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In this episode of Stats On Stats, we sit down with Torrence Evans, a self-taught software engineer and chapter lead for Black Boys Code Atlanta. Torrence shares his journey from entrepreneurship to tech, how he navigated the challenges of self-learning, and the role LinkedIn played in landing his first role. He also discusses the importance of mentorship, the impact of seeing Black professionals in tech, and his vision for the future.Guest ConnectLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/torranceevans/Stats on Stats ResourcesCode & Culture Magazine: https://www.statsonstats.io/flipbooksMerch: https://www.statsonstats.io/shop LinkTree: https://linktr.ee/statsonstatspodcast Stats on Stats Partners & AffiliatesPath AIWebsite: https://yourpath.ai Discount Code: Join our Discord community for access!Antisyphon TrainingWebsite: https://www.antisyphontraining.com MAD20 TrainingWebsite: https://mad20.io Discount Code: STATSONSTATS15Ellington Cyber AcademyWebsite: https://kenneth-ellington.mykajabi.com Discount Code: STATSONSTATSKevtech AcademyWebsite: https://www.kevtechitsupport.com Dream Chaser's Coffee Website: https://dreamchaserscoffee.com Discount code: STATSONSTATSPodcasts We LikeDEM Tech FolksWebsite: https://linktr.ee/developeverymind YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@demtechfolks IntrusionsInDepthWebsite: https://www.intrusionsindepth.com YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@IntrusionsInDepth Elastic DoD ArchitectsYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@elasticdod -----------------------------------------------------Episode was shot and edited at BlueBox Studio Tampahttps://blueboxdigital.com/bluebox-studio/
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In this episode, we talk with Jon Torrence. I had a fantastic time talking with Jon about his journey into music, his songwriting, and experience as a teacher. I came away extremely inspired and full of admiration. Honestly, I wanted to be a kid again so that I could be in Mr. Torrence's classroom. It makes me happy knowing there are awesome musicians like Jon Torrence out there sharing their gift. Keep your eyes on Jon's social media for updates on shows and new music. Jon Torrence Check out their music Follow on Facebook, Instagram, Youtube, Spotify Fans With Bands Subscribe to Fans With Bands on your favorite podcast service such as Apple, Google, Youtube, Spotify, iHeartRadio, Audible, Amazon Music or Stitcher. Be sure to rate the show and please send us feedback. We would love to hear from you. You can also follow Fans With Bands on Facebook, Twitter, Youtube, and Instagram For samplings of music by artists featured on Fans With Bands, check out our playlist on Spotify Fret Rescue Check out this episode's sponsor - Fret Rescue on Youtube, TikTok and Facebook!
Dr. Janet Patterson: Welcome to this Aphasia Access Aphasia Conversations Podcast, a series of conversations about the LPAA model and aphasia programs that follow this model. My name is Janet Patterson, and I am a research speech-language pathologist at the VA Northern California Healthcare System in Martinez, California. Today, I am delighted to be speaking with Dr. Elizabeth Madden, an Assistant Professor at Florida State University in the School of Communication Sciences and Disorders and an affiliate of the Institute for Successful Longevity. Liz also leads the FSU Aphasia Research Laboratory. Liz's research, teaching and clinical interests focus on rehabilitation of aphasia, and specifically on understanding the relationship between spoken and written language abilities in individuals with aphasia and developing behavioral treatments to address reading and writing disorders post stroke. Her work also addresses the impact of aphasia on the friendships and social well-being of people with aphasia and their care partners. These Show Notes accompany the conversation with Liz but are not a verbatim transcript. In today's episode you will hear about: the power of friendship and what people with aphasia and care partners think about how aphasia can affect the ability to create and sustain friendships, the definition of literacy and its behavioral components, and behavioral treatments for reading comprehension deficit in aphasia. In 2024, Liz was named a Distinguished Scholar USA by the Tavistock Trust for Aphasia UK. The Tavistock Trust aims to help improve the quality of life for those with aphasia, their families and care partners by addressing research capacity related to quality-of-life issues in aphasia. Congratulations on receiving this honor, Liz. Aphasia Access collaborates with the Tavistock Trust for Aphasia in selecting the awardees and is pleased to have the opportunity to discuss their work and the career influence of the Tavistock Award. Welcome Liz, to Aphasia Access Conversations. Dr. Liz Madden: Thank you, Janet. I'm really happy to be here today. I also say thank you to Aphasia Access and to the Tavistock Trust for Aphasia. I'm very grateful for this award and excited to have this conversation. Janet: I'm excited to be talking to you, my friend and research partner in several endeavors that we've been working on over the last few years. Liz, as we've said, you were named a Tavistock Trust Distinguished Scholar USA for this year, and you join a talented and dedicated group of individuals. How has receiving the Tavistock Award influenced your clinical and research efforts in aphasia, Liz: I first wanted to extend that thank you to the Tavistock Trust for Aphasia, and specifically Henrietta, the Duchess of Bedford and the honorable Nicole Campbell, and just a very gracious, sincere thank you for all the time and effort and support they give to aphasia researchers. I would say, I'm just delighted and very humbled to be recognized this year. I would say further that this award motivates my work that is focused on trying to really make an impact on the lives and quality of life and successful living for people who have aphasia and continuing my work. My beginning work was really more impairment focused, which some of that we will talk about, and I really value that. But having this award, and the more I stay in the field, it is extending that and making sure that everything I'm doing always is directly related to helping the lives of people with aphasia. Janet: That leads right into the question I'd like to begin with Liz, which is about your recent work investigating the role of friendship for persons with aphasia. I believe in the power of friendship and community during joyful times and also during the sad times in one's life. In Aphasia. Access podcast episode number 119, Finding the person in front of aphasia, I talked with your friend and colleague, Dr Lauren Bislick, with whom I believe you collaborate to investigate friendship and aphasia. How did you become interested in this aspect of aphasia, and what can you tell us about your work in this area and your collaboration with Lauren? Liz: Lauren and I did our Ph.D.'s together. We both were mentored by Diane Kendall at the University of Washington, so Lauren and I are Ph.D. sisters. Also, we were both at Project Bridge, led by Dr. Jackie Hinkley in 2018. That's really where my interest in friendship began. That conference brought together researchers, speech-language pathologists, people with aphasia, and their friends and family. I was the researcher at a table, and we ended up being Team Friendship. Lauren was also at this meeting, but she was at Team Yoga; Lauren does a lot of work with friendship, but also with yoga. My other colleague who does a lot of friendship work with me is Dr. Michelle Therrien here at FSU. She primarily works with children who use AAC, but her main research is friendship. She and I had already had some conversations about the importance of friendship, particularly for people who have communication disorders. The idea was we leave the conference and to take action and carry out some of the goals that were generated from that discussion. So that's when I reached back out to Lauren, because she was at that conference. Then I also reached out to my friend, Michelle Therrien, and other individuals who became part of our Team Friendship, Dr. Sarah Wallace, who's also one of our good friends and collaborators, and Rachel Gough Albritton who is one of Jackie Hinkley's former doc students and here at FSU as well. and the office of research. That is the background of some conversations before Project Bridge, but really for me, coming back and actually starting studies addressing different aspects of friendship, which I know we'll talk more about, was really brought about by the Project Bridge conference. Janet: That is quite a story, and I can see you sitting around the table and developing Team Friendship - good for you. We all know, Liz, that one of the unfortunate consequences of aphasia can be the loss of or the diminishing of friendships, or the disruption of the communication skills important to developing and sustaining friendship and community. What have you learned from people with aphasia about their successes and challenges in sustaining and creating new friendships. Liz: Yes, good question. Well, at that conference that I mentioned, there were five or six people with aphasia, and initially our table was labeled something like, What happens in the long run? and we started having conversations. It was very clear after our initial conversation that the group centered on relationships and friendship, so we shifted to being friendship only. I will say, just at that table, it became very clear to me, that's what rose to the top when the group was thinking about the bigger picture of living life. In a research project we've done there was a small sample of 15 people with aphasia, and we talked to them over time. I think the timing of a conversation is really something important to keep in mind when we're talking to people with aphasia about any topic, of course, but particularly friendship. From other studies we've noticed that responses are really different. If we're talking during the early days, maybe the acute days, versus the chronic days, we'd get really different responses. Just a quick summary, again, this was 15 people and a unique set. Most people in our study were a part of aphasia groups, and, of course, really motivated to do research. But I will say, when we looked at their responses, when asked to think back to the early days, all different aspects of friendship, how supported they felt, or how they were able to communicate, and we compared it to their responses in the now. Overall, the pattern was less satisfaction, feeling less supported or less able to engage in those earlier days, but more of a recovery pattern over time, but again, not for everybody. There were still a few people in our group that were reporting not having many friends. Our paper had a different light, a positive light about friendships. Some of the other papers out there have a more negative tone. It's a very important area we need to address. I was happy to see this group reporting, now that they had been living with aphasia for several years, their pattern of more negative responses early, and a recovering pattern now. They reported making friends with other people who have aphasia, and finding at this point, who are those good friends. There's other great work being done by other colleagues, Brent Archer, Jamie Azios and Katie Strong, who are studying the same topic. They had a great paper that describes who stuck around, they were examining the next steps of what it takes to support the positive recovery that we know does happen for some people. Janet: I like the positive perspective you are taking. Given that one has had a stroke, and given that the this is the situation in life, what is the positive? What can you do? Who are your friends? Look at positive ideas rather than publishing research on all the negative aspects. Kudos to you for doing that. Liz: Thanks, all of it's important, right? We have to know that. I think we had a special group. I think we had a particularly positive outcome, and it was good to know that friendships don't disappear for everyone. But I think there's something that those people had done and that their friends had done, that we're still trying to learn more about. Janet: Thank you for that work. Liz. It makes me think about the aphasia journey in that it involves not just the person with aphasia, but also their care partners and all the people around them. In your investigations of friendship, what do the care partners of persons with aphasia tell you about their successes and challenges in sustaining and developing friendships? These friendships could be individual friendships or partner friendships or group friendships through social, religious or professional activities or even community groups. Liz: Thank you for this question. I think it's sometimes a forgotten group that we overlook, the care partners, and the critical role they play in the recovery of people with aphasia. I always try to have us remember we want the care partners to do well on their own as people, and so we've done a couple projects. We've just finished data collection on a much larger study of 80 aphasia care partners, and I'm just getting into those data. We did a Qualtrics survey and also did experience sampling, where we used a phone app, and four times a day for two weeks, participants got these little pings, and they had to tell us, Where are you? What are you doing? Who are you with? How are you feeling? When was the last time you interacted with a friend? Was it a text? I don't have the amazing outcomes for you yet. This project was a much bigger follow-up to a project a few years ago with 35 care partners. We, of course, wanted to interview them but then COVID was happening, so we settled for a really nice Qualtrics survey. I will say that these individuals were surprised when we were reaching out to them. They kept trying to schedule their loved one with aphasia, and we said, “No, we want to talk to you about your friendships.” And they were surprised, asking, “You want to talk about me.' I will say they were very excited that we wanted to know about them. Back to the timeline I shared earlier in that very small study, the profile was opposite. We asked them about their friendships before they were caregivers, the early stages of caregiving, and then now, and their comments kind of make sense. Across the group they reported in the early stages, they felt like they had really great friends, support and satisfaction. People were rallying around them, coming to the hospital to support them. Many of them had been caregiving for a very long time when we did a comparison, and their reported friendship satisfaction and support was actually lower now. The questions were not the same and the groups were different, but as I told you a few minutes ago, the people with aphasia were more negative in the acute stage, and our small group were more positive now with how they're feeling about their friendships, and the care partners were the opposite. They were feeling more supported in the beginning, and now as time has gone on, some of them report the friends aren't there as much. Some of them felt like they were a burden, or they didn't know how to engage, being very selfless. They have dropped their own social interests to take care of their loved one. We did see in that project, that the longer, the more months a person had been caregiving, was correlated with poor self-perceived friendships and also how they perceived their loved one's health. That was just their perception. If they perceived their loved one to have more health concerns, not just a feature but overall health, they also tended to rate themselves as not as satisfied with their friendship. Bringing in that piece of information and the caregiving burden into our new projects, we did actually get scales on resilience and caregiving burden depression. In this new project we replicated some of our same questions, and we're now trying to look more at overall well-being, seeing how resilience and purpose in life and caregiving burden might play a role. Janet: That reminds me of the commercials, when you are taking off in an airplane or when you are thinking about being a care partner, you do have to take care of yourself as the care partner before you can give the best care to the person with aphasia. Anything that we can do to focus on the person the with aphasia, and also focus on the care partner, I think, is good in terms of developing and sustaining friendships, Liz: Yes. Care partners definitely have a lot more to say, and we haven't actually been able to do face to face interviews yet, but we did have a lot of really rich, open ended responses and surveys that we're still looking through. A piece I'm really interested in, is we have that one-time perception when they did our one-time survey, now we have their responses, we can track how people respond over a two-week period, were they always at home with their loved ones and not responding to friends? I think there's just a lot and again, trying to understand from this group what are the positives. Who are the people that have these positive responses? Then, of course, the next big steps are trying to provide more research resources and interventions for both care partners and people with aphasia. Our group has not yet reached out to friends, so that's a big part to come. I think other researchers have examined friends and a key part intervening with these friends too. Janet: People with aphasia and care partners have different friendship styles and needs, and when aphasia disrupts communication, it can also affect the way a person approaches friendship. As speech-language pathologists, I believe that we can play a role in guiding a person with aphasia and a care partner to develop communication skills that can support friendship efforts. Liz, what are some ideas or actions that you might think of for speech-language pathologists in a busy clinical practice? What kind of actions can they take to support friendship activities, for a person with aphasia, recognizing, of course, that we are all different in our friendship activities. Also recognizing that you're at the very beginning of some of this work, I'm hoping that you have some ideas you might be able to share with us. Liz: Yes, actually our very first friendship project addressed this topic. It was led by Michelle Therrien, and we surveyed about 40 speech-language pathologists trying to find out their view of the role that they think they should play. They find friendship to be very important. They find it to be in their scope of practice. But not surprising, were not aware of resources. They felt overwhelmed with how much speech-language pathologists have to cover, right? But it was really good to know that the group we reached out to found it to be a very important part of their practice that they want to address. I think you hit on something really important, that we teach and adopt having a person-centered care model, and we know that it's part of what we ask about. The simplest thing is asking. We don't need tools. We just need to make sure it's part of what we ask, making sure we're talking about relationships, talking about friendships. There are some really great tools that do exist. There's the Stroke Social Network Scale by Sarah Northcott and Katerina Hillary from the UK. Katie Strong, Brent Archer, Jamie Azios and Natalie Douglas are a wonderful group who have been studying friendship. They've used the Social Convoy Model in some of their papers. It has a great visual that they have used, and therapists can also use. Basically, it is mapping out the social network of who's most important, which could be used one time, or as a pre-post measure. There are different ways, formal or informal, of trying to monitor someone's social network or how they feel supported. I don't think there's a target number of friendships and I don't think more means better, but it could be just making sure we're checking in and that we know that's an important part of therapy. We want them to be able to communicate and interact with friends. Speech-language pathologists are creative in to how to make that happen. Janet: I agree with that view Liz, and I hope that speech-language pathologists will feel comfortable being creative and asking people about their friendships or what they might need to help maintain or sustain their friendships. I would like to turn now to the topics of reading and literacy, which I know you have been investigating. While these terms are related, they are not synonymous. Would you please explain the difference between them and how you are investigating both in your research? Liz: Yes. Thanks. That is a good question. To be honest, the first answer is not very scientific. When I was writing papers it was getting cumbersome to always write reading and spelling/ writing. The term came to be when I wanted to make sure that I was making it clear that I wasn't just focused on reading, but also concerned with the spelling and writing components. With my colleagues, Jessica Obermeier and Aaron Bush, we started using the term literacy for some of our work. People will have different ideas of what literacy might entail. I have been describing treatment as “literacy focused”, working on reading and spelling and writing. My initial work was very much focused on reading, and over the past several years I became more interested in trying to also add on the spelling component. If we're working on spelling and writing it gives us a chance to inherently work on the reading. If we're only focused on reading, it doesn't bring in the writing. There's a time for them to be separate, I fully agree. There are also times where they can be targeted at the same time. Janet: That makes perfect sense. When I think about how we discussed in the past, reading for pleasure, or reading to gain knowledge, or reading for information, or reading for safety, so many different aspects of reading, literacy also factors into how you use reading in those situations. Liz: Yes, and so in a lot of day-to-day communication, you need both, right? It's for text messaging, right? We need to read it and respond in a written way, also emails. There are lots of instances where for the for the interaction to go well, we need to be able to read and respond in writing, such as filling out forms, email, texting, social media. For a lot of interactions we need both for there to be a successful written language exchange. Janet: Liz, as part of our work with the Academy of Neurologic Communication Disorders and Sciences, Aphasia Writing Group, you and I were part of the team who critically reviewed treatment approaches for reading comprehension deficits in persons with aphasia. You've also investigated, as you mentioned earlier, specific aspects of reading deficits in persons with aphasia. What are some of the insights that you have gained from this work? And by the way, it was such a pleasure doing that critical review of treatment for reading deficits, and there was a lot of interesting information that came to light in that paper. Liz: Yes, thank you. I was going to comment that I remember we thought we were going to have all these papers to go through and really and that review, we were very much focused on papers where the main outcome was reading comprehension. When we stuck to what our aim was, there really weren't that many papers that that met the aim of that project. So that really brought to light that it really is an area of our field that doesn't have enough attention. Some of my recent projects, as I mentioned with Aaron Bush and Jessica Obermeier, we've talked to people with aphasia and gotten their perspective of before and early days. I really like doing this research over time. Things change, but we learned just how important reading and writing are to people with aphasia, and that they really want to work on it. I think we've seen when we looked in the literature, there wasn't much there. When we've talked to people with aphasia and speech-language pathologists, they want to work on reading, and they're not sure how. That further motivates me that this is an area to work on. In some of my beginning work, I was Diane Kendall's research speech language pathologist for a few years before I did my Ph.D., and I exclusively delivered her phono motor treatment. In that research trial, the main outcome was word retrieval, but the therapy that she designed inherently worked a lot on reading and writing. We retrained every phoneme - how to say it, what your mouth is doing, and also the graphemes that go with the phonemes. As her research speech pathologist, that's really when I got very interested in reading. I'd be in these sessions, and we'd finally bring out the graphemes that go with the phonemes. I recall telling people that this is going to get better – and it did not. That connection between the phonemes and the graphemes, for a lot of people, wasn't there. In that clinical experience as her research speech pathologist is when I realized that the treatment improved reading for some people, but not for everyone. So that's my background of really getting focused on reading. In the last few years, I've been working on adapting that original version of treatment that was for word retrieval. I've added some components to make it more focused on reading. I've been working with Olga Burkina, who's at the Kessler Stroke Foundation, and has an NIH grant where she is pairing exercise with this reading focused phono motor treatment. It's fun to be a part of that group exploring the idea of doing aerobic exercise to improve the brain blood flow, and to see if that's going to help improve reading treatment. Again, the idea being going forward is what the treatment might change. There are some other projects also. I'm working with Will Graves at Rutgers. He is using computational modeling to have us stop guessing which treatment. We're trying to get a really good baseline assessment, trying to find out about semantic impairment, phonological impairment, and then we're using this reading focused phono motor treatment. We also have a reading focus semantic feature analysis. I really enjoy getting to work with different researchers who have these wonderful, big questions, and that I'm getting to support it as the speech-language pathologist on these projects focused on reading and writing and phono motor treatment. So those are some exciting projects I'm involved in right now. Janet: That's exciting, because you started out by saying there were only a few papers that we found that really address reading treatment, and you're right. It's daunting, then how do you select the reading treatment? How do you help this person with aphasia who wants to improve their reading comprehension? I think it's exciting that you've got all these different avenues and are working with a variety of people to investigate treatment. Liz: Yeah. And the one thing I'll add to that is part of that, that review we did, for some people those treatments are helping reading comprehension. But for some people, I've been trying to work on the next step. I have a very small dataset where I've added a semantic comprehension stage to my adapted photo motor treatment. I'm in the very early stages of this and I'm sure it's fine to say, but I've been having these really exciting conversations with Kelly Knollman-Porter and Sarah Wallace. They're also Tavistock Trust recipients, and they study reading from a different perspective, using text to speech, compensatory and very focused book reading. They're very comprehension focused, so we're at the very early, fun stages of where we are in our thinking. I think there might be a middle step we are missing, but we are talking about taking these impairment focused treatments, which I think have a role, and have a participation, functional part of it. That's another emerging, new collaboration, where we are coming to reading from different perspectives, and we're trying to see where we can get with that goal, back to this comprehension question, improving functional reading, maybe from impairment and compensatory approaches. Janet: I think that's the right approach to take, and I think it's exciting, because we have to remember that everybody reads differently. Some people like reading, some people don't enjoy reading. They read what they have to, but they don't particularly enjoy it. So, if we all come to it from different perspectives, we all have different strengths that we bring, and different deficits as well, and different needs or designs, just as is so many things with aphasia. Start with the person with aphasia, asking What do you want to read? What problems are you having? Then use that as a guide to selecting an impairment-based treatment or text to speech treatment, or whatever. I think that's exactly the right approach. Liz: The one thing the treatment we were talking about, phono motor treatment, in general, is a phonology treatment. The good thing is that my focus is asking, is it improving reading? I'm also extending it to writing. We do know at its core, it's a language treatment, so it is nice that it can be tweaked to serve the person's main interests. I think that's important, that we are trying to work on what people want to work on, but we want to make sure we're improving, if we can, not just one language modality, and we know that these abilities are supported by similar brain structures and underling cognitive processes. That's something else we've been trying to work on, being person centered and at the same time trying to maximize generalization - lots of pieces. I am finding now what's most motivating and exciting is trying to make sure that we're doing things that people with aphasia find important, and how also to keep the whole science moving forward in this way that's going to have functional, important outcomes. That people with aphasia are going to be able to do what they want to do to the best that they can. Janet: Absolutely! But then there's the scientific challenge of how do you collect the data? How to best observe specific outcome data on performance measures, but also collect the person-centered data. How do you collect data that really can speak to whether you're having a success and whether this might be generalizable or transferable to another person? Liz: I think it's important that we need both. I always say, and some of my collaborators may not like it, but if in the person reported outcome, a person with aphasia is telling us that they feel better and that they are communicating better in life, and those measures should not be optional, those measures to me, a critically important part of seeing this treatment successful. There are different ways to do that and different ways to capture their perspective. For example, if trained reading words moved this much and if the patient reported outcome change is greater, then I find that to be a success. If the reverse happens, I find treatment not successful. If my probes showed gain but the person with aphasia does not see it or feel it, then I don't find treatment to be a success. So, I think it's really important that persons with aphasia tell us different things, and we need to have many assessments in both of those categories. I think, when possible. Janet: You're absolutely right. When you think about many of the treatments that we're doing, they are not necessarily easy, and they take time, and you have to stay the course. I think you know, I've been interested for a number of years in motivation and engagement, and what keeps people motivated and doing what they're doing. If you've got a treatment that you can see over time, small changes in your specific reading outcomes, but not so much of a change in the person centered outcomes, or person reported outcomes, how do you know the person is still really engaged and motivated and willing to slog through your treatment in order to get to the place that you hope they will? I think you're correct when you're assessing the importance of the person reported outcome. Liz: Yeah, that's good. And then that's a whole other like measure in itself, right? The key of motivation we've talked about in some of the trials. The one person who didn't do very well, and just in our conversation, sometimes it for different reasons. That wasn't motivating for that person. There's that's a whole very important piece that a lot of us have a lot of room to improve in how we capture that and support that. Janet: Which is a challenge when we're trying to devise treatments for, say, reading or anything that can be applicable to a wide range of persons with aphasia. Kudos to you for meeting that challenge as best you can. Liz: We're working on it. But I do really think that it's changing. Sometimes I feel like there are impairment-based people and life participation people, and I don't think it needs to be that way. It's fine if we only study one area. We can't all study everything, but I think as a whole they complement each other very well. And so I'm just excited to see that it seems like things are moving in a really exciting way, where people who study aphasia in various different ways now seem to have the main outcome, asking is this going to help people with aphasia feel better, communicate better, and look forward to something different in life? I think we're all seeing that that's what we're supposed to be doing, and how we do it is going to look really different, and that's great. I think we're moving in the right direction. Janet: Very well said. I think, and you obviously do as well, that literacy and reading skills are crucially important to individuals with aphasia in so many ways, such as life skills reading or pleasure reading. Acknowledging that we all have different skill levels and preferences, what are some ideas that you might have identified that speech-language pathologists can use to support the literacy and reading desires and activities for a person with aphasia? Liz: Great question. I think my answer is very similar to the question about what can SLPs do to help support friendship? I think being person centered. You said earlier, right, we all have different interests. Somebody might say it's not one of my goals and I really don't want to spend a lot of time on this. But just having those conversations and person-centered measures and using supported conversation we can easily gather important information. There are some really good patient-reported outcome measures that ask about reading, so maybe use some of those existing tools. The Comprehensive Aphasia Disability Questionnaire has a nice scale that talks about different aspects of reading as well as other aspects of language. But at the minimum, I think finding a way, even just to draw your own scale and then trying to find out in their life, what are different activities where they want to or need to engage, right? Texting, email, restaurant. I mean, we think about it, we're reading all the time throughout life. So, I think finding the reading need is a general interest and then getting really specific is one way to do it. Another thing could be, as I mentioned before, our brain relies on similar structures and language networks when we are engaging in spoken language and written language. So oftentimes improving our reading and writing improves our spoken abilities and vice versa. So even if it's not the main goal in treatment, for example if the main outcome might be word retrieval, I really believe multimodal learning is important. If, after you've gone through what you want to do say writing it, having them repeat it, maybe copy it, even though that's not the main goal, and it's not slowing the therapy, if it's working for you and your client, then I really think, at the minimum, using written language to support spoken language has a good role. I also think the opposite can be true using spoken language to support written language. So I do think that it's important that we know we are addressing all of language, and that that language skills really do usually move up and down together in aphasia. Janet: Well said, again. Liz, thank you so very much for joining me today in this fascinating look into friendship, literacy, reading and aphasia. And again, hearty congratulations to you on being named Tavistock, Distinguished Scholar. On behalf of Aphasia Access, I wish you well in your research and clinical efforts, and thank you for taking the time to speak with me today. At this point, I'd also like to thank our listeners for supporting Aphasia Access Conversations by listening to our podcast, including this fascinating discussion with Liz Madden. Liz: Thanks so much, Janet, I feel like you could just chat with you all day. Thank you again for giving me a chance to highlight some of my work. Also I want to thank everyone with aphasia who has participated in my projects, all my students and collaborators, Aphasia Access and the Tavistock Trust for Aphasia. Thanks again. Janet: For references and resources mentioned in today's podcast, please see our Show Notes. They are available on our website, www.aphasiaaccess.org. There you can also become a member of our organization, browse our growing library of materials, and find out about the Aphasia Access Academy. If you have an idea for a future podcast episode, email us at info@aphasiaaccess.org. For Aphasia Access Conversations, I'm Janet Patterson, thanking you again for your ongoing support of Aphasia Access. References Antonucci, T. C., & Akiyama, H. (1987). Social networks in adult life and a preliminary examination of the convoy model. Journal of Gerontology, 42(5), 519–527. https://doi.org/10.1093/geronj/42.5.519 Archer, B.A., Azios, J.H., Douglas, N.F., Strong, K.A., Worrall, L.D. & Simmons-Mackie, N.F. (2024). “I Could Not Talk . . . She Did Everything . . . She's Now My Sister”: People with Aphasia's Perspectives on Friends Who Stuck Around. American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 33, 349–368. https://doi.org/10.1044/2023_AJSLP-23-00205 Azios, J.H., Strong, K.A., Archer, B, Douglas, N.F., Simmons-Mackie, N. & Worrall, L. (2021). Friendship matters: A research agenda for aphasia. Aphasiology, 36(3),317-336. https://10.1080/02687038.2021.1873908 Madden, E.B., Bislick, L., Wallace, S.E., Therrien, M.C.S. & Goff-Albritton, R. (2023). Aphasia and friendship: Stroke survivors' self-reported changes over time. Journal of Communication Disorders, 103, 106330. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcomdis.2023.106330 Madden, E., Conway, T., Henry, M., Spencer, K., Yorkston, K., & Kendall, D. (2018). The relationship between non-orthographic language abilities and reading performance in chronic aphasia: An exploration of the primary systems hypothesis. Journal of Speech Language Hearing Research, 61, 3038-3054. https://doi.org/10.1044/2018_JSLHR-L-18-0058 Madden, E. B., Torrence, J., & Kendall, D. (2020). Cross-modal generalization of anomia treatment to reading in aphasia. Aphasiology, 35, 875-899. https://doi.org/10.1080/02687038.2020.1734529 Purdy, M., Coppens, P., Madden, E. B., Freed, D., Mozeiko, J., Patterson, J., & Wallace, S. (2018). Reading comprehension treatment in aphasia: A systematic review. Aphasiology, 33(6), 629–651. https://doi.org/10.1080/02687038.2018.1482405 Strong, K.A., Douglas, N.F., Johnson, R., Silverman, M., Azios, J.H. & Archer, B. (2023). Stakeholder-engaged research: What our friendship in aphasia team learned about processes and pitfalls. Topics in Language Disorders, 43(1), 43-56. https://10.1097/TLD.0000000000000302 Therrien, M., Madden, E. B., Bislick, L., & Wallace, S. (2021). Aphasia and Friendship: The Role and Perspectives of Speech-Language Pathologists. American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 30(5), 2228-2240. Resources Stroke Social Network Scale reference and materials: https://cityaccess.org/tests/ssns/ Aphasia Access Conversations Episode #119 - Finding the person in front of aphasia: A conversation with Lauren Bislick
The fourth episode on our CWG Series is with Al Torrence, the guitar player for the Alleghany High! We talked first meeting Charles, forming the band and more. Tune in! Listen to Al's favorite tunes here. Keep up with Al here. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thebuzzwithkatieb/support
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Chris and Steve are joined by Bills guard O'Cyrus Torrence following practice
Ian (28 JFK Finishes) and Emily (2x winner and 3rd fastest time on the course) join Corinne and Russell to talk about America's oldest ultramarathon and what makes it unique, challenging, and such a classic late season event. Ian & Emily's coaching business - https://sundogrunning.com/runner-training-and-coaching-services/ Follow Ian on IG - https://www.instagram.com/itgoesinflag/ Follow Emily on IG - https://www.instagram.com/emilyharrison0708/ Follow the show - please review and share! https://www.instagram.com/ultrauncoveredpodcast/
In this bonus episode, I'm hanging out with my favorite astrologer and dear friend, Torrence Tremayne. Torrence is a wildly talented multimedia artist and intuitive guide who brings the magic of astrology to life with humor and insight. He's here to break down the cosmic drama in Donald Trump's chart, and let's just say—it's a roast. We're talking retrogrades, rising signs, and what it all means for Trump's path ahead. Expect some rants, a few laughs, and some unexpected truths from the stars. Connect with Torrence: Website Instagram The Five Mistakes Coaches Make When Trying to Sell Ethically with a Feminist Lens Do you LOVE providing your services, but selling feels like a completely different vibe? Download the free PDF today to learn how to sell ethically. Business Witch The Course: This episode is brought to you by Business Witch The Course Additional Resources: - Learn about working with me and subscribe for business tips. - Apply to be a 1:1 client. Follow me on Instagram!
Anyone can be successful in real estate as long as they are willing to put in the work, and this is exactly what our guest today, Torrence Sorrell, has done and he's just getting started. Torrence just completed his second flip and now firmly has a base in real estate to start building his own real estate empire with flips and rental properties. The Cashflow For Life podcast is about one thing: using real estate investing as a tool to create consistent cashflow every month for the rest of your life. Our mission is to help everyone in America buy their first 5 properties in the next 2 years, and have them paid off in 7 years. This is the 2-5-7 Cashflow For Life philosophy. Tune in to witness how ordinary people in our community have put this philosophy into action to increase their net worth and create consistent monthly cashflow as they continue their journey to build wealth for themselves and their families.
We're joined once again by Torrence Tremayne, a brilliant archetypal astrologer with over 15 years of experience. Torrence's practice blends Jungian and mythopoetic traditions with storytelling, making his astrological insights both profound and accessible. In this episode, we explore the geopolitical astrology of 2024, unpacking potential U.S. political shifts, leadership changes, and the striking parallels between current astrological patterns and key historical events like 1968. Torrence also sheds light on astrology's power to decode collective transformation and societal change. Connect with Torrence: Website Instagram The Five Mistakes Coaches Make When Trying to Sell Ethically with a Feminist Lens Do you LOVE providing your services, but selling feels like a completely different vibe? Download the free PDF today to learn how to sell ethically. Business Witch The Course: This episode is brought to you by Business Witch The Course Additional Resources: - Learn about working with me and subscribe for business tips. - Apply to be a 1:1 client.- Follow me on Instagram!
Connor and Jordan discuss Cliff's entitlement, Isis's academic career, and Torrence's second-place win in Part 2 of this Bring It On rewatch.
09-29 O'Cyrus Torrence Postgame bonus 65 Mon, 30 Sep 2024 03:30:02 +0000 Sinh9v9LNlImQIJ2omHjeC6R3xKRPTly nfl,football,buffalo bills,o'cyrus torrence,sports Bills Football nfl,football,buffalo bills,o'cyrus torrence,sports 09-29 O'Cyrus Torrence Postgame Every Play, every game right here on WGR Sports Radio 550, WGR550.com. The official voice of the Buffalo Bills! Football On-Demand Audio Presented by Northwest Bank, For What's Next. 2024 © 2021 Audacy, Inc.
In today's episode of Business Witch, I welcome Torrence Tremayne, a renowned astrologer celebrated for his precise political predictions. Torrence delves into the impact of significant transits, such as the Jupiter-Uranus conjunction, on the 2024 presidential race, sharing his insights and forecasts for the upcoming election. Connect with Torrence: Website Instagram TikTok The Five Mistakes Coaches Make When Trying to Sell Ethically with a Feminist Lens Do you LOVE providing your services, but selling feels like a completely different vibe? Download the free PDF today to learn how to sell ethically. Business Witch The Course: This episode is brought to you by Business Witch The Course Additional Resources: - Learn about working with me and subscribe for business tips. - Apply to be a 1:1 client.- Follow me on Instagram!
In this exclusive episode of The Film Room, Erik Turner and Anthony Prohaska are joined by Buffalo Bills' Right Guard O'Cyrus Torrence, who shares in-depth insights into his training, game preparation, and on-field strategies.0:00 | Checking in O'Cyrus Torrence2:00 | How Did Torrence Prepare for Year Two3:20 | How Did He Learn the Offense in His Rookie Year4:35 | Biggest Physical Adjustment6:13 | Who Were Challenging Players to Face8:20 | Film Study Habits10:00 | Film & Discussion - Dart/Tackle Wrap18:58 | Film & Discussion - Combination Blocks24:30 | Film & Discussion - Anchoring33:15 | Film & Discussion - How the Pass Type Impacts the Block38:05 | Dealing with Defensive Line Stunts40:15 | Closing ThoughtsIn this episode, we explore:-Torrence's offseason training regimen and key areas of improvement.-His most effective learning methods for mastering the team's offense.-The biggest adjustments he faced as a rookie.-Weekly film study habits and techniques for analyzing opponents.-Insights into his toughest matchups and the players who posed the greatest challenges.Our discussion also delves into specific plays, blocking techniques, and the intricacies of different offensive schemes, offering a detailed look at what it takes to excel at the highest level of football. Tune in to gain valuable knowledge from one of the game's rising stars and elevate your understanding of the sport!—One Pass Premium Membership - https://www.cover1.net/onepass/Cover 1 would love to hear your thoughts on this topic and the show in general. Comment below and let us what you think!—Thank you for watching this video, we can't do it without the support of our fans. If you have any ideas for content you'd like to see from us, comment below.—DOWNLOAD THE COVER 1 MOBILE APP!► Android: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.coverapp► iOS: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/id1532587486 —► Subscribe to our YouTube channel - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClL6eJS1s8xmRoYRQbYgxQQ?sub_confirmation=1► Subscribe to our Cover 1 Network channel - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/cover-1-sports/id1370162953 —Cover 1 provides multi-faceted analysis of the NFL and NFL Draft including: Podcasts, Video blogs, Commentary, Scouting Reports, Highlights and Video Breakdowns. NFL footage displayed is not owned by Cover 1. —Follow Us HereTwitter: https://twitter.com/Cover1Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/@Cover_1_Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Cover1NFL/Official Merchandise: https://teespring.com/en-GB/stores/cover-1__The Cover1.net web site and associated Social Media platforms are not endorsed by, directly affiliated with, maintained, authorized, or sponsored by the NFL or any of its clubs, specifically the Buffalo Bills. All products, marks and company names are the registered trademarks of their original owners. The use of any trade name or trademark is for identification and reference purposes only and does not imply any association with the trademark holder of their product brand.
Known for his innovative approach to education, Dr. Michael Torrence of Motlow State Community College in Tennessee is a champion of emerging technologies, workforce development, and community engagement. He's passionate about creating scalable opportunities for students, fostering relationships with industries, and preparing the next generation for the future. From transforming homeless students into successful professionals, to pioneering digital credentialing systems, Dr. Torrence shares his dynamic FRED Talk from the ACT Workforce Summit stage. Show Notes, Transcript, and Slides ACT Work Ready Communities ACT Workforce Solutions 2024 ACT Workforce Summit Tear the Paper Ceiling Campaign Inquire on WRC Storytelling and Poster Exhibition
Monday, January 19th, 1953 was the last time Willie Torrence saw his wife, Rose. On Tuesday, Willie called the police and learned that a body of a woman matching Rose's description had been found. Join us as we try to make heads or tails of a case fraught with racial tension and sparse news coverage.Tea of the Day: TWG 1837 Black TeaTheme Music by Brad FrankThis episode is sponsored by Kyoot Tees.For a full list of sources, go to https://tea-time-crimes.simplecast.com/episodes.Sources:By William A Fowlkes, “Woman's Slayer Still Free.” New Pittsburgh Courier, Sat, Feb 07, 1953, Page 1, https://www.newspapers.com/image/40111565/Obituary, Mrs. Rosa Bradley Torrence, The Atlanta Constitution, Thu, Jan 22, 1953, Page 28, https://www.newspapers.com/image/398007330/Obituary, Torrence, The Atlanta Constitution, Fri, Jan 23, 1953, Page 23, https://www.newspapers.com/image/398007574/By George Coleman, “Torrence Case Suspect is Indicted on Murder Charge.” Alabama Tribune, Fri, Feb 27, 1953, Page 1, https://www.newspapers.com/image/554730305/“City Orders Family Vacate Bombed House.” The Atlanta Constitution, Thu, Apr 28, 1949, Page 10, https://www.newspapers.com/image/397759629/Department of Commerce - Bureau of the Census: Fifteenth Census of the United States: 1930 Population Schedule, Retrieved June 29th, 2024 from https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/2298451:6224Department of Commerce - Bureau of the Census: Fifteenth Census of the United States: 1940 Population Schedule, Retrieved June 29th, 2024 from https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/50802384:2442“Negro Tenants Guarded in Rubble.” The Atlanta Constitution, Wed, Apr 27, 1949, Page 20, https://www.newspapers.com/image/397759553/“Atlanta Woman Beaten to Death.” California Eagle, Thu, Jan 29, 1953 ·Page 1, https://www.newspapers.com/image/693598503/“Wealthy Woman Beaten to Death.” Spokane Chronicle, Sat, Jan 24, 1953, Page 2, https://www.newspapers.com/image/566321803/“Rich Negro Woman Found Beat to Death in Atlanta.” Alabama Journal, Sat, Jan 24, 1953 ·Page 1, https://www.newspapers.com/image/457048878/“Suspect Indicted in Sewer Death.” The Atlanta Journal, Sat, Feb 21, 1953, Page 7, https://www.newspapers.com/image/968741277/“Negro Lady Killed, Stuffed into Sewer.” Beatrice Daily Sun, Sun, Jan 25, 1953 ·Page 8, https://www.newspapers.com/image/507433478/“Mistrial Declared in Murder Trial of Major Bailey.” The Black Dispatch, Sat, Apr 18, 1953 ·Page 6, https://www.newspapers.com/image/872012484/“Atlanta Woman Who Moved into White Neighborhood is Found Dead in City Sewer.” The Black Dispatch, Sat, Jan 31, 1953, Page 5, https://www.newspapers.com/image/872011484/“Bailey Case Winds Up in Mistrial as Atlanta Jury Hangs.” New Pittsburgh Courier, Sat, May 23, 1953, Page 10, https://www.newspapers.com/image/40111880/“Seeks Hole in Murder Confession.” The New York Age, Sat, May 23, 1953, Page 12, https://www.newspapers.com/image/40477532/“ Bailey Case Declared Mistrial By Judge As Jury Panel is “Hopelessly Deadlocked.”” Alabama Tribune, Fri, May 22, 1953, Page 1, https://www.newspapers.com/image/554731109/Atlanta Scene by Alyce Martin Ware, and “Willena Torrence Allen Selected English Ave Teacher of the Year.” The Atlanta Voice, Sat, May 13, 1978 ·Page 4, https://www.newspapers.com/image/519871810/Obituaries - Torrence, The Atlanta Constitution, Fri, Nov 02, 1956, Page 18, https://www.newspapers.com/image/397505884/Obituaries - Mrs. Willena T. Allen, The Atlanta Constitution, Wed, Aug 27, 1997 ·Page 82, https://www.newspapers.com/image/403353798/National Archives at Washington DC; Washington DC, USA; Applications for Headstones For U.S. Military Veterans, 1925-1941; Retrieved on June 29th, 2024 at https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/821686:2375Georgia Department of Health and Vital Statistics, 1914 - 1940; Retrieved on June 29th, 2024 at https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/60041277:2562“Seeking to Tell a Story: Political action from slavery to civil rights.” Archives Research Center at AUC Robert W. Woodruff, https://digitalexhibits.auctr.edu/exhibits/show/seekingtotell/segregation“This Day in History.” By History.Com Editors https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/kkk-founded“Ku Klux Klan in the Twentieth Century.” New Georgia Encyclopedia, Published July 7th, 2005 and edited Aug 12, 2020, https://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/articles/history-archaeology/ku-klux-klan-in-the-twentieth-century/A 'Forgotten History' Of How The U.S. Government Segregated America : NPR, MAY 3, 201712:47, HEARD ON FRESH AIR hosted by Terry Gross with guest Richard Rothstein author of “The Color of Law.”
In this episode, we are joined by Thurman and Torrence Thomas, founders of Tankproof. Listen in as they share their incredible journey from the swamps of Louisiana to becoming full-time musicians and nonprofit professionals. Discover how Tankproof is making a difference by teaching swimming lessons, providing food security, and fostering community connections in Texas, Louisiana, California, and New York. Hear about the life-changing impact of their programs and their inspiring personal stories, including a near-drowning experience that fueled their mission. Don't miss this inspiring conversation with two dedicated and humble individuals who are changing lives one swim lesson at a time. Visit Tankproof.org for more information and to support their cause.
Righteous Torrence “Chevy” Hill, was a cherished member of Atlanta's LGBTQ+ community who was tragically killed at the age of 35. Known as “Chevy”, Hill was the owner of Evollusion, a salon dedicated to creating a safe and affirming space for young black queer individuals. Righteous Torrence “Chevy” Hill, era un querido miembro de la comunidad LGBTQ+ de Atlanta que fue asesinado trágicamente a la edad de 35 años. Conocido como “Chevy”, Hill era el propietario de Evolusion, un salón dedicado a crear un espacio seguro y afirmativo para los jóvenes. individuos negros queer. — Support Us: Get your Merch here! : https://www.cuentocrimenpodcast.com/category/all-products Buy us a coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/cuentocrimenpodcast — Follow us: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cuentocrimenpodcast/?hl=en Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@cuentocrimenpodcast?lang=en Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCb-xq8FGsgxqDOyT4CsCfHA Twitter: https://twitter.com/CuentoCrimenPod Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61550192066426 — Email us a personal true crime encounter at: cuentocrimenpodcast@gmail.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Acquire tons of knowledge in technology utilization from today's episode with Chris Torrence! Chris joins the show to cover the importance of maintaining a neutral mindset in the freight industry, the role of AI in automation and augmentation, the significance of human-to-human interaction, Optum's focus on optimization, and the challenges in technology adoption, data fragmentation, and standardization. There's more to learn from our conversation, so don't miss out! About Chris Torrence A Visionary Leader in Transportation and Logistics Technology, Chris Torrence serves as the Chief Strategy Officer at Optym, Inc. Torrence possesses over 20 years of vast and equally diverse experience within the commercial logistics, transportation, and supply chain solutions industry. From the US military to industry-leading incumbents and hyper-growth start-ups, he has worn virtually every functional hat imaginable within the space. He fundamentally believes the ability to harmonize human capital with advanced technology is paramount for success in the modern day freight ecosystem. Prior to joining Optym, Chris proudly served in the United States Air Force with three wartime tours of duty under his belt. While on active-duty, he was charged with overseeing logistics readiness, joint task force operations, and installation deployment planning for the Department of Defense. Following his military service, Chris spent over a decade at global 3PL behemoth, C.H. Robinson, primarily with the TMC division whereby he was selected to work onsite managing the complex logistical needs for multinational Fortune 100 shippers. This unique exposure equipped him with the ability to truly understand the intricacies of enterprise supply chains from multiple vantage points. Chris was later tapped to help orchestrate the launching of Uber Freight, to include the autonomous truck program as part of Uber's Advanced Technologies Group. He subsequently led global expansion efforts at premier SaaS visibility provider, FourKites, Inc., before becoming a senior executive at Arrive Logistics, one of the fastest growing freight brokerages in the United States. Most recently, Chris led strategic sales and go-to-market strategy for Optimal Dynamics, a Princeton University spinoff specializing in advanced AI and sequential decision analytics within the trucking sector. During his three year tenure at OD, Chris personally generated over 80% of the organization's total revenue (ARR/TCV). He was also a critical piece in securing north of $56 million in VC funding. Chris Torrence's combination of industry knowledge, leadership success, strategic vision, and passion for innovation makes him a compelling and influential speaker for transportation and logistics media and events. His insights into the intersection of technology, AI, and logistics are invaluable for audiences keen on navigating the complexities of the modern-day freight ecosystem. Connect with Chris Website: https://optym.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/chris-torrence-0ab7923b/
The boys try to spend the day before the start of the trial finding out anything that might help them make their case against Mary McGinn stick. Marion comes to a conclusion that has him sneaking away from his friends to meet with Torrence in secret.-Now YOU can play Tales of the Old West too! Download our QuickDraw for FREE from DriveThru and sign up for more info at our new website.We are sharing one of our playtests for Tales of the Old West, the game we are creating. As is the nature of the beast, the rules are ever changing - this episode takes a short interlude in the real minutes to discuss the new iteration of the Trouble mechanic - and the current QuickDraw may have a number of differences from what you hear in this episode. This session was recorded in January 2024.EffektAP is brought to you by Effekt. Music is Old West Game by Stu Venable, used with kind permission of the Angry Folk Media Empire. Like what we do?Leave a review on iTunes or PodchaserFind essay transcripts and other stuff on Matthew's, and Dave's blogsUse this link to buy Free League stuff in PDF ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
Jared Torrence preached this sermon at our 20/30 College Retreat during the 2nd session on May 25, 2024. Scripture: Psalm 16
Jared Torrence preached this sermon at Covenant Fellowship Church on May 12, 2024. Series: What a Savior! - Seeing Jesus in the Book of Luke Scripture: Luke 7:1-35
A cybersecurity breach is not a matter of if, but a matter of when in this day in age. In today's episode we partnered with Triangle Artworks to host a Lunch and Learn presentation where local cybersecurity expert, Torrence Reed, talks about how this space may affect artists. Torrence discusses… Art, AI and Your IP Why having back up data is important Having a disaster recovery plan Training AI models for your creative business Using AI to work for your creative business Owning the data and digital content of your business Best practices for password security The benefits of using a password vault Mitigating risk And action steps that creatives can take to secure their data and operations Stay Connected with Torrence: Free Cyber Foundations Workbook: https://www.cybershieldsecurity.co https://www.instagram.com/torrencereed3/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/torrencereed/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbbALUHEEGYtXNZeNDh7CfQ Stay Connected with Triangle Artworks: https://www.triangleartworks.org Episode Blog Link: https://www.levelupartists.com/lua-podcast/159 Sign up for our studio newsletters at: https://www.AmeighArt.com https://www.JaclynSanders.com https://www.levelupartists.com Connect with us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/AmeighArt/ https://www.instagram.com/JSandersStudio/ https://www.instagram.com/LevelUpArtists/ Music by: https://www.coreyclaxton.com Watching or listening to one of our earlier episodes? In 2022, the Art Studio Insights podcast was renamed the Level Up Artists podcast!
This message by Jared Torrence was preached at our Renewing Your Mind meeting on April 21, 2024. It was followed by a panel discussion led by Jared Mellinger with Meghan Mellinger and Jared Torrence.
Torrence joins the show to discuss his college career and how he's preparing for the upcoming @nfldraft.Torrence also talks about his experience playing in the shrine bowl and his visits with NFL teams.Torrence (6-3, 208lbs) recorded 37 total tackles, 23 solo, 2 sacks, 1 INT, and 3 pass defenses in 12 games last season.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/profootballchase-podcast/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Hey there, friends!It's your host, Tammy Wilson, from the "Lead-HER-ship" podcast, and I've got something special to share with you today. I recently had the privilege of sitting down with a true community hero, Deanna West Torrence, the powerhouse behind the North End Community Improvement Collaborative (NEC) in Mansfield, Ohio. Our conversation was nothing short of inspiring.
On this episode of the NHRA Insider Podcast powered by Speedmaster, host Brian Lohnes is joined by Steve Torrence and Jeg Coughlin Jr to talk about not only the start of the 2024 Mission Foods NHRA Drag Racing Series but their careers, their approach to drag racing, and how the mental aspect of this sport is its most towering challenge. For Steve Torrence, a strong running car in Gainesville has buoyed his spirits and placed him back in a competitive mindset that he will carry into the Lucas Oil Winternationals. In a wide ranging conversation Torrence talks about himself, his family, the team's approach, and how things actually get more difficult in racing as time and success wear on. He also tells a side-splitting story about his first experience in a top fuel dragster as well as his first race. Must hear stuff. Jeg Coughlin Jr is back among the full-time ranks of NHRA pro stock racers and this conversation spans the spectrum of topics. Whether it is the evolution of a driver in the class, how he is able to maintain and keep competitive focus, his relationship with the car and his crew chiefs, and even the things his father taught him as a young racer, you'll be fascinated by the subject matter. The Winternationals are going to be fast and this show will get you pumped up for the race.
Deanna West-Torrence's next steps: Moving to California and NECIC's future Today – Deanna West-Torrence, founder and CEO of the North End Community Improvement Collaborative, is planning a move to San Diego, California on March 15. In this interview, city editor Carl Hunnell and business reporter Grace McCormick talk about her plans to be closer to her daughter and son-in-law and how she will lead NECIC from California. They also discuss the future of the NECIC community center, its fundraising efforts and NECIC staff members who will be in-house leaders while she works remotely.Support the show: https://richlandsource.com/membersSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week on the Queer News podcast Anna DeShawn remembers Righteous Torrence “Chevy” Hill. Chevy was a black trans man who was murdered in Atlanta. Anna also talks about the queer history made at the 96th Academy Awards. In full transparency, Anna's been down sick all week so this is a shorter episode but we hope you enjoy it nonetheless. Let's go! 00:00 - Welcome to the Queer News podcast 1:22 - Leave a Queer News Tip, https://www.speakpipe.com/msg/s/243669/19/rc6z5z67pp1op502 1:43 - Join the QCrew, https://bit.ly/3L3Ng66 2:57 - Queer News headlines 3:31 - We remember Righteous Torrence “Chevy” Hill 6:55 - The queers at the Oscars 9:00 - Anna's Got a Word
It's a Show-a-Rama at the KFI headquarters w/ Marla talking about her heels and about her outfit. New law at the Del Amo Shopping mall in Torrence, Calif., requires an adult accompanying anyone under 18 years old and younger after 8pm. Neil and Marla talk about her hometown and their family tree and how massive their family members are/ Marla is an Angeleno for over a decade and says that she LOVES LA. People are ditching California to locate themselves into Paradise Valley, Arizona. Prominently, wealthy Californians are making their way to this growing and pricey neighborhood. Marla breaks down the many police chases that hit SoCal and how she reports on it while doing her live show in the FOX LA newsroom.
Locked On Sun Devils - Daily Podcast On Arizona State Sun Devils Football & Basketball
With the 2024 NFL Draft process underway the 2024 NFL Scouting Combine kicks off at the end of the month. Unfortunately, Arizona State Sun Devils football is underrepresented at the event this year with cornerback Ro Torrence appearing as the program's lone representative. Torrence was more than deserving of the nod after two stellar seasons at Arizona State where he flourished as the team's number one corner and stacked up with impressive PAC-12 Conference competition. Still, there were several other Sun Devils football studs we can't help but feel were snubbed from the event. Versatile offensive lineman Joey Ramos tops our list including defensive lineman Dashaun Mallory, linebacker Tre Brown, and safety Chris Edmonds of Sun Devils who should've joined Torrence in Indianapolis. Host Richie Bradshaw breaks down why Torrence deserved his invite and why the other guys should've gone on this edition of the Locked On Sun Devils podcast. Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors! LinkedIn These days every new potential hire can feel like a high stakes wager for your small business. That's why LinkedIn Jobs helps find the right people for your team, faster and for free. Post your job for free at LinkedIn.com/lockedoncollege. Terms and conditions apply. Gametime Download the Gametime app, create an account, and use code LOCKEDON for $20 off your first purchase. FanDuel New customers, join today and you'll getONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY DOLLARS in BONUS BETS if your first bet of FIVE DOLLARS or more wins. Visit FanDuel.com/LOCKEDON to get started. eBay Motors With all the parts you need at the prices you want, it's easy to turn your car into the MVP and bring home that win. Keep your ride-or-die alive at EbayMotors.com. Eligible items only. Exclusions apply. eBay Guaranteed Fit only available to US customers. FANDUEL DISCLAIMER: 21+ in select states. First online real money wager only. Bonus issued as nonwithdrawable free bets that expires in 14 days. Restrictions apply. See terms at sportsbook.fanduel.com. Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER or visit FanDuel.com/RG (CO, IA, MD, MI, NJ, PA, IL, VA, WV), 1-800-NEXT-STEP or text NEXTSTEP to 53342 (AZ), 1-888-789-7777 or visit ccpg.org/chat (CT), 1-800-9-WITH-IT (IN), 1-800-522-4700 (WY, KS) or visit ksgamblinghelp.com (KS), 1-877-770-STOP (LA), 1-877-8-HOPENY or text HOPENY (467369) (NY), TN REDLINE 1-800-889-9789 (TN) Follow & Subscribe on all Podcast platforms…
Locked On Sun Devils - Daily Podcast On Arizona State Sun Devils Football & Basketball
With the 2024 NFL Draft process underway the 2024 NFL Scouting Combine kicks off at the end of the month. Unfortunately, Arizona State Sun Devils football is underrepresented at the event this year with cornerback Ro Torrence appearing as the program's lone representative. Torrence was more than deserving of the nod after two stellar seasons at Arizona State where he flourished as the team's number one corner and stacked up with impressive PAC-12 Conference competition. Still, there were several other Sun Devils football studs we can't help but feel were snubbed from the event. Versatile offensive lineman Joey Ramos tops our list including defensive lineman Dashaun Mallory, linebacker Tre Brown, and safety Chris Edmonds of Sun Devils who should've joined Torrence in Indianapolis. Host Richie Bradshaw breaks down why Torrence deserved his invite and why the other guys should've gone on this edition of the Locked On Sun Devils podcast.Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors!LinkedInThese days every new potential hire can feel like a high stakes wager for your small business. That's why LinkedIn Jobs helps find the right people for your team, faster and for free. Post your job for free at LinkedIn.com/lockedoncollege. Terms and conditions apply.GametimeDownload the Gametime app, create an account, and use code LOCKEDON for $20 off your first purchase.FanDuelNew customers, join today and you'll getONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY DOLLARS in BONUS BETS if your first bet of FIVE DOLLARS or more wins. Visit FanDuel.com/LOCKEDON to get started.eBay MotorsWith all the parts you need at the prices you want, it's easy to turn your car into the MVP and bring home that win. Keep your ride-or-die alive at EbayMotors.com. Eligible items only. Exclusions apply. eBay Guaranteed Fit only available to US customers.FANDUEL DISCLAIMER: 21+ in select states. First online real money wager only. Bonus issued as nonwithdrawable free bets that expires in 14 days. Restrictions apply. See terms at sportsbook.fanduel.com. Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER or visit FanDuel.com/RG (CO, IA, MD, MI, NJ, PA, IL, VA, WV), 1-800-NEXT-STEP or text NEXTSTEP to 53342 (AZ), 1-888-789-7777 or visit ccpg.org/chat (CT), 1-800-9-WITH-IT (IN), 1-800-522-4700 (WY, KS) or visit ksgamblinghelp.com (KS), 1-877-770-STOP (LA), 1-877-8-HOPENY or text HOPENY (467369) (NY), TN REDLINE 1-800-889-9789 (TN)Follow & Subscribe on all Podcast platforms…
Jared Torrence preached this sermon at our 20-30 Young Adults meeting on February 9, 2024. Scripture: Psalm 116:1-14
Thanks as always to Shawn Daley for our intro and outro music. Follow him on Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/shawndaley Where to find Throwdown Show: Website: https://audioboom.com/channels/5030659 Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/throwdownshow Twitter: https://twitter.com/ThrowdownShow YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/throwdownshow Discord: https://discord.gg/fdBXWHT Twitter list: https://twitter.com/i/lists/1027719155800317953
Amy King hosts your Día de Muertos Wake Up Call. ABC News Correspondent live from Jerusalem Jordana Miller comes on the show to share the latest regarding the Israel-Hamas War. KFI Tech Reporter Rich DeMuro joins Wake Up Call Show for ‘Wired Wednesday'! Rich talks about Beeper brining iMessage to Android, Jimmy Stewart reading a new bedtime story courtesy of AI, and a new startup adding a high tech twist to raising backyard chickens. On a new edition of ‘Amy's on It' she features Candy Cane Lane, an area of Woodland Hills consisting of several blocks of extensive Christmas lights. The show wraps with Amy interviewing President and CEO of the Inland Valley Humane Society & SPCA about animal shelters overflowing across the United States.
Syracuse legend Bruce Williams joins us to discuss CBA's playoff run and the latest on Syair Torrence's recruitment with host Wes Cheng on The Juice on the Cuse Podcast, presented by Rivals.com. Afterward, TJO's Brad Bierman calls in to discuss Syracuse basketball's win over Colgate, and the football team's upcoming matchup with Georgia Tech. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
MDJ Script/ Top Stories for Oct 14th Publish Date: Oct 13th Commercial: Henssler :15 From the Henssler Financial Studio, Welcome to the Marietta Daily Journal Podcast. Today is Satursday, October 14th and happy heavenly birthday to President Dwight D Eisenhower. ***EISENHOWER – FAIRWELL SPEECH*** I'm Dan Radcliffe and here are the stories Cobb is talking about, presented by Credit Union of Georgia. Cobb Schools Wants to Rejoin Map Lawsuit as Elections Board Settles Police Investigate Double Homicide at South Cobb Drive Cobb Commission Moves Forward With 2 Trails in County Master Plan All of this and more is coming up on the Marietta Daily Journal Podcast, and if you are looking for community news, we encourage you to listen and subscribe! BREAK: CU of GA STORY 1: Cobb Schools Wants to Rejoin Map Lawsuit as Elections Board Settles The Cobb County School District is seeking to rejoin a lawsuit challenging a school board map that's alleged to be racially gerrymandered. In July, a federal judge ruled that the school district couldn't be held liable but didn't rule on the map's merits. The Cobb County Board of Elections, the only remaining defendant, is settling with the plaintiffs, declining to defend the map. The school district alleges collusion between the elections board and the plaintiffs to favor Democrats. The lawsuit accuses the map of discriminating against communities of color. The school district is appealing to rejoin the case, and it's uncertain who will ultimately defend the map.......…….Get more stories like this from mdjonline.com STORY 2: Police Investigate Double Homicide at South Cobb Drive The Cobb Police Department is investigating a double homicide at the 4800 block of South Cobb Drive. Initial findings suggest a lone suspect approached the establishment, shot and killed two individuals, and then fled in a vehicle. The suspect's vehicle was tracked using Flock cameras. Officers located the suspect's vehicle, and the incident ended when the suspect took their own life. This appears to be an isolated incident involving known individuals, and there is no current threat to the public. The investigation is ongoing, and anyone with information is encouraged to contact the Cobb County Police Tip Hotline at 770-499-4111. STORY 3: Cobb Commission Moves Forward With 2 Trails in County Master Plan Cobb County is progressing with its Chattahoochee River Trail Pilot project, with the Board of Commissioners approving the start of engineering design for the second phase of the two-mile trail. The $3 million allocated for this phase includes $620,000 for the design of a one-mile section by engineering firm Thomas & Hutton. The first phase is already under construction, set to be completed around spring 2026. Commissioner Keli Gambrill opposed the project, citing concerns about funding from a 2016 special-purpose local-option sales tax. Additionally, the commission approved the concept for a four-mile trail connecting Powder Springs to Austell, expecting funding from grants and SPLOST funds. This trail will enhance the county's greenway and trail network. ......................…..(pause) We have opportunities for sponsors to get great engagement on these shows. Call 770.799.6810 for more info. We'll be right back Break: ESOG – ELON – JRM STORY 4: Marietta Weather Forecast Mostly Clear This Weekend Cobb County residents can expect favorable weather for upcoming events like high school homecomings and Chalktoberfest. The National Weather Service predicts the rest of the weekend staying dry and featuring partly cloudy skies. Temperature-wise, it will be mild, with temperatures ranging from the low 60s to low 70s. Wind speeds are expected to remain below 15 miles per hour throughout the weekend. STORY 5: Cobb Teacher of the year Award Cobb and Marietta Teachers of the Year, Elizabeth Goff and Candance Torrence, have been honored with handprints on Marietta Square's Teacher Walk of Honor. Goff, Cobb County's Teacher of the Year, teaches English to Speakers of Other Languages at Bells Ferry Elementary. Torrence, Marietta's Teacher of the Year, teaches fifth grade at Burruss Elementary. Both educators shared their paths to teaching and expressed gratitude to their support systems. Goff, a teacher for 21 years, serves students from 29 different language backgrounds. Torrence transitioned from a career in banking to education, inspired by her Aunt Annie Ruggs, a teacher in Alabama. Superintendent Grant Rivera praised Torrence for her inspirational role both inside and outside the classroom. We'll be back in a moment Break: DAYCO – DRAKE – POWERS STORY 6: Police: Man Sought to Record Woman in Bathroom of Kennesaw Bowling Alley A 21-year-old Roswell man, Taylor James Levey, was arrested for allegedly attempting to record a woman in the bathroom of a Kennesaw bowling alley using his cell phone. Surveillance footage at Bowlero captured Levey entering the women's restroom, where he was confronted by the victim after she noticed him attempting to record her. She took a photo of Levey before he left the scene in a Hyundai. Levey has been charged with felony unlawful eavesdropping surveillance, arrested on October 2, and released on a $6,500 bond the next day. STORY 7: Smyrna Woman Arrested After Expired Tag Leads To Drug Trafficking Bust A Smyrna woman driving a vehicle with an expired license plate was stopped by a Marietta patrol officer on October 10 near Fairground and Lawrence streets. During the traffic stop, the officer discovered multiple narcotics and two weapons in the car. The vehicle's owner, Nakyla Yvette Morman, was arrested. Morman faces charges of trafficking cocaine, intent to distribute cocaine, intent to distribute and distributing marijuana, possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. She is also accused of possessing a gun with an altered serial number and is currently held at the Cobb Adult Detention Center without bond. Break: TEDS – INGLES 10 – Henssler :60 Signoff- Thanks again for hanging out with us on today's Marietta Daily Journal podcast. If you enjoy these shows, we encourage you to check out our other offerings, like the Cherokee Tribune Ledger Podcast, the Gwinnett Daily Post, the Community Podcast for Rockdale Newton and Morgan Counties, or the Paulding County News Podcast. Read more about all our stories and get other great content at MDJonline.com. Did you know over 50% of Americans listen to podcasts weekly? Giving you important news about our community and telling great stories are what we do. Make sure you join us for our next episode and be sure to share this podcast on social media with your friends and family. Add us to your Alexa Flash Briefing or your Google Home Briefing and be sure to like, follow, and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. www.henssler.com www.ingles-markets.com www.cuofga.org www.drakerealty.com www.daycosystems.com www.powerselectricga.com www.esogrepair.com www.elonsalon.com www.jrmmanagement.com #NewsPodcast #CurrentEvents #TopHeadlines #BreakingNews #PodcastDiscussion #PodcastNews #InDepthAnalysis #NewsAnalysis #PodcastTrending #WorldNews #LocalNews #GlobalNews #PodcastInsights #NewsBrief #PodcastUpdate #NewsRoundup #WeeklyNews #DailyNews #PodcastInterviews #HotTopics #PodcastOpinions #InvestigativeJournalism #BehindTheHeadlines #PodcastMedia #NewsStories #PodcastReports #JournalismMatters #PodcastPerspectives #NewsCommentary #PodcastListeners #NewsPodcastCommunity #NewsSource #PodcastCuration #WorldAffairs #PodcastUpdates #AudioNews #PodcastJournalism #EmergingStories #NewsFlash #PodcastConversationsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Buffalo Bills have had open competitions for several starting jobs on the depth chart and head coach Sean McDermott finally named who won those competitions. On this episode, Joe Marino breaks down Terrel Bernard, Christian Benford and O'Cyrus Torrence winning starting jobs before discussing the injury to Micah Hyde and how Brandon Beane created cap space. Key topics include Terrel Bernard, O'Cyrus Torrence, Christian Benford, Dane Jackson, Kaiir Elam, Ryan Bates, Tyrel Dodson, Josh Allen, Sean McDermott, Brandon Beane, Micah Hyde, Damar Hamlin, Taylor Rapp, Taron Johnson and more! JOIN THE LOCKED ON BILLS SUBTEXT COMMUNITY: https://joinsubtext.com/lockedonbillsORDER YOUR COPY OF JOE MARINO'S BOOK GO BILLS!: https://www.amazon.com/Go-Bills-Photographs-Favorite-Football/dp/1940647622/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2OBBKR6GD332F&keywords=go+bills&qid=1692565452&sprefix=go+bills%2Caps%2C109&sr=8-1Follow & Subscribe on all Podcast platforms…
The Buffalo Bills have had open competitions for several starting jobs on the depth chart and head coach Sean McDermott finally named who won those competitions. On this episode, Joe Marino breaks down Terrel Bernard, Christian Benford and O'Cyrus Torrence winning starting jobs before discussing the injury to Micah Hyde and how Brandon Beane created cap space. Key topics include Terrel Bernard, O'Cyrus Torrence, Christian Benford, Dane Jackson, Kaiir Elam, Ryan Bates, Tyrel Dodson, Josh Allen, Sean McDermott, Brandon Beane, Micah Hyde, Damar Hamlin, Taylor Rapp, Taron Johnson and more! JOIN THE LOCKED ON BILLS SUBTEXT COMMUNITY: https://joinsubtext.com/lockedonbills ORDER YOUR COPY OF JOE MARINO'S BOOK GO BILLS!: https://www.amazon.com/Go-Bills-Photographs-Favorite-Football/dp/1940647622/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2OBBKR6GD332F&keywords=go+bills&qid=1692565452&sprefix=go+bills%2Caps%2C109&sr=8-1 Follow & Subscribe on all Podcast platforms…
In this weekend episode, Victor Davis Hanson and cohost Sami Winc discuss how World War II was won, 100 fires burning Greece and smash and grab violence in Torrence mall. VDH finishes with the health of farmers.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
We are on a summer break & will come back at some point in the fall with an actual season of the show! But in the meantime, We are over the moon today to bring you Tortoise Drama, Diary Comics, Unsolicited Vegan Vacation Food Reviews, Big news, where to find AJLT recaps and MORE. You can find Nicole's new book here: https://www.phasesevencomics.com/phase8/dogs-breakfast/ Get her 2024 calendar here: nicolejgeorges.com/shop Find an unlocked And Just Like That finale recap bonus episode with Bran Taylor at patreon.com/nicolejgeorges And find Nicole live in person at SPX Small Press Expo, Cartoon Crossroads in Columbus, and Short Run Comics Fest in Seattle. Featured on today's show, Roving reporters Dawn, Luca, Morgan & Torrence bring us unsolicited vegan food reviews from Spain, Tucson, & Denver. Dawn Riddle is a multidisciplinary artist from Portland, Oregon. She is a brilliant painter, weaver, photographer, musician, playwright, videographer and so much more. Luca J. Davis is a writer, web designer and long distance hiker. You will notice their review is in two parts, because it was originally sent to me as a video text, which you can see on our instagram page, but after hearing just the names of BEAUTIFUL tahini drink & breakfast items from Houlden's Rise Above, I demanded more details. Which Luca sent. Via memo. Morgan is a baker and seed lover, and Torrence is a cat lover who was once my very excellent roommate. Alec Longstreth is an award winning cartoonist. He also works as a freelance illustrator, animator, digital colorist, and comics educator. He works at the Center for Cartoon Studies, just did all the images and some animations for Weezer's summer tour, and is the author of Basewood And the all ages comic Isle of Elsi. He runs Phase 8 publishing, and you can get my NEW BOOK by going to his website. Phasesevencomics.com. You'll see the phase 8 logo in the top right, click on it, and be taken to a print AND digital download link that directly benefits me! Find Alec's comics at phasesevencomics.com. The audio portion of this episode with Alec was originally recorded and edited by Alec for his Patreon page! Find him here: https://www.patreon.com/longstreth/posts
Immediate reaction to a football game is great, but thorough takeaways from studying the tape are better and that's exactly what we have queued up for this discussion. On today's episode, Joe Marino shares his thoughts from studying the Buffalo Bills preseason win over the Chicago Bears. Key points of discussion include Josh Allen, O'Cyrus Torrence, Dalton Kincaid, David Edwards, Spencer Brown, Alec Anderson, Ryan Van Demark, Kyle Allen, Dalton Kincaid, Dawson Knox, Damien Harris, Justin Shorter, Tyrel Dodson, Ed Oliver, Jordan Phillips, Gregory Rousseau, Boogie Basham, Leonard Floyd, Siran Neal, cam Lewis, JaMarcus Ingram, Damar Hamlin, Christian Benford, Kaiir Elam and more! JOIN THE LOCKED ON BILLS SUBTEXT COMMUNITY: https://joinsubtext.com/lockedonbillsORDER YOUR COPY OF JOE MARINO'S BOOK GO BILLS!: https://www.amazon.com/Go-Bills-Photographs-Favorite-Football/dp/1940647622/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2OBBKR6GD332F&keywords=go+bills&qid=1692565452&sprefix=go+bills%2Caps%2C109&sr=8-1Follow & Subscribe on all Podcast platforms…
Immediate reaction to a football game is great, but thorough takeaways from studying the tape are better and that's exactly what we have queued up for this discussion. On today's episode, Joe Marino shares his thoughts from studying the Buffalo Bills preseason win over the Chicago Bears. Key points of discussion include Josh Allen, O'Cyrus Torrence, Dalton Kincaid, David Edwards, Spencer Brown, Alec Anderson, Ryan Van Demark, Kyle Allen, Dalton Kincaid, Dawson Knox, Damien Harris, Justin Shorter, Tyrel Dodson, Ed Oliver, Jordan Phillips, Gregory Rousseau, Boogie Basham, Leonard Floyd, Siran Neal, cam Lewis, JaMarcus Ingram, Damar Hamlin, Christian Benford, Kaiir Elam and more! JOIN THE LOCKED ON BILLS SUBTEXT COMMUNITY: https://joinsubtext.com/lockedonbills ORDER YOUR COPY OF JOE MARINO'S BOOK GO BILLS!: https://www.amazon.com/Go-Bills-Photographs-Favorite-Football/dp/1940647622/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2OBBKR6GD332F&keywords=go+bills&qid=1692565452&sprefix=go+bills%2Caps%2C109&sr=8-1 Follow & Subscribe on all Podcast platforms…
Immediate reaction to a football game is great, but thorough takeaways from studying the tape are better and that's exactly what we have queued up for this discussion. On today's episode, Joe Marino shares his thoughts from studying the Buffalo Bills preseason win over Indianapolis Colts. Topics include O'Cyrus Torrence, Justin Shorter, Dalton Kincaid, Ryan Van Demark, Ryan Bates, Kaiir Elam, Tyrel Dodson, Dorian Williams, Baylon Spector, Christian Benford, Latavius Murray, Boogie Basham, Eli Ankou, Poona Ford, Tim Settle and more!JOIN THE LOCKED ON BILLS SUBTEXT COMMUNITY: https://joinsubtext.com/lockedonbillsORDER YOUR COPY OF JOE MARINO'S BOOK GO BILLS!: https://lake7creative.com/product/go-bills/Follow & Subscribe on all Podcast platforms…
Immediate reaction to a football game is great, but thorough takeaways from studying the tape are better and that's exactly what we have queued up for this discussion. On today's episode, Joe Marino shares his thoughts from studying the Buffalo Bills preseason win over Indianapolis Colts. Topics include O'Cyrus Torrence, Justin Shorter, Dalton Kincaid, Ryan Van Demark, Ryan Bates, Kaiir Elam, Tyrel Dodson, Dorian Williams, Baylon Spector, Christian Benford, Latavius Murray, Boogie Basham, Eli Ankou, Poona Ford, Tim Settle and more! JOIN THE LOCKED ON BILLS SUBTEXT COMMUNITY: https://joinsubtext.com/lockedonbills ORDER YOUR COPY OF JOE MARINO'S BOOK GO BILLS!: https://lake7creative.com/product/go-bills/ Follow & Subscribe on all Podcast platforms…
The Buffalo Bills rookies took the field over the weekend for the start of rookie minicamp, providing our fist look at Dalton Kincaid, O'Cyrus Torrence, Dorian Williams, Justin Shorter, Nick Broeker and Alex Austin in team colors. General manager Brandon Beane also signed three players including 2015 first-round pick Shane Ray, Travin Howard and Isaiah Bowser.Follow & Subscribe on all Podcast platforms…
The Buffalo Bills added to its offensive line in the 2023 NFL Draft by selecting Florida offensive guard O'Cyrus Torrence in the second round. What does it mean for Ryan Bates? What does it mean for the identity of the rushing offense? On today's episode, Joe Marino dives into those dynamics in addition to a host of other Herd Mentality items including Sean McDermott's aggressive nature as a defensive play caller, Josh Allen's completed air yards, tight end depth, how the Bills' rivals drafted and more!Follow & Subscribe on all Podcast platforms…