Podcast appearances and mentions of tom hume

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Best podcasts about tom hume

Latest podcast episodes about tom hume

KNBR Podcast
5-11 Tom Hume joins Extra Innings with Bill Laskey to discuss the pitcher's mindset of going as many innings as you can, regardless of the number innings or pitches thrown

KNBR Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2024 31:51


Cincinnati Reds pitcher (1977-1985, 1987) Tom Hume joins Extra Innings with Bill Laskey to discuss the pitcher's mindset of going as many innings as you can, regardless of the number innings or pitches thrownSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Redlegs Radio Report
Redlegs Radio Report 139 | Tom Hume

Redlegs Radio Report

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2023 59:58


Jason Harbison and Todd Smith chat with former Cincinnati Reds pitcher and coach Tom Hume. They are very excited by the Reds' recent run.

Willets Pod
We Can Pod It Out 114: Flying

Willets Pod

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2023 9:34


Last night in Queens was special, as Mark Vientos and Francisco Álvarez hit game-tying home runs, the latter with two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning, and Pete Alonso walked it off with a three-run shot in the 10th.Obviously, that kind of thing doesn't happen often. But there are a few games in Mets history that it recalls, and those are fun, too. For instance, May 21, 2000, when Randy Johnson started for the Diamondbacks and gave up tying dingers to Mike Piazza in the third and Edgardo Alfonzo in the seventh, followed by Robin Ventura taking Mike Morgan deep in the eighth to tie the game yet again, and the Mets winning, 7-6, on a walkoff single by Derek Bell off Byung-Hyun Kim, with Joe McEwing (who hit two non-tying homers off the Big Unit that day) scoring the winning run.The Mets' other game hitting three tying home runs to thrill fans in Flushing was in 1993, with Bobby Bonilla hitting two of those homers, Tim Bogar the other, and the Mets still losing to the Reds.But how about two tying homers and a walkoff? The first time the Mets ever did that was 40 years ago this month: May 6, 1983, in a game that started as a Tom Seaver-Mario Soto duel. Dave Kingman got the Mets to extra innings with a two-run shot off Soto in the ninth, Hubie Brooks blasted a solo homer off Tom Hume in the 10th, and George Foster won it with a three-run dinger in the 13th off Frank Pastore.Three years later, on July 3, 1986, Darryl Strawberry hit a two-run shot in the fifth inning off Jim Deshaies for a 3-3 tie with the Astros, then hit a two-run shot off Frank DiPino in the 10th to tie it again after Phil Garner had taken Jesse Orosco deep in the top of the inning. After DiPino settled down for a pair of outs, Ray Knight won that one with a solo shot.It took another 20 years for another such game at Shea, until May 23, 2006. And that game itself took 16 innings against the Phillies. The first tying homer was Cliff Floyd off Gavin Floyd for a 2-2 game in the fourth inning, then José Reyes in the eighth off Ryan Franklin to make it 8-8. Being one of those games, of course nobody then scored until the 16th, when Carlos Beltrán punished Ryan Madson on a 2-2 pitch for a 9-8 Mets win.That's some big names in Mets history for those games… and then there's the last time before last night that they'd had two tying homers plus a walkoff: September 13, 2018, against the Marlins — a Thursday afternoon in the first game of a doubleheader. But unless the Mets can acquire Shohei Ohtani, it's special in its own way that won't soon be repeated.Steven Matz started for the Mets and gave up back-to-back homers to Peter O'Brien and Isaac Galloway (these were real major leaguers five years ago) in the second inning. But in the bottom of the inning, after a Kevin Plawecki walk, Matz hit a homer off Sandy Alcantara (hey, he's actually good).Alcantara being actually good, the Mets didn't score again against him, and went to the ninth inning down 3-2. With two outs, Michael Conforto tied the game with a dinger off Kyle Barraclough. Three pitches later, Todd Frazier sent everyone… well, not home happy, because doubleheader (the Mets won the second game, 5-2, with Tomás Nido homering off the same Jeff Brigham who gave up Jose Siri's homer last night), but to the concession stands happy?So, that's five times in Mets history that they've hit two game-tying homers and gone on to walk it off. If you've been waiting for something special to spark the season, there you go. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit willetspen.substack.com/subscribe

Beyond Zero - Community
TIPPING POINTS - PHYSICAL AND SOCIAL

Beyond Zero - Community

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2022


CLIMATE ACTION SHOW -  AUGUST 22ND 2022Produced by Vivien LangfordT I P P I N G  P O I N T S - IN NATURE AND SOCIETY Guests:Music by Tom Hume - "Petition" and Tambah Project " Our Song"- https://environmentalmusicprize.com/ Erica Chernoweth with Shankar Vedantam  - https://hiddenbrain.org/podcast/how-to-change-the-world/ August 7th Climate Rally in Sydney organised by Knitting Nanas and Water for Rivers Alison Boyd - Greens MLC NSW Parliament Rilka   -   Blockade Australia Paul Keating - Sydney Branch Secretary of Maritime Union of Australia Paddy Gibson - Workers for Climate Action &  Jumbunna Institute https://www.uts.edu.au/research/jumbunna-institute-indigenous-education-and-research David Spratt - Research Director for Breakthrough National Centre for Climate Restorationhttps://www.breakthroughonline.org.au/climatedominoes Nick Breeze - Producer of Climate Genn. Please check out these fine podcasts from UK https://genn.cc/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K9wB0P3Y5d0 TIPPING POINTS IN NATURE AND SOCIETY The burning question is what forms of Climate Action  work? Are the harsh new anti protest laws a sign that Government fears the huge changes demanded by campaigners?  Is  ABC  RN turning up at a Blockade Australia safe place a sign? I was delighted. It was daring for the ABC. Geoff Thompson's Background Briefing is well worth a listen, though 3CR has been reporting on this movement for ages.  We are looking for social tipping points when the majority of people understand that direct action is needed.  Nature understands the tipping points of hot house gasses, the Antarctic Ice shelf just crumbles..... and you know the rest.PODCAST :  https://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/backgroundbriefing/inside-the-climate-activists-plan-to-shut-down-australia/101324992  In search of what climate action works, I quote from Erica Chernoweth's study on how Non Violent Action has more lasting effects than Violent revolution, especially if we all get behind it. Then I go to the Sydney Climate Rally of August 7th. The harsh new anti protest laws and imminent opening of new gas wells are upermost in our minds.Paddy Gibson talks about the hopes of the Gommeroi people that the new government will stop the Santos Gas project in the Pilliga. Yet Santos is attempting to overide their Native title to establish  850 gas wells in the Pilliga Forest.Paul Keating and Abigail Boyd voice the massive opposition from unions and civil society groups to the new police powers over protesters and Rilka speaks about how harshly they had been applied to Blockade Australia. Then we hear from David Spratt talking to Nick Breeze about climate risk. He says that the IPCC is giving policy makers the wrong message.   For him the only question is "What is the worst that can happen and what do we need to do to prevent it? Breaking news : Paul Gilding's comments on changing our focus from reducing emissions to slowing the RATE of warming by cancelling methane."Much of the climate debate and its central arguments were formed in the 1990s when we perceived we had decades to get things under control. The context has now dramatically changed. The 2020s already see unprecedented heatwaves, wildfires, floods, emerging food crises and related geopolitical conflict – and yet this process has just begun. Every fraction of a degree of warming now brings us closer to climate tipping points that if breached, could lead to a runaway process we cannot control. We are teetering on that edge.Therefore, we need to reset the debate to have a laser focus on the immediate rate of warming and everything that influences it.This will not be easy. History shows that most large-scale global change happens with many distributed actions. Rather than ‘death by a thousand cuts', it's more like ‘life by a thousand little victories.' Thus, most arguments about the merits of different possible actions on climate change, end up with the same conclusion – we need an ‘all of the above' strategy. We see no silver bullets or amazing heroes, just all of us, and all that we do.Sometimes, though very rarely, an idea comes along which is not like that. A single action that could literally change the course of history.I believe slashing methane emissions urgently, with large reductions this decade, is such an action. Methane is a climate weapon of mass destruction if we don't act, but a silver bullet if we do. It will not stop climate change - not even close - but it might buy us the time to do so. Success in rapid methane reduction could be the singular difference between achieving some level of messy but manageable global change vs the descent into chaos and economic collapse.However, we will only take this action if we shift our mindset and focus from the ‘level of emissions' to the ‘rate of warming'.It's a hard argument to make because of the deeply entrenched focus and momentum on emissions reduction – towards which all progress is then seen as additive. As a result, everyone agrees methane is important, but its singular power to change the path we are on is not yet recognised.Let me be very clear - my key argument is not ‘methane vs CO2', it is ‘warming vs emissions.' They're connected, but very different. And it's the difference that defines the importance.If we are to reduce the existential risk of runaway climate change, we must slow the 'rate of warming' in less than 10 years. Even drastic reductions in CO2 emissions - while essential and urgent for different reasons - will simply not get us there. Firstly, because CO2 warms the climate slowly (and thus cutting it reduces the rate of warming slowly) and secondly because cutting fossil fuel use also reduces the aerosol pollution which currently has a temporary ‘cooling' effect.Given all the above, we can see that slowing the ‘rate of warming' is our single most critical task and urgent methane reduction is the most viable way to achieve it.We must therefore throw everything at this task – including faster elimination of fossil fuels, especially gas, and a dramatic focus on food and agriculture, particularly livestock. And we must deliver this change in less than 10 years.It's a tall order. The good news is that, while not easy, it's completely doable. Everything we require is available - we just need to decide. As with fossil fuels, the incumbent players will argue it's complicated and difficult, bad for jobs and the economy, that ‘sure we need to change, just not so fast!'.They are completely wrong. The science is clear that the path we are on – unprecedented climate events, geopolitical chaos, food crises and the risk of runaway warming - is immeasurably and incomparably worse than anything we can do to slow it down.If you want to understand the detail behind this argument, I explored it all in a recent discussion paper at the University of Cambridge. It covers the emergency nature of the task, the actions available and the economic opportunities that result. In particular, I explain why a focus on food and agriculture – particularly livestock – should now be our priority task.This detail matters, but don't let it distract you from the simplicity of the idea. The path we are on today is accelerating climate change with the risk of runaway warming and global economic chaos. We can choose a different path, but only if we slash methane emissions to slow the rate of warming. The future may well be determined by our decision."~ Paul Gilding, 15 August 2022PDF:https://www.paulgilding.com/s/CC-emissions-v-warming-20220815-FINAL.pdfDiscussion paper:https://www.cisl.cam.ac.uk/resources/publications/methane-markets-and-food-how-climate-emergency-will-drive-urgent-focus Source:https://www.paulgilding.com/cockatoo-chronicles/shifting-focus-from-emissions-to-warming      

The Mayor’s Office with Sean Casey

Tom Hume is part of the fabric of baseball in the Cincinnatti.  Both as a player and coach, Tom has been as much of a part of the culture of the Reds as Johnny Bench and Tom Seaver.   And speaking of those 2 hall-of-famers, you will NOT wanna miss the stories Tom shares about his relationship with both and the experiences they shared together as teammates and as friends.   Plus, Case & Hume dive deep into how the culture of the game has changed over the past few generations.   And don't worry, there's plenty of good-hearted fun and laughter between these two close friends.    All that plus Chinch's 9-in-90 on an old-school, throwback-style edition of The Mayor's Office with Sean Casey!   And, as always, please join us on our Youtube page, like & subscribe and tell your friends to join us for the full broadcast experience right here: https://youtu.be/bogzPPuXztQ

Redlegs Radio Report
Redlegs Radio Report 121 | Skeeter Barnes, Tom Hume

Redlegs Radio Report

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2022 59:21


Jason Harbison and Todd Smith are joined in studio by former Reds coach and present Bowling Green Hot Rods coach Skeeter Barnes. Former Reds pitcher Tom Hume calls in to talk to Skeeter.

Redlegs Radio Report
Redlegs Radio Report 118 | Tom Hume

Redlegs Radio Report

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2022 60:07


Jason Harbison and Todd Smith are joined by former Reds pitcher Tom Hume. Also, Reds Hall of Fame filmmaker Cam Miller joins the show.

Redlegs Radio Report
Redlegs Radio Report 98

Redlegs Radio Report

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2021 60:34


Jason Harbison and Todd Smith are joined by Cincinnati Reds' legend Tom Hume to talk about the state of the team and other fun stuff. It's always a trip down memory lane.

Redlegs Radio Report
Redlegs Radio Report 84

Redlegs Radio Report

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2020 59:27


Jason Harbison and Todd Smith welcome former Cincinnati Reds pitcher Tom Hume to the show. The Reds are back in action.

Redlegs Radio Report
Redlegs Radio Report 70

Redlegs Radio Report

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2019 58:54


Jason and Todd are joined by former Cincinnati #Reds pitcher and coach Tom Hume. Also, Nashville #Sounds GM Adam Nuse joins South Central Kentucky's only show dedicated to the Reds.

Redlegs Radio Report
Redlegs Radio Report 55

Redlegs Radio Report

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2019 74:54


Jason and Todd are joined by Garret Browing of ESPN Radio 102.7 and Cincinnati Reds coach Tom Hume.

Redlegs Radio Report
Redlegs Radio Report 35

Redlegs Radio Report

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2018 59:29


The Reds are on a hot streak since the Matt Harvey trade. Jason, Todd and Cincinnati fans are excited. They are joined on this show by former Reds pitcher and present Reds pitching coach Tom Hume. It's Southern Kentucky's only Cincinnati Reds Radio Talk Show. The show airs each Saturday at 9 a.m. central on ESPN 102.7 FM, 1450 AM in Bowling Green, Ky. and 1230 AM in Glasgow, Ky. Also, it streams live at espnky.com/wwku. Jason Harbison and Todd Smith talk weekly to fans, players, staff and broadcasters about the Reds.

This Rural Life
The Vet

This Rural Life

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2018 47:38


James Herriot inspired at least two generations of children to become large animal vets. Tom Hume was one such wide-eyed youth. He recognised a desire to be intimately connected with nature and to understand how it functions. He then had the foresight to nurture that desire, channeling it towards his ultimate goal.  Its rare to be able to speak to someone so in love with their work. It’s doubly rare for that person to be at the very top of their game. Aside from being every mother-in-law’s dream, Tom is by all accounts an excellent vet. Hopefully you will enjoy our chinwag!

Lion's Share Marketing Podcast
Ep 5: Marketing to Millennials | Tom Hume

Lion's Share Marketing Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2017 43:26


In Episode 5 of the Lion’s Share Marketing Podcast our featured guest, Tom Hume, offers insight into techniques to attract Millennials to purchase established products. Tom begins by retelling his success in reducing the average age of Toshiba buyers from 48 year olds to 38 year olds. After conducting research, he found that Toshiba computers were regarded as high quality products, they did however fall short in terms of aesthetics and innovation. Because of this, Toshiba was struggling to reach a younger audience with whom Apple was having great success. In an attempt to reach Millennials, Toshiba began to modify their mobile and social media approach. Tom and his team began to focus on the story rather than simply listing the specs of their products. They created more video content through which they were able to showcase their products’ features in an unique and entertaining way that consumers could connect with. Tom shares an experiment Toshiba conducted in which they placed their new ultrabooks in people’s bags without their knowledge to demonstrate the unnoticeable weight of the computers. Through this experiment, Toshiba was able to collect testimonials and engage consumers by posting footage of the entire process on Facebook to encourage people to guess when the computers were placed in the bags. Later, Toshiba created various films to engage and attract consumers, especially millennials. Tom states that this approach was very successful and consumers were seeking the stories they were creating. Tom explains that good storytelling starts with a deep understanding of your consumer and being able to specify what differentiates your product. Tom shares what he believes to be the most effective method to get your material viewed and recognized by consumers and how to get started with storytelling. Join us in this conversation about reaching millennials through storytelling, the importance of researching your target market and understanding your product’s unique attributes. Listen for more about techniques and practices to retain your existing consumers while attracting new ones. Time Stamps 00:00 – Episode Welcome 00:20 – Co-hosts Introduction 00:50 – What’s in the News Today | “Proximity to Searcher is the New #1 Local Search Ranking Factor” 05:14 – Featured Interview with Tom Hume 06:07 – Marketing to Millennials | Toshiba’s Approach 13:03 – How to get high consumer engagement 14:00 – Digital Story Telling | Ultrabook Experiment 18:15 – Satellite Click | Toshiba One Hand Challenge 20:00 – Toshiba’s Films | Millennials Response & Involvement 29:30 – The role of storytelling in reducing the average age of Toshiba’s buyers 32:38 – How to use storytelling to reach target market 35:02 – Cure JM Foundation 40:12 – Episode Key Takeaway 41:49 – Closing Comments 42:12 – Jokes – Sushi 43:00 – Episode Outro Resources MOZ – “Proximity to Searcher is the New #1 Local Search Ranking Factor” Crowdrise: crowdrise.com Lion’s Share Marketing Podcast Learn More About Tyler & Kyle   Music Intro Music – Colony House – Buy “2:20” on iTunes Outro Music – Skillet – Buy “Lions” on iTunes  

Move to Tacoma Podcast
Floating your way to inner peace with Jonathan Murray Episode 014

Move to Tacoma Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2015 19:09


A few months ago my real estate agent friends Brent Tornquist and Tom Hume were talking about their client that was opening a float center. Jonathan and his wife Sarah opened the Uncharted Waters Float Center on South Proctor & South 12th in Central Tacoma this Spring. Jonathan is from Portland. He moved to Tacoma... The post Floating your way to inner peace with Jonathan Murray Episode 014 appeared first on Move to Tacoma.

d.Construct 2006
Tom Hume

d.Construct 2006

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2006 11:09


One of last year's speakers discusses the mobile web and APIs.