Podcasts about tsi

  • 220PODCASTS
  • 511EPISODES
  • 43mAVG DURATION
  • 1WEEKLY EPISODE
  • Sep 5, 2025LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about tsi

Show all podcasts related to tsi

Latest podcast episodes about tsi

Unstoppable Mindset
Episode 368 – Unstoppable Creator and Visionary with Walden Hughes

Unstoppable Mindset

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2025 65:05


As you will learn, our guest this time, Walden Hughes, is blind and has a speech issue. However, as you also will discover none of this has stopped Walden from doing what he wants and likes. I would not say Walden is driven. Instead, I would describe Walden as a man of vision who works calmly to accomplish whatever task he wishes to undertake. Walden grew up in Southern California including attending and graduating from the University of California at Irvine. Walden also received his Master's degree from UCI. Walden's professional life has been in the financial arena where he has proven quite successful. However, Walden also had other plans for his life. He has had a love of vintage radio programs since he was a child. For him, however, it wasn't enough to listen to programs. He found ways to meet hundreds of people who were involved in radio and early television. His interviews air regularly on www.yesterdayusa.net which he now directs. Walden is one of those people who works to make life better for others through the various entertainment projects he undertakes and helps manage. I hope you find Walden's life attitude stimulating and inspiring. About the Guest: With deep roots in U.S. history and a lifelong passion for nostalgic entertainment, Walden Hughes has built an impressive career as an entertainment consultant, producer, and historian of old-time radio. Since beginning his collection in 1976, he has amassed over 50,000 shows and has gone on to produce live events, conventions, and radio recreations across the country, interviewing over 200 celebrities along the way. A graduate of UC Irvine with both a BA in Economics and Political Science and an MBA in Accounting/Finance, he also spent a decade in the investment field before fully embracing his love of entertainment history. His leadership includes serving as Lions Club President, President of Radio Enthusiasts of Puget Sound, and long-time board member of SPERDVAC, earning numerous honors such as the Eagle Scout rank, Herb Ellis Award, and the Dick Beals Award. Today, he continues to preserve and celebrate the legacy of radio and entertainment through Yesterday USA and beyond. Ways to connect with Walden: SPERDVAC: https://m.facebook.com/sperdvacconvention/ Yesterday USA: https://www.facebook.com/share/16jHW7NdCZ/?mibextid=wwXIfr REPS: https://www.facebook.com/share/197TW27jRi/?mibextid=wwXIfr About the Host: Michael Hingson is a New York Times best-selling author, international lecturer, and Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe. Michael, blind since birth, survived the 9/11 attacks with the help of his guide dog Roselle. This story is the subject of his best-selling book, Thunder Dog. Michael gives over 100 presentations around the world each year speaking to influential groups such as Exxon Mobile, AT&T, Federal Express, Scripps College, Rutgers University, Children's Hospital, and the American Red Cross just to name a few. He is Ambassador for the National Braille Literacy Campaign for the National Federation of the Blind and also serves as Ambassador for the American Humane Association's 2012 Hero Dog Awards. https://michaelhingson.com https://www.facebook.com/michael.hingson.author.speaker/ https://twitter.com/mhingson https://www.youtube.com/user/mhingson https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelhingson/ accessiBe Links https://accessibe.com/ https://www.youtube.com/c/accessiBe https://www.linkedin.com/company/accessibe/mycompany/ https://www.facebook.com/accessibe/ Thanks for listening! Thanks so much for listening to our podcast! If you enjoyed this episode and think that others could benefit from listening, please share it using the social media buttons on this page. Do you have some feedback or questions about this episode? Leave a comment in the section below! Subscribe to the podcast If you would like to get automatic updates of new podcast episodes, you can subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts or Stitcher. You can subscribe in your favorite podcast app. You can also support our podcast through our tip jar https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/unstoppable-mindset . Leave us an Apple Podcasts review Ratings and reviews from our listeners are extremely valuable to us and greatly appreciated. They help our podcast rank higher on Apple Podcasts, which exposes our show to more awesome listeners like you. If you have a minute, please leave an honest review on Apple Podcasts. Transcription Notes: Michael Hingson ** 00:00 Access Cast and accessiBe Initiative presents Unstoppable Mindset. The podcast where inclusion, diversity and the unexpected meet. Hi, I'm Michael Hingson, Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe and the author of the number one New York Times bestselling book, Thunder dog, the story of a blind man, his guide dog and the triumph of trust. Thanks for joining me on my podcast as we explore our own blinding fears of inclusion unacceptance and our resistance to change. We will discover the idea that no matter the situation, or the people we encounter, our own fears, and prejudices often are our strongest barriers to moving forward. The unstoppable mindset podcast is sponsored by accessiBe, that's a c c e s s i capital B e. Visit www.accessibe.com to learn how you can make your website accessible for persons with disabilities. And to help make the internet fully inclusive by the year 2025. Glad you dropped by we're happy to meet you and to have you here with us.   Michael Hingson ** 01:20 Well, hi everyone, and welcome to another episode of unstoppable mindset, where inclusion, diversity and the unexpected meet. We're going to deal with all of that today. We have a guest who I've known for a while. I didn't know I knew him as long as I did, but yeah, but we'll get to that. His name is Walden Hughes, and he is, among other things, the person who is the driving force now behind a website yesterday USA that plays 24 hours a day old radio shows. What I didn't know until he told me once is that he happened to listen to my show back on K UCI in Irvine when I was doing the Radio Hall of Fame between 1969 and 1976 but I only learned that relatively recently, and I didn't actually meet Walden until a few years ago, when we moved down to Victorville and we we started connecting more, and I started listening more to yesterday, USA. We'll talk about some of that. But as you can tell, we're talking, once again, about radio and vintage radio programs, old radio programs from the 30s, 40s and 50s, like we did a few weeks ago with Carl Amari. We're going to have some other people on. Walden is helping us get some other people onto unstoppable mindset, like, in a few weeks, we're going to introduce and talk with Zuzu. Now, who knows who Zuzu is? I know Walden knows, but I'll bet most of you don't. Here's a clue. Whenever a bell rings, an angel gets his wingsu was the little girl on. It's a Wonderful Life. The movie played by Carol from Yeah, and she the star was Carolyn Grimes, and we've met Carolyn. Well, we'll get to all that. I've talked enough. Walden, welcome to unstoppable mindset. We're glad you're   Walden Hughes ** 03:19 here. Hello, Michael boy, I mean, you, you had John Roy on years ago, and now you finally got to me that's pretty amazing.   Michael Hingson ** 03:25 Well, you know, we should have done it earlier, but that's okay, but, but you know what they say, the best is always saved for last.   Walden Hughes ** 03:34 Hey. Well, you know, considering you've been amazing with this show on Friday night for the last year. So here yesterday, USA, so we you and I definitely know our ins and outs. So this should be an easy our place talk.   Michael Hingson ** 03:47 Yes. Is this the time to tell people that Walden has the record of having 42 tootsie rolls in his mouth at once?   Walden Hughes ** 03:52 That's what they say. I think we could do more, though, you know. But yeah, yeah. Well, we won't ask, miss, yeah, we won't ask you to do that here. Why not?   Michael Hingson ** 04:03 Yeah, we want you to be able to talk. Well, I'm really glad you're here. Tell us a little about the early Walden growing up and all that.   Walden Hughes ** 04:12 I'm my mom and dad are from Nebraska, so I have a lot of Midwestern Nebraska ties. They moved out here for jobs in 65 and I was born in 1966 and I was the first baby to ever survive the world Pierre syndrome, which means I was born with a cleft palate, being extremely near sighted and and a cup and a recession. So I was the first baby through my mom and dad debt by $10,000 in 17 days, and it was a struggle for my folks. You know, in those early days, without insurance, without any. Thing like that. You know, people really didn't think about medical insurance and things like that in those days, that was not an issue. So, um, so I've always had extremely loving family. Then I went through five retina detachments, and starting when I was seven years old, up to I was nine, and I finally woke up one morning seeing white half circle so the retina detached. Sometime in the middle of the night, went to the most famous eye doctor the world at times, Dr Robert macchermer, who was the one who invented the cataract surgery and everything. Later, he wound up being the head of Duke Medical that was down in Florida, and they took one last ditch effort to save my sight, but it was a 2% chance, and it didn't work out. So they went blind in November 75 and went into school for people who may or may not know California pretty aggressive in terms of education, and so when I wear hearing aids, so I parted a hard of hearing class. Newport school. Mesa took care of the kids who were hard of hearing and the blind children went up to Garden Grove. So when I walked my site, went up to Garden Grove. And so that was my dedication. I was always a driven person. So and I also had a family that supported me everything I ever did. They didn't it just they were ultimately supporting me in education, all sorts of stuff. So I wound up in the Boy Scout Program. Wound up being an Eagle Scout like you, wound up being visual honoring the OA. And this was always side of kids. I was sort of the organizer all decided kid, and there was Walden that was right, I was that way in my entire life, which is interesting that the most kids are all hanging out. We were sighted and and even the school district, which was pretty amazing to think about it, Newport, they told my mom and dad, hey, when Wong ready to come back to his home school district, we'll cover the bill. We'll do it. And so my freshman year, after my freshman year in high school, we thought, yeah, it's time to come back. And so the Newport school, Mesa picked up the tab, and so did very well. Went up, applied to seven colleges, Harvard, a Yale Stanford turned me down, but everybody else took me   Michael Hingson ** 07:53 so, but you went to the best school anyway.   Walden Hughes ** 07:57 So I mean, either like Michael Troy went to UCI and I graduated in three years and two quarters with a degree in economics, a degree in politics, a minor in management, and then I went to work as a financial planner with American Express and then a stockbroker. I always wanted to go back get my MBA. So I got my MBA at UCI, and I graduated with my MBA in accounting and finance in 1995 so that's sort of the academic part Wow of my life.   Michael Hingson ** 08:32 How did your parents handle when it was first discovered that you were blind? So that would have been in what 75 how do they handle that?   Walden Hughes ** 08:42 They handle it really well. I think my dad was wonderful. My dad was the one that took, took me my birth, to all the doctor appointments, you know, such a traumatic thing for my mom. So my dad took that responsibility. My mom just clean house. But they, they My dad always thought if I were going to make it through life, it was going to be between my ears. It could be my brain and I, I was gifted and academically in terms of my analytical abilities are really off the chart. They tested me like in 160 and that mean I could take a very complicated scenario, break it down and give you a quick answer how to solve it within seconds. And that that that paid off. So no, I think, and they they had complete and so they put in the time.   Michael Hingson ** 09:47 What kind of work did your dad do? My dad   Walden Hughes ** 09:51 wound up being a real estate agent, okay, and so that gave him flexibility time. My mom wound up working for the Irvine camp. Attorney, which is the big agriculture at that time, now, apartments and commercial real estate here in oil County and so. So with their support and with the emphasis on education, and so they helped me great. They helped my brother a great deal. So I think in my case, having two really actively involved parents paid off, you know, in terms of, they knew where to support me and they knew the one to give me my give me my head, you know, because I would a classic example of this. After I graduated from college at UCI, I was looking for work, and mom said, my mom's saying, oh, keep go to rehab. Talk to them. They're both to help you out, give it. I really wasn't interested, so I sat down and met with them and had several interviews, and they said we're not going to fund you because either A, you're gonna be so successful on your own you pay for your own stuff, or B, you'll completely fail. So when I, and that's when they flat out, told me at rehab, so I I had more more luck in the private sector finding work than I did ever in the public sector, which was interesting.   Michael Hingson ** 11:39 I know that when I was in high school, and they it's still around today, of course, they had a program called SSI through the Department of Social Security, and then that there, there was also another program aid of the potentially self supporting blind, and we applied for those. And when I went to UC Irvine, I had met, actually, in 1964 a gentleman while I was up getting my guide dog. He was getting a guide dog. His name was Howard Mackey, and when I went to college, my parents also explored me getting some services and assistance from the Department of Rehabilitation, and I was accepted, and then Howard Mackey ended up becoming my counselor. And the neat thing about it was he was extremely supportive and really helped in finding transcribers to put physics books in braille, paid for whatever the state did it at the time, readers and other things like that that I needed provided equipment. It was really cool. He was extremely supportive, which I was very grateful for. But yeah, I can understand sometimes the rehabilitation world can be a little bit wonky. Of course, you went into it some 18 to 20 years later than that. I, in a sense, started it because I started in 6869 Yeah. And I think over time, just the state got cheaper, everything got cheaper. And of course, now it's really a lot different than it used to be, and it's a lot more challenging to get services from a lot of the agencies. And of course, in our current administration, a lot of things are being cut, and nobody knows exactly what's going to happen. And that's pretty   Walden Hughes ** 13:30 scary, actually. When I went to UCI, the school picked it up the pic, the school picked up my transcribing. They picked up my readers and all that. So interesting. How?   Michael Hingson ** 13:39 But did they let you hire your own readers and so on? Or do they do that?   Walden Hughes ** 13:43 They just put out the word, and people came up and and they paid them. So they just, they were just looking for volunteer, looking for people on the campus to do all the work. And, yeah, in fact, in fact, I had one gal who read pretty much all my years. She was waiting to get a job in the museum. And the job she wanted, you basically had to die to get it open. And so she for a full time employee with the read, can I be taking 20 units a quarter? Yeah. So I was, I was cranking it out. And in those days, everybody, you were lucky they I was lucky to get the material a week or two before midterm. Yeah, so I would speed up the tape and do a couple all nighters just to get through, because I really didn't want to delay, delay by examinations. I wanted to get it, get it through. But, uh, but, you know, but also, I guess I was going four times just throughout the quarter, set them into the summer. Okay, I wanted to get it done. Yeah, so that's, that's how I   Michael Hingson ** 14:50 did it. I didn't do summer school, but I did 16 to 20 units a quarter as well, and kept readers pretty busy and was never questioned. And even though we have some pretty hefty reader bills, but it it worked, no and and I hired my own readers, we put out the word, but I hired my own readers. And now I think that's really important. If a school pays for the readers, but lets you hire the readers, that's good, because I think that people need to learn how to hire and fire and how to learn what's necessary and how to get the things that they need. And if the agency or the school does it all and they don't learn how to do it, that's a problem.   Walden Hughes ** 15:36 If fashioning is just a sidebar issue, computer really became a big part. And with my hearing loss, TSI was really, yeah, telesensory, the one Incorporated, right? And they were upscale, everybody. It was, you know, $2,500 a pop. And for my hearing, it was the was for the card, the actual card that fits into the slot that would read, oh, okay, okay, right. And eventually they went with software with me, a lot cheaper, yes, and so, so my folks paid for that in the early days, the mid 80s, the computers and the software and a lot of that were trial and error terms of there was not any customer support from the from the computer company that were making special products like that, you were pretty much left on your own to figure it out. Yeah, and so time I went to graduate in 1990 we figured, in the business world, financial planning, I'm gonna need a whole complete setup at work, and we're gonna cost me 20 grand, yeah, and of course, when we have saying, We biking it, we're gonna finance it. What happened was, and this has helped with the scouting program. I knew the vice president of the local bank. And in those days, if it was, if it was still a small bank, he just went, he gave me a personal loan, hmm, and he, I didn't have to get any code centers or anything. No, we're gonna be the first one to finance you. You get your own computer set up. And so they, they, they financed it for me, and then also Boyle kicked in for 7500 but that was, that's how I was able to swing my first really complicated $20,000 units in 1990   Michael Hingson ** 17:33 the Braille Institute had a program. I don't know whether they still do or not they, they had a program where they would pay for, I don't know whether the top was 7500 I know they paid for half the cost of technology, but that may have been the upper limit. I know I used the program to get in when we moved, when we moved to New Jersey. I was able to get one of the, at that time, $15,000 Kurzweil Reading machines that was in 1996 and Braille Institute paid for half that. So it was pretty cool. But you mentioned TSI, which is telesensory Systems, Inc, for those who who wouldn't know that telesensory was a very innovative company that developed a lot of technologies that blind and low vision people use. For example, they developed something called the optic on which was a box that had a place where you could put a finger, and then there was attached to it a camera that you could run over a printed page, and it would display in the box a vibrating image of each character as the camera scanned across the page. It wasn't a really fast reading program. I think there were a few people who could read up to 80 words a minute, but it was still originally one of the first ways that blind people had access to print.   Walden Hughes ** 18:59 And the first guinea pig for the program. Can I just walk my site in 75 and they, they wanted me to be on there. I was really the first one that the school supply the optic on and has special training, because they knew I knew what site looked like for everybody, what Mike's describing. It was dB, the electronic waves, but it'd be in regular print letters, not, not broil waters, right? What   Michael Hingson ** 19:25 you felt were actually images of the print letters, yeah.   Walden Hughes ** 19:30 And the thing got me about it, my hand tingled after a while,   Michael Hingson ** 19:35 yeah, mine   Walden Hughes ** 19:36 to last forever,   Michael Hingson ** 19:38 you know. So it was, it wasn't something that you could use for incredibly long periods of time. Again, I think a few people could. But basically, print letters are made to be seen, not felt, and so that also limited the speed. Of course, technology is a whole lot different today, and the optic on has has faded away. And as Walden said, the card that would. Used to plug into computer slots that would verbalize whatever came across the screen has now given way to software and a whole lot more that makes it a lot more usable. But still, there's a lot of advances to be made. But yeah, we we both well, and another thing that TSI did was they made probably the first real talking calculator, the view, plus, remember   Walden Hughes ** 20:25 that? Yep, I know a good sound quality.   Michael Hingson ** 20:28 Though it was good sound quality. It was $395 and it was really a four function calculator. It wasn't scientific or anything like that, but it still was the first calculator that gave us an opportunity to have something that would at least at a simple level, compete with what sighted people did. And yes, you could plug your phone so they couldn't so sighted people, if you were taking a test, couldn't hear what what the calculator was saying. But at that time, calculators weren't really allowed in the classroom anyway, so   Walden Hughes ** 21:00 my downside was, time I bought the equipment was during the DOS mode, and just like that, window came over, and that pretty much made all my equipment obsolete, yeah, fairly quickly, because I love my boil display. That was terrific for for when you learn with computers. If you're blind, you didn't really get a feel what the screen looked like everybody. And with a Braille display, which mine was half the screen underneath my keyboard, I could get a visual feel how things laid out on the computer. It was easier for me to communicate with somebody. I knew what they were talking   Michael Hingson ** 21:42 about, yeah. And of course, it's gotten so much better over time. But yeah, I remember good old MS DOS. I still love to play some of the old MS DOS games, like adventure and all that, though, and Zork and some of those fun games.   Walden Hughes ** 21:57 But my understanding dos is still there. It's just windows on top of it, basically,   Michael Hingson ** 22:02 if you open a command prompt in Windows that actually takes you to dos. So dos is still there. It is attached to the whole system. And sometimes you can go in and enter commands through dos to get things done a little bit easier than you might be able to with the normal graphic user interface, right? Well, so you, you got your master's degree in 1995 and so you then continue to work in the financial world, or what did   Walden Hughes ** 22:35 it for 10 years, but five years earlier? Well, maybe I should back it up this way. After I lost my site in 1976 I really gravitated to the radio, and my generation fell in love with talk radio, so I and we were really blessed here in the LA market with really terrific hosts at KBC, and it wasn't all the same thing over and over and beating the drum. And so listening to Ray Breen, Michael Jackson, IRA for still kill Hemingway, that was a great opportunity for somebody who was 10 years old.   Michael Hingson ** 23:18 Really, they were all different shows. And yes, I remember once we were listening to, I think it was Michael Jackson. It was on Sunday night, and we heard this guy talking about submarines, and it just attracted Karen's and my attention. And it turns out what it was was Tom Clancy talking about Hunt for Red October. Wow. And that's where we first heard about it, and then went and found the book.   Walden Hughes ** 23:45 But So I grew up in the talk radio, and then that, and I fell in love with country music at the time on koec, and then Jim Healy and sports, yep, and then, and then we were blessed in the LA market have a lot of old time radio played, and it was host like Mike was here at K UCI, John Roy, eventually over KPCC, Bob line. And so my relatives said you should listen to this marathon KPFK, which was a Pacific did an all day marathon. I fell in love with that. Jay Lacher, then one night, after I walked my site, I tuned in. Ray bream took the night off, and Bill balance had frankly sit in. And the first thing they played was Jack Armstrong, and this is where Jack, Jack and Billy get caught up in a snow storm and a bone down the hill. And Brett Morrison came in during the one o'clock two o'clock hour to talk about the shadow. And so my dad took me to, oh, I'm trying to think of the name of the record. Or if they gave away licorice, licorice at the at the record store tower, yeah, not Tower Records. Um, anyway, so we bought two eight track tapes in 1976 the shadow and Superman, and I started my long life of collecting and so. So here we up to 1990 after collecting for 15 years. Going to spill back conventional meetings. I knew Ray bream was going to have kitty Cowan at the guest. Kitty Cowan was a big band singer of the 40s who later the fifth little things mean a lot. And I figured nobody was going to act about her days on the Danny Kaye radio show. And so I called in. They realized I had the stuff. I had the radio shows, they took me off the air, and Kitty's husband, but grand off called me the next day, and we struck up a friendship. And so they were really connected in Hollywood, and so they opened so many doors for me. Mike I Katie's best friend with Nancy Lacher, SR bud with the one of the most powerful agents in town, the game show hosting, who could come up with a TV ideas, but did not know how to run a organization. So that was Chuck Paris, hmm, and Gong Show, yeah, so I wound up, they wound up giving me, hire me to find the old TV shows, the music, all that stuff around the country. And so I started to do that for the Sinatra family, everybody else. So I would, while we do the financial planning, my internet consulting thing really took off. So that wound up being more fun and trying to sell disability insurance, yeah. So one wound up doing that until the internet took over. So that would that. So my whole life would really reshape through kitty Carolyn and Ben granoff through that. So I really connected in the Hollywood industry from that point on, starting 1990 so that that really opened up, that really sure reshaped my entire life, just because of that   Michael Hingson ** 27:28 and you've done over the years, one of the other things that you started to do was to interview a lot of these people, a lot of the radio stars, The radio actors   Walden Hughes ** 27:39 and music and TV, music,   Michael Hingson ** 27:44 yeah.   Walden Hughes ** 27:45 And I think when Bill Bragg asked me to interview kitty Carol, and I did that in 2000 and Bill said, Well, could you do more? And so one of Kitty friends, but test Russell. Test was Gene Autry Girl Friday. He she ran kmpc for him. And I think everybody in the music industry owed her a favor. I mean, I had Joe Stafford to Pat Boone to everybody you could think of from the from that big band, 3040s, and 60s on the show. Let's go   Michael Hingson ** 28:24 back. Let's go back. Tell us about Bill Bragg.   Walden Hughes ** 28:29 Bill Bragg was an interesting character all by himself. Born in 1946 he was a TV camera man for CBS in Dallas. He was also a local music jockey, nothing, nothing, big, big claims of fame boys working for channel two. And then he in Dallas, he was at a press conference with LBJ, and LBJ got done speaking, and the camera crew decided that they were going to pack up and go to lunch. And Bill thought it'd be fun to mark what camera, what microphone the President used for his address, and the guys were in a rush door in the box, let's go have lunch. So Bill lost track, and that bothered him. So he started the largest communication Museum in 1979 and he collected and was donated. And so he had the biggest museum. He had a film exchanger. So in those early days of cable TVs, you know, we had a lot of TV stations specializing in programming, and there were channels, I think this was called a nostalgic channel, wanted to run old TV shows and films. They had the film, but they didn't. Have the equipment. And they got hold of Bill. He said, Okay, I'll do it for you. But what you're going to give me is games. Bill was a wheel and dealer, yeah. And Charlie said, We'll give you your own satellite channel. And I was talking to Bill friend later, John women in those days, in the 1983 when Bill got it, the value of those satellite channels was a million dollars a year, and he got it for free. And Bill would try and figure out, What in the world I'm going to do with this, and that's when he decided to start playing with old time radio, because really nobody was playing that on a national basis. You had different people playing it on a local basis, but not really on a national basis. So Bill was sort of the first one before I play old time radio. I became aware of him because of bur back, so I was trying to get the service on my cable TV company. Was unsuccessful.   Michael Hingson ** 30:58 So what he did is he broadcast through the satellite channel, and then different television stations or companies could if they chose to pick up the feed and broadcast it. Did, they broadcast it on a TV channel or   Walden Hughes ** 31:13 on radio public asset channel. Okay, so remember note day a lot of public it would have the bulletin boards with the local news of right community, and lot of them would play Bill can't   Michael Hingson ** 31:28 play Bill's channel because the only because what they were doing was showing everything on the screen, which didn't help us. But right they would show things on the screen, and they would play music or something in the background. So Bill's programs were a natural thing to play,   Walden Hughes ** 31:44 yeah, and so Bill wound up on a stout then he wound up being the audio shop Troyer for WGN, which was a nice break and so. And then Bill got it to be played in 2000 nursing homes and hospitals, and then local AMFM stations would pick us up. They were looking for overnight programming, so local throughout the country would pick it up. And so Bill, Bill was a go getter. He was a great engineer, and knew how to build things on the cheap. He was not a businessman, you know, he couldn't take it to the next level, but, but at least he was able to come up with a way to run a station, 24 hours a day. It was all the tapes were sent down to Nash, down to Tennessee, to be uploaded to play into the system. Eventually, he built a studio and everything in Dallas. And so,   Michael Hingson ** 32:38 of course, what what Weldon is saying is that that everything was on tape, whether it was cassette or reel to reel, well, reel to reel, and they would play the tapes through a tape machine, a player or recorder, and put it out on the satellite channels, which was how they had to do it. And that's how we did it at kuci, we had tape, and I would record on Sunday nights, all the shows that we were going to play on a given night on a reel of tape. We would take it in and we would play it.   Walden Hughes ** 33:13 And so that's how it's done in the 80s. Eventually built bill, built a studio, and then started to do a live show once a week. Eventually, they grew up to four days a week. And so here is about 1999 or so, and they were playing Musa from kitty cat, and did not know who she was. I would quickly, I would quickly give a couple background from AIM hang up. I didn't really they had no idea who I was yet. I didn't talk about what I would do and things like that. I was just supplying information. And eventually, after two years, they asked me to bring kitty on the show, which I did, and then I started to book guests on a regular basis for them, and then eventually, the guy who I enjoyed all time radio shows listening to Frank Percy 1976 built decided that I should be his producer, and so I wound up producing the Friday Night Live show with Frankie, and eventually we got it up and running, 2002 So Frank and I did it together for 16 years and so that so Bill built a studio in Texas, mailed it all to my House. My dad didn't have any engineering ability. So he and my bill got on the phone and built me a whole studio in six hours, and I was up and running with my own studio here in my bedroom, in 2002 and so overhead, I'm in my bedroom ever since Michael, you know, there you go.   Michael Hingson ** 34:58 Well and to tell people about. Frank Bresee Frank, probably the biggest claim to fame is that he had a program called the golden days of radio, and it was mainly something that was aired in the Armed Forces Radio and Television Service on the radio, where he would every show play excerpts of different radio programs and so on. And one of the neat things that's fascinating for Frank was that because he was doing so much with armed forces, and doing that, he had access to all of the libraries around the world that the Armed Forces Radio and Television Service had, so he could go in and oftentimes get shows and get things that no one else really had because they were only available in at least initially, in these military libraries. But he would put them on the air, and did a great job with it for many, many years. Yeah, Frank   Walden Hughes ** 35:53 was an interesting character, a pure entrepreneur. He invented a game called pass out, which was a drinking game, board game, and he for 20 years, he spent six months in Europe, six months in United States. And he was making so much money in Europe, he would rent out castles and lived in them, and he would and he would spend months at a time in Germany, which was the main headquarter of art, and just sit there in the archives and make copies of things he wanted to play on his show, yeah. And so that's how he built that. And then he he started collecting transcriptions when he would to 10 he was a radio actor, and so he had one of the largest collection, collection, and he his house, his family house was in Hancock Park, which was the, it was Beverly Hills before Beverly Hills, basically, what did he play on radio? Well, when he was, he was he was deceptive. He was the backup little beaver. When someone Tommy, writer, yeah, when, when Tommy Cook had another project, it was Frank be was a substitute. And so that was a short coin of fame. He did bit parts on other shows, but, but that's what he did as a kid. Eventually, I think Frank came from a very wealthy family. He wound up owning the first radio station when he was 19 years old on Catalina Island in 1949 and then he wound up being a record producer. He worked with Walter Winchell, created albums on without about Al Jolson worked on Eddie Cantor and Jimmy Durante and anyway, Frank, Frank had a career with game with creating board games, doing radio and having an advertising company. Frank was responsible for giving all the game shows, the prices for TV and the way he would do it, he would call an advertise, he would call a company. He said, you want your product. Beyond on this section, go to say, yes, okay, give us, give us the product, and give me 150 bucks. And so Frank would keep the cash, and he would give the project to the TV shows,   Michael Hingson ** 38:17 Dicker and Dicker of Beverly Hills. I remember that on so many shows   Walden Hughes ** 38:23 so So Frank was a wheeling dealer, and he loved radio. That was his passion project. He probably made less money doing that, but he just loved doing it, and he was just hit his second house. The family house was 8400 square feet, and so it was pretty much a storage unit for Frank hobbies, right? And we and he had 30,000 transcriptions in one time. But when he was Europe, he had a couple of floods, so he lost about 10 to 20,000 of them. Okay? Folks did not know how to keep them dry, but he had his professional studio built. And so I would book guests. I arranged for art link writer to come over, and other people, Catherine Crosby, to come over, and Frank would do the interviews. And so I was a big job for me to keep the Friday night show going and get Frankie's guess boy shows. I would have been. He died,   Michael Hingson ** 39:22 and he was a really good interviewer. Yeah, I remember especially he did an interview that we in, that you played on yesterday USA. And I was listening to it with Mel Blanc, which is, which is very fascinating. But he was a great interviewer. I think it was 1969 that he started the golden days of radio, starting 49 actually, or 49 not 69 Yeah, 49 that was directly local, on,   Walden Hughes ** 39:49 on Carolina, and K, I, G, l, which was a station I think heard out in the valley, pretty much, yeah, we could pick it up. And then, and then he started with on. Forces around 65   Michael Hingson ** 40:02 that's what I was thinking of. I thought it was 69 but,   Walden Hughes ** 40:06 and well, he was, on those days there were armed forces Europe picked them up. And also, there was also the international Armed Forces served around the far eastern network, right? Yeah. And so by 67 he was pretty much full on 400 stations throughout the whole world. And I that's probably how you guys picked him up, you know, through that capability.   Michael Hingson ** 40:30 Well, that's where I first heard of him and and the only thing for me was I like to hear whole shows, and he played excerpts so much that was a little frustrating. But he was such a neat guy, you couldn't help but love all the history that he brought to it   Walden Hughes ** 40:46 and and then he would produce live Christmas shows with with the radio. He would interview the guest he, you know, so he had access to people that nobody generally had, you know. He worked for Bob Hope, right? So he was able to get to Jack Benny and Bing Crosby and yes, people like that, Groucho Marx. So he was, he had connections that were beyond the average Old Time Radio buff. He was truly a great guy to help the hobby out, and loved radio very much.   Michael Hingson ** 41:21 Well, going back to Bill Bragg a little bit, so he had the satellite channel, and then, of course, we got the internet, which opened so many things for for Frank or Frank for, well, for everybody but for Bill. And he started the program yesterday, usa.net, on the radio through the internet,   Walden Hughes ** 41:44 which he was the first one in 1996 right? There's a great story about that. There was a company called broadcast.com I bet you remember that company, Mike. Anyway, it was founded by a guy who loved college basketball, and he was a big Hoosier fan, and he was living in Texas, and so he would generally call long distance to his buddy, and they would put up the radio. He could went to the basketball games. And eventually he decided, well, maybe I could come up and stream it on my computer, and all these equipment breaking down, eventually he came up with the idea of, well, if I had a satellite dish, I could pick up the feed and put and stream it on the computer, that way people could hear it right. And he hired bill to do that, and he offered bill a full time job installing satellites and working Bill turned them down, and the guy wound up being Mark Cuban. Yeah, and Mark Cuban gave every every employee, when he sold broadcast.com to Yahoo, a million dollar bonus. So Bill missed out on that, but, but in exchange, Mike Cuban gave him broadcast.com While USA channel for free. So Bill never had to pay in the early days, until about 2002 so when Yahoo decided to get out of the streaming business for a while, then that's when we had to find and we found life 365 eventually, and we were paying pretty good. We're paying a really good rate with like 265 Bill was used to paying free, and we were paying, I think, under $100 and I knew guys later a couple years, were paying over $500 a month. And we were, we were, but there was such a willing deal able to get those things for really dope less   Michael Hingson ** 43:45 money, yeah. Now I remember being in New Jersey and I started hearing ads for an internet radio station. This was in the very late 90s, maybe even into 2000 W, A, B, y. It was a company, a show that a station that played a lot of old songs from the 50s and 60s and so on. And it was, it was, if you tuned on to it, you could listen. And after four or five hours, things would start to repeat, and then eventually it disappeared. But I started looking around, and I don't even remember how I found it, but one day I heard about this radio station, www, dot yesterday, usa.net. Right, yep.net.com,   Walden Hughes ** 44:31 yep, and yeah. And   Michael Hingson ** 44:33 I said, Well, oh, I think I actually heard an ad for it on W, A, B, y, when it was still around. Anyway, I went to it, and they were playing old radio shows, and they had a number of people who would come on and play shows. Everyone had an hour and a half show, and every two weeks you would have to send in a new show. But they. They played old radio shows, 24 hours a day and seven days a week, except they also had some live talk shows. And I remember listening one day and heard Bill Bragg talking about the fact that he was going to have his standard Friday night show with Walden Hughes, it would start at nine o'clock. I had no idea who Walden was at the time. And the problem is, nine o'clock was on the in Pacific Time, and it was, I think, Midnight in New Jersey time, as I recall the way it went anyway, it was way too late for me to be up. And so I never did hear Walden on yesterday USA, or I may have actually listened. Just stayed up to listen to one and fell asleep, but the show, the whole innovative process of playing radio all the time on the internet, was intriguing and just opened so many opportunities, I think. And of course, the internet brought all that around. And now there are any number of stations that stream all the time. And Bill Bragg passed away. What in 2016   Walden Hughes ** 46:15 2018   Michael Hingson ** 46:18 1819 2019 Yeah. And Walden now is the person who directs, operates, and is the manager of yesterday USA. And so when I go ahead,   Walden Hughes ** 46:30 it's fascinating. In the height of the station, there was 15,000 internet radio stations out there in 2000 they did a survey yesterday, USA was number three in the world, behind the BBC and CNN, which I thought was a pretty nice number to be concerned. We had no budget to promote, right? And the last time I saw the numbers been a couple years, we were number 44 in the world, which I don't think of, 15,000 radio stations. Not bad. No, not at all. You know, really not bad. But now there is more talk than there used to be, because Walden and the gasmans, who we had on years ago on this podcast, but   Michael Hingson ** 47:16 have interviewed a lot of people, and continue to interview people. And of course, so many people are passing on that. We're trying to talk to people as much as we can, as they can, and all of us now, because I've started to come a little bit and become a little bit involved in yesterday USA. And as Walden said on Friday night at 730 Pacific Time, see it's earlier, we we do a talk show. Bob Lyons, who did a lot of radio out here, and for 50 years, had a program called Don't touch that dial. And John and Larry and Walden and I get on the air and we talk about, Gosh, any number of different things. We've talked about Braille, we've talked about sometimes, everything but radio. But we talk about a lot of different things, which is, which is a lot of fun.   Walden Hughes ** 48:04 And I think it probably is, you know, in the old days, it would pretty much no entertainment, and Bill telling some stories and things like that. But with me, I always had a focus in interviews, but it's so much more fun to do radio as a co host. And that's when Patricia and I connected back in the 2007 I knew was in 2005 she's my co host. And Patricia didn't grow up with whole town radio. She became a fan after she found yesterday, USA into 2000 but she's a very articulate person, and so through the shows, what she and I did on Saturday night, the audience grab it and just we should talk about everything, and I just generate calls. I mean, when she and I were doing eight hours a night, we would average about 18 calls a night, which was pretty amazing, but we would cover the gamut, and I think a really good talk show host had to know a little bit about a lot of things. Yes, he got it. You got to be flexible. And Patricia and I compliment each other that way, that we're able to cover history and politics and music and just everything. And so when I do a show with her, you never know what direction we go with where. When I'm with John Roy, it's more radio centric. So it depends on what night a week people tune in, is what you're going to   Michael Hingson ** 49:40 get. And Walden has Patricia on now Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, but we know why she's really on there, because she likes hearing Perry Como song Patricia that starts out every show Walden plays that he's in love with Patricia. One of these days, there's still the possibility. But anyway, we. We, he, we love it when he, he has Patricia on, and it's every week. So, so it is really cool. And they do, they talk about everything under the sun, which is so fascinating. Tell us about Johnny and Helen Holmes.   Walden Hughes ** 50:15 Ah, well, it's an interesting story. I I say the second biggest old time radio station in the country, after yesterday USA. It's about half the size in terms of audience basis. Radio once more, and you can find them at Radio once more.com and they do a good job. No else with probably yesterday USA branch offers own internet radio station, and he found he would go to the east coast to the nostalgic convention, and he connected with Johnny and Helen. Holmes and Johnny and Helen are people who love to attend nostalgic convention and get autographs and things. And they became really friends. So Neil convinced them, why don't you come on? Just come on radio once more. And so after a while, they do the presentation the coffee shop. Neil convinced them to take it, take it to the air, and they started to have their own show, and I was aware of them, and I produced the spirback convention, 2017 in Las Vegas. So Johnny helm came to the convention, and Johnny wanted to say hi to me. I said, I know who you are. I think he was for by that that I knew who he was, but I invited Johnny and Helen to come on with Patricia and I one night to talk about their coffee shop presentation and their show on Radio once more. And we just bonded very quickly and easy to bond with Johnny. They really are really fabulous people. He's really a generous guy, and so over the last six, seven years, we have developed a great friendship on you, and almost have created a whole subculture by itself, playing trivia with them. Every time they come on,   Michael Hingson ** 52:17 they do a lot of trivia stuff, and Johnny produces it very well. He really does a great job. And he'll put sound bites and clips and music, and it's gotten me such a major production with Johnny and Helen. And people look forward to it. I sometimes count the interaction people hanging out in the chat room, on the phone, email, about 18 to 20 people will get and get an answer question, was it amazing that that many people will be interested in trivia like that? But and, and Johnny also collects, well, I guess in Helen collect a lot of old television shows as well. Yep. So we won't hold it against him too much, but, but he does television and, well, I like old TV shows too, you bet. Well, so you know, you are, obviously, are doing a lot of different things. You mentioned spurred vac oop. They're after you. We'll wait. We'll wait till the phone die. You mentioned, well, I'll just ask this while that's going on. You mentioned spurred back. Tell us a little bit about what spurred vac is and what they've been doing and what they bring to radio.   Walden Hughes ** 53:23 Sprint vac started in 1974 it's the largest full time radio group in the country, called the society to preserve and encourage radio drama, variety and comedy. John Roy Gasman were two of the main driving force behind the club. It reached up to a membership of 1800 people, and they've honored over 500 people who worked in the golden days of radio and to speak at their meeting, come to the special conventions. And so I attended some dinners at the Brown Derby, which was a great thrill. I started attending their conventions, and it was just, it was wonderful. So I so I really got to meet a lot of the old time radio personality and become friends with Janet Waldo and June for a and people like that. And so I eventually got on the board. I eventually became one young, somewhat retired. I wound up being the activity person to book guests, and started producing conventions. And so that became a major part of my life, just producing those things for spur back and in other places, and I first started to do that for reps. Was it the Old Time Radio Group in Seattle in 2007 so they were actually the first convention I produced.   Michael Hingson ** 54:54 And rep says radio enthusiasts of Puget Sound,   Walden Hughes ** 54:57 right? Reps online.org, G and so I would produce new convention. I was helping super vac, and I also helping the Friends of all time radio back in New Jersey and so. And it probably helped my contact, which is 300 pages long, so, and I would book it. I would also contact celebrities via the mail, and my batting average was 20% which I thought were pretty good. I got Margaret. I got Margaret Truman. She called me, said, Walden, I got your order, and I forgot that I did the show with Jimmy Stewart. I'd be happy to come on talk about my memory. You know, she talked about Fred Allen on the big show, and how, how Mike Wallace had a temper, had a temper. She was a co host. Was among weekdays, which with the weekday version of monitor. Monitor was weekend and weekday, we see NBC. And so she was just fabulous, you know, so and I would get people like that 20% bad average, which was incredible. So I met, that's how it's up to two, my guess was, so I, I was sort of go to guy, find celebrities and booking them and and so in that help yesterday, USA helped the different conventions. And so it and so you're so you're booking the panels, and then you're coming up with ideas for radio recreations. And so I produce 37 of them, ranging from one day to four days. And I get counted, over the last 18 years, I've produced 226 audio theater plays with it. A lot at least, have an idea of how those things   Michael Hingson ** 56:55 work. So right now, speaking of recreations, and we're both involved in radio enthusiasts of Puget Sound, and for the last couple of years, I've participated in this. Walden has done radio recreations, and twice a year up in the Washington State area, where we bring in both some some amateurs and some professionals like Carolyn Grimes Zuzu and so many others who come in and we actually recreate old radio shows, both before a live audience, and we broadcast them on yesterday USA and other people like Margaret O'Brien who won   Walden Hughes ** 57:46 Gigi Powell coming this year. Phil Proctor. David Osmond from fire sign theater. Chuck Dougherty from Sergeant Preston. John Provo from Timmy from Lassie, Bill Johnson, who does a one man show on Bob Hope. Bill Ratner from GI Joe. Bill Owen, the who might have had he is the author of The Big broadcast, Ivan Troy who Bobby Benson, Tommy cook from the life O'Reilly Gigi parole, a movie actress of the 50s, as you mentioned, Carolyn grime, Beverly Washburn and others, and it's just the radio folks are really down to earth, really nice people, and you get to break bread with them, talk to them and reminisce about what was it like doing that radio show, this movie, or that TV show, and then They still got it, and they can perform on stage,   Michael Hingson ** 58:43 and they love to talk about it, and they love to interact with people who treat them as people. And so yeah, it is a lot of fun to be able to do it. In fact, I was on Carolyn Grimes podcast, which will be coming out at some point in the next little while, and Carolyn is going to be on unstoppable mindset. So keep an eye out for that. Bill Owens program is coming out soon. Bill and I did a conversation for unstoppable mindset, and we're going to be doing Bill Johnson will be coming on, and other people will be coming on. Walden has been very helpful at finding some of these folks who are willing to come on and talk about what they did, and to help us celebrate this medium that is just as much a part of history as anything in America and is just as worth listening to as it ever was. There is more to life than television, no matter what they think.   Walden Hughes ** 59:40 And also, we do a Christmas thing too. And hopefully Mike, if his speaking engagement allow him, will be with us up at Christmas saying, Well, I will. I'm planning on it. We're gonna do, It's a Wonderful Life. Keith Scott, coming over from Australia, who's a he's the rich little of Australia. And we'll do, It's a Wonderful Life. We'll do. The Christmas Carol, milk on 34th Street film again, Molly Jack Benny will have a great time.   Michael Hingson ** 1:00:07 These are all going to be recreations using the the original scripts from the shows, and that's what makes them fun. And for those of us who don't read print, we do have our scripts in Braille, absolutely so that's kind of fun. Well, Walden, this has been absolutely wonderful. We're going to have to do it some more. Maybe we need to get you, John and Larry all together on that. That might be kind of fun. But I really, I don't think we need a host if you that. No, no, we just, you know, just go on. But this has been really fun. I really enjoy it. If people want to reach out to you, how do they do that?   Walden Hughes ** 1:00:45 Oh, I think they can call my studio number 714-545-2071, I'm in California, or they can email me at Walden shoes at yesterday, usa.com, W, A, l, D, E, N, H, U, C, H, E, S at, y, E, S T, E, R, D, A, y, u, s a.com, I'm the president of radio enthusiast sound, that's reps online.org or on the board of Sper back, which is S, P, E, R, D, V, A, c.com, so while waiting shakes me down, when   Michael Hingson ** 1:01:25 will the showcase actually occur up in Bellevue in Washington?   Walden Hughes ** 1:01:30 That will be September 18, 19 20/21, and then our Christmas one is will be Friday, December five, and Saturday, December the sixth. And then we're also going back and spir back, and I bet we'll see you there. We're going to go back to the Troy Blossom Festival next April, 23 to 26 and we'll know, are we set up to do that now? Yep, looks like that gonna happen? Yeah? Oh, good, yeah. So kick out the phone with Nicholas here a few days ago. So everything's gonna go for that, so that will be good.   Michael Hingson ** 1:02:03 Yeah, we will do that. That's cool. Well, thank you for being here, and I want to thank you all for listening. I hope you had fun. This is a little different than a lot of the episodes that we've done, but it's, I think, important and enlightening to hear about this medium into to meet people from it. So thank you for listening wherever you are. We hope that you'll give us a five star review of unstoppable mindset wherever you're listening or watching. Please do that. We'd love to hear from you. You can reach me at Michael H, I m, I C, H, A, E, L, H, I at accessibe, A, C, C, E, S, S, i, b, e.com, and you can also go to our podcast page if you don't find podcasts any other way. Michael hingson.com/podcast, that's m, I C, H, A, E, L, H, I N, G, s, O, n.com/podcast, singular. So thanks again for being here and for listening to the show, and Walden, once again, I want to thank you for being here. This has been great.   Walden Hughes ** 1:03:01 Thank you, Michael,   Michael Hingson ** 1:03:07 You have been listening to the Unstoppable Mindset podcast. Thanks for dropping by. I hope that you'll join us again next week, and in future weeks for upcoming episodes. To subscribe to our podcast and to learn about upcoming episodes, please visit www dot Michael hingson.com slash podcast. Michael Hingson is spelled m i c h a e l h i n g s o n. While you're on the site., please use the form there to recommend people who we ought to interview in upcoming editions of the show. And also, we ask you and urge you to invite your friends to join us in the future. If you know of any one or any organization needing a speaker for an event, please email me at speaker at Michael hingson.com. I appreciate it very much. To learn more about the concept of blinded by fear, please visit www dot Michael hingson.com forward slash blinded by fear and while you're there, feel free to pick up a copy of my free eBook entitled blinded by fear. The unstoppable mindset podcast is provided by access cast an initiative of accessiBe and is sponsored by accessiBe. Please visit www.accessibe.com . AccessiBe is spelled a c c e s s i b e. There you can learn all about how you can make your website inclusive for all persons with disabilities and how you can help make the internet fully inclusive by 2025. Thanks again for Listening. Please come back and visit us again next week.

united states christmas america tv university california texas president friends children australia europe hollywood master house washington las vegas talk germany new york times creator seattle radio new jersey tennessee hospitals bbc harvard mba cnn nbc economics superman blind cbs southern california museum hunt ambassadors thunder michael jackson midnight nebraska stitcher attorney sr pacific windows pierre ebooks yahoo unstoppable holmes folks hughes forces political science beverly hills washington state frank sinatra visionary christmas carol mesa wong aim social security monitor mark cuban rehabilitation irvine tvs american express rutgers university wonderful life reps newport db wound lyndon baines johnson boyle hemingway ic hoosiers armed forces gi joe walden incorporated tom clancy american red cross cowan bellevue oa uc irvine bing crosby uci braille jimmy stewart eagle scouts puget sound bob hope wgn ssi national federation weldon red october lassie dicker groucho marx bill johnson gong show old time radio catalina island pat boone mike wallace jack benny michael h tower records danny kaye mel blanc am fm perry como zuzu friday night live al jolson troyer tsi zork garden grove kbc jack armstrong victorville kpfk exxon mobile sper chief vision officer jimmy durante kpcc federal express scripps college eddie cantor fred allen michael hingson keith scott brown derby walter winchell john roy bill owens accounting finance phil proctor armed forces radio hancock park accessibe american humane association bill ratner braille institute tommy cook thunder dog david osmond janet waldo beverly washburn hero dog awards bob lyons sperdvac yesterday usa
Beasts Of Burden
169: Compartmentalize the Task Ahead

Beasts Of Burden

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2025 48:21


In this episode, I share a little catch up. I talk about my food plot plans. I transition into the tasks ahead we all face on our farms. I descrive forestry management as the Holy Trinity of Forestry: TSI, Fire, Invasive Management. You need all 3 to have a healthy timber. I talk about compartmentalizing a stand out of the whole timber. I also encourage you to break down the invasive management starting from May 1st to October 1st. You have 150 days to address invasives or TSI across your farm. Throw a dart at the calendar to tackle a particular stand. This method of compartmentalizing your timber or farm as a whole will help break down the list of priorities, but also giving each stand it's individual attention instead of looking at the whole and becoming stressed. Thank you for listening!Base Camp Country Real Estate Agent Jesse Knoxhttps://www.basecampcountry.com/agent-jesse-knox/Jesse.Knox@basecampcountry.comFor Habitat Questions/Consultations Forestry ConsultationsJKnox0623@gmail.com

行動星球
VW Tiguan 280 eTSI Elegance Premium優缺點大公開 少了天窗讓露營族爸爸心中有小缺憾|聊車挺好的EP227

行動星球

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2025 25:18


對VW來說,大改款Tiguan的發表可謂今年的重中之重,但並非大多數人會去選擇性能版的430 TSI車型,因此售價149.8萬元的Tiguan 280 eTSI Elegance Premium就成了銷售主力!而此次試駕的便是它。該車型搭載不少人熟悉的1.5升引擎+48V輕油電系統,滿上的配備和科技感濃厚的內裝自是頗有賣點,但志豪站在露營族爸爸角度來看,Tiguan 280 eTSI Elegance Premium沒有天窗、甚至無法選配的作法似乎有些小缺憾,為什麼?本文有詳細的說明。另外,該車型雖然沒有這項配備,但卻有此類似的選項,似乎讓人摸不著頭緒,為什麼?且看島叔與豪哥的推敲為何? #行動星球 #聊車挺好的 #Tiguan280eTSI #VW #SUV #48V輕油電 -- Hosting provided by SoundOn

Programa del Motor: AutoFM
Sección AutoScout24 para encontrar el mejor Seat Leon Cupra R

Programa del Motor: AutoFM

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2025 15:25


Esto es un extracto de la Tertulia de AutoFM que se emite cada jueves en Onda Cero La sección de AutoScout24 es para encontrar un Seat Leon Cupra R: Analizamos precios de las distintas entregas del Seat Leon Cupra R, desde un Seat Leon Cupra R MK1 ¡inglés! hasta un Seat Leon SC 2.0 TSI 280cv con 250K kilómetros. Comentamos todas las generaciones y motorizaciones y cómo todas ellas se pueden encontrar en autoScout24. Todos los podcast: https://www.podcastmotor.es Twitter: @AutoFmRadio Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/autofmradio/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@AutoFM Contacto: info@autofm.es

Robert McLean's Podcast
Climate News: Economist Ross Garnaut among those urging Australian Government to use 'roundtable discussions' to resurrect the carbon price

Robert McLean's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2025 43:34


Ross Garnaut (pictured) is among those who have urged the Australian Government to use this month's roundtable discussions to boost Australia's productivity and economy, and repair the budget as a platform to resurrect the carbon price - "Economists want a carbon price comeback – but does Australia have the political courage?";"Great Barrier Reef suffers sharp decline in coral coverage after 'unheard of' heat events";"Great Barrier Reef suffers biggest annual drop in live coral since 1980s after devastating coral bleaching";"Renewable Energy Fit for a Superpower";"How to answer the argument that Australia's emissions are too small to make a difference";"The agency asked five climate skeptics to write a report criticizing the consensus on global warming. Scientists are pointing out its errors.";"Candidate Trump Promised Oil Executives a Windfall. Now, They're Getting It.";"Changes in Nature's Symphony Can Reflect Climate Impacts":"Australian researchers discover two invasive weeds have the potential to be burned as biofuel";"Great Barrier Reef suffers biggest annual drop in live coral since 1980s after devastating coral bleaching";"World's biggest coral survey confirms sharp decline in Great Barrier Reef after heatwave";"These students cut air pollution near their schools – by taking aim at their parents' idling cars";"What would a climate model made from music sound like? This team of artists and scientists has created one";"TSI's Submission to the Economic Reform Roundtable";"August to bring more rain and snow, but for farmers it's ‘storm Lotto'";"These kids want climate action. Here are the cutting questions they're asking CEOs";"Ten Victorian towns to lose piped gas as operator says network is too expensive";"UN plastic pollution talks must result in ambitious treaty, leading expert says";"‘The forest had gone': the storm that moved a mountain";"Heat, work, and worry: How is outdoor employment linked to concern about extreme heat?";"Walkable Cities, Neighborhoods = Happy Communities";"Energy Dept. Attacks Climate Science in Contentious Report";"Australia's Bid for COP31: Why It Matters and Why You Should Care ";"New National Climate Risk Assessment – more omission than commission?";"Clean energy subsidies should be replaced with ‘market-based incentives' from 2030, Australia's Productivity Commission says";"Threat of Nuclear War Is Rising, But Scientists Say the Public Can Change That";"'A bellwether of change': speed of glacier shrinking on remote Heard Island sounds alarm";"5 ingenious things trees do that human designers can learn from";"Romania to access EU funds to help areas affected by devastating floods, PM says";"Offshore wind leasing is officially dead under Trump";"Scientists slam Trump administration climate report as a ‘farce' full of misinformation";"Woman swept away in flood waters in Hunter region as emergency services respond to more than 1,450 calls";"Going to waste: two years after REDcycle's collapse, Australia's soft plastics are hitting the environment hard";"Troubling Scenes From an Arctic in Full-Tilt Crisis";"Greening of Antarctica Is Another Sign of Significant Climate Shift on the Frozen Continent";"Nordic countries hit by ‘truly unprecedented' heatwave";"

Radio3i
Ricordi di un normalissimo sabato sera degli anni 80

Radio3i

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2025


Tra i programmi più amati dai bambini (e non solo) trasmessi dall'allora TSI negli anni passati, Scacciapensieri occupa un posto speciale nella memoria collettiva. Questo contenitore di cartoni animati, pensato per intrattenere e far sognare, ha offerto per anni una selezione di classici dell'animazione provenienti da ogni angolo del mondo.Ad aprire le danze c'era spesso lui, l'irresistibile Mister Magoo, l'anziano miope dai modi buffi e involontariamente comici, capace di infilarsi nelle situazioni più improbabili senza mai perdere calma.Da lì, Scacciapensieri ci portava in un viaggio tra mondi fantastici e personaggi indimenticabili.Oggi, nominarlo significa evocare una piccola epoca d'oro della TV per ragazzi, quando bastava accendere il televisore e lasciarsi trasportare con un sorriso.

Agro Resenha Podcast
AEP#017 - Produção e qualidade de semente de soja

Agro Resenha Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2025 40:23


Neste episódio do "Agro em Pauta", Lígia Pedrini entrevista Tulio Pytlak para um mergulho técnico e prático na produção de sementes de soja, destacando os principais desafios enfrentados pelo setor e os cuidados necessários para garantir a qualidade das sementes que chegam ao produtor. FICHA TÉCNICAApresentação: Lígia PedriniProdução: Agro ResenhaConvidado: Tulio PytlakEdição: Senhor A - https://editorsenhor-a.com.brSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Agrocast
AEP#017 - Produção e qualidade de semente de soja

Agrocast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2025 40:23


Neste episódio do "Agro em Pauta", Lígia Pedrini entrevista Tulio Pytlak para um mergulho técnico e prático na produção de sementes de soja, destacando os principais desafios enfrentados pelo setor e os cuidados necessários para garantir a qualidade das sementes que chegam ao produtor. FICHA TÉCNICAApresentação: Lígia PedriniProdução: Agro ResenhaConvidado: Tulio PytlakEdição: Senhor A - https://editorsenhor-a.com.brSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Wiele2Wiele
Wiele2Wiele ry met VW se Golf 1.4 TSI

Wiele2Wiele

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2025 25:23


In hierdie week se episode van Wiele2Wiele vertel hulle jou meer oor Nissan se nuwe Stealth-bakkie en hulle bring kwaliteittyd met VW se Golf 1.4 TSI deur - 'n ware juweel van 'n motor. Daar is raad oor wetlike beskerming wanneer jy 'n motor aankoop, 'n tegniese wenk oor motordiefstal en Honda-nostalgie vir 2Wiele-liefhebbers. Wiele2Wiele op Facebook · Wiele2Wiele op Maroela Media

Auto - Rund ums Auto. Fahrberichte, Gespräche und  Informationen

Als Seat vor einigen Jahren angekündigt hat, aus der bisherigen Zusatzbezeichnung „Cupra“ eine eigene Automarke zu machen, haben einige Fachleute gezweifelt. Die Zweifel sind unterdessen ausgeräumt, denn CUPRA ist eine der am schnellsten wachsenden Automarken in Europa. Mehr als 700.000 ausgelieferte Fahrzeuge seit dem Launch im Jahr 2018 beweisen es. Und der Terramar wird für weitere Stückzahlen sorgen.  Darum geht es diesmal!Ich könnte mir den heutigen Fahrbericht einfach machen und sagen: Cupra Terramar. Klare Kaufempfehlung. Aber was mache ich dann mit den verbleibenden 2 Minuten und 25 Sekunden dieses Radiobeitrages? Also fangen wir anders an. Auch Motorjournalisten stehen regelmäßig vor der Qual der Wahl, welches Auto sie sich kaufen sollen. Unser Problem ist, dass wir von -zig Modellen fast alles Gute, aber auch fast alles Schlechte wissen. Der Terramar hat mich aber rundum begeistert! Und zwar bei Optik, Ausstattung und Technik. Power und Drive!    Die Qual der Wahl, die ich schon angesprochen habe, beginnt beim Antrieb. Verfügbar sind TSI-Benzin-Motoren, Mildhybrid eTSI-Motoren und die e-HYBRID genannte neue Generation von Plug-in-Hybrid-Motoren. Alle Kombinationen haben serienmäßig ein DSG-Doppelkupplungsgetriebe.  Die Leistungsbandbreite liegt zwischen 110 kW (150 PS) und 200 kW (272 PS), im Test hatten wir die Version Terramar VZ mit 195 kW (265 PS), einem 7-Gang-DSG-Getriebe und Allradantrieb (4Drive). VZ ist übrigens die spanische Abkürzung für „Veloz“ gleich „schnell“. Die Beschleunigung von 0–100 km/h wird in 5,9 Sekunden erledigt, - das ist schnell - die Höchstgeschwindigkeit ist auf 243 km/h limitiert. Der Verbrauch auf 100 Kilometer pendelt sich dabei zwischen 8,4–8,8 l ein, die CO2-Emissionen auf 191–199 g/km, jeweils nach WLTP. Das der Wagen alle notwendigen Assistenzsysteme hat, versteht sich von selbst!  Die Kosten!Auch hier schauen wir mal auf die Preisskala. Sie beginnt bei 44.400,00 € für den CUPRA Terramar 1.5 eTSI 110 kW (150 PS) 7-Gang-DSG und endet bei 57.530,00 €. Für den letztgenannten Betrag bekommen Sie alternativ den Terramar VZ 2.0 TSI 195 kW (265 PS), 7-Gang DSG und Allradantrieb oder den Plug-in-Hybriden Terramar VZ 1.5 e-HYBRID 200 kW (272 PS), 6-Gang-DSG und Frontantrieb.Das Gesamtbild!    Da sage ich nur noch: CUPRA Terramar! Den empfiehlt der Motorjournalist seiner Familie. Und natürlich auch sich selbst! Damit ist alles gesagt, oder? Alle Fotos: © SEAT Deutschland GmbH    Diesen Beitrag können Sie nachhören oder downloaden unter:

Land & Legacy - Sportsmen's Nation
Prime Time Farm - Recreational Real Estate

Land & Legacy - Sportsmen's Nation

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2025 35:08


This week we take a new look at what recreational real estate should look like on the market! We highlight and talk in depth about a clients property that didn't last long before going under contract. We wanted to share this with you so that you know what a truly fairly represented farm looks like. Also, we discuss what Farm Tier this property falls under! In the video we highlight this farm's features such as hunting access, CRP, food plots and diversity of crops. TSI, prescribed fire regime, and more! This farm has it all, from the perfect living quarters to an ideal balance of open acres to managed timber acres. Review this farm with us and put it to memory, that this is what managed farms look like! Enjoy the podcast and reach out to your local Whitetail Properties agents for more assistance in your real estate needs. Farm Listing Link: https://www.whitetailproperties.com/hunting-land/missouri/putnam/putnam-co-mo-405-hinkle LandBeat Videos: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rfa8ugqN9-w&list=PLb5o-rUKMbQ7sCqhbd6Oo0pWq8A7MRVSW&index=17&t=4s https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ci9P20Ad4Pc&list=PLb5o-rUKMbQ7sCqhbd6Oo0pWq8A7MRVSW&index=18&t=324s https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iKbhCj2qpb0&list=PLb5o-rUKMbQ7sCqhbd6Oo0pWq8A7MRVSW&index=19&t=328s

Happily EVERything Disney
2025-06-26: Stitch day, Tom Sawyer Island Demo Permits and Holiday Thoughts

Happily EVERything Disney

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2025 12:49


Stitch makes a cameo for our show!We discuss TSI demo permits and Holiday previews upcoming for the parks.  Matt finishes his rationale from hopping out into the lightning lane instead.Send us a textTwitter/X Handles:Dizhappenings: https://twitter.com/dizhappeningsShaun: https://twitter.com/rankingthemouseMatt: https://twitter.com/mattpetoBefore/After Watch Music in Dizhappenings copyrighted by Audio Jungle

Millevoci
Mike Bongiorno, la TSI e il primo quiz a colori “Personaggi in fiera” nel 1975

Millevoci

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2025 31:40


Sapete qual è stato il primo quiz a colori di Mike Bongiorno? “Personaggi in fiera”, un programma in onda 50 anni fa alla TSI: 20 puntate, il venerdì sera, dal 17 gennaio al 7 giugno del 1975. Era un gioco a premi in cui due concorrenti si sfidavano fra loro sostenuti da un gruppo di “padrini”. Per l'indimenticabile Mike, assistito da Fiorenza Fioratti in studio e da Marco Blaser alla regia, fu la sua prima volta in immagine “a colori”. Dopo 50 anni ripercorriamo la storia di una trasmissione che molti di voi sicuramente ricorderanno e che ha visto la partecipazione di famosissimi ospiti del mondo dello spettacolo, del giornalismo, dello sport e del cinema, allargando la nostra chiacchierata ad altri grandi personaggi televisivi, come Enzo Tortora e Corrado, che hanno presentato dei programmi alla TSI. Ci tuffiamo quindi nel passato della nostra TV con una guida, Pino Frisoli, esperto di storia della televisione e dello sport. Frisoli è attivo in RAI dove è specializzato nelle ricerche di archivio, in particolare per RAI Sport. 

Indiana Association of School Principals (IASP) Podcast

I'm excited to share a brief but important episode of the IASP Advocacy Podcast: “Action Items & Accountability: What You Need to Know Before School Starts.”

The WhitetailDNA Podcast
EP 60 | The Flatlander Way: Food Plots & Deer Habitat With Kaleb Greiner

The WhitetailDNA Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2025 64:29


Welcome back to another week! In today's episode, Alex and Jeremy are joined by Kaleb Greiner. Kaleb is one of the more knowledgeable deer hunters we know, but he thrives in deer habitat management. Kaleb was formerly part of Midwest Whitetail and recently departed to pursue his new adventure and passion in land consulting and management. Growing up in the great state of Iowa, he has spent his life learning how to make properties more attractive to whitetails, and he's here to share what he has learned along the way. Kaleb goes over his background in the hunting industry and growing up in Iowa as a kid bowhunting whitetails. Kaleb touches on his favorite food sources to plant for big bucks, and what top equipment he would purchase to manage land. The guys dive into the heavily debated topic of mock scrapes and water holes in food plots. Kaleb shares why he thinks a cultipacker is a must-have when planting food plots and why TSI work is so important on your property. Lastly, the guys discuss the pros of hiring a land consultant to evaluate your farm and provide insights into government programs available that can help fund your habitat goals. Whether you manage 10 acres or 1,000, Kaleb's knowledge and hands-on experience will give you actionable strategies to take your property—and your whitetail hunting—to the next level. Enjoy the show! New episodes drop every Wednesday at 6AM CST LINKS: Subscribe to the YouTube Channel Follow along on Instagram and Facebook Check out the Website The WhitetailDNA Podcast is presented by: Dark Energy | 10% OFF (code: wdna10) Rack Hub | 10% OFF (code: whitetaildna) Pnuma Outdoors | 20% OFF (code: wdna20) Tactacam Reveal Cameras  Tactacam Reveal Accessories  Custom Archery & Outdoors Kifaru

Growing Your Dental Business
Automate Your Cash Flow and Reduce Bad Debt with Ron Cash

Growing Your Dental Business

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2025 18:53


Are patient past-due accounts slowing down your dental practice? In this episode, we sit down with Ron Cash of Transworld Systems Inc. (TSI) to explore how automation can help your practice recover more from your patients, faster, and at the lowest possible cost.Discover proven methods to:✅ Resolve past-due patient accounts efficiently✅ Improve cash flow & reduce bad debt✅ Seamlessly integrate collections with your existing dental software✅ Leverage TSI's partnership with the Michigan Dental Association for exclusive discountsDon't let outstanding accounts impact your bottom line—tune in now to learn how to streamline your collections process!You can connect with Ron by calling 877-RON-CASH—it's that easy! 

Land & Legacy - Sportsmen's Nation
Cutting Timber Holds more Deer- We've Got the Facts

Land & Legacy - Sportsmen's Nation

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2025 22:55


We've got the facts that point you to how quickly deer relate to the value produced from harvesting timber! A client conducted a thermal drone survey in 2024 before a timber harvest was completed. From May to October of 2024 the farm had its timber harvested by a crew, bedding thickets, heavy TSI, medium TSI, and Light TSI were all conducted through the harvesting. Following up the timber harvest, in early 2025 another thermal drone survey was conducted and the comparison between the two is astounding. It's not that numbers bumped largely, but simply the reallocation or distribution of resident deer are heavily selecting the logged vs unlogged areas. During the podcast we review a LandBeat video that highlights all of the amazing information we collected from these surveys! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-5vNHmDeQQ

PUSH to TALK with BRUCE WEBB: A Helicopter Podcast
Episode 45: Inside A UIMC Event (w/ John Roberts)

PUSH to TALK with BRUCE WEBB: A Helicopter Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2025 59:39


Unintended flight into IMC is one of the most severe risks we face as pilots. If you haven't been there, it's a hard thing to fathom — flying into the clouds, quickly losing all orientation. Our guest today is John Roberts. John is the Senior Training Manager at the Transportation Safety Institute. In a previous career, John flew helicopters in the army, where he retired with the rank of CW 5. In this episode, John will tell the story of a UIMC event he survived while flying in the army. What was his thought process as he entered the clouds? And what decisions were key to his survival? Also — we'll speak with John about his current work at TSI, the evolution of UIMC training equipment, and much more. 

Programa del Motor: AutoFM
Buzón del oyenete: Simulación de ruido en los eléctricos, ¿Qué coche me compro?, ¿Diesel o Gasolina?

Programa del Motor: AutoFM

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2025 15:05


Esto es un extracto de la Tertulia de AutoFM que se emite cada jueves en Onda Cero Buzón del oyente múltiple: En YouTube nos pregunta Javier Habane Tengo interés en adquirir un seminuevo con apenas 20.000 km año 23 Mazda CX60 homura lo hay phev y diesel 200 CV . Con qué motor os quedáis? Fernando López de Novales nos manda un mail: Buenos días amigos. Espero que estéis bien. Recientemente he escuchado en vuestro programa hablar de las sensaciones y el sonido deportivo de algunas variantes deportivas de coches eléctricos. ¿No os parece algo lamentable que un coche eléctrico deportivo intente imitar el sonido y la sensación de cambiar de marchas de un coche con un motor normal? Es como "negarse" a sí mismos, no sé si me explico...deberían ser capaces de generar sensaciones nuevas y específicas como coche eléctrico. Un saludo para todos. Buenos días, mi nombre es Jorge y soy de León. Soy uno de esos nuevos oyentes que os ha descubierto este año 2025 y desde el primer día me he hecho fijo del podcast. Daros la enhorabuena por el trabajo que hacéis y la información tan clara y objetiva que ofrecéis en cada programa. Os escribo porque estoy valorando comprarme un coche más grande, tengo un Vw Golf V 1.4 Tsi 122 cv con casi 400.000 km con el que estoy encantado, pero se me queda pequeño con la silla de la pequeña de la casa. Valoro comprar una berlina de segunda mano, probablemente importada de Alemania por existir mucha variedad y con pocos km a buen precio. Quiero gastar unos 30.000€ y el coche siempre gasolina y automático. Realizo unos 20.000km al año por carreteras nacionales y autovías con una conducción tranquila. Valoro la comodidad, pero con suficientes prestaciones que nunca están de más en caso de necesidad. Me gustan las siguientes opciones que he encontrado con 3/4 años de antigüedad y menos de 50.000 km: Audi A4 Avant Tfsi (150 o 190 cv), no sé qué me podéis decir sobre todo del 150 cv, si es suficiente motor. Mercedes C180 State 156cv, si sabéis como va este motor y si es suficiente para este coche al ser un 1.5 o debo irme al C200 que ya tiene 184 cv con hibridación siendo el mismo motor. Vw Arteon Shotting Brake 2.0 Tsi 190cv. Gracias de antemano, un saludo desde León. Todos los podcast: https://www.podcastmotor.es Twitter: @AutoFmRadio Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/autofmradio/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@AutoFM Contacto: info@autofm.es

The Fall Podcast
EP 450 | Farm Flows and Spring Prep - SZN 25

The Fall Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2025 25:15


Feel good Friday episode is live. Today's topics are flows of a farm, TSI improvement, pruning apple trees and prepping for spring plots. Enjoy. . . . Promo Codes: Latitude Outdoors: thefall Americas Best Bowstrings: TFP Helix Broadheads:TFP Faceoff Ebikes: TFP Asio Gear: FALL20 . . . Partner Websites: Jays Sporting Goods - https://www.jayssportinggoods.com/ Helix Broadheads - https://www.helixbroadheads.com/ Latitude Outdoors - https://www.latitudeoutdoors.com/ Garmin Bow Sights - https://www.garmin.com/en-US/c/outdoor-recreation/sportsman-and-tactical-devices/ Prime Archery - https://www.g5prime.com/ Asio Gear - https://asiogear.com?utm_source=pro&utm_medium=fall Faceoff Hunting Ebikes - https://www.faceoffebikes.com/ Michigan Buckpole - https://mibuckpole.com/ Don't forget to check out the Fall Podcast Youtube channel for new content. Subscribe to the channel as well. Thank you. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWSCcGJeHHxejFXBZAO83QA For updates from The Fall Podcast: The Fall Podcast on Instagram - The Fall Podcast The Fall Podcast on Facebook - The Fall Podcast Facebook The Fall Podcast Youtube Channel - The Fall Podcast Youtube Channel Subscribe and Rate us on Itunes: SUBSCRIBE to The Fall Podcast Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Land & Legacy - Sportsmen's Nation
LandBeat Breakdown: How Not to Use Fire and TSI

Land & Legacy - Sportsmen's Nation

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2025 25:50


On this week's podcast we cover the nuisance usage of TSI and fire. We review a particular location that has years of fire and a round of TSI, but no reward to show for that effort. Why you may ask is a great question! We talk constantly about these techniques and how good they are! But, if you are executing them poorly or too frequently, the results will suffer or you can even go backwards! Wouldn't it be wild to know that what you thought was helping was hurting? We don't see it often, but when we do, we have to discuss how the overuse or abuse of good things can create negatives on the landscape. We are talking about the removal of fuel loads, cover, and removal of forage opportunities for deer and wild turkey. Follow-along on this week's podcast to see if you are executing well and effectively with the habitat management techniques of prescribed fire and TSI. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1VRcFUDkkUc

Beasts Of Burden
Ep 161: The Onion

Beasts Of Burden

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2025 70:59


In this episode, I update the listners with unexpected bronchitus. Frustrating flat tires in Amish country. The discovery of a Bloodfluke Worm in my body since I was 6. Finally, the real topic looking at your land as an onion. There are layers to a farm. We peel back the toxic outer layers such as the first round of TSI, or cedar trees, or heavy invasive management. Then it finally gets down to the layer you were working for all along.I hope you enjoy and thank you for listening!Habitat Inquiries: JKnox0623@gmail.comBase Camp Country: jesse.knox@basecampcountry.com

Ma Non Sembri Malata
La storia di Martina Rosaci

Ma Non Sembri Malata

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2025 44:54


In questa puntata sentirete la storia di Martina Rosaci, parlerà delle sue diagnosi di Sindrome di Ehlers Danlos, Disautonomia, TSI, POTS, e sindrome da fatica cronica.

行動星球
七人座SUV果然好用 Škoda Kodiaq 2.0 TSI 4x4宜蘭試駕一日遊|聊車挺好的EP218

行動星球

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2025 32:07


連續蟬連國內七人座SUV銷售冠軍的Škoda Kodiaq,在眾多露營休閒、有多人乘載需求的車主敲碗等待下終於來了。與1.5升車型相較,Škoda Kodiaq 2.0 TSI 4x4配備一樣豐富外,四輪傳動、更強的2.0升動力均更貼近戶外玩家的期待。不僅如此,它還多了全景天窗。如此熱門的車款,我們當然要趕快借出來蹂躪一下啊(誤)~~ 這次試駕不太一樣,可以說是邊旅遊邊工作,沒想到辛苦的試駕還能夠吃吃喝喝,希望大家喜歡,請慢用 !! -- Hosting provided by SoundOn

The Standard Sportsman
Hunter Johnson

The Standard Sportsman

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2025 74:47


A diverse background ranging from dirt work to duck guide led Hunter Johnson to managing habitat for a pair of top-notch Arkansas duck clubs. With one on the famed Grand Prairie and the other in the Cache River Bottoms, Johnson employs diverse strategies to attract and hold ducks throughout a sixty-day duck season. The guys discuss habitat, food plots, timber stand improvement (TSI), flooded unharvested crops, pressure management, and scouting. Thanks to our sponsors: Tom Beckbe, Ducks Unlimited, Perfect Limit Outdoors, Sitka Gear, Greenhead: The Arkansas Duck Hunting Magazine, Lile Real Estate and Purina Pro Plan.Send us a textAll Rights Reserved. Please subscribe, rate and share The Standard Sportsman podcast.

Land & Legacy - Sportsmen's Nation
LandBeat Breakdown: In Depth Timber Evaluation

Land & Legacy - Sportsmen's Nation

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2025 27:45


On this weeks podcast Adam is breaking down all your questions from a recent whitetail properties LandBeat video. When it comes to deciding which tree to kill and which to keep during TSI is a common question and we break down how we decide on that very question. Be sure to check out the LandBeat series and ask your questions to get a further break down on here!

Save My Thyroid
What approach should I take if I have the antibodies for both Graves' disease and Hashimoto's?

Save My Thyroid

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2025 8:00


Many patients have thyroid antibodies for both Graves' disease and Hashimoto's, with some combination of the main three types: thyroid peroxidase, thyroglobulin, and thyroid stimulating immunoglobulin.Today, I'm sharing a brief overview of these antibodies, whether your approach should be different depending on which antibodies are present, why it's important to address the Triad of Autoimmunity, and the need for individualized strategies for symptom management.In this episode, you'll learn:Understanding the three main thyroid antibodies: TPO, TG, and TSI.The Triad of AutoimmunityFour categories of triggers: food, stress, chemicals, and infectionsWhy I advocate for addressing the immune system aspectIndividualized symptom management strategiesIdentifying and addressing multiple triggers when managing thyroid antibodiesAs always, I hope you find this episode valuable, and I look forward to catching you in the next episode!To learn more, visit the show notes at https://savemythyroid.com/podcast/what-approach-should-i-take-if-i-have-the-antibodies-for-both-graves-disease-and-hashimotos/. Do You Want Help Saving Your Thyroid? Access hundreds of free articles at www.NaturalEndocrineSolutions.com Visit Dr. Eric's YouTube channel at www.youtube.com/c/NaturalThyroidDoctor/ To work with Dr. Eric, visit https://savemythyroid.com/work-with-dr-eric/

Chasing Giants with Don Higgins
Episode #261 - Does GMO Traits Reduce Deer Attraction?

Chasing Giants with Don Higgins

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2025 80:18


In this episode of Chasing Giants, hosts Terry and Don discuss various topics, including their recent experiences at the Midwest Sportsman's Classic, insights from consulting on soybean plots in Iowa, the challenges of switchgrass quality, and funny stories from their consulting trail. They also address listener questions and provide valuable takeaways on GMO vs non-GMO soybeans and effective planting strategies. In this episode, Terry and Don delve into various aspects of deer management, including the timing for TSI projects, understanding buck behavior, and the implications of new hunting regulations in Illinois. They also discuss the challenges of balancing cattle management with deer habitat, navigating property purchases while considering family dynamics, and the exciting developments at Real World Wildlife Products, including acquiring Kitchen Seed Company. The conversation emphasizes the importance of quality management and the value of supportive relationships in achieving success. Chasing Giants and Lester's Feet Merchandise can be purchased at: https://morancreekoutdoors.com Our Sponsors of Chasing Giants TV: Asio Camo Gear - www.asiogear.com Midwest Land Group - www.midwestlandgroup.com Victory Auto Group - www.victorykc.com 360 Hunting Blinds - www.360huntingblinds.com Real World Wildlife Products - www.realworldwildlifeproducts.com Mathews Archery - www.mathewsinc.com Gingerich Tree Farms - www.gingerichtreefarm.com Brenton USA - www.brentonusa.com Vortex Optics - www.vortexoptics.com Any use of reproduction without the expressed written permission of Chasing Giants TV LLC is strictly prohibited.

The Longevity Formula
Radioactive Iodine or Natural Healing? The Thyroid Dilemma with Dr. Eric Ozansky

The Longevity Formula

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2025 55:49 Transcription Available


Send us a textDr. Brandon Crawford and Dr. Eric Ozansky discuss thyroid health, focusing on hyperthyroidism and Graves' disease. They stress the need for thorough testing and a holistic treatment approach that includes diet, stress management, and iodine supplementation. They also explore the links between thyroid health, halides, brain health, weight gain in hyperthyroid patients, and the effects of light exposure, providing tips for improving thyroid health.What You'll LearnThyroid disorders affect 12% of the U.S. population, with hyperthyroidism and Graves' disease often overlooked compared to hypothyroidism.Comprehensive testing is crucial for accurate diagnosis, as many patients may have both Graves' and Hashimoto's antibodies.Diet, lifestyle changes, and stress management play a significant role in maintaining thyroid health and managing autoimmune conditions.Iodine supplementation is controversial and should be approached with caution, especially in individuals with thyroid disorders.Thyroid hormones significantly influence brain health, mental well-being, and even contribute to unexpected issues like weight gain in hyperthyroid patients.Light exposure and gut health are critical factors that regulate thyroid function, emphasizing the importance of a holistic, functional medicine approach.ResourcesTests MentionedHAKALA labs testing (for halides testing)GI Map TestingDutch Test (for hormones and cortisol)Urinary iodine testingThyroid antibody testing (TSI, TPO, TG)Referenced Books/Authors“Natural Treatment Solutions for Hyperthyroidism and Graves' Disease” (now in its third edition, 2023)“Hashimoto's Triggers” (2018)“The Hyperthyroid Healing Diet” (2024)Dr. David Brownstein's book “Iodine: Why You Need It, Why You Can't Live Without It”Dr. Alan Christensen's “The Thyroid Reset Diet”Products 528 Innovations Lasers NeuroSolution Full Spectrum CBD NeuroSolution Broad Spectrum CBD NeuroSolution StimPod Learn MoreFor more information, resources, and podcast episodes, visit https://tinyurl.com/3ppwdfpm

Merchant Sales Podcast
Building Residuals with Medical Payments & Software | Live Event Recap

Merchant Sales Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2025 58:44


Tune in to this recap of our webinar to learn how to build massive residuals in the Healthcare Payments industry. I am joined by Jon Shirey (CEO, Full Stack Payments), Mark Dunn (Owner, Field Guide & Co-owner, TSI), and Brian Wasserman (President & CEO, TSI) to discuss their new partnership and share strategies for targeting medical merchants, scheduling demos, and adding large accounts to your residual portfolio—all managed within the Full Stack Payments mobile app. Don't miss these expert insights!

Land & Legacy - Sportsmen's Nation
Deep Dive Into TSI

Land & Legacy - Sportsmen's Nation

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2025 75:47


It's a hot topic right now, TSI! In this episode, following our "How to Get Started with TSI," we dive deeper into the weeds of timber stand improvement (TSI). We discuss how we utilize different intensities of TSI for timber production, turkey management, and deer management across the landscape. From the Deep South to the Far North, one thing rings true: timber management is necessary for healthy wildlife populations and timber stands. With hunting seasons ending across the country, we are hitting the woods hard this time of the year managing our timbered areas. So, if you have been on the fence about diving into the world of TSI, make sure to give these two episodes a listen!

Land & Legacy - Sportsmen's Nation
Deep Dive Into TSI

Land & Legacy - Sportsmen's Nation

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2025 50:03


It's a hot topic right now, TSI! In this episode, following our "How to Get Started with TSI," we dive deeper into the weeds of timber stand improvement (TSI). We discuss how we utilize different intensities of TSI for timber production, turkey management, and deer management across the landscape. From the Deep South to the Far North, one thing rings true: timber management is necessary for healthy wildlife populations and timber stands. With hunting seasons ending across the country, we are hitting the woods hard this time of the year managing our timbered areas. So, if you have been on the fence about diving into the world of TSI, make sure to give these two episodes a listen!

Land & Legacy - Sportsmen's Nation
How to Get Started with TSI

Land & Legacy - Sportsmen's Nation

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2025 50:03


TSI is a well known and adopted technique to dramatically improve the timbered acres on a given recreational property. However, most people don't know how or where to start. They may not feel comfortable running a chainsaw, they don't know how to ID trees, or perhaps they don't understand how to evaluate a forest in its layers. But, during this podcast we walk you through the mental game step by step process to truly and accurately evaluate a forest so you can begin to start TSI. Give this a listen and share to those who need help starting TSI. Once you start and see the results, you will be captivated, but you have to start! Break the forest into layers and think logically through the best technique and GO!

Learn Irish & other languages with daily podcasts
20250112_IRISH__bean_rialta_as_doire_ar_a_bealach_chun_a_naomhaithe

Learn Irish & other languages with daily podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2025 11:06


jQuery(document).ready(function(){ cab.clickify(); }); Original Podcast with clickable words https://tinyurl.com/22pvhepq Contact: irishlingos@gmail.com A nun from Derry on her way to sainthood. Bean rialta as Doire ar a bealach chun a naomhaithe. The Catholic Church will today formally recognize a nun from Derry, Sister Clare Crockett, as a candidate for sainthood, at a special ceremony in Madrid. Tabharfaidh an eaglais Chaitliceach aitheantas foirmeálta inniu do bhean rialta as Doire, an tSiúir Clare Crockett, le bheith ina h-iarrthóir le go ndéanfaí naomh di, ag searmanas ar leith i Madrid. Mr Crockett, from the Long Tower in Derry, died in an earthquake in Ecuador in South America on 16 April 2016. Bhásaigh an tSr Crockett as an Túr Fada i nDoire, i gcrith talún in Eacuadór i Meiriceá Theas ar an 16 Aibreán 2016. The school where she was teaching music in Playa Prieta collapsed in the earthquake, when Sister Crockett was trying to get people out of the building. Is amhlaidh a thit an scoil a raibh sí ag múineadh ceoil ann i Playa Prieta sa chrith talún, nuair a bhí an tSiúir Crockett ag iarraidh daoine a thabhairt amach as an fhoirgneamh. The 33-year-old nun from the Brandywell area of Derry had done pastoral work, hospital chaplaincy and missionary work in Spain, the United States and Ecuador. Bhí obair thréadach, séiplíneacht ospidéil agus obair mhisinéireachta déanta sa Spáinn, sna Stáit Aontaithe agus in Eacuadór ag an bhean rialta 33 bliain d'aois as ceantar an Brandywell i nDoire. Around 100 of the Sister's relatives and friends are in Madrid today for the ceremony in the Cathedral of Alcalá de Henares at 5.30 a.m. Spanish time. This beatification ceremony is the first step in the process for the young woman to be canonized. Tá thart ar 100 de ghaolta agus chairde na Siúrach i Madrid inniu don searmanas in Ardeaglais Alcalá de Henares ar a a 5.30 am na Spáinne Is é an searmanas beannaitheachta seo an chéad chéim sa phróiseas le go ndéanfaí naomhú ar an bhean óg. The ceremony will be shown at the Brunswick Moviebowl cinema in Derry city this evening - all seats have been sold and it is expected that the additional 170 tickets that were made available will be sold. Beidh an searmanas le feiceáil i bpictiúrlann an Brunswick Moviebowl i gcathair Dhoire tráthnóna - tá na suíocháin uilig díolta agus meastar go ndíolfar an 170 ticéad breise eile a cuireadh ar fáil. Sister Crockett was originally an actress and television presenter before joining the Servant Sisters of Mother Teresa in Spain in 2001. Aisteoir agus láithreoir teilifíse a bhí sa tSiúir Crockett ar tús sula ndeachaidh sí le Siúracha Searbhónta Bhaile na Máthar sa Spáinn i 2001. She had been a nun since the previous year. Bhí sí ina bean rialta ón bhliain roimhe sin. There is usually a 5-year wait after a person's death before the process of sainthood can begin. De ghnáth bíonn fanacht 5 bliana ann i ndiaidh bhás duine sular féidir an próiseas naomhaithe a thosú. The application for canonization is the first step in the process; the title of Servant of God is conferred afterwards. Sé an tiarratas ar chanónú an chéad chéim den phróiseas; bronntar an teideal Searbhónta Dé ina dhiaidh sin. A formal report is submitted to the Congregation for the Causes of Saints and if the application is successful, the person is declared 'venerable' or 'venerable.' The candidate is granted beatification in the third stage and the process is concluded with 'canonization.' Cuirtear tuairisc fhoirmeálta faoi bhráid na Cuallachta Naomhaithe agus má éiríonn leis an iarratas, fógraítear go bhfuil an té sin 'cásach' nó 'urramach.' Bronntar beannaitheacht ar an iarrthóir sa tríú céim agus cuirtear críoch ar an phróiseas le 'naomhainmniú.'

Save My Thyroid
What are thyroid binding immunoglobulins?

Save My Thyroid

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2024 8:00


The three main types of thyroid antibodies are thyroid peroxidase (TPO) antibodies, thyroglobulin antibodies, and thyroid stimulating immunoglobulins (TSI). Although it's rarely mentioned, there is a fourth type of antibody known as TSH-binding inhibitor immunoglobulins (TBII). Today, I'm sharing what the research tells us about the role of TBII and whether it's worth testing as part of your thyroid panel.In this episode, you'll learn about:- Different types of thyroid antibodies- Controversy surrounding TSH-binding inhibitor immunoglobulins- Whether you should test for TSH-binding inhibitor immunoglobulins- Interpreting thyroid antibody test results in context- My approach to thyroid antibody testingAs always, I hope you find this episode valuable, and I look forward to catching you in the next episode!To learn more, visit the show notes at https://savemythyroid.com/podcast/what-are-thyroid-binding-immunoglobulins/. Do You Want Help Saving Your Thyroid? Access hundreds of free articles at www.NaturalEndocrineSolutions.com Visit Dr. Eric's YouTube channel at www.youtube.com/c/NaturalThyroidDoctor/ To work with Dr. Eric, visit https://savemythyroid.com/work-with-dr-eric/

Innovative Real Estate with Three Squared, Inc.

If you have been following along for a while then you know TSI's very own Director of Design, Breck Crandell has been on a journey of building his own home here in the city of Detroit.In this episode Breck shares his thoughts about the journey a month post completion.Breck shares insights into what it was like to not only design, but to also build his own home, what lessons he learned from the process, and most importantly, how this experience has made him a better architect.Here's a glimpse of what you'll learn: Total timeline and cost to build Favorite memories from the build How does this home change housing options in Detroit? What it was like having Mayor Duggan tour the home? Who would benefit most from this type of design? Learn more about the Cochrane Home Learn more about Houm Link to full show notesReady to move forward with your project, or have questions about building with shipping containers? Contact us here and we will put you in contact with the right member of our team. Make sure to follow us on Instagram to stay up to date on new project releases, trainings, and more.

行動星球
大改款Skoda Kodiaq深度試駕優缺點大公開 內裝配備優但少了一項!|聊車挺好的EP208

行動星球

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2024 21:51


從上一代車型開始,Kodiaq就成為Skoda主力銷售車款之一,因此第二代車型原廠在配備方面則是誠意滿滿,此次試駕的是1.5 TSI e-TEC車型,雖說是入門款車型,連725 W的Canton也端出來了。在此次長達三天兩夜長時間試駕後,它哪些部分很討喜?哪些部分不是強項?來聽島叔和豪哥怎麼說? -- Hosting provided by SoundOn

Tom Nelson
Ronan Connolly: The role of the sun in climate change | Tom Nelson Pod #263

Tom Nelson

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2024 108:16


Ronan is an independent scientist, environmentalist and writer. In this episode, Ronan Connolly discusses the complexities of climate change, focusing on the role of the sun and discrepancies in temperature and solar irradiance data. Ronan mentions various scientific debates regarding solar activity's impact on climate, urban heat islands, and the reliability of historical temperature records. Ronan highlights the need for more accurate proxies and continued investigation into the true drivers of global temperature changes. 00:00 Introduction to Climate Data Adjustments 00:18 The Role of the Sun in Climate Change 01:18 Recent Research and Publications 02:47 Understanding Global Warming Attribution 10:11 Urban Heat Island Effect 21:29 Temperature Homogenization Controversy 36:50 Challenges in Sea Surface Temperature Data 44:23 Reconstructing Total Solar Irradiance 57:03 Exploring NASA Climate Reconstructions 57:41 Understanding Sunspots and Their Historical Observations 59:34 The Schwabe Cycle and Solar Cycles 01:01:45 Sunspot Numbers and Total Solar Irradiance (TSI) 01:03:21 Satellite Observations and TSI Measurements 01:12:15 The Akron and PMOD Debate 01:22:56 New TSI Composites and Their Implications 01:38:28 Concluding Thoughts and Future Research Slides for this podcast, along with AI summaries of all of my podcasts: https://tomn.substack.com/p/podcast-summaries Related video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Evbid7NOMng New paper on TSI: https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad7794  Other relevant links:  If you want to support the work of CERES, please visit us at https://www.ceres-science.com/support-us  Follow Dr. Ronan Connolly at the following: Home page: https://ronanconnollyscience.com/  Twitter/X: https://x.com/1RonanConnolly  Substack: https://substack.com/@ronanconnolly ========= AI summaries of all of my podcasts: https://tomn.substack.com/p/podcast-summaries My Linktree: https://linktr.ee/tomanelson1 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL89cj_OtPeenLkWMmdwcT8Dt0DGMb8RGR X: https://twitter.com/TomANelson Substack: https://tomn.substack.com/

Innovative Real Estate with Three Squared, Inc.
Is Mass Timber the Future of Development with Jill Ramirez

Innovative Real Estate with Three Squared, Inc.

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2024 45:42


This past summer TSI's very own Jill Ramirez had the opportunity to travel to Finland and attend a mass timber conference and workshop. Mass timber is an innovative and eco friendly building material that has been gaining popularity in Europe that last decade or so and is not starting to be implemented in the United States thanks to collaboration between US and european policymakers, tradespeople, and architects. In this episode we sit down with Jill to talk about what she learned during her time in Finland and what were her key takeaways for implementing this alternative building material in a variety of projects. Jill also explains the environmental impact of mass timber, and how the process of sourcing the material helps manage forests rather than harm them. Here's a glimpse of what you'll learn: What is mass timberWhy the United States started using it soonerHow it's sourced and the environmental impactMass timber's fire retention What projects make the most sense to use mass timber Supplementary Links: Michigan State Mass Timber Sterling SolutionsReady to move forward with your project, or have questions about building with shipping containers? Contact us here and we will put you in contact with the right member of our team. Make sure to follow us on Instagram to stay up to date on new project releases, trainings, and more.

Conversations on Conversations
A Conversation on Inclusive and Sustainable Leadership with Tiana Sanchez

Conversations on Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2024 49:36


Join Sarah Noll Wilson and guest Tiana Sanchez as they examine the role of consistency and integrity in leadership, with real talk on how organizations can truly uphold commitments to diversity and inclusion. About Our Guest Tiana Sanchez, CEO and Founder of TSI, LLC, a Woman-Owned Small Business, brings over a decade of expertise as a Corporate Trainer and Business Consultant to leaders in the public and private sectors. With a #1 best-selling authorship and a globally recognized podcast, Tiana has earned acclaim for her insights, including a KTLA Morning News feature on workplace empathy. As an Award-Winning Executive Coach, she utilizes her diverse management background in Retail, Food and Beverage, and Finance to elevate people development. Leading Tiana Sanchez International, named "Best Executive Coaching" Program by HR.Com, Tiana specializes in delivering world-class leadership programs, keynotes, and seminars. Her tailored Diversity Audits and Pulse Surveys empower organizations with equitable practices, showcased through partnerships with renowned entities like Sempra, Metropolitan Water District, Sony Pictures Entertainment, and various government agencies. Tiana's impactful workshops at esteemed educational institutions underscore her commitment to elevating organizational effectiveness. Armed with a Psychology and Business Management background, Tiana is a sought-after speaker, contributing author, and dedicated advocate for sustainable leadership development. Links and Resources Website: www.tianasanchez.com LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/tianasanchez Instagram: www.instagram.com/likearealbosslady YouTube: www.youtube.com/@TianaSanchez The New C-Suite: Civil Leadership in Action:  https://a.co/d/7KLVQGU

Sportsmen's Nation - Whitetail Hunting
Mid-Atlantic Outdoorsmen - Timber Stand Improvement

Sportsmen's Nation - Whitetail Hunting

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2024 92:20


This was a really fun conversation full of laughs and educational information with Chris and Angelo, the hosts of the Wing and Tail boys hunting podcast. Chris and Angelo hunt in primarily New York and New Jersey. We discuss the preparations we've done for this hunting season, talk about some of our goals and priorities for this year and share excitement. The conversation takes a turn when Chris mentions his TSI (timber stand improvement) company. We spend almost an hour talking about different types of timber stand improvement and habitat management that he has implemented for his clients both with the goal of timber harvest management, and deer habitat improvement. We discuss things such as timber thinning, select cuts, clear cuts/cutovers, riparian zones and more. Thanks for listening! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Midlife Pilot Podcast
EP88 - The Heat is On

Midlife Pilot Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2024 55:13


How does flying in the heat effect you? Do you know when to say when? We talk about the trials of flying in summer heat, things we think about to keep safe, Ben's ride in an L39, and more! Mentioned on the show: - Larry Lee flying his L39 (this is who flew Ben): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=46BWO26mNpE - FlightChops, flying aerobatics with his daughter for the first time: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OApcRojO0Oc - Brian Shul's SR71 speed check story: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8AyHH9G9et0 - Brian Siskind, NOBODY CARES, gravel parking lot: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YAjPnyxtrSM - Sling USA's TSi air conditioning system: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sRsb1-o4wGA#t=5m48s - Evan Brunye's Sling TSi air conditioning system: https://www.kitplanes.com/air-conditioning-now-available-for-sling-tsi/ - Adam R's J3 Cub videos in Florida: https://www.youtube.com/@AdamRichArt/videos - IcyBreeze air conditioning cooler: https://www.icybreeze.com/ - Nathan Ballard is now a Master CFI! https://nafi.memberclicks.net/assets/Master/BALLARD%20MCFI%20PR.pdf - Nathan Ballard- protecting your health, including sunscreen: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dvnamts-aC0 - Safer Flying with Nathan Ballard patreon: https://www.patreon.com/nathanballardsaferflying/about - Erica/Aerosafe's Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/AeroSafe - Flight Insight "Can you take off from Death Valley?" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0X2RD14HRa0 - Boldmethod "Does Departing In The Morning With Lower Density Altitude Really Help?" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N49MmxX4ibA

T-Time with Tori Totlis
145. All About the Innovative GT Series with Titleist's Stephanie Luttrell

T-Time with Tori Totlis

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2024 29:24


I'm sitting down with Stephanie Luttrell, the visionary Director of Metalwood Product Development at Titleist. Listen in as she gives us a behind-the-scenes look at working with innovation and research teams to bring the latest GT Range to life.   Hear how the team at Titleist eases Tour players into the adoption of new driver technologies and how their feedback directly impacts final designs. Stephanie also shares her personal journey in the golf industry, fueled by her father's influence and her competitive spirit, and reveals her plans for an upcoming golf adventure in Scotland.   We also dive into the latest breakthroughs in fairway wood technology, from the revolutionary PMP material to the L-Cup Face design that optimizes ball speed and feel. We talk about the importance of regular fittings, especially for women golfers aged 40 to 60, to maintain peak performance.   About Stephanie Luttrell For over seventeen years, Stephanie Luttrell has played a key role in innovating and elevating Titleist drivers, fairway metals, and hybrids. She currently serves as the Director of Titleist Metalwood Product Development, where she led efforts to bring TSi and TSR Metals to market. Stephanie has been credited with over 50 Patents/Applications related to golf club design and technology. Check Out Titleist GT Here: GT Metals Schedule Your Fitting Here: Find a Fitter To join the Desert Classic Interest List, click here. Don't forget about the T-Time Swag Giveaway! To enter into this weekly giveaway, please share about the episode you are listening to on your Instagram or Facebook stories and give the show a rating and review on your favorite podcast platform. We will be picking a winner every Friday! For more information on the California Crush Invitational, please visit CaliforniaCrushInvitational.com.   To download a free copy of the Round Report Card, visit RoundReportCard.com.   For instant access to the Short Game 100 program, visit ShortGame100.com. For more information about all our women's golf events, including the Desert Classic, please visit: CompeteConfidenceGolf.com   Subscribe to our FREE Female Golfer Facebook Group: First T Crew [Behind the Scenes of Women's Golf]   Get in touch! Instagram: @tori_totlis TikTok: @tori_totlis YouTube: @tori.totlis Website: CompeteConfidenceGolf.com 

Dos Marcos
From Closeouts to Cash Flow: Kelly Charles on Maximizing Margins

Dos Marcos

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2024 22:07


Ever wondered how to turn sleep dreams into business gold? In this episode of the FAMM podcast, host Mark Kinsley welcomes Kelly Charles, a true icon in the mattress industry. Broadcasting straight from the cozy comfort of an Englander Echelon mattress at the Big Mattress Outlet, Kelly shares insights that could revolutionize your business strategy. Episode Highlights: Inside the Mattress World: Kelly breaks down the Big Mattress Outlet's unique business model, revealing the art of acquiring top-quality closeout mattresses. From canceled internet orders to floor samples, Kelly's strategy of building exclusive relationships with manufacturers like SSB and TSI ensures premium products at unbeatable prices. The Secret to Stellar Margins: Discover how Kelly's years of cultivating supplier relationships translate into exceptional margins. This is not just a business; it's a finely-tuned operation where customer satisfaction and profit margins go hand-in-hand. If you've ever doubted the profitability of the mattress business, Kelly's story will make you think again. Turning Negatives into Positives: Kelly shares an inspiring tale of transforming a negative review into a teachable moment. By addressing customer concerns head-on and using the opportunity to educate the public about mattress care and warranty essentials, Kelly demonstrates the power of transparency and proactive communication. Key Takeaways: Building Relationships: Long-term success in the mattress industry hinges on establishing and nurturing strong supplier connections. Understanding Margins: Exceptional profit margins come from unique sourcing strategies and understanding customer needs beyond just brand names. Customer Education: Turning negative feedback into positive outcomes can strengthen customer trust and enhance your business reputation. Connect with Kelly: If you're intrigued by the Big Mattress Outlet's model or considering franchising, reach out to Kelly at Kelly@BigMattressOutlet.com. She's always open to industry conversations and eager to share her wealth of knowledge.

Save My Thyroid
Why do my thyroid hormones increase even though my TSI is decreasing?

Save My Thyroid

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2024 11:23


Often, we'll see an increase in thyroid hormones in those with Graves' disease. This is due to thyroid stimulating immunoglobulins (TSI), a type of TSH receptor antibody that binds to the TSH receptors and causes the thyroid gland to release an excessive amount of thyroid hormone.For some people on the healing journey, TSI and thyroid hormone levels decrease simultaneously. However, this isn't always the case. Today, I'm sharing why you might find thyroid hormone levels increasing despite decreasing TSI.In this episode, you'll learn about:- Causes of increased thyroid hormone levels in those with Graves' disease- The relationship between TSI and thyroid hormone production- What it can mean when thyroid hormone decreases while TSI increases- Why it's crucial to find and treat the underlying causes- How elevated TSI levels can trigger a more vigorous immune response- Lab reference ranges for TSI- When to be concerned about fluctuations in thyroid hormones and TSI- How often to test TSI and thyroid hormone levelsAs always, I hope you find this episode valuable, and I look forward to catching you in the next episode!To learn more, visit the show notes at https://savemythyroid.com/podcast/why-do-my-thyroid-hormones-increase-even-though-my-tsi-is-decreasing/. Do You Want Help Saving Your Thyroid? Access hundreds of free articles at www.NaturalEndocrineSolutions.com Visit Dr. Eric's YouTube channel at www.youtube.com/c/NaturalThyroidDoctor/ To work with Dr. Eric, visit https://savemythyroid.com/work-with-dr-eric/

Land & Legacy - Sportsmen's Nation
Transforming Farms One Tier at a Time

Land & Legacy - Sportsmen's Nation

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2024 57:12


Brady shares his experiences working on two vastly different farms one in Kansas and one in Missouri that has seen 500 acres of TSI and multiple fires since he has overseen the property. The changes are vastly different. Matt discusses how one long time client who operates a high Tier 3 farm is now adding to his farm with new ground, but that farm would score a 0.... The journey of improving that property will be long, but rewarding. Key takeaways are, to improve, you need to first identify where you are at and then determine where you are going, from there the plan will begin to reveal itself.

Habitat Podcast
#269 - "A Week In The Field" Part 2: Edge Feathering, Hack and Squirt, and Manipulating Travel Corridors with Brian and Al

Habitat Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2024 53:39


Habitat Podcast #269 - In today's episode of The Habitat Podcast, we are bringing you a brand new series called "A Week In The Field." In this series, we will be talking about what habitat projects we are doing each specific week relating to the specific time of year. The second installment of this series is with my Co-host Brian and Al Tometchko talking about TSI and edge feathering for travel corridors. We discuss: TSI projects & wildlife benefits Southern Ohio Vitalize test farm update The basics of travel corridors Mastering Edge Feathering Customizing travel corridors Blending habitat improvement with economic gains NRCS and EQUIP: A Goldmine for Landowners Food Plot Timing & Techniques Safety gear is essential, not optional The significance of a sharp chainsaw And So Much More! PATREON - Patreon - Habitat Podcast Brand new HP Patreon for those who want to support the Habitat Podcast. Good luck this Fall and if you have a question yourself, just email us @ info@habitatpodcast.com A Week In The Field YouTube Video: https://youtu.be/j1WzzkxkIfo?si=n5ON5HoKspO1Z2RW  -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Patreon - Habitat Podcast Latitude Outdoors - Saddle Hunting: https://bit.ly/hplatitude Stealth Strips - Stealth Outdoors: https://bit.ly/stealthstripsHP Contact Rich at Tagged Out Seed Products: (740) 856-5207 or on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100063715565466 Midwest Lifestyle Properties - https://bit.ly/3OeFhrm Vitalize Seed Food Plot Seed - https://bit.ly/vitalizeseed Down Burst Seeders - https://bit.ly/downburstseeders 10% code: HP10 Morse Nursery - http://bit.ly/MorseTrees 10% off w/code: HABITAT10 Packer Maxx - http://bit.ly/PACKERMAXX $25 off with code: HPC25 Exodus Outdoor Gear - Use Code: HP - https://exodusoutdoorgear.com/discount/HP First Lite --> https://bit.ly/3EDbG6P LAND PLAN Property Consultations – HP Land Plans: LAND PLANS Leave us a review for a FREE DECAL - https://apple.co/2uhoqOO Morse Nursery Tree Dealer Pricing – info@habitatpodcast.com Habitat Podcast YOUTUBE - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmAUuvU9t25FOSstoFiaNdg Email us: info@habitatpodcast.com habitat management / deer habitat / food plots / hinge cut / food plot Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Land & Legacy - Sportsmen's Nation
Which Skill to Master: TSI or Prescribed Fire

Land & Legacy - Sportsmen's Nation

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2024 51:34


Often times prescribed fire is the technique that gets hired out to contractors by landowners. They think fire is too dangerous, but they forget about the complications of hiring a burn crew to complete the burns. In comparison, most landowners want to tackle the TSI and run a chainsaw because they feel more confident doing so. At the end of the day, they forget that TSI is less commonly used than fire and TSI without follow-up fire is offering half of the value. Learning both TSI and fire is important as a landowner, but if you pick one, pick fire and hire out the TSI!

Sportsmen's Nation - Whitetail Hunting
Missouri Woods & Water -Early Spring Habitat Work With Dustin Williams

Sportsmen's Nation - Whitetail Hunting

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2024 69:13


This week on the Missouri Woods & Water Podcast we get the chance to catch up with our buddy Dustin Williams, owner of Habitat Works. We talk with Dustin about some projects you should be looking at doing right now and over the next few months as well. Dustin gets into burning, spraying, TSI, CRP programs, food plots, and more. Dustin is a wealth of knowledge when it comes to habitat management and improvement, so give him a call if you are looking for some help or guidance. Thanks for listening!   Check out the MWW Website for shows, partner discounts, and more!!! Habitat Works Facebook Page: Mention us when you call and get 15% off any service 816-752-7390  habitatworksllc@gmail.com   Morrell Target Weber Outfitters Athlon Optics Midwest Gun Works: Use code 5OFFMWW for 5% off OnX Use code MWW20 for 20% off  Camofire Black Ovis: Use code MWW10 for 10% off Reveal Cameras by Tactacam Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Land & Legacy - Sportsmen's Nation
S&F “Are they cutting timber again, they are going to ruin hunting!”

Land & Legacy - Sportsmen's Nation

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2024 55:33


I see this phrase every time I open social media. It seems that no matter where it happens, someone is complaining about the government “ruining their hunting” by logging or TSI work. Today we dive into why timber thinning is necessary, what happens when it isn't cut and is someone really “lining their pockets” from a timber sale.