Podcasts about Terex

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Best podcasts about Terex

Latest podcast episodes about Terex

The Crownsmen Show
TCS 121. Crownsmen Partners: Terex's Pay Strategy, Energy Breakthroughs, & The Future of Beer Branding

The Crownsmen Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2025 60:19


This episode of The Crownsmen Show dives into Terex's strategy, key innovations, and investment trends shaping the future. Watch now!Heavy Industry Tour Partner

RevOps FM
Preventing MarTech Stack Failures with Automated Testing and Monitoring - M.H. Lines

RevOps FM

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2024 46:58 Transcription Available


This week we sit down with M.H. Lines, founder of Stack Moxie, to explore how automated testing and monitoring can prevent Martech failures. M.H. shares insights from her experience as a marketing operations leader and explains why many revenue teams are still vulnerable to unexpected system breakdowns. We dive into the challenges that come with managing complex Martech stacks and why early detection through automated tools is essential for keeping operations running smoothly.M.H. also reflects on her journey from marketing leadership to founding Stack Moxie, including how she navigates being a venture-backed startup without compromising on her core principles. Thanks to Our SponsorMany thanks to the sponsor of this episode - Knak. If you don't know them (you should), Knak is an amazing email and landing page builder that integrates directly with your marketing automation platform. You set the brand guidelines and then give your users a building experience that's slick, modern and beautiful. When they're done, everything goes to your MAP at the push of a button. What's more, it supports global teams, approval workflows, and it's got your integrations. Click the link below to get a special offer just for my listeners. Try Knak About Today's Guest M.H. Lines founded Stack Moxie in 2018 to bridge the gap between engineering and no-code technology for the SaaS economy. She has helped teams in marketing and technology both in-house and as a consultant at companies like Terex, Cohn & Wolfe, Microsoft, Lowes, The Tile Doctor and IBM Watson Health. MH received an undergraduate degree from The Florida State University in Finance, and her MBA from the Foster School of Business, University of Washington with a focus on Technology Management. https://www.linkedin.com/in/mhlines/Key Topics[00:00] - [00:00] - Introduction[01:49] - Secrets to Gap Folding[03:55] - From marketing to MOPS[07:54] - MOPS as strategic vs. service provider[14:28] - Being wired as a founder[17:55] - Working in mega-enterprise[22:59] - Observability for MOPS[34:35] - Observability and AI[39:12] - Being a VC-backed founder Thanks to Our SponsorBig thanks goes out UserGems for sponsoring today's episode. We all know running outbound is a huge pain—you need to manage a dozen different tools and data sources and it takes ton of manual work to keep it all going. UserGems solves that with one platform to capture signals and automate next steps with workflows and AI.You get a library of the most impactful signals in one place, automated playbooks to make sure your team executes consistently, and Gem AI to create personalized messaging for each prospect. So stop wasting time and start targeting your most promising buyers with less headcount. Click the link below for a special offer just for my listeners. Try UserGems Resource LinksThe Official Home of Stack Moxie and Revenue Observability Learn MoreVisit the RevOps FM Substack for our weekly newsletter: Newsletter

Anker-Aktien Podcast
Jungheinrich vs. Kion // Aktien-Duell 2024 // Lagerlösungen im Wettbewerb: Wer führt die Branche an?

Anker-Aktien Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2024 27:13


In diesem Podcast widmen wir uns einem intensiven Vergleich zwischen Jungheinrich und Kion, zwei maßgeblichen Akteuren in der Intralogistikbranche. Die Analyse beleuchtet, wie sich diese beiden Unternehmen in ihrer Herangehensweise an Lagerlösungen und Flurförderzeuge unterscheiden und welches Unternehmen in diesem hart umkämpften Marktsegment die Führung hat. Die zentralen Themen, die wir in diesem Podcast behandeln, umfassen: - Unterschiedliche Geschäftsstrategien: Ein genauer Blick auf die individuellen Ansätze von Jungheinrich und Kion in Bezug auf Produktentwicklung, Marktexpansion und Kundenservice.- Langfristige Investitionsperspektiven: Einsichten in die langfristigen Chancen und Risiken beider Unternehmen aus Investorensicht.- Fundamentale Daten: Die finanzielle Sicht auf beide Konzerne und deren finanzieller Entwicklung.- Charttechnik: Technische Analyse beider Aktien und einem Blick auf die aktuelle Situation. // Inhaltsverzeichnis: //00:00 Intro01:29 Langfristige Charts: Jungheinrich vs. Kion 03:35 Jungheinrich & Kion vs. DAXsector Industrial vs. MDAX 04:05 Jungheinrich & Kion vs. Mitsubishi Logosnext vs. Toyota Industries vs. Terex vs. Cargotec vs. Hyster-Yale Materials Handling04:42 Marktführer im Überblick05:15 Intralogistik-Branche06:28 Jungheinrich: Geschäftsmodell08:34 Kion: Geschäftsmodell10:28 Inhaberschaft: Jungheinrich & Kion11:23 CEOs: Lars Brzoska & Rob Smith11:53 Umsatz & Margen Entwicklung 13:03 Umsatz nach Region & Segment 14:38 Gewinn, Cashflow & Dividenden-Entwicklung17:05 Bilanz Überblick 17:47 Aktienrückkäufe 18:36 Dividenden19:39 Kennzahlen-Überblick (KGV)20:09 Piotroski- & Levermann Score 21:38 Unternehmensbewertung: Jungheinrich22:33 Unternehmensbewertung: Kion23:03 Chartanalyse: Jungheinrich24:31 Chartanalyse: Kion25:21 Disclaimer27:03 Danke fürs Einschalten! // Zum kostenlosen Strategie-Gespräch anmelden: //

The Hydrogen Podcast
Will California See Hydrogen ICE As Clean Emission Tech?

The Hydrogen Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2023 13:52 Transcription Available


Welcome to The Hydrogen Podcast!In episode 260,  Nikola stock goes up thanks to California. And could hydrogen internal combustion engines really be a worthwhile investment for manufacturers? I'll go over all of this and give my thoughts on today's hydrogen podcast.Thank you for listening and I hope you enjoy the podcast. Please feel free to email me at info@thehydrogenpodcast.com with any questions. Also, if you wouldn't mind subscribing to my podcast using your preferred platform... I would greatly appreciate it. Respectfully,Paul RoddenVISIT THE HYDROGEN PODCAST WEBSITEhttps://thehydrogenpodcast.comDEMO THE H2 ADVANTAGEhttps://keyhydrogen.com/hydrogen-location-analytics-software/ CHECK OUT OUR BLOGhttps://thehydrogenpodcast.com/blog/WANT TO SPONSOR THE PODCAST? Send us an email to: info@thehydrogenpodcast.comNEW TO HYDROGEN AND NEED A QUICK INTRODUCTION?Start Here: The 6 Main Colors of HydrogenSupport the show

Austinpreneur
Building Robots for Humans

Austinpreneur

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2023 22:38


Jeff Cardenas, CEO of Apptronik, is our guest for this episode about creating the ultimate tool for humans - humanoid robots. We discuss how robots can help humans free their time to do things we'd rather spend our time on. Before discussing Apptronik, we dive into Jeff's entrepreneurial journey. Jeff led an entrepreneurial life up to Apptronik including a previous venture in political technology that went through Capital Factory. Take a listen and get a glimpse into the future where humans and robots work side by side.Austinpreneur is hosted by Nick Spiller and edited by Aaron Handwerker.About Apptronik:Maker of world leading humanoid robot, ApolloPartnered with NASA, U.S. Army, SOCCOM and other DOD agencies fueling development.$25M+ raised in venture capital from Grit Ventures, Capital Factory and recently Terex. Spun out of Human Centered Robotics Lab at The University of Texas. About Capital Factory: Center of Gravity for Entrepreneurs in Texas with locations across the state.Most active seed fund in Texas investing in 1 startup per week. Partner to 25+ F500 enterprises on their innovation efforts.Producer of the Austinpreneur podcast.

Connecting the Dots
4 Step Improvement Kata: Step 2 – Grasp the Current Condition with Mark Rosenthal

Connecting the Dots

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2023 32:24


Mark Rosenthal has been learning on the front lines of Lean implementation, quality improvement, and leader development in manufacturing, engineering design, service sector and health care for over 30 years. His experience includes working on lean and quality systems implementation in companies such as Boeing and Boeing suppliers, Genie Industries, Eastman Kodak and Terex at sites throughout North America, Asia and Europe. His baseline background and training experience was with Toyota-trained teachers in the USA and Japan.Since becoming a full-time independent consultant in 2011 he has worked with a wide spectrum of organizations ranging from strategic projects for major global corporations, coaching and training small and medium sized businesses down to coaching the owner of a small single-site retail business.He has a Bachelors from Clarkson University in Potsdam, NY. Following school he spent 11 years as a Commissioned Officer in the US Army, managing heavy equipment maintenance and logistics operations, in Korea, the US, and Germany (as well as questionable activities such as jumping out of perfectly serviceable aircraft in flight) before joining the private sector.Mark is also a well-known blogger in the Lean industry with his “The Lean Thinker” website.Link to claim CME credit: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/3DXCFW3CME credit is available for up to 3 years after the stated release dateContact CEOD@bmhcc.org if you have any questions about claiming credit.

Ethical & Sustainable Investing News to Profit By!
Podcast: The Most Ethical US Companies

Ethical & Sustainable Investing News to Profit By!

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2022 23:23


The Most Ethical US Companies includes coverage of the following articles: “22 Most Ethical Companies in the US,” by Habib Ur Rehman at Insider Monkey; “Top 15 Infrastructure Companies in the US,” by Ty Haqqi, also at Insider Monkey; and “Caterpillar Leads 5 Stocks To See Infrastructure Spending Boost,” by Harrison Miller. Plus much more Podcast: The Most Ethical US Companies Transcript & Links, Episode 96, December 16, 2022 Hello, Ron Robins here. Welcome to my podcast episode 96 published on December 16, 2022, titled “The Most Ethical US Companies” — and presented by Investing for the Soul. Investingforthesoul.com is your site for vital global ethical and sustainable investing mentoring, news, commentary, information, and resources. Remember that you can find a full transcript, and links to content – including stock symbols and bonus material – on this episode's podcast page located at investingforthesoul.com/podcasts. Now if any terms are unfamiliar to you, simply Google them. Also, a reminder. I do not evaluate any of the stocks or funds mentioned in these podcasts, nor do I receive any compensation from anyone covered in these podcasts. Furthermore, I will reveal to you any personal investments I have in the investments mentioned herein. Additionally, quotes about individual companies are brief so that I can get as many companies covered as possible in the time allowed. Please go to this podcast's webpage for links to the actual articles where you'll find much more great company information. Also, note several companies are covered more than once and there are also six article links below that time didn't allow me to review them here. Also, I'm taking some time off over the holidays, so my next episode of this podcast will be Friday, January 13, 2023! ------------------------------------------------------------- The Most Ethical US Companies The first article I'm covering today is titled 22 Most Ethical Companies in the US. It's by Habib Ur Rehman at Insider Monkey and found on yahoo.com. Mr. Rehman describes how they arrived at choosing these companies and then offers commentary on each one. “For our list of the 22 most ethical companies in the US, we've ranked them based on how many times they've been hailed as honorees for being ethical up until 2022 by Ethisphere Institute, a global leader in assessing ethical businesses. We've also mentioned each company's ESG-risk scores from Sustainalytics, a premier ESG grader… It assigns quantitative risk scores between 0 and 50 to corporations… and classifies them into any of… five risk categories: Negligible (0-10) Low (10-20), Medium (20-30), High (30-40), and Severe (40-50). 22. V.F. Corporation (NYSE:VFC) Ethisphere Honoree: 6 Times / ESG-Risk Score: 12.9 21. Oshkosh Corporation (NYSE:OSK) Ethisphere Honoree: 7 Times / ESG-Risk Score: 19.4 Oshkosh Corporation is a… machinery company that manufactures military vehicles, fire apparatus and truck bodies among others. 20. Mastercard Incorporated (NYSE:MA) Ethisphere Honoree: 7 Times / ESG-Risk Score: 17 19. The Allstate Corporation (NYSE:ALL) Ethisphere Honoree: 8 Times / ESG-Risk Score: 19.1 The Allstate Corporation is one of the biggest insurance companies in the United States. 18. Best Buy Co., Inc. (NYSE:BBY) Ethisphere Honoree: 8 Times / ESG-Risk Score: 14.2 17. CBRE Group, Inc. (NYSE:CBRE) Ethisphere Honoree: 9 Times / ESG-Risk Score: 6.9 CBRE is a… commercial real-estate investment company based in Dallas, Texas. 16. Dell Technologies Inc. (NYSE:DELL) Ethisphere Honoree: 10 Times / ESG-Risk Score: 16.5 15. Visa Inc. (NYSE:V) Ethisphere Honoree: 10 Times / ESG-Risk Score: 15.6 14. Henry Schein, Inc. (NASDAQ:HSIC) Ethisphere Honoree: 11 Times / ESG-Risk Score: 13.5 Henry Schein is a… multinational supplier of healthcare products and services. 13. Hasbro, Inc. (NASDAQ:HAS) Ethisphere Honoree: 11 Times / ESG-Risk Score: 7.1 12. Intel Corporation (NASDAQ:INTC) Ethisphere Honoree: 12 Times / ESG-Risk Score: 17 11. Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:MSFT) Ethisphere Honoree: 12 Times / ESG-Risk Score: 15.2 10. ManpowerGroup Inc. (NYSE:MAN) Ethisphere Honoree: 13 Times / ESG-Risk Score: 10 ManpowerGroup is… the third largest staffing company in the world. 9. Teradata Corporation (NYSE:TDC) Ethisphere Honoree: 13 Times / ESG-Risk Score: 17.4 Teradata Corporation is a… software corporation that provides analytics software. 8. Waste Management, Inc. (NYSE:WM) Ethisphere Honoree: 13 Times / ESG-Risk Score: 16.8 7. Salesforce, Inc. (NYSE:CRM) Ethisphere Honoree: 13 Times / ESG-Risk Score: 13.2 Salesforce is a major… software company based in San Francisco, California. 6. Rockwell Automation, Inc. (NYSE:ROK) Ethisphere Honoree: 14 Times / ESG-Risk Score: 17.7 5. Premier, Inc. (NASDAQ:PINC) Ethisphere Honoree: 15 Times / ESG-Risk Score: 19.9 Premier is a… healthcare company. 4. Cummins Inc. (NYSE:CMI) Ethisphere Honoree: 15 Times / ESG-Risk Score: 19.4 Cummins is a… machinery company. 3. Deere & Company (NYSE:DE) Ethisphere Honoree: 15 Times / ESG-Risk Score: 16.6 2. Aflac Incorporated (NYSE:AFL) Ethisphere Honoree: 16 Times / ESG-Risk Score: 16.9 1. Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated (NYSE:JLL) Ethisphere Honoree: 15 Times / ESG-Risk Score: 6.8 Jones Lang LaSalle… has provided its Science-Based-Target-initiative (SBTi) aligned to the 1.5 degrees Celsius goal of the Paris Agreement.” End quotes. ------------------------------------------------------------- Top 15 Infrastructure Companies in the US Here's another analyst from Insider Monkey, Ty Haqqi, with his analysis titled Top 15 Infrastructure Companies in the US. Also, on yahoo.com. Again, the writer explains how they picked these companies. He then follows with brief outlines of each company. All market caps are as of December 3, 2022, and dollar numbers are millions of dollars. I start at #13 due to duplication of data for #'s 14 and 15. “The top infrastructure companies in the U.S. are giants of the industry… To determine these companies, we have considered their market cap, revenue, profit and assets, assigning 30% weightage to the first three criteria and 10% to the last one. 13. Construction Partners, Inc. (NASDAQ:ROAD) Total market cap: $1,559 Total assets: $4,809 Construction Partners is one of the fastest-growing civil infrastructure companies. 12. Uniti Group Inc. (NASDAQ:UNIT) Total market cap: $1,770 Total profits: $124 Uniti Group is involved in the acquisition as well as construction of infrastructure pertaining to critical communication. 11. SBA Communications Corporation (NASDAQ:SBAC) Total market cap: $31,877 Total profits: $238 SBA Communications is one of several real estate investment trusts which owns and also operates wireless infrastructure. 10. Crown Castle Inc. (NYSE:CCI) Total market cap: $60,700 Total profits: $1,158 Crown Castle is a real estate investment trust and also provides shared communication infrastructure. 9. Plains All American Pipeline, L.P. (NASDAQ:PAA) Total market cap: $8,548 Total profits: $593 Plains All American Pipeline is engaged in pipeline transport. 8. Sempra (NYSE:SRE) Total market cap: $52,157 Total profits: $1,318 Sempra is an energy infrastructure company. 7. Kinder Morgan, Inc. (NYSE:KMI) Total market cap: $42,707 Total profits: $1,784 Kinder Morgan is the biggest energy company in the U.S. 6. Norfolk Southern Corporation (NYSE:NSC) Total market cap: $58,821 Total profits: $3,005 Norfolk Southern operates more than 19,000 miles (of railways) in 22 states in the Eastern side of the U.S. and Norfolk Southern Corporation is also responsible for the maintenance of 28,400 miles. 5. American Tower Corporation (NYSE:AMT) Total market cap: $102,140 Total profits: $2,568 American Tower provides wireless and broadcast communications infrastructure in the United States and several other countries worldwide. 4. CSX Corporation (NASDAQ:CSX) Total market cap: $67,382 Total profits: $3,781 CSX is one of the biggest railroad companies in the U.S. 3. Union Pacific Corporation (NYSE:UNP) Total market cap: $132,016 Total profits: $6,523 Union Pacific is the biggest railroad company in the U.S. as well as among the top infrastructure companies in the U.S. 2. Comcast Corporation (NASDAQ:CMCSA) Total market cap: $155,037 Total profits: $14,159 Comcast is one of the biggest conglomerates in the world and is the second largest broadcasting and cable television company in the world in terms of revenue. 1. AT&T Inc. (NYSE:T) Total market cap: $135,556 Total profits: $20,081 AT&T (is) the largest telecom company in the world.” End quotes. ------------------------------------------------------------- Caterpillar Leads 5 Stocks To See Infrastructure Spending Boost Continuing on the theme of infrastructure is this article Caterpillar Leads 5 Stocks To See Infrastructure Spending Boost, by Harrison Miller, found on investors.com' Here are some quotes from Mr. Miller on each of his picks. “All of the companies should see a boost from the recent infrastructure bill and the Inflation Reduction Act. The infrastructure spending plan… will dole out more than $500 billion for various projects. And the Inflation Reduction Act includes $369 billion to expedite mining projects and build out renewable energy infrastructure. 1. Caterpillar Stock (CAT) The construction giant has rallied nearly 50% since bottoming in late September, and saw positive earnings and revenue growth the past two quarters. 2. United Rentals (URI) Earnings growth for the world's largest equipment rental company fluctuated over the past seven quarters, averaging roughly 40% gains during that time. 3. Terex Stock (TEX) Materials processor and machine maker Terex… earnings and revenue jumped 79% and 13%, respectively, for the most recent quarter after three periods of decelerating gains. 4. Deere Stock (DE) Agriculture equipment manufacturer Deere's… shares are way up after a big run going back to late September. 5. Martin Marietta Stock (MLM) The building materials and concrete supplier shed 19% from its stock price so far this year, but started to recover at the beginning of the summer.” End quotes. ------------------------------------------------------------- 3 Alternative Energy Stocks to Buy Amid U.S.-EU Trade Rift Now back to our old familiar sector, alternative energy, with this article titled 3 Alternative Energy Stocks to Buy Amid U.S.-EU Trade Rift. It's by Zacks analyst Aparajita Dutta. And found on sports.yahoo.com. (Note, some of you might have concerns about the designation of ‘alternative energy' being applied to two of the stocks.) Now some quotes from Ms. Dutta. “The forerunners in the U.S. alternative energy industry are Texas Pacific Land, HF Sinclair and Clearway Energy. 1. HF Sinclair (DINO) Based in Dallas, TX, this company is an energy company, which produces and markets light products such as gasoline, diesel fuel, jet fuel, renewable diesel and other specialty products… HF Sinclair currently sports a Zacks Rank #1 (Strong Buy). 2. Texas Pacific Land (TPL) Based in Dallas, TX, Texas Pacific Land is one of the largest landowners in the State of Texas operating under two business segments: Land and Resource Management and Water Services and Operations… Texas Pacific Land currently carries a Zacks Rank #1. 3. Clearway Energy (CWEN) Based in San Francisco, CA, Clearway Energy owns, operates and acquires renewable and conventional generation and thermal infrastructure projects.” End quotes. ------------------------------------------------------------- Now some Other Honorable Mentions – no particular order 1) From Canada, Title: 3 Best-in-Class Stocks to Build Long-Term Wealth on fool.ca. By Robin Brown. 2) Title: 14 Best Environmental Stocks to Buy Now on yahoo.com. By Omer Farooq. 3) Title: 10 Most Responsible Retailers of 2023 on risnews.com. By Liz Dominguez. 4) Title: 8 Best Solar Power Stocks Of 2022 on forbes.com. By Cory Mitchell. 5) Title: 7 Best Socially Responsible Funds | Investing on money.usnews.com. By Jeff Reeves. UK article Title: Best ESG ETFs to Buy UK in 2022 on investingreviews.co.uk. By Antonia Medlicott. ------------------------------------------------------------- Ending Comment Well, these are my top news stories with their stock and fund tips -- for this podcast: “The Most Ethical US Companies.” Now, please be sure to click the like and subscribe buttons on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, or wherever you download or listen to this podcast. That helps bring these podcasts to others like you. And please click the share buttons to share this podcast with your friends and family. Let's promote ethical and sustainable investing as a force for hope and prosperity in these terribly troubled times! Contact me if you have any questions. Thank you for listening. Now I'm taking some time off over the holidays, so my next episode of this podcast will be Friday, January 13, 2023! I wish you and your family and friends a most joyous, healthy, and fulfilling holiday period! Bye for now. © 2022 Ron Robins, Investing for the Soul

Dj De Key
SUN Day by De Key #19 - (Vova Terex House mix) #19

Dj De Key

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2022 61:24


Гость передачи Вова Терех - легендарный Dj, музыкант. Only vinil

Drinkin at MO’s
Drinkin at MO's w/The Definition of Pain Terex

Drinkin at MO’s

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2022 60:21


Terex has been tearing it up on the west coast for promotions like ORC and XPW… here we talk about all aspects of his career and our mutual movie fandom. Terex is the perfect example of a big man being able to really go and pull off moves that you wouldn't expect from a big guy. It was an honor chatting with a guy that was in the promotion that got me started on independence wrestling. Twitter: @D_O_P_Terex Instagram: definitionofpain #terex #prowrestling #independentwrestling #wwe #aew #gcw #ringofhonor #impactwrestling #prowrestlingnoah #njpw #letsfngo #drinkinatmos --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/drinkinatmos/message

Comics In Motion Podcast
Star Wars: Comics In Canon - Ep 96: Unravelling The High Republic's Greatest Mystery (Trail Of Shadows)

Comics In Motion Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2022 46:00


WHAT IS TURNING THE JEDI TO STONE? AN INVESTIGATION IS NEEDED! In Trail Of Shadows; one of the last pieces of High Republic material from Phase 1, Jedi investigator Emerick Caphtor & private investigator Sian Holt must work together to unravel the mystery of what the nihil possess that is calcifying jedi, which spirals out to a much larger conspiracy than either had ever imagined! As well as the story, Mike gives information on the Tarnab species, Doctor Uttersound & more. Mike tackled all three volumes of High Republic Adventures comics in episodes 86, 90 & 93 of SWCIC, all High Republic comics (by Cavan Scott) in episodes 84, 88 & ep 92, and The Eye Of The Storm comics in ep 94. Mike's High Republic book reviews are found on Comics In Motion's feed and on Mike's YouTube: Light Of The Jedi was released March 13th 2021, A Test Of Courage: August 14th 2021, Into The Dark: October 2nd 2021, The Rising Storm: November 13th 2021, Race To Crashpoint Tower: February 5th 2022 and Out Of The Shadows was released 19th March 2022. The Fallen Star review was released 23rd April 2022 and the last two books; Mission To Disaster & Midnight Horizon will be reviewed over the coming months. Last week, in ep 94, Mike delved into the penultimate volume of Poe Dameron comics where the Resistance locate Lor San Tekka trapped in a prison on Cato Neimoidia, all while agents Terex & Malarus plot against them and the greedy Baron Maccon will stop at nothing to make credits; all of this & more is tackled in this episode including info on Cato Neimoidia, the ships Raddus & Absolution and the Kazerath artifact! To listen to one of Mike's Patreon episodes for free, check out the first in Mike & Megan's Tom Hanks rewatch here: https://bit.ly/TomHanks1 For more exclusive content, including book reviews on Last Shot, A New Dawn & Dark Disciple plus the Legends books Shatterpoint & Darth Plagueis, check out Mike's Patreon, where he releases episodes of these in his weekly “Afterthoughts” show and more, so check it out at http://patreon.com/genuinechitchat Please subscribe to Mike's YouTube channel as once we get 100 subscribers, we can change the YouTube channel link: https://youtube.com/channel/UClQvgois9knDkFvjqcpoQtw Mike returned to Star Wars Timeline to talk about Villains in each of the SW trilogies here: https://youtu.be/V7382WWkSP0 - they also discuss accents in the Star Wars universe; the original trilogy here: https://youtu.be/1X0PyXkQZGg & the prequel trilogy here: https://youtu.be/3L4qWeYOzhw Mike is also the host of a podcast called Genuine Chit-Chat where he speaks with a different guest each week about a wide array of topics where no subject is off limits, he's spoken with Cavan Scott, Claudia Gray, Paolo Villanelli, Dominic Pace, all of whom have been involved with Star Wars content, as well as a huge amount of guests that have nothing to do with the galaxy far far away – GCC can be listened to in the same place you're listening to this show, so there's no excuse to not check it out! Outro read by BZ The Voice: http://www.bzthevoice.com Intro theme arranged by Mike Burton, backing music by Eric Matyas at www.soundimage.org --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/comics-in-motion-podcast/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/comics-in-motion-podcast/support

Comics In Motion Podcast
Star Wars: Comics In Canon - Ep 95: Finding Lor San Tekka On Cato Neimoidia (Poe Dameron 20-25 & Annual 1)

Comics In Motion Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2022 37:37


POE HAS FOUND THE LEGEND THAT IS LOR SAN TEKKA! In the penultimate volume of Poe Dameron comics, the Resistance locate Lor San Tekka trapped in a prison on Cato Neimoidia, all while agents Terex & Malarus plot against them and the greedy Baron Maccon will stop at nothing to make credits; all of this & more is tackled in this episode including info on Cato Neimoidia, the ships Raddus & Absolution and the Kazerath artifact! Volume 4 of Poe Dameron is set around 32ABY (2 years before The Force Awakens, 28 years after Return Of The Jedi). Poe Dameron 20 was released October 2017, issue 25 was out March 2018, Annual 1 was out June 2017 and the trade paperback collection was released May 2018. Charles Soule is the writer of the main Poe comics, with Angel Unzueta as artist and Arif Prianto as colour artist, while Robbie Thompson wrote Annual 1 with Nicole Virella as artist and Jordan Boyd as colour artist. Make sure you listen to episodes 85, 89 & 91 of SWCIC for the previous 3 episodes of Poe Dameron comics and check out ep 4 for an introduction to Poe's parents, ep 7 for the Allegiance mini-series (set between The Last Jedi & The Rise Of Skywalker) and ep 56 for Poe's Age Of Resistance comic! Last week, in ep 93, Mike tackled the two-part High Republic comic finale; The Eye Of The Storm, which detail Marchion Ro's upbringing and rise to power in the Nihil, the history of his people the Evereni, where the Nameless/Leveler came from, how the galaxy reacted to the events of The Fallen Star and much more! To listen to one of Mike's Patreon episodes for free, check out the first in Mike & Megan's Tom Hanks rewatch here: https://bit.ly/TomHanks1 For more exclusive content, including book reviews on Last Shot, A New Dawn & Dark Disciple plus the Legends books Shatterpoint & Darth Plagueis, check out Mike's Patreon, where he releases episodes of these in his weekly “Afterthoughts” show and more, so check it out at http://patreon.com/genuinechitchat Please subscribe to Mike's YouTube channel as once we get 100 subscribers, we can change the YouTube channel link: https://youtube.com/channel/UClQvgois9knDkFvjqcpoQtw Mike returned to Star Wars Timeline to talk about Villains in each of the SW trilogies here: https://youtu.be/V7382WWkSP0 - they also discuss accents in the Star Wars universe; the original trilogy here: https://youtu.be/1X0PyXkQZGg & the prequel trilogy here: https://youtu.be/3L4qWeYOzhw Mike is also the host of a podcast called Genuine Chit-Chat where he speaks with a different guest each week about a wide array of topics where no subject is off limits, he's spoken with Cavan Scott, Claudia Gray, Paolo Villanelli, Dominic Pace, all of whom have been involved with Star Wars content, as well as a huge amount of guests that have nothing to do with the galaxy far far away – GCC can be listened to in the same place you're listening to this show, so there's no excuse to not check it out! Outro read by BZ The Voice: http://www.bzthevoice.com Intro theme arranged by Mike Burton, backing music by Eric Matyas at www.soundimage.org --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/comics-in-motion-podcast/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/comics-in-motion-podcast/support

El Garaje Hermético de Máximo Sant
Supercamiones: Más grandes, más pontentes, más pesados

El Garaje Hermético de Máximo Sant

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2022 17:18


Ya he comprobado que, como a mí, os gustan los camiones. Así que decidí hacer este podcast para hablar de los camiones más grandes, más pesados y más potentes, los verdaderos #SUPER-CAMIONES. ¡En este video vas a encontrar de todo! Dúmpers, grúas, duotráiler, giga tráiler, trenes de Carretera y sobre todo muchas toneladas y muchos caballos. Sin duda son los camiones mineros, los conocidos como dúmpers o súper-dúmpers los más abundantes de esta lista. No me he olvidado de los trenes de carretera, muy populares sobre todo en Australia, pero es que más que modelos de camión son un tipo de transporte que, en ese continente, muy grande, carente de infraestructuras en algunas zonas y con escasa densidad de población, suponen una buena alternativa. En Europa lo mas grande que puede circular por carretera son los doutráilers y de estos si os he traído un modelo concreto… 1. BelAZ 75710. ¡664 l. cada 100 km! Este dúmper minero fabricado en Bielorrusia tiene dos motores de 65 litros de cilindrada y 16 cilindros cada uno, que ofrecen en total 4.600 CV. Te doy más datos: mide más de 20 m. de largo, más de 8 m de alto, más o menos como una casa de 3 pisos y puede llevar 450 toneladas. 2. Caterpillar 797F. ¿Botas o dúmper? La marca Caterpillar tiene su atractivo pues lo mismo te vende unas botas de trabajo, un casco, un tractor o un dúmper de 400 toneladas de capacidad de carga. Este camión norteamericano es el líder de ventas en su segmento y sus dimensiones son de 14,8 m de largo, 6,52 m de alto y 9,75 m de ancho. 3. Hitachi EH5000AC-3. Alternativa japonesa. Esta marca japonesa, cuyo nombre completo e Hitachi Construction Machinery Co., Ltd tiene su sede en Higashiueno y se dedica a la fabricación de maquinaria de construcción de todo tipo, entre ellos algunos dúmper ligeros, más orientados a la construcción que a la minería. 4. Komatsu 960E-1. Segundo del Mundo. Komatsu hace de todo: Grúas, vehículos militares, maquinaria para la construcción y la minería. ¿Creías que no había súper-camiones híbridos? Pues te equivocas, porque este dúmper lo puedes comprar, si te interesa, con motor Diésel que mueve un generador que alimenta los motores eléctricos que van en las ruedas. 5. Liebherr T 282C. ¡Peso pluma! La ventaja de este dúmper es su bajo peso… y es que en vacío pesa poco más de 200 toneladas. En este mundo de los mega camiones, este peso le sitúa como un peso pluma. ¡Que cosas! Tiene solo 3.600 CV, pero es de los que menos gastan y ofrece una velocidad máxima similar, 64 km/h… 6. Liebherr LTM 11.200. 200 m,. de altura. Si quieres una grúa que venga a casa rodando y te permite subir hasta casi 200 m. en realidad “solo” 188 m., no tienen otra opción que ésta. Este es el camión grúa motorizado más grande del mundo con la pluma las más larga del mundo. 7. Nicolas Tractomas D100. Made in France. Si necesitas transportar por carretera algo que pese 500 toneladas, estás de suerte: Este camión fabricado en Francia es capaz de remolcar ese peso en varios remolques con cientos de ruedas. Esta bestia puede cargar hasta 500 toneladas. El un camión mide 4,5 metros de alto, 3 de ancho y 12 de longitud, pesa 40 toneladas y tiene un motor diésel de 27 litros y 1.000 CV de potencia. 8. Scania 770 CV. El duotráiler perfecto. ¿Sabes que es un duotráiler? Pues son dos tráiler unidos entre sí, que alcanzan una longitud de 31,70 metros y pueden transportar 70 toneladas de peso. El giga tráiler es su hermano pequeño, de solo 25,25 metros de longitud y una capacidad máxima de 60 toneladas. Pues probablemente la cabeza tractora más indicada para este tipo de montajes sea el Scania 770, el camión de su tipo más potente del mercado y que ofrece, a ver si lo adivináis, 770 CV. 9. TC-497 Mark II. ¡170 m. de largo! Te doy unos datos: Casi dos campos de futbol de largo, 54 ruedas motrices y 5.000 CV… No esta mal, ¿verdad? Aquí donde lo ves este monstruo tiene casi 50 años de edad y nació en plena guerra fría para poder transportar todo tipo de mercancías en regiones inhóspitas y sin necesidad de rieles… porque este camión, más que un camión es un tren. 10. Terex MT 6300AC. El competidor de Caterpillar Los dúmper dan mucho juego. Este modelo nació como Terex, una empresa dedicada a la elevación y manipulación de material minero y luego cambio su nombre por Bucyrus… pero es el mismo perro con distinto collar. Coche del día. Me encantan los camiones, pero después de tanto camión, ¿no os apetece un buen deportivo? Por ejemplo, un TVR Tuscan Speed de 366 CV y sólo 1.100 kg… Ya sabéis que el mes de marzo es el mes del coche del día de PS y la verdad es que estoy disfrutando, porque hay mucho donde elegir.

Comics In Motion Podcast
Star Wars: Comics In Canon - Ep 90: The Hutt's Deception, Friends Reunited & 5 Short Stories (High Republic Adventures #6-8 & Annual)

Comics In Motion Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2022 43:49


FARZALA & QORT HEAD TO THE HUTT HOMEWORLD WHILE THE NIHIL PREPARE TO ATTACK! For the second volume of High Republic Adventures comics, two padawans & an ancient jedi master head to Nal Hutta along with crew from The Vessel – this journey brings plenty of reflection and lessons learned. Plus after the events in Race To Crashpoint Tower, Zeen & Lula are reunited with their friends while Maz Kanata's castle on Takodana is attacked by the Nihil with only a single jedi there to defend! Plus Mike delves into the Parwan, Kyuzo and Rancor species all while giving plenty of connections to other content! These High Republic comics are set in 231BBY, in the first phase & second wave of the High Republic. The High Republic Adventures 6 was released 21stJuly 2021, issue 8 was released 1st September 2021, the 2021 Annual was released 15th December 2021 and the trade paperback collection was released 22nd February 2022. Daniel José Older is the writer of these comics, with Rebecca Nalty as the colour artist for issues 6-8, Harvey Tolibao as artist on issues 6 & 7, Pow Rodrix also helped with the art on issue 6 and Toni Bruno was artist for issue 8. The 2021 HRA Annual has 5 short stories each written by a different author; Charles Soule, Claudia Gray, Justina Ireland, Daniel José Older & Cavan Scott, with artwork by Sam Beck, Jason Loo, Megan Huang, Yael Nathan, Jesse Lonergan & Stefano Simeone. Mike tackled the first volume of High Republic Adventures comics in ep 86 of SWCIC and he tackled the first volume of High Republic comics (by Cavan Scott) in episode 84 of SWCIC, with volume 2 in episode 88. Mike's High Republic book reviews are found on Comics In Motion's feed and on Mike's YouTube: Light Of The Jedi was released March 13th 2021, A Test Of Courage: August 14th 2021, Into The Dark: October 2nd 2021, The Rising Storm: November 13th 2021 and Race To Crashpoint Tower was released February 5th 2022 - Out Of The Shadows should be released later in March 2022. To listen to one of Mike's Patreon episodes for free, check out the first in Mike & Megan's Tom Hanks rewatch here: https://bit.ly/TomHanks1 Mike was recently on the 4th CiM Book Club, this time about Sandman Vol 1 - listen on this very feed! Check out last week's SWCIC (ep 89), where Mike tackled the 2nd volume of the Poe Dameron comics, where he & C-3PO search for a droid operative with the location of Snoke, all while trying to find who's feeding information to the First Order. This story also includes Terex' flashbacks to the Battle Of Jakku and a familiar droid for any Aftermath trilogy fans returns! Also check out Mike's Patreon, for exclusive Star Wars book reviews AND weekly “Afterthoughts” episodes, plus there are unsplit full-length episodes of GCC, additional photos (including early access to photos of comics for this very show) and more, so if you want to support the show and get more content, check it out at http://patreon.com/genuinechitchat Guest spots Mike has been involved in: Mike returned to Star Wars Timeline to talk about accents in the Star Wars universe here: https://youtu.be/1X0PyXkQZGg - Check out Mike & Ben's discussion on The Force Awakens here: https://youtu.be/c4VMXeBU3W4 The Last Jedi here: https://youtu.be/7dGEsdfSMkYand The Rise of Skywalker here: https://youtu.be/9fZWXji7_Jo Intro & outro reads by BZ The Voice: http://www.bzthevoice.com Intro theme arranged by Mike Burton, backing music by Eric Matyas at www.soundimage.org --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/comics-in-motion-podcast/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/comics-in-motion-podcast/support

Comics In Motion Podcast
Star Wars: Comics In Canon - Ep 89: Poe Searches For Snoke & A Resistance Spy While Terex' Gang Attacks (Poe Dameron #8-13)

Comics In Motion Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2022 44:16


POE SEARCHES FOR A SPY IN THE RESISTANCE! Poe's story continues with volume 2 of his own comics where he & C-3PO search for a droid operative with the location of Supreme Leader Snoke, all while trying to work out who's feeding information to the First Order. This story also includes Terex' flashbacks to the Battle Of Jakku and a familiar droid for any readers of the Aftermath trilogy returns! Mike also gives information on Rothana, BX-series battle droids, the Battle of Jakku and more! Volume 2 of Poe Dameron is set around 32ABY (2 years before The Force Awakens, 28 years after Return Of The Jedi). Poe Dameron 8 was released November 2016, issue 13 was released April 2017 and the trade paperback collection was released June 2017. Charles Soule is the writer of these comics, with Phil Noto being the artist, colour artist and cover artist! Make sure you listen to episode 85 of SWCIC for volume 1 of Poe's comics, also check out ep 4 for an introduction to Poe's parents, ep 7 for the Allegiance mini-series (set between The Last Jedi & The Rise Of Skywalker) and ep 56 for the Age Of Resistance Poe comic! To listen to one of Mike's Patreon episodes for free, check out the first in Mike & Megan's Tom Hanks rewatch here: https://bit.ly/TomHanks1 Check out last week's SWCIC, which was something a little bit different; it's a recording from 2021 which is found on Mike's Patreon where Mike & Megan discuss the 3 movies from the Original Trilogy! The episode before that was number 88 and Mike continued The High Republic comics with time volume 2 which takes place during & just after The Rising Storm, with the Jedi battling the Drengir which inculdes Skeer struggling with his force connection, Keeve struggling being a newly-knighted Jedi and Avar going against the council's wishes! Make sure you check out the Book Of Boba Fett discussion show where Mike & various guests discussed each chapter of the new series week-by-week, you can listen to all episodes on this very feed, or on Mike's YouTube channel! Also check out Mike's Patreon, for exclusive Star Wars book reviews AND weekly “Afterthoughts” episodes, plus there are unsplit full-length episodes of GCC, additional photos (including early access to photos of comics for this very show) and more, so if you want to support the show and get more content, check it out at http://patreon.com/genuinechitchat Guest spots Mike has been involved in: Mike returned to Star Wars Timeline to talk about accents in the Star Wars universe here: https://youtu.be/1X0PyXkQZGg - Check out Mike & Ben's discussion on The Force Awakens here: https://youtu.be/c4VMXeBU3W4 The Last Jedi here: https://youtu.be/7dGEsdfSMkYand The Rise of Skywalker here: https://youtu.be/9fZWXji7_Jo Mike appeared on the Hall of Mears podcast, listen here: https://spoti.fi/3bxgXwS or watch the video version here: https://youtu.be/K5epyHW-TPs Mike & Megan spoke with Alex & Mollie of Star Wars Explained, you can listen on this very feed or check out the video version on YouTube here: https://youtu.be/R2fr4-TdbQA Find Mike @GenuineChitChat on Twitter, @Genuine_ChitChat on Instagram & /GenuineChitChat on Facebook! Intro & outro reads by BZ The Voice: http://www.bzthevoice.com Intro theme arranged by Mike Burton, backing music by Eric Matyas at www.soundimage.org --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/comics-in-motion-podcast/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/comics-in-motion-podcast/support

Utility Safety Podcast by Incident Prevention Magazine
Utility Safety Solutions: Talking Safety with Terex Utilities

Utility Safety Podcast by Incident Prevention Magazine

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2022 16:58


Incident Prevention magazine's Associate Publisher Kurt Moreland stopped by the Terex Utilities newly expanded and state-of-the-art manufacturing facility to talk with Joe Caywood, the Director of Marketing for Terex Utilities. Joe talks about how Terex is focused on safety for its customers and for its own employees as well as some tales about mountain lion encounters.   This podcast is sponsored by T&D Powerskills. If you are looking for a comprehensive lineworker training solution, visit tdpowerskills.com today and use the exclusive podcast listener promo code podcast2021 to receive a 5% discount!

The Crownsmen Show
TCS 75. TEREX FINLAY - The World of Tracked Mobile Crushing, Screening & Conveying

The Crownsmen Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2021 52:29


In this episode we take a look back at the history of mobile screening and crushing, from the first designs, functions, and patents up to today with the integration of new technology, expanded function, and applications. Darren Finlay joins The Crownsmen Show to talk about TEREX FINLAY and the incredible world of tracked mobile crushing, screening and conveying. Watch Episode Here: https://youtu.be/K6klR1wRJlA

Atolio Conversations
Andrew Campbell, CIO at Terex Corporation

Atolio Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2021 20:27


Andrew Campbell, CIO at Terex, talks with us about a number of topics, including Terex’s concept of “purposeful innovation,” the drawbacks to single-vendor environments, his reasons for being a servant leader, and more. Topics include: Working in IT at Xerox & GE (1:00) "Your job is everyone's hobby" (2:17) The drawbacks of single vendor environments (6:50) Terex's Innovation Council (9:17) Servant leadership (12:25) Hunter Muller & HMG Strategy (15:57) Advice from John Repko (17:50) What drives you? (18:39)

Access Nation
Season 3 Episode 3: JLG/Terex versus China Part 2

Access Nation

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2021 15:25


Host Phil Duane discusses the preliminary hearings rulings in the case of Anti-dumping against Chinese based manufacturers. 

Access Nation
Season 3 Episode 2; JLG/Terex versus China

Access Nation

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2021 25:35


Host Phil Duane discusses last weeks Preliminary Hearing in the Anti-Dumping / Countervailing Case against China based equipment manufacturers. 

The Crownsmen Show
TCS 70: General Equipment & Supplies - Aggregate & Construction from Komatsu to Terex Finlay

The Crownsmen Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2021 39:27


On The Crownsmen Show WE LOVE EQUIPMENT, so we were thrilled to have Micah E. Tysver​ from General Equipment & Supplies join us to talk customer relations, technical support, and specific equipment supply projects in both the aggregate and construction space. In the United States, General Equipment & Supplies sells, rents, services and fabricates heavy construction equipment across heavy industry including construction, mining, oil exploration and municipal services. Their product lineup includes aggregate equipment, construction equipment, cranes and laser/GPS equipment, parts, and service with locations in Bismarck, Fargo, Minot, and Williston in North Dakota, Sioux Falls in South Dakota, Shakopee and Duluth in Minnesota, and Urbana in Iowa. They represent many top aggregate manufacturers, including Eagle Iron Works, Fab Tec, Terex Finlay, KPI-JCI, Lippmann, Superior, and Vale. Rolling stock manufacturers include Komatsu, JCB, Dynapac, Kobelco, Link-Belt, and others. Watch Episode Here: https://youtu.be/UVxhqGqGack

The Art of Photography With Stanley Aryanto
Ep 20 - How Felix Gerz found inspirations in his life from doing landscape photography

The Art of Photography With Stanley Aryanto

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2021 58:51


Hey Wicked Hunters, This week we chat with Felix about his journey to get started in photography. How he was able to find inspiration from landscape photography and his big dream to pursue his passion for photography.  You can learn more about him by connecting in www.felixgerz.com www.felixgerzphotography.com www.instagram.com/exploreincreation Other ways to listen and subscribe to the podcast: Spotify - http://bit.ly/twhspotify  Apple Podcast - https://bit.ly/Theartofphotography  Google Podcast: https://bit.ly/TheArtOfPhotographyWithStanleyAr  Website: podcast.thewickedhunt.com   Tune In (Alexa) - https://bit.ly/TuneInTheArtOfPhotographyPodcastWithStanleyAr  For those of you who want to see more of The Wicked Hunt Photography: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thewickedhunt/    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thewickedhunt/ Masterclass: https://www.TheWickedHuntPhotography.com    Photo print: https://www.TheWickedHunt.com/  Don't forget to let us know your favourite part of the Podcast on the comment below and subscribe ---------------- Transcription: Felix Gerz  0:00   After landscape photography, I feel inspired. You know, like, I feel absolutely I feel thrilled. I feel like recharge being out there in nature is what I'd want to do anyways Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt  0:16   so again, this welcome back to the weekend photography podcast where we share our passion as a photographer, and how photography gives us hope, purpose, and happiness. Now, welcome back. And today we have Felix from Germany, who's currently in Canada, and he's a landscape photographer who work with brands all over the world. So hey, Felix, how you doing? Very good, Felix Gerz  0:41   man. How you doing? Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt  0:42   Doing well, doing well? Glad to see you again. It's been a while. Totally. Yeah. So what you've been up to what you've been up to lately? Felix Gerz  0:53   Oh, man, I've been living in a beautiful town of Revelstoke enjoying the small mountain community town and getting a lot of just scattering recently. Yeah, that's basically most of my life right now. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt  1:04   Man, every time I see your photo, you really make me jealous. It's, it's, yeah, I mean, it's so beautiful. And I Yeah, wish I have more time to do a little bit more of that this year. But yeah, I got a little bit. My priorities shifted a little bit this year. So um, you are from Germany. And you came here, I guess. Give us a little bit of story, a little bit of background story about who you are, and why you choose photography. Felix Gerz  1:38   Totally, totally. So originally, I was born and raised in Germany, other two for 18 years. But I quickly realised that Germany is not the place for me, like I quickly realised the German culture, the Western culture is not 100% where I feel at home, I feel a lot of pressure growing up. And I felt like I was pushed into like a little drawer. And yeah, I had to kind of follow up everyone else's pathway in life, I guess, like to start really deep here. Which is like, yeah, studying, and then get a job, get an apartment, get the car and blah, blah, blah, you kind of kind of know what I mean, I guess. And this totally did not suit my personality. So that's why as soon as I could when I was 18, I booked a flight. And when we fly back then it was to New Zealand and I, yeah, I was living there for a while. I just tried to rediscover who I am, who I was. And yes, it's now been three and a half years since I've since I left Germany. And I ended up in Canada. To your question, why photography? That's a very big question. I guess it all started actually, when I was really I think I was 13 years old. And we had to do this like really random biology observation project. We just had to photograph trees and the change of seasons in it. And yeah, back then I picked up my good old 450 D of my like, my dad's camera. Good old Canon old DSLR. And yeah, it ended up it started off with me photographing trees for the biology project, but it ended up with me being in the forest for Thai days, just shooting deer mushrooms and stuff. And then from then on, it just developed you know, I got to know how a camera works. I went out of the auto mode. And yeah, I got my own camera when I was 15 then and good old T three I who didn't have that in the back then. Yeah, and then just grew from there, man. Yeah, and I shot lots of weddings when I grew up grew up, when I grew up, and they kind of tried to find my style more and more and specialise in specific niches. And then at some point, when I left Germany, I combined it with my travelling so wherever I travelled, I tried to reestablish the business and work with tourism brands. And yeah, as you said, already, the landscape photography niche. Cool. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt  3:59   Awesome. You just mentioned that you shot weddings as well. That's, that's a bit usually, I mean, you know, from most of landscape photographers, and as well as myself. Usually we don't shoot weddings because and we should we choose like landscape. It's like the two very extreme side of it, right? One of them is like with so many people are in pressure and one of them is like, do a one and it's no one there's like, chill. So like, how does that feel like, you know, merging between the two like going from one to another? Felix Gerz  4:33   That is a very good question, actually. Because there is tension between landscape and commercial photographers and wedding photographers, for sure. And I had a lot about discussion it was about that. But I think it's actually not it's actually really, really interesting to cop combined those two together. Let's say to get the scenic landscape photography way you look at the weather, you look at the sun, you look at landscapes, and just combine it with weddings, for example, getting in stead of having having different nature foregrounds having the couple as a foreground in the scenery. And I think that's absolutely amazing, especially if you have people that are totally in for that and happy to wake up at 4am Just to hike a freaking mountain in their wedding dress, you know. And I think that is really cool. And I love combining those things. But yeah, you are right, like landscape photography is a very well your day in nature, you're soaking it all in their silence, usually. And wedding photography is stressful wedding photography, especially on the wedding day has to do with lots of responsibility. Lots of people, you have to communicate with everyone. And yeah, but I have a passion for both. And I like to combine it and I think that's a really cool niche as well. Yeah, that's, Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt  5:45   that's really cool to hear. I mean, I never, I always say I don't want to do it. But I guess I shouldn't give it a try. Because I never know, um, I actually like it. But let's, let's not go into that. With landscape because, yeah, anyway, so I guess like with with the thing that with wedding photography, the thing that really stressed me is always the pressure. And it's okay, I feel like if you find like someone who actually enjoy, who actually let you be the creative side, and actually along with your creativity, but some people are very, you know, they're really close minded so that they want a certain type of shot. So if you miss that certain type of shot, they become unhappy. And that's, that's what I guess that's what I really scared about. Have you come across that sort of people? Felix Gerz  6:37   I say generally speaking, the couples I shoot are very young. And they stayed they they hire me because they like, what they identify with the style with that with my shooting style. So right, right off the bat, there's a lot of trust, usually where they're saying, okay, you know, what, we know your work, we trust you in there, you know, better than we do. And that's ideal. That's what we want to hear as photographers, right? Like people are having trust, and we can totally unfold our creativity. But yeah, and sometimes there, there are people that are saying, okay, hey, you know what, I had one person that sent me like, an entire Pinterest list of photos where they're like, Okay, I want this, I want this, and I want this, and it's totally fine. I mean, it's a once in a lifetime day, hopefully, if everything goes right. And that's totally fair. And I like to respect that and take Yeah, and make these put these expectations into reality as well. And that's totally fine. And then there are just a couple of situations where you, yeah, we were, you're just really focused on that one shot, but then I try to always guide people into a non stage uncurbed, unperfect. Atmosphere, what can they can repeat themselves. And I think that's what is really special about wedding photography, because you are a stranger for them. I as someone who travels all around the world who's not even speaking their language as my first language, you know, and I have just a very, very minimal of time to gain that confidence and to make them really comfort comfortable, that I can capture raw and emotion, raw emotions and unstaged photos. And I think building that bridge between Okay, I have no idea who you are, and you have no idea who no idea who I am. And hair, you totally trust me and everything I do. And you can totally be yourself in a very, very short amount of time. I think that is a really, really cool aspect in wedding photography. That is not happening in any other type of photography. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt  8:30   Yeah, that's, that's awesome. It's definitely really difficult. One of the most difficult thing is to gain, you know, like, I mean, you kind of see that on a little bit on portrait as well as like fashion, but you don't have that much of you know, different like, John, because, you know, with the wedding, you go from nothing to like, everything, right? So, I actually like came across these clients when I was doing portrait wear. And it was like a nightmare, because she's like, oh, yeah, yeah, it's good, it's good. You do whatever you want and took a bunch of photos, send it to her and it's like, it's just not professional quality, like, it's just not worth my money. And I was just like, Okay. And yeah, it's just like, I don't know, like, I mean, I felt like he was just wanting her money back. But you know, just have to move on sometimes and cut your losses. But I guess what, I know that you identify yourself as a landscape and commercial photographer and reason why I want to ask you a lot of this wedding question is I want to bring a contrast and then I want to see how you feel about this in comparison to landscape. So now, now that we've talked about that, let's talk about the landscape and how are they contrast with each other like what what are the different feelings that you get or the different shifts or feelings that you get from from wedding that is, you know, Depending on people opinion and very, a lot of pressure to landscape where it's like, man, like go for your life, do what you want, you know, the nature will never pay anything back. Felix Gerz  10:12   Totally, I think, I think the biggest difference between it and I think that's a question is that wedding photography drains me. And nature photography. If you consider the shooting part on set in nature and the type of photography I do that this really fills me up, if that makes sense recharges me. Because I'm an introvert. I'm when I'm around people. Yeah, I'm definitely getting drained and when I'm on my own or in nature and recharging, so I feel like, Yeah, I know, wedding day after wedding day, I'm actually pooped. I'm like, I'm just going to stretch a bed. I'm backing up the footage. I'm done for the day, after landscape photography, African inspired, you know, like, I feel absolutely, I feel thrilled. I feel like recharge being out there in nature is what I'd want to do anyways, and with my free time, you know, ski touring best example for that you just out there. So only you, your buddy. And then like just just nature everywhere, you know, and you're in the middle of nowhere. So ideally didn't know people around. So it's yeah, as you said, it's the biggest contrast that you can get. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt  11:16   Yeah, that's, that's, that's actually true. I've never actually think of it that way. But it's very true. You know, when I was working in Lake Louise as a portrait photographer, it was very, it was very draining. Like, it's kind of nice to be able to, like, you know, like, talk to people and socialise a little bit in your photo shoot, but after a while, it just really get drained. You're right, like, I'm not exactly sure why there. But yeah, wow, very interesting. And so, you mentioned that you work with brands as well and do a lot of commercial and how is that fit in with everything else? Felix Gerz  11:55   Yeah, so it's basically product because of my lifestyle, right? Like, wherever I go, right now. I see myself as an outdoorsy person. So wherever I travel is usually it's usually mountains, it's usually an outdoor outdoorsy area. And there's always tourism wherever I go. And I saw myself finding potential in the tourism area, because that's just where it was anyways. So that's right off the bat, how does that fit in everything else? Well, how did it work? I approached a lot of brands, I have different pitch boards where I can be like, okay, hey, look, I've been doing that for a couple of years straight. Now. I have the references. This is this is what I do. This is my style. And then I basically prove, yeah, I approached brands basically on the spot, and sometimes in advance, but usually it's really spontaneous as well. Yeah. And that's been working pretty well, actually. And you know, it's with everything you gain experience. In the beginning of it all, if I saw the email sent out in the beginning of like, four years ago or something, I would probably get my favourite headshot, if I saw that again, you know, but the more you do it, the more you get a feel for the industry, the more you chat with people that are like that, I might like mine, or the similar similar niche, the more you narrow down your portfolio to certain niches, or the more you just know how to how exactly, you can approach brands or tourism boards accurately. And it's just a development process with everything, you know. Yeah. So to answer your question really quickly, I think it's just how it just fit my lifestyle. And it just fit what I feel like I'm talented in. And that's why I saw potential and then that's why I kept following it. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt  13:42   Cool. Yeah. Like Commercial is very interesting, because it's coming. I guess, depending on the type of people that you work with, or the company that you work with commercial can really aligned with either the crazy side of things of wedding and also could align with the landscape side of things of, sorry, the chill side of things off landscape, isn't it? Felix Gerz  14:06   Totally. It's very versatile. That's what I love about it as well. Yeah. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt  14:10   Yeah. So you get a lot of like, different changes is very dynamic. Not boring. Is that Is that what you're saying? Felix Gerz  14:16   Yeah, totally, totally. Like, you know, and I love the entire process of it. Like I obviously like, love going up with with with people that are on the team and just shoot the actual content, but I also like to go back and see okay, this is the situation right now. For example, now we have the pandemic and everyone is kind of itching to get out there's a new consciousness for like, the outdoors everywhere. And I feel like that is so has so much potential for story and you know, going from okay, what's the situation right now, when a pandemic, we want to promote this outdoor brand, how can we put things together? And yeah, create a great campaign or product that reflects that I think that process in advance is also really really cool. Um, Um, yeah. So it is versatile. Yeah, it is not really just heading out there, like 1010 years ago, like, putting your tripod down putting your gradient filter down and just shooting one photo. That's it, and then you try to promote it. No, it's more it's the entire process that every like. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt  15:15   Awesome. So you you came to Canada about a year ago? Give or take? Yeah. 50 month Yeah. 18 months. Yeah. So you say that you share with us a little bit story of how you your story in in back at home when you were doing your project and then you as soon as you kind of finished with that you took off to New Zealand and now you're here in Canada. So tell us a little bit story about that about your adventure and how photography cannot have fit in and, you know, help you document a lot of those adventures within your travel. Felix Gerz  15:58   Very good question. Photography was before was there before I travelled. So it was always with me when I travelled. And yeah, I picked up on the reason why I left Germany because of the let's call it social pressure, let's call it, let's call it that I just didn't know what's out there. I just knew what I was used to. And I saw on Instagram on the page on YouTube and stuff, all these people being outdoors, and I was never really in the mountain. So I was like, I think I'm missing out. So that was one reason why I was like, Alright, I need to get out of here. And, yeah, then I went to New Zealand. And you know, I had a couple of Buck like dreams on my bucket list. I want to live in a car. I wanted to climb five peaks in the South Island, I wanted to go back then it was like things like bungee jumping, you know, I had a lot of things in my on my bucket list. I was like, Okay, I was never able to do it, I really want to do it. And then I planned backpacking trips around it, I was living in a surf town and how to surf and things like that. And the role that photography played in that was definitely just that I was able, and that was actually a major reason why I was able to grow in my ability as well, just because I took the camera along, wherever I was, and try to document how I felt and how what Yeah, on like, document the adventure itself, right, and the people that were involved. So what that meant was, for example, I I had it yeah, let me let me tell you very quickly about like something really, we really, you know, like I, I was back then I was only a backpacker, you know, I was only having a couple of bucks and spent that all on a car. And then at some point, the car broke down. I didn't have any money anymore. I wanted to have a job, I really tried to get it. And in the beginning, I was obviously trying to work with tourism, tourism brands, that wasn't a very, very beginning in New Zealand now. And in the beginning, it didn't, it didn't work. I was just not experienced enough. I didn't have the portfolio yet. And I was just really last so I didn't work. I tried to work in a for retail shops after that, and like stores and stuff. You know, I kind of went down all the time because things didn't work out. And it ended up me going through malls and through anything and just actually at some point just getting a job. It didn't really matter anymore because I was just broke. And yeah, and at some point, you know, I even got sick. My harddrive broke. That was like I still had the head of backup. But that was back in Germany. So I got really nervous here. It's like the nightmare of every photographer if like, your main hard drive is not working anymore. So I was crushed, you know, and it was like, oh, what should I do? And then you know, at some point I got a job as a farmer like what I was never I can't believe I'm telling you this right now but like you know, it's like something never considered I never really enjoyed. And then after that it was a horrible time I worked 16 hour days and I got treated like yeah, not like a nice person. It was not a really friendly environment. After that I worked with as a dishwasher you know it like it was jobs that were totally not relating to what I'm doing right now. But it was just the situation that travel situation that put me into the circumstances that I did things like that, but I'm telling you, you know, after that things shifted and what did I do and during these times I took my camera along I documented you know was a format my GoPro my head and and filmed like how I chased chased the cars into the colour chips the things that would hold that I brushed the crap out of the shed you know like things like that and then afterwards like right now I'm in a position okay, it's been a long time but have all this footage and back then I was already taking these stories that were already like always like it was not these dream stories of like, oh yeah, I travel I have the best time but it will also stories that way I was really like sad and really like drained you know and I took these stories and publish them. And beginning was only my channels you know on social media and stuff and it really like changed people and then I use my camera gadget to I visualise what I was feeling and to redraw people in my circumstances. And I think that's where really like my, my passion for storytelling began, you know, was really just telling my story. And just making sure that there's more reality on Instagram as well. Like, that's a really big topic for me that, you know, like, we just share 1% That's not really real, or real life, and people just assume it is. And I'm having a huge problem with that. So I really want to be more way more transparent, and that I want to be more real, because that's not what life is. And I think the camera just helps me to tell to, to, to build that bridge, you know, to, to really tell that story of it and just make sure, yeah, there's more reality online. And yeah, from then on. In New Zealand, I learned so much like tele told the stories, and it just continued after. After that, when I went through Asia, I was in Nepal tracking. And that's why that was the second time I was working with tourism brands, you know. And back then it was a clothing company in New Zealand. And they send us up there in the Himalayas. That was really cool. And from then on, we went to Java and Indonesia, and had a great time there with the tourism board there. And, you know, I think the time in New Zealand wasn't amazing. And stuff was really leading up to that I learned so many things, I learned to appreciate these things and like really, how to really work hard so that the things I experienced in New Zealand, were not happening anymore. And the camera along the way, it was always a tool for me to bring to bring out to process it for myself, but also to prove to include other people and tell my story along the way. And yeah, that went over to dinner afterwards. I went to Norway, same thing worked with tourism, Norway out there. And then yeah, back in, I was in Portugal, same thing. And now I'm in Canada, and Canada has been a little different. But um, that's been that's been the last three years in a very, very, very short amount of time. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt  21:55   Yeah, it's crazy, isn't it? I met It's so crazy, because we have really sort of a similar story. In terms of like timing, like, I started all this journey about three years ago as well. So and, I mean, I started travelling way before I started photography, probably not long before that, probably about a year before that, where I took it really seriously. But yeah, I started to travel full time. And I left my nine to five about three years ago. So it was so crazy to hear all this story. And it's, it's exactly the same thing. Like I had the same feeling when I right after I left that lifestyle, I feel like I finally live again, like I finally, like, living like you know, the life that I want. And honestly, like when I think back the past three years is more memorable than the past 30 years of my life. So it's been crazy to kind of see that it's insane. And that's one hour later, I love travelling, isn't it? Like you just get to see. I mean, if you didn't travel, you probably wouldn't be able to, you know, develop your skill that quickly because you wouldn't be able to see and face all that different challenges and adversity, isn't it? Felix Gerz  23:15   And I think if I didn't travel, I would be a bank or broker right now in in Germany, that would be it would have been the worst thing that could have happened. So I'm pretty happy that. Yeah, you know, and the, you know, encounters like, like the one we had together, you know, that just really encourage you because you know that people are in the same boat, you know, and that are that you're not alone with what you what you how you feel. And maybe I can just throw in a little story of a person I met on a on a grid walk in New Zealand. I was Thomas, he was 40 years old. And he's been working for 20 years and a job back in, in Eastern Europe. And I met him on the trail. And he told me his story. And it was really inspiring, because it hasn't had a big impact on my life. Because he said, Yeah, he worked 20 years for a development company. You know, he had what people in our culture just promise us, which is reputation, money, fame, let's even put girls in there or whatever, you know, like, the car, and he had something he just broke down. He almost had a car accident, he just crashed down and he was like, hey, I need to change something like that's not what I want to do, you know, and hit this revealing moment where he just had to sell everything, go to New Zealand, and he was a cherry picker. And it was the happiest person he has ever been. You know, and it's like, I can totally relate. You know, it's not about the things you have for the job you do. It's like following your passion heart in that case, you know, and that's just what you felt when I assume when you started three years ago, and you just went out and you felt so like, you know, and I think that's just so inspiring. But I said, I don't want to be 35 or 40 to realise that so like I wanted to just start a little earlier. Yeah, but yeah, encounters like that man just really inspired me. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt  25:00   Yeah, you're you're really lucky to have kind of realise this very early on. I definitely, you know, if, if I were to go back, the one thing that I would change is that like, you know, I mean, I didn't really regret anything that I've gone through because, you know, I'm in a position now where I, I a little bit more secured. And you know, people like you because I have, you know, the university and stuff like that, which actually, I think is a bad thing, because it can discourage me, sometimes I always go, you know, if things go wrong, I always have this, it's really bad thing. And I only, it's only just last year where I actually give up that option. I was like, I would never go back to that lifestyle period. You know, and before, I used to always say that, but never really kind of mean it always at the back of my mind. It's like that. Felix Gerz  25:54   It's really interesting. That can I can interrupt you for a second. I had a lot of I had a lot of I had a lot of conversations about there were lots of filmmakers, you know, because let's be honest, especially during COVID times, like things are uncertain. And we as creative sometimes. Well, yeah, we things are not, let's be honest, like 2020 As a creative, opportune job opportunity year wasn't like incredible for us. I had the best year but like, not out of this perspective. So having a backup, like you did, is something that would really reassure me a little bit, just give gives me a good feeling in my stomach. I think like, that's what I would expect from it, you know, because, oh, if everything fails, if I can reestablish my business, your things just go down, I still have this as a backup Do you feel that gives you any insurance? Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt  26:39   So I do, and I don't, I. But a couple of months ago, actually, my old boss contacted me because he thought I was back in person offered me a job and a promotion from where I was. But I thought about it, and I turned it down straightaway. And here's, here's the good and the bad thing. The good thing is that people say always say that you always have a backup. And for my case, it's a really, really comfortable backup, right? An engineer, like I could literally work anywhere as an engineer, really comfortable backup. And I've also worked like in business improvement and business side of things. I've been supervisor as well. So I have a wide array of skill that I could fall back to. Now, the bad thing about this is that sometimes when you don't, sometimes when you have something to fall back to you don't go all in and for that reason, you know, you get lazy, you get complacent. And a good example is I guess when, like so, the reason why I left my job is that when I started photography, I feel like I enjoying it. And I mean, before even that, probably three years into the I know that I want to build a lapstone laptop style lifestyle. But it never happened because it's too much comfort. Like, I don't have the push to go there. You know, like, it's like, oh, yeah, I could wait till tomorrow, you know, I don't need this right now. It's like, totally, there's always something. And I the reason why I decided to leave my job was that, I know that I don't want that lifestyle. I I've known for a while, but there's just so much doubt in myself, I know that there is something better out there. And I know that if I stay with my nine to five of never, I'll never gonna get there, it's always gonna there's always going to be an excuse. So actually cutting cutting your your safety net is the best thing to get there. And it is really scary. But the one thing that I always come back to is going back to what you're saying with the working farm. When I was after my trip in Indonesia and Australia when I first came here, I worked back in a restaurant where I get $12.50 per hour. Going back from from engineering job is like, you know, really good hourly rate to like to another 50 And now Right? Felix Gerz  29:29   Like, it's, it's even worse. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt  29:32   By the end of the day, I got like 60 bucks. I was like yeah, like it's, it's, it's more, I think it's that that lesson just taught me that. You know, you always have a safety net, like you know, like in this especially for our our world like you know, like for Australia and Canadian and all that really developed country like worst case scenario, just kind of a quirk And the restaurants like, it's like, I could literally live off that if I just worked my ass off there and built, you know, on the site. So, yeah, it's a bad it's a good and a bad thing actually. Yeah, quite interestingly. So. And also when you're on like yourself you have more hunger you have you have more energy and you have you have less, less desire for comfort, because you haven't experienced yet as much as, Felix Gerz  30:26   as I do. I totally, totally. Yeah, it's true. It's true. We get we get spoiled, you know, especially in these Western countries, the worst, the worst thing that can happen, you know, it's, it's something even acceptable still. So yeah, I'm with you. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt  30:41   It's really interesting, though, like, I really thought, I mean, I was born in Indonesia, and I was raised up in, in that culture, where, I mean, my parents was actually really cool. They have been supported me. You know, even when I was most Asian parents would say it's like, all you either have to do the three things, which is Doctor engineer, and yeah, and accountant type of thing, which I, and my parents actually had been really supportive and just like, do what you want to do. I, I had at one point, I wanted to do like, social studies and become a politician, which I realised how much I hate and so glad, didn't take that wanted to do. I'm so surprised that, you know, for a Western culture, like Germany, it's like that as well. Felix Gerz  31:37   Totally, totally debt there is there's a lot of pressure going on. Like, I mean, that's just my opinion, I'm pretty sure that this is controversial. And I'm definitely someone who doesn't really fit into the pattern. That's what I am very, I feel provoked, provoked for like to that but um, I agree. Yeah, there's a lot of pressure pressure for achieving things for building up a reputation. And there's a lot of competition thinking, No, I think in Canada, especially where we live right now. It's more like, okay, let's work together. Let's, you know, like, make your passion big, and it's okay. Even if it sounds weird, and it's the same in New Zealand. But I feel like in Germany, it's like, okay, if it's not, if it's not, sort of an official way of doing things, if it's not something that people did in the past, and it's proven that it works. You are your weirdo, you're a little bit different. And, yeah, no, I really feel this way. And I agree, I think that's not where I fit in. And I'm pretty glad your parents are not like that. For you. I'm pretty awesome. Like, I think it's pretty awesome that they support you the way you want to build your future, you know, Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt  32:45   well, they had a lot of doubts, and they were really worried. But it goes That's Felix Gerz  32:48   definitely Yeah, I agree. Same of mine. But, you know, like, we are spoiled, like, I don't know where abouts from Indonesia you from? It sounds like you're not from a very poor background. But um, I've been in Java, for example, as I mentioned earlier, and it's been that's what that was a poorest country after a poll I've ever been to and you know, people there I met people that was actually the project I was most proud of, of my life, I documented a group of a self reminding worker working in a volcano in Java, this mountain in Mount Egypt. Exactly. And I think that was one of the most inspiring things I've ever that changed my life the most because yeah, just really quickly to carry up to 110 kilos on their shoulders on a bamboo basket. Before they after they dismantled it with them next to like 120 degrees solemn sour crater, like inside a crater and then it just balance it out and just get it down to valley and, you know, 700 metres on bare feet. And, you know, they have no insurance, no nothing, and they have no choice. You know, they were, I talk to the guys and they have no choice because they've been doing it for generations, and they're not having the money to leave the country. The policy is corrupt. And yeah, it's really sad, but that's just reality. They're, you know, and yeah, telling that story and realising how, and come back to that what we said earlier, you know, how spoiled we are no restaurant cultures now. And, you know, even the worst case, let's say the worst case would be that working for a restaurant or something like that would be like an absolute luxury case for them something, something they could never even dream of. So and things like that, when you realise them, they humble you down and they bring you back back to the ground, you know, and I think I would actually encourage everyone to have experiences like that where you just really reset your mind and just see okay, hey, the Terex jacket I want to buy tomorrow. It's not like it's absolutely a luxury item. You know, it's something people don't even think of down there and yeah, do you know an hour an hour worth of was obsessed salary like in our daily daily wage for us, it's like a monthly wage for them. So it brings you back to the grind On for sure. And, you know, that's you appreciate where we are. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt  35:03   Well, that's, that's the interesting thing is like, when I grew up, I mean, like, we, I wouldn't say we were poor, but we're like, okay, and my parents are working really hard to stay afloat, right. And so when I got my engineering job, it was like, like a dream come true, I finally have the money to you know, spend or get what I wanted. And, and that's why it was really hard to leave that behind. Because I was like, wow, I really want to go back to like, being broke. But, yeah, that's, that's, it's been an interesting journey so far. So one of one thing that I really like, hearing from your story, or your, the way you put photography, you always say feeling like, you know how, like the emotion behind and I feel like not many people in photography world talking about that. They're more fixated about how good they look, instead of the emotion that that photo really evoke. So I really love how how you bring that up. Tell us a little bit more about your, your take on how photography and emotion kind of interconnected and how it helps you to capture the photo that you're capturing, right now? Felix Gerz  36:32   Um, yeah, sure. I think nowadays, it's really, it's really easy to take a photo without putting any thought and emotion into it. I think you know, you like you live in Lake Louise, you see that every day, people just going through, like, at like, a certain amount of time. And just like take that one photo. I think that's the most, like, emotional. So thing you can you can do and caught while you call yourself a creative, you know. And I think photos, especially now, when we have an overflow of photos in on Instagram, where you can edit it like it was, you know, it wasn't possible for like 10 years or five years ago that I think it's way more important that we have motion or photos or that we display or focus on that, because I think that's at some point, making a lot of difference. And yeah, I think how do you how you do get a motion in your photo, it's just if your photo tells a story if your photo reflects something you are dealing with, or the viewer deals with. And I think that is something you can deliver with. Yeah, you can do it in the photo itself through comprehensive composition through like, telling a story with different characters and different emotions or like different facial expressions and people. You can also do it in a caption way, just tell the the actual story in a text. That's what I do a lot. And, yeah, and best thing you can do is combining those two things, you know, so yeah, maybe an example of how I feel like I did accomplish that. Let's go back. Let's go back to the to the example in Java and stick to that for a second. Like, you know, I could have said like it was it's a touristy area by now. Like it's people go there all the time to check it out. And you see a blue flame phentermine. And then yeah, just to go into the crater. But um, I really hated it. I really hated the tour. Like, we didn't book a tour or anything. So we just walked up on the place. And we said, okay, who's local here? Our taxi driver was translating for us. It's like, okay, hey, please. Could you ask one of these guys, you and disability living in this village, if he's working in this in this in this volcano, and maybe he can, maybe he can give us he can just bring us up there. That's all we said. We didn't say okay, we want to have a tour. That's what should be what should be included. We didn't get there with a tour bus or anything. And we really wanted to have the raw and the real experience of the place and the people that live and act in it. And yeah, and it actually happened. So I'll check with you, I was able to communicate with them. One of the guys that works there, his name was Vito, and yeah, he took us up there. And I think that was the first the first step and bringing, and just really considering emotional photo because we weren't there on like on our own, or like with like a big company or anything. We were really there because we wanted to experience the place. How the local student how it actually really is because tourism very, very often just blurs places and perspective. And I think that was the first step. So he took us up here he told us things that no what no tour guy would ever tell us. You know, he told us how people died in the volcano he told us how about all his any injuries he had while working there, he told us about the competition with within the workers and the pressure within the inter inter Yeah, the pressure within the people that work there is and he was actually also able to, you know, we rocked in up into place and all the tourists were gone at some point. We because we totally took took a different time to go to go there from the beginning of from the beginning. So we were really seeing the people that acting in it and like how they actually are because of when they're tourists around, they're different. You know, they're like, you know, they try to sell them things and take photos with them. But when they're all gone, they tried to focus on the work, because that's what I had to get the money as well. Right. And, yeah, I think having that approach gave us the opportunity to see the place and the people in an authentic way. And having this local showing us around, there was a perfect door opener, because he couldn't, he obviously knew every person and he was able to, you know, I had questions, for example, about the place and about the person I was I was photographing, because I wanted to tell the story in an emotional way again. And so he was able to give us information about that person and to talk to him and introduce us and really, like break the ice between that strange like between us with who was stranger to each other, you know, I think the approach definitely determines this the emotion you can you like the amount of emotion you can deliver in a photo as well. And it's not like, oh, yeah, just walk up in a place and see how it goes. But it's actually having a more intention into the story behind it and try to make an make making make an effort to experience that, that place in its real state, I guess. I don't know if that makes sense. Yeah, no, for sure. Oh, yeah. And then And then, you know, I was able to tell the story. I was a person with a photo that day, you know, and even the shooting process was like, a lot more confident, confident, comfortable, because, again, we had that person that was connecting us to the workers. And also at the end of it, I just had more info. I had more info about the place, I have more info about the person's back when I was shooting. And because we had that local app up there I was that veto that guy. I was able to interview him later on, you know, and ask him like more questions. And, yeah, again, get a real impression. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt  42:03   That's awesome. Yeah, that's, that's really cool. Like, really authentic? I mean, you know, not a lot of people can do that. I mean, I was actually, I was born in Java. So I know that, for sure. Yeah. I mean, it's not, you know, it's a big social difference there from, you know, people that really, really comfortable and rich to people that really, you know, can't totally make, or put the food in front of their house, even though it's only, I mean, for us probably like $1, yeah, probably less than $1 a day to cost to put in front of their family. So it's crazy. But it's quite interesting that you take that approach, because a lot of people are and including myself, because I was born there. And people. And my parents are like, be careful. Be careful, like, you know, like, because there's so many people trying to take advantage of you're obviously on a heart economy, you always hear me that. It's, yeah, we're what what were the thought of you kind of doing that? Weren't you like worried that you get ripped off? Or you get, you know, taken advantage of? Felix Gerz  43:17   Yeah, totally. I have to be honest with you, like I got ripped up a lot ripped off a lot. In the beginning, when I was in New Zealand, you know, I was a I was 18 years old, I just turned 19 or something. And, you know, I didn't know anything about life. And obviously, people take advantage of that and take advantage of you. But you know, the more that happens, the more you learn a bit. And then the more you develop a resistance and a feeling where you're like, okay, something's wrong here. And I think until I got to just this situation in Java, I've been learning and like reevaluating a lot in that case, but yeah, obviously, it's a different culture. It's a it's not a Western, western country. So yeah, obviously, there was a risk, but I think I was absolutely willing to take that risk and to be able to tell to tell the actual story. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt  44:05   That's awesome. Yeah, it's it's definitely, it's definitely take a lot of courage, especially with you know, when you have that much gear that costs so much, right, it's, it's always Yeah, Felix Gerz  44:16   it's true. It's true. I was actually minimalizing my demo gear, I brought up this trip because I was a little sketchy. But, um, you know, I, that's something I felt during my entire travels through, like, I've been to a lot of countries, you know, and I think especially from where you're from, where I'm from back in Germany, in Europe, and also in Canada, you get told, hey, the world is dangerous, you know, everyone in Germany this obviously, really general generalised and stereotypical, stereotypical now, but um, everyone who don't know can be dangerous, so be very cautious, you know, and ideally, not have any contact with them. That's how at least how I felt. And then you go into the world, you know, and as long as you have You know, obviously, you'd have to go into the world with a common sense. You know, there are places in South Africa, we shouldn't be after 10pm In the evening. But generally speaking, if you have a bit of a common sense, I think, and if you have, if you have a smile on your face, and you have, if you're a genuine, genuine person, and you approach people in that way, then you will be surprised how safe and how genuine and Hona friendly the world is, and how a lot of stereotypical things you thought about this world are actually wrong and how nice people are. I cannot tell you a single situation through my, in my Asia trip, where people wanted to harm me. You know, like, obviously, if you are in the streets in Nepal, and the main streets and the touristy areas, and you're running around with the 5g for up over your head, of course, people will be, you know, people see them, they're like, Okay, let's, let's rip the scope. But if you're, if you're a normal person, if you don't do things like that, and if you talk to the person, you know, and you'll be surprised, you'll be surprised how open they are to share their own story, how I got invited to people's houses, you know, I'm a white person, you know, over there, it's different. And they sometimes didn't even see a white person yet. But they just invited me to their house, I got invited once to wedding party on the spot, you know, and I was the firt, the one, the one that was my Kiwi friend, we were just totally confused about what's happening. And I never saw a white person. And we were the first people that saw, you know, in a very, very remote village and Java. And then they had this one day of the year where they had two weddings. And I think they celebrated most birthdays of everyone who lived in the village because they were otherwise they were still pretty quick. Just do it once a day, once a year for everyone, you know. And then they sat us down there in the smart key in this tent. And we were supposed to be the first ones eating before even the bride or the groom, or anyone you know. So basically, you just have to imagine 250 People sitting on their chairs, looking at two white people, me and my friend, Caleb. And we're supposed to, like eat something there. And everyone was watching us. And we're like, Oh, my goodness, this is not good. I we were not feeling confident. You know, and for them, you know, it's a big deal. Like they had meat there was slaughtering like animals. And you know, making sure this was an amazing meal. And then we were the first ones out there big being able to eat. And it was meant that was a life changing experience, like and then also myself, how non generous and like, egocentric will i am? And I also have, like I was about to hit myself in the face for that, you know, because I was like, Man, how can these people not have anything but give you everything they have and still be happy? You know? Yeah, there were crazy things. But it's definitely coming back to. I'm just saying like, the world is less dangerous than you think. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt  47:53   Yeah, no, like, definitely. I think coming back to what you're saying there, there is probably a small percentage of bad things are bad people. But unfortunately, those small percentage is, you know, people are attracted to negative stuff and negative stories. So that's why it looks a lot bigger. But yeah, once when you meet Indonesian people, they're actually very genuine, and they're very welcoming. And they will totally will put their guests in front of themselves. So that's, that's, that's why you get that experience. I'm glad that you get you get a chance to, to, to experience it's a it's a genuine experience. It's hard to get, especially as as a foreigner. So that's, that's good that you get to experience that. So I'm coming off to one hour mark here. I want to ask you a couple more question. And then we can wrap this up. So one question that I want to ask you is, I guess I want to I want to hear one of your most memorable moments in your travel on your photography journey that you that makes you feel like you're on the right track or that makes you feel like this is what you meant to be doing. Felix Gerz  49:24   I think I took it away already by stating that story off the cell for my new work as a job. I think that was a really life changing thing. But on the other hand you know, I tried to avoid your question a little bit now, but I'm saying I think that the confirmation that what I'm doing is right. And that I'm you know, because I'm doing something that's not common from where I'm from, and it's kind of a little wandering without purpose people would say from where I'm from, is that the response means it's it is the response that I get from other people that is very encouraging. You know, when I share things like the story in Java, or with the silver mining worker, people see, like, you know, I share that with people like, I flew to Canada and on the flight, I shared it with like a teenager, like an 18 year old teenage teenager, you know, and he was like, oh, what should I do with my life? Oh, blah. And he was I saw myself in his situation. And I told him the story. And I showed him my photos. And then he said, you know, what? I think you really want I think you're really walking in your, what did he say? I think you're really walking in your calling. And I was like, what, you know that that was like, in your face, I was really like, whoa, okay. And like, sometimes, you know, when when I show people like stories like that people begin to be reflective about their own life. And they're like, whoa, okay, maybe I should change something in my life when I after I saw this now, and just really getting this response that it changes people, because as you am, I'm so glad you you mentioned that I tried to really put emotion into my into motion shots. You know, when you do that, and it affects people, I think you making an impact. And I think that is one of the most rewarding things I just to talk to you like a good old DP in a debit debit, Whetstone. You know, and you've worked with like Patagonia, every and lots of brands like that. And he says, you know, he finds fulfilment and confirmation in what he's doing. Because he has an impact, he changes people's worldviews, he improves the you know, he, he just leaves the world as a better place. And I think that is getting this feedback is the most encouraging thing you can get. But on the other hand, I believe that you shouldn't rely on feedback and comparison and things like that. And that can be really, really poisonous if you use it, use it in the wrong context. But then on the other hand, I see myself how I'm reacting on how I feel joy in this, you know, and how I can connect it to what my heart is beating for, you know, the outdoors with storytelling. And then combined with the response that I just mentioned from other people, I think that is really confirming for me, that I'm doing the right thing that I'm doing something that I made for, you know, sounds pretty deep. I hope that makes sense. But that's just what I feel about it. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt  52:20   Yeah, no, that's, that's awesome. I think, you know, that that what what he said in that person that you met in the plane is probably one of the best compliment you can you can get, isn't it? Being knowing where you need to be, is probably the hardest thing I think in life. Because like getting to one place is is not necessarily the hardest thing. But knowing where you want to go is I think it's a lot a lot harder, like knowing which path you need to be. Yeah, thanks for sharing that. That's, that's, that's good to hear. And I think you answered that question really? Well. You know, that's, that was one of my intention is to share a little bit more of that. So that's great. Yeah, so a question that I always ask my guests who come into the podcast. If you were to think back through all of your photography, experience and storytelling experience through photography, what is the one thing that you would give as an advice that you know, that you would tell other people who want to start or want to get into photography world? The one advice that you you feel like it's the most important for them to, to get whether or not they're beginner, intermediate, or even advanced? Felix Gerz  53:52   Very good question. Once again, you're doing a great job. I think. I think what I would give as an advice is I give two advices. Can I give two? Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt  54:13   Yeah, sure. Well, you get one. Felix Gerz  54:17   Okay, okay. Okay. So first of all, my advice is ask yourself, why you're doing what you're doing, and why you're loving what you're loving. Because there will be times when you compare yourself and you think your work is not what you're good enough, you're not good enough and things like that. And then it's good to remember why you're doing things in the first place, and that you are having a talent and as soon as it gives you joy, it you know that there's enough reason for you to do it. So ask yourself why you're doing things. And what helped me in my career, or like in my pathway, I guess, to grow a lot was to reach out to people that are where I wanted to be, you know, and I'm doing this right now. I'm doing this current You know, reaching out to I want to be a DP working in Canada eventually. And what am I doing to get there right now, I'm trying to connect with DPS in the area I want to be at, you know, and I'm trying to ask them a lot of questions just to keep on reaching out. And don't care where you are right now. Like, if you're just shooting for shooting your pet in your garden, or if you're doing a big campaign already, for a big company, it doesn't matter. You know, reach out and be proud of what you're doing, no matter where you are, in your path and your photography path. And reach out to people where they are where you want to be. And you will be surprised how open they are to tell you how they got there. And they help how they that how even they're able to know that they're there. They're keen to even help you to get where you want to be. I think that's the two things I would mention. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt  55:53   Awesome. Yeah, that's, that's, that's really powerful stuff right there. I think understanding the why is really important, not only in photography, but in life. So really good advice. There. Be like some thanks a lot for sharing that. And yeah, look, be an amazing conversation had a lot of fun there a lot of fun. Listening to your story. Really awesome episode. And for those people who want to see more of your work and who want to follow your journey and your story, what are some ways they can find you? Felix Gerz  56:31   Totally got a website where I have the one double 0.5% of my life that I think is worth sharing creatively. If you want to have see my shell Look over there. If you want to see more inside, I'm pretty. I'm pretty active on Instagram. And I think, yeah, that would be a way of being in contact with me on more of a daily basis. Yep. Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt  56:54   Awesome. All right, cool. Well, thanks a lot for being here. And yeah, look, we can hunters, hopefully you enjoy that there's a lot of inspiration. And also, like I opening story from what we've heard from Felix, so I'm glad that you listening to this episode, because, you know, as a traveller, it's, it's, it's not always the easiest, it's not always smooth sailing. And it's very true, what he said, when you look at some of the stuff that we produce that we create, it can it can bring a perception that we have it all that life is easy that we enjoy everything, but I must say that every everything that we come to comes with the struggle, every achievement that we get, you know, we we just like you we just like everyone else, we're just using. And yeah, and when when we come to these places, it's because we have that struggle to get there. So doesn't matter where you are like Felix says, you know, don't don't, don't get discouraged to where you are, but just look up, look up and see where you can go and look back where and how far you look back and see how far you've gone. So yeah, thank you very much for tuning in. And if you haven't subscribed yet, be sure to subscribe, but leave a comment and hit the like so that we know that this is the type of things that we'd like that you'd like to hear. But thank you very much for sparing your time Felix. I know you're busy on your adventures. You're out there making me jealous. Felix Gerz  58:38   I spent I appreciate you having me. Thanks so much. Yeah, Stanley Aryanto - The Wicked Hunt  58:41   all right. Fantastic, man. All right. Well, thank you very much we can hunters and until she I'll see you on. Until next episode.  

Sermons - Harvest Church  |  Arroyo Grande

0 (1s): Well, good morning. Harvest Church family. How is everybody doing? Good to have some folks in the house this morning and hello to everyone who's watching around campus and at home this morning, if you're able to, why don't you stand with me as we begin this morning, if you're at home, find some worshiping space, Let's just invite the Lord. The Lord's presence this morning. Let's go before him in prayer. God, we just look to you as only as you are our source for the well that never runs dry. So we drink from the well this morning, 1 (45s): Deeply, 0 (47s): God, we pray that you would refreshes renew us, strengthen us, protect us, give us, give us provision Each day for those mercies that are needed. And so we just pray that you would pour out your spirit on your sons and daughters today, as we gather to worship on this campus and all around this County, 40 even others watching all over the world, that tune in it's amazing. We just are so grateful that we get to come and to worship you to spend time in your presence together. 0 (1m 29s): So would you put things giving in our hearts and a song on our lips today? Hang on. Are you in worship today in Jesus name? 1 (1m 38s): 0 (7m 40s): Let's just bring us some thanks and praise this morning and you just want to speak it out of a choir of res. Now we just thank you for your faith in your first . I want to teach you a new song this morning. It's being confident in God's faithfulness 1 (8m 14s): 0 (20m 15s): And you know, there's no pants so deep or dark that your love can't find us. Would you remind us more that we're never alone. You are always with us pray for anyone this morning, that is feeling that sense of loneliness. How would you just scoop them up just in your loving arms, your loving presence, just in such a tangible way that they would sense or how near that you are. You're aware of every circumstance, every care, every concern way on our heart and mind as you know, every pain in our bodies, you know, the very number of the hairs on our head. So what other details would you not know? So remind us again, again, we forget that you never forget us sick, grateful for your presence and how you need us. 0 (21m 9s): We honor you to Jesus, but Church said, Hey man, amen. What does it be a great time to greet your neighbor? If you feel safe doing so say hi to somebody, you can always do an elbow bump or away, but to stay safe, we'll be back in just a few moments with some announcements. 2 (21m 39s): All right, good morning. Church so glad to see you all. Hey, my name is Jeremy. I have to write that on my list. I forget to forget to say my name. My name is Jeremy. I'm the, I'm the youth and family pastor here. So glad you're here. If you're joining with us here in person, just glad to see you all. And if you're joined online so glad that you're, you're, you're taking part in that way. I have a quick story. Quick story. So years ago I used to work at a outdoor shop down in Santa Barbara, and I'm feeling out all the gear and checking out. I grew to really enjoy this, this company, Ark, Terex. I love their jackets. And one day I was working in the shop and, you know, testing out their jackets and I, and I was wearing one around the shop. 2 (22m 24s): I was like, Ooh, I really like the way this jacket feels. It's a good jacket. And a guy came in and he starts asking me, Hey, you looking for a jacket? I'm like, Oh, well these are great jackets. And I tell him why. And he's like, Oh yeah, yeah, I think I'm a large, I'm like, okay, let's go. Let's go to the rack. So we go to the rack and I look small, medium, extra large. And I realize I'm wearing the only large and the tags are stuff from the back. And I, and I, and I, and I was like, well, let me look in the back and see if we have a jacket back there. So I quickly go back there, pull off the large and bring it out to them. And, and I think I threw on an extra large just to make it look like I saw the CA jacket, but he bought the jacket. He loved the jacket. And I, and while I was working there as sales for Arc'teryx actually went up because a lot of customers came in and I convinced them to, you know, pay a little extra money for this jacket. 2 (23m 12s): This is a 15 year old jacket. So they last, and, and the reason I saying that is because I was able to like really to help you about this product, because I believed in it. I really believed in it. And so, because I believe in it, I kind of pass it on. Well, family Church, this is family Church. And I really believe in family. Church I, I love that students are in here with your parents. I grew up at a church where we go to Sunday school together, and then we'd go to our, our different scheduled classes. But we had a church. I grew up worshiping with my father, and it's so important for young kids to see their parents worshiped. So I really believe in that. 2 (23m 53s): So I'm so glad that we have this church that believes the family needs to be together and today's community and Sundays to get to partake in that together. And yes, kids, they can make a little more money, 3 (24m 3s): Boys, all that stuff. And that's okay. That's okay. So it's, 2 (24m 6s): It's all part of just that family we're here together. So I'm glad that you guys are joining us a family Sunday, and we have donuts. You have donuts the breezeway. So it's a good Sunday. Hey, we sent out the giving statements for 2020 this week. If you did not get yours, send us email info at EG Harvest dot org. And we'll make sure to get you the right giving statement for last year. And lastly, lifeline, baby bottle drive it. They're accepting their bottles back this Sunday. And I believe next Monday as well. So if you've been filling up your bottles with change or dollar bills or checks, whatever, they'll, they'll, they'll be here to grab them. 2 (24m 46s): So thanks so much. I'm glad to glad to partake 3 (24m 51s): Family. Send it with y'all. There we go. Grab my coffee. Do you guys get your communion elements already? It's communion. Sunday. We got elements. Yeah, it's good stuff. So there's a, we've got these little crazy little COVID safe communion elements. So make sure you grab that. If you haven't, if you haven't received it and you would like to receive a good and raise your hand and we'll make sure we get them to you, Ron, where you want to pass those things out. As we get ready to go, Hey, we're in second Thessalonians chapter three today, we're going to get through a whole five verses in second Thessalonians, chapter three, we're talking about prayer. Why should I pray. 3 (25m 32s): It's not Why should I pray. So that little girl was in the garden and she was trying to pray, but she didn't really know what to pray. So she just started in kind of this peripheral way, got to go in through her ABCs and her grandmother listed. And she's like, what are you doing? And she said, well, I want to pray, but I don't really know what to pray you ever been there. And so I decided I would just pray my ABCs and God knows me so well that he'll take the ABCs and just make them whatever prayer I need for my life. And so that was her prayer for the, for the day. Isn't that cute? 3 (26m 12s): I think, I think that childlike faith is something that God responds to. I think sometimes we feel like we've got to have all the right words and we've got to say all the right things in order for God to hear us. But the reality is this, that God already knows what we need before we ask. And as we just humbly come before him with broken and contrite hearts and with hearts, not just that are broken a contract, but hearts that are filled with gratitude, with appreciation. And we just come before the Lord and offer up a sacrifice of praise and prayer. 3 (26m 55s): God hears us and he responds. And so with that, let's go ahead and stand up and pray for this service. And, and We'll just, we'll just take a moment. I know that we're online and, and some things won't be heard as we pray in the crowd. So I'm going to just invite you guys to pray for a moment. And just for just a moment, just pray something that's on your heart and just preparation for this message. So whatever venue you're in, if you're at home or if you're in the loft, or if you're on the patio, wherever you might want to might find yourself, let's just, let's just take a moment. 3 (27m 37s): I know this is awkward for people at home who can't hear, but just trust that the Lord's doing something as we pray. So I'm going to pray and then I'm going to just open it up. And then as you feel led, just, just pray for the day, pray for the service, pray for whatever's on your heart. And we're not going to take a long time to do this, but we're just going to take some time. So Lord, we just want to pray. We, we give our hearts to you this morning and in our prayers, God, we declare that our time is yours this morning. And, and we want to be tender before you and available before you. So God help us to learn something today and be able to apply what we've learned in Jesus name. 3 (28m 20s): Thank you, Lord. 1 (28m 29s): I thank you that you bless us, that you keep us providing your love for us father. Even now God, I know the father of the lines in the sand had been drawn. Father. I just thank you, God, that we can come to you and that we can ask you in all things and that God is faithful to deliver us. God has already begun to answer affairs, God, that you are faithful students and God, I just thank you that God, most of all, that you love. 1 (29m 18s): And if you have a purpose for our lives and then our lives are to serve you in Jesus name. I thank you, Lord, Lord Jesus. I just want to ask him to teach us all to put our fears and our cares at the foot of the cross. Lord, let you worry about our situations. So frees us up are unsafe because we know that you love so much. 1 (31m 31s): 3 (33m 30s): Thank you Lord, for the opportunity to pray and offer up our hearts and minds and lives to you in this sweet way. Jesus, I pray that God would just childlike faith, that we would pray always all the days of our lives. Lord God, that we would at be expectant, expecting something as we pray because of the God of the universe is listening and we can actually have great expectations from a great God. 3 (34m 13s): And so Lord, we pray that you would raise, raise our expectations. As we pray to you, you have all resource, you have all power, have all authority. You are King of Kings and Lord of Lords. And so we can have great expectation because we serve a great God. So I pray God that in our dark moments, when we feel like we don't want to pray that we would pray anyway, God, when we don't feel like we've got anything to say that we would just say, what's in our hearts, Lord God, that we would rest in you, that you know, all things you know our needs before we declare them. 3 (34m 55s): And, and you are faithful. Lord. Hallelujah. Thank you, Lord. Thank you, Lord. We bless you all over this campus and wherever we're watching online, Lord, we just, we want to bless you Lord. And so I pray that you Lord God would touch each person gathered wherever they're gathered Lord, and you'd have your way and you're accomplish your will today in Jesus name. Amen. Amen. You can be seated. You can be seated. Why should I pray. Well, I think it's obvious why we should pray. 3 (35m 36s): I mean, as we just take a moment to pray, 4 (35m 42s): We hear the cry of people's hearts, the gratitude that people expressed, and it's a sweet thing. And if it's sweet to our ears as brothers and sisters in Christ, as we listened to our Christian family, praise it as if it sweet you our ears, how much more sweet to God's ears. God has never worn out by our prayers. He's just not, he he's got a heart that longs to hear from his kids and we have this great opportunity to, to communicate our hearts to him. Let's jump into second Thessalonians, chapter three and 3 (36m 21s): Paul, 4 (36m 22s): The first word in chapter one or chapter three verse one is finally Paul uses that, that terminology, that word, because the main issue of the letters already been dealt with the issue concerning the confusion regarding the second coming of Christ. So he says, finally, not that not 3 (36m 40s): Because he's done, but because 4 (36m 43s): The main issue that he wrote the letter for has been accomplished. We've been talking about last couple of weeks, the second coming of Christ. We've been talking about the rapture, the second coming. And so Paul saying finally, finally, because all of that's already been handled, your brothers and sisters verse one says, we ask you to pray for us. 3 (37m 3s): Okay? 4 (37m 3s): Many he's got some specific things that he wants the church to pray for him. And I think there are timeless things that we can always be praying for. Finally, dear brothers and sisters, we ask you to pray for us, pray that the Lord's message will spread rapidly and be honored wherever it goes. That the message is literally the terminology means that the message was speed ahead, that it would move forward and that it would have the effect that it's meant to have. That the people who hear the message would hear it 3 (37m 34s): And believe it, they would hear it, receive it and believe it. And so that's what Paul's prayer. 4 (37m 40s): There is four. So maybe we've got, you got somebody in your life that you've been praying for for a long time. Diane prayed that our unsaved loved ones would come to know Jesus. I know she's been praying that prayer for a years, for people in her family for decades probably. 3 (37m 55s): And that's it that all 4 (37m 60s): And with the early Church, as people got a passion in their heart for the loss, those who don't know Jesus yet, when we say the loss, we mean those who don't know Jesus, 3 (38m 11s): Jesus 4 (38m 12s): Has put something in our hearts to pray, to participate in that salvation work by praying for them. So Paul says pray that the Lord's message will spread rapidly and be honored wherever it goes just as when it came to you. So that can be your prayer. So this Church received the gospel message that Paul proclaimed, and now he's asking them to remember the message and pray that as it's proclaimed further, that it's believed the way it was believed when they believed it. You remember when you first believed the message, the gospel. I remember, I remember when it finally hit home with my soul. I mean, like I had heard it before. There's one thing to hear it, right? It's, there's another thing to hear it. 4 (38m 54s): Like when it is driven home to your soul and all of a sudden you just know that that message is true and, and you receive it. I, I remember just being 3 (39m 5s): Broken, crying with 4 (39m 10s): W a couple of things were, a lot of things were going on in my soul. I was a junior higher and we were at a camp. And I remember when I was broken with the gospel, I was broken with the reality that God loves me because I certainly didn't deserve it and don't deserve it, Thomas. So just so grateful, but also at the reality of, of my family and how much my family needed Jesus. And I wanted them to understand him the way that I was beginning to understand him as a, as a young person, I was beginning to understand that the gravity of his love and the gravity of a sacrifice for me, that I might come to faith in him. And that's what Paul Paul had this same experience. He had the same experience. He was a very devout religious person, but he hadn't heard the message. 4 (39m 51s): He had probably heard the message, but he didn't hear it. He didn't hear it until God revealed it to him and just this profound way. 3 (39m 59s): And then he heard it and then 4 (40m 1s): It wrecked his life for good. I mean, like all of his previous pursuits were done with, he was done pursuing the things that he had been pursuing. And then now he was pursuing Jesus. This is, this is the heart that we have the capacity. This is the way that we can pray for people in our lives. Paul Paul is addressing, I love Paul's tenderness with all of the stuff that he was exposed to and experienced as an apostle. It would have been easy for Paul to become either proud because of his great 3 (40m 37s): Backed or Harvest 4 (40m 43s): Partly because of all of his persecution, He could have become anything, but what he did become. And he became just this, this tender man, it seemed like the more that the difficulties in Paul's life, the more tender he became. 3 (41m 1s): And I, I think 4 (41m 4s): That can be the reality for our lives as well. We can become more tender as we experience persecution, difficulty challenge. And then out of that tenderness, we can learn to pray differently. And so we're not just praying out of our heads out of our understanding, but we're praying out of our souls from our hearts, praying that that God would work in a new and a profound way. So Paul is addressing the family of God with tenderness and gentleness, inviting them to pray for him. And then for the fruitfulness of the gospel, do you ever have a hard time praying? I do. At times I find like, I, I sometimes I just don't know what to say. 4 (41m 44s): There are times when it's difficult to pray, 3 (41m 48s): But 4 (41m 49s): In those moments, I feel like God's wanting to do something that is beyond our expectations. There's something profound that happens when we press through and pray. Even when we don't feel like it, we battle not against flesh and blood enemies, but we have this spiritual battle that we're a part of an Inn. And the enemy wants to keep us from praying. He wants to keep us from pressing in, but when we press in, when we press in and we'll be praying in spite of how we feel, God just begins to do something. First of all, our mind changes our attitudes change. Our heart changes. Everything begins to transform when we invite God into it, because that's essentially what we're doing. 4 (42m 30s): Prayer is just inviting God into our lives, into our circumstance. We're saying, God, I invite you. Please come into my life. I'm in my, into my temptation, into my fear, into my anxiety, my doubt, my relationship, whatever it may be, Lord, come into it. That's what prayer does. It invites God. And when we pray in any way, when we don't feel like praying, God does wonderful and profound things, supernatural things. I think that's the way he works in our lives. When we're in a bad season, a difficult season where you can be sure that God's just about to do something that will cause us to turn the corner. He's just about to bring something that will encourage us. If we'll just hang in. Often our faith is tested. 4 (43m 12s): Well, what we hang in when we don't feel like hanging in what we pray, when we don't feel like praying, I promise this, that God is faithful and he hears us. And if we'll just hang in there and pray, I remember praying for family members for decades, some family members I'm still praying for, for 3 (43m 31s): Decades like 30, 40 years, 4 (43m 37s): Praying for family members. And we're watching them one by one by one. Sometimes whole families come to faith 3 (43m 45s): And they're still 4 (43m 46s): Some on the outskirts that we're praying in the kingdom. We're praying them in the kingdom. But for a lot of my, my grandparents and aunts and uncles, before they died, they gave their life to Jesus. And we're believing the same thing 3 (44m 1s): For cousins and siblings and all of the above. There are times when it's difficult to pray, pray anyway, watch what the Lord will do. Watch what the Lord will do. There are times when you don't want to pray. I would just 4 (44m 20s): Ask you in those times to ask God for renewed, renewed desire to pray. And I find that when we pray anyway, when we don't feel like praying, God begins to stir us. And we remember the things that we need pray for. There are times 3 (44m 33s): When you feel you're all prayed out. Like Lord, I had been praying for this person for this situation, for this circumstance. I've been praying forever. There's there's a time when it's time just to rest in the Lord and believe that he's heard your prayers. I remember my mother-in-law's had been praying for her parents for years forever. And at one point, the Lord said, it's okay. You don't need to pray anymore. The work's done. And the truth was that both of them gave their lives to Jesus before they died. I'd been praying for them for years. And then the Lord said, it's, it's done. And so she was able to just rest and believe that he had heard her prayers and it was made obvious later on when he saved their lives and added them to the kingdom. 3 (45m 23s): Max Lucado said, our prayers may be awkward. Our attempts may be feeble, but since the power of prayer is in the one who hears it and not in the one who says it, our prayers do make a difference. W we think it's all up to us sometimes. Like, I can't get the words, right? Lord, just pray your hearts and watch what the Lord he knows what's going on in your soul and in your lives and your circumstances. First, John, five, 14 and son on the slides. But it says this, and this is the confidence that we have toward him. That if we ask anything, according to his, will he hears, we ask anything according to his will he hears us. 3 (46m 4s): I prayed plenty of things. It didn't come to pass. And I just had to realize that it wasn't his timing, or it wasn't as well. And, and, and I have to be okay with that. And, and the reality is, is that when, when, when you want to please the Lord, you don't want anything. That's not his will anyway. You just don't want it because it's just going to Jack you up. It's going to confuse you or cause your heart to go in the wrong direction. It's going to it's it's, it's just not what God has for you. And when, when we are submitted to the Lordship of Jesus Christ, that's okay. That w cause he knows all things. We, we don't understand the, the, the future and what he's got in store for us clearly. So when he says no, or he doesn't answer, we just have to rest in that and be okay with that. 3 (46m 49s): Why should I pray. Number one, our prayers are heard by God. Our prayers are heard by God amazing. He's the King of all Kings. He's the Lord of all Lord. He's the president of all presidents, right? He's above all things. He's before all things he's created all things. He sustains all things. He is, he is in all things. Our prayers are heard by the King of Kings. Our prayers are heard by God. So let's do this. I want you to say this, make it personal. Say my prayers are heard by God. Yeah. My prayers are heard by God, Psalm one 16 one, and two says this. 3 (47m 34s): I love the Lord because he hears my voice and my prayer for mercy because he bends down to listen. I will pray as long as I have breath that just a beautiful picture. God bending down to listen. My daughter's praying. What is she saying? My son he's praying. What is, what is his need? He bends down. I love the Lord because he hears my voice and my prayer for mercy because he bends down to listen. I will pray as long as I have breath. I think that's God's design is that we'd pray. 3 (48m 17s): As long as we have breath that we pray without ceasing, that we would never stop praying. And that as we pray, we have confidence knowing that God hears us, that he hears us. What's what's on your prayer list. It's new year new opportunity for making a prayer list. What, so what is on your prayer list and then who, who is on your prayer list and what should we, we pray about? What should we pray about? So we have a new president. We can pray for our new president. It's our responsibility to pray for a new president. 3 (48m 57s): Amen. I just had that realization a couple of days ago, and I been praying for our leaders for a long time. But as I was thinking about president byte and I thought I got to pray for that guy. I'm just going to pray for him. Pray for him. Amen. Pray for him. And then as a church we've got work to do as a church. So we can pray for our effectiveness. Like Paul said, Hey, pray for the gospel. That it would speed ahead that it would have impact in that it would be believed even as we have believed it, we have a divided nation. We need to be praying for unity in our nation. Only God knows what that looks like. You know, people who need Jesus, we need to pray for their salvation. 3 (49m 40s): You know, people who are sick, we need to be praying for them. There's never a shortage of things to be praying for the best kind of prayer, the best kind of prayer. The very best kind of prayer is when we're not asking for anything, it's adoration prayers. And we're just in the presence of the Lord. Not because we need anything, but because we adore him, it's a strange concept for some, but we're called to this relationship whereby we call God our ABA father. And so we are in this suite and this is tough to grasp for those of us who didn't have a great relationship with our earthly fathers. 3 (50m 23s): It takes some work for us to get there because we feel awkward about this ABA father. But yeah, 4 (50m 32s): And we begin to get the intimacy and understand the intimacy. And for some of us, that's difficult for us to understand the intimacy with God because we've been burned by relationships. We don't understand intimacy when it comes to God, it's been that terminology. You've been perverted, been perverted in our hearts and minds. And so we don't understand intimacy. We're uncomfortable with it. But if we understand that the relationship that Jesus had with his father, it's a relationship that we too can have with our father. He often would get away to be with the father and he would just be in connection with the father being infused with the power of the father and with the love of the father. He would just be with the father. 4 (51m 13s): And so the best kind of prayer, 3 (51m 15s): Not prayers for a things, but prayer 4 (51m 17s): That are filled with gratitude, love, prayers, prayers of adoration. 3 (51m 24s): It takes them some practice 4 (51m 28s): If you will, to pray like that because it's so contrary to our typical prayers, Lord, we typically pray, Lord, help me with this heal. This person, save this person. And we have a shopping list and the God's okay with all of that stuff. 3 (51m 46s): He's 4 (51m 46s): Okay with that shopping list. But he also longs for us 3 (51m 51s): To just have intimate connection with him. It's like just hanging out with your best friend and just kind of 4 (51m 59s): Having conversation. And you're not asking that person for anything, but you're just enjoying your laughing together. Just enjoying time together. It's just, there's, there's a connection that takes place. And it, it moves God off of the to-do list and into the enjoy less like I'm just going to enjoy some time with God. He's not, he's not just on my to-do list where I'm just checking a box, but I'm enjoying him for some reason. I, I I've got this new phone, right 3 (52m 23s): Appreciation. So why 4 (52m 29s): Should we pray? Well, God hears us. We 3 (52m 30s): Need to pray. We need to pray praise, prayers and thing, prayers, both praise, 4 (52m 37s): Adoration, thankfulness, but then also thing price as well. And Paul asked us to pray for a few things. Paul asked the church that they would pray for him 3 (52m 46s): Thing prayers for the 4 (52m 48s): Fruitfulness of the gospel message that the gospel message was spread rapidly and believed. And then what else did Paul asked for first to pray to that? We will be rescued from wicked and evil people for not everyone is a believer 3 (53m 2s): Pray 4 (53m 3s): Too, that we will be rescued from wicked and evil people for not everyone is a believer. So Paul saying, Hey, not everybody agrees with us. And so we need to pray for those people who might try to persecute us pray that we are rescued from wicked and evil people. Prayer works. Our prayers are heard by God. Number one, number two, our prayers invite God's protection. And as we opened the service this morning, at least in the sanctuary, we heard prayers of protection, inviting God's protection. We say, God protect us. Guide us, direct us, help us. Paul was rescued many times throughout his life, many, many times. 4 (53m 44s): And I think it's because of prayer because everywhere Paul went, Paul was asking for prayer. He was always asking people to pray in acts 27. He was shipwrecked. Remember that Paul was shipwrecked. And what did he do? He's swam to safety that the captain of the boats wanted to kill all the prisoners because Paul was a prisoner, but they instead just let him swim to shore. Paul swam to safety. And while he was there, he was cold on the shore there. And while he was cold, he decided to build a fire. So he's gathering sticks and a snake latches onto him. Remember that acts chapter 28 was the snake lashes onto him. It's a Viper, it's a deadly poisonous snake. And what does, what does Paul do? 4 (54m 25s): He shakes it off right shake. And everybody's waiting for him to swell up and die, right? And when he didn't swell up and die, what did they think then? Oh, he must be a God. Paul is a God. And so God used that to open up doors for him to minister to others. And then instead of dying, like you should have died when a snake bit, a hold of him got ahold of him instead of dying, God saved his life so that he could pray for healing and pray for, I pray for grace and mercy upon others, there was just this powerful, profound thing that God wanted to do in Paul's life. And so he kept him safe in prison for his faith in Rome, his enemies wanted him executed. 4 (55m 6s): They said, let's just kill him. But Paul lived to see another day. Why? Because God protected him. He lived to see many more days and he continued to preach the gospel. Paul always asked for prayer. What was the last time you asked her prayer? I think it's okay for us to ask for prayer. I think it's even, God's designed as part of the fellowship that we enjoy as, as brothers and sisters in Christ, that we would be available to one another. Pray. This is what Paul prayed and asked people to pray for. In Romans 1530, dear brothers and sisters. I urge you in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ to join in my struggle by praying, join in my struggle by praying to God for me do this because of your love for me given to you by the Holy spirit. 4 (55m 52s): So Paul is saying, Hey, I'm in the midst of a battle. I'm proclaiming the gospel. I'm spreading the gospel, the love of Christ to everywhere I go. Would you join in my struggle? You know, we often wonder what can we do for missionaries who are abroad and what can we do for people who are serving on the front lines of ministry? We can join in the struggle by praying for them. So we have missionaries really scattered all throughout the world. We've got opportunity to join in the struggle. Believe me, there's struggle is we have people ministry in the middle East and, and all over in Southern CA in, in, in Mexico. And in Greenland, we've got people ministering all over the place and we have an opportunity to join in the struggle. So Paul said, join, please join me in my struggle by praying for me, Ephesians six 19, he says, and pray for me to ask God to give me the right words, ask God to give me the right words. 4 (56m 43s): So I can boldly explain God's mysterious plan. That the good news is for the Jews and Gentiles alike. So as he was proclaiming, Paul writes United his need for the right words. And he knew that if people pray that God would give him the right words, do you think Paul believed in prayer? Absolutely. This is not some religious exercise for Paul. This is out of desperation that Paul is asking people to pray. He's saying, join me in my struggle. I pray that God gives me the right words. Ephesians six 20 says, I'm in chains now still preaching this message just God's ambassador. So pray that I will keep on speaking boldly. He's in chains. What's the temptation that he would with her, that he would just give up. 4 (57m 27s): You can't tell me that wasn't a temptation. He's being beaten, imprisoned. He's been shipwrecked. He's been snake bitten. He's been, he's kind of, you might be worn down at different times in his life. So he's praying, praying that he would continue to speak boldly. We can join in the struggle and pray for God to get people the right words and that that those people would continue to speak. And then, then we could pray for ourselves. God, would you give me the right words as I'm encountering people at work or people at school, would you give me the right word so that I might speak boldly for you? We can have all of the right eloquent words, but if, if God's not speaking through us, the right eloquent words won't have the impact, but simplistic words, simple words of love. 4 (58m 18s): And grace will communicate deeply to people's souls because we pray, Lord, I don't know what to say to this person, but you do. Would you help me? God will speak through us Philippians one 19 for, I know that you, that as you pray for me and the spirit of Jesus Christ helps me. This will lead to my deliverance. Pray as you pray for me. And the spirit of Jesus Christ helps me. This will lead to my deliverance. Paul was often asking people to pray for him. Oswald chambers said this. We have to pray with our eyes on God, not on the difficulties that will raise our level of faith right there. 4 (59m 3s): If we just decide, I'm praying with my eyes on God, not on the difficulties. And we need to pray with a new level of faith, believing that God is abled capable, strong, our prayers invite God's protection. Have you asked 3 (59m 22s): People to pray for you lately? And have you been faithful to pray for others? Paul asked others to pray for him and he prayed for others. And this gave him confidence in the faithfulness of God. Number one, our prayers are heard by God. Number two, our prayers invite God's protection. And number three, our prayers give us confidence in God's faithfulness. Our prayers give us confidence in God's faithfulness. Paul wrote this in verse three, he said, but the Lord is faithful. He will strengthen you and guard you from the evil one. 4 (59m 57s): And the Lord is faithful and he will strengthen you and guard you from the evil one. Paul saying this with confidence and the Lord is faithful. He will strengthen you and guard you from the evil one. You can't know that this is true without a prayer life. You can't have this. You can't speak this kind of statement with confidence, unless you have a prayer life. You can't know of the faithfulness of God without a prayer life. You just can't know of the faithfulness of God, unless you are praying and praying regularly 3 (1h 0m 24s): Early and making it part of your regular, your time with the Lord praying you can't know of the faithfulness of God without a prayer life. Paul was built up at a fight in his most Holy faith because of his prayer life that gave him faith in God's faithfulness. 4 (1h 0m 42s): And he was able to proclaim that truth 3 (1h 0m 44s): Because we don't live our Christianity in a bubble where we're meant to actually as iron sharpens iron. So one man sharpens another. So one woman sharpens another. So we have this responsibility to strengthen one another. 4 (1h 0m 55s): We can't speak with confidence and with faith encouragement about God's faithfulness, unless we have experienced it. And we need to be able to speak that to people's lives. 3 (1h 1m 7s): God is faithful. You can't have confidence that God will strengthen and guard you unless you are praying. 4 (1h 1m 15s): There's there's confidence that comes and it's not an arrogance. It's just a knowing. It's just a knowing God's God's faithful. He will strengthen, strengthen and guard us. God is faithful. 3 (1h 1m 29s): We'll take care of us. Verse four. And we are confident in the Lord that you are doing, and we'll continue to do the things we commanded you. So Paul spoke some commands to them, some things that they should be doing, and he had confidence that they were doing those things. And then verse five, our last verse this morning, he says, may the Lord leads your hearts into full understanding and expression of the love of God and the patient endurance that comes from Christ? Not just a, a great prayer. I want that to be my prayer. Lord, may you lead me my heart into a full understanding and expression of the love of God and the patient endurance that comes from Christ. 3 (1h 2m 25s): As we read verses like this, and we make them personal, they begin to speak to us. Let's do that together. May the Lord 1 (1h 2m 33s): Lead me? 3 (1h 2m 35s): Lord, may you lead me so that my heart is it's full of understanding God that I, that I might be the expression of the love of God with all patient endurance that comes from Christ 1 (1h 2m 56s): Why 3 (1h 2m 56s): Oh, I should we pray? I pray. We pray because it takes us to a new level spiritually. Some of us have been dry spiritually. And if you don't know how to pray, I would just encourage you to pray the scripture, just open up the scripture and just begin to pray the scripture, just like we did there. I'll read it again. May the Lord leads your hearts into a full understanding and expression of the love of God and the patient Durance that comes from Christ is the verse. Let's put the verse up there. Let's just practice. And you guys all read that and see that. And it kind of in your own mind, in your own heart, just make that a personal prayer to the Lord. Pray that verse. I'm just going to do it out loud again. 3 (1h 3m 36s): No, you do it. Don't listen for me. I'm not going to do it out loud. Actually. I knew as soon as I said, I was going to do it out loud, you guys wouldn't listen, do it, do what you're supposed to do. Do you, do you do it? I'll do it quietly as well. That, that verse that we may just gloss over it just, we just got some roots to it in our soul right now. It's like personal. There's something person. When we pray the scripture, it takes on new life. 3 (1h 4m 17s): It's like, it just, it takes root in our lives. And now we get almost just without even looking at the verse, recite that prayer. We get almost make that our own prayer. Now, as we move forward throughout the balance of this day, there's something deep that takes place. When we do that, why should we pray? Our prayers are heard by God. Even in that little exercise, God heard that our prayers invite God's protection and our prayers give us confidence in God's faithfulness. 3 (1h 4m 60s): We're going to take communion now. And so, as we transition about our conversation about prayer, we're gonna, we're gonna take communion and remember why it is that we have access to God. 5 (1h 5m 18s): We have access to God because Jesus died on the cross. He took the penalty for, for my sins, my penalty. He took that upon himself and gave me access to God, Mark 1422 through 25. And this is the institution of the Lord's prayer. As they were eating, as they were eating, he took bread and after blessing it broke it and gave it to them and said, take, this is my body. Let's go ahead and take the bread. 5 (1h 6m 7s): Thank you, Lord. Thank you God. For the incarnation, you became man to pay the penalty for man's sin so that we might have forgiveness and eternal life in you. Thank you Lord. For the reality of that sacrifice on that cross calibrate 2000 years ago, thank you that you instituted the Lord's supper and then went to the cross, any took a cup. 5 (1h 6m 49s): And when he had given thanks, he gave it to them and they drank and they all drank of it. And he said to them, this is my blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many truly. I say to you, I will not drink again of the fruit of the vine until that day when I drank it, I knew the kingdom of God. Let's take the cup. Thank you, Lord. Thank you, Lord God. I pray that we wouldn't be refreshed in our souls as we take communion. 5 (1h 7m 30s): And I pray that if there's any sin in us that needs to be confessed, that we would do that. Or I probably should have done that before communion, but we do it. Now we can do it. Now. I pray that the, the, the truth of your grace and your faithfulness, Lord would draw us close to you. For those of us who have been maybe feeling distant from you, or like we haven't been with you lately, Lord, I pray that you would restore our confidence. The fact that you love us and that your grace is sufficient. Thank you, Lord. Your grace is sufficient. Lord. 5 (1h 8m 11s): Thank you, Lord. Pray for those who are listening. Who've never accepted that. Grace. I pray that they would accept that grace Has given because the Bible says that all have sinned and fall short of God's glorious standard. The Bible says for the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ. 1 (1h 8m 37s): So Jesus died on our behalf and has given us life for those who are 5 (1h 8m 42s): We'll receive it. So Lord, we want to receive it a fresh today. And if you're here and you've never received it, you just simply say, Lord, I receive your sacrificial work on the cross. I receive your grace, your mercy, your love. I give my life to 1 (1h 8m 56s): You. Bible says, 5 (1h 8m 58s): If you confess with your mouth, the Lord Jesus, and you believe in your heart, that God has raised him from the dead. You will be saved. So Lord, we, we believe we confess that we do believe Lord, and we want salvation. We need salvation and we need it by grace. Not because we're good, but because you're here, 1 (1h 9m 14s): Lord, thank you Lord for this time. Thank you for salvation. Thank you for renewed faith. Thank you that you hear our prayers. Lord, thank you that you heard our prayers. We love you Lord in Jesus name, amen. Let's stand and worship together. 1 (1h 9m 47s): 0 (1h 20m 4s): And I just really feel like there's so many who need to receive that message from your hearts this morning, where the enemy is trying to bring discouragements and Remind you of his promises that he works. All things Are morning at the DMC. Pray that those hearts that are hurting today, we just, just evidence of your goodness, this week, evidence of your mercy, following us through our day. Not that David just sense, Lord, that everything is under your control. There's nothing out of your sight. 0 (1h 20m 44s): So would you keep us safe until we gather here together again, one of the salt and light to all the earth, we share the love of Jesus with everyone 1 (1h 20m 53s): That we can make contact with this week, 0 (1h 20m 55s): They would know we're Christians by our love. 1 (1h 20m 57s): 0 (1h 22m 55s): So much for that word. There's anyone this morning, Alexa, if any of those things are just been stirring in your heart and you're like, Oh man, it's like the Lord's talking to me this morning. We to provide prayer 1 (1h 23m 6s): Service today. So don't hesitate to come on forward. 5 (1h 23m 30s): He was gay. It was first person. He was, he was, he was saying, come on to the Lord. And so, yeah, you don't want to go to Doug, but, but he isn't, it's an affirmation and encouragement to go before the Lord and not be afraid. Again, it's a little awkward because not everybody can hear us, but give an opportunity. One more. Anybody else have a word that, that they want to share expectation a prayer or anything. Before we wrap up one more. If we've got time, we've got it. 1 (1h 24m 2s): 5 (1h 24m 11s): So Lord, we love you. And we know that you're working in us, you're speaking to us and, and I pray God that we would be, we would be people with ears to hear Lord God that we wouldn't be afraid. Not given us a spirit. Thank you Lord. So God do what you're going to do in us and with us and through us, we pray. We submit to you 1 (1h 24m 36s): Jesus' name. Amen.

Software Lifecycle Stories
Continuish Ikigai with Krishna Prasad

Software Lifecycle Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 25, 2020 34:53


In this conversation, Krishna Prasad - aka KP - a coach at PM Power Consulting, shares many of his personal experiences with Chitra. Among other things, he talks of: A mechanical engineer, with Masters and PhD in software Mercedes, Tata, Terex, Delphi Own journey of various roles in the Software industry, experiencing and contributing to various aspects of SDLC His origin story: typical middle class family, aspiring kids to be engineers or doctors; though liked the doctor profession, did not want much of biology and defaulted to engineering Wanted to get into sales [and marketing], appeared glamorous, though at heart i was an R&D person Tried sales and did not enjoy it; but realized that even if you are in development, you need to go to customers, to make the customers feel happy Though in automotive, true software started in avionics; i became a true software developer in Aeronautical Development Agency, developing military standard software Joining Daimler, was again forced, that I am happy about now, into software Aha! Moment - developing software from India, that goes into international products We need to get empathy to feel like a driver, difficult for a youngster to just imagine this Always good to think how someone would actually use the software While a lot of knowledge has been built about, say, braking systems, today, the systems have grown complex and need to work with multiple other systems Only the nature of rigour has changed to more agile ways of working Used to get a few thousand pages of document of requirements, we used to take a few months to get back on how it can be implemented Everyone has now realized that we cannot afford to write so much of initial documentation Rigour is still there, with incremental development - nature of development has changed; everything now is ‘continuish’ Systems getting complex, regulatory requirements are also increasing We have to bake in compliance; no longer a bolt-on Feels model based development will have a significant impact and many freshers are not prepared for that Career advice: develop T shaped skills.. With multiple skills being deep and not just one Question to ask yourself: with your T shaped skills, how can you continuously contribute The benefit of lateral movement across different roles in an organization Internalizing the concept of ikigai - balance passion, mission and profession; magic happens when all these intersect Secret for rallying teams around a leader’s vision: People should know that the leaders are making the right choices What worked for him: Have seen a couple of transformation journeys - they were only partly successful; start with high aspiration and expectation; most often - may turn out the aspirations were unrealistic No matter what, this transformation journey is important There cannot be just one end point - it is a journey - with great learning for leaders and teams Prospects in IT: fantastic area to get in; so broad, you can pick up any area and make a positive impact using technology We have to be really aware that when we enter this technology area; there is a half life of skills; this is reducing dramatically There is no ways of getting into technology areas that will keep you ahead for 305 years Constant need for learning - new skills, honing skills, learn something different Now we have unlimited access to resources, to learn every day Robin Sarma - 5 AM club - daily learning; learn anything, every day

Investors & Operators
Ep. 35 Euan Rellie & Charlie Maynard, Co-founders & Senior Managing Directors of BDA Partners

Investors & Operators

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2020 31:30


Euan Rellie is Co-Founder and Senior Managing Director of BDA, based in New York. He is also President of BDA Advisors Inc, the firm's SEC/FINRA registered broker-dealer. Since founding BDA in 1996, he has lived in New York and London, and Singapore, and has worked in China, Taiwan, Korea, Japan, India and across the Middle East. 1990-1996, he worked for Schroders, the UK investment bank now part of Citigroup, in New York, London and Singapore. He was Head of SE Asia Execution for Schroders Asia-Pacific Regional Advisory Group. His clients include AgFeed, Ardian, Bain Capital, CITIC Capital, Dainippon Ink & Chemical, DuPont, Ecolab, Flex, Hanjin, Happy Socks, ICICI, Intel, Investcorp, Kraft Foods, Life Technologies, Lubrizol, Materion, Nalco, One Equity Partners, OpenGate Capital, Pfizer, Philip Morris, Platinum Equity, Sara Lee, Sigma-Aldrich, Tenneco, Terex, ThomsonReuters, Wockhardt and Yucaipa. He was named Dealmaker of the Year in 2016 and 2012 (by The M&A Advisor), 2014 North American Investment Banker of the Year, and one of the Top 50 Global M&A Dealmakers (by The Global M&A Network). He was educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge. Charlie Maynard is Co-Founder and Senior Managing Director of BDA. Since founding BDA in 1996, Charlie has been based in Singapore, Tokyo, New York, Beijing, and now London. Charlie was based in Tokyo from 2002 to 2005 and established BDA's office there and in Seoul. He has advised on a number of successful transactions throughout the region. Charlie advised Navis Capital in China's largest control exit in 2014 by a private equity group, the sale of Trio to Weir plc. In 2015 he has advised Cosma (a Magna International subsidiary) on its acquisition of Chongqing Xingqiao and Cristal on its acquisition of Jiangxi Tikon. Prior to BDA, he worked for the Jardine Matheson Group in Hong Kong and Singapore. In 2011, he was named by M&A Advisor as one of their “40 Under 40” global M&A professionals. Charlie was educated at Oxford University (MA Hons, Geography). BDA Partners is the global investment banking advisor for Asia. BDA is a premium provider of Asia-related advice to sophisticated clients globally, with over 20 years' experience advising on cross-border M&A, capital raising, and financial restructuring. BDA has strategic partnerships with William Blair, a premier global investment banking business, and the Development Bank of Japan (DBJ), a Japanese government owned bank with total assets of US$150bn.

The Treasury Talent Podcast
#128 David Viney - Treasurer at Terex Corporation

The Treasury Talent Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2020 36:19


I have David Viney in today’s episode. David is the Group Treasurer at Terex. David’s background came from banking, structured finance phase, and now corporate treasury. He’s an English origin and worked in different places.   In this episode we discuss: How David came to treasury Experience and advice in being an international citizen Highlights of David’s career The differences between banking securitization and corporate treasury His approach to networking David’s mentors Advice he wishes he’d been told Key things he looks for in direct hires What makes a successful treasurer in the eyes of the executives How is the role of treasury changing in the coming years

Morgan Latif Presents...
Michael Keating: The Human Effect On Leadership Post-Covid

Morgan Latif Presents...

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2020 36:49


Today as our world struggles to develop sustainable strategies in “wake-up” after the first wave of our COVID-19 “New World”, leaders need to create a revitalised “Way of Doing Things”!Michael Keating challenges them to adopt his 10 C's Model of Change-Coaching-Crisis Leadership. It's all about seeing the Chance in this Change and enabling leaders to champion the What's In It For Us (WIIFU) more than What's In It For Me (WIIFM) mindset!“Better Together, Together Better “ is the motto Michael employs.About Michael KeatingMichael is an international Human Relations expert.For the last 6 years at KEATINGRELATIONS, he has been developing others on the Essence of being Human and the Power of Togetherness.Others know him as a Mentor & Networker who creates a bridge between people from different cultures. Thereby, bringing people together to implement commonly agreed solutions.He has worked more than 25+ years as a Senior EMEA HR Leader in Industrial Companies like SOLERA, NSK, EATON, TEREX, MWZ, and LAFARGE.His expertise lies in coaching on: Change Management, Leadership Mentoring, Organisation Culture Analysis & Development.About the HostSam is Co-Founder and Director of Morgan Latif. We empower life sciences and industrial businesses to achieve their change management, diversity and transformation goals.Sam personally focus on leadership searches across commercial, strategic, and corporate functions. He has worked across various industrial segments globally working cross-functionally and building teams in specialist industry segments, most notably in packaging, food & beverage. Based out of London but a world citizen (Portuguese, Ecuadorian) having lived in 4 different continents.

People of the PNW
Strategic Account Sales with Jake

People of the PNW

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2019 17:35


This week Dawn sits down with Jake Domer, 10 year veteran franchisee of the award winning Bellevue office. Not sure how to approach selling to big prospects? Jake shares how he mastered the process with Bellevue who regularly bills big names like Microsoft and Terex.

Kota iRadio Network
UnCut Live* ( Terex, The Definition of PAIN )

Kota iRadio Network

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2019 26:24


From the West is where it all started, with the inspiration from the Big Men of the sport showing the way and the Nudge from a friend Jason started to morph in to a ProWrestling Star. with the training of Jesse Hernandez, who has a long list of Star Power from his School. Get ready for the Definition of Pain!!

The Orbital Mechanics Podcast
Episode 216: Look to Windward

The Orbital Mechanics Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2019 50:22


This week in SF history— 28 June 1969. First flight of Black Arrow (wikipedia.org)Spaceflight news— Upcoming non-Earth science missions — 2019 — Chandrayaan-2 (wikipedia.org) — Spektr-RG (wikipedia.org) — CHEOPS (wikipedia.org) — Chang’e 5 (wikipedia.org) — Lunar Scout / MX-1E (wikipedia.org) — 2020 — Solar Orbiter (wikipedia.org) — PROBA-3 (wikipedia.org) — Aditya-L1 (wikipedia.org) — Exomars (wikipedia.org/Rosalind_Franklin, wikipedia.org/Kazachok) — Hope Mars Mission (wikipedia.org) — Mars 2020 (en.wikipedia.org) — Korea Pathfinder Lunar Orbiter (wikipedia.org) — 2021 — Astrobotic M1 (wikipedia.org) — Luna 25 (wikipedia.org) — SLIM (wikipedia.org) — XRISM (wikipedia.org) — IXPE (wikipedia.org) — JWST (wikipedia.org) — Double Asteroid Redirection Test (wikipedia.org) — ASTER (wikipedia.org) — Lucy (wikipedia.org) — 2022 — PUNCH (wikipedia.org) — EUCLID (wikipedia.org) — MOM 2 (wikipedia.org) — TEREX (wikipedia.org) — DESTINY+ (wikipedia.org) — Psyche (wikipedia.org) — JUICE (wikipedia.org)— Comet Interceptor mission approved (spaceflightnow.com)Short & Sweet— Stratolaunch is up for sale (cnbc.com)— Firefly is offering free rides. (spaceflightnow.com)— Worries raised about U.K. spaceport site in Scotland (bbc.com)Questions, comments, corrections— arahanga.space

CONEXPO – CON/AGG Radio: Construction Technology Trends For Contractors
Ep. 103: Moving to Predictive & Prescriptive Maintenance with Christine Zeznick of Terex AWP

CONEXPO – CON/AGG Radio: Construction Technology Trends For Contractors

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2019 20:28


No matter the size of your aerial fleet, managing equipment is a priority. This podcast digs into how telematics can help monitor how equipment is performing, how often a piece is being used, where each unit is located, and if it is ready for maintenance. Host Peggy Smedley and Christine Zeznick, Genie Senior Product and Business Development Manager, Terex AWP, talk about telematics and the company’s new Genie Lift Connect. They also discuss how we are moving from a world where information is currently descriptive to one that is more predictive and prescriptive.

Comics With Kenobi
Comics With Kenobi #49 -- Thrawn's Locks, Vader's Lonely & Terex Is Loopy

Comics With Kenobi

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2018 89:09


Terex has a bolt loose, Vader's got a price on his head and Thrawn's locks are luscious.We're beyond head canon in this episode of Comics With Kenobi as Jeff McGee and Matt Moore dive into Star Wars: Poe Dameron #24, Star Wars: Darth Vader #11 and the much anticipated debut of the first issue of the six-issue Star Wars: Thrawn adaptation of Timothy Zahn's 2017 novel.We also break down the reveals about comics from Marvel and IDW Publishing that tie in to May's release of Solo: A Star Wars Story and what effect they, and the film, will have on those titles, as well as information about Doctor Aphra making the leap from the pages of comics to the shelves of toy collectors, too, thanks to loyal fans and Hasbro.The new Star Wars comics out this week include:Doctor Aphra #17Stay in touch and up to date by following us on Twitter or Facebook.If you want a cheap-as-free Comics With Kenobi button, send us a note to comicswithkenobi@gmail.com and let us know what you thought of the show, the latest comics or just to ask a question.Like what you hear? Go to iTunes and leave us a rating and review. Subscribe to all of the Coffee With Kenobi network podcasts, including Rebels Reactions, Lattes With Leia, Legends Library and Coffee With Kenobi.

Cultural Wormhole
Cultural Wormhole Episode 25

Cultural Wormhole

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2017 45:00


David and Paul are back to review the latest Star Wars comics from Marvel Entertainment. They discuss the detailed art of Darth Maul, the awesomeness of Terex in Poe Dameron, Doctor Aphra's moral ambiguity, and try to figure out whatever the hell is going on in Star Wars with Yoda. Star Wars Issues - Darth Maul #2, Poe Dameron #11 & 12, Doctor Aphra #4 & 5, and Star Wars #28 & 30.

Far Far Away Radio
Rogue Podron Season 5 Kickoff: Doe Pameron's Super Secret Mission

Far Far Away Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2017 55:11


All wings report in! This episode: Poe Dameron, chapters 7-10. This week on Rogue Podron, we begin by talking about which characters from our dream encounters between Rey and Poe in Episode VIII. Then, we discuss the latest arc of Poe Dameron comics, in which Poe meets up with an old friend, goes on some super secret missions, and we learn about Terex's super relevant (?) backstory. Listener Question of the Week: What should Poe's undercover spy name be? Contact Us: Tweet us @roguepodron or e-mail us at roguepodron@gmail.com. Website: http://roguepodron.tumblr.com Hosted by Meg, Danny, Saf, and Heath. Next week:  X-wing: Wraith Squadron, chapters 1-4.

Rogue Podron
Rogue Podron Season 5 Kickoff: Doe Pameron’s Super Secret Mission

Rogue Podron

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2017 55:11


All wings report in! This episode: Poe Dameron, chapters 7-10. This week on Rogue Podron, we begin by talking about which characters from our dream encounters between Rey and Poe in Episode VIII. Then, we discuss the latest arc of Poe Dameron comics, in which Poe meets up with an old friend, goes on some super secret missions, and we learn about Terex’s super relevant (?) backstory. Listener Question of the Week: What should Poe’s undercover spy name be? Contact Us: Tweet us @roguepodron or e-mail us at roguepodron@gmail.com. Website: http://roguepodron.tumblr.com Hosted by Meg, Danny, Saf, and Heath. Next week:  X-wing: Wraith Squadron, chapters 1-4.

Deep House Music Podcast
Mona - Massive Dynamix Without You (Terex Remix)

Deep House Music Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 27, 2016 3:39


Mona - Massive Dynamix Without You (Terex Remix)

Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS
(017) - the terex sessions - (04/04/2013)

Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2013 60:25


Decimo septima edición del progrma THE TEREX SESSIONS, emitido en Espiral Fm Pamplona el Jueves 4 de Abril del 2013, y en la que Dj Terex nos ofrece un divertio y enérgico set combinando sonidos Dance, Electro, Progressive y Tech House.

Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS
(016) - the terex sessions

Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2013 80:08


Subido hace 15 días (15/03/2013) en Electrónica por ESPIRAL FM Pamplona Descargar (27MB) Mis Audios Decimo sexta edición del progrma THE TEREX SESSIONS, emitido en Espiral Fm Pamplona el Jueves 28 de Marzo de l 2013, y en la que Carla Dj nos ofrece un divertio y enérgico set combinando sonidos Dance, Electro, Progressive y Tech House.

Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS
(015) - the terex sessions - (14-02-2013)

Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2013 58:46


Decimo quinta edición del progrma THE TEREX SESSIONS, emitido en Espiral Fm Pamplona el Jueves 14 de Marzo del 2013, y en la que Carla Dj nos ofrece un divertio y enérgico set combinando sonidos Dance, Electro, Progressive y Tech House.

Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS
(014) - the terex sessions - (28-02-2013)

Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2013 60:24


Edición número catorce de THE TEREX SESSIONS Radio Show, programa emitido en Espiral Fm Pamplona todos los Jueves de once a doce de la noche, y presentado y dirigido por CARLA DJ y DJ TEREX. En esta edición, emitida el Jueves 28 de Febrero del 2013, os traemos un set realizado por DJ TEREX.

edici terex espiral fm pamplona
Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS
(013) - the terex sessions - (21-02-2013)

Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2013 59:29


Decimo tercera edición de THE TERX SESSIONS Radio Show, emitido en ESPIRAL FM Pamplona el Jueves 21 de Febrero del 2013, y en la cual CARLA DJ nos vuelve a ofrecer un set cargado de dinamismo, ritmo y energía, que no dejará indiferente a ningún amante de la buena música House.

house decimo terex espiral fm pamplona
Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS
(012) - the terex sessions - (07-02-2013)

Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2013 62:53


Carla Dj nos ofrece a lo largo de sesenta minutos, un set muy bailable combinando y fusionando diferentes ramass del house, en la que es la decimosegunda edición del radio show THE TEREX SESSIONS, emitido en ESPIRAL FM PAMPLONA el Jueves 7 de Febrero del 2013.

terex espiral fm pamplona
Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS
(011) - the terex sessions - (31-01-2013)

Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2013 60:06


Edición número 11 del radio show THE TEREX SESSIONS, emitido en ESPIRAL FM Pamplona el Jueves 31 de Enero del 2013, y en la que a lo largo de sesenta minutos, DJ TEREX nos ofrece un interesante set combinando sonidos Tech y House.

house tech enero edici terex espiral fm pamplona
Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS
(010) - the terex sessions - (17-01-2013)

Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2013 62:53


Décima edición del radio show THE TEREX SESSIONS, emitido en Espiral Fm Pamplona el Jueves 17 de Enero del 2013 y presentado y dirigido por Carla Dj y Dj Terex. En esta edición nos ofrecen una sesión a cargo de Carla Dj.

enero terex espiral fm pamplona
Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS
(009) - the terex sessions - (10-01-2012)

Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2013 61:58


Novena edición del radio show The Terex Sessions, emitido en Espiral Fm Pamplona el miércoles 10 de Enero del 2013, y en la que Carla Dj nos ofrece a lo largo de 60 minutos uno de sus divertidos y bailables sets.

enero novena terex espiral fm pamplona
Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS
(008) - the terex sessions - (13-12-2012)

Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2012 76:49


Octava edición del Radio Show THE TEREX SESSIONS, emitido en Espiral Fm Pamplona el Jueves 13 de Diciembre del 2012, y en la que Carla Dj nos ofrece los sonidos House más divertidos y bailables en un set de 60 excitantes minutos.

house octava terex espiral fm pamplona
Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS
(007) - the terex sessions - (29-11-2012)

Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2012 49:50


Septima edición del Radio Show THE TEREX SESSIONS, emitido en ESPIRAL FM PAMPLONA el Jueves 29 de Noviembre del 2012, y en la que DJ TEREX nos ofrece a lo largo de sesenta minutos una sesión House cargada de ritmo y de buena energia.

house septima terex espiral fm pamplona
Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS
(006) - the terex sessions - (22-11-2012)

Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2012 58:17


Sexta edición del radio show The Terex Sessions, emitido en Espiral Fm Pamplona el Jueves 22 de Noviembre del 2012, y en la que Carla Dj nos hace disfrutar con una divertida y elegante sesión house de una hora.

sexta terex espiral fm pamplona
Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS
(005) - the terex sessions - (15-11-2012)

Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2012 59:58


Quinta edición de THE TEREX SESSIONS Radio Show, emitida en Espiral Fm Pamplona el Jueves 15 de Noviembre del 2012, y en la que DJ TEREX nos regala una divertda y bailable sesión que no dejará indiferente a los amantes del House y del Dance.

house dance terex espiral fm pamplona
Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS
(004) - the terex sessions - (08-11-2012)

Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2012 54:46


Cuarta edición de THE TEREX SESSIONS Radio Show, emitida en ESPIRAL FM Pamplona el Jueves 8 de Noviembre del 2012, y en la que Carla Dj nos ofrece durante 60 minutos una sesión House llena de ritmo y frescura.

house cuarta terex espiral fm pamplona
Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS
(003) - the terex sessions - (01-11-2012)

Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2012 57:36


Una nueva edición del programa THE TEREX SESSIONS, emitida en ESPIRAL FM Pamplona el Jueves 1 de Noviembre del 2012, y en la que Carla Dj nos deleita durante 60 minutos con una divertida sesión con sonidos Dance y House.

house dance terex espiral fm pamplona
Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS
(002) - the terex sessions - (18-10-2012)

Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2012 72:31


Segunda edición de The Terex Sessions, programa emitido en Espiral Fm Pamplona el Jueves 18 de Octubre del 2012 ,y en la que Dj Terex nos deleita con 60 minutos con lo mas fresco, divertido y bailable de su maleta en una sesion house sin desperdicio

segunda terex espiral fm pamplona
Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS
(001) - the terex sessions

Podcast THE TEREX SESSIONS

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2012 59:59


Estreno de THE TEREX SESSIONS, emitido en ESPIRAL FM Pamplona el Jueves 11 de Octubre del 2012, y en el que Carla Dj nos deleita con una sesión de una hora con temas dance de actualidad.

estreno terex espiral fm pamplona
Third National Infrastructure Conference (2010)
Morning Keynote Introduction - Ronald M. DeFeo, Chairman & CEO, Terex Corporation

Third National Infrastructure Conference (2010)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2010 3:58


iona college, infrastructure, terex, roads, bridges, public transportation

Stock Day Media
CEO Lee Hamre of AmeraMex International Inc. (OTCPink: AMMX)

Stock Day Media

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 1970 10:45


CEO Lee Hamre of AmeraMex International Inc. , (OTCPink: AMMX) rejoins the show to discuss Heavy Equipment sales, rentals, and services while also talking about  light military vehicle sales internationally. OTCPink: AMMX # Hamre Equipment # sales # leases # rentals # refurbished # construction # machinery #  backhoes # Barko Hydraulics # container handlers # excavators # forklifts # front-end loaders # Genie and Terex # improving global infrastructure # log loaders # Menzi Muck # Nevada-based company # Penny Stocks # rock trucks # scrapers # tactical military vehicles # Taylor # Machine Works # trucks and trailers # wheel loaders