. Because we send them, if you sign up to get our content, they get an email alert which tells them these five or 10 pieces will be moved on next day. That gives you three days to have a look at it, which means that our end users can use that content in different ways. Or they can remix the content with a reporter who may want to develop that story and add some bits because it makes it more topical to their region or whatever.Andrew Jaspan:But AAP, the Australian wire agency, operates the same way. They put all their content out. It's all available to all their end users. And of course, somebody will use it in one city, and it'll be used the same time by different outlet in another, or sometimes two outlets in the same city. Those are just the sort of basic rules of a news wire.Tim Burrowes:Tell me about your team, the individuals, the roles, how you're going to be organizing them.Andrew Jaspan:Yeah. So, we took a decision from the outset to focus on two areas, which in a sense are aligned with the research, with the way in which university researchers conduct their work. Usually sitting behind most research are very big data sets, where people do a huge amount of work to try and understand, as I say, a problem.Andrew Jaspan:We've decided to actually focus on data, data journalism, data visualization, and text. Those are the two areas, rather than focus on video, for example, and even our pictures, largely speaking, are generic pictures. Because again, we're not a news breaking site. So, we've hired two data visualizers, one of them with a more focus on data itself, another one on being able to do the design work around data, to turn it into, for example, interactives or graphics or whatever. And we think this is a really interesting area to get into.Andrew Jaspan:The second team are really a combination of professional editors and producers. And some of these come from a background in broadcasting, some in prints, some in magazines. We've got actually a very small team to begin with. We've started off with the team of nine. Which is, I don't think I mentioned this earlier, but Monash University provided the seed funding to allow the project to happen, and the funding they've given us allows us to hire nine people. Although, we've just hired, again through the two campuses Monash has overseas, one in Malaysia and one in Indonesia, we've just hired one person into Jakarta who starts at the beginning of next year and two people in Kuala Lumpur. We already have somebody in Delhi. So, we're working well towards a global approach, with Delhi, Jakarta, Kuala Lumpur, and Melbourne as our four bases, initially.Andrew Jaspan:And each one of those are people who have got to be good at ideas, got to be good at commissioning, got to be respectful in the relationships we have with the researchers, good at finishing and packaging.Andrew Jaspan:Then the key person in my team is my deputy, who's the editor also at the Asia Pacific service, because we've got a number of hubs we hope to have, but the Asia Pacific's the first one. Charis Palmer worked with me at The Conversation. She then went work for Morry Schwartz, and did, you may have seen something called Schwartz Pro, which were newsletters that she led, and she's come back to work with me on this project. One of the key things that she likes about this project is the global aspect to it, rather than just being another country play, as it were.Tim Burrowes:Well, you've already alluded to the global aspect a couple of times, and it was something I was going to ask about actually, was about your ambitions. I mean, it sounds to me like you're very deliberately writing from the beginning around topics and areas that certainly aren't Australian specific, but have more of a kind of global outlook.Andrew Jaspan:Yes. Well, one of the interesting things, Tim, is that we sit here in Melbourne, and I tried to indicate to you that our newsroom meetings are not the traditional ones, of us sitting around the table and just agreeing what to do. But we open up the room, as I call it, and bring in people who are not sitting physically around our desk, to get different aspects.Andrew Jaspan:What was really interesting was, we were going to put a package out in January/February around bushfires and wildfires, because that's the hottest time of the year, and our Delhi editor pointed out that actually that was winter in India, and so it's hot in the Southern Hemisphere and cold in the Northern. It just makes you kind of rethink a lot of these issues.Andrew Jaspan:And other issues around, for example, energy. When you think of solar and wind, which are great in terms renewables, the real issue is one of energy storage, so that you can release it when you need it. Well, of course, in Australia, being a rich country, we can afford to build massive Tesla batteries, and we kind of assume, "Well, why doesn't the rest of the world do the same thing?" Well, the answer is that the rest of the world can't afford those kind of batteries at all and have to have very different approaches.Andrew Jaspan:So, the whole idea is to make sure that we don't just have another rich world play, but we do offer information which tries to look at problems within the round, how do these play in Africa, Latin America, South Asia, as well as Europe and North America and Australia. So, it's that kind of different focus which we've built right in from the very beginning, in terms of how we approach information.Tim Burrowes:We've touched on funding. When you launched The Conversation, you raised 10 million to cover the first three years. This time you've just referred to about five million. How are you thinking about funding going forwards? Presumably once you have momentum and you can show that you're having an impact, that will be a powerful tool, but is it likely to come from within Australia, do you think? Or will the rest of the funding have to come from global sources?Andrew Jaspan:Well, again, a very good question because it's something I think about a lot. The short answer is, the appetite from foundations and philanthropy in Australia is really not attuned to global plays. It is more about addressing, for example, health issues, mental health issues, education issues, indigenous issues in Australia.Andrew Jaspan:And the big funders who are interested in the sort of global plays tend to be, sadly, in the US, the likes of Rockefeller, Carnegie, Gates, MacArthur, or in the UK, the likes of The Wellcome Trust. There's a number of others. And there are a number in Germany and also in Scandinavia and Holland, by the way. There are very few of them here. And also, the foundations don't operate in the same way in Asia, either South Asia or Southeast Asia.Andrew Jaspan:So, I am kind of looking at where we might go next for funding. The the issue for the three year funding is to give us time to establish the service, so I'm not too worried. We've got a three year runway, as it were. Year one is just about establishing the brand, establishing the service, establishing our customer base. Although they don't pay, we need to drive loyalty and use of our service.Andrew Jaspan:And then what we will do is, in years two and three, move towards looking at raising more funding, but also potentially introducing some services as well, which we might charge for. And we haven't yet decided what those might be, but at some stage we're going to have to look at that.Andrew Jaspan:The other bit is that, again, going back to the global nature of this, is that we do have partners around the world who are very interested in working with us, but unlike The Conversation, it won't break down into national services. Because there is a Conversation which I got going in the UK, the US, Canada, France, Spain, and Indonesia, and each one of them has become a sort of, in a sense, almost an independent service for each country. We're not going to do that.Andrew Jaspan:What we are looking at is having hubs, which are also hosted at universities by the way, in the same way as we're hosted at Monash, but they will be responsible for raising the money within their region or location. We can't use Australian money to help get an offshore hub established. So, once we're up and running and we've got those partners in place, I expect they'll be making direct approaches towards some foundations in their their region. And, potentially, each university host might also chip something in towards towards setting up the hub.Tim Burrowes:Now, something you had to face as a challenge when you launched The Conversation, it grew and became global, was balancing your time with looking overseas and being overseas and then the Australian office, as well. I think in the end, there were tensions, which in part contributed to you not being with The Conversation anymore.Andrew Jaspan:Yeah.Tim Burrowes:What lessons or thoughts have you got around how you need to organize yourself and your culture and your time, to get the most out of you?Andrew Jaspan:Again, Tim, it's something which I've sort of had to think about quite deeply over the last three years, since I left. I mean, each set of problems was probably driven from something slightly different, but at the end of the day, I think I got trapped between trying to do too much, and if I didn't do enough, the global rollout just couldn't have happened as fast as it could. I mean, there are very, very few, if you think about it, rollouts quite as big and large and global as The Conversation managed to do in its first three, four years.Andrew Jaspan:But what that did was, it took me away from Australia a hell of a lot. I had to raise quite a lot of money in the US, to get the US going. I had to do the same in the UK. I helped a little bit with Indonesia and with Spain and with France.Andrew Jaspan:And then the other thing in Australia is that we signed up 39 universities and CSIRO, 40 institutions all were paying between 50,000 and 200,000 a year. And I personally had to knock on vice chancellors' doors and try and persuade them to join. And although it sounds easy in retrospect, you think, "Well, everybody would've joined," I can tell you a lot of them were unsure or didn't want to. But now they've all signed up, and that meant a lot of interstate travel.Andrew Jaspan:So, the first thing is, I don't want to travel as much as I used to. And thank God for COVID in many ways, because I can't. That's a discipline which has been forced upon me, but the upside of it is I can now do Zoom calls. And frankly, I have to say, I actually find Zoom to be a wonderful tool because it means I don't need to travel, people turn up on time. I don't have to hear excuses of people getting caught up with traffic issues and all that sort of nonsense. It works really well. It's efficient, and people have got used to it. I think it's a great new way of working, and anybody concerned about carbon footprint should really curtail travel. So, that's the first thing, is I'm able to spend more time with the team.Andrew Jaspan:The second thing is that, I have to say, and I sort of have to take blame for this is, I didn't hire particularly well. I made some terrible mistakes, in terms of hires, and largely speaking these were people who had agendas which were different to mine in many ways. I don't want to go into that in too much more detail, but I was badly let down by certain people. I just thought, "I never ever had thought that you would do something like that."Andrew Jaspan:Then the other thing, which is again my fault, was being distracted by having so many different issues to deal with that. There were times I didn't handle things as well as I should.Andrew Jaspan:So yeah, I mean, learned many lessons from that. Still feel very disappointed about what happened, but you know what? I've moved on. They can do their thing, which is very much a creature of my own making. And thankfully, they are still working very much the way that I set the whole thing up, which leaves me room to introduce a different service, which in many ways is a kind of complimentary service. The Conversation are largely breaking views services, in terms of being opinion about what's in the new cycle, whereas we've parked opinion and we've parked breaking news, for the reasons I explained earlier.Andrew Jaspan:It's opened up a very fertile different area for us, which is that, the longer read, the more considered approach, and trying to address problems, rather than just report on problems. Which, to me, is a really interesting new area. Some people call that constructive or solutions journalism. I don't like to use those phrases too much, but that's what we're trying to do.Tim Burrowes:Something strikes me. Let's assume that you're able to develop some really good quality content. In time, that reputation, and I hear everything you say about being B2B rather than business to consumer, but in time that reputation, I could see there being an appetite to actually see, from the public, your raw feed, so to speak. Do you think there will be a moment when you do, even if it's a simple site, just have something where anybody can just take a look at what you're publishing, so they can see your whole output in one place?Andrew Jaspan:Yes. I mean, that's a possibility, Tim, but if you think of Reuters, which is a massive business, they don't have really a public facing site, as such. I mean, there is a Reuters site you can go to, there is stuff there, but all the content is locked up for its subscribers and users. And they don't particularly want to be a site that attracts lots of readers, because at the end of the day, their subscribers are the people who want to retail their content, and they don't want to set up in competition to their own subscribers.Andrew Jaspan:In Australia, for example, say Sydney Morning Herald, The Age uses Reuters content. Well, if Reuters should set up a public facing website, The Age and Sydney Morning Herald people would say, "Well, we're not going to take your content because it's already freely available on your website."Tim Burrowes:Is there any likelihood that you'll find yourself competing with The Conversation, when it comes to wanting to sign up an expert to write a piece for you?Andrew Jaspan:Tim, there is the potential for that, but let me tell you, in Australia alone, I just happen to have these numbers, there are about 100,000 academics, and The Conversation has used about 25,000. So, about 25% have already been used. 75,000 haven't been, and probably never will be. But even of those 25,000, all those academic write for many different channels. Many of them will write, occasionally, directly for a newspaper or they'll appear on TV or radio. They'll write for overseas publications. So, The Conversation doesn't have the complete right to utilize those researchers alone.Andrew Jaspan:And the other thing, as I indicated to you before, is our content is quite different because The Conversation, which is the model I set up, tries to riff off that day's breaking news and do, in a sense, commentary to sort of say, "Oh, let's explain the budget today. Or let's explain a plane going down." Or whatever. What we're doing something quite different. We're actually focusing on, as I said to you, sustainable development goals, the world's biggest problems, and looking at things in a quite different way.Tim Burrowes:Well, finally, I'd be wasting the opportunity if I didn't ask your more general view on Australia's media. As I was saying, you were a former editor of The Age and you've edited many other mastheads in other parts of the world, as well. Quite a wide question, but what do you see as the state of the media, as we head towards 2022?Andrew Jaspan:Well, Tim, I'm looking at the clock and it tells me that we've nearly spent 40 minutes on what I've done now. If you've got time for another 40 minutes, I'd love to talk to you about it because it's a really extremely important issue. And it goes to the heart of what I think is a real problem in Australia, which is that we have probably one of the most concentrated media ownerships in the world.Andrew Jaspan:When I came to Australia to edit The Age in 2004, there was Fairfax, there was APN, there was News Corp, obviously, and Channels Seven, Nine and Ten, but now Nine has gobbled up Fairfax. News Corp has gobbled up APN. There's been lots of other mergers and consolidation, and you've got even fewer players than when I arrived in 2004. And I think there's a real problem in Australia. I mean, there are large swathes of Australia, as you know, that are just owned by one group. And so it's you take it or leave it.Tim Burrowes:Now, that one group is News Corp.Andrew Jaspan:News Corp is big, but the Nine group now, between both Nine TV, plus all the mastheads. By the way, there has been one change in development, which is Andrew Catalano. He and I, by the way, were both asked to leave Fairfax at the same time. And I went off to do The Conversation and now this thing, and he went on to buy out Rural Press and renamed it Australian Community Media. And he's got, I can't remember, 120-odd papers right across Australia, which is an independent play.Andrew Jaspan:But largely speaking, it's been consolidation, consolidation, fewer and fewer voices. And of course, due to a combination of the global economy and now COVID, a lot of those groups have delayered and hollowed out newsrooms even further. And there's been a loss of, I think, 5,000 journalists jobs in the last three to four years, in Australia. So, it's not in good shape at all.Andrew Jaspan:But I wouldn't mind, if I can, just to talk briefly about the advertising side of what's happened. As you probably know, in Australia, the advertising spend on the media tends to be, or was I should say, about 10 years ago, about eight to nine billion a year. It now stands at more like 10 to 11 billion a year. However, what's happened is that, over the last five years, Google and Facebook together have carved out about half of that and now actually take between 60 and 70% of that, 10 to 11 billion. Google takes a lot more than Facebook. And they bill all of that out of Singapore or overseas in low tax thresholds.Andrew Jaspan:What that's done is actually reduced, hugely reduced, the ability for the Australian media to focus not just on hiring journalists, but to actually conduct their operations. So, there has been a big change in the advertising marketplace, which has led to huge structural issues.Andrew Jaspan:Those issues are being dealt with, to a certain extent, through the news bargaining code, which the News Corp papers led the charge on, and largely speaking was about what Rupert Murdoch has always thought, which was that Google was stealing their content and should pay. And that's, largely speaking, what Google and to a certain extent Facebook are doing now, is paying them. But it hasn't really gone to towards new entrants or the smaller players. It's really gone to the big players who had skin in the game, to get the government to structure the news bargaining code in a way that, in a sense, reinforced the existing ownership structures.Tim Burrowes:Well, I might follow up on Rupert Murdoch, in a moment. Just one question first, on your previous point, because I totally recognize what you say about the dominance of Google and Facebook in that ecosystem and the lack of transparency there is, as well, particularly with Google's control over every stage of it. At the same time, we see Google certainly wanting to be seen as being a good citizen in journalism. There's the Google News initiative, for instance. So, it does put money into the ecosystem.Tim Burrowes:Would you take that sort of money, if offered, for 360Info? Or does it compromise you to do so, do you think?Andrew Jaspan:Again, a sort of a dilemma which faces many independent journalists. Let me just comment on the first part of your question. I've been to Mountain View, which is Google's headquarters just outside San Francisco, and I've also been to Facebook's headquarters at Palo Alto, and also their officers in London, for both Google and Facebook, and also for Google in this country.Andrew Jaspan:The key issue for Google and Facebook is they see themselves as technology companies, first and foremost. They do not want to be seen as a publisher, because if you're seen as a publisher, it kind of changes the nature of the game, and they become responsible for content. They can be sued for defamation or liable and all sorts of other things.Andrew Jaspan:So, what they've done is they've got an exclusion, which is actually written into American law to be not seen as a publisher, but just a carrier of other people's information. What that meant is that they had to strenuously avoid putting money into anything editorial. So, when I would go and speak to Google and Facebook, they would say, "Look, we can help you with, for example, developing your site better, with giving you tools to optimize readership, with giving you data tools, with giving you free access to the G suite of services and so on and so forth. But we can't give it to editorial."Andrew Jaspan:So, that used to be their approach, and that sort of held for, I don't know, let's say five to ten years. But now, particularly in Australia, because of the campaign that News Corp led in this country, and a compliant government who listened largely to what News Corp say, they have managed to force, in a sense, Google and Facebook to actually start putting money into journalism, which is something they've always stood against. I think they're still trying to test the waters on that, whether it works or not, what could be the downside.Andrew Jaspan:The second part to your question was, would we take the money? And the short answer, without being churlish is, yes we would. But, like all funding arrangements and agreements, Google or Facebook, were they to give us money, would have to accept that we remain an independent voice, that they cannot have any say over what we commission. They can't ask us to lay off certain areas and cover certain areas, all of that. And as long as those agreements were in place, which is the same, by the way, for any foundation or anybody else that would want to fund us, as long as that was the case and it was clear that we or I retained overall and ultimate control of the service, then the answer is we probably would take that their funding.Tim Burrowes:And you touched on News Corp, the Rupert Murdoch led organization. Earlier in your career, you worked for The Times and The Sunday times, which are a part of the empire. How do you think of the company? Because I always feel it's kind of painted a bit in naughts and ones, either they're everything that's wrong with journalism or they're everything that's right with journalism. And usually the truth is somewhere in the middle. How do you think of the organization?Andrew Jaspan:First of all is, I think the professional standards at News Corp are probably amongst the highest I've come across, in terms of just the basic craft of running newsrooms, disciplined newsrooms, chasing stories, chasing exclusives, and doing a really good job at packaging, selling, advertising their brands, and actually being very strong players in every market that they operate in.Andrew Jaspan:The downside is, it's agenda driven journalism. There is a clear Murdoch agenda which you sign up to, when you join a Murdoch organization. And there are certain things which are subjects, which you know if you work for any Murdoch outlet, is kind of the areas that they support and the areas they don't like.Andrew Jaspan:I remember when I joined The Sunday Times, Andrew Neil was my editor, and he really spelled this out. The way he did good and bad, he called sectors of the UK either sunset industries, sunrise or sunset. For example, he hated the coal miners, so he called them a sunset industry. He hated the BBC, so that was a sunset industry. Whereas the sunrise were the new players that didn't have unions and all the areas that they kind of ideologically agreed with, I guess. And none of this is really spelled out.Andrew Jaspan:I laugh every time when I hear people like Robert Thomson, who's the CEO of News Corp, say, "No editor is ever rung up by Rupert and told what to do." Well, Rupert doesn't operate that way. Rupert very carefully chooses editors. I don't mean him personally, although he does at the most senior positions, but broadly speaking Rupert's lieutenants make sure that they choose people who are "one of us." That's the term they use. You're either one of them or one of us. And then once you become anointed as a Murdoch editor or whatever, you know what the line is.Andrew Jaspan:There are meetings once, twice, three times a year, where all the executives gather and they hear from Murdoch and his thoughts about the world, what's up, what's down, and then they go away and just make a sure that their papers, in a sense, align with that.Andrew Jaspan:And where people disagree, they get short shift and they have to leave. You hear this over and over again. For example, on climate issues, anybody who kind of used to, although there's been a change, as you probably know, in Australia, in terms of a recognition that climate change actually is real. But previously to that, it was one of suppressing the real climate science story. And so, every paper took the same line, and so it goes on and on. I think you know most of this, Tim.Andrew Jaspan:As I say, it's a strongly driven, purpose driven, ideologically driven organization with extremely good professional journalists and editors, who deliver on that remit. And as such, they're very robust players in every market that they operate in.Tim Burrowes:When it comes time to write Rupert Murdoch's obituary, which could be another 10 or 15 years away, if you were asked, would you say that his contribution to journalism was a net positive or a net negative?Andrew Jaspan:Oh, I would come down probably as a net negative. And I don't mean that from the point of view of what he did on The Adelaide Advertiser. He clearly did a good job. But what he did, and I watched closely because you alluded to it earlier, to The Times and and Sunday Times. I worked on those papers, and I saw these papers, in many ways, become diminished as the kind of standard barriers of the highest quality journalism, in the UK.Andrew Jaspan:And then when I look at what Fox News has done, and I mean, I think Fox News has been probably the most divisive, destructive of force in America. But Rupert really saw an opportunity because the four other major broadcasters all held to a sort of narrow, broadly liberal viewpoint. And he saw an opportunity for something that was way off on the right, that would bring in the rednecks and others. He saw that opportunity, and he just went for it. He's made a huge amount of money. Fox I think makes more money than anything else for him, these days.Andrew Jaspan:But the downside is the destruction that it's created in America and society. And you speak to any American just about the impact of it, the polarization, the anger, the fury, and the quality of debate is diminished. And of course, out of all that, we had Trump who was very much promoted by the Fox organization.Andrew Jaspan:And so, at the end of the day, do I think the world's a better place, as in better informed? The answer is probably no, because what what Trump did, and what Fox did, was to essentially say there are alternative facts, in a sense. There are alternative ways of seeing the world. And that's come down a broad agreement around facts and evidence. You know the old saying, "You're entitled to your opinion, but not your own facts?" Well, that's now changed. People now, at Fox News particularly and some of the other outlets, say they're entitled to their own facts, alternative facts, and so on and so forth.Andrew Jaspan:So, I think it's unmade a lot of the best of the journalism in the world. But I can't lay all the fault of journalism there. There is the other issue, which is the structural change of the big search companies, particularly Google and Facebook, which are, at the end of the day, Tim, to be blunt, they're both advertising companies. And what they've done is, they've just sucked the advertising out of what used to be newspapers, radio, and television and moved it into search and all the advertising associated with that. That's where the real money is these days.Andrew Jaspan:And what's interesting is to see how those things are going to develop, because they will develop, and you will see, I think, Facebook and Google morph into different organizations. They will have to take on some form of responsibility for a lot of the damage that's been done, the ways it's kind of led to siloed discussions, where you have all the people who are anti-vaxxers talk to each other on that community page, and all the people who who support vaccinations speaking in another sort of loop, and different echo chains, et cetera.Andrew Jaspan:These are really big societal problems. They are being thought about. They are being addressed. At some stage, they will be solved. So, I think it's a really interesting period to watch closely, for how all this is going to unravel over the next five to ten years.Tim Burrowes:Well, as you allude to, Andrew, it is a subject we could talk about for hours, let alone minutes, but that's where we'd better leave it for now. My thanks to Andrew Jaspan, and have a great summer break, Andrew.Andrew Jaspan:Thank you very much, Tim. Enjoy your Christmas and all the best for 2022.Tim Burrowes:The Unmade Podcast is produced with the enthusiastic support of Abe's Audio. More soon. I'm Tim Burrowes. Toodlepip. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.unmade.media/subscribe

The Bird Dog Babe
Episode 084: Defying The Odds - On Winning The National Field Championship w/ Jaelee Schwartz

The Bird Dog Babe

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2021 80:05


Jaelee Schwartz is the owner of Green Gable Gundogs and winner of the 2021 US Open Cocker National Championship. She has been training and competing with Spaniels since she was 8 years old alongside her father, Jeff Schwartz, a professional trainer at Rock River Kennels.  Jaelee placed in her first licensed AKC Springer trial at 10 years old, and now a professional trainer herself, is the youngest person to win the Open National Cocker Championship. Despite all of Jaelee's accomplishments, she claims failng was a big part of her journey. She believes anything is possible with hard work and dedication. The Bird Dog Babe Podcast is Presented By: Purina Pro Plan Boss Shotshells OnX Hunt 12:45 Horicon Marsh 13:15 2021 US National Cocker Championship 14:45 Ike, the Champ 16:30 Trialing and Testing 17:30 Springers to Cockers 20:00 Growing up raising puppies, training and traveling 23:00 Starting a training business 24:00 Growing up in the business 27:25 Accomplishments as a kiddo 31:00 Training professionally 34:15 Relationship with each dog 34:55 Placeboard training 37:00 Teaching steadiness with cheeseballs 40:15 Overcoming obstacles 46:00 Early characteristics of the National Field Champion 47:45 What it takes to get to the National 48:10 Requirements at the National 53:00 Ike's National Run 56:50 The Moment 1:02:10 Ike's future 53:00 Importance of pedigree 1:05:20 Hunt tests 1:08:10 Evaluating puppies 1:12:00 Finding a breeder 1:13:15 Cocker Health Clearances 1:17:00 Fieldcockers.com 1:17:40 Favorite piece of gear Green Gable Gundogs Instagram Facebook --------------------------------------------------- Thank you to our Partners: Dakota283 Kennels (promo code birddogbabe for 10% discount) Syren: Shotguns for Women Support this podcast on Patreon Connect with Courtney Follow Bird Dog Babe: Instagram Facebook YouTube -------------------------------------------------  

Kinky Boots
Episode 14: The Springers

Kinky Boots

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2021 15:00


Episode 14: The Springers by Kinky Boots

Kinky Boots
Episode 14: The Springers

Kinky Boots

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2021 15:00


Episode 14: The Springers by Kinky Boots

The Jerry Springer Podcast
The Confederacy Is Not Dead: EP-338

The Jerry Springer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2021 35:55


It's alive and well and kicking. Racism is in our DNA. It's institutionalized. Our nation's racism is always there, from the decimation of Indigenous Americans to the enslavement of Africans. We continue to ward off these attacks on the better angels of our soul. Our generation hasn't been spared these responsibilities.Then Jene and his wife will be traveling to Florida in several months and want to get his guest list (family members, etc.) approved for their four-week stay with the Springers. What temperature is the pool kept at? Eighty degrees is the Galvins' preference. Musical guest Short & Companyhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KFxC-XeQLRI See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Span The Void
Span The Void #337 - Breakaway Springers

Span The Void

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2021 83:32


This week on STV, Jim has a problem after he actually puts his truck to work. Ryan goes camping and is witness to a heart wrenching situation. Brad visits a mall in Washington DC and has Jim all confused. Will visits the opening of a new REI store in the area and finds some good deals.

Stand jetzt
Eklige Unioner und DFL-Chefin von Springers Gnaden?

Stand jetzt

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2021 18:12


Die Podcast-Woche startet bei Malte Asmus und Andreas Wurm mit dem Gedenken an die verstorbene Stürmerlegende Gerd Müller. Der Mann, ohne den es den aktuellen FC Bayern München wohl nie gegeben hätte. Und dann geht es um diese Themen des Sporttages: Eklige Unioner - oscarreifer Haaland - Der erste Bundesliga-Spieltag war großes Kino DFL-Chefin von Springers Gnaden? Was wir von Donata Hopfen halten Alexander Zverev hofft auf kleinen Tennisboom - zurecht? Dazu gibt es Top und Flop und ein Highlight des heutigen Tages der Sportgeschichte die Geburtsstunde eine Weltidee! Dieser Podcast wurde produziert mit freundlicher Unterstützung und Text- und Ton-Material unseres Partners, dem Sport-Informations-Dienst SID. Der SID ist Content-Lieferant für nahezu alle großen Sender und digitalen Sport-Portale. Über 90 Prozent aller Sportredaktionen in Deutschland setzen auf den SID.

Monday Moms
Highland Springs falls in state Class 5 football title game, 13-10

Monday Moms

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2021 6:45


You can’t win them all. That’s a reality that Stone Bridge High School head football coach Mickey Thompson knows all too well. Facing Highland Springs in the Class 5 State Championship for the fourth time in six years, Thompson and the Bulldogs were looking for their first win in those matchups. Thanks to an overtime touchdown pass from quarterback Billy Wiles to Jacob Thomas, they were able to accomplish that goal, defeating the Springers 13-10 on Saturday in the title game at Varina High School. “This was one of those games where it wasn’t good enough just to get here...Article LinkSupport the show (http://henricocitizen.com/contribute)

#MehringsMeinung
012 - Auf ein Wort mit Christian Springer (Kabarettist und Autor)

#MehringsMeinung

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2021 86:31


Toller Gast, tolle Haltung, tolles Gespräch. Christian Springer ist nicht nur Kabarettist und Autor mit Leib und Seele, sondern auch engagierter Helfer in notleidenden Ländern - v. a. im Libanon und Syrien. Mit dem Münchener haben wir uns diesmal im Bayerischen Landtag getroffen und mit ihm über das Künstlersein in der Pandemie, Abstand und Anstand unterhalten. Was Hofnarren mit all dem zu tun haben und was er von Corona-Leugnern und Rechtsorientierten hält, da nimmt er kein Blatt vor den Mund - und das ist gut so. Freut Euch auf knapp 90 Minuten interessante Aspekte in einem kurzweiligen Interview. Hier noch das Spendenkonto des von Springer ins Leben gerufenen "Orienthelfer e. V." (gespendet werden darf immer - nicht nur zu Weihnachten): Stadtsparkasse München Empfänger: Orienthelfer e.V. IBAN DE92701500000000574111 BIC SSKMDEMM Um eines von 10 Büchern "Wir müssen Freiheit aushalten" von Christian Springer zu erhalten, schreibt uns Euer ehrliches Feedback an abgeordnetenbuero.mehring@fw-landtag.de mit dem Betreff #MehringsMeinung. Den ersten 10 Schreibern, schicken wir ein im Original unterzeichnetes Exemplar. Für alle anderen gibt es die Bücher Springers auch hier: https://www.christianspringer.de/buecher.html

The JC Money Show
The Springer Saga

The JC Money Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2021 31:55


On this edition of #TJCMS, JC goes on a two day, three call journey with the Medicare company. Unlike other calls, this one feels more like a case of the wrong number than a scam itself, but JC introduces the caller to "James and Dorothy Springer" and it becomes clear to this caller that the Springers have more issues than just accepting Medicare benefits.A swashbuckling fun time!Powered by Raze Energy: https://bit.ly/35vBwr0Click the above link and enter promo code GERE at checkout to save 15% on your order!Support the show with a secure PayPal Donation: https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=DNUT5Z6DGHZGYIntroducing Fresh Clean Tees! Your search for the most comfortable, best fitting tee shirts is over. We've got style, color, and size options for all! Purchase using our link to support the show: https://bit.ly/3ucecIJ

Outdoor Line
Hour 1: Springers, Spring Steel, Spring Turkey and Spring Bear

Outdoor Line

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2021 45:23


Tom, Rob, and Joey rundown all the exciting local Spring hunting and fishing opportunities, and they look at a Horseback Fly-fishing adventure with Joe Poteat of South Fork Outfitters.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Birds All Day
Is Vladdy's best fit at 1B, Springer on Astros’ scandal & Mariners fiasco w/ Josh Goldberg

Birds All Day

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2021 78:17


A first in the short history of Spin Rate, a guest joins the show! Fan590 host and Toronto Blue Jays radio producer Josh Goldberg joins Drew and Kaitlyn to unravel one of the biggest questions in Spring Training, will Vladimir Guerrero Jr. play a majority of the time at first base? Why would he? What benefit does it provide to him and the team? Are there better options at 3B? How can the Jays balance placating their young core and putting themselves in a position to win games? Drew and Kaitlyn then discuss the trash can in the room; will George Springers' past affect his tenure in Toronto? Lastly, what in the world was Kevin Mather doing? Rundown: (7:30) Josh Goldberg joins the pod (15:30) Are there better options at 3B (36:15) Springers' past a problem? (53:00) Who will hit leadoff? (1:01:45) Kevin Mather-Mariners debacle Follow Drew on Twitter: @DrewGROF Follow Kaitlyn on Twitter: @kaitlyncmcgrath Follow Josh Goldberg on Twitter: @JGoldberg12 Join The Athletic for just $3.99 a month! Visit: theathletic.com/spinrate Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The A-Team w/ Wexler & Clanton
Geoff Blum Talks Springers Exit & His Legacy As An Astro

The A-Team w/ Wexler & Clanton

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2021 14:13


Coast Mornings Podcasts with Blake and Eva
11 - 06 - 20 ZOE FROM SPRINGERS JEWELERS BLING FOR YOUR BOO

Coast Mornings Podcasts with Blake and Eva

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2020 8:33


11 - 06 - 20 ZOE FROM SPRINGERS JEWELERS BLING FOR YOUR BOO by Maine's Coast 93.1

Phantom Galaxy
Phantom Galaxy Halloween: Best Short Horror Fiction with Victor H. Rodriguez

Phantom Galaxy

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2020 119:29


Halloween draws near and the creeping shadows of October are already upon us. What better way to confront this season of mists than by reading some shivery and chill-inducing short stories?The Phantom Galaxy welcomes author Victor Rodriguez to the show to help us come up with a list of the best fiction for the Halloween season. Victor discusses his own work in the genres of sci-fi, fantasy and horror and talks his short story collection ‘The Sound of Fear’ and various other projects, including his work in a brand new collection called ‘On Time’ from Transmundane Press.Then Nathan, Bill and Victor traverse the weird and wonderful world of horror authors, stopping off to visit the likes of Stephen King, Clive Barker, Poe, Lovecraft and Charlotte Perkins Gilman with other singular and underrated voices like Thomas F. Manteleone and Robert R. McCammon.Check out our choices, and then let us know which ones you’d choose!Links for Victor Rodriguez:https://vhrodriguez.wordpress.com/The Sound of Fear: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1694373576On Time from Transmundane Press: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08KBT7YY3----more----Links to some of the stories covered in this episode: The Outsider: https://www.hplovecraft.com/writings/texts/fiction/o.aspxThe Price by Neil Gaiman: http://www.bitchwick.com/amacker/bean/price.htmlFritz Leiber - Space-Time for Springers: https://www.baen.com/Chapters/9781625791207/9781625791207___2.htmStrange Candy: https://www.robertmccammon.com/strange-candy-a-halloween-short-story-by-robert-mccammon/In the Hills, the Cities by Clive Barker: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kMrwtnNE9HgArmy of One (Billions Aline) by Junji  Ito https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FHqv4ck91MwThe Summer People by Shirley Jackson: http://indbooks.in/mirror1/?p=454The Oblong Box: https://poestories.com/read/oblongThe Monkey’s Paw: https://americanliterature.com/author/w-w-jacobs/short-story/the-monkeys-pawThe Landlady: https://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/sites/teacheng/files/landlady_text.pdfThe Yellow Wallpaper: https://www.nlm.nih.gov/exhibition/theliteratureofprescription/exhibitionAssets/digitalDocs/The-Yellow-Wall-Paper.pdfDon't miss this episode, and check us out at all the places below: www.phantomgalaxy.podbean.comTwitter: @fantomgalaxyYou can also find us on Facebook at: The Phantom Galaxy Podcast You can also contact us and share your recommendations for show topics and stuff to review (books, beer, movies, whatever!) or leave us a Phantom Rant at Phantomcasts@gmail.com  Find Bill Van Veghel's other podcasts at:Land of the Creeps podcast - http://landofthecreeps.blogspot.com/ Other places to find Bill:https://www.facebook.com/bvanveghelhttps://letterboxd.com/billhorrorguy/https://landofthecreeps.blogspot.com/

Down and Back
Stately Canine Sidekicks of 1600 Pennsylvania Ave.

Down and Back

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2020 25:43


In this podcast episode, we tour a couple of centuries of presidential dogs, the canine confidants of our Commanders-in-Chief. America truly is the land of opportunity. Just ask the lucky dogs who went from rags to riches solely from being in the right place, on the side of the road, at the right time. Dogs have been a welcome presence in the White House since the time of George Washington. For an in-person tour through Presidential pups, visit the AKC Museum of the Dog in New York. The Museum’s Presidential Dogs exhibit opens to the public on September 8, 2020. Bonafide Bits: George Washington was a dog lover and a serious breeder Warren G. Harding’s Airedale Terrier, Laddie Boy, was featured in thousands of press stories Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s Scottish Terrier, Fala, was mentioned in the President’s speech to labor leaders George H. W. Bush’s English Springer Spaniel, Millie, became a best-selling author Barack Obama gifted his daughters a Portuguese Water Dog puppy after winning the Presidential election Featured Breeds: American Foxhound American Foxhounds are good-natured, low-maintenance hounds who get on well with kids, dogs, even cats, but come with special considerations for prospective owners. They are closely associated with Revolutionary heroes and the rolling estates of old Virginia. Discover more about American Foxhounds at AKC’s American Foxhound Breed Biography. Briard The Briard packs so much loyalty, love, and spirit into its ample frame that it’s often described as a "heart wrapped in fur." The dashing good looks of these muscular Frenchmen radiate a distinct aura of Gallic romance and elegance. Discover more about Briards at AKC’s Briard Breed Biography. Airedale Terrier His size, strength, and unflagging spirit have earned the Airedale Terrier the nickname “The King of Terriers.” The Airedale stands among the world’s most versatile dog breeds and has distinguished himself as a hunter, athlete, and companion. Discover more about Airedale Terriers at AKC’s Airedale Terrier Breed Biography. Bullmastiff Fearless at work, docile at home, the Bullmastiff is a large, muscular guarder who pursued and held poachers in Merry Old England—merry, we suppose, for everyone but poachers. Bullmastiffs are the result of Bulldog and Mastiff crosses. Discover more about Bullmastiffs at AKC’s Bullmastiff Breed Biography. Irish Setter The Irish Setter is a high-spirited gundog known for grace, swiftness, and a flashy red coat. They are famously good family dogs: sweet-tempered companions for the folks, and rollicking playmates and tennis-ball fetchers for the children. Discover more about Irish Setters at AKC’s Irish Setter Breed Biography. English Setter The English Setter is a medium-sized sporting dog of sweet temper and show-stopping good looks. It is one of the AKC’s four British setters created to work on the distinctly different terrains of England, Ireland, and Scotland. Discover more about English Setters at AKC’s English Setter Breed Biography. German Shepherd Dog There are many reasons why German Shepherd Dogs stand in the front rank of canine royalty, but experts say their defining attribute is character: loyalty, courage, confidence, the ability to learn commands for many tasks, and the willingness to put their life on the line in defense of loved ones. German Shepherd Dogs will be gentle family pets and steadfast guardians, but, the breed standard says, there’s a “certain aloofness that does not lend itself to immediate and indiscriminate friendships.” Discover more about German Shepherd Dogs at AKC’s German Shepherd Dog Breed Biography. Great Dane The easygoing Great Dane, the mighty “Apollo of Dogs,” is a total joy to live with—but owning a dog of such imposing size, weight, and strength is a commitment not to be entered into lightly. This breed is indeed great, but not a Dane. Discover more about Great Danes at AKC’s Great Dane Breed Biography. Scottish Terrier A solidly compact dog of vivid personality, the Scottish Terrier is an independent, confident companion of high spirits. Scotties have a dignified, almost-human character. Their terrier persistence has earned the breed the nickname “the Diehard.” Discover more about Scottish Terriers at AKC’s Scottish Terrier Breed Biography. Cocker Spaniel The merry and frolicsome Cocker Spaniel, with his big, dreamy eyes and impish personality, is one of the world’s best-loved breeds. They were developed as hunting dogs, but Cockers gained their wide popularity as all-around companions. Discover more about Cocker Spaniels at AKC’s Cocker Spaniel Breed Biography. Beagle Not only is the Beagle an excellent hunting dog and loyal companion it is also happy-go-lucky, funny, and—thanks to its pleading expression—cute. They were bred to hunt in packs, so they enjoy company and are generally easygoing. Discover more about Beagles at AKC’s Beagle Breed Biography. Golden Retriever The Golden Retriever, an exuberant Scottish gundog of great beauty, stands among America’s most popular dog breeds. They are serious workers at hunting and fieldwork, as guides for the blind, and in search-and-rescue, enjoy obedience and other competitive events, and have an endearing love of life when not at work. Discover more about Golden Retrievers at AKC’s Golden Retriever Breed Biography. English Springer Spaniel The English Springer Spaniel is a sweet-faced, lovable bird dog of great energy, stamina, and brains. Sport hunters cherish the duality of working Springers: handsome, mannerly pets during the week, and trusty hunting buddies on weekends. Discover more about English Springer Spaniels at AKC’s English Springer Spaniel Breed Biography. Portuguese Water Dog The bright and biddable Portuguese Water Dog was bred to be an all-around fisherman’s helper. The robust, medium-sized body is covered by a coat of tight, low-shedding curls. They are eager and athletic companions built for water work. Discover more about Portuguese Water Dogs at AKC’s Portuguese Water Dog Breed Biography. For more information about a specific breed visit the breed’s parent club or AKC.org. Shareables: Presidential pups have had popularity ratings their Commanders-in-Chief could only dream of. Franklin Delano Roosevelt had a Scottish Terrier named Murray the Outlaw of Falahill, popularly known as Fala. From bed to shed, America is the land of canine opportunity.

Upland Nation
Spaniels! Training, e-collar use, the evolution and diversion ... Jerry Ray Cacchio, Gun Dog columnist. And a challenge to wild bird hunters.

Upland Nation

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2020 78:41


Everything you wanted to know about hunting cocker spaniels ... and much more. From insights into the devolution of old-school hunt clubs, to his experience with Richard Wolters, Hall of Famer Jerry Ray Cacchio has opinions and observations. Gun Dog magazine columnist, consultant, trainer, judge, hunter, Cacchio gives us advice on picking a dog, conformation, subtle differences between Springers and cockers, aspects of flusher training and how it's different for spaniels versus retrievers and pointers.Critical gear, essential commands, the biggest mistakes we make, how to plant birds for flushers, and why most of us mis-use an e-collar on the little dogs are all part-and-parcel of Jerry's unique perspective.Plus, a wild-bird-hunting challenge, all brought to you by these sponsors:Cabela's, Sage & Braker Mercantile, Electronic Shooters Protection, Dogtra, Dr. Tim's performance dog food; FindBirdHuntingSpots.com and Gunner Kennels.Take advantage of great deals from many of our sponsors: 10% off and free shipping on any purchase over $200 at Dogtra with the code SLUN10 (plus sale prices on many collar-transmitter bundles); win a Pointer shotgun at FindBirdHuntingSpots.com; 30% off your first order from Dr. Tim's with the code UPLANDNATION; and financing on your Gunner Kennel.

CCE DAIRY EDUCATORS
E3 Dialing into Your Best Dairy: Heifers and Springers

CCE DAIRY EDUCATORS

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2020 18:00


In this episode, CCE Regional Dairy Specialists Margaret Quaassdorff and Dave Balbian discuss best management practices for dairy heifers from post-weaning to freshening. Topics include heifer health and nutrition, growth and breeding targets, housing facilities and ventilation, and incorporation into the milking herd. For more information: https://prodairy.cals.cornell.edu/events/podcasts/

Coast Mornings Podcasts with Blake and Eva
4 - 21 - 20 SPRINGERS JEWELERS BAG THAT BENEFITS FULL PLATES

Coast Mornings Podcasts with Blake and Eva

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2020 6:29


4 - 21 - 20 SPRINGERS JEWELERS BAG THAT BENEFITS FULL PLATES by Maine's Coast 93.1

Andersens Sproken en vertellingen by Hans Christian Andersen

More great books at LoyalBooks.com

Locked On Astros - Daily Podcast On The Houston Astros
Astros Prospect Busted, and George Springers Future.

Locked On Astros - Daily Podcast On The Houston Astros

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2020 20:42


The Houston Astros has a pitcher suspended for a second time (1 year suspension) for PEDs. While George Springer discusses contract negotiations. Could we se a return of Collin McHugh and who will the Astros 4th and 5th starter be? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Locked On Astros - Daily Podcast On The Houston Astros
Astros Prospect Busted, and George Springers Future.

Locked On Astros - Daily Podcast On The Houston Astros

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2020 23:42


The Houston Astros has a pitcher suspended for a second time (1 year suspension) for PEDs. While George Springer discusses contract negotiations. Could we se a return of Collin McHugh and who will the Astros 4th and 5th starter be? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

A Walk In The Dark
Out of Touch

A Walk In The Dark

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2020 13:58


Matthew and Carol Springer have been happily married for many years, but life – in it’s uncanny and unpredictible way – is about to change all of that.  In their loving quest to remain happy together, the Springers have decided to ignore the “No Exit” sign which looms before them.   OUT OF TOUCH was... Read More

Elevate Your Game Radio
Episode 44 - Hunting With The King of the Flushing Dogs, The Springer Spaniels w/ Briar Ridge Springers

Elevate Your Game Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2019 87:56


This week I am joined by Jim Giacobbe, the founder and owner of Briar Ridge Springers, of California. Jim is one of the most passionate Springer Spaniel breeders and hunters that I know. Jim and I talk about the history of the breed, how Jim's dogs are different than most other Springers and why everyone needs to hunt upland birds with a Springer!        ________________________________________________________ Briar Ridge Springer Website:  https://briarridgespringers.com www.facebook.com/briarridgespringers www.instagram.com/briarridgespringers ________________________________________________________ Apex Ammunition makes the hardest hitting TSS upland loads available. Follow the link below for more information:  https://www.apexmunition.com/?rfsn=2712252.d26d21 www.facebook.com/elevateyourgameradio.com www.instagram.com/elevateyourgameradio 

Greg & The Morning Buzz
The Buzz-Springers Jewellers Couple's Challenge.

Greg & The Morning Buzz

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2018


We get familiar with our couples.......!

Greg & The Morning Buzz
Buzz-Springers Jewellers Couples Challenge.

Greg & The Morning Buzz

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2018


Round One. Things are getting hot here in the studio!

Greg & The Morning Buzz
The Morning Buzz Springers Jewellers Couples Challenge.

Greg & The Morning Buzz

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2018


Greg & The Morning Buzz
The Buzz-Springers Jewellers Couple's Challenge.

Greg & The Morning Buzz

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2018 10:26


We get familiar with our couples.......!

Greg & The Morning Buzz
The Morning Buzz Springers Jewellers Couples Challenge.

Greg & The Morning Buzz

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2018 11:48


Greg & The Morning Buzz
Buzz-Springers Jewellers Couples Challenge.

Greg & The Morning Buzz

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2018 22:03


Round One. Things are getting hot here in the studio!

Split The Party
Split The Party 79: My Dramatic Samurai Game?!

Split The Party

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2018 86:46


This week the gang gives a quick Dorksgiving recap, the start to season two of our FFG Star Wars campaign, players with different views of fun, and an AcadeCon 2018 quick debrief. This is the second time Space-Time for Springers has been brought up. Learn more about Fritz Leiber’s short story here!

Workaround
#13 Florian Klages: Welchen Beitrag leistet People & Culture für Axel Springers Digitalisierung?

Workaround

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2018 33:17


#13 Florian Klages: Welchen Beitrag leistet People & Culture für Axel Springers Digitalisierung? by Jasmine Werner | Axel Springer hy

The Bottom Line by Ben Rogers
Episode 4: Victory Defined w/ Coach Loren Johnson

The Bottom Line by Ben Rogers

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2018 51:45


"Victory Defined" features a conversation with Loren Johnson, the head football coach at Highland Springs High School in Richmond, VA. Coach Johnson played his college ball at Virginia Tech and coached at a few different high schools before arriving at Highland Springs in 2008, where he has led the Springers to state championships in 2015, 2016, and 2017. Listen in to hear Ben & Coach Johnson discuss the definition of "Total Victory", how the game of football is a great vehicle to get us where we want to be, and more.

The Weird Tales Podcast
Space-Time For Springers, by Fritz Lieber

The Weird Tales Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2018 25:38


Gummitch is going to write books. Books that will change the world, and relations between it's two most important beings- cats and humans. He just has one small obstacle to overcome first.   Twitter: Tycho_Alhambra Email: TheWeirdTalesPodcast@gmail.com  

Irish Examiner Sport
PaperTalk Extra: Joe Schmidt's rookies, north London derby and the Kerry springers show

Irish Examiner Sport

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2018 25:30


Steve Neville and Mikie Sheehan join Peter McNamara to discuss the rookies hoping to prove their worth to Joe Schmidt against Italy. Also: the North London derby, Conte's travails and Kerry's young guns

The Sports Bar Podcast (SBP)
PS804 -High School Football Wrap Up.

The Sports Bar Podcast (SBP)

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2016 60:00


We spoke to Highland Springs  Asst. Coach Fareed Saunders about The Springers winning back to back State Titles We also spoke  to Coach Chamont Thompson as he gets ready to lead the 804 against the 757 in the I-64 Bowl

The Breakfast Club
Bobby Bones Shoots his Shot to Jerry Springers Craziest episode Plots

The Breakfast Club

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2016 73:10


On today's episode Bobby Bones tries to shoot his shot at Angela Yee and Jerry Springer reminisces about his craziest episode and spills the tea. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers

Medien-KuH
Folge 22: Zukunft von „Genial daneben“, Weihnachten im Fernsehen, Springers Paid-Content-Offensive, Golden-Globe-Nomis

Medien-KuH

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2009 182:05


So kurz vor Weihnachten konnten sich auch die Medien-KüHe Körber und Hammes dem Zauber dieser Zeit voller Harmonie und Sinnlichkeit nicht entziehen, und haben ein ganz besonderes Vorweihnachtsgeschenk für die treue KuH-Hörer-Meute auf der Weide: Die bis dato längste Folge eures Medienpodcasts Nummer eins mit etwas mehr als 180 Minuten Spielzeit. Glühwein aufgesetzt, Kekse geholt und ran an die Themen der Ausgabe 22. Nachdem die zwei Film- und Fernsehverrückten Fehler der letzten Ausgabe klargestellt haben, widmen sie sich einem beinahe schon traurigen Thema. Das Magazin Quotenmeter.de berichtete, dass die Sat.1-Sendung „Genial daneben“ möglicherweise vor dem Aus stünde. Heiße Luft und aufgeblasene Headline? Oder was ist dran, an diesen Informationen? Das ohne Zweifel größte KuH-Thema in dieser Woche ist Weihnachten im Fernsehen. Zur Vorweihnachtszeit werden wir mit Spendensendungen überflutet und von allen Seiten zum Spenden aufgefordert, an Heiligabend und den Feiertagen zeigt sich auch die Glotze ausnahmsweise mal von seiner schöneren Programmseite. Dazu hat sich zum einen KuHlumnistin Frau Engels die beiden Spendengalas mit Kai Pflaume (Sat.1) und Thomas Gottschalk (ZDF) angesehen und Körber und Hammes kramten im Studio die Fernsehzeitschrift hervor um ultimative KuH-TV-Weihnachtstipps von sich zu geben. Zum KuH der Woche von unseren Hörern erstaunlich oft gekürt: Die Paid-Content-Offensive des Axel-Springer-Verlags. Auf der Suche nach neuen Erlösquellen, wurden nicht nur die kosten- und abopflichtigen Apps von „Bild“ und „Welt“ gelauncht, sondern seit Mitte der Woche werden Nutzer der Springer-Angebote Abendblatt.de („Hamburger Abendblatt“) und Morgenpost.de („Berliner Morgenpost“) online für die regionale Berichterstattung im Netz zur Kasse gebeten. Versuche der Rechtfertigung des stellvertretenden Chefredakteurs Matthias Iken und die Sichtweise von Herrn Körber und Herrn Hammes hört ihr in der Folge. Dem Segment Film wird sich – wie es sich für eine Rekord-KuH gehört – ebenfalls ausgiebig gewidmet. Neben den Top-Neustarts der Woche, „Avatar“ und „Wo die wilden Kerle wohnen“, werfen die zwei KüHe wie jede Woche einen Blick auf die Charts. Als speziellen KuH-Tipp bringt Herr Hammes heute „Hart auf Sendung“ aus seiner DVD-Sammlung mit. Vielleicht das noch fehlende Weihnachtsgeschenk? Und: die Golden-Globe-Nominierungen sind raus, Herrschaften! Wer die wichtigsten Nominierten sind...

Miette's Bedtime Story Podcast
Space-Time for Springers

Miette's Bedtime Story Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2009 36:36


Can I tell you something about my speculative fiction habits? Of course I can-- this my barroom restroom wall and the red marker's in my slimy mitt. Here's the thing: I just love stories about sentient animals. I can't get enough of talking dogs or super-intelligent rats or telekinetic polar bears-- this is the stuff of unconditional love.

Miette's Bedtime Story Podcast
Space-Time for Springers

Miette's Bedtime Story Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2009


Can I tell you something about my speculative fiction habits? Of course I can-- this my barroom restroom wall and the red marker's in my slimy mitt. Here's the thing: I just love stories about sentient animals. I can't get enough of talking dogs or super-intelligent rats or telekinetic polar bears-- this is the stuff of unconditional love.