Podcasts about Stoute

  • 92PODCASTS
  • 128EPISODES
  • 39mAVG DURATION
  • 1EPISODE EVERY OTHER WEEK
  • Jan 9, 2025LATEST

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Best podcasts about Stoute

Latest podcast episodes about Stoute

Voorproevers
Een middeleeuwse roadtrip met Bart Van Loo en de podcast 'Stoute schoenen'

Voorproevers

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2025 21:35


60 afleveringen over 60 plekken waar je het decor van ons Bourgondisch verleden kan aanraken. Bart Van Loo trok zijn stoute schoenen aan, en vertrok op tijdreis. Hij waadde door de modder van het slagveld, beklom kerk- en kasteeltorens en steeg te paard. Van de ruïnes van de Sint-Baafsabdij in Gent waar Filips de Stoute trouwde met Margaretha Van Male tot het Spaanse klooster waar Karel V, 'de laatste Bourgondiër', stierf.

Napoleon, met Johan Op de Beeck
Ontdek nu Stoute schoenen op VRT MAX.

Napoleon, met Johan Op de Beeck

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2025 1:39


Wrijf de kuiten in en trek mee de stoute schoenen aan voor een epische reis langs afgelegen kasteelruïnes, donkere kerkers, en modderige slagvelden. Door de late middeleeuwen letterlijk aan te raken blaast auteur Bart Van Loo ons verre verleden meer dan ooit nieuw leven in. De reis brengt ons op het spoor van vergeten ridders en kruisvaarders. Maar we komen ook de hoofdrolspelers uit de Bourgondiërs opnieuw tegen. Luister nu op VRT MAX.

De vorstinnen van Vlaanderen
Luister ook Stoute schoenen op VRT MAX.

De vorstinnen van Vlaanderen

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2025 1:39


Wrijf de kuiten in en trek mee de stoute schoenen aan voor een epische reis langs afgelegen kasteelruïnes, donkere kerkers, en modderige slagvelden. Door de late middeleeuwen letterlijk aan te raken blaast auteur Bart Van Loo ons verre verleden meer dan ooit nieuw leven in. De reis brengt ons op het spoor van vergeten ridders en kruisvaarders. Maar we komen ook de hoofdrolspelers uit de Bourgondiërs opnieuw tegen. Luister nu op VRT MAX.

PZC Voetbal Vodcast
#10 met Jevairo Pengel (Hoek): harde voeten, zachte handjes en stoute schoenen

PZC Voetbal Vodcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2024 45:21


De tiende aflevering van de PZC Voetbal Podcast met als gast Jevairo Pengel. De speler van koploper Hoek is een van de revelaties dit seizoen en bespreekt tal van zaken met de sportjournalisten Juriën Dam en Jan Dagevos. Dat het goed gaat bij derdedivisionist Hoek moge duidelijk zijn, zo goed zelfs dat de vaste volgers Hoek zelden zo goed hebben zien spelen. Een mooie rol in het team is weggelegd voor de jonge Pengel. Hij vertelt hoe hij de stoute schoenen aantrok om van FC Dordrecht naar Hoek te gaan. De Denzel Dumfries van de Zeeuwse velden spreekt verder over de zoektocht naar een zaakwaarnemer, zijn harde voeten, voetballende kwaliteiten en het op zijn falie krijgen van trainer Gérard de Nooijer. De schilder van beroep, die na trainingen vaak ook nog even de sportschool induikt, begon het seizoen nog zonder contract, maar daar is inmiddels al verandering in gekomen. Verder gaat het over de opmerkelijke zaterdagavond van Dagevos in de Johan Cruijff ArenA en wil diezelfde Dagevos ook alles weten over de plotselinge aanstelling van Dam als interim-trainer bij Axel.Support the show: https://krant.nlSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

In The Money Players' Podcast
Nick Luck Daily Ep 1133 - EXCLUSIVE: AMO Racing in bid for Stoute yard

In The Money Players' Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2024 19:27


In this bonus podcast, Nick talks exclusively to Kia Joorabchian, who confirms Amo Racing's offer and strong desire to acquire the historic Freemason Lodge yard, for many decades the base of the now retired Sir Michael Stoute.

Nick Luck Daily Podcast
Ep 1133 - EXCLUSIVE: AMO Racing in bid for Stoute yard

Nick Luck Daily Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2024 19:27


In this bonus podcast, Nick talks exclusively to Kia Joorabchian, who confirms Amo Racing's offer and strong desire to acquire the historic Freemason Lodge yard, for many decades the base of the now retired Sir Michael Stoute.

In The Money Players' Podcast
Nick Luck Daily Ep 1129 - Stoute bows out

In The Money Players' Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2024 49:07


Tom in for Nick and joined by broadcaster and journalist Lydia Hislop. We first reflect on Sir Michael Stoute having sent out his last ever runner yesterday at Nottingham and discuss just how much the industry will miss him. We hear from Jour De Galop's Adrien Cugnasse who brings us news of today's French protests against proposed tax rises and what they might mean for the industry. Lydia reports further on the news from Ireland broken on the podcast yesterday re the IHRB's financial impropriety and on Luke Comer jnr's successful appeal. We look ahead to the pick of the weekend action and hear from Valvano's rider Hector Crouch who is current favourite for the November handicap and from Barry Connell who sends out Marine National in the Barberstown Castle Chase at Naas on Sunday. Plus we welcome the return of our point to point segment in association with ThoroughBid as Ben Atkins tells us what we can look forward to this weekend.

Nick Luck Daily Podcast
Ep 1129 - Stoute bows out

Nick Luck Daily Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2024 49:07


Tom in for Nick and joined by broadcaster and journalist Lydia Hislop. We first reflect on Sir Michael Stoute having sent out his last ever runner yesterday at Nottingham and discuss just how much the industry will miss him. We hear from Jour De Galop's Adrien Cugnasse who brings us news of today's French protests against proposed tax rises and what they might mean for the industry. Lydia reports further on the news from Ireland broken on the podcast yesterday re the IHB's misappropriation of funds and on Luke Comer jnr's successful appeal. We look ahead to the pick of the weekend action and hear from Valvano's rider Hector Crouch who is current favourite for the November handicap and from Barry Connell who sends out Marine National in the Barberstown Castle Chase at Naas on Sunday. Plus we welcome the return of our point to point segment in association with ThoroughBid as Ben Atkins tells us what we can look forward to this weekend.

The Mic High Club Luchtvaart Podcast
#291 Pas op voor de Vliegtuigtruckers!

The Mic High Club Luchtvaart Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2024 38:17


Nummer 291! easyJet passagiers schrikken van de vliegtuig*kker. Een rijkeluisdochter wil weg uit Genève met een peperdure privéjet. Probleem opgedoken bij sommige Boeing 737's. Farewell Falcon: het is nu écht klaar met de F-16 bij de Koninklijke Luchtmacht. Dick Schoof schroeft de veiligheid omhoog in het regeringsvliegtuig. Een vrouw beweert dat aliens de Politieheli besturen. Chapters: (00:00) DJ Turbulence in the mix (01:13) Verwend nest boekt private jet (07:22) Leader (10:07) Boeing 737: defect staartroer (12:03) Schoof doet het veiliger dan Rutte (15:36) KLM Neo en de Vakantiekoning (16:33) Stoute unruly passengers (18:49) Dame in Suriname wil "Pastemol" (21:18) Vrouw denkt dat Politieheli een UFO is (22:29) Onhandelbare passagiers krijgen boete (25:22) New airline in Israël (29:42) Oude ATR helemaal uitgewoond (32:13) Afscheid van de F-16 (34:27) Zelensky praat zijn mond voorbij (35:33) Afsluit (36:08) Nabrander: The Airbus Song Muziek: Rich Girl - Hall & Oates. Tips en commentaar stuur je naar info@tmhc.nl Michiel Koudstaal is onze voice-over. Voor al je stemmenwerk ga naar voxcast.nl

Touche Podcast
Bart Van Loo

Touche Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2024 106:20


Het was de grote droom van Bart Van Loo om te worden zoals zijn leraar Frans. Maar dat draaide uit op een stevige burn-out. Een dieptepunt dat ervoor zorgde dat hij zijn passie voor de Franse cultuur op een andere manier zou bedrijven. Hij groeide uit tot de beste meesterverteller van ons land. Zijn naam valt niet meer los te koppelen van de 'Bourgondiërs' en met zijn nieuwste boek ‘Stoute schoenen' maakt hij die geschiedenis nu ook tastbaar. Maar wie is hij… als hij zwijgt?

The Pivot Podcast
Steve Stoute Music & Advertising mogul talks Super Bowl Halftime act Kendrck Lamar vs Lil Wayne, Jay Z's impact, Reveals Drake news, rise of UnitedMasters, the fall of P Diddy & business philosophy

The Pivot Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2024 82:11


"The fact that these artists are getting their flowers, getting a chance to perform on this stage, these black artists..If it wasn't for Jay-Z, this wouldn't be happening. So how can you come down and criticize this man like that? it's beyond me." Steve Stoute sounds off on the recent Super Bowl Halftime controversry. Steve Stoute is the ultimate American success story. He's worn a lot of hats—author, entrepreneur, ad exec, and most notoriously, a music mogul. For nearly three decades, he's played a pivotal role at some of the biggest music labels from Interscope, Geffen, and Sony, to working with massive names like U2 and Eminem. Ultimately he's helped shape not just hip-hop, but today's music culture as a whole and continues to find ways to bridge the gap with culture, sports, music and global reach. In this episode, in partnership with Fanatics, Stoute takes us on a wild ride through his experiences in music, advertising, and business and how valuing relationships fueled his journey to the top.  We had to start the conversation off and get right to it- With loud buzz around Kendrick Lamar being announced as this year's Super Bowl Half-time Act... controversy continues to swirl around the choice and blame being put towards Jay Z, who is on of Stoute's closest friends and business confidants. Jay, who's been a major part of choosing the NFL's biggest act of the year, is taking heat for selecting Kendrick over the hometown star and fan favorite Lil Wayne to headline New Orleans Super Bowl. Steve is blown away by the negativity towards Jay's choice, confused why people aren't celebrating that Jay has made such strides for culture to be apart of a big event vs making it personal as football and music fans alike are split, and even some big-name artists, like Nicki Minaj, have weighed in with their grievances. Stoute delves into this topic with Ryan, Fred, and Chan, sharing the inside scoop on how the decision really went down, what he thinks of the backlash, and who was originally asked to perform!  Ryan understands this Super Bowl controversy has caused a lot of backlash and ugliness from different areas of the industry but RC says this isn't nearly the black eye to culture that the continuous fall of P Diddy has stirred up, as more allegations are revealed and Diddy's recent arrest landed him in jail without bail. Knowing Diddy for a long time, the guys ask Stoute to honestly speak to it all, especially the fallout and if he ever saw any signs or this coming…. The conversation shifts to where things are heading with music, sports, culture and owning media rights as well as creation of platforms controlling the space vs the old days where networks and big companies dictated the industry. While Stoute started in an era where artists were burning their own records and signing deals with record labels to get noticed, he speaks to how the landscape has completely shifted. With social media, consumers can find an artist's music without them needing a label-- and he thinks this transition is beneficial. He's all about artists owning their craft and not "selling their souls" to big companies which is what led him to start UnitedMasters, to help creators keep control of their music, name, and likeness. Fred asks him about the recent Dame Dash situation with and how he sees it all playing out. Stoute's family roots and emphasis on relationships has always played a part in his work ethic and drive to make money. Steve breaks down the lessons he learned in the early days of his career and how he was able to navigate big moves, taking chances and never settling for anything less than his goals.  The guys soak up the knowledge from Steve as he breaks down the music industry's inner workings, connect music with sports, providing a front-row seat to the conversations shaping culture and give a better understanding of how key relationships have paved the way for so many to experience a new wave of success at any level.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

In The Money Players' Podcast
Nick Luck Daily Ep 1089 - Why are top jocks everywhere but Donny on Saturday?

In The Money Players' Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2024 39:45


Nick is joined by Rishi Persad to discuss the latest from around the racing world. Today, Nick and Rishi discuss a loaded weekend around the globe which sees the three highest profile GB based jockeys not riding on the country's big stage for the world's oldest classic. Among guests today is Richard Kingscote, looking for a Group One double on Ghostwriter and Kerdos at the weekend and rider of many important Stoute-trained winners. Andrew Balding, whose New Century heads to Canada with Oisin Murphy, explains why that is the preferred option for horse and rider, and spins through the best of his Doncaster team, while Wille McCreery looks ahead to the Matron Stakes with a brace of fascinating contenders. Also on the show, Nick and Rishi pick some of their favourite Stoute-trained horses, and discuss Elizabeth Gale's ban at Worcester last night.

In The Money Players' Podcast
Nick Luck Daily Ep 1088 - Ryan Moore acknowledges Stoute's epic career

In The Money Players' Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2024 47:18


Nick is joined by Racing Post senior writer to look at the latest from around the racing world. Today they are joined first by Ryan Moore, who speaks warmly of the skill and kindness of trainer Sir Michael Stoute, who announced his impending retirement yesterday. Owen Burrows, a former Stoute assistant, is also on the show, and has news of his St Leger hopeful Deira Mile. Plus, Jake Warren on the clutch of Stakes runners that he manages/bought ahead of the weekend: Economics plus the Tattersalls grads Soprano, Believing and Jewelry. Ollie Sangster has high hopes for his star juvenile fillies at Doncaster and The Curragh, while Leopardstown CEO Tim Husbands expresses dismay at ITV not covering the Royal Bahrain Irish Champion Stakes, and JA McGrath returns with a new season in Hong Kong.

Nick Luck Daily Podcast
Ep 1089 - Why are top jocks everywhere but Donny on Saturday?

Nick Luck Daily Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2024 39:44


Nick is joined by Rishi Persad to discuss the latest from around the racing world. Today, Nick and Rishi discuss a loaded weekend around the globe which sees the three highest profile GB based jockeys not riding on the country's big stage for the world's oldest classic. Among guests today is Richard Kingscote, looking for a Group One double on Ghostwriter and Kerdos at the weekend and rider of many important Stoute-trained winners. Andrew Balding, whose New Century heads to Canada with Oisin Murphy, explains why that is the preferred option for horse and rider, and spins through the best of his Doncaster team, while Wille McCreery looks ahead to the Matron Stakes with a brace of fascinating contenders. Also on the show, Nick and Rishi pick some of their favourite Stoute-trained horses, and discuss Elizabeth Gale's ban at Worcester last night.

Nick Luck Daily Podcast
Ep 1088 - Ryan Moore acknowledges Stoute's epic career

Nick Luck Daily Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2024 47:18


Nick is joined by Racing Post senior writer to look at the latest from around the racing world. Today they are joined first by Ryan Moore, who speaks warmly of the skill and kindness of trainer Sir Michael Stoute, who announced his impending retirement yesterday. Owen Burrows, a former Stoute assistant, is also on the show, and has news of his St Leger hopeful Deira Mile. Plus, Jake Warren on the clutch of Stakes runners that he manages/bought ahead of the weekend: Economics plus the Tattersalls grads Soprano, Believing and Jewelry. Ollie Sangster has high hopes for his star juvenile fillies at Doncaster and The Curragh, while Leopardstown CEO Tim Husbands expresses dismay at ITV not covering the Royal Bahrain Irish Champion Stakes, and JA McGrath returns with a new season in Hong Kong.

OVT
1e uur: Tanks in Nederland, Bekendmaking Shortlist Libris Geschiedenisprijs, De column van Suzanna Jansen, Beetlejuice en de gothic-film, Stoute Schoenen, 08-09-2024

OVT

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2024 52:30


(02:00) Donderdag werd bekendgemaakt dat Nederland na dertien jaar weer eigen tanks krijgt, terwijl we juist een historisch ambivalente relatie hebben met de tank. Te gast om dit te duiden is militair historicus Wim Klinkert.  (15:36) Elk jaar reiken we in OVT de Libris Geschiedenis Prijs uit aan historische boeken voor een algemeen publiek. Juryvoorzitter van dienst is Gerdi Verbeet; zij maakt bekend welke 5 historische boeken de shortlist hebben gehaald.  (29:31) De column is van Suzanna Jansen.   (33:28) Beetlejuice Beetlejuice is sinds afgelopen donderdag in de bioscoop te zien. Regisseur Tim Burton geldt als koning van de gothic-film. Waarom is het genre zo populair, en hoe lang is dat al? Julius Koetsier, filmjournalist en hoofdredacteur van filmmagazine Schokkend Nieuws is te gast.  (42:42) Historicus Bart van Loo trok voor zijn nieuwste boek zijn ‘stoute schoenen' aan en trad letterlijk in de voetsporen van de Bourgondiërs. Hij trok langs alle plekken uit de Bourgondische geschiedenis om het verleden dichterbij te brengen. Hij is te gast.  Meer info: https://www.vpro.nl/programmas/ovt/luister/afleveringen/2024/08-09-2024.html#  (https://www.vpro.nl/programmas/ovt/luister/afleveringen/2024/08-09-2024.html)

OVT Fragmenten podcast
#1862 - Stoute Schoenen

OVT Fragmenten podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2024 9:44


https://www.vpro.nl/speel~RCRSA1_0535146898570~.html RCRSA1_0535146898570 Sun, 08 Sep 2024 08:00:00 +0200 full 1862 https://podcast.npo.nl/file/ovt-fragmenten-podcast/112693/stoute-schoenen.mp3?awCollectionid=feed-327-ovt-fragmenten-podcast&awEpisodeid=feed-327-ovt-fragmenten-podcast_episode-112693-RCRSA1_0535146898570 00:09:44

sun stoute awcollectionid
B&B De Podcast - Een podcast over B&B Vol Liefde
Cupido schiet raak en Robert Jan wil stoute vrouw (Week 6 mét Esmeralda)

B&B De Podcast - Een podcast over B&B Vol Liefde

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2024 30:08


Elke zondag checken Vincent en Daniël in bij B&B De Podcast om de perikelen in B&B Vol Liefde te bespreken. Vandaag: Albert wil Joyce's pappie zijn, Robert Jan is Els alweer vergeten en Mike herpakt zich.

Luisterrijk luisterboeken
Stoute kleine piranha

Luisterrijk luisterboeken

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2024 3:00


In deze tweede thriller van De Vriese & Durnez verdwijnt een dertigjarige vrouw op de Gentse Feesten. Het onderzoek leidt de Vlaamse en Waalse rechercheurs naar een obscuur klooster in een verlaten uithoek van Henegouwen. Een beklijvende thriller die je van begin tot einde in de ban weet te houden Uitgegeven door Pelckmans uitgevers Spreker: Ilse Cox

De Zoete Zusjes Vakantiepodcast
Verhaal 'De stoute broertjes'

De Zoete Zusjes Vakantiepodcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 23, 2024 10:43


De Zoete Zusjes en Bram gaan eten bij De Stoute Broertjes. Wat is het daar een rommel zeg. Ze hebben een flipperkast en ze mogen bijna alles! Zelfs boeren en scheten laten. Dit verhaal komt uit het boek 'De Zoete Zusjes gaan verhuizen'. Benieuwd hoe het verhaal verder gaat? Bestel het boek hier. En er is ook een nieuw boek uit: 'De Zoete Zusjes logeren bij tante Taart'. Wil jij een gratis Zoete Zusjes e-boekje ontvangen? Schrijf je dan in voor de nieuwsbrief, waar mee je op de hoogte blijft van nieuwe boeken, de podcast en ander Zoete Zusjes nieuws.   Volg de podcast en luister mee, bijvoorbeeld onderweg, in de auto, het vliegtuig, de trein of op de boot! Maar ook voor op de camping, in het hotel of lekker thuis.  De Zoete Zusjes vakantiepodcast is een podcast van VBK Audiolab en Kosmos Uitgevers, geproduceerd door Thinium Audioboekproducties. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

SinQuest - Fetish Podcast
# 131 - Milenaxoxo en Nympha.ophis - stoute verhalen

SinQuest - Fetish Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2024 98:21


❣️ ⁠Word vriend / vriendin van SinQuest en steun de podcast!⁠ ga naar: ⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.sinquest.nl/friends ⁠⁠⁠⁠

Geschiedenis voor herbeginners - gesproken dagblad in virale tijden
95. De Lage Landen - deel 2: Hoe weerspannig waren de onderdanen van Bourgondië?

Geschiedenis voor herbeginners - gesproken dagblad in virale tijden

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2024 57:22


waarin we zien hoe de ambitieuze eenmakingspolitiek van de Bourgondische hertogen in de Lage Landen veel weerstand oproept.WIJ ZIJN: Jonas Goossenaerts (inhoud en vertelstem), Filip Vekemans (montage), Benjamin Goyvaerts (inhoud) en Laurent Poschet (inhoud).MET BIJDRAGEN VAN: Prof. dr. Jelle Haemers (expert politieke geschiedenis middeleeuwen - KULeuven), Laurens Luyten (Philippe de Commynes), Alejandra Theus (Maria van Bourgondië - Groot Privilege), Ward Bal (Filips de Goede, Karel de Stoute).In samenwerking met Museum Hof van Busleyden - Mechelen.WIL JE ONS EEN FOOI GEVEN? http://fooienpod.com/geschiedenisvoorherbeginners. Al schenkt u tien cent of tien euro, het duurt tien seconden met een handige QR-codeWIL JE ADVERTEREN IN DEZE PODCAST? Neem dan contact op met adverteren@dagennacht.nlMEER WETEN? Onze geraadpleegde en geciteerde bronnen: Beyen, Pollmann, J., Te Velde, H. (2021). De Lage Landen. Een geschiedenis voor vandaag. Ons Erfdeel. Menen. Blockmans, W, Hoppenbrouwers, P. (2002) Eeuwen des onderscheids. Een geschiedenis van middeleeuws Europa, Prometheus, Amsterdam. De Maesschalck, E. (2020). De Bourgondische vorsten (1315-1530). Standaard Uitgeverij. Antwerpen. Stein, R. (2013). De hertog en zijn staten. De eenwording van de Bourgondische Nederlanden (ca. 1380-1480). Verloren Uitgeverij. Hilversum. Van Loo, B. (2020). De Bourgondiërs. Aartsvaders van de Nederlanden. De Bezige Bij. Amsterdam.Beeld: Wikimedia CommonsZie het privacybeleid op https://art19.com/privacy en de privacyverklaring van Californië op https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

The Simplifiers Podcast
345: How to drive your vision, mission, + core values at work - with Andrew Stoute

The Simplifiers Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2024 47:36


Vision, mission, and core values… could you recite your organization's ones off the top of your head, without peeking? Truth be told, many people can't and that might be the root cause of why some companies are struggling in today's economy.  My special guest today is HR professional Andrew Stoute and he's simplifying how to drive your company's vision, mission, and core values at work. When you're crystal clear on all three and you ensure your teams embrace and adopt them as well, you're creating a compass to guide every move on why your organization exists, who you serve, where you're headed next, and how you make big decisions. Here's how. My special guest today is Andrew Stoute and he's simplifying how to drive your company's vision, mission, and core values at work. We tackle and simplify all aspects of it, including: How he defines vision, mission and core values for the modern workplace. Why it's important for an organization to teach their workforce about these three elements and not just treat them like buzzwords. When companies say they are a “family” - why you might pause on saying that in the future as it might not necessarily be a good thing. Sadly, people make assumptions about others they work with all the time. He shares how people leaders can be a great role model to value one another, your diverse opinions and backgrounds, and begin to reverse this behavior. …and ultimately, what you should do if you notice your senior leadership are NOT upholding the values of the company in the key decisions they make… How to influence (and hopefully, course correct) as an HR executive advisor for your organization. Q: Are you ready to learn how to drive your company's vision, mission, and core values at work? If yes, this one is for you. It's time to #DoTheThing! ---- Show notes available with all links mentioned here:https://www.thesimplifiers.com/posts/345-how-to-drive-your-vision-mission-core-values-at-work---with-andrew-stoute

De Nieuwe Contrabas Podcast
135 – De Nieuwe Contrabas podcast – De niet zo stoute Anton Dautzenberg

De Nieuwe Contrabas Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2024 66:22


Hans en Chrétien hebben het over de boekpresentatie van Hans' z'n kersverse interviewbundel ‘Vrijheidsvuur' in de Rotterdamse boekhandel Donner, over de nieuwste column van Tommy Wieringa en over het menselijk tekort als bedreigde bron van literatuur. Besprekingen zijn er van de libertijnse roman ‘De vijf' (Anton Dautzenberg) en van ‘Else Böhler, Duits dienstmeisje' (in de Vestdijk-reeks van Chrétien en Rob van Essen). Tot slot tipt Hans Gerrit Komrij's heruitgegeven novelle ‘De pagode'. Luister, like en abonneer.

Sky Sports: Real Talk
Talking Exercise Safety - with Jennifer Stoute, Sarah McDonald & Hayley Madigan

Sky Sports: Real Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2024 48:55


“I kind of just froze in that moment....and everything everyone tells you about being assaulted was true. I just didn't know what to do.”  On this week's Real Talk, Olympic bronze medallist and former Gladiator Jennifer Stoute, middle-distance runner Sarah McDonald, and health, fitness, and female empowerment influencer Hayley Madigan share their experiences of harassment and assault whilst training. They discuss how they're now advocating for more awareness and change on athlete safety.   A special thanks to Rachel Williams, the Policy and Public Affairs Manager at Women in Sport who joins us on this episode to give us her expert advice.  This podcast contains discussions of sexual assault which some listeners may find distressing. If you've been affected by anything we talk about and would like more information on organisations that can provide help and support, please head to sky.com/viewersupport.  Real Talk is presented by Miriam Walker-Khan and this episode is produced by Sabrina Bal, Alice Reeves-Turner, Claire Taylor and Chessie Bent.  You can also watch our interviews on YouTube (https://bit.ly/RealTalkSkySportsNews), read supporting articles on our website (skysports.com), and find us on social media @skysports.

ClaraMENTE
Lo más Focop - 14 de Marzo - Entrevista a Irma Hernandez y análisis del debate con Monchi Stoute

ClaraMENTE

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2024 51:04


Karisma y Daniel analizan el debate presidencial y entrevistan a la candidata independiente a la alcaldía de San Miguelito Irma Hernandez

RADIOGRAFÍA
Debate presidencial sin propuestas concretas -Entrevista a José Stoute

RADIOGRAFÍA

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2024 22:19


Luisterrijk luisterboeken
De Stoute Broertjes moppenboek

Luisterrijk luisterboeken

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2024 3:00


Een nieuw moppenboek van de buurjongens van de Zoete Zusjes: de Stoute Broertjes delen gloednieuwe moppen, grappen en raadsels. Gegarandeerd de slappe lach! Uitgegeven door Kosmos Uitgevers Spreker: Huub Dikstaal

Afrobeats Intelligence
S3E4: Steve Stoute — Independent Afrobeats To The World

Afrobeats Intelligence

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2024 30:45


Steve Stoute is an American businessman and record executive. The founder and CEO of the Translation, a marketing agency, and the author of The Tanning of America: How Hip-Hop Created a Culture That Rewrote the Rules of the New Economy. In 2017, Stoute received $70 million from investors such as Alphabet Inc. and Andreessen Horowitz to launch United Masters, a music venture for independent artist. In 2023, United Masters launched in Africa, via Lagos, Nigeria.

The TripSitting Podcast
062 Uplifting Community w/ Kēnya Stoute

The TripSitting Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2024 60:10


Kēnya comes on the podcast to talk about what it means to be part of and uplift her community. She's a one-of-a-kind human that I'm blessed to have crossed paths with.  Kēnya's Info: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cheezsmoothie/Website: https://www.permatierra.org/Tickets to A Table of Our Own In Denver: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/a-table-of-our-own-screenerfundraiser-27-tickets-773184524727If you enjoyed this episode, feel free to share with a friend and subscribe so you never miss my latest posts :)Check out the TripSitting Website Watch on YouTubeFollow on InstagramFollow on TikTok

KBZE 1059FM NEWS
KBZE SPORTS - A RECAP OF HANSON VS VERMILION CATHOLIC WITH COACH RYAN STOUTE

KBZE 1059FM NEWS

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2023 3:55


KBZE'S Neal McClelland recaps the Hanson/VC game from November 3rd where the Tigers fell to the Eagles l4 to 43.  On Nov 10, the Tigers will host St John of Plaquemine at home in the first round of the District IV Select Playoffs. 

Rap Radar
Rap Radar: Steve Stoute

Rap Radar

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2023 72:34 Transcription Available


Steve Stoute's been standing on business for over 25 years. This fall, the United Masters CEO held his annual SelectCon conference in New York City. Later this year, he's honoring Scarface and Rakim at his inaugural Paid In Full ceremony in Las Vegas. Returning for a second time on the Rap Radar Podcast, Stoute speaks on his relationships with Usher, NBA Youngboy, Brent Faiyaz, Nas, 50 Cent, and JayZ. He also speaks candidly on Max Kellerman, shares a text message with Nipsey Hussle, and reacts the arrest of his former artist, Superstar Pride.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

In The Money Players' Podcast
Nick Luck Daily Ep 786 - Could new Stoute star take Sussex by storm?

In The Money Players' Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2023 39:48


Nick is joined by writer and broadcaster Lydia Hislop on the middle day of the Boodles July Festival at Newmarket. They take stock of the Day One action, reluctantly conceding the best days may be behind Adayar while hailing the conspicuous promise and talent of Nostrum. They take a look at the two big Group ones of the weekend, and round up all the news from off the track. Also on today's show, Teme Valley's Richard Ryan discusses two big fancies for Saturday, Australian Turf Club Director Angela Belle McSweeney talks about the massive prize money boost for the Everest and the renamed King Charles III, NHRM Chair Frances Stanley drops in to highlight the Banksy exhibition in Newmarket and much more, while Racing Welfare's Hetta Harris discusses her new role in supporting Stud Staff. Food and wine are provided once again by Neil Phillips and Damian Adams.

Nick Luck Daily Podcast
Ep 786 - Could new Stoute star take Sussex by storm?

Nick Luck Daily Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2023 39:47


Nick is joined by writer and broadcaster Lydia Hislop on the middle day of the Boodles July Festival at Newmarket. They take stock of the Day One action, reluctantly conceding the best days may be behind Adayar while hailing the conspicuous promise and talent of Nostrum. They take a look at the two big Group ones of the weekend, and round up all the news from off the track. Also on today's show, Teme Valley's Richard Ryan discusses two big fancies for Saturday, Australian Turf Club Director Angela Belle McSweeney talks about the massive prize money boost for the Everest and the renamed King Charles III, NHRM Chair Frances Stanley drops in to highlight the Banksy exhibition in Newmarket and much more, while Racing Welfare's Hetta Harris discusses her new role in supporting Stud Staff. Food and wine are provided once again by Neil Phillips and Damian Adams.

The Final Furlong Podcast
Flat Out! Sir Michael Stoute Stable Tour and thoughts on the Classics

The Final Furlong Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2023 91:14


In association with Betdaq and Spotify Podcasts: Emmet Kennedy is joined by is joined by Sir Michael Stoute's Assistant Trainer James Savage for a Stable Tour with detailed updates on the yards leading prospects and dark horses for the season including: Desert Crown, Bay Bridge, Infinite Cosmos, Nostrum, Potapova, Assessment, Crystal Caprice, Real Dream, Circle Of Fire, Falcon Nine, Passenger, Humankind, Nader King, Oliver Show, Stormy Sea & Zarga. Plus we take an early look at the Classic's with the lads both in agreement on the horse to take on the favourite with in the 2000 Guineas. Pay no commission for your first 100 days at BETDAQ. Join BETDAQ.com, The Sports Betting exchange today. New customers only, Terms and conditions apply. https://www.betdaq.com Show Your Support for The FFP with Likes & Shares on Twitter, Instagram or Facebook

Hit Play Not Pause
Finding Midlife Clarity with Jennifer Stoute

Hit Play Not Pause

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2023 64:05


People will often accuse a woman who is changing things in her life at 50 of having a midlife crisis. It's quite the opposite, according to this week's guest, two-time Olympian, Jennifer Stoute. It's midlife clarity. Stoute, who also played Rebel the Gladiator on the hit show Gladiators has done her share of evaluating and re-evaluating her personal, professional, and active life as she's transitioned through menopause and midlife. This week she talks about what she's learned and where she's landed on gray hair, hormone therapy, and the power of being your authentic self. She also shares her thoughts on the challenges Black women face in menopause and how women can help mitigate the disparities in menopausal care.Jennifer Stoute is a two-time Olympian, bronze medalist sprinter, model, and business owner. She represented Great Britain at the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul and the 1992 Olympic Games in Barcelona, where she won a bronze medal in the 4x400 meter relay. She also appeared as Rebel on the hit TV show Gladiators from 1996 to 1999. She is the co-owner of the global sports management business Astra Partners. You can follow her at instagram.com/gorgeousfifties/Resources:Study on endometrial polyps: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/2050312119848247**Support the Podcast** InsideTracker: 20% off at insidetracker.com/feistyPrevinex: 15% off your first order with code HITPLAY at https://www.previnex.com/ Bonafide: 20% off your first purchase when you subscribe to any product with code HITPLAY at hellobonafide.com/hitplayNutrisense: Go to nutrisense.io/hitplay and use the code HITPLAY30 for $30 off any subscription to the CGM programThat's It: Receive 20% off your order with the code PLAY20 at thatsitfruit.com/This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis: Podsights - https://podsights.com/privacyChartable - https://chartable.com/privacy

ClaraMENTE
Sal y Pimienta - José Eugenio Stoute - 3 enero del 2023.

ClaraMENTE

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2023 50:54


En el programa de hoy conversamos con el analista político, José Eugenio Stoute, para analizar el discurso del Presidente Laurentino sobre el informe de gestión del año 2022.

ClaraMENTE
Sal y Pimienta - José Eugenio Stoute - 01 de diciembre 2022.

ClaraMENTE

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2022 49:24


En el programa de hoy tuvimos como invitado al analista político, José Eugenio Stoute, para conversar sobre las primarias en los partidos políticos.

Totally Oral Podcast
Chilling with Brian Stoute

Totally Oral Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2022 57:45


This week Clint and Russ interview Dr. Brian Stoute.  Brian is a dentist in DC who focuses on doing implants.  We discuss his dental journey such as dating and marrying his now wife whom he taught while she was in dental school.  We also discuss how CE has changed in the past two decades. 

Trapital
How HitPiece Rebounded and Relaunched After Controversy

Trapital

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2022 46:28


Rory Felton has spent most of his past two decades in music being pro-artist. He developed talent and sold millions of records under his Militia Group label that he co-founded and eventually sold to Sony. In the early days of social media, Rory worked with Top 40 artists and majors to monetize on these new platforms. That's why it was ironic that Rory was recently criticized for being anti-artist. Rory founded HitPiece two years ago. HitPiece is an NFT marketplace focused solely on music collections. While in beta earlier this year, unauthorized NFTs from big-name artists became available for purchase on HitPiece. HitPiece was hit with wide-spread backlash from artists, the RIAA, and many others for copyright infringement. The company quickly went dark while the team recalibrated its business.Months later, HitPiece has now re-launched. This time with strictly-authenticated collections on-site from rising artists like ATL Jacob, Pyrex Whippa, and proven commodities such as Rick Ross. A metaverse add-on is also in the works to virtually display purchased NFTs. In many ways, the industry-wide blowback changed both Rory and HitPiece. The company's intent has stayed consistent from the get-go: to make NFTs easy for both artists and fans.Rory joined me on the show to cover what went wrong with HitPiece earlier this year, why this relaunch is different, and the opportunities and challenges NFTs have inside the music industry. Here's everything we covered:[2:58] Rory's two decades in the industry pre-HitPiece[6:07] “Best time in human history to be an artist” [9:19] What went wrong with HitPiece's beta release[13:33] Re-gaining industry trust after the backlash [16:22] Did HitPiece consider rebranding?[19:12] How HitPiece built a collection with rising star ATL Jacob[20:27] Web3 co-existing with industry, not replacing it[27:34] Building out a music-centric metaverse [33:32] How HitPiece will compete against Facebook, Opensea, and other big players[35:57] Types of NFT collections on HitPiece[39:00] How to win the music industry in 2022 and onward [43:17] HitPiece plans for 2023Listen: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | SoundCloud | Stitcher | Overcast | Amazon | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | RSSHost: Dan Runcie, @RuncieDan, trapital.coGuests: Rory Felton, @Roryfelton Sponsors: MoonPay is the leader in web3 infrastructure. They have partnered with Timbaland, Snoop Dogg, and many more. To learn more, visit moonpay.com/trapital Enjoy this podcast? Rate and review the podcast here! ratethispodcast.com/trapital Trapital is home for the business of hip-hop. Gain the latest insights from hip-hop's biggest players by reading Trapital's free weekly memo.TRANSCRIPTION[00:00:00] Rory Felton: We think this space is for everyone. And we think that the smallest artists on the planet can actually benefit from Web 3.0 in a way that maybe streaming isn't changing the game for them right now. For instance, we've worked with baby developing artists that are making more money from Web 3.0 in one launch of an NFT collection than they would over two to three months from streaming. In general, we all think music's the coolest thing in the world. And so we want to revalue it in a way that maybe NFTs allow us to that technology hasn't enabled in the past.[00:00:40] Dan Runcie: Hey, welcome to The Trapital podcast. I'm your host and the founder of Trapital, Dan Runcie. This podcast is your place to gain insights from executives in music, media, entertainment, and more, who are taking hip-hop culture to the next level. [00:00:60] Dan Runcie: Today's guest is Rory Felton. He is the co-founder and CEO of HitPiece, a company that's bringing artists and fans together through NFTs in real life experiences, metaverse experiences and more. HitPiece is one of our sponsors this quarter for Trapital, and I wanted to have this conversation because Rory and HitPiece have had a very interesting past couple of months. Back in February, they launched a platform, but there was a ton of controversy surrounding it because a lot of artists had their music and their NFTs for sale on the platform without their consent, and understandably so, it created a bunch of frustration and news around some of the consent around NFTs, some of the perception around the space overall and how that impacted Rory and the team. So in this conversation, we talked about it. We talked about how that happened, why it happened, and what Roy and the team are doing now moving forward for that not to happen in the future. And then we talked about what does HitPiece look like now moving forward, what are the opportunities more broadly for Web 3.0 companies in music, what are some of the challenges, what are some of the artists that they're working with now, like ATL Jacob, who just signed with Republic Records. So we talked about that, and Rory has a ton of experience in the music industry, even before HitPiece. So we talked about how that shapes his current strategy and what he thinks successful look like, not just for HitPiece, but for the overall industry moving forward. Great conversation and tons of insights, and especially for a lot of the founders that have built stuff messed up and want to hear what it's like to keep things going. This is a good one to listen to. Here's my chat with Rory. [00:02:39] Dan Runcie: All right. Today we are joined by Rory Felton, who is the co-founder and CEO of HitPiece. But before we talk about HitPiece or anything like that, I know you've worked in music for a number of years and you've had a few different hats in this industry. What attracted you to the space early on? [00:02:58] Rory Felton: Oh, man. So when I was 15, I started playing music and I learned pretty quickly that I really couldn't write songs very well. So when I was 16, I started putting on local shows for artists booking regional acts, and that naturally turned into putting out records for artists. And in the nineties, we were manufacturing CDs, so I actually learned the process of printing, shipping it to a factory, calling distributors, trying to get them to ship out our CDs to retailers. And that's how I started. In 2000, I moved out to LA to go to school at SC, was a little bored and started another record label. Our first few records did quite well. I think our first record almost went gold, and so that created enough revenue to really fund the company and grow that record label. And for the next 10 years, we ended up selling millions of records. I developed dozens of artists, felt really proud of what we accomplished. Sony Music later invested in the company and later acquired the major artists that I worked And I took a breather for a moment because working with artists can be a lot of work and can be emotional and and challenging in so many ways, but also fun and exciting. And I ended up finding a real passion for the technology side of the music industry. I really wanted to have sort of a macro impact on the industry in helping artists create new technologies to connect with their fan base, develop new business models. And I saw, sort of saw the old record company structure or record deal structure is sort of a little bit antiquated, and there are so many technologies here that could allow artists to directly connect with their fans and connect and create new and unique revenue streams. And so I spent several years in the early 2010s helping top 40 artists sell music and merchandise in stream on social media like Gaga, Green Day, Snoop Dog, Tim McGraw, A$AP Rocky, all the major labels. And I did a couple years overseas on a volunteer trip and then came back to the music space really on artist management initially, but also in blockchain. I bought Bitcoin in 2014 and was always really curious about blockchain's application to the music space. And in 2018 I co-wrote a white paper on digital collectibles for artists and could not get anyone's attention back then on this space and the idea of fans buying digital merchandise from artists and connecting with them and the idea of an artist creating a layer of community ownership and what they were doing. And then obviously fast forward a couple of years, the NFT space, that specific protocol has really taken off four creatives and four artists. And I decided to jump in full time to apply this innovation to the music industry 'cause I saw so many opportunities for artists to take advantage of it.[00:05:43] Dan Runcie: That makes sense. And one thing there before we get to the HitPiece part of it where you are today, selling your record label and everything there to Sony, what is it like watching the current movement now with other record labels being bought up by other record labels, especially the majors or just some of the catalog purchases there? Because I'm sure you did this in a very different market than what we're seeing now. [00:06:07] Rory Felton: Yeah, so a lot of people don't remember this, but in 2006 to like 2011, it was really hairy for the record industry. There were a lot of unknowns. Downloading was here, digital like iTunes and its competitors, however, streaming as a paid streaming format really hadn't taken off or really been fully established. And so you had these massive problems still with file sharing and people just assuming music was free, right? And just downloading it without paying for it from all sorts of websites. And so there was this moment, an era where like, gosh, golly, we don't know if these major labels are really going to figure it out. And kudos to them, they struck some really savvy deals and made streaming something that really, really worked. So today's era has been amazing. I get really excited for artists that are able to have huge liquidity opportunities if they've built a catalog over their lifetime. And then also I get really excited just as more opportunities to finance your career than there ever have been. You can now borrow against your catalog. You can borrow against your master rights or publishing rights to fund something you want to do moving forward. You could never do that 10 or 15 years ago. So you have players like that in this space. You have distributors in this space, almost playing like record labels and advancing monies to artists, but allowing artists to keep their masters. And then you have record labels sort of playing as distributors. And so you have all these middle men kind of playing as different roles. And I think it's great 'cause artists have more opportunity now than they've ever been. I've been saying this for a few years. It is the best time in human history to be a music artist. It was so hard in the nineties and so hard in the early 2000s to stand out, and now even though we are in some economic challenges right now, and just the macro economy, it's still really the best time in human history to be a music artist. [00:07:59] Dan Runcie: Yeah, I think that's generally where I land with this too. I know that there's a lot of people that have a bit of the nostalgia and yearning for being able to sell CDs and being able to make the money off of CDs, but it was still a market that had tons of gatekeepers. And even without Napster, I still think that there would be a lot of challenges 'cause there were a bunch of CD sales that were of bad catalog that weren't exactly of new things, but we could go all day talking about that. But it was a fascinating time for sure. But fast forwarding a few years though, with HitPiece, of course you have the idea and you see the opportunity to be able to make it easier for artists to monetize and take advantage of what's here. And I know that earlier this year, the launch day didn't go the way that you had wanted it to. And there was a lot of press and some negative things written about just the intent and where you all were trying to go. And I know that there are also a few artists too, whether it's like Jack Antonoff and a few others that had some complaints about how it went down and after reading a few of those, I definitely saw some of the responses and from your perspective as well, but I never really got a good, clear sense for what was the . Intent and what would this have looked like if the launch had went as well as it could have, so it'd be great to hear a little bit about that, because I feel that's the part that was a little bit missing in some of the discussions about what had happened. [00:09:19] Rory Felton: Yeah. So first and foremost, I really believe in innovation, and I really believe in enriching artists, and artists being able to control their music and what they're doing. And so we were looking at this space and thinking about like, man, if I put on my music fan hat, what's the ideal experience I want as a music fan? What would I love to have more than anything? And platforms like Spotify and Apple Music has sort of trained us to feel like everything could be in one place. And so we put together this idea to create an experiment where we tried to show artists and labels and rights holders, hey, this is what the future could look like. Here's sort of this private game experience that we think would be really fun to onboard a huge number of people into this space very quickly and create a massive revenue stream for artists and rights holders. And where we really messed up is we failed to put the proper guardrails around it to where too much of it was public too fast. And that was something that we definitely messed up with. We were having active discussions with hundreds of artists, managers, major record companies. We had showed them what we're doing. Hey, what do you think of this experience we're creating? And all the feedback that we received was highly positive. Everyone was really excited about this potential future for a platform that could turn on a whole new revenue stream for them without a lot of work. One thing I've experienced as a manager and a record company founder is that artists are so busy. They're in the studio making music all the time. They have to go on tour, they have to make content for social media all the time right now. They're so busy doing all these things you don't want to add just another thing to their plate. And so we've always tried to make it, what's the easiest way for them to onboard into a new space without having to create a huge amount of work for them? So that was our intent. Clearly, we failed to have the proper guard rails around it. And we took down the beta after a few weeks. And there were obviously some artists that expressed some frustration with it. And since then, we've had conversations with hundreds of artists and labels and managers and industry leaders, sharing with them how we feel about this space, what we think is coming, and the overall sediment has been really about excitement and enthusiasm. about what's coming in this space and the opportunities that are being created for artists and rights holders in this space. [00:11:39] Dan Runcie: Got it. So if I'm understanding correctly, it's like you were trying to show, okay, this is what it could look like. Let's give you an example of what this could look like. Like, if your Taylor Swift, like this is a type of revenue stream that you could unlock, but the presentation of it was more so, hey, here's where you can buy Taylor Swift's, you know, access to her likeness or access to her music. And you were trying to more so show a demo as opposed to an actual marketplace. Do I have that right? [00:12:07] Rory Felton: Yeah, it was definitely a live demo. There was no music used on the website. As a music rights holder myself, as someone that's worked with artists for decades, we would never utilize music in a way that was infringing on their rights or unapproved in any way. And that's something that I think really got lost in the storm of it all is the fact that there was no music on the website. We had some marketing language on the website, and again, we've looked at this as a beta experiment for a small audience. It was by no means built or intended to be exposed to the world at large. But we did have some language on the website that was not fully fleshed out at the time, again, like many beta experiments are. [00:12:49] Dan Runcie: So was part of it also as well that the beta was meant to be a bit of a closed opportunity, but then it leaked, or then it got out? [00:12:58] Rory Felton: It was public and that was an error on our end. You know, we failed to have the guardrails built around to cut off certain sections or functions of the website that shouldn't have been made public.[00:13:08] Dan Runcie: Got it. Okay. So since then, how has it been having a lot of these conversations? 'cause obviously you were able to drum up a bunch of support leading up to February and you still had plenty of connections now with artists that we'll get into soon. But what was it like having those conversations, whether it's with labels or others where you're trying to communicate not just what happened but also build up a bit of trust given the impact?[00:13:33] Rory Felton: Yeah. What we found is that, well, having been in this industry for two decades, I have a huge number of relationships from, you know, the tops of the major record companies, major publishers to many, many, many managers of both developing artists and some of the biggest artists in the world. And they know me, right, so they knew my heart, they knew where I was coming from, and I just was able to be honest with them, and say, look, we moved a little too fast here. We built this product a little too fast without fully flushing out where we should put certain guardrails in place, and the response was, hey, look, we get it, no problem. We're looking for solutions in this space. We need easy ways to launch collections to audiences that might want to be interested in this. And right now everything on the market feels a little too complicated, right? NFTs and Web 3.0, it feels nerdy and it feels complex. And I think a lot of the early people in this space may have made it that way on purpose so that there feels like there's a level of like seniority or gatekeeping to it. And we've approached this and been like, no, this is actually pretty simple. This is actually making what has existed in the world of music already, such as VIP experiences, and fan clubs, and even, like, DRM music, and it's creating it on a layer of new technology that actually gives more ownership to fans and actually deepens relationships between artists and fans. And so that response has been really exciting and I think that's what's contributed to us being able to onboard the large volume of artists that we have onboarded so far and continue to have exciting conversations every single day with folks across this space. [00:15:14] Dan Runcie: Have there been any lingering impacts since then? Like, obviously there's the initial response and things have happened. But since you've relaunched. And it does seem like, as you mentioned, you still are stable of artists and there are a bunch of folks that you're working with but are there any lingering impacts from what had happened? [00:15:30] Rory Felton: I would say there's probably still some artists that just don't want to have anything to do with the NFT space. I think that in general, there's still a lot of misunderstanding around what Web 3.0 is and what it can enable, and there seems to, generally speaking, a level of negative sentiment towards NFTs in some categories of the music industry. But that seems to be sort of a blanket feeling or sentiment towards NFTs, not necessarily what we're doing.[00:15:58] Dan Runcie: Yeah, I've heard that from, was just talking to a few people about this earlier this week, and we've heard it as well, just the polarizing nature of it that's bigger than HitPiece. And I think it's something for a lot of companies to navigate, but it's not necessarily at one company itself. But, I guess, leading up to the relaunch recently, were there any talks at all about rebranding or anything like that? 'Cause obviously I know that staying with the name is also a statement in itself. [00:16:22] Rory Felton: Yeah, clearly, we thought about every sort of path we could take. You know, we even thought like, do we want to do this? Like, is this worth the battle, right? And what we decided at the end of the day was, look, some folks thought we were doing something we were not doing at all. Our intent was completely misconstrued, and we felt like if we were to shut it all down and say, you know, good night. It's almost like the people that were creating this narrative would've won or that narrative would've become true, right? In our hearts, in our feeling, and everyone at the company that's at the company that was experienced all that, we all felt together, like, look, this isn't what we are doing. This isn't what we're all about. Like, we should stick with it and see this through because we felt like the brand was now very well known for better or worse, and it's up to us to sort of, to see it through and show to the world that, no, this isn't what we were trying to do. We're actually making something amazing, we think, for artists and so far, in the collections that we've launched has done really well for the artists that we've worked with. So that's what led to our decision to stick with the brand and keep going. We could have posited to a whole other brand, but everyone would just say, oh, those are the same folks that did this. So what would be the point of that? Because it's still me. Unlike a lot of people in this space, I've never been anonymous, right? I've always been completely public with who I am. HitPiece was on my LinkedIn, on my branding since early last year. I didn't hide from any of this. I engaged with anyone that wanted to have a conversation and still will. So it's not in our nature to hide or to run away. We think that Web 3.0 is still a huge game changer for both developing and establishing artists, and we want to provide incredible solutions for artists. [00:18:10] Dan Runcie: And what was the hardest part for you personally during all of this, as the founder, as the leader of the organization, but also as a human being dealing with the fallout and just trying to keep things moving?[00:18:22] Rory Felton: Oh gosh. I think for a little bit, like, you know, personally I'm a father. I'm a husband, and so for me, it's just not letting what some people in social media or in the media might say about me impact who I know I am and who I am to my family. First and foremost, that's always most important to me. So that was probably the biggest challenge and, you know, clearly, it's not something that we wanted to happen, but we're really excited and bullish on the future right now. [00:18:48] Dan Runcie: For sure. And I think you have a lot of reasons, too. One of the artists that you have, ATL Jacob recently signed a deal with Republic Records. And I think he's someone who's definitely been rising quite a bit, and I assume that's a partnership that you are able to land in the most recent months. So what did that look like and what has it been like working alongside someone like him and then seeing the growth continue?[00:19:12] Rory Felton: Yeah, Jacob was amazing. We are so blessed to really have just the perfect time to connect and meet him and hear about what he thought about this space, and what he wanted to do, and had that sort of build a collection together that really made sense for his brand and offer value to his super fans that really you can't get any other way. And so that's what we're really excited about. We, of course, knew he was in conversations with major labels at the time and knew something would happen in that space. We just feel honored and privileged that we get to be his partner for Web 3.0 because he's clearly an incredible talent that's had huge success on the producing side in the last couple of years, and I think we're going to see him break out as an artist over the next year and reach completely new milestones as well in his career.[00:19:57] Dan Runcie: And what was it like for what he was able to do specifically on HitPiece? 'Cause I think a lot of people that see artists, they understand what it's like to be on a major label, but from an economic standpoint, like what they were able to do with a platform like yours, there still is a bit of questions, and this honestly may lead to some of the confusion some artists may have about NFTs, Web 3.0 in general, so obviously you may not be able to share all the details, but, like, what did things look like for him right now with what you've all been able to work on and what he's released, and what that ends up looking like for him? [00:20:27] Rory Felton: Yeah, so he's building a beautiful collection of art that's going to be completely collectible, and those tokens will be connected to incredible in real-life experiences. So some of those tokens can be redeemed for a studio session with ATL Jacob. So rather than, typically in the music industry, right, you have to go through a manager or you have to go through a record company. You have to go through gatekeepers to get to someone on Jacob's level. Here we're saying, no, let's break down all the barriers and say, actually through Web 3.0, you can have an incredible experience, and you could work with, you know, a producer that spends six months at the number one rap producer chart on Billboard. Like, you can actually work with them and make a record together, right? Experiences like that we think are incredible, exclusive merchandising items. And being able to essentially build a really connected VIP club of sorts that will get you access to experiences, to events, to really in- person, one on one time with these artists and producers that people love. You know, this is what I think Web 3.0 is all about. It's creating experiences that are unparalleled in other parts of the music industry. [00:21:40] Dan Runcie: So given those experiences, and I think those are definitely things that fans and everything value and things that he could likely build a career standalone on. Is there any particular question or thought about when an artist-producer like him goes in, does a deal with a major label as a bit of it like, oh, well why did you need to do that? Like, you could have continued working here, like, part of the promise is getting more inherent value for the work itself. Was there any tension there at all with him or even with some of the other artists? [00:22:11] Rory Felton: No, because every artist is different, and every artist gets different types of opportunities. And to me, Web 3.0 is not about being in Web 3.0 only and forgetting about the rest of the industry. It's not like you release your content or your music only as NFT and you don't do streaming, right? It's not like you do that only and you don't go on tour, or you don't sync your music to film and TV, or you don't do brand partnerships. It's just one part of the bigger puzzle of connecting with fans and connecting with bigger audiences. I think this huge opportunity for artists to connect with fans through Web 3.0 while also doing partnerships on the record side that they want to do that work best for them and their brand. For Jacob specifically, he has a whole record label, Wicked Money Family, that he can do. He can sign new artists, too, and they all can go through this bigger system. That's not something that not every artist can just do on their own, right, being able to plug into a bigger system is great for him. What it does do is it may limit what type of content an artist can mint as an NFT on their own, such as if you're in an exclusive recording contract, it may limit or prohibit what specifically you can do with music. But those are always open discussions, and every single recording contract is unique and specific and different, and provide artists and labels with all sorts of different rights.[00:23:35] Dan Runcie: Got it. So for someone like him, and I guess as well thinking about how you're building the business, I do feel like your stance essentially is that a company like HitPiece can work, and they don't necessarily have to be exclusively here. They could work with majors, they could work with others. Do you feel like that mentality is similar to other founders you may talk to in Web 3.0 or with NFTs? Because some of the folks I talk to, there's a bit more of that dogmatic approach where the purpose of our platform is that you don't need to do that. [00:24:08] Rory Felton: Yeah. So first and foremost, every partnership we have with an artist is non-exclusive. They could do a collection with us and go to a collection with anyone else or on their own using their own software at any time. That's something that I believe in. I believe in, like, we're not here to be an exclusive partner in any way. So I believe in artist freedom. Artists should have the freedom to do a record deal if they want to. Artists should also have the freedom to say, hey, look, I'm going to stay independent. I'm going to build up a balance sheet of masters and publishing that I own, and I'm going to leverage that in the way that I want to. I think every path is different for each artist and some work for others, and some don't work for others. And I've seen artists stay independent, build balance sheets of masters, and publish they own, and be tremendously successful. They build these multimillion-dollar businesses that they can operate and function like their own business. And then at the same time, that can just build up their leverage for if a major label wants to do a deal with them, they're saying, hey, look, my business is already doing millions of dollars a year. If you want to be in business with my business, you've gotta make it worth my while. To me, it's about, I think Web 3.0 increases leverage for artists if they embrace it and engage that community. But by no means would I look at it as a dogmatic Web 3.0 anti-record company approach. I don't think that's it at all. I think we're already seeing major labels enter Web 3.0 and allow their artists to try things in Web 3.0 that I think is really exciting. And every conversation I have with major labels and people at those companies is it's curiosity, it's intriguing, it's fun. They are by no means looking at it as a do-or-die or like you said, a dogmatic approach. I come from the music industry. I think maybe some other founders in this space don't have two decades of music experience, and so they're wanting to disrupt an industry that they think needs disruption. Whereas I know all these, all my friends that work at labels or at management companies, I mean, they bleed for artists. They put their heart and soul into trying to break new artists, and these are the people you want to be a part of your business, right? You don't want to just alienate them and cut them off. That being said, historically, some record deals have been a little unfair for the artists, right? And I'm not trying to say that that's not the case, but I think innovation like Web 3.0 is continuing to increase artist leverage and continuing to give them more options. More options is really what it's all about. [00:26:42] Dan Runcie: Yeah, and I think even the point that you mentioned at the beginning of the conversation, just your stance on streaming itself and what it unlocked for the business, that is a bit more of that holistic perspective as opposed to some others that, you know, I think the belief that music should have inherent value, which it should. I think it's a bit of that dichotomy, and to be honest, you hear less of that from the record labels with, most of the time, it maybe from some of the founders and folks outside of the industry. But it's a fascinating time. It's a fascinating time. And I know that with you, you're not just thinking about NFTs and things minting for HitPiece, you're also having a metaverse, you have the Lounge and having that as an opportunity for artists, and I know that's something that's continuing developing as well. What does that look like and what does that opportunity look like for artists? [00:27:34] Rory Felton: Yeah, so one, we realized there's a small but growing population of people that love to collect music as NFT format. I think of NFT as it applies to audio music as a new format, just like there was vinyl, there was downloads, there was streaming. NFT is sort of a new type of format for music, and there wasn't really a centralized place to play all your music. There are a couple of apps butting up that allow you to sort of plug into your wallet and play your music collection. We wanted to create a space that allowed a collector to display NFTs that they're collecting from music artists on the wall, but also put them on a record shelf if they're music NFTs and allow people, allow them to come in and play their own music, allow other people to come into a fans room and play their music. I've seen that a lot of these metaverse spaces that fans are using to share their NFTs are almost like part business card part, like, showing off and bragging to their friends and their community what they own, what they collect. It reminds me a lot as being a teenager of collecting CDs and records that were hard to find from really, really new artists and sort of bragging with your friends that you got to them earlier than they did. And we wanted to sort of mimic this experience in a really cool, beautiful, metaverse space and also be a space that artists could brand and create their own version of, as well as invite their VIP community to be a part of, be it virtual record listening parties or virtual tour kickoffs where they could display or present new music. One functionality we have that artists are taking advantage of is token-gated releases. So they might release regular releases like they always do but put out maybe a limited edition mixtape that is only available to people who buy an NFT to access it. And so you go into the Lounge, our system reads that you have that NFT in your wallet and it unlocks access to music that you wouldn't otherwise have. That doesn't just have to be music. It can be all sorts of content. So the idea is you're rewarding your most engaged community token holders with really cool experiences. We speak with artists that want to create experiences that get updated every single month, so keeps fans coming back to this space that they almost treat like a social media platform or like a website, but the artist gets to control it entirely themselves.[00:29:58] Dan Runcie: I feel like the fan piece of this is the unique piece of this, and I know that's a bit of the broader conversations that people have had about the metaverse, but being able to have that type of way to actually physically show what you have, and I think this is a piece that was missing a bit from, I'll call it the first stage of the NFT boom, right? We saw a lot of people changing their profile picks, but ultimately, how do you create the opportunity for people to have some type of visual that you can see, right? Like, people are buying vinyls right now. People want to be able to have those vinyls visible or no different than buying DVDs or VHS tapes back in the day. Part of it was the medium itself, but you also, it was a statement of who you are. Having some type of collection that can show that I think it's valuable, plus all of the exclusive perks that they can get from their favorite artist or from their type of experiences. I do think that that is something that a lot of fans would value, assuming that it can be somewhere where the people that they want to see those things also are engaged in.[00:30:59] Rory Felton: Yeah, we see there's millions of people around the world that build up massive record collections on their wall. And when you go into their house, it's often the main feature of their house is their record collection. And oftentimes, that's tied to a really high-end audio system as well, depending on where you're at and your lifestyle, right? And we wanted to sort of create that experience for anyone or everyone in the metaverse space. And so that's what the Lounge is built around, is sort of to cater to that type of collector, if you will. I think we're still very early in the Web 3.0 NFT space, clearly with where the economy's at. I think we're going to start to see some huge growth over the next year or two, but we wanted to build these tools now for people so that when more and more people start to come into this space every month, every quarter, they're already ready for them to sort of plug into. And in fact, in a certain sense, it provides more utility for all NFTs. So you could buy music NFTs anywhere you want to on the internet and be able to pull them into this Lounge space we've created for them to perform, to play, and to share with their friends and their community.[00:32:05] Dan Runcie: So this leads me to the age-old question I'm sure every venture capitalist asks at some point, how do you compete this against Facebook or Meta and their offering to eventually try to do this similar type of thing? But obviously, you have a more of a specific community. But I do know that with a lot of the different types of metaverse experiences, that type of thought is something that's likely in the back of the minds for a lot of founders.[00:32:30] Rory Felton: I think that there's clearly dozens of metaverse spaces that already exist. We're not necessarily looking to create an entire universe. We just want to create experiences and artist-branded experiences. And I think potentially we see a future where these artist-branded virtual slash metaverse experiences can be interoperable with a metaverse space that Meta is building or with the other ones that exist right now, such as Sandbox and Decentraland. We, of course, being a blockchain-based company, we believe in decentralization. We think that that's a value to be recognized and to be held up. And so if we continue to see other metaverse spaces built on the same or similar blockchains, I think we're going to see them be interoperable in new ways that may currently just not exist yet. [00:33:22] Dan Runcie: And would the same type of logic apply as well for the marketplace that you all have, given folks like OpenSea or some of the other broader platforms? [00:33:32] Rory Felton: So our big differentiator from a platform like OpenSea is we only allow authenticated artists to mint NFTs in our platform. One of the big challenges I see with some of the secondary-focused NFT marketplaces is that it's a wild west still. There's an insane amount of content that infringes on other people's rights that use all sorts of artists' name, image, like this audio without any sort of permission, right? And unlike a lot of people in this space or some people in this space, we actually believe in copyright. We think that's really valuable for artists and artists investors, and we really wanted to make sure that we prevent it as much as possible, people minting content that they didn't control through our platform. And so when fans or collectors come to HitPiece.com, they can feel assured that everything on our platform is authentic, is real, is coming from the artist that says it's coming from. And that's also why we were the first NFT company to integrate with Audible Magic. Audible Magic allows us to scan every single piece of audio file that gets uploaded to HitPiece to be minted as an NFT. And we test that against their massive database of over a hundred million songs to see if that song has been registered previously or as a copyrighted work from a record company or an artist. And we've already been able to say, hang on, that song's copyright. We need to confirm whether this artist actually controls the copyright of this audio file. And so we want to make sure that only the authenticated parties, the owners of works are actually able to mint NFTs of their creative content through HitPiece. So that's a big difference I see versus like the secondary markets of the world. But we also think ours is a little bit more just music-focused, right? Music NFTs are a little different than PFP projects or artwork NFTs, and so it really requires a different experience than maybe what some of the secondary markets that appeal to every one offer, if that makes sense.[00:35:31] Dan Runcie: Yeah, that makes sense. And I assume that some of the guardrails there to make sure that things are authenticated, to make sure it has the right copyright and licensing, also tie back to ensuring that what had happened back in February doesn't happen again. So part of that authentication, I'm sure likely may slow down some of the process, but it is how you ensure that everything that is there and what is transparent and seen is ultimately what you're trying to actually sell. [00:35:57] Rory Felton: Yeah. I don't think an experience that we've built, that you can go to HitPiece.com and see right now really exists anywhere else, and we've really tried to focus on making, one, authenticated protecting rights holders. And two, just make it super simple and easy for both artists who are new to this space that may not fully understand all the language and this new terminology that's come around, make it super easy for them to create their own collections and start minting NFTs with their creative content. And then also just make it super easy for music fans, you know, that haven't purchased an NFT to be able to collect one. I would say that really a small, small number of music fans overall have still entered Web 3.0 or acquired an NFT, be it for free or purchase, and there's still a huge amount of education that platforms like ourselves need to do and others about how to onboard into this space.[00:36:52] Dan Runcie: So for you all, specifically, with the folks you have on board before and up to this point, is ATL Jacob, is he the most successful artist or the artist that's made the most money on the platform so far? [00:37:04] Rory Felton: So ATL Jacob's collection has not launched yet. We have launched a variety of collections from artists like Surf, and we have a couple of collections dropping tomorrow. This interview, of course, will be out after this date. From King Midas, who's a Baltimore artist, and from Pyrex Whippa, who's a multi-platinum producer slash artist, a part of the 808 Mafia. He's worked with artists like Future, Juice WRLD, DaBaby. And his collection also involves granting people rights to collaborate with him in the studio. Some actually get a limited-edition skateboard from him. And also some of them actually get a limited edition beat kit from him as well. So there's all these cool, both digital and in real-life experiences, tied to token ownership, which we believe in. [00:37:50] Dan Runcie: No, that's solid. [00:37:51] Rory Felton: But beyond those, we do have some other, like, multi-platinum slash diamond level music artists, Grammy-nominated artists that we're looking to announce really, really soon.[00:38:02] Dan Runcie: Any hints as to who they may be? [00:38:05] Rory Felton: I'll just say we have a lot of love for Atlanta. [00:38:08] Dan Runcie: Okay. [00:38:08] Rory Felton: Atlanta moves the culture. Atlanta's, like, where my heart is. I love going to Atlanta. I think everyone in Atlanta is just coming. Being in LA for 20 years, like Atlanta's so nice. You have that southern hospitality, but you have that hustle and that combination of both. Like, I just love being in Atlanta. I love the vibe of Atlanta. [00:38:25] Dan Runcie: All right. We'll definitely look out for that one, for sure. Thinking about the company and hearing how you're building it, though, it does make me think about this article that you had written a couple of years back. I think it was an article you posted on LinkedIn actually is like, How to Win the Music Industry of 2019-2025, and you're describing what the type of company would look like and what type of things they need to have in place. And now that we're a couple of years past that, what are you seeing in the industry now, and is there any specific company that you think is checking all those boxes? [00:39:00] Rory Felton: Oh, man. I think when I wrote that, it was one of those, like late night, man, why doesn't this company exist? You know, if I had a hundred million dollars, this is what I would do, right? And it's interesting, I see companies doing bits and pieces of that, and what's fascinating is like I sometimes forget that I published that article, and I've even had, you know, investors and venture capital people reach out, nothing to do with HitPiece. They're just really curious about what I wrote, and they're like, this is it. How do we do this? And it's been fascinating to see that piece impact, if you will. No one's doing all of that, but I'll gladly compliment folks that I think are moving in that direction. United Masters and what Steve Stoute built, I think, is incredible. If you would've told me several years ago that someone could enter the music distribution space with a similar offering to other platforms out there, I never would've thought someone could truly compete. But kudos to him and his team, they've completely proved me, and I'll think a lot of people wrong. They've made a huge impact in, again, creating more opportunities for artists who can own their own content and not necessarily feel like they're stuck to have to do the traditional record deal. I think what they're doing is pretty amazing. Let's see, who else? I got to give out props to Downtown Music Holdings group. I think they're doing a huge amount of innovation in this space, both on the record side, on the distribution side, and on the publishing side. I'm a huge fan of Songtrust and what they built and that offering. I tell every music artist to work with if they do not have a publishing deal, sign up with Songtrust. It's a super easy admin deal that just creates a great solution that captures money that you just cannot capture any other way. I try to tell every music artist, I'm like, look, if you're writing your own music, you're writing your own songs, you're not going to get all your money that's due to you, just through your PRO. Artists, unfortunately, they're so busy, so much going on, they don't fully understand that. And so it's, like, the artists that I've seen turn on to a platform like Songtrust, they've literally turned on five figures plus in revenue in a quarter because that money is just sitting there if they don't capture it, eventually just goes away, which is really sad. So those are my shout-outs. Those are companies that I think are doing it well. I think with that piece, if I were to critique it now, I think it's a little too broad. There's a little too much going on for one company to do. But I'm a big fan of companies that, you know, believe in artistic freedom and innovation and providing more tools and opportunities for artists while also actually creating real success for them.[00:41:26] Dan Runcie: Yeah. I think what sticks out about those two companies is both the partnerships and the fact that there's, you know, overall companies that are tying both of them together, right? So United Masters is obviously tied to the work that Stoute had done with or is currently doing with Translation on the ad side. And then that also informs so many of the partnerships and just how he has been able to help think and expand things there. And then Downtown, specifically how they've been able to just reorganize a few of the things and then restructure to just understand, okay, what could that stack look like. What could it have to have all of these companies underneath, but in this way that feels practical, but not in this way of, you know, a company trying to check every box that's the hottest topic right now. [00:42:12] Rory Felton: Yeah, yeah, absolutely. I think companies are wise to, that are established in at scale. They're wise to take their time with Web 3.0 versus jump into it head-on per se. And I would encourage everyone to experiment. I think you can experiment in this space and try new things without having to go completely in. And of course, we're a great solution to experiment with. But there's clearly a variety of opportunities out there to do things. And quite frankly, no one knows exactly how the NFT innovation's going to be utilized in a few years from now, right? We have our hunch. We think it's going to be connected to real-life experiences and real amazing virtual experiences. However, I think there's all sorts of innovation that maybe hasn't even been created yet for its application, such as to ticketing and other categories as well. [00:43:05] Dan Runcie: Yeah, there's so much more to explore. We're still in the early innings with this. I'm excited to see what's next. But before we wrap things up, let's talk about what's next for you all. What does 2023 look like? What are the big things on the roadmap? [00:43:17] Rory Felton: Yeah, so as you mentioned, we've been building the Lounge metaverse space to connect artists and fans as well as give fans a great way to display and show off the collections that they own. So that's going to be launching soon. We clearly have some really amazing collections coming up from some really top-tier artists that we're excited to announce really soon as well. And then we fully built out now this completely self-service solution for independent artists to come in and start minting NFTs with their content. We haven't really focused on presenting that or pushing that yet to the independent community at scale. But that's something that we are looking forward to. We felt that it was best, hey, look, we want to establish that there is interest and demand for this space. That's why we focused on more established artists, artists with audiences initially, but really we think this space is for everyone. And we think that the smallest artists on the planet can actually benefit from Web 3.0 in a way that maybe streaming isn't changing the game for them right now. For instance, we've worked with baby developing artists that are making more money from Web 3.0 in one launch of an NFT collection than they would over two to three months from streaming. And I think this again goes back to humanity and society sort of revaluing music. In general, we all think music's the coolest thing in the world. We all think music is the most divine thing that we get to participate in as humans. And so we want to revalue it in a way that maybe NFTs allow us to that technology hasn't enabled in the past. And I think more than ever this concept of a thousand true fans is truer than ever, right, if an artist doesn't need to be a pop star to make a living. They really just need to cater to a niche of dedicated fans that love what they're doing. And NFTs and Web 3.0 really allow that artist to benefit from that type of model more than ever before. [00:45:08] Dan Runcie: I know. It's fascinating. It's an exciting time to see all the developments and what's going to come down the pipe for you all, what's going to come down for everyone else. It's going to be an exciting time. That's why so many of us are in this industry, right? But before we let you go though, where can people follow along with HitPiece if they want to stay and tap with what you have coming on, or if they want to follow along, where should they go?[00:45:28] Rory Felton: Yeah, so clearly you can go to HitPiece.com. You can just put in your email if you don't want to sign up yet and just follow updates from us on our email list. You can find us on Twitter or Instagram @joinHitPiece. You can even follow me on Twitter or Instagram if you'd like, @RoryFelton. Everything's open and my life is really an open book for everyone.[00:45:48] Dan Runcie: Awesome. Thanks, Rory. This is great. Thanks for coming on. [00:45:51] Rory Felton: Thanks, Dan, for your time. We really appreciate it.[00:45:54] Dan Runcie: If you enjoyed this podcast, go ahead and share it with a friend. Copy the link, text it to a friend, post it in your group chat, post it in your Slack groups, wherever you and your people talk, spread the word. That's how Trapital continues to grow and continues to reach the right people. And while you're at it, if you use Apple podcast, go ahead, rate the podcast. Give it a high rating and leave a review. Tell people why you liked the podcast. That helps more people discover the show. Thank you in advance. Talk to you next week.Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands

Black Menopause & Beyond
#24 Jenny Stoute explains why she is no longer on HRT (re-Release )

Black Menopause & Beyond

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2022 9:39


Two-time Olympian winner, ex tv Gladiator, busy owner and model Jenny Stoute experienced abnormalities found in her routine cervical smear test; she tells Anita why in response, she has decided to come off HRT and go Menopause Natural. Jenny Instagram: gorgeousfiftiesBlack Menopause and Beyond work with the Peer Group Black Women in Menopause Insta/Twitter/Facebook BlackwomeninMenopause. https://www.instagram.com/blackwomeninmenopause/Black Menopause and Beyond podcast look at Menopause from the eyes of a Black woman. Anita expresses her views and also interviews individuals and experts discussing the conversation of Menopause.Are you fed up with not being included in the discussion of Menopause? If you are, this is the podcast for you. Anita Powell, the host, is the Co-founder of Black Women in Menopause with Nina Kuypers an Online peer support group for Black women. She is also the Founder of the Menopause Alliance, a face-to-face peer support group in Bedfordshire. Also, Anita is a Community worker/advocate and a Menopause Activist and facilitator. In addition, She has worked in community radio for many years. Plus, in 2016 was awarded 'I am Inspiring.' by Evans Clothes, Garnier Skin Care and Marie Claire Magazine. She has appeared on BBC Breakfast TV and interviewed with Kate Muir, the producer of Davina McCalls Menopause Documentary, BBC 3 Counties Radio, Magic FM and Marie Claire Magazine. Also, her Menopause Alliance ( prev. known as Bedford support group) appeared on ITV News.Anita uses her personal experience and experiences gained from her peers, profession and activism to explore the topic of Menopause.The podcast aims to inform, explore, and educate the listeners. An episode will be broadcasted monthly with the occasional bonus episodes. The podcast will include individual and group interviews and personal views.I hope you enjoy it; please follow and subscribe to my podcast wherever you listen to your podcast episodes.My social media: Twitter BlkMenoBeyond, Insta: BlkMenoBeyond, Facebook: Black menopause and Beyond.Black Menopause and Beyond work with the Peer Group Black Women in Menopause Insta/Twitter/Facebook BlackwomeninMenopause. https://www.instagram.com/blackwomeninmenopause/Awarded 5th UK black women podcast https://blog.feedspot.com/uk_black_women_podcasts/Anita Powell's email address is BlackMenoBeyond@yahoo.comhttps://linktr.ee/AnitaPowellhttps://www.instagram.com/blkmenobeyond/https://twitter.com/blkmenobeyondhttps://www.facebook.com/blackmenopausebeyond/Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/black-menopause-and-beyond. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Black Menopause & Beyond
Anita talks pre diabetes, cost of living, plus explains Jenny Stoute on why she has come off HRT

Black Menopause & Beyond

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2022 31:59


Within this episode, the host, Anita, reflects on her Menopause week and thoughts. Anita was diagnosed with Prediabetes in 2022. In this episode, she talks about her pre- diabetes Experience and Menopause and Diabetes.Anita wonders if the rising cost of living impacts menopausal women. Two-time Olympian winner Jenny Stoute is interviewed; she tells Anita why she has decided to come off HRT and go Menopause Natural. Black Menopause and Beyond works with the Peer Group Black Women in Menopause Insta/Twitter/Facebook BlackwomeninMenopause. https://www.instagram.com/blackwomeninmenopause/Black Menopause and Beyond podcast look at Menopause from the eyes of a Black woman. Anita expresses her views and also interviews individuals and experts discussing the conversation of Menopause.Are you fed up with not being included in the discussion of Menopause? If you are, this is the podcast for you. Anita Powell, the host, is the Co-founder of Black Women in Menopause with Nina Kuypers an Online peer support group for Black women. She is also the Founder of the Menopause Alliance, a face-to-face peer support group in Bedfordshire. Also, Anita is a Community worker/advocate and a Menopause Activist and facilitator. In addition, She has worked in community radio for many years. Plus, in 2016 was awarded 'I am Inspiring.' by Evans Clothes, Garnier Skin Care and Marie Claire Magazine. She has appeared on BBC Breakfast TV and interviewed with Kate Muir, the producer of Davina McCalls Menopause Documentary, BBC 3 Counties Radio, Magic FM and Marie Claire Magazine. Also, her Menopause Alliance ( prev. known as Bedford support group) appeared on ITV News.Anita uses her personal experience and experiences gained from her peers, profession and activism to explore the topic of Menopause.The podcast aims to inform, explore, and educate the listeners. An episode will be broadcasted monthly with the occasional bonus episodes. The podcast will include individual and group interviews and personal views.I hope you enjoy it; please follow and subscribe to my podcast wherever you listen to your podcast episodes.My social media: Twitter BlkMenoBeyond, Insta: BlkMenoBeyond, Facebook: Black menopause and Beyond.Black Menopause and Beyond works with the Peer Group Black Women in Menopause Insta/Twitter/Facebook BlackwomeninMenopause. https://www.instagram.com/blackwomeninmenopause/Awarded 5th UK black women podcast https://blog.feedspot.com/uk_black_women_podcasts/Anita Powell's email address: BlackMenoBeyond@yahoo.comhttps://linktr.ee/AnitaPowellSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/black-menopause-and-beyond. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Nerdland maandoverzicht wetenschap en technologie
Nerdland maandoverzicht augustus 2022

Nerdland maandoverzicht wetenschap en technologie

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2022 118:41


Met deze maand: Gekkopootjes! Somerton man! Schrikkelseconden! Tomorrowland! Planten in het donker! Stoute schaakrobot! En veel meer... Shownotes: https://maandoverzicht.nerdland.be/nerdland-maandoverzicht-augustus-2022 Gepresenteerd door Lieven Scheire met Hetty Helsmoortel, Jeroen Baert, Els Aerts en Stephanie Dehennin. Montage: Els Aerts. Mixing: Jens Paeyeneers. (00:01:03) China wil asteroide defense system rond de maan (00:06:43) Vlag van Loehansk in ISS (00:09:34) Grasmaairobots zingen happy birthday voor Curiosity (00:15:54) Programmeer uw huishoudapparaat (00:18:43) Sommerton man mysterie beetje opgelost (00:31:05) Plantjes groeien in het donker (00:37:07) Hoe blijven gekkopootjes kleven? (00:41:37) AI Aldi in Nederland (00:47:08) Nieuwe brain computer interface (00:55:04) Big Tech wil af van de schrikkelseconde (01:04:51) Nerdrondleiding op Tomorrowland (01:13:44) Musk Niews (01:14:00) Musk vs Twitter (01:19:04) Musk kreeg tweeling met topmanager van zijn bedrijf (01:21:37) Musk op familiefoto met de paus (01:22:26) Roman Space Telescope zal met Falcon Heavy vliegen (01:23:21) Macron wil eigen Starlink (01:24:57) Nieuws over de Einstein telescoop (01:26:10) Schaakrobot breekt vinger kind (01:30:58) Mitrailleur op rug robothond (01:34:46) Raket in vulvavorm (01:42:54) James Webb eerste beelden (01:51:23) SPONSOR Potteau

De Jortcast
#472 - Moeten die stoute rijken meer dokken?

De Jortcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2022 33:06


De nieuwskoppen ademden misbaar toen er vorige week weer eens een vuistdikke fiscale studie uitkwam, maar wordt de kloof tussen arm en rijk eigenlijk wel groter? En als je allerrijksten al wilt uitkloppen als Kaag of Rutte zijnde, hoe môt dat dan?  Een gesprek met Reageer snel! (https://www.eur.nl/people/bas-jacobs)(Mailen mag ook: jortcast@avrotros.nl)

In The Money Players' Podcast
Nick Luck Daily Ep 492 - I Gotta Horse

In The Money Players' Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2022 26:49


Nick is joined by Racing Post writer Jonathan Harding to discuss the news and events in the racing world today. The lead on whether an outsider can once again prevail in the Cazoo Derby, with Jonathan giving a good shout to Mark and Charlie Johnston's Dante Stakes runner-up Royal Patronage. His York conqueror, Desert Crown, continues to impress at home and Nick talks to his assistant trainer James Savage, who also gives notice of the strong Stoute squad for Epsom and tonight's exciting Brigadier Gerard runner Bay Bridge. Nick and Jonathan discuss Jon's recent Racing Post column in which he cautioned against the increasing growth of the superstable, while Julia Romich - right hand to trainer Marcel Weiss - joins the show to discuss what the season might hold for Sunday's returning Arc hero Torquator Tasso, and Racing Welfare COO Gemma Waterhouse talks about the Great Racing Welfare Cycle and how you can get involved.

Nick Luck Daily Podcast
Ep 492 - I Gotta Horse

Nick Luck Daily Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2022 26:48


Nick is joined by Racing Post writer Jonathan Harding to discuss the news and events in the racing world today. The lead on whether an outsider can once again prevail in the Cazoo Derby, with Jonathan giving a good shout to Mark and Charlie Johnston's Dante Stakes runner-up Royal Patronage. His York conqueror, Desert Crown, continues to impress at home and Nick talks to his assistant trainer James Savage, who also gives notice of the strong Stoute squad for Epsom and tonight's exciting Brigadier Gerard runner Bay Bridge. Nick and Jonathan discuss Jon's recent Racing Post column in which he cautioned against the increasing growth of the superstable, while Julia Romich - right hand to trainer Marcel Weiss - joins the show to discuss what the season might hold for Sunday's returning Arc hero Torquator Tasso, and Racing Welfare COO Gemma Waterhouse talks about the Great Racing Welfare Cycle and how you can get involved.

In The Money Players' Podcast
Nick Luck Daily Ep 491 - Arsenic an Odd Case

In The Money Players' Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2022 38:01


Nick is joined by Racing Post senior writer Lee Mottershead to discuss news and events from around the racing world today. They lead with a curious arsenic positive in horse trained by Richard Hannon, one which appears to have both trainer and investigators foxed, but whose central themes may lead to further debate when the case is concluded. Nick talks to trainer Conor O'Dwyer about his 300/1 winner at Punchestown yesterday, the joint longest in Irish racing history, while TRC No 1 jockey James McDonald drops in to talk about his Royal Ascot sprinting stars and another likely victory for Zaaki in this weekend's Doomben Cup. Nick and Lee talk two Stoute stars - Desert Crown and Bay Bridge - while consignor Timmy Hillman talks a rare store sale in Newmarket for Tattersalls, JA McGrath brings his update from Hong Kong and we meet MyRacehorse shareholder Nick Lowe, enjoying his first experience of racehorse ownership.

Nick Luck Daily Podcast
Ep 491 - Arsenic an Odd Case

Nick Luck Daily Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2022 38:01


Nick is joined by Racing Post senior writer Lee Mottershead to discuss news and events from around the racing world today. They lead with a curious arsenic positive in horse trained by Richard Hannon, one which appears to have both trainer and investigators foxed, but whose central themes may lead to further debate when the case is concluded. Nick talks to trainer Conor O'Dwyer about his 300/1 winner at Punchestown yesterday, the joint longest in Irish racing history, while TRC No 1 jockey James McDonald drops in to talk about his Royal Ascot sprinting stars and another likely victory for Zaaki in this weekend's Doomben Cup. Nick and Lee talk two Stoute stars - Desert Crown and Bay Bridge - while consignor Timmy Hillman talks a rare store sale in Newmarket for Tattersalls, JA McGrath brings his update from Hong Kong and we meet MyRacehorse shareholder Nick Lowe, enjoying his first experience of racehorse ownership.

In The Money Players' Podcast
Nick Luck Daily Ep 480 - Is Stoute about to unleash Derby star?

In The Money Players' Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2022 37:43


Nick is joined by Daily Mirror journalist David Yates to discuss the latest news and developments from around the racing world. They lead by considering the potential impact of Sir Michael Stoute's once raced colt Desert Crown on this week's Dante Stakes and next month's Derby following a sustained gamble through the last ten days. Nick tracks down the horse's breeders Strawberry Fields Stud, and talks to stud manager Stuart Millar. He also gets insight into the Stoute method from his former assistant trainer Owen Burrows, who gives Nick the lowdown on his star sprinter Minzaal ahead of his run in the Duke of York Stakes. This week's Weatherbys guest is Moyglare Bloodstock advisor Fiona Craig, who covers a wide range of topics as well as updating on Homeless Songs, Thoughts of June, Search for a Song and Kyprios.

Nick Luck Daily Podcast
Ep 480 - Is Stoute about to unleash Derby star?

Nick Luck Daily Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2022 37:42


Nick is joined by Daily Mirror journalist David Yates to discuss the latest news and developments from around the racing world. They lead by considering the potential impact of Sir Michael Stoute's once raced colt Desert Crown on this week's Dante Stakes and next month's Derby following a sustained gamble through the last ten days. Nick tracks down the horse's breeders Strawberry Fields Stud, and talks to stud manager Stuart Millar. He also gets insight into the Stoute method from his former assistant trainer Owen Burrows, who gives Nick the lowdown on his star sprinter Minzaal ahead of his run in the Duke of York Stakes. This week's Weatherbys guest is Moyglare Bloodstock advisor Fiona Craig, who covers a wide range of topics as well as updating on Homeless Songs, Thoughts of June, Search for a Song and Kyprios.