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Kindle vs. Print. The debate goes on among book lovers, but should it? Today's Throwback Thursday episode answers that question. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/bookish/support
Today's Throwback Thursday episode reminds us that one of the greatest works of literature is the Bible. It also fits well with our next episode. Let's get Bookish. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/bookish/support
Today's Throwback Thursday episode is a flashback to our first Sunday Ramble and first real rant. And in our next episode we will look at the lost art of hagiography. Let's get Bookish. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/bookish/support
Today's Throwback Thursday episode was originally inspired by procrastination. I think you'll find that it's one of the most encouraging things you'll hear, especially if you're a writer. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/angrytypewriter/support
Today's Throwback Thursday is all about the history of the myers mask. That episode aired in October 2018 on the old HMMAT THE PODCAST. Enjoy! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/halloweenunleashed/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/halloweenunleashed/support
What are the most impactful books you've read in your life? Today's Throwback Thursday episode is all about the power of certain books we read and reference in our lives. Not all books are created equally. You'll probably play closer attention to what you read after you listen to this, The Make Everyday YourDay Podcast is empowered by the YourDay Balance Game. To learn more and sign up for the YDBG app for free, go to www.theydbg.com. Links: Power vs Force - https://www.amazon.com/Power-Force-David-Hawkins-M-D/dp/1401945074 7 Habits of Highly Effectively People - https://www.franklincovey.com/the-7-habits.html
Today's Throwback Thursday conversation is with Mimi Adeogba, aka Yogini Mimi. Yogini Mimi in an internationally recognized yoga instructor. Having spent the last 2 years in india Yogini Mimi has coached and transformed hundreds of yoga instructors in the School of Swadhaya Yoga. She is a longer term player of the game, she is my older sister and she is an amazing mother of one. To learn more about who she is, you can go to her website at www.yoginimimi.com. According to the YourDay Balance Game, Mimi at Beg Lifestyle and Int level in Fitness.
Have you explored the purpose and intention of your relationship with your significant other?Have you explored the purpose and intention of your relationship with your significant other? Today's Throwback Thursday is a conversation between Saint Day Adeogba and his partner Chanda Leigh. It's a candid and intimate discussion on how they met and how they're relationship blossomed into what it is today. They talk about past situations they've been in as well as what they are continuing to create. This is a great episode for anyone with a significant other or anyone who intends to have one. It's some powerful stuff! The Make Everyday YourDay Podcast is empowered by the YourDay Balance Game. To learn more and sign up for the YDBG app for free, go to www.theydbg.com.
Today's Throwback Thursday is an awesome video podcast with 2015 Presenter Dr. Ben Peterson. During our discussion Ben dives into monitoring, ways we can make it more efficient, and the things that he looks at when discussing monitoring with teams. Every talk I get to have with him is always enlightening, so I really hope you all enjoy this as much as I did. ENJOY THE CONTENT? THEN YOU SHOULD CHECK OUT THE STRENGTH COACH NETWORK! You can find sensational content just like this in The Strength Coach Network. As a member of The Strength Coach Networks, you can access over 200 hours of the highest-level lecture content just like this one for 48 hours for only $1. Follow the link below to sign up and use the code CVASPS at check out to get a 48 hour trial for only $1. Check out The Strength Coach Network Here! https://strengthcoachnetwork.com/cvasps/ #StrengthCoach, #StrengthAndConditioningCoach, #Podcast, #LearningAtLunch, #TheSeminar, #SportsTraining, #PhysicalPreparation, #TheManual, #SportTraining, #SportPerformance, #HumanPerformance, #StrengthTraining, #SpeedTraining, #Training, #Coach, #Performance, #Sport, #HighPerformance, #VBT, #VelocityBasedTraining, #TriphasicTraining, #Plyometrics
Today's Throwback Thursday is a look back at a 1993 book that I purchased in 2011 on somebody's recommendation. It was probably one of those used books you can buy for a penny on Amazon... Creating the New American Hospital: A Time for Greatness. It's indeed available for a penny today.I had flipped through the book at the time as it was interesting to me to get more context on how hospitals are not just suddenly in crisis (financial or otherwise) in recent years. Book-NAHChapter 1 of the book is titled "Why Hospitals Fail." The author says, "Clearly, something isn't working." --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lean-blog-audio/support
Today's Throwback Thursday looks at the continued strength of the vinyl revival. Tune in during the 8 am hour when Jeff Spurgeon plays a special vinyl track. The numbers are striking: CD sales declined nearly 15 percent last year. But vinyl sales moved in the opposite direction: up 32 percent from 2012, according to Nielsen SoundScan. Trendy retailers such as Urban Outfitters and Whole Foods are stocking vinyl records. Sales of turntables are up and artists like conductor Gustavo Dudamel, pianist Valentina Lisitsa and the Brooklyn Rider string quartet are releasing LPs. While the black disc never went away among purist deejays and audiophiles, it has made a broader comeback, especially among hipsters, college students and nostalgic baby boomers. “The whole idea of actually holding a piece of music in your hand has become sort of a quaint concept because you can carry thousands of songs around in your pocket," said Greg Milner, author of Perfecting Sound Forever: The Story Of Recorded Music. However, "if you are going to have a material object, it may as well be something that’s so far removed from digital formats.” Brooklyn Rider violist Nicholas Cords believes that vinyl records put a listener in a physical space, such as a living room or bedroom. For the quartet, "it connects us to a past, a heritage of string quartet playing that we very much admire. It was a symbolic connection to something we really love." When Brooklyn Rider released its 2012 album “Seven Steps” on vinyl (as well as MP3 and CD) the group invoked past greats like the Capet, Rosé, and Busch String Quartets, who first became known to the world through their pioneering 78 rpm releases in the 1930s and '40s. Cords dismisses the suggestion that LPs are a gimmick, noting that their creation can be painstaking and costly given the different mastering processes involved. What's more, a vinyl release is a way to connect with a specific fan base. Detractors argue that vinyl has plenty of drawbacks: it's not portable, it scratches, it warps and player needles wear out. But its advocates point out that, unlike MP3s, the sound of vinyl is not compressed and any surface noise actually adds warmth to the listening experience. “One of the reasons why people like vinyl is it imparts a kind of unreality to the sound,” said Milner. “People think of it as real but it actually gives you this thing that maybe you don’t hear in real life because in real life you’re not hearing things through the veil of hiss and noise.” But despite the love heaped on vinyl and its reported comeback, it barely moved the needle for the music industry in 2013. "Vinyl is only about two percent of total album sales, so when you talk about a revival you have to talk about it in the context of everything everyone is listening to,” said Claire Suddath, a writer for Bloomberg Businessweek. In October, Suddath reported that the number of LPs sold in the U.S. represented only 1.4 percent of all albums sold. While vinyl may not save a troubled industry – one that saw even download sales drop last year – Cords notes that it represents a link with tradition in an age when music formats can seem overly disposable. "I just don’t see vinyl going away," added Milner. “It’s a good format, it’s durable, it will last a long time.” Listen to the full segment above, take our poll and leave a comment: Do you listen to vinyl? If so, why? .chart_div { width: 600px; height: 300px; } loadSurvey( "vinyl-comeback", "survey_vinyl-comeback");