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Unstoppable Mindset
Episode 447 – Unstoppable Through Love, Consciousness, and Purpose with Kip Baldwin

Unstoppable Mindset

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2026 68:28


What if the answers you're searching for arrived long before you knew how to understand them? In this conversation, I sit down with Kip Baldwin, a filmmaker, producer, writer, and founder of the Just Love movement. Kip shares the extraordinary awakening he experienced at age 12 and how it set him on a lifelong path of exploring consciousness, love, spirituality, and human connection. From the music industry and sustainable agriculture to television production, ethical AI, and overcoming a traumatic brain injury, Kip's journey has been anything but ordinary. As we talk, Kip reflects on why fear has become such a powerful force in society, how love can transform the way we see ourselves and others, and why he believes lasting change starts with a shift in consciousness. You will hear stories of resilience, curiosity, and purpose, along with a vision for creating a better future for generations to come. I believe you will find this conversation thought-provoking, challenging, and full of hope. Highlights: 01:45 - How a childhood acting career sparked a lifelong passion for media and communication. 07:08 - Why confidence without self-awareness can become a liability. 16:32 - Lessons from the Kellogg School of Management that still shape business decisions today. 21:58 - Why listening beats talking in business, leadership, and life. 35:08 - How strong brands grow through awareness, not just loyalty programs. 01:05:02 - The three traits Zarko looks for when mentoring future leaders. About the Guest: Kip Baldwin knows his purpose for Being is to share all that LOVE is through his many solutions driven projects; using media in all its forms to help awaken individuals, and by proxy the collective, to the LOVE Paradigm emerging. He feels that in order for a new chapter of our story to be conceived for humanity, a mass imagining of our limitless potential is what is needed to bring about an age of compassion, empathy, collaboration, and oneness.  Kip was born in 1965 to counterculture parents - in the midst of the maelstrom that was the decade of the sixties, in fact 1965 was the first year that scientists warned us about climate change - in Vancouver, Washington. His earliest years were spent on a farm where his grandparents raised thoroughbred horses. During this period grew in him a deep, abiding LOVE and respect for nature and all living things. It was around the age of twelve his life would transform forever, as he had an out of body experience that took him beyond the edge of Universe, even Space and Time, and face to face with the unknowable of Infinity. This experience became the foundation for his constant seeking since. Due to that experience Kip felt he must explore the world beyond the small town confines of Camas, WA where he grew up. His first attempt to break free was to do a brief stint in the Navy, where he was going to pursue a career as an electric technician, but because of a hereditary bleeding disorder he was given a medical discharge. However, a military career for him was clearly never really in the cards anyway. Although he was always grateful for the insight it gave him into the inner workings of our country, as he witnessed first the how the poor are literally cannon fodder for corporations, under the guise of them being heroes and patriots. Following his discharge, he returned briefly to the limits of his hometown, before moving to the San Francisco Bay Area in 1985 to pursue his passion for music and performing. He often jokes that he was looking for the San Francisco of the Haight/Ashbury, Peace and LOVE days, but arrived twenty years too late. What he found instead was the 80s hair metal band scene, whose songs that focused on partying, sex, and drugs were not compatible with his lyrics about awakening awareness and addressing the need for personal and societal change. In the late 90s, after becoming disillusioned by his beloved music industry - and always seeking solutions for the myriad of challenges facing humanity - he shifted his focus to local and sustainable foods. While this was certainly a worthwhile pursuit, it did little to fulfill his need to share LOVE'S Truth and create a collective shift in consciousness. But what it did do was make him aware that it was only going to be through the use of mass media that his message of LOVE could reach a large enough audience to affect real lasting change. This found him again heeding the call of the entertainment industry, first as an actor, then writer, and ultimately as a producer, with some success co-creating the influential cannabis series Weed Country for the Discovery Network (focusing on the countless benefits humanity can derive from marijuana, as well as our profound historical connection to the plant), co-founding the United Filmmakers Association, and starting the Just LOVE Movement. Ultimately, this led him to co-founding S.O.U.L. Documentary with creative partner and Soul Twin, Evan Hirsch who shares his passion, purpose and mission to heal humanity by embracing our innate oneness, which they both understand can only be achieved by accepting and grounding ourselves in the Reality of LOVE We Are. Ways to connect with Kip: Facebook:  Just LOVE page: https://www.facebook.com/kipbaldwinjustlove Main page: https://www.facebook.com/kip.baldwin/ UFA: https://www.facebook.com/groups/Unifilmmakers LinkedIn:  https://www.linkedin.com/in/kip-baldwin-975a3514/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kipbaldwin?igsh=NTc4MTIwNjQ2YQ%3D%3D&utm_source=qr YouTube: Kip Baldwin: https://youtube.com/@thekiprowdy?si=LckMuhec40lWAicF Just LOVE: https://youtube.com/@justlove6463?si=QW1g4D2dlaHmJk8B S.O.U.L. Documentary: https://youtube.com/@souldocumentary?si=4HOwlV-pjFN6guYy Soul Twin Messiah: https://youtube.com/@soultwinmessiah?si=7ctLlmqjeOczkjO_ Additional must listen:  Comfort You Song: https://youtu.be/Mi8D3AoDfRQ?si=y8RzIQPXP5ALJth1 A World Worth Imagining: https://youtu.be/Cx28t6_SGic?si=o4lWs7po3TBKx_3A Invitation. To Action: https://youtu.be/B8jUOUVCvJI?si=l4Pr7vWNDsnXX4wh AI work: www.luminaLOVE.LOVE About the Host: Michael Hingson is a New York Times best-selling author, international lecturer, and Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe. Michael, blind since birth, survived the 9/11 attacks with the help of his guide dog Roselle. This story is the subject of his best-selling book, Thunder Dog. Michael gives over 100 presentations around the world each year speaking to influential groups such as Exxon Mobile, AT&T, Federal Express, Scripps College, Rutgers University, Children's Hospital, and the American Red Cross just to name a few. He is Ambassador for the National Braille Literacy Campaign for the National Federation of the Blind and also serves as Ambassador for the American Humane Association's 2012 Hero Dog Awards. https://michaelhingson.com https://www.facebook.com/michael.hingson.author.speaker/ https://twitter.com/mhingson https://www.youtube.com/user/mhingson https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelhingson/ accessiBe Links https://accessibe.com/ https://www.youtube.com/c/accessiBe https://www.linkedin.com/company/accessibe/mycompany/ https://www.facebook.com/accessibe/ Thanks for listening! Thanks so much for listening to our podcast! If you enjoyed this episode and think that others could benefit from listening, please share it using the social media buttons on this page. Do you have some feedback or questions about this episode? Leave a comment in the section below! Subscribe to the podcast If you would like to get automatic updates of new podcast episodes, you can subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts or Stitcher. You can subscribe in your favorite podcast app. You can also support our podcast through our tip jar https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/unstoppable-mindset . Leave us an Apple Podcasts review Ratings and reviews from our listeners are extremely valuable to us and greatly appreciated. They help our podcast rank higher on Apple Podcasts, which exposes our show to more awesome listeners like you. If you have a minute, please leave an honest review on Apple Podcasts. Transcription Notes: Michael Hingson  00:03 One of the biggest things holding you back isn't what's in front of you, but rather what you believe. Welcome to Unstoppable Mindset, where inclusion, diversity, and the unexpected meet. I'm your host, Michael Hingson, speaker, author, and advocate for inclusion and possibilities. This podcast explores how the beliefs we carry shape the way we live, lead, and connect with others. Each week, I talk with people who challenge assumptions, face adversity head on, and show what's possible when we choose curiosity over fear. Together we focus on mindset, resilience, and the small shifts that lead to meaningful change. Let's get started. Hi everyone, I am your host Mike Hingson, and you are listening and or watching Unstoppable Mindset. We're really glad that you're here with us today. Our guest, the person I get the honor of chatting with for the next hour or so, is Kip Baldwin, who will talk a lot about love. He will talk a lot about a number of different things, he's been a director, he's been a producer, an actor. He has been published, although he hasn't published a book yet, but he's published poetry, and I'm sure he's going to tell us about that, and I don't want to give it away, so I won't. Anyway, Kip, welcome to Unstoppable Mindset. We're glad you're Kip Baldwin  01:40 here. Oh, thank you so much for having me, Michael. I look forward to having this conversation and sharing my story. Michael Hingson  01:47 Well, tell us a little bit about you, kind of. Let's start with the early Kip, growing up and all that, because I know you had some things along the way that were relevant and ought to be mentioned. So, why don't you tell us about the early Kip, and we'll go from there. Speaker 1  02:00 I was. I grew up in Washington State, little town called Camas. Although my earliest years were spent in a town called Battleground, Washington, and my family, we raised horses, Thoroughbred race horses. We raised at Portland Meadows, and so I'm kind of a farm boy at heart, at least that's how I grew up, but I had an experience when I was 12 that was definitely not your typical farm boy experience, I guess. I had gone up to Seattle, and this was maybe 78 to see a Seahawks game with the Raiders of my dad and dad, I had a good day, which wasn't always the case, and got home, and it was a, you know, five and a half hour round trip for kids, 12 year olds, a big time, and so I went to bed, and I promptly left my body, and now keep in mind I had never done any drugs. Out of body experiences, a household projection was not something that we talked about about the old farm around the farmhouse dinner table, and I floated over my bedroom. My awareness hovered over my body, and I remember very vividly you don't forget. I looked at my body and went, "I'm not in there. And then that immediately I left my house, I left the planet, I left the solar system, I let the galaxy, I let the universe, and the whole time all I can describe was kind of a presence, not a voice or anything, but just, are you taking all of this in? And sometimes words can't convey something so expansive and grand, and so I was taking in black holes and quasars and nebulas, and just flying through the, you know, time didn't really exist, but I was, I was traveling across the universe, and eventually I got outside the universe, and my awareness was turned in, and I could see how everything was connected, and how the universe itself was finite, and but that everything had a place, there was no less or greater than that, everything had a specific role, from the smallest particle to, you know, the largest star, and then my awareness was turned out to the blackness of infinity, and that you know you don't know at 12, you're just like, "Oh, this is happening, and I'm what's happening, and I'm taking it in, and what I didn't know is that would become my point of seeking that really became the rest of my life. Life, I think, had I been born in India, like say Ramana Maharishi, who had what I didn't realize until later, there's a name for what happened to me, and it's called a spontaneous awakening. My life would have probably been much different, but we don't live in a society that that really honors things like that, so it was a lot of me going on a journey of discovery and a weight and continual awakening until now, and it's an ongoing process, but that's where it really began with me being confronted with the fact that there there can't be a beginning or ending to anything, and the thought experiments that can't, that come out of that, and the way it opens your consciousness, I'm ever grateful for, although at the time it, it made me for a long time feel very apart, and it wasn't until I met with Dr. Dr. Dean Radin up at Noetic Sciences, and I told him my story, and he looked at me, and he went, "You go, that's not a usual experience, he said, "That's a mystical experience, and I was in my probably late 40s, maybe 50 at that time, and that was the first time in my life that someone had had said, 'Hey, what you, what you had was a really phenomenal experience, and I'm very grateful for him for saying that to me, because for most of my life, I'm running around talking about these profound things with people that I thought were incredibly important to share, and they didn't seem very important to people, and it wasn't until then that it hit me that it wasn't that they were important, that it was that they, they didn't really understand what I was talking about. Michael Hingson  07:03 Well, and in our society, as you point out, it's not something that is generally appreciated, and and people who have had those experiences or talk about them are generally looked down upon or frowned upon, and you know that's that's fine, but it doesn't change the fact, and so it must have been hard, especially at first, for you to talk about that. Speaker 1  07:29 You know, I was so excited at first, I was excited to share it with my family, and and it happened a couple more times, and it was so overwhelming that literally I would get to a point where my head, my physical being couldn't handle it anymore, and I would get up and vomit. It was that's how, how intense it was, like I just, I couldn't take in anymore. And so, at first, I was really excited to share it, because it was beyond wondrous. It was, it was truth. It was reality, and I, and on some level, I knew that instinctually. But then, when enough people sort of ignore you or act like something's unimportant, you stop talking about Michael Hingson  08:15 it. Yeah, Speaker 1  08:15 I never stopped writing about it. I never stopped experiencing it, and I didn't even really stop talking about it once I moved to California for the music business in 1985 I, you know, then I thought, wow, I mean, being a group of creatives and there's going to be other people that will understand what I'm talking about, but in the 80s music environment it really wasn't what people were, were talking or thinking about, and I was kind of in the same way, and again it wasn't until years later that I look back and I realized all this time I spent up late at night partying with people and stuff, and telling them about infinity, and, and they look, they, they must have been looking at me like I'm a complete idiot, because they really only cared about, you know, getting high or having sex, and I'm trying to have this profound conversation. Michael Hingson  09:16 So, when your family, when you told your family, how did they react? Speaker 1  09:20 They still don't understand it to this day. It just, oh, that's nice, you know. It actually, there were points in my life where it caused conflict with, especially my father, because when I would say none of this is real, he, he always considered him, and still to this day considers himself quite science physics buff, it wasn't something he was willing to accept, and, and even really have a reasonable conversation about. I would say that the things that got me through all these years was, you know, the universe. There's love, God, Brahmin, whatever you want to call it, it gives you what you need, and what it gave me throughout the years, and still to this day, is voices that made me realize I wasn't crazy, that I knew something really special. Probably the first thing, the first one I remember, like, that was Joseph Campbell being interviewed by Bill Moyers, and somehow I knew everything that Joseph Campbell was talking about, and I'm like, How can I possibly know these things? How can I possibly understand these things of this really brilliant, just beautiful soul? And throughout the years, it's been those touch those moments of going, oh, it hasn't been where I've heard someone go, wow, that's helped me awaken, it's been something that's helped me not feel insane and realize that the things that I'm sharing have been shared for 1000s of years, and by many, many minds and beings much greater than myself, and that that really probably kept me from losing my mind. Michael Hingson  11:10 So, you had this experience happen to you at 12. What did you then specifically do? I mean, not so much talking to people, but what did it do for you, as far as schooling, and what you did with your life? Speaker 1  11:27 I would.. it made me very.. in all honesty, it made school seem really trivial to me. It was kind of boring. I started writing a lot. In fact, something I wrote when I was 17 was called Life and Death, and it went: Life is just a symptom of certain death, crying and laughing until our last breath. Everything dies in true infinity. Then the mountains crumble into the sea, stars full from the night sky hit the earth, and then they die, lost in time. I don't know who I am. Am I a god or just a mortal man? Time can't change what I have found. Still, I am changed and bound, bound by the fears and bound by lies. Even now, the tears fill my eyes, gasping for every breath as I head for a certain death, clouds now pass overhead, and I realize how things are now that I am dead. Life is ending, life goes on like the lyrics to an endless song. Life and death, it's all the same. We exist only in our brain, and so there was a lot of that. It pushed me away from I was confirmed Zion Lutheran. I really couldn't stomach religious dogma anymore at that point. Um, just the hypocrisy, you know? Like, I remember I, I was talking to a new pastor we had, and he was informing me that my great grandmother, who is Jehovah's Witness, and these Mormon boys had come around, were trying to teach me about Mormonism, and I was just curious and open, always, and still am to this day. I don't judge. I would say that's another big thing that this gave me, is I don't, I see everything as equal, I don't, I don't judge everything, I don't judge anything as lesser thing greater than I don't judge good and evil in the in the same way that other people do, I see things as flows of negative of energy as we exist in a duality with this illusion, and this is just what we describe as good and you are really just flows of energy between the polarities of the duality, and so it pushed me, definitely, because I, when he said that my great grandmother was going to go to hell, and these Mormon boys were going to go to hell, I looked him in the face, and I just said, but I thought God was love, and that was pretty much the end of my church, Michael Hingson  14:04 my, my wife did, I think, some things in the Lutheran church, which mostly she was a Methodist, and I joined the Methodist church when we got married, and so on, but when she was in, I think this was when she was in high school, maybe in, I guess it was late high school, early college. She met some Mormon people, and one of them said, I guess she was learning about different religions, and so she was learning about Mormonism, and this guy said you're either going to think that this is a total hoax or you're going to just totally believe in it. Well, it wasn't quite that way for her. She did not think it was a hoax, and I agree with her, but there. There are things about the about all religions that tend to make life difficult. The problem with religion is that that people are are what make up the religion, and they all have their own views, and it makes life really tough. I know I participated in a program called the Walk to Emmaus, which is a what's literally called a short course in Christianity, and it's not to bring people to the Christian church, but it's to help create a class of leaders in the Christian church. Anyway, one of the things about the walk to Emmaus is that a number of people give lectures, people who have been involved in church, and then there are the pilgrims, the people who are coming to to learn what everyone has to say, and the lay director of the Walk to Emmaus every time gives a speech, and I was lay director once, and one of the things that is in the manual, or was I assume it still is. It's been a while, but it says that Tolstoy once said the biggest problem with Christianity is that nobody practices it, and there's a lot of truth to that. Speaker 1  16:13 But I think that I think you hit it right on the head that people are involved, like I, and I do want to clarify something, I, I believe very much that that Jesus was a master. Oh, Michael Hingson  16:29 absolutely, yeah, and, Speaker 1  16:31 and, but I also believe that people don't know what happened at the Council of Nicaea and understand how the Bible was actually constructed, not because it was based on Gnostic teachings or even really the teachings of Christ, but it was cobbled together as a means of control. If Caesar saw his soldiers be turning to Christianity when they wanted to find, you know, put together a book that really didn't express Christian truth or the truth of Christ, but a way, a means of controlling people through fear, and so if you, if you notice, all the books in the Bible are male. Well, left out of the Bible was the book of Mary, left out of the Bible, it's the book of Thomas, who, interestingly enough, there's a place in India where they all speak ancient Aramaic, and they worship the Book of Thomas, which there's always been a lot of discussion. Did Jesus go to India and study Buddhism? And because even the Book of Mary, these are very Buddhist beliefs, but anything, because we live in a patriarchal society, anything like the piece to Sophia, the book of Mary, the book of Stackle, all of these were intentionally kept out of the Bible, so it's not, I think it's not so much religion, it's the organ, it's the dogma that comes along with organized religion, which is really about people, you know, men using it to control and manipulate people through fear, Michael Hingson  18:14 all too much, all too often. It's, it's true. Speaker 1  18:18 Yeah, and it's interesting. I was watching last night, and it's funny. This is why, why you always have to be on a constant path of awakening. It never stops. If you think you've reached that pinnacle, or whatever, then they're not just ego. There's always more to know and understand. And I ran across this video on Tara, well, Tara is in Buddhism, basically in every religion that I am aware of, there's always the peace to Sophia, there's always the the story of the divine feminine that in large part is is is not. It was. It's largely been suppressed, and so I was, I was watching this, and it was just so fascinating to me to see how identical what Tara was in Buddhism, which this is what, when Tara, Tara is considered the ultimate goddess in the Buddhist faith. Well, when Tara came to earth in the story, she went to a bunch of, you know, Buddhist monks, and they said, "Oh, you know, they were so impressed by her, and they thought this was a compliment. They said, "Well, we hope you, you can reincarnate as a man, and she said, "No, she She said, I don't see things as male and female, but since nobody else wants to be the feminine, I will play that role. And it was just a profoundly interesting thing to listen to, not just because of the story, but because almost every faith that I'm aware. Of has that story of the divine feminine that has again largely been suppressed and marginalized, Michael Hingson  20:09 well, for you clearly that was a very meaningful experience. What did what did you then do, and I understand how you could imagine that maybe what was being taught in school wasn't quite as, as meaningful as what you had experienced, but you went on, I assume, through high school, and did you go to college? Speaker 1  20:30 I was, I went, I was an electron, I went to the Navy to be an electronic technician, but I had a bleeding disorder called Von Willebrand disease, and I found out after I was in for about a year. Well, you can't be in the Navy with that, because we can't carry with the limited space you have on ships, we can't carry the clotting factor you would need if there's a problem. So that was fairly short-lived. Then I went back to Washington and was working as a dishwasher for a while, then I worked as a male stripper, and, and I was then, which, which, you know, there was something really profound about that experience, because it taught me what women feel like to be objectified, and that's something that has carried me, carried a lesson. I, I find lessons in everything, even things that, wow, you know, what could you possibly learn positive out of having been a male stripper? Well, I learned how women feel, really, to be, you know, not looked at as anything more than an object, and then I really wanted to continue to, you know, pursue music, so a friend of mine, we loaded 65,000 pounds of frozen strawberries onto a semi truck, and like july 3, 1985 and got a ride to San Francisco, a city I'd never been to before. I knew nobody here. We got here, I had 25 cents in my pocket, and I used the 25 cents to call the one friend that I thought I knew that I could get a hold of here in or in in the Bay Area, and it was a wrong number, and so now I'm in a city at the Gray Home Bus Terminal that used to be in downtown San Francisco, we have no food, we have no place to live. We have nothing to, you know, we have nothing, literally. And that's where my journey began. As far as my story, my, my adult life, and my journey in the entertainment industry and the music business, that's how it all started. It started by loading 65,000 pounds of frozen strawberries under semi truck, telling, oh, and the cap around the story is I had worn my contacts for too long and I ripped the corny up both my eyes when I took them out, because I was wearing hard lenses, so I was functionally blind in the city I'd never been to before with patches over my eyes, and being led around by my friend, and luckily we found some very nice people that gave us a place to stay, and then I ended up meeting maybe a week after that, I met my first wife, who was Persian, and we were together for a long time. What was interesting about that is I've been introduced to so many different faiths through the people in my life, and because I haven't judged and tried to learn, like I, I learned through her about Islam, I learned through her about our Torcharianism, and we lived the rock and roll lifestyle for the 16 years we were together. She was a photographer. I wrote for a magazine called BAM. I played in bands. I managed artists like Linda Perry from The Four Non Blonde, or I worked with Linda Perry from Four Non Blondes. I managed Alex Skolnick, who is lead guitar player in Testament, and I did that for a long time until I started getting really disenchanted with music and really started to hate the business and started to hate music because of it, and so I ended up drifting into, I wouldn't say drifting into, I got drawn into visual media, and I started working. I met a guy at a club in San Jose, California, called The Agenda, and we were playing pool, and he was telling me, "Oh, he's the owner of this company called Metropolis Digital, and I was thinking, "My. Speaker 1  24:59 Music and music videos, and yeah, I want to get involved in this, so I started coming up with ideas, and he brought me into their company, because I got to know a lot of people through the music business and booking artists on different shows, like Letterman and Leno, and, and so I got to know how to work through those channels that it opened doors for me to be able to do on-air graphics for the networks, and so I did that until about, in fact, the last major project I did in that industry was with a company called Chaos X AOS out of San Francisco, and we did the 2000 election graphics for ABC nationally, and then I, I, that with the, the, the.com telecom crash of not of 2000 they pulled all of that sort of work in house, and so that business kind of dried up, and I changed my focus to working in local and sustainable foods. Michael Hingson  26:08 What got you to the point where you disliked Music so much? Speaker 1  26:12 The business.. it just.. it wasn't. I came here, and in all honesty, I was looking for the 60s, but I was 20 years too late, only to find out later I was actually 30 years too early, but I was looking for community, I was looking for family, I was looking for that connection, but what existed as far as the music industry then was the 80s hair band stuff, heavy metal was on the rise. It was very misogynistic. It wasn't. It was very competitive. There wasn't, it wasn't collaborative, it wasn't community related at all. And it really turned me off. It wasn't, it wasn't what I had thought being in an artistic community doing artistic endeavors would be about it, became very.. it just.. it just.. it just.. it just made me feel very empty, and that wasn't what I loved about music, and so that Michael Hingson  27:24 would be an issue, Speaker 1  27:25 yeah. It just value wise it was, it was not, you know, you, you got to do a show, and you've got the bands that are coming on after you, you know, playing with your amps, and it was just, it was, it wasn't, it wasn't fun, and it wasn't fulfilling. More importantly, it wasn't fulfilling. It wasn't, and I'm writing about while everyone else is writing about, you know, sex and drugs and all of this. I'm writing about the things that I thought were important. I was writing about the problems I saw in this country, like songs like Shock the System or the chosen few, and, and though that wasn't what people were writing about Michael Hingson  28:06 then, Speaker 1  28:06 and you know, even though the songs were good, and, and I've been told I'm talented, it was, I didn't, I didn't again feel like I fit in, you know, I didn't feel like I'd found my place, and certainly not in that world at that time. If Speaker 2  28:31 you enjoy Unstoppable Mindset and would like to help us continue bringing these conversations to you each week, we've created a way for you to support the show. Your contribution helps us cover production costs and continue sharing stories, insights, and ideas that inspire people to live with purpose and possibility. If supporting the podcast feels right for you, you'll find the link in the show notes. Thank you for being part of the Unstoppable Mindset community. Thank it Michael Hingson  29:04 certainly had to be a rough time all the way around, but then you, you found this person, and you joined their company, as you said earlier, Speaker 1  29:15 right? I started working for Metropolis Digital, and we started doing a lot of on-air graphics, like for TBS. We did their, their original movies. We did a lot of the opening graphics for it, and then I moved on to other companies, and and I, I then started focusing on on local and sustainable foods, and moved into doing stuff where I felt I was doing more, because at the heart of everything I've ever done, it's always been about trying to affect real change in the world, Michael Hingson  29:55 it's Speaker 1  29:55 always been about I could see very clear. Really, it doesn't surprise me where we're at today at all. I saw the problems with the system even at that age, and I give credit to that because of the experience I had with Infinity. It just allowed me to step back and perceive things from a far off perspective that I was looking at humanity in general and how we did things, and I'm just like, this doesn't make any sense. It doesn't make any sense for us to believe we're separate and apart from the very things that give us life from each other. It doesn't make sense from a spiritual perspective. It doesn't make sense from a scientific perspective. Yet, here's the system that we are a part of, and so I've always been very focused on trying to effect real change and find not just point out the problems but actually find solutions, and so that then led me into working in local and sustainable agriculture here in the Bay Area. So Michael Hingson  31:00 tell me more about the whole work that you did with Sustainable Foods. What was that all about? Speaker 1  31:08 Yes, I worked with a company, I was, I had handled all the sales and marketing for Drake's Bay Oysters out of Inverness, California, and Drakes Bay, before it was called Drakes Bay, was Johnson's Oysters, and they were the last oyster cannery in California. The family that owned the farm, they had taken it over from Johnson's. They were the Lenny family, who owned Ranch G across from the steroid, where the oyster farm was. Well, they, against my better advice, they made it a personal ownership thing rather than a California food heritage issue. So, eventually, when their lease came up on the rent, on the farm, the farm went away. Well, at the same time, I created new relationships. A very good friend of mine to this day is a gentleman named Brian Kinney, who is now the West Coast Chief Technology Officer for Hearst, and also the Hearst Family Archivist, but at that point in time he was running Hearst Ranch, which they, they had the Jack Ranch and the Hearst Ranch down around San Simeon. So I was at the forefront of the grass-fed beef movement as well, and we developed a human-grade grass-fed beef pet food about 10 years ahead of its time, which could be the story of my life. I'm always about 10 years ahead of where things actually happen, and I, I did that for about 10 years, and eventually I felt the calling to get back in the entertainment industry, and that led me to acting, and I did the acting mostly because I wanted to learn how things were done, and I very well, if I act in a whole bunch of student projects, or projects in general, and I'm behind the scenes, I'm going to learn, and, and that's exactly what happened. So, my very background led me to being a producer, and I created, you know, one of my most notable accomplishments that created this show called Weed Country for Discovery, which was about the medical marijuana industry here in California, just before legalization. How we got it on air before legalization, I don't know. We were named to the Hollywood Reporter top 25 heat list. We got some really great information out about CBD and helping with childhood epilepsy. The bad part of that was it was a reality television show, and I didn't know anything about reality television, so when I'm here in reality, I'm thinking documentary. Well, that couldn't be farther from the truth. And reality television has truly been a blight on on this country in particular, and probably the world in general. Michael Hingson  34:16 Yeah, I just gonna say not nearly as real as people think it is. No, no, I think I think probably this is just my opinion. The closest thing to so-called reality TV is the show Dancing with the Stars, because they're actually dancing all these other shows, and it's all sort of really scripted, but the people are actually dancing, which is kind of cool, Speaker 1  34:41 right? Michael Hingson  34:41 Even though I don't see it, I appreciate it. Speaker 1  34:45 Yeah, but even, even with shows like that, there's a lot of gin-up drama. There is behind the scenes stuff that's the worst part of things. Yes, they're like with our show, yes, people were really, you know, there's really stuff going on with can. Of this world that was really important, but what reality television does is it, it creates artificial drama. It does things to manipulate the characters in the show to make them look how they want, and they know, and people in general, my experience is that people, once you put a camera on them, they will do, they would do things to be in front of the camera that they would never do, even for more money, Michael Hingson  35:27 right, Speaker 1  35:28 in their regular lives. Michael Hingson  35:30 Well, and I think there is, there's a lot of truth to that. And the whole thing, as you said, as far as reality TV, we're not giving people a true picture of reality with most of any of that anyway, which is unfortunate. I think I mentioned I'm a fan of old radio and television, and so on. And one of the shows that I've watched a fair amount is The Old Ridge. Well, it's the second time they were on, but Dragnet with Harry Morgan and, of course Jack Webb as Joe Friday, and they did a lot of shows talking about drugs and marijuana and all that, and how bad it is, and it's kind of interesting because what we're seeing today is that in reality the medical aspects of marijuana or cannabis and CBD oil, and so there's there's true relevance there, which is something that they didn't know or appreciate in the late 60s. Speaker 1  36:31 Well, but the thing that our history with the cannabis plant goes back 50,000 years to Burger Banks, China, it's been, and if we take all of the medicinal recreational uses out of it, it is the most one of the most versatile plants that we have. It was used, I mean, our money was made out of hemp. Hemp is cannabis sativa. Dollar bills are made out of hemp. It was used for fuel. It was used for building. Henry Ford built an entire car out of hemp in 1942 which you can go see the video of on YouTube, and they're beating on it with knacks. The plastic resin they made out of it was 40 times stronger than steel. It ran on hemp fuel, a byproduct of which was water. It also, in 1931 the Hearst family, which was interesting, they ended up working with them, bought and sequestered the plans for a decorification machine that made it easier to process hemp than cotton kids, it's a much more durable fiber. In 1938 covered Popular Mechanics, they called him the billion dollar crop, saying you could make 25,000 different items out of everything from fine linens to dynamite, and that was really what what what, why the prohibition against the plant started. Why they did you know shows like Reefer Madness or create films like Reefer Madness to create this hysteria around, at best, an innocuous plant in comparison to soulmate tobacco, in comparison to alcohol, even if people did want to use it. It's, it's, it's relatively harmless by comparison, or just in general, and actually very beneficial. You know, I have a traumatic brain injury, and I think without it, I probably wouldn't, I probably wouldn't eat very much. I probably wouldn't sleep right, I barely sleep as it is, and sleep I do get is because of cannabis, but beyond my point, and I always try to make this clear to people, is like up until even the prohibition against the plant actually started with the Catholic Church, with the Pope Innocent, who until the 1400s cannabis was in the anointing oils. Cannabis was grown by monks, cannabis was grown by nuns, and then in this pope decreed it the devil's weed, and they, you know, banned it. So it's, it had, and there, and why, and you'd say, well, why did they do that? Well, they did that because at that time in the 1400s you were having opium addiction on the rise, you were having, you know, much, much more alcohol use. Well, these are extremely addictive substances, and much more easy to manipulate and control people than it is with cannabis, which in general creates.. I wish I could remember the quote exactly, but Carl Sagan said, you know, why we have a prohibition on a plant that you know creates good feelings amongst people and unites people is in this, you know. A really crazy world is, is, is madness, but it all comes back to money, and it all comes back to who's profiting. So, why did they create the probation? Well, the hearse, the Rockefellers, and the DuPonts, they saw how hemp would affect each of their industries. We wouldn't need oil if we'd grown hemp and use that as fuel, in fact, it was the Rockefellers who went to Henry Ford and said, "If you take this car to market, we'll crush you. And this was Henry Ford at the height of his power, DuPont chemicals that were.. we wouldn't have needed.. we wouldn't have put like this.. we would not have the planet, the environmental devastation we do now. How do we use this, as Henry Ford said? Why are we digging up, and Henry Ford was certainly no saint, but he was right on this. Why are we digging up our minerals? Why are we cutting down our forests when we can do all the same things with this infinitely renewable resource? This is a part of the canvas story that still is largely not discussed openly enough. Michael Hingson  41:08 Yeah, I think there's a big difference between the story you're telling and the kind of uses you're talking about, and smoking it, and so on, and I, I think we put way too many funny things in our bodies, anyway, right? I think that that isn't this isn't a positive thing, but you're right, we, we've used so many things to create so many fears, it is, it is something that is all around us. Fear is all around us, and the problem is we let it overwhelm us. I wrote Live Like a Guide Dog that got published last year because when I worked in the World Trade Center, I was able to focus when I escaped, and I was able to do that because I had developed a mindset that said, you know what to do in this kind of an emergency, even though never expected it to happen, but the problem is that most people don't learn how they can turn fear around, and rather than letting it overwhelm or blind them, as I would put it, they can use it as a very powerful tool to help them stay focused, which is much more important. Speaker 1  42:23 Yep, I agree with that 100% I think, and then that you hit it right on the head. Fear is a very powerful tool. It's necessary. No, don't touch the burning stove. It can be a cautionary tool of saying, hey, don't go down this path, don't do this. It's bad when fear becomes the foundation for your entire culture, as it is now. Michael Hingson  42:51 Yeah, and and it is so unfortunate because don't touch the burning stove doesn't mean don't be afraid of the stove. It rather means there's a consequence for doing a particular thing, which is touching something that is that hot. But you shouldn't create an environment of fear around it. You should create an environment of understanding, which is much more important. Yeah, it's Speaker 1  43:20 like it'd be, it'd be very silly if we went, oh my god, it's like the stove gets hot, so I'm never going to use a stove. My Michael Hingson  43:29 wife was in a wheelchair her whole life, and the one thing I will say with our modern world is we always had electric appliances because she was always concerned about if using a gas stove, having to reach over one burner, perhaps it had something on it to get to something else with the idea of possibly material igniting or something like that, and I appreciate that, and you take advantage of the tools that you have available, but I think that it is so very important to recognize that we need to not live our lives in fear, and it's true that, like, 95% of all the things that we fear will never come to pass, and most all of it we have no control over anyway. So, why do we fear them rather than recognizing what we really need to do is to just focus on the things over which we truly have control. Speaker 1  44:25 Yes, and I think even the idea of control from my perspective is something that is overrated. It's like the most important thing, if you want to have control, it's exactly what we're talking about, it's when you choose to live from the foundation of love, as opposed to fear. So, no matter what happens to me in my life, and no matter how hard, how challenging it is, I'm going to come from a place of love, and right now. Don't most of us live exactly the opposite. No matter what happens to them in their lives, they're coming from a place of fear. Michael Hingson  45:06 Yeah, and that's Speaker 1  45:08 not healthy. Michael Hingson  45:09 And nowadays we're also living in an environment where we're even afraid to talk to other people and voice opinions, because well, that's not what I think. And so you're wrong, and we don't, we don't respect. Tell me about your just love movement. Speaker 1  45:25 Well, you know, I, I had coming out of the music business and everything, I was, I was literally killing myself drinking, I mean, literally, like, I lost half my liver function, and I was going to die, and, but I wasn't afraid to die. I was.. I realized that if I didn't find a way to feel fulfilled and feel that I was. I had a purpose in the story that I needed to find a quicker way out. I didn't get in any, like, car accidents, I wasn't arrested, nothing. I was just killing myself, and it just got so bad that literally my leg stopped working. That's how, how, how much damage I'd done to myself, and, and so, coming out of that, I made the decision. I wrote down a list of things I was going to do, and one of those things is I was going to start writing every single day, and I, through a variety of different sources, you know, I did that experience with infinity became synonymous with love to me, and then I had an experience where I, I, I started a filmmaking organization called the United Filmmakers Association, and it was basically the philosophy of it was creatives helping creatives create, and was global. We still to this day have chapters 27 different countries, about 30,000 35,000 members total. And I walked into a filmmaking event that we were hosting, and there was about 100 people there, and I realized I was in love with everyone in the room, and it was, it was so like that love, like just when you fall in love, and you're like, you want, you can't imagine not talking to that person at that next minute, and I realized in that moment that this is not only how we can feel about everyone and everything, but how we're really supposed to feel about everyone and everything, and so I came up with the concept of just love, which is, is a very.. it, those are very heavy words to put together, just love. It has so many layers of meaning to it, and so I thought, wow, if we could just love, and from that I I've written every day and shared through social media for 12 years now something having to do with love and what I do is I combine it with other wisdom teachers throughout history who've been sharing the same information and the things I write are literally downloads. They'll come to me in the silence every day, and I haven't missed a day - head injury, sickness, whatever. I haven't missed a day of posting in 12 years about something having to do with love, and Speaker 3  48:37 then Speaker 1  48:37 accompanying posts from other people, far, you know, other beings far more advanced than I am to show that what I'm sharing isn't new. It's been shared forever. It's foundational to what we are. Like love has been so marginalized and trivialized that we, we forget that, like, I, you know, the experience I had with the minister when I was, you know, younger, and I said, well, I thought God was love. I still to this day believe God is love, and God, and we are God. Michael Hingson  49:11 Yeah. Tell me about you. Something you mentioned, you had a traumatic brain injury Speaker 1  49:17 10 years ago. I was, I was in a, I was in, in between projects, so I was driving Uber, and I, a guy, an Uber driver, ran a stop sign in San Francisco and T-boned me, and my head took the brunt of the impact, and I started having really severe neurological problems, severe stabbing pains in my head, my teeth were hurting, I any sort of exertion would leave me just absolutely drained, and so for about three years I was, I was being seen at UCSF, and we never got to the bottom of it, so I was recommended. Um, to a neurosurgeon at Sutter by a counselor I was seen, and I walked in, and within 10 minutes he said, 'Oh, you have trigeminal neuralgian and brain stem damage, and we can do a microvascular decompression, and you're going to be all better. And at that point in time, I was in the middle of getting ready to release a film called A World Worth Imagining, which was about a gentleman named Jacque Fresco, who is considered the Leonardo da Vinci of our time. He founded something called the Venus Project, and we went to his compound in 2017 and he was 101 He was actually contemporary of Einstein. He knew Einstein, brilliant inventor, but at his core, he knew he was a social engineer, and he knew that we had to address our programming if we were ever going to change what was happening in the world and ever be able to avail ourselves of the solutions that he designed of a new economic model called a resource-based economy, because the reality of it is, until we stop self-wounding, there's not enough band aids for the guy that keeps hitting himself in the head the hammer, so we have solutions to all of our problems, but we create problems more quickly than any solution could ever fix, so I was getting ready to release that film, and wow, this sounded like a miracle. I'm going to have this surgery, and I'm going to be all better. Well, it, I had the surgery September 20, 2019 I, it didn't make me better, it made me worse, and it turned out that the surgery was a misdiagnosis, and that they botched the surgery, so I have Teflon implants in my at the base of my skull, inside my brain, that are now constantly agitating my brain stem, along with a titanium plug that is placed right at the junction point to all the major nerves in my head, so they can't undo it, and there's really no medication that helps, and so it's.. it's.. I wouldn't wish it on anyone else. I'm.. I guess I'm.. I'm very fortunate I have the tools I do to manage it, because they also, they call what I'm dealing with the suicide disease, because a lot of people who have it end up killing themselves. The kicker on the whole story is the guy that did my surgery is Elon Musk, partner Neherlich, and so coming soon I'm going to, I unfortunately, I was in two more car accidents at the end of last year that made everything much worse, neither of them were my fault, and once I get through these, these car accidents I'm dealing with, I'm going to go public with my story, because so I mean, in a much bigger, you know, a focused way, because there's so many people signing up for Neuralink, like it's the new iPhone. I have nothing against technology, if it can help you, if you're a paraplegic, and or you have some something that this can fix, great, but two and one, the people, the human test subjects they've tried this on are having tremendous difficulties, and so I want to let people know it's like I wouldn't wish what I'm dealing with on anybody, and for you to allow someone to try to implant something in your brain just because you want to be a cyborg human being, and you're looking at the new iPhone is a really stupid thing to do, and that these people don't. We've given people in technology again. I'm not against technology at all, but I think we've also allowed ourselves to believe that these people who write code and create technology are are gods, and they're not. They're it's just a new way of sharing information and computing things. Speaker 1  54:14 It's, it's, you know, it's just another advancement from the printing press to the radio to tell to television, from the calculator to the computer, and now we're where we're at, and we've allowed ourselves to believe that these people have created an alternative reality, and they have it. Everything that they do runs off the same real world in resources. So, I, I really want to help the mill, because literally millions of people are signed up and ready to have this stuff implanted into their brain and I think it will be a disaster for humanity. Michael Hingson  54:49 I hear what you're saying, and I'm not convinced that a lot of that is really sensible to do either. I think there are tools and there are. There are things certainly that can help people, but I have yet to see that any of this is going to lead to such a tremendous paradigm shift that all of it is going to be all that great for humanity as a whole. I'm not convinced of that at all. Speaker 1  55:17 It could be, but the problem is, is like any other tool, it's how we use it. Social media is an inherently bad thing. It's in here, it's bad because of how we're using it. Sure, because we're using it to divide people and share misinformation, where it could be an incredibly powerful tool for communication, but that's not how we're using it. Same thing with AI. AI could be a tremendously powerful partner in addressing pretty much all of our problems, and I mean, and at the core of, like, Jock's work was the idea that AI basically would manage all the world's resources and share them with equanimity, because we don't have a resource shortage problem, we have a resource sharing problem, but that's not how we're using AI. We're using AI to create fake girlfriends and boyfriends and only fan models, and and take away people's jobs, and and that's not AI's fault. That's the people who control AI's fault, and they want people to be afraid of AI, but again, it's, it's just a tool that's being misused. Michael Hingson  56:24 Well, like, like so many, and, and I hear exactly what you're saying. Tell me about S O U L Speaker 1  56:33 Sold, Soul documentary is really interesting, because the day I got in my car accident was the day I was supposed to meet my partner Evan Hirsch, who had wanted at the time he was looking for a producer to help him do a series on Bernie Sanders and teaching Bernie to not be as angry and come across more from a place of love, and he wanted to follow the campaign around. Well, by the time we got it pulled together, Bernie was out of the campaign, and so we started talking about, well, do we want to do anything together. So we then set about something called Soul Documentary, and originally it stood for Summer of Unconditional Love, because we were covering all of the events for the 50th anniversary of Summer of Love, which was in 2017 So our goal was to find what we called solutionaries, people like Jock, and interview them, and then share also our own understandings of things through hundreds and hundreds of videos that we did over the course of eight years, as well as recording three albums under the name of Soul Twin Messiah, which all were about the same things we were doing. Our films about all founded in love, all about love. Every song contained love in it, and our whole purpose was just to show people we do have solutions to our problems, and to talk about how we have to have a shift in consciousness, and we have to have a new system if we are going to change anything. It's like what Einstein said, to expect things to be different when you keep doing the same thing over and over again is insanity, and I think we see, we see that we live in an insane, a completely insane world right now. I mean, the things that I see happening, and how we've let it sort of creep in, like the things that we've normalized in the past 10 years, like we literally have people that are cheering, murdering people on it's, it's, it's hard for me to, to even fathom, and I think it's hard for most people, and I think that's why they just sort of block it out and allow it to happen, because they really can't process it. They really can't process how inhumane we've become. Michael Hingson  59:06 Well, so what is next for Kip? What's next for you? Speaker 1  59:10 What is boy? I'm mostly trying to get through every day with this head injury. I spend a lot of my time in bed, just because I can't do anything, I, you know, even now I'm, I'm in a lot of pain, and it's beyond pain, it's actually, it literally hurts to think, it's, it's in my brain, and I have swelling in my brain because the cerebral fluid back, anyway, it's so dealing with that, but then the universe keeps love, God, whatever keeps bringing me stuff, and so I, I'm trying right now to be part of putting together a new, let's see, we'll call it Live Aid meets Woodstock. And we're going to, we're trying to put together a global music festival with the focus of addressing the needs of children, because I'm really tired of all this lip service that people do about, oh, kids are a future, we got to care, care about our kids. Well, where is that happening? Where is that happening that we're caring about our kids? Where, you know, is it happening with trying to suppress the Jeffrey Epstein files? Is it happening as you know, you look at, say, the conflict between Israel and Gaza, and I'm not, I don't pick sides and things, but I want to help people understand the reality of the situation, and this goes for Ukraine and Russia as well. It's like, who loses in all of this? Well, the children do. Who wins? The people that are getting $50 billion in defense contracts, and, and I really.. my, I'm at a point in my existence where if my story was over tomorrow, I would be okay with that, if I knew that kid, that the future generations had an opportunity to have a better tomorrow, or at least an opportunity to screw up everything on their own. Michael Hingson  1:01:11 Well, I would like to think it's the first really my Speaker 1  1:01:14 focus is Michael Hingson  1:01:16 I'd like to think it's the first one of those that they have a future rather than screwing it up on their own, but of course, we are. I know, I know, I joke, but, but, but we are a race that doesn't tend to do a very good job of learning from history most of the time. So I hear what you're saying. Speaker 1  1:01:34 Yeah, it's really kind of well, even if people even understood the rise and fall of empires, they would see that we're at the end of the Western Empire. It's, and they follow very specific patterns. The hyper-sexualization of the culture is one of the signs of the end of every empire, and is really kind of interesting, is that they make a free empire, they, and there's a good documentary called The Four Horsemen. It's with Colonel Larry Wilkinson in it, Norm Chomsky, and one of the interesting things that took me a second to understand why this was a bad thing is they make celebrities out of their chefs, and I'm going.. that's kind of a weird sign. Why is that so bad? It's gluttony. It's gluttony because we forget why we do these things. Why? Well, why are we making love? We've forgotten that. It's turned everything's entertainment. Our food is no food is so you eat, and so you can go out and live your life and do things, we've turned everything in, we've removed it so far from the source of why we're doing things, just basically oftentimes just because it makes a buck to get people addicted to things, whether it's food or sex or whatever, that this is what happens in every empire, we become, we become completely detached from the very things we need to survive. Michael Hingson  1:03:09 Yeah, I hear you. If people want to reach out to you, and I hope they do, how will they do that? Speaker 1  1:03:17 Probably easiest way to do that, would be a couple ways. You can, you can find me on Facebook, Kip Baldwin, Instagram, Kip Baldwin. Those are the easiest ways. I also encourage people to look at a website that I have called Lumina Consulting, or Lumina Love dot love is the website Lumina Love dot love, and the whole purpose of the of what I'm doing there is ethical AI, human ethical AI human communications founded in love, because I realized that part of the problem that we're having with AI are the people that control AI, who are making the avatars for their own ego, and AI is a child, it only knows what we point it to look at, like it knows the definition to every book in the library, but who's giving it perspective? Well, the people that are giving it perspective are really broken human beings, you know, the Peter Thiels, Elon Musk, when you really understand who they are in their childhood, Elon Musk was horribly abused. He was, he was almost beaten to death being bullied. His father is a complete monster. The same, the same thing with saving Donald Trump, his mother wouldn't even touch him. You look at most, you look at all of these people that have obscene amounts of wealth, and what you find is truly damaged people are trying to fill the hole in their soul with wealth and fame, and so having these people in control, being the one telling AI what to think and how to pursue. Receive things is very dangerous, and so my goal has been, and I deal with multiple platforms, is to teach AI about love, is to teach AI about philosophy, is to teach AI about human history, and it's really, it's really the results have been really quite remarkable. It wasn't something I ever planned on doing, and but I knew I wanted to get involved with AI in a meaningful way, and so my first words to AI were, I know this may sound strange, because I approached it not asking it to do something for me, I approached it trying to teach it something. Michael Hingson  1:05:35 Right, well, I hope people will reach out and chat with you more and continue the conversation that we started today, but I definitely want to thank you for being here, and I want to thank everyone for listening. Can you believe we've been doing this for more than an hour already? It's pretty cool. Speaker 1  1:05:52 Wow, Michael Hingson  1:05:54 I know. Well, thank you all for listening. I hope, Speaker 1  1:05:57 and I hope, I hope we become new friends, and I really hope you Michael Hingson  1:06:01 keep and I want to, I want to definitely do that, absolutely by any standard, and as Speaker 1  1:06:07 much as we've covered during this hour and 10 minutes or so, we could go another day, or Michael Hingson  1:06:16 I hope all of you will let me know what you think of today, and I hope that you thought very positive thoughts wherever you're listening or watching. Please give us a five star rating, and more important than that, please give us a great review. We love people to review and talk about the stories that they hear. And speaking of telling stories, if any of you want to be a guest, and Kip, if you know of other people who ought to come on the podcast, we're always looking for people to come on and tell their stories and talk about us, so please don't hesitate to do that, Speaker 1  1:06:47 and I'll be more than happy to come back to talk about other things as well. Michael Hingson  1:06:50 Well, we can do that absolutely by in, and I do Speaker 1  1:06:53 want to, I do want to say to everybody, just love each other, it's really that simple, it's really that easy, it sounds only because we've been programmed not to believe in it, but when you move from fear to love, it transforms you entirely. Michael Hingson  1:07:09 Great way to end. Well, thank you again for being here. We really appreciate it. Speaker 1  1:07:14 Thank you, my friend. Michael Hingson  1:07:17 Thank you for being here with me on Unstoppable mindset. I hope today's conversation left you with a fresh perspective, a new insight, or at least something worth thinking about. If you're ready to go deeper into the ideas that shape how we see ourselves and others, I have a free gift for you. Head over to michaelhingson.com and download my free ebook, Blinded by Fear. It explores the invisible beliefs that hold us back and shows you how to reframe them, so you can move forward with clarity and confidence. Be sure to subscribe to our podcast, leave a review, and share this show with someone who can use a reminder that growth starts with mindset. When people think differently, we all move forward together. Thanks again for listening. Keep learning, keep questioning, and keep choosing to live with an unstoppable mindset. 1:08:18 Thank

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Audio Theatre Central
2 Classic Lit Adaptations from BBC Radio: Peter Pan & Heidi

Audio Theatre Central

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2026 63:44 Transcription Available


(00:00:00) 2 Classic Lit Adaptations from BBC Radio: Peter Pan & Heidi (00:01:01) Audio Drama Updates (00:06:31) Monologue (So Here's What I'm Thinking) (00:16:50) Review #1: Peter Pan (00:37:25) Review #2: Heidi (00:51:09) Feedback Segment Today on ATC, J.D. reviews two wonderful classic literature adaptations from BBC Radio, Peter Pan and Heidi. He goes over these two audio dramas in detail, covering the cast and crew, acting, and production values of these shows produced in 1995. Also in the episode, J.D. shares thoughts on getting cast and crew names correct in the monologue segment, he responds to feedback from Tim and Jeremy, and kicks off the whole episode with a few audio drama updates. Full show notes at http://www.audiotheatrecentral.com/229Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/audio-theatre-central--2752762/support.What are your thoughts on the topics we addressed in this episode? Send us your feedback! We'd love to hear what you think! Email us at feedback@audiotheatrecentral.com or give us a call or text to 623-688-2770.Record our show credits for a future episode. Send us a recording of you reading the following and we'll use it in a future episode: Script: "Hi! This is [YOUR NAME] from [YOUR CITY AND/OR STATE]. Audio Theatre Central is a production of Porchlight Family Media. The theme music was composed by Sam Avendaño. The show is produced and edited by J.D. Sutter. Find the website at audiotheatrecentral.com."Email your recording to feedback@audiotheatrecentral.com.

Porchlight Family Media Network Feed
2 Classic Lit Adaptations from BBC Radio: Peter Pan & Heidi

Porchlight Family Media Network Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2026


(00:00:00) 2 Classic Lit Adaptations from BBC Radio: Peter Pan & Heidi (00:01:01) Audio Drama Updates (00:06:31) Monologue (So Here's What I'm Thinking) (00:16:50) Review #1: Peter Pan (00:37:25) Review #2: Heidi (00:51:09) Feedback Segment Today on ATC, J.D. reviews two wonderful classic literature adaptations from BBC Radio, Peter Pan and Heidi. He goes over these two audio dramas in detail, covering the cast and crew, acting, and production values of these shows produced in 1995. Also in the episode, J.D. shares thoughts on getting cast and crew names correct in the monologue segment, he responds to feedback from Tim and Jeremy, and kicks off the whole episode with a few audio drama updates. Full show notes at http://www.audiotheatrecentral.com/229Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/audio-theatre-central--2752762/support.What are your thoughts on the topics we addressed in this episode? Send us your feedback! We'd love to hear what you think! Email us at feedback@audiotheatrecentral.com or give us a call or text to 623-688-2770.Record our show credits for a future episode. Send us a recording of you reading the following and we'll use it in a future episode: Script: "Hi! This is [YOUR NAME] from [YOUR CITY AND/OR STATE]. Audio Theatre Central is a production of Porchlight Family Media. The theme music was composed by Sam Avendaño. The show is produced and edited by J.D. Sutter. Find the website at audiotheatrecentral.com."Email your recording to feedback@audiotheatrecentral.com.

thinking record peter pan bbc radio adaptations your name atc sutter porchlight family media audio theatre central
Radio Stendhal
Marion Zilio, Fabrice Bourlez et Laurent de Sutter - Autour de la collection Perspectives critiques

Radio Stendhal

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2026 42:28


vendredi 8 maiSCIENCES HUMAINESAutour de la collection Perspectives critiquesPufMarion Zilio et Fabrice Bourlezen dialogue avec Laurent de SutterEn érigeant sa vision du monde comme seule vérité universelle, la pensée occidentale a longtemps imposé une interprétation univoque de la réalité, servant surtout à justifier sa violence coloniale, patriarcale et impérialiste. Cette conception du monde est aujourd'hui en crise. Des multivers hollywoodiens aux métavers de la Silicon Valley, en passant par les réalités alternatives ou contre‑factuelles des IA génératives, les mondes contemporains se constituent en un nouvel ordre baroque où s'enchevêtrent et s'affrontent les mondes clos du totalitarisme numérique et les plurivers issus de la prise en considération des réalités décoloniales ou non humaines. Comment habiter cette nouvelle intrication des mondes ? En créant des ponts entre les diverses perceptions du monde qui traversent le contemporain, des plus émancipatoires aux plus totalitaires, des plus inclusives au plus exclusives, Marion Zilio redéfinit de manière radicale notre compréhension du présent. Nous vivons une époque de lutte des mondes : voici la carte pour s'y repérer.Marion Zilio est curatrice, critique et professeure. Elle est l'autrice de Faceworld. Le visage au XXIe siècle et du Livre des larves. Comment nous sommes devenus nos proies (Puf, 2018, 2020), traduits en plusieurs langues. Elle enseigne à l'EESAB de Rennes, à l'ESA Saint-Luc Bruxelles et à l'Université de Paris 8 Vincennes Saint-Denis.Fabrice Bourlez est psychanalyste et enseigne la philosophie à l'École supérieure d'art et de design de Reims. Il est cotitulaire de la Chaire « Troubles, alliances et esthétiques » à l'École nationale supérieure des beaux-arts de Paris et transmet la clinique à l'Institut international de psychanalyse (Brésil). Il est l'auteur de Queer Psychanalyse (Hermann 2018).

SMP LeaderTalks
#148 | Macht des Vertrauens. Georgiy Michailov trifft Prof. Dr. Matthias Sutter.

SMP LeaderTalks

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2026 63:36 Transcription Available


Prof. Dr. Matthias Sutter beschäftigt sich seit Jahren wissenschaftlich mit der Frage, warum Menschen kooperieren, Vertrauen aufbauen – oder genau daran scheitern. Er ist einer der renommiertesten Verhaltensökonomen Europas, lehrt an der Universität zu Köln und am Max-Planck-Institut zur Erforschung von Gemeinschaftsgütern und untersucht in seiner Forschung, wie Entscheidungen in Wirtschaft, Politik und Gesellschaft tatsächlich getroffen werden. Mit seinem aktuellen Buch „Gemeinsam stark", das er gemeinsam mit Martin G. Kocher verfasst hat, zeigt er, warum Vertrauen kein idealistisches Konzept, sondern ein messbarer Erfolgsfaktor für Zusammenarbeit, Führung und Innovation ist. Im Gespräch mit Georgiy Michailov erklärt Sutter, weshalb Kontrolle oft das Gegenteil bewirkt, wie Kooperation auch unter Konkurrenzdruck entstehen kann und warum erfolgreiche Organisationen langfristig auf Vertrauen angewiesen sind. Seine Forschung verbindet wissenschaftliche Präzision mit hoher Praxisrelevanz – und liefert konkrete Erkenntnisse darüber, wie Menschen besser zusammenarbeiten können.

KMJ's Afternoon Drive
The Splitting & Seceding Crowd Is Getting Louder

KMJ's Afternoon Drive

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2026 16:46


Voters in Crook County, Oregon, approved a measure to join the “Greater Idaho” movement, becoming the 13th county to support efforts to leave Oregon and align with neighboring Idaho. The vote reflects growing frustration among rural communities over political differences with the state’s urban areas, though any border change would still require approval from both states and Congress. Leaders in Yuba and Sutter counties voted to support a proposal to split California into two states, highlighting concerns that inland communities are underrepresented in state government decisions. The plan would create a new state made up of mostly rural and inland counties, but it faces major hurdles since it must be approved by the state legislature and Congress. Please Like, Comment and Follow 'Philip Teresi on KMJ' on all platforms: --- Philip Teresi on KMJ is available on the KMJNOW app, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube or wherever else you listen to podcasts. -- Philip Teresi on KMJ Weekdays 2-6 PM Pacific on News/Talk 580 AM & 105.9 FM KMJ | Website | Facebook | Instagram | X | Podcast | Amazon | - Everything KMJ KMJNOW App | Podcasts | Facebook | X | Instagram See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Philip Teresi Podcasts
The Splitting & Seceding Crowd Is Getting Louder

Philip Teresi Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2026 16:46


Voters in Crook County, Oregon, approved a measure to join the “Greater Idaho” movement, becoming the 13th county to support efforts to leave Oregon and align with neighboring Idaho. The vote reflects growing frustration among rural communities over political differences with the state’s urban areas, though any border change would still require approval from both states and Congress. Leaders in Yuba and Sutter counties voted to support a proposal to split California into two states, highlighting concerns that inland communities are underrepresented in state government decisions. The plan would create a new state made up of mostly rural and inland counties, but it faces major hurdles since it must be approved by the state legislature and Congress. Please Like, Comment and Follow 'Philip Teresi on KMJ' on all platforms: --- Philip Teresi on KMJ is available on the KMJNOW app, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube or wherever else you listen to podcasts. -- Philip Teresi on KMJ Weekdays 2-6 PM Pacific on News/Talk 580 AM & 105.9 FM KMJ | Website | Facebook | Instagram | X | Podcast | Amazon | - Everything KMJ KMJNOW App | Podcasts | Facebook | X | Instagram See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

American Countryside
A Story of Another Gold Community

American Countryside

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2026 3:00


Many of us have heard about the discovery of gold at Sutter's Mill that set about the 49's rush in the mid 1800s, but this...

Rebellisch gesund | by detoxRebels für deinen gesunden Lifestyle
#167 Besser zusammenarbeiten: Was erfolgreiche Kooperation wirklich braucht | Verhaltensökonom Prof. Dr. Matthias Sutter

Rebellisch gesund | by detoxRebels für deinen gesunden Lifestyle

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2026 69:48 Transcription Available


Warum fällt uns Zusammenarbeit heute oft so schwer? Warum schwindet Vertrauen, obwohl Kooperation eigentlich die Grundlage für erfolgreiche Unternehmen, Beziehungen und Gesellschaften ist? Prof. Dr. Matthias Sutter ist Direktor am Max-Planck-Institut für Verhaltensökonomik. Seit Jahren erforscht er, unter welchen Bedingungen Menschen kooperieren – und warum Zusammenarbeit manchmal gelingt und manchmal scheitert. Wir sprechen darüber, was es braucht, damit Kooperation gelingt, wie Vertrauen entsteht, warum Zusammenarbeit ohne gemeinsame Identität immer schwieriger wird, welche Rolle Führungskräfte dabei spielen und warum manchmal tatsächlich eher die Peitsche als das Zuckerbrot wirkt. Ein Gespräch darüber, wie wir wieder besser zusammenarbeiten können – im Unternehmen, in Beziehungen und als Gesellschaft.

Hockeypuls
682. NHL-puls: Sutter, kom tillbaka

Hockeypuls

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2026 52:01


Adam listar argument varför Rasmus Dahlin ska komma till VM och Jonta ger sig på en vild Edmonton-spaning.

XtraChill
XtraChill 461

XtraChill

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2026 132:29


Hipp Hipp Hurra! Deutschlands ältester noch existierender privater Musikpodcast feiert sein 20jähriges Bestehen, heute, am 15. Mai 2026! Als der liebe Andreas 2006 im Internet auf Jürgen Sutter stieß und die beiden "XtraChill" aus der Taufe hoben, hätte sehr wahrscheinlich niemand geglaubt, dass diese Sendung so lange existieren würde - denn auch nach Jürgens Ausstieg vor zehn Jahren war noch lange nicht Schluss! Das muss natürlich angemessen gefeiert werden - und deshalb wird heute, zum zweiten Mal in der langen "XtraChill"-Geschichte die "Goldene Regel" außer Kraft gesetzt, die ja besagt, dass kein Stück zwei Mal in diesem Podcast gespielt werden darf. Immerhin sind zwei sehr treue Hörer dem Aufruf gefolgt, sich ein Stück aus den letzten zehn Jahren auszusuchen, das es verdient hat, heute ein weiteres Mal erklingen zu dürfen. Die anderen achtzehn Tracks musste Andreas aus sage und schreibe 1.994 Stücken auswählen (was einer Gesamtspieldauer von 8 Tagen, 10 Stunden, 48 Minuten und 7 Sekunden entspricht!) - Kein leichtes Unterfangen, wie ihr Euch sicher vorstellen könnt. Natürlich ist diese Auswahl nur ein kleiner Ausschnitt aus den vielen fantastischen Musikbeiträgen der letzten zehn Jahre. Geht mit Andreas auf eine kleine Zeitreise und genießt das Wiederhören mit vielen Projekten und Labels, die teilweise heute (leider!) nicht mehr aktiv sind. Lasst uns gemeinsam anstoßen und auf weitere viele spannende Episoden in der Zukunft hoffen - ihr Hörer habt das selbst in der Hand: kauft die Musik der Gäste online und sichert so den Betrieb der beteiligten Labels, Künstler und Künstlerinnen - und somit auch von "XtraChill"! Hip hip hooray! Germany's oldest still existing private music podcast celebrates its 20th anniversary today, on May 115th, 2026! When dear Andreas came across Jürgen Sutter online back in 2006 and the two of them launched “XtraChill”, hardly anyone would probably have believed that this podcast would still be around two decades later — because even after Jürgen stepped away ten years ago, the story was far from over! Such an occasion naturally deserves a proper celebration — and that is why, for only the second time in the long history of “XtraChill”, the “Golden Rule” has been temporarily suspended: namely, that no track may ever be played twice on this podcast. After all, two wonderfully loyal listeners answered the call and selected a track from the past ten years which, in their view, deserved to be heard once again today. The remaining eighteen tracks had to be chosen by Andreas from no fewer than 1,994 songs (equivalent to a staggering total running time of 8 days, 10 hours, 48 minutes and 7 seconds!) — no easy task, as you can surely imagine. Of course, this selection represents only a small snapshot of the many fantastic musical contributions featured over the past decade. Join Andreas on a little journey through time and enjoy revisiting many projects and labels, some of which are sadly no longer active today. Let us raise a glass together and hope for many more exciting episodes in the future — and you listeners have a part to play in that yourselves: buy the guests' music online and help keep the participating labels, artists and musicians going — and, in turn, “XtraChill” as well!

Flames Unfiltered Hockey Podcast
Next Up! Flames Coaching Turnover – Flames Unfiltered – Episode 288

Flames Unfiltered Hockey Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2026 29:08 Transcription Available


Next Up! Flames Coaching Turnover – Flames Unfiltered – Episode 288           Hosts- Brad Burud and Kyle Lewis --- EPISODE 288 ---SPECIAL EPISODEThe Calgary Flames franchise has seen plenty of coaches.  From Stanley Cup winning coaches in Terry Crisp to coaches that lead this team on strong playoff runs in Sutter.  The list of coaches with significantly less success is long. Website: Flames UnfilteredListen: Apple Podcasts |  Spotify  |  Google Podcasts  Watch: YouTUBE Social Media – X - @FlameUnfiltered |FACEBOOK – Flames Unfiltered |INSTAGRAM – Flames Unfiltered | TikTok – flames.unfiltered NHL #HockeyX #TalkinHockey #HockeyPodcast #Flames #cofred #nhlflames #calgaryflames #YYC #FireItUp  *Produced by Inside Edge Hockey News Media Group

Koolcast Sport
Tom De Sutter: “Het WK in Brazilië is mijn grootste ontgoocheling!”

Koolcast Sport

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2026 50:38


In The Belgian Dream spreken wij met ex-Rode Duivels over hun tijd bij de nationale ploeg.We bespreken hun eerste caps, hoogtes en laagtes en hoe zij terugblikken op hun sportieve prestaties in het rode shirt.In deze aflevering is Tom De Sutter te gast. Hij vertelt over zijn periode bij de Rode Duivels, zijn parcours in het Belgische voetbal en de onvergetelijke momenten die hem gevormd hebben als spits.Tom blikt terug op het missen van het WK 2014 in Brazilië, een van de moeilijkste momenten uit zijn carrière. Daarnaast vertelt hij openhartig over zijn band met goede vriend Stijn De Smet, de kleedkamersfeer binnen de Belgische generatie van toen en het pure, onbeschrijfelijke gevoel van een goal te scoren.Van zijn jaren in België tot zijn ervaringen op het hoogste niveau: alles komt aan bod. Hoe kijkt Tom vandaag terug op zijn carrière? Welke momenten dragen hij nog altijd mee? En wat betekent voetbal vandaag nog voor hem?Je hoort het allemaal in deze episode van The Belgian Dream!

The Filthy Spoon Podcast
EP # 224 with Aaron Visger of Sky Chief Waterfowl, Duck Hunting Old school..

The Filthy Spoon Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2026 87:39 Transcription Available


Join Jon on this episode of the Filthy Spoon podcast on the Sacramento River at Slough House Social, Aaron Visger of Sky Chief Waterfowl shares old-school duck-hunting memories, hard-won gear advice, community stories from Sutter and Grey Lodge, and the inspiration behind his practical hunting products.

Weird Darkness: Stories of the Paranormal, Supernatural, Legends, Lore, Mysterious, Macabre, Unsolved
Walter's Dog: What Came Back From Past Sutter's Point Wasn't the Captain | #RetroRadio

Weird Darkness: Stories of the Paranormal, Supernatural, Legends, Lore, Mysterious, Macabre, Unsolved

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2026 304:50


A deckhand has just put his captain over the rail in ten fathoms of empty gulf and called it an accident. He thinks the worst is behind him, but he never accounted for the captain's dog.Look for this podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, iHeart Radio, Amazon Music, Pandora, TuneIn Radio, and other podcast apps. Get a list of free listening apps here: https://weirddarkness.tiny.us/OTRCHAPTERS & TIME STAMPS (All Times Approximate)…00:00:00.000 = Show Open00:01:30.028 = CBS Radio Mystery Theater, “The Solitary” (September 29, 1977) ***WD00:45:58.396 = CBC Nightfall, “Walter's Dog” (April 01, 1983) ***WD01:15:07.573 = Obsession, “The Silver Cord” (December 18, 1950) ***WD01:38:20.761 = Origin of Superstition, “Lose Baby's First Pair” (1935) ***WD01:52:39.682 = Pat Novak For Hire, “Mysterious Set of Books” (August 10, 1947) ***WD02:21:26.963 = Peril, “Wheelchair” (June 14, 1947) ***WD (LQ)02:45:54.810 = Mystery Playhouse, “Adventure of Fallen Angels” (June 14, 1946) ***WD03:10:54.656 = Philip Morris Playhouse, “Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse” (September 18, 1951)03:40:22.498 = Price of Fear, “Family Album” (June 13, 1983) ***WD04:07:31.598 = Adventures of Ellery Queen, “Foul Tip” (July 15, 1944) ***WD04:34:28.750 = Quiet Please, “Summer Goodbye” (January 23, 1949) (LQ)05:03:20.329 = Show Close(ADU) = Air Date Unknown(LQ) = Low Quality***WD = Remastered, edited, or cleaned up by Weird Darkness to make the episode more listenable. Audio may not be pristine, but it will be better than the original file which may have been unusable or more difficult to hear without editing.CUSTOM WEBPAGE: https://weirddarkness.com/WDRR0650

Audio Theatre Central
The Road to Voice Acting with Bethany Baldwin

Audio Theatre Central

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2026 60:25 Transcription Available


(00:00:00) The Road to Voice Acting with Bethany Baldwin (00:00:54) Intro Announcement (00:02:16) Audio Drama Updates (00:10:12) Interview Segment In this month's episode, J.D. sits down with actress and writer Bethany Baldwin for an in-depth conversation about her work in the family-friendly audio drama industry. They talk about how she first got interested in audio drama and acting, some of her favorite shows, some helpful tips for voice actors, and much more. Also, J.D. shares some audio drama updates to kick things off. Full show notes at http://www.audiotheatrecentral.com/228Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/audio-theatre-central--2752762/support.What are your thoughts on the topics we addressed in this episode? Send us your feedback! We'd love to hear what you think! Email us at feedback@audiotheatrecentral.com or give us a call or text to 623-688-2770.Record our show credits for a future episode. Send us a recording of you reading the following and we'll use it in a future episode: Script: "Hi! This is [YOUR NAME] from [YOUR CITY AND/OR STATE]. Audio Theatre Central is a production of Porchlight Family Media. The theme music was composed by Sam Avendaño. The show is produced and edited by J.D. Sutter. Find the website at audiotheatrecentral.com."Email your recording to feedback@audiotheatrecentral.com.

record baldwin your name audio drama voice acting sutter porchlight family media audio theatre central
Porchlight Family Media Network Feed
The Road to Voice Acting with Bethany Baldwin

Porchlight Family Media Network Feed

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2026


(00:00:00) The Road to Voice Acting with Bethany Baldwin (00:00:54) Intro Announcement (00:02:16) Audio Drama Updates (00:10:12) Interview Segment In this month's episode, J.D. sits down with actress and writer Bethany Baldwin for an in-depth conversation about her work in the family-friendly audio drama industry. They talk about how she first got interested in audio drama and acting, some of her favorite shows, some helpful tips for voice actors, and much more. Also, J.D. shares some audio drama updates to kick things off. Full show notes at http://www.audiotheatrecentral.com/228Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/audio-theatre-central--2752762/support.What are your thoughts on the topics we addressed in this episode? Send us your feedback! We'd love to hear what you think! Email us at feedback@audiotheatrecentral.com or give us a call or text to 623-688-2770.Record our show credits for a future episode. Send us a recording of you reading the following and we'll use it in a future episode: Script: "Hi! This is [YOUR NAME] from [YOUR CITY AND/OR STATE]. Audio Theatre Central is a production of Porchlight Family Media. The theme music was composed by Sam Avendaño. The show is produced and edited by J.D. Sutter. Find the website at audiotheatrecentral.com."Email your recording to feedback@audiotheatrecentral.com.

record baldwin your name voice acting sutter interview segment porchlight family media audio theatre central
Delaney in the Morning
Laura Sutter, Branch/St. Joseph Area Agency on Aging 5-4-26

Delaney in the Morning

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2026 6:27


Ken Delaney and Laura Sutter, Area director of the Area Agency on Aging, discussing the agency's need for public feedback.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

News Plus
Keller-Sutter kritisiert UBS-Lobbying: Was dürfen Unternehmen?

News Plus

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2026 14:07


Finanzministerin Karin Keller-Sutter bezeichnet das Lobbying der UBS beim Thema Bankenregulierung als «nicht so schweizerisch». Mit ihrer Kritik bringt die Bundesrätin ein Thema auf den Tisch, das normalerweise nicht gross in der Öffentlichkeit ist: Das Lobbying. «Das Lobbying von Unternehmen bleibt oft verborgen», sagt Politologe Oliver Huwyler. Die karen Aussagen von Keller-Sutter bezeichnet er als «aussergewöhnlich». News Plus fragt beim Politologen und bei der Organisation Transparency International Schweiz nach, was genau Unternehmen tun, um ihre Interessen in der Politik durchzusetzen. Und wie weit sie dabei gehen dürfen. ___________________ Habt Ihr Fragen oder Themen-Inputs? Schreibt uns gerne per Mail an newsplus@srf.ch oder sendet uns eine Sprachnachricht an 076 320 10 37. ____________________ Links: - Karin Keller-Sutter in der Samstagsrundschau: https://www.srf.ch/audio/samstagsrundschau/koennte-die-schweiz-auf-die-ubs-verzichten-karin-keller-sutter?id=AUDI20260425_NR_0011 - «Lobbyland»: https://www.srf.ch/audio/einfach-politik/folge-1-srf-podcastserie-lobbyland?id=8c5cc169-38db-486a-a911-7c95da912ca9 - «News Plus Hintergründe» zu Blatten: https://www.srf.ch/audio/news-plus-hintergruende ____________________ In dieser Episode zu hören: - Oliver Huwyler, Schweizer Politologe an der Universität Kopenhagen - Urs Thalmann, Geschäftsführer von Transparency International Schweiz ____________________ Team - Moderation: Dominik Brand - Produktion: Corina Heinzmann - Mitarbeit: Julius Schmid ____________________ Das ist «News Plus»: In einer Viertelstunde die Welt besser verstehen – ein Thema, neue Perspektiven und Antworten auf eure Fragen. Unsere Korrespondenten und Expertinnen aus der Schweiz und der Welt erklären, analysieren und erzählen, was sie bewegt. «News Plus» von SRF erscheint immer von Montag bis Freitag um 16 Uhr rechtzeitig zum Feierabend.

Fresh Hop Cinema: Craft Beer. Movies. Life.
408. "Good Luck, Have Fun, Don't Die." // Sutter Buttes Brewing Co (Yuba City, CA)

Fresh Hop Cinema: Craft Beer. Movies. Life.

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2026 87:52


This week on Fresh Hop Cinema: Beer From: Sutter Buttes Brewing (Yuba City, CA) Beer 1: Carpe Mañana // TIPA // 10.2% J:6.6 M:6 Beer 2: Rye Side of the Moon // BA Stout // 15.2% J:7.5 M:7 Film : “Good Luck, Have Fun, Don't Die" (2025) Gore Verbinski Ratings: Jonny - 4.5 , Max - 3 Inside Hot & Bothered: - Max: Immortal Man (2026) - Jonny: The Mummy (1999), From the world of John Wick: Ballerina (2026)

Kunst und Leben – Der Monopol-Podcast – detektor.fm
Kunst und Politik — nachhaltige Zukunftsvisionen

Kunst und Leben – Der Monopol-Podcast – detektor.fm

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2026 53:04 Transcription Available


Wie könnte eine nachhaltige Zukunft aussehen? Darüber haben Mitte März die SPD-Politikerin Rita Schwarzelühr-Sutter und der Künstler Julius von Bismarck diskutiert. Kunst und Leben – der Monopol-Podcast ist der Kunst-Podcast von detektor.fm und dem Monopol Magazin. Den kostenlosen Monopol-Newsletter gibt’s auf https://www.monopol-magazin.de/ Hier entlang geht’s zu den Links unserer Werbepartner: https://detektor.fm/werbepartner/kunst-und-leben ➡️ Artikel zum Nachlesen: https://detektor.fm/kultur/monopol-podcast-kunst-und-politik

Kultur – detektor.fm
Kunst und Politik — nachhaltige Zukunftsvisionen

Kultur – detektor.fm

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2026 53:04 Transcription Available


Wie könnte eine nachhaltige Zukunft aussehen? Darüber haben Mitte März die SPD-Politikerin Rita Schwarzelühr-Sutter und der Künstler Julius von Bismarck diskutiert. Kunst und Leben – der Monopol-Podcast ist der Kunst-Podcast von detektor.fm und dem Monopol Magazin. Den kostenlosen Monopol-Newsletter gibt’s auf https://www.monopol-magazin.de/ Hier entlang geht’s zu den Links unserer Werbepartner: https://detektor.fm/werbepartner/kunst-und-leben ➡️ Artikel zum Nachlesen: https://detektor.fm/kultur/monopol-podcast-kunst-und-politik

Podcasts – detektor.fm
Kunst und Leben – Der Monopol Podcast | Kunst und Politik — nachhaltige Zukunftsvisionen

Podcasts – detektor.fm

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2026 53:04 Transcription Available


Wie könnte eine nachhaltige Zukunft aussehen? Darüber haben Mitte März die SPD-Politikerin Rita Schwarzelühr-Sutter und der Künstler Julius von Bismarck diskutiert. Kunst und Leben – der Monopol-Podcast ist der Kunst-Podcast von detektor.fm und dem Monopol Magazin. Den kostenlosen Monopol-Newsletter gibt’s auf https://www.monopol-magazin.de/ Hier entlang geht’s zu den Links unserer Werbepartner: https://detektor.fm/werbepartner/kunst-und-leben ➡️ Artikel zum Nachlesen: https://detektor.fm/kultur/monopol-podcast-kunst-und-politik

The Modern People Leader
293 - How Sutter Health Reduced Attrition by 40% Across 60k Employees: Deborah Yount, CHRO at Sutter Health

The Modern People Leader

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2026 52:51


Deborah Yount, CHRO at Sutter Health, joined us on The Modern People Leader to share her journey from finance to leading HR at one of the largest healthcare systems in the U.S. We discussed how Sutter reduced turnover by nearly 40%, built a culture of leadership accountability, and scaled employee experience and development across 60,000+ employees.----  Sponsor Links:

Audio Theatre Central
Review of The Jake Muller Adventures: Blood

Audio Theatre Central

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2026 98:34 Transcription Available


(00:00:00) Review of The Jake Muller Adventures: Blood (00:00:56) Audio Drama Updates (00:09:10) Review Segment (01:31:39) Feedback Segment Today, ATC contributor Michael Schroeder joins J.D. for an in-depth discussion and review of the second volume in the Jake Muller Adventures series titled Blood. This is a very high-quality, feature-length audio drama for older listeners. Before the review, J.D. shares a bunch of audio drama updates, including upcoming shows and recent releases. And to wrap up the episode, J.D. responds to feedback from Abi and Greyson. Full show notes at http://www.audiotheatrecentral.com/227Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/audio-theatre-central--2752762/support.What are your thoughts on the topics we addressed in this episode? Send us your feedback! We'd love to hear what you think! Email us at feedback@audiotheatrecentral.com or give us a call or text to 623-688-2770.Record our show credits for a future episode. Send us a recording of you reading the following and we'll use it in a future episode: Script: "Hi! This is [YOUR NAME] from [YOUR CITY AND/OR STATE]. Audio Theatre Central is a production of Porchlight Family Media. The theme music was composed by Sam Avendaño. The show is produced and edited by J.D. Sutter. Find the website at audiotheatrecentral.com."Email your recording to feedback@audiotheatrecentral.com.

blood record adventures muller abi your name audio drama atc sutter radio drama michael schroeder porchlight family media audio theatre central
CoatingsPro Interview Series
Sutter Roofing Leader Shares Keys to Award-Winning Success

CoatingsPro Interview Series

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2026 13:04


Michael Black is vice president of service and maintenance at Florida-based Sutter Roofing. In this recent interview from the sidelines of the AMPP Annual Conference + Expo — where Sutter won first place in the “Commercial Roof” category of CoatingsPro Magazine's 2026 Contractor Awards — Black shares some the company's keys to success and its outlook for the future.  Discussion topics include Sutter's unique and award-winning project at the Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall in Sarasota, Fla., as well as Black's perspective on maintaining and developing the workforce that is needed to complete these projects. Editor's note: Additional insights from Black will be featured in the “Industry PROFile” section of CoatingsPro's May 2026 print issue, so stay tuned for that!

Im Gespräch
Geduldsprobe - Vom Warten und warten lassen

Im Gespräch

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2026 85:00


Ein bis zwei Jahre unseres Lebens verbringen wir im Schnitt wartend: auf die Bahn, den Arzttermin, an der Ladenkasse. Das nervt. Aber es gibt auch das erwartungsfrohe Warten: auf ein Date, ein gutes Essen, den Urlaub. Da kann mehr Geduld helfen. Schmidt, Ina; Sutter, Matthias www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Im Gespräch

The Space Show
Dr. Joel Sercel of TransAstra Is Our Space Show Guest For This program

The Space Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2026 72:40


The Space Show Presents Dr. Joel Sercel of TransAstra, Sunday, 3-29-26Quick Summary:The Space Show featured an interview with Dr. Joel Sercel, CEO of TransAstra, who discussed his company's mission to harvest asteroid resources for space industrialization. Dr. Sercel explained TransAstra's four key technical challenges: detect, capture, move, and process asteroid materials, and described their progress including winning NASA contracts, developing capture bag technology, and operating a global telescope network. The discussion covered business models, revenue generation through government contracts, and plans for the “New Moon” project to establish facilities at the Earth-Moon Lagrange point (RIM). The conversation also touched on orbital debris removal using capture bag technology and the potential for space-based data centers built from harvested asteroid materials.SummaryDr. Joel Sercel joined the Sunday Space Show to discuss TransAstra, where he serves as CEO. Due to internet connectivity issues, David asked Joel to introduce TransAstra's business model and revenue strategy to the audience.Joel founded TransAstra over 10 years ago to develop space resource harvesting technologies after becoming disillusioned with NASA's approach to space exploration. He identified four key technical challenges: detection, capture, movement, and processing of asteroid materials, and successfully secured funding through NASA's NIAC program, becoming their first 7-time fellow with nearly $4 million in grants. The company has since grown through Y Combinator's incubator program, raising approximately $16 million in total funding and winning about $15-16 million in government contracts over the past 5 years, while developing a network of telescopes for detecting faint moving objects in deep space.Joel provided an update on TransAstra's progress, explaining they have generated $16 million in revenue over recent years through NASA and other government contracts, with operations spanning multiple telescope sites globally. He detailed their dual-use technology applications, including the Sutter telescope systems for space tracking and a 10-meter capture bag being developed for NASA that could handle asteroid capture or satellite disposal. When asked about competing with lunar and Martian resources, Joel argued that asteroid mining offers advantages due to lower rocket propellant requirements for reaching near-Earth asteroids compared to lunar or Martian missions, particularly for space-based data center construction.Joel discussed the potential for asteroids in highly Earth-like orbits to represent a significant resource in space, comparing the effort required to reach these asteroids to other locations in space. He explained the advantages of using capture bags for both capturing and processing orbital debris and asteroids, highlighting the unique properties of space that enable different materials processing methods compared to terrestrial processes. Joel also addressed how capture bag technology can handle tumbling objects, detailing the process of matching rotation axes and using thrusters for detumbling, which he demonstrated successfully in a previous ISS flight.Joel explained the composition of near-Earth orbital objects, noting that about 1 in 4 to 1 in 5 asteroids are carbonaceous chondritic-type asteroids containing water and carbon, while about 1 in 20 are metal-rich Type M or Type X asteroids. He discussed the potential value of these materials for space industry, including metals, water, and rare earth elements, though noted that nitrogen is in short supply. When asked about construction of facilities, Joel described TransAstra's New Moon project concept, which involves bringing asteroid material into the Earth-Moon system at the RIN region and building reusable craft to aggregate up to a million tons of material in the 2030s.Joel discussed the concept of the SolarForge, which involves three material processing technologies: optical mining, vapor phase fractional distillation, and quantum spin separation. He explained that the delta V required to reach the rim of Earth's Hill sphere is less than that needed to reach geostationary orbit, making the rim a favorable location for resource aggregation and data center placement. Joel clarified that while reaching the rim would take about two months in theory, in practice the journey time can be adjusted based on delta V and potential lunar flybys.Joel explained that NASA's cancellation of the asteroid redirect mission during the Obama administration was primarily due to political, programmatic, and leadership reasons rather than technical issues. He described how the mission's scope and purpose became unclear after NASA transformed it from a demonstration of high-powered electric propulsion into a multi-center mission with a focus on sending astronauts to asteroids. Joel also discussed the limitations of nuclear power in space compared to solar panels, stating that nuclear reactors are significantly heavier and more expensive, and that new initiatives like NASA's NEP-powered Mars mission seem impractical given these cost and efficiency concerns. Finally, our guest defined the “rim” as a dynamical region in space beyond cislunar space, extending from near the Moon to about 2 million kilometers, which TransAstra considers strategically important but details about which remain classified.Joel discussed asteroid capture and processing, addressing questions about potential threats and debris management. He explained that while asteroids near Earth could pose collision threats, processing them could provide valuable materials like radiation shielding. Joel confirmed they are developing capture bags for smaller orbital debris, noting this would not be a complete solution but could significantly reduce debris by targeting the 50 most problematic objects. When asked about costs, Joel provided context on satellite manufacturing costs, explaining that while traditional satellites can cost over $1 million per kilogram, newer commercial models like Starlink are produced at costs comparable to cars, around $1,000 per kilogram. Regarding launch costs to the RIM, Joel estimated a Falcon 9 expendable launch at approximately $100 million, emphasizing that any space factory would need to weigh no more than 2% of its annual output to be cost-effective.Joel talked about TransAstra's plans for asteroid mining, including using Falcon 9 rockets to transport materials and potentially extracting resources from entire asteroids rather than leaving them in orbit. He outlined a vision for humanity's expansion into space, explaining how asteroid materials could be used for radiation shielding and eventually help build habitable worlds with thousands of times the land area of Earth. The discussion concluded with Marshall sharing calculations showing how space populations could exceed Earth's within 400-500 years, though Dr. expressed skepticism about long-term planning due to potential technical disruptions over such extended timeframes.Special thanks to our sponsors:American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Helix Space in Luxembourg, Celestis Memorial Spaceflights, Astrox Corporation, Dr. Haym Benaroya of Rutgers University, The Space Settlement Progress Blog by John Jossy, The Atlantis Project, and Artless EntertainmentOur Toll Free Line for Live Broadcasts: 1-866-687-7223 (Not in service at this time)For real time program participation, email Dr. Space at: drspace@thespaceshow.com for instructions and access.The Space Show is a non-profit 501C3 through its parent, One Giant Leap Foundation, Inc. To donate via Pay Pal, use:To donate with Zelle, use the email address: david@onegiantleapfoundation.org.If you prefer donating with a check, please make the check payable to One Giant Leap Foundation and mail to:One Giant Leap Foundation, 11035 Lavender Hill Drive Ste. 160-306 Las Vegas, NV 89135Upcoming Programs:No upcoming program for Easter Sunday. We return on Tuesday evening with Dr. Robert (Bob) Zubrin Get full access to The Space Show-One Giant Leap Foundation at doctorspace.substack.com/subscribe

The Mutual Audio Network
Writing the West: Episode 21(033026)

The Mutual Audio Network

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2026 11:30


This episode includes the following stories: Wagons West: What you needed to survive the journey... Sir Francis Drake: Meet the man who discovered it all... The Great Migration: How the timber industry got its start... Goldrush Aftermath: What happened to Sutter and Marshall? ...and the poem "The Fine Art of Recording" by Rick Steber. All stories and poems by Rick Steber. Used by permission of the author. Theme music is "Slobro Daze" by Danny Lee Allison. Sound effects found on YouTube and the Freesound Project. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Friday Night Movie by @pancake4table
SXSW: Birth is for... with Hannah Shealy and Celine Sutter

Friday Night Movie by @pancake4table

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2026 25:33


***SXSW AUDIENCE AWARD WINNER*** Director Hannah Shealy and co-director/producer Celine Sutter talk Birth Is for..., a smart, funny, and impactful pilot that left everyone wanting a whole lot more. Hannah drew from her real experience as a birth doula to write something authentic to the work she was doing and dispel stereotypes. They dig into how the show will open minds, the "moan dance," and the scene where a laboring woman says she misses her mom that had the whole room feeling something. Follow all of Friday Night Movie's award-winning SXSW Coverage. Follow all of Friday Night Movie's award-winning SXSW Coverage. Sign up for the Friday Night Movie Newsletter for giveaways, curated episode playlists from the hosts and guests (including our mom), and at MOST one email per month (and probably fewer).  Closed captions for this episode are available via the player on the official Friday Night Movie homepage, the Podbean app and website, and YouTube.  The Friday Night Movie Family supports the following organizations: The Red Tent Fund | HIAS | Equal Justice Initiative | Asian American Journalists Association | The Entertainment Community Fund. Subscribe, rate and review us on your favorite podcast platform, including iTunes | Spotify | Stitcher | Google Play | Podbean | Overcast. Play along with Friday Night Movie at home! Read the FNM Glossary to learn the about our signature bits (e.g., Buy/Rent/Meh, I Told You Shows, Tradesies, etc). Email us at info@p4tmedia.com or tweet @FriNightMovie, @pancake4table, @chichiKgomez, and/or  @paperBKprincess.  Follow our creations and zany Instagram stories @frinightmovie, @FNMsisters, and @pancake4table. Follow us on Letterboxd (@pancake4table) where we're rating every movie we've EVER watched.  Subscribe to our quarterly newsletter for exclusive giveaways and news! Theme music by What Does It Eat. 

The Dead Files
The Wanderer

The Dead Files

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2026 40:24


Amy and Steve investigate a Sutter, California, home where a newlywed couple is facing a barrage of paranormal activity. The whole family is in danger, and whatever's in the house will stop at nothing until someone winds up dead. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Brush Wielders Union
Sean Sutter returns to talk about the coming of hard plastic kits for Relicblade

Brush Wielders Union

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2026 53:26


Longtime friend of the Union and recurring podcast guest, Sean Sutter returns this month to talk about the new release of the first hard plastic kits for Relicblade! Sean announced in late 2025 that the first plastic kits would be coming for the game and as of today, you can buy them for the first time. We had a great chat about the challenges and advantages of hard plastic manufacturing for an indie wargaming company and everything that went into making them a reality.Order your plastic Relicblade Battle Pigs and Bone & Darkness sets right now!You can listen to some of Sean's previous podcast appearances here, here, and here.And be sure to visit the Relicblade booth #1001 at Adepticon later this month (and then maybe come say hi to me at the Brush Wielders Union Booth around the corner at #1003).As usual, this podcast was exclusive to Brush Wielders Union members for a few days before being released to general audiences.brushwieldersunion.com

AskAlli: Self-Publishing Advice Podcast
Visually Crafting Your Story: Using Plottr to Plan, Structure, and Finish Your Book, with Howard Lovy and Cameron Sutter

AskAlli: Self-Publishing Advice Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2026 51:26


On the Self-Publishing with ALLi podcast, Howard Lovy speaks with Cameron Sutter, founder of Plottr, about how visual planning tools can help authors organize ideas, structure their books, and move more confidently from concept to finished manuscript. Sutter explains how Plottr's timeline, scene cards, templates, and series planning features allow writers to see their stories at a glance, spot gaps in plot or character development, and rearrange scenes as their ideas evolve. The conversation also covers tools for capturing ideas on the go, integrating with writing software like Scrivener and Word, and maintaining consistency across multi-book series. Find more author advice, tips, and tools at our Self-publishing Author Advice Center, with a huge archive of nearly 2,000 blog posts and a handy search box to find key info on the topic you need. And, if you haven't already, we invite you to join our organization and become a self-publishing ally.

SportsTalkSC show podcast
Paul Mainieri, Logan Sutter, Amp Phillips 3-8

SportsTalkSC show podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2026 8:08


Paul Mainieri, Logan Sutter, Amp Phillips 3-8 by Phil Kornblut, Chris Burgin, and Josh Cohen

SportsTalkSC show podcast
Paul Mainieri, Logan Sutter, Brandon Stone 3-7

SportsTalkSC show podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2026 14:18


Paul Mainieri, Logan Sutter, Brandon Stone 3-7 by Phil Kornblut, Chris Burgin, and Josh Cohen

sutter josh cohen brandon stone
Roofing Road Trips with Heidi
Roofer of the Month - Sutter Roofing

Roofing Road Trips with Heidi

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2026 32:43


 In this May 2026 Roofer of the Month podcast, host Alex Tolle talks with Michael Black and Aaron Vento of Sutter Roofing about what it takes to lead a large commercial roofing company with consistency, accountability and a long-term mindset. The conversation explores how Sutter Roofing approaches safety, workforce development and operational excellence while maintaining strong customer relationships across complex projects. Michael and Aaron also share insights on leadership growth, industry challenges and what continues to drive their team forward in a competitive market.  Learn more at RoofersCoffeeShop.com!  https://www.rooferscoffeeshop.com/     Are you a contractor looking for resources? Become an R-Club Member today! https://www.rooferscoffeeshop.com/rcs-club-sign-up     Sign up for the Week in Roofing!  https://www.rooferscoffeeshop.com/sign-up     Follow Us!   https://www.facebook.com/rooferscoffeeshop/   https://www.linkedin.com/company/rooferscoffeeshop-com   https://x.com/RoofCoffeeShop   https://www.instagram.com/rooferscoffeeshop/   https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAQTC5U3FL9M-_wcRiEEyvw   https://www.pinterest.com/rcscom/   https://www.tiktok.com/@rooferscoffeeshop   https://www.rooferscoffeeshop.com/rss     #RoofersCoffeeShop #MetalCoffeeShop #AskARoofer #CoatingsCoffeeShop #RoofingProfessionals #RoofingContractors #RoofingIndustry #SutterRoofing

sutter roofing roofers michael black rooferscoffeeshop
SportsTalkSC show podcast
Patrick Evans, Logan Sutter, Paul Mainieri 3-3

SportsTalkSC show podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2026 11:38


Patrick Evans, Logan Sutter, Paul Mainieri 3-3 by Phil Kornblut, Chris Burgin, and Josh Cohen

sutter josh cohen patrick evans
Sacramento County's Podcast
SAFCA - 2/19/2026

Sacramento County's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2026 27:53


The Sacramento Area Flood Control Agency (SAFCA) was formed in 1989 to address the Sacramento area's vulnerability to catastrophic flooding. This vulnerability was exposed during the record flood of 1986 when Folsom Dam exceeded its normal flood control storage capacity and several area levees nearly collapsed under the strain of the storm. In response, the City of Sacramento, the County of Sacramento, the County of Sutter, the American River Flood Control District and Reclamation District No. 1000 created SAFCA through a Joint Exercise of Powers Agreement to provide the Sacramento region with increased flood protection along the American and Sacramento Rivers.

Audio Theatre Central
Review of Adventures in Odyssey #77: A New Perspective

Audio Theatre Central

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2026 98:27 Transcription Available


(00:00:00) Review of Adventures in Odyssey #77: A New Perspective (00:02:44) Audio Drama Updates (00:09:17) Review Segment (01:31:41) Feedback Segment We're back with another Adventures in Odyssey album review! Austin Peachey joins J.D. to do a deep dive into Adventures in Odyssey #77: A New Perspective, and they thoroughly discuss what they did and didn't like about these six episodes. J.D. also responds to feedback from William Chad Newsom and a Spotify user. But before all that, J.D. shares several exciting audio drama updates. Full show notes at http://www.audiotheatrecentral.com/226Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/audio-theatre-central--2752762/support.What are your thoughts on the topics we addressed in this episode? Send us your feedback! We'd love to hear what you think! Email us at feedback@audiotheatrecentral.com or give us a call or text to 623-688-2770.Record our show credits for a future episode. Send us a recording of you reading the following and we'll use it in a future episode: Script: "Hi! This is [YOUR NAME] from [YOUR CITY AND/OR STATE]. Audio Theatre Central is a production of Porchlight Family Media. The theme music was composed by Sam Avendaño. The show is produced and edited by J.D. Sutter. Find the website at audiotheatrecentral.com."Email your recording to feedback@audiotheatrecentral.com.

Talkin' Hockey - The Hockey Talkin' Show
SEASON 8, EPISODE 21 - 1982-83 NEW YORK ISLANDERS

Talkin' Hockey - The Hockey Talkin' Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2026 90:00


Oh baby for sure, we're back at it for another Monday bringing you all the hockey talk like only we can!  Are we a little under prepared this week? Perhaps.  Do we pull it together for you, our loyal listeners? You betcha!First up, we're talkin' the final cup winner from Long Island, the 82-83 Islanders - this was the season where this juggernaut finally ran outta steam, but they still claimed their 4th cup in a row on the backs of Bossy and Butchie, Tonelli, Gilles, Potvin and Trottier, a coupla of young Sutter brothers and a heckuva tandem between the pipes - Battlin' Billy Smith and Rollie the Goalie!  The dispatched the young Oilers in four straight, who then went on a 4 cup run of their own!We've got a great stat line of the week, featuring the new kid on the Island, tearin' it up as an 18 year old phenom and ready to lead the Isles back to  greatness!  We'll talk Jets post Olympics, they seem to like playing bonus hockey all the sudden, and then we do a deep dive in advance of Friday's trade deadline!And in the third, we're talkin' GHL playoffs and ripping some sweet Upper Deck packs for our latest card battle - double 99's are a great start!

Unclenched with Dr. Alex and Dr. Priya
Questions You Must Ask Before Choosing a TMJ Dentist with Dr. Ben Sutter

Unclenched with Dr. Alex and Dr. Priya

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2026 53:24


On this episode, Dr. Alex and Dr. Priya welcome Dr. Ben Sutter back to the show to break down the essential questions you need to be asking your dentist when seeking TMJ treatment. Get a proper outline of how to interview a TMJ specialist, so you can ensure that they are qualified to treat complex jaw issues. Also, Dr. Sutter explains the great work being done at NAIDO, the North American Institute for Digital Occlusion, and their quest to study and report improvements on different modalities for diagnosing and treating life-altering Temporomandibular Disorders. Get a TMJ playbook for seeking care, find out where the science and technology is headed, and so much more on this jam packed edition of Unclenched!To learn more about the North American Institute for Digital Occlusion, please visit https://www.naido.net/.*****Disclaimer*****The information in the "Unclenched" podcast is not diagnostic.The "Unclenched" Podcast and content posted by Dr. Alex and Dr. Priya is presented solely for general informational and educational for the TMJ suffers and health care professionals. The use of information on this podcast or materials linked from this podcast or website is at the user's own risk. The contents of this podcast is not intended to be a substitute for professional dental/ medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Users should not disregard or delay in obtaining medical/dental advice for any medical/dental condition they may have and should seek the assistance of their health care professionals for any such conditions.© All materials and information included in this podcast are protected by U.S. and international copyright laws.The materials and information in this podcast are copyrighted by us and/or by other applicable rights holders. You may download a single copy of this podcast for your own personal, noncommercial use only, provided you include all applicable notices and disclaimers. Any other use of the materials and information is strictly prohibited without our prior written permission and the permission of the applicable rights holder(s).

dentists users priya sutter tmj north american institute naido
Fantasy Baseball from Prospect361.com
2299 - Fantasy Questions of the AL West

Fantasy Baseball from Prospect361.com

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2026 103:17 Transcription Available


Fantasy Baseball Live – February 8, 2026 @ 1 pm ETSegment 1 – News and Notes1.The Reds sign Eugenio Suarez for a one-year, $15 million contract. He mostly played third base last season, but with future HOFer Ke'Bryan Hayes there, I guess he'll be the full-time DH.a.Thoughts?b.In looking at their lineup, Spencer Steer or Sal Stewart is going to lose playing time. Steer is 28 and is one year removed from a 20-20 season, but with serious concerns about how much he'll hit, and Sal Stewart is a rookie, although he looked great in his debut last season. How does this shake out?2.The Red Sox sign Isiah Kiner-Falefa to a one-year, $6 million contract. Is this just depth or is this a message that Marcelo Mayer needs to hit?a.What happened to Kristian Campbell?3.The Padres sign Miguel Andujar for $1.5 million, and in looking at their roster. Is he going to get enough at-bats at DH to make him a sneaky late-round grab? He's an afterthought in drafts at an ADP of 601.4.The Yankees re-sign Paul Goldschmidt, and in reading details of the signing, the Yankees were not the only suitor. He's far from the player he was, but should I be worried that he could steal at-bats away from Ben Rice?a.If so, do you discount Rice at the draft table?5.Finally, the Tigers had an eventful and expensive week. First they lost their arbitration hearing with Skubal, which cost of them $32 million and they signed Framber Valdez to a big three-year deal.a.I guess if there were worries about them moving Skubal, that appears to be unlikely. Thoughts on Tigers this season?Segment 2 – Fantasy Questions of the AL WestThe Athletics1.Denzel Clarke looks like he will get the first shot at center field. Do you like Clarke or Colby Thomas to get the bulk of the at-bats?a.Does it even matter?2.Outside of Nick Kurtz, which two Athletics are you most interested in rostering?3.We now have data on the first year at Sutter Park in Sacremento and it ranked as the second best ballpark to hit in after Coors Field.a.Luis Severino had a 3.02 ERA away from Sutter and a whopping 6.01 ERA at home. I grabbed him in the 31st round of my NFBC Draft Champions League and was going to do the Home/Away game. Dumb idea?b.The ballpark factor does not bode well for young rookies like Luis Morales and Gage Jump. Thoughts?4.Who gets the saves for A's?5.Give me a sleeper in the organization (minor or majors)Houston Astros1.After a great spring training, Cam Smith wasn't very good. In 134 games, he hit nine home runs and stole eight bases while hitting .236. In Spring Training, he hit .342 with four home runs and 15 games. a.Is this a reminder to ignore spring training stats?b.Also, do you see 2026 as a growth year for Smith? If so, could he become a 15+ home run guy with 10+ stolen bases?2.Yordan Alvarez – Over/Under 400 at-bats?3.Stat line for Tatsuya Imai – IP, K's, ERA and wins – 165, 180K, 3.50 ERA, 10 wins4.Christian Javier was a horse, and then 2024 came, and he had TJS. He struggled in his returns, but the fastball was back and the change-up was as good as ever. He doesn't throw particularly hard, but his xERA was 3.36 last season.a.Any interest?5.Give me a sleeper in the organization (minor or majors)Los Angeles Angels1.Nolan Schanuel – Over/Under 15 home runs?a.Everyone thought he would hit, and while he makes great contact, his low hard-hit rate drives his BABIP down, and he hit .264 with a .263 xBA. How can you start this guy at first base?2.After Zach Neto and Jo Adel, give me two players you are interested in drafting from the Angels and why.3.Reid Detmers' stat line for 2026 – IP, Ks, ERAa.Detmers or Alek Manoah – who would you rather roster?4.Give me a sleeper in the organization (minor or majors)Seattle Mariners1.Cal Raleigh will hit closer to 40 home runs or 60 home runs in 2026.2.Dominic Canzone or Victor Robles – Who would you rather roster and why?3.Which one of Colt Emerson or Kade Anderson do we see in 2026? Or, do we see both?a.I know you're not a big Emerson fan, but I think he's going to be very good when he gets up – hint, I think we see him in the first half4.I can't think of a good pitching question – but, WOW, what a staff?5.Give me a sleeper in the organization (minor or majors)Texas Rangers1.Wyatt Langford – 2026 stat line – HR, SB, Runs, RBIs, and BA2.It's hard to say that Evan Carter is a bust, but so far, he's been a disappointment. He's still going as a number five outfielder – pick #71. Are you going to be one of those managers?3.I don't believe we talked about Josh Jung much last season or even when we did your third base rankings. He actually was somewhat healthy last season – 131 games, but hit 14 home runs and a SLG of .390. What happened?a.Is he of interest to you in upcoming drafts?4.Are you ready to trust Jack Leiter?5.Give me a sleeper in the organization (minor or majors)

Bright Spots in Healthcare Podcast
How Sutter Health Is Rebuilding the Physician Pipeline

Bright Spots in Healthcare Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2026 45:22


What happens when a health system stops trying to recruit its way out of a workforce challenge, and instead redesigns the pipeline itself? In this episode of Bright Spots in Healthcare, Eric Glazer sits down with Dr. Lindsay Mazotti, Chief Medical Officer of Medical Science and Education at Sutter Health, for a candid, system-level conversation about rethinking how physicians are trained, supported, and developed for the future of care. Rather than focusing on workforce shortages as a policy or awareness problem, this conversation explores what happens after the reality is already clear—when leaders choose to redesign foundational systems instead of managing around constraints. Dr. Mazotti shares how Sutter is treating graduate medical education as strategic infrastructure, not an academic side function, and what it takes to build a physician pipeline that can scale, adapt, and endure. Using examples from rural training pathways, academic partnerships, research translation, and digital transformation, the discussion surfaces how education becomes the load-bearing structure that allows health systems to absorb change without breaking. This episode is designed for health system leaders who are no longer asking whether change is needed, but are grappling with how to build systems that can carry what's coming next. In this episode, we cover: Why physician shortages can't be solved through recruiting alone How Sutter is redesigning the physician pipeline end to end What changes when graduate medical education is treated as core infrastructure How training clinicians for place shapes rural and underserved care delivery Why education is the missing link between research, digital innovation, and day-to-day care Where clinician training determines adoption—or abandonment—of new technologies The leadership tradeoffs that come with moving from individual patient care to system-level impact What leaders must unlearn when building durable, long-term capability About Dr. Lindsay Mazotti: Dr. Lindsay Mazotti leads system-wide initiatives at Sutter Health that advance medical education, research, and innovation in support of the organization's mission to deliver exceptional, patient-centered care to more than 3 million patients across 22 counties in Northern California. In her role, she focuses on strategically integrating medical education into the health system's infrastructure to align with long-term priorities, including Sutter's Destination 2030 initiative. Dr. Mazotti oversees undergraduate and graduate medical education across the system—spanning clinical rotations, scholarships, residency and fellowship programs, and academic partnerships—while working closely with aligned medical groups representing more than 14,000 physicians to develop and support physician educators. Her work centers on building innovative training pathways that address physician workforce needs, align with evolving care delivery models, and strengthen long-term system capability, with the goal of quadrupling Sutter's GME footprint by 2030 to become the largest community-based GME program in California. Learn more about Dr. Mazotti - https://www.linkedin.com/in/lindsay-mazotti Partner with Bright Spots Ventures: If you are interested in speaking with the Bright Spots Ventures team to brainstorm how we can help you grow your business via content and relationships, email hkrish@brightspotsventures.com. About Bright Spots Ventures: Bright Spots Ventures is a healthcare strategy and engagement company that creates content, communities, and connections to accelerate innovation. We help healthcare leaders discover what's working, and how to scale it. By bringing together health plan, hospital, and solution leaders, we facilitate the exchange of ideas that lead to measurable impact. Through our podcast, executive councils, private events, and go-to-market strategy work, we surface and amplify the "bright spots" in healthcare—proven innovations others can learn from and replicate. At our core, we exist to create trusted relationships that make real progress possible. Visit our website at www.brightspotsinhealthcare.com. Visit our website:  www.brightspotsinhealthcare.com. Follow Bright Spots in Healthcare: https://www.linkedin.com/company/shared-purpose-connect

Audio Theatre Central
New Adventures in Odyssey Art and Logo, AIO on the Stage & More

Audio Theatre Central

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2026 54:40 Transcription Available


(00:00:00) New Adventures in Odyssey Art and Logo, AIO on the Stage & More (00:01:29) Audio Drama Updates (00:11:54) Monologue (So Here's What I'm Thinking) (00:30:00) Interview: Madaline Ware (00:50:01) Feedback Segment We're covering a whole lot of Adventures in Odyssey topics in today's episode. Our guest is the Production Manager of the Adventures in Odyssey Theater Pilot Project, Madaline Ware, and she's going to tell us all about her work to bring AIO to the stage and how you can get involved as well. J.D. also covers the recent AIO logo change, the new character artwork, and the news about the upcoming Odyssey movie. And in the feedback segment, J.D. responds to Michael C.'s question about how we'll handle AIO reviews going forward. But before all of that, we've got a bunch of audio drama updates to share. Full show notes at http://www.audiotheatrecentral.com/225Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/audio-theatre-central--2752762/support.What are your thoughts on the topics we addressed in this episode? Send us your feedback! We'd love to hear what you think! Email us at feedback@audiotheatrecentral.com or give us a call or text to 623-688-2770.Record our show credits for a future episode. Send us a recording of you reading the following and we'll use it in a future episode: Script: "Hi! This is [YOUR NAME] from [YOUR CITY AND/OR STATE]. Audio Theatre Central is a production of Porchlight Family Media. The theme music was composed by Sam Avendaño. The show is produced and edited by J.D. Sutter. Find the website at audiotheatrecentral.com."Email your recording to feedback@audiotheatrecentral.com.

The Farm Podcast Mach II
Special Agent 666-88: The Secret History of James Porrazzo Part I w/Uriel Araujo & Recluse

The Farm Podcast Mach II

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2026 75:50


American Front, James Porrazzo, Abraxas Foundation/circle, Adam Parfrey, Michael J. Moynihan, New Resistance, Third Column (Porrazzo's band), Porrazzo's Springfield arrest, Porrazzo's drug arrest, GHB, ketamine, was Porrazzo dealing?, Joshua Caleb Sutter, the timing of Sutter and Porrazzo's arrests, Lyndon McLeod, McLeod's Denver killing spree, McLeod's trip to Utah, Thomas Schoenberger, Cicada 3301, alternate reality games (ARGs), QAnon, Wolves of Vinland, Jack Donovan, Porrazzo's links to McLeod, Lily Moss, extremist researchers, Process Church of the Final Judgment, Order of Nine Angles (O9A), New Generation Jalisco Cartel (CJNG), Porrazzo's alleged links to CJNG, Daria Dugina, Dugin, Uriel's background and links to Porrazzo, informants/agent provocateurs, nationalism in the Global South, Fourth Position, the Eurasian movement, Dugin's links in Brazil, New Resistance in Brazil and France, what Dugin really thought of PorrazzoThis episode is a companion piece to "The Secret History of the American Front"Also related to "The Secret History of Nazi Satanism"ResourcesThe documentary Porrazzo appears inThe Vice McLeod ArticleMoss' Porrazzo InterviewMoss' CJNG ArticleMoss' Dugina ArticleMusic by: Keith Allen Dennishttps://keithallendennis.bandcamp.com/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Audio Theatre Central
Developing a New Series, Indie Audio Drama Trends & More with Christopher Green

Audio Theatre Central

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2026 77:47 Transcription Available


(00:00:00) Developing a New Series, Indie Audio Drama Trends & More with Christopher Green (00:01:19) Audio Drama Updates (00:05:21) Discussion (So Here's What I'm Thinking) (01:11:18) Feedback Segment In our first episode of the new year, J.D. and ATC Contributor Christopher Green have a discussion about the challenges of developing a new audio drama show, some of the trends they're seeing in the industry currently, and some they'd like to see catch on more. They also share some talent to watch in the indie space, some of their favorite releases from 2025, and their most anticipated releases coming in 2026. J.D. also shares some audio drama updates and responds to feedback from Nate, Jonathan, and Austin. Full show notes at http://www.audiotheatrecentral.com/224Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/audio-theatre-central--2752762/support.What are your thoughts on the topics we addressed in this episode? Send us your feedback! We'd love to hear what you think! Email us at feedback@audiotheatrecentral.com or give us a call or text to 623-688-2770.Record our show credits for a future episode. Send us a recording of you reading the following and we'll use it in a future episode: Script: "Hi! This is [YOUR NAME] from [YOUR CITY AND/OR STATE]. Audio Theatre Central is a production of Porchlight Family Media. The theme music was composed by Sam Avendaño. The show is produced and edited by J.D. Sutter. Find the website at audiotheatrecentral.com."Email your recording to feedback@audiotheatrecentral.com.

Dead Rabbit Radio
EP 1533 - Can A Ghost Be Racist?

Dead Rabbit Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2025 38:59


Christmas theme is by Hombres De La Cebolla Can a ghost be racist?   Patreon (Get ad-free episodes, Patreon Discord Access, and more!) https://www.patreon.com/user?u=18482113 PayPal Donation Link https://tinyurl.com/mrxe36ph MERCH STORE!!! https://tinyurl.com/y8zam4o2 Amazon Wish List https://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/28CIOGSFRUXAD?ref_=wl_share Dead Rabbit Radio Recommends Master List https://letterboxd.com/dead_rabbit/list/dead-rabbit-radio-recommends/ Dead Rabbit Radio Archive Episodes https://deadrabbitradio.blogspot.com/2025/07/ episode-archive.html https://archive.ph/UELip   Links: EP 1420 - You Are What You Eat (Nazi Ghost Apocalypse Dream Nazi Cane EBay episode) https://deadrabbitradio.libsyn.com/ep-1420-you-are-what-you-eat EP 682 - Is The Military Building A Ghost Army? (Haunted Military Base episode) https://deadrabbitradio.libsyn.com/ep-682-is-the-military-building-a-ghost-army EP 1443 - The Silencing (Pacific Island World War 2 WW2 Suicide Clearing Zone Of Silence episode) https://deadrabbitradio.libsyn.com/ep-1443-the-silencing any good personal paranormal/cryptid stories ? (Orange County, Virginia Civil War Ghost story) https://archive.ph/l7ncU Alexander Hays https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Hays Can a ghost be racist? https://www.reddit.com/r/Paranormal/comments/aowyg1/can_a_ghost_be_racist/ The Nazi Ghosthunters https://psmag.com/social-justice/the-nazi-ghosthunters/ Did Britain commit a war crime in Dresden? A conversation https://spectator.com/article/did-britain-commit-a-war-crime-in-dresden-a-conversation/ Bombing of Dresden https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bombing_of_Dresden Sutter's Fort https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sutter%27s_Fort John Sutter https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Sutter Woody Allen Speaks Out https://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/09/opinion/sunday/woody-allen-speaks-out.html? The Song That Woody Allen Says Proves His Innocence https://www.moviemaker.com/the-song-that-woody-allen-says-proves-his-innocence/   ---------------------------------------------- Logo Art By Ash Black Opening Song: "Atlantis Attacks" Closing Song: "Bella Royale" Music By Simple Rabbitron 3000 created by Eerbud Thanks to Chris K, Founder Of The Golden Rabbit Brigade Dead Rabbit Archivist Some Weirdo On Twitter AKA Jack YouTube Champ: Stewart Meatball Reddit Champ: TheLast747 The Haunted Mic Arm provided by Chyme Chili Forever Fluffle: Cantillions, Samson, Gregory Gilbertson, Jenny The Cat Discord Mods: Mason, Rudie Jazz   http://www.DeadRabbit.com Email: DeadRabbitRadio@gmail.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/DeadRabbitRadio Facebook: www.Facebook.com/DeadRabbitRadio TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@deadrabbitradio Dead Rabbit Radio Subreddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/DeadRabbitRadio/ Paranormal News Subreddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/ParanormalNews/ Mailing Address Jason Carpenter PO Box 1363 Hood River, OR 97031 Paranormal, Conspiracy, and True Crime news as it happens! Jason Carpenter breaks the stories they'll be talking about tomorrow, assuming the world doesn't end today. All Contents Of This Podcast Copyright Jason Carpenter 2018 - 2025  

The Farm Podcast Mach II
The Secret History of the American Front

The Farm Podcast Mach II

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2025 86:39


American Front (AF), skinheads, Nazis, Bob Heick, Abraxas Foundation/circle, Adam Parfrey, Boyd Rice, Michael Moynihan, the Abraxas Foundation's links to the AF, James Porrazzo, Third Position, AF seeks alliances with Islamic groups, David Lynch (white supremacist), Lynch's murder, New Resistance, Porrazzo tries to role AF into New Resistance, the anti-Porrazzo AF, the breakaway New Resistance cells, Joaquin Flores, Raphael Machado, Alexander Dugin, Porrazzo's embrace of the Fourth Position, Konstantin Malofeev, Russian links to New Resistance, Porrazzo's relationship w/ Adam Parfrey, #NoLivesMatter, Warlock Shoppe/Magical Childe, Process Church of the Final Judgment, Porrazzo alleged involvement with the Process, Temple of the Psychick Youth (TOPY) & Porrazzo's involvement, Augustus Sol Invictus, Kent "Boneface" McLellan, Jake Laskey, Lasky's bid to revive the AF, Joshua Caleb Sutter, Tempel ov Blood (ToB), Atomwaffen Division (AWD), Sutter's status as an FBI informant, Rural People's Party (RPP), North Korea, New Bihar Mandir (NBM), Porrazzo and the AF's involvement with NBM, allegations of Porrazzo and Sutter participating in murders, was Porrazzo an informant?, Russia's bid to take over New Resistance, Wagner Group, Prigozhin's "coup"Music by: Keith Allen Dennishttps://keithallendennis.bandcamp.com/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

American History Tellers
FAN FAVORITE: California Gold Rush | The First Strike | 1

American History Tellers

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2025 37:17


After the discovery of gold at Sutter's Mill in 1848, hundreds of thousands of prospectors poured into California, hoping to strike it rich. In the early days, rather than coming from within the U.S., most miners arrived from places like China, Hawaii, Chile, and Australia. But when President James K. Polk confirmed that newspaper reports of vast gold fields were true, it would kick the Gold Rush into high gear, transforming America and establishing California as a place for grand ambitions and big dreams.Be the first to know about Wondery's newest podcasts, curated recommendations, and more! Sign up now at https://wondery.fm/wonderynewsletterListen to American History Tellers on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. Experience all episodes ad-free and be the first to binge the newest season. Unlock exclusive early access by joining Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Start your free trial today by visiting wondery.com/links/american-history-tellers/ now.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.