Podcasts about umt

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Best podcasts about umt

Latest podcast episodes about umt

Astro Awani
AWANI Pagi:Pemindahan ilmu, teroka manfaat pokok gelam

Astro Awani

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2023 28:39


Bersiaran langsung dari luar di Hutan Gelam, Penarik, Kuala Terengganu, Fahmi Izzuddin meneroka Bagaimana pemindahan ilmu melalui penyelidikan oleh pakar dari UMT ke atas pokok gelam berupaya membantu komuniti di Kampung Mangkuk, Terengganu mengupayakan sosio-ekonomi dan menambah pendapatan mereka.

Podcastine - L'actu dans la poche
Unités mobiles de télémédecine : une expérimentation à deux vitesses

Podcastine - L'actu dans la poche

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2022 18:14


Plébiscitée pour ses actions, l'association "Sauv live" apparaît comme la panacée pour compenser la pénurie de soignants sur le territoire national. Grâce à ses "Unités mobiles de télémédecine" (UMT), au nombre de 15 dont 4 en Nouvelle Aquitaine, l'organisation s'est fait repérer par le Ministère de la Santé, qui entend développer cette solution afin de désengorger les urgences. Mais derrière la solution miracle, de nombreuses interrogations commencent à émerger... Stéphanie Fontaine, de Médiapart a mené son enquête.Stéphanie Fontaine, journaliste pour Médiapart, est au micro de Miren Garaicoechea, pour son article "Télémédecine : derrière "Sauv Life", le business contestable d'un médecin de l'AP-HP". Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

Organic Gardener Podcast
427. Cultivating Connections | Homestead Organics | Laura Garber | Hamilton, MT

Organic Gardener Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2022 56:00


https://www.trueleafmarket.com/ (True Leaf Market) is offering a discount code for listeners to get 15% off cover crop seeds: https://www.trueleafmarket.com/ (GOG15). (See disclosures below) https://www.cultivatingconnectionsmt.org/about-us-1 (https://www.cultivatingconnectionsmt.org/about-us-1) Where the food is the by-product and the product is the relationship and learning that students get from working on the farm and growing lettuce and you get to eat the lettuce that is grown. So cultivating connections is basically the farm classroom and people can be on the farm and interact with animals through a seasonal way.  Salads for Seniors High schoolers who are hired as interns to learn how to be engaged in the kitchen by growing the lettuce, harvesting it, bringing it into the kitchen to clean it, make the salads that are delivered to meals on wheels. Funding?  Tricky for non-profits. If Laura had her way there would be non-profits, for profits and community profits. Now they raise money through grants, weekly CSA shares, and other fundraising projects.  CSA shares support upcoming farmers. $500 goes to help create a future for everyone. Where do high schoolers come from? Local or are there places to stay? Youth farm internships are focused on local high schoolers. Also have adult interns who come from all over and stay on farm but wanted to focus more on local students. First garden experience. Grew up outside of Butte? Remembers a 2nd grade classmate brought a queen bee and was fascinated with rural life. Mom had a small garden full of tomatoes and raspberries. First thing remembered planting was pine trees around her house in town. Went to UMT and was in first year of https://www.umt.edu/environmental-studies/opportunities/peas/ (PEAS program). Next summer started managing one of the community gardens and that was her first foray into growing 10 zucchinis instead of 1 and first experience into working with youth. Took 10 plots to grow for Food Bank. How to engage young people in a way that is meaningful for everyone. Do you want to tell us about social presencing theater and what's social presencing soil? Ways to engage people. The https://www.u-school.org/u-school (presencing institute) was created by Arawana Hayashi. What grew well this year? Community - food and farming are the universal connector. At the farmer's market two people who would usually never talk to each other standing talking about spinach and how they prepared it last week.  What literally grew well last year was the kale. Grows well in all kinds of weather. So good for you. Hope people can grow kale. Also a good community builder and people have their assumptions about kale and so they get people talking to each other. JackieMarie - 2 things, I got to go to the Missoula market, 2xs last year and it was so peaceful talking to the vendors, standing in line getting coffee, exactly talking talking to compost guy and the pepper guy and the vendors so smiling. 2nd - my kale was awful last year. I actually put row cover and forgot 2xs and it was worse than ever.  Kale is a really good indicator species for us. We had tons of aphids last year and the year before. Kale is a really good indicator of stress in the environment. Row cover is a great way to protect it. A great way to stay ahead of kale is to have multiple crops. Maybe every 3 weeks planting kale in different places. For a family of 4 you could get buy with just 4 plants. If you can transplant a few plants in April and then late May, and June. Pull the bugs off the ones that are infested. Also if you can enjoy on off season. Plant in late summer. 5 leaf stage is going to overwinter. In spring it's a biennial and want to go to seed in second year. Kale flowers just before they open looks like broccolini and so delicious thing you've ever eaten and all the amazing colors that come into kale floras are stunning. And to get to eat something pink in spring...

The Kaimin Cast
An overnight epidemic: Fentanyl overdose in Montana up 1100% in last four years

The Kaimin Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2022 11:56


Since 2017, fentanyl overdose has gone up more than 1,000% in Montana. Students for Sensible Drug Policy, a service organization focused on harm reduction, educates students at UMT on how to take drugs and avoid overdose safely. They do this through distributing fentanyl testing strips, Narcan, and most importantly, sharing information about how to take drugs safely.  In this episode, Kaimin Cast reporter Alyssa Tompkins reports on the ever-growing presence of fentanyl in Montana and the organizations working to help Missoula's community avoid overdose.  Full transcripts of this episode and all others are available online at www.montanakaimin.com/the_kaimin_cast/ Questions? Comments? Email us at editor@montanakaimin.com A podcast from the Montana Kaimin, University of Montana's independent, student-run newspaper.

Aziz Mustaphi
Santé : Nouveau round de dialogue social entre Ait Taleb et Moukharik

Aziz Mustaphi

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2022 1:30


Le ministre de la Santé et de la Protection Sociale, Khalid Ait Taleb s'est entretenu, lundi à Casablanca, avec le secrétaire général de l'Union marocaine du travail (UMT), El Miloudi Moukharik ainsi que les membres du secrétariat général de ce syndicat, dans le cadre d'une nouvelle tournée du dialogue social avec les centrales syndicales. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/aziz-mustaphi/message

JAVI COLORS SONORA VICIOUS RADIO
ON AIR 009 (MARCH) - Underground Music Thailand [UMT.radio] _Master

JAVI COLORS SONORA VICIOUS RADIO

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2022 121:11


Welcome to ON AIR 009 the 9th instalment in my monthly series with UMT.radio and fifth in a string of B2B sessions with producers I admire and who inspire. Kickin' things off in March with one of my favourite talents in the game, Industry veteran, Javi Colors. Having featured Javi in a string of solo shows, the time is now to shine the spotlight on this incredible talent. Great vibes, flawless productions, always a party. Tracklisted as a resource, the show includes several unreleased promo exclusives. Big love to anyone pressing Play and taking the journey with us.

The Pakistan Experience
Why we need to know our Islamic History - Dr. Syed Noman-ul-Haq - TPE 120

The Pakistan Experience

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2021 82:27


Syed Nomanul Haq is a Pakistani scholar and intellectual historian noted especially for his contributions to the fields of Islamic history and Islamic philosophy. Noman ul Haq is currently the Dean of Liberal Arts at UMT, he has previously taught at Harvard, Brown, UPenn, LUMS, IBA and Habib University. In his career spanning twenty years, Haq has gained widespread repute for his teaching, publications and editorial and research work on the history and philosophy of science, postmodern philosophy, history of religion, history of art and history of literature, for which he has won multiple prizes and awards. Dr Noman ul Haq comes on the podcast to discuss why Liberal studies are important, why we have an anti-intellectual culture where we think of people like Hasan Nisar as intellectuals, the need to know our Islamic History, Erturgul and Batameez Dil. On this deep dive podcast I ask him if the Ottoman Empire was brought down because of the printing press, what we need to do to expand the Muslim Mind, the reassertion of the Muslim identity and why LUMS is better than IBA and Habib. Please consider supporting us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thepakista nexperience And Please stay in touch: https://twitter.com/ThePakistanExp1 https://www.facebook.com/thepakistanexperience https://instagram.com/thepakistanexpeperience The podcast is hosted by comedian and writer, Shehzad Ghias Shaikh. Shehzad is a Fulbright scholar with a Masters in Theatre from Brooklyn College. He is also one of the foremost Stand-up comedians in Pakistan and frequently writes for numerous publications. He can be found on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and Tinder. https://www.facebook.com/Shehzadghias/ https://twitter.com/shehzad89 https://instagram.com/shehzadghiasshaikh Chapters: 0:00 LUMS, IBA, Habib 3:30 Why are Liberal studies important 7:50 The Nationalization project 10:30 The East West binary 18:00 Academic gatekeeping of history 23:23 Losing languages and politicizing the language issue 28:50 Ertugrul and the panIslamic zeal 31:00 Cruelty to Animals in Islam 36:30 Reassertion of the Muslim Identity as backlash 52:56 History, mythology and psychedelics 57:30 Love for man in Sufi thought 1:06:00 The Muslim mind 1:11:48 Did the printing press end the Ottoman Empire? 1:17:30 Batameez Dil

LOGIN
Unidad de Medicina Transfusional del Hospital van Buren destaca en medidas de autocuidado

LOGIN

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2020 2:40


Comité Operativo Covid19 del centro asistencial realizó un reconocimiento al equipo humano de dicho servicio por su estricta aplicación de medidas para prevenir contagios de coronavirus. Con el fin de promover las medidas de autocuidado para prevenir contagios por coronavirus entre funcionarios y funcionarias, el Comité Operativo Covid-19 del Hospital Carlos van Buren estableció pautas de supervisión para todas las unidades de la institución que enfatizan el uso correcto de mascarilla, el distanciamiento físico y el lavado frecuente de manos, entre otros aspectos, plasmadas en la circular N° 32 del centro asistencial. En ese contexto, dentro de las supervisiones que el Comité ha realizado desde el mes de julio a las diversas unidades del hospital, tanto clínicas, como administrativas y de apoyo, muchas obtuvieron un buen resultado, sin embargo, la Unidad de Medicina Transfusional se destacó entre todas, por tal motivo, sus funcionarios y funcionarias fueron reconocidos por su desempeño en la pandemia. La enfermera referente de Epidemiología del Comité Operativo Covid19 del HCVB, Daniela Bascuñán, detalló que “como Comité Covid-19 del Hospital Carlos van Buren, quisimos destacar a la unidad mejor evaluada en las supervisiones que se han aplicado durante estos últimos meses en el contexto de la pandemia, dentro de las estrategias, hemos definido supervisar diferentes prácticas de autocuidado de los funcionarios para evitar contagio entre ellos y ellas, como por ejemplo, el uso correcto de la mascarilla, el distanciamiento físico, el adecuado uso áreas comunes como las salas de estar o residencias de descanso y en ese marco, la unidad de Medicina Transfusional ha sido la que mejor evaluación tuvo durante este período, además, ha sido una unidad donde no se han presentado brotes de funcionarios con covid positivo y que no ha desarrollado, por ende, contactos estrechos laborales”. La profesional del cuidado explicó que “aplicamos pautas de supervisión durante todo este período en todo el hospital, en las áreas administrativas, clínicas y de apoyo, donde las profesionales que aplicaron las pautas, describieron los lugares que visitaron, las personas identificadas y esto se llevó a una nómina de la cual, la Unidad de Medicina Transfusional fue la que tuvo las mejores evaluaciones”. El jefe médico de la Unidad de Medicina Transfusional, Dr. Javier Cañón, tras recibir el reconocimiento señaló que "desde el primer momento de la pandemia, hemos sido muy estrictos en el autocuidado, tanto dentro como fuera del hospital, es lo que siempre recalcamos a los funcionarios y funcionarias, así que a pesar de haber estado en contacto con muchos pacientes covid, como son los paramédicos que van a transfundir a las unidades de Urgencia o de Paciente Crítico que tienen covid y que han requerido transfusiones, hasta ahora, prácticamente ninguno se ha contagiado en la unidad y eso es lo que valoramos realmente por el esfuerzo que ha hecho nuestro equipo humano respecto a esta medida”. Por su parte, la tecnólogo médico supervisora de la UMT del HCVB, Sara Contreras, expresó que “es algo muy valioso para nosotros, porque esta unidad es bastante pequeña y los funcionarios y funcionarias han hecho un trabajo muy arduo y en equipo, donde el autocuidado ha primado en esta situación y por lo tanto, con este reconocimiento es mucho más valioso”. Llamado a mantener medidas de autocuidado Por último, la delegada de Epidemiología del HCVB, enfermera Daniela Bascuñán, hizo un llamado a los equipos de trabajo de todas las unidades del centro asistencial para “incentivar a las diferentes unidades del hospital a que mantengan las medidas de autocuidado, para nosotros, las personas son muy valiosas y necesitamos que estén sanas para que puedan seguir trabajando y cuidando a los pacientes y a sus familias”.

Zona Periodística Podcast
Zona Periodística 03 Agosto 2020 Podcast

Zona Periodística Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2020 22:51


Detectan a funcionario municipal Oscar Cruz Estrada alcoholizado y amenazante. Prepotente, amenazante e intentando abusar de su autoridad son algunas de las características que describieron policías municipales al descubrir a el funcionario municipal Oscar Cruz Estrada cuando se encontraba ingeriendo bebidas alcohólicas en horario restringido. Funciones del IMOS son ilegales: regidor Ante la falta del convenio entre el Instituto de Movilidad Sustentable y la UMT del Ayuntamiento, el organismo estatal no puede asumir la vigilancia e inspección al transporte

Hey Girl Hey Podcast
Hey Girl Hey Podcast for Dec 7 with special guest Alex Ari (model/Blogger/Boss Chick)

Hey Girl Hey Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2019 61:31


Alex Ari joins the ladies around the UMT round table to discuss the hot topics from the week of Dec 7 --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Amata’s Erfolgspodcast Frau & Geld – Der Podcast für ein residuales Einkommen und ein erfülltes Leben
223 - Lumira Weidner - Sei unabhängig, selbstdenkend, selbstbestimmend

Amata’s Erfolgspodcast Frau & Geld – Der Podcast für ein residuales Einkommen und ein erfülltes Leben

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2019 37:03


Lumira ist heute sowohl erfolgreiche Bestseller-Autorin, als auch russische Heilerin und Networkerin. Das war nicht immer so. Sie ist 1969 in Kasachstan geboren, in der Ukraine aufgewachsen und 1990 nach Deutschland ohne alles ausgewandert. In ihrer Familie war die eine Seite Ärzte, die andere russische Volksheiler. So sind auch ihre Themen Gesundheit, Wellness und Verjüngung. Lumira ist verheiratet und hat drei Kinder. Als gelernte Krankenschwester hat sie viele Jahre in der Anstellung gearbeitet, ihr Freiheitsdrang jedoch führte sie in die erfolgreiche Selbstständigkeit. Jetzt, nachdem ihre Kinder ausgezogen sind beginnt ein neuer Lebensabschnitt und zeigt Menschen, wie sie mit bester Gesundheit ihr Leben meistern können. Lass dich gerne von ihr inspirieren. ***** Viel Spaß mit diesem interessanten Interview ***** Der Pitch von Lumira ist Lumira zeigt dir anhand ihres eigenen Beispiels, als Ausländerin, ohne eigene Mittel, ohne Sprachkenntnisse zu haben wie du bei bester Gesundheit eine eigene Selbständigkeit aufbauen und den Traum deines Lebens leben kannst. Alles ist möglich   Welche 3 praktischen Tipps hat Lumira aus ihrer Praxis für dich? -  Definiere für dich, wie hoch ist dein Ziel!    Dein Schmerz muss groß sein.    Sonst kommst du nichts ins Tun, du musst es wirklich wollen. -  Was sind deine Stärken?    Nutze das und baue darauf auf.    Gehe zu 5 Personen, die dich am besten kennen, die dir deine 5 Stärken    und 5 Schwächen sagen und du dieses Feedback ehrlich annimmst und            daran arbeitest. -  Schaue in den Spiegel und nimm dich an wie du bist. Sei ehrlich zu dir.    Tue das was du liebst, und das Geld wird dir folgen     Welche Verbindung hat Lumira zu Frau & Geld und womit und wie verdient sie ihr Geld? Geld ist ein spirituelles Mittel und sie hat eine gute Beziehung zu Geld. Für sie ist Geld auch eine Mainifestation des geistigen Reichtums. Du kannst mit Geld auch viel Gutes tun, Projekte fördern und vieles mehr – ohne Geld ist das nicht möglich.   Das gilt ganz besonders für viele Frauen, die sich um das Thema auch kümmern sollen und nicht an den Mann abgeben. Denn Frauen brauchen Geld um sich schöne Kleider zu kaufen – das ist wie Medizin und an Medizin soll man nicht sparen.   Welchen Tipp hat Lumira für dich, wenn du dein Einkommen deutlich erhöhen willst? Für sie ist hier Network Marketing genau das Richtige. Frauen kuscheln gerne, kümmern sich um Familie und andere Menschen, Frauen pflegen Netzwerke und das ist genau auch das was du im Network machst. Mit Network hast du die Riesenchance ein weiteres Einkommen dir aufzubauen in aller Freiheit, die du dir gibst.   Welche Werte sind für Lumira wichtig? Sei authentisch, lebe dein eigens Leben, ethisch korrekt zu sein. Frage dich bei jedem Einkauf, wer daraus den Gewinn bekommst. Riesengroße Konzerne, Unternehmen die Kinderarbeit machen um billigst produzieren zu können, oder Familienunternehmen, die ihre Angestellten fair und ehrlich bezahlen? Deshalb strebe auch an, viel Geld zu Geld, dann kannst du viel besser entscheiden, welchen Unternehmen du dein Geld gibst, welche Qualität du einkaufst und unter welchen Umtänden die Produkte hergestellt wurden. Lumira kauft ganz bewusst ihre Produkte ein, wo sie gezielt Werte und Qualität unterstützt, ob es ihre Unterhose, ihr Waschpulver, ihr Sal oder andere Lebensmittel sind. Was bedeutet Erfolg für Lumira? Freiheit   Was sind die drei Stärken von Lumira? Reden, Fühlen, Warmherzig sein   Gibt es ein Lebensmotto, ein Lieblings-Zitat das Lumira begleitet?  Lerne jeden Tag neues dazu.   Was war der beste Rat, den Lumira bekommen hast? Kaufe nie was Billiges, sonst kaufst du 2x. Welche Internet-Ressource (z.B. einen besonderen Service, eine Open Source Software oder ähnliches) hat für Lumira persönlich einen hohen Mehrwert?  Sie liebt das Internet u frei und unabhängig zu sein. Sie nutzt mehrere Whatts-App-Gruppen, benutzt Facebook und Instagram.   Was ist die beste Buchempfehlung von Lumira? Die Gesetze der Gewinner: Erfolg und ein erfülltes Leben von Bodo Schäfer https://amzn.to/2M6CaDt   Welchen „letzten Tipp“ gibt dir Lumira mit auf den Weg?    Sei treu dir selbst, es ist dein Leben. Nicht das deiner Kinder, deines Mannes, deiner Eltern. Lebe jeden Tag für dich   Wie und wo kann man Lumira am besten erreichen?   Mail: info@lumira.de Bitte gebe deinen Namen, Emailadresse und die Telefonnummer (WhatsApp?) bzw. Skype Namen an. Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Lumiraheilerin/ Shop: www.lumira.de/shop Videos: www.lumira-stream.de YouTube Kanal: https://www.youtube.com/user/LumiraRa Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lumira_weidner/ Pinterest:  https://www.pinterest.de/lumirahealing/ Wenn Du regelmäßige Impulse für Schöpferwerkzeuge erhalten möchtest, melde dich zu den Newslettern an: info@lumira.de Nachzulesen und Nachzuhören auch in meinem Blog: https://amatabayerl.de/223-sei-unabhaengig-selbstdenkend-selbstbestimmend-interview-mit-lumira-weidner Ich freue mich, wenn Du mir ein Feedback hier im Blog oder auf Facebook hinterlässt

Gut Check Project
Robo Hendrickson, FullBucket Health

Gut Check Project

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2019 117:46


Robo Hendrickson is a lifelong inspired entrepreneur and philanthropist. "Be Good. Do Good." is the epitome and slogan of FullBucket Health and for Robo himself. Robo and his partners have built a company that researches and produces incredible supplements to protect the health of horses, dogs, & cats. Gut health is a pillar of their current projects, and for each and every purchase, a portion goes directly to other parts of the world to educate local and impoverished families on proper animal health care, incentivize veterinary practice, and actually foster sustainable economic growth. Robo is a serial entrepreneur and an accomplished visionary. He tells his story of growing up in South Dakota as his father used the family home for a vet clinic to care for working animals and pets. Later becoming a collegiate and then professional bareback rodeo competitor, Robo found his biggest joy was in creating and executing vision for companies and products that could deliver good to the world.This episode is very inspiring, and you can really see Ken and Eric just get taken into Robo's story telling as he paints a tangible picture with just words.Also- Special Call in from Linda Snider, MD- Living with AtaxiaBe Good. Do Good.Protest your pets here:https://fullbuckethealth.comNebraska Ataxia Organizationhttps://nebraskaataxia.orgAtrantilhttps://lovemytummy.com/spoonyhttps://gutcheckproject.comHey hi Mandy if you don't know me it's probably because I'm not famous but I did start a men's grooming company called Harry's the idea for Harry's came out of a frustrating experience I had buying razor blades most brands were overpriced overdesigned and out of touch and here is our approach is simple here's our secret we make sharp durable blades and sell them at honest prices for as low as two dollars each we care about quality so much that we do some crazy things by world-class German blade factory obsessing over every detail means were confident in offering 100% quality guarantee millions of guys have already made the switch to Harry's so thank you if you're one of them and if you're not we hope you give us a try with the special offer get a Harry starter set with a five blade razor weighted handle shave gel and a travel cover all for just three bucks plus free shipping just go to Harry's.com and enter 5000 at checkout that's Harry's.com code 5000 enjoy alright it's time for the object project with your host Dr. Kim Brown MD I married Grigor will forget dead Jim Collins on the board is you Patrick in the booth at GCP we all check our ego at the door and nothing is off the table it's episode number 10 were now in double digits long we just attend that's also nothing off the table I think we got something really cool over the show today are gastric and start talking animal health that's a new one for us it is a brand-new and present is more than just animal health domain you can actually confuse you can actually help people all around the world by engaging with our guests company and course are talking about Robo Hendrickson cofounder of full bucket health and full bucket is a company it is taking action with innovation and charity and making tangible differences all over the world they have a parent company called animal stewards international couple other smoke companies under that umbrella but regardless Robo is going to be easily fantastic as organist show our audience that if you you come accustomed to what we been doing to type things are unchangeable that is can be a lot of fun that his daughter bring a lot of different stores the table here is that a lot of different industries and you'll actually know health animal health human health there is a lot of overlap including things like CBD services this could be a really cool topic I can't wait to pick his brain we know he's here to show how they can make it easy for you to help impoverished people from all corners of the world basically for axis small is just feeding your pets it's asking a lot to say but full bucket health is a high level research company for animal health and they have a passion for helping all animals pets working livestock they know that in many parts of our planet the people depend upon the health the contributions of animals and to carry out daily living Robo and his team have created a very humane initiative to help those animals and then on top all at ease be actually funny as hell so and then in this first half hour also came across a really cool article linking we always talk about the brain got access now the science started to catch up to give the mechanisms of how this is so I can't wait to get to that that when it gets it's pretty inventive as I'm driving I know I know I just left I found that actually done right around the corner over here Texas Christian University and just published this month nice will be sure if this is your first or 10th time to tune in to get checked project be sure to subscribe like in share subscribe I can share I'm available in the way number one thank you all for the messages that the people who ask who are you have next in the show the comments from from before but go to gut check project.com and you can hit connect you can write to us about any show ask any questions send them to me or to a Dr. Brown will both read them and then you can go to YouTube search for the gut check project channel subscribe and share the same for iTunes and the coursework were live on iHeartRadio so that's awesome I got some pretty good feedback on our gigantic box gigantic box of the front seal here is so upfront to deal we develop this to help people with bloating abdominal discomfort and we can show that really growth and fortify people benefit by taking this and I see every single day in my clinic and were to talk will be about gut health and the gut brain Access upfront you can help with that so where should they go to get huge discounts as big as this box they can always go to love my tummy.com/spooning love my tummy.com/spoony use the code that's on that page which is just spooning it sparely and save money save money heal your guide don't blow it anymore love my Tommy.com we should run a contest to see how many outrun teal boxes or capsules can fit into the big one and do a real big winner when something cool something I don't know I tell you what come up with that and you know it will do that let's let's talk about maybe even the break maybe before in the shogun come out with a contest that any viewer or listener can guess yeah will will through that part out in low-level get back to you by will go to some of our other men I'm sure we can get some really cool make a nice box were somebody could get a lot of the cool stuff that other host its bony radio possibly mojo 50 speaking a box we get an important call today to finalize something here don't we do have a box with a box we'll call a very important call to finalize a few things about the box they went to a date and well worked out last week we had Jacob around was talking about the D hat member box the D hat health box were finalizing a few things on that and we just came back from Scottsdale where we were with JJ Virgin and she offered to be on the call with us today to try and just make sure that were doing everything correctly because she's so experienced at doing that with her other brand and she's been doing it which are they just super cool so today were to try and get some business advice from JJ on how to do this properly so that everyone benefits for the one thing that I can tell you that she puts as a priority in terms of how she handles people to buy things from her on all of the health things that she delivered she make sure that everything is true to its word and that customer service is priority so that's deftly what she's trying to make certain that the hat does it's funny because it reminds me of an email that I got from Dana she's interested in the hatbox Hashimoto joke and said is that is a gigantic deal benefit in the I highly doubt it and laugh but she didn't want to know when does it launch and can I sign up a family member which is not really some that we covered last week but yes Dana thank you and I did write you back but for those others who had similar questions you just simply have to go to D hatbox.com and you will be given the information right away as soon as they launch which may be as early as next week I believe there's a two small negotiations I think is what he had said they're doing to make sure they have it all put together but amazing service that there really giving to their patient is down so the only thing that I really want to do for my partners is maybe just a quick little webinar so that the employees so that if you happen to be local when you go in and see your doctor ask about of the employees the deal front desk people the medical assistance will know all about the boxes well so that everybody can be part of a team to really help and like we discussed last week change the health landscape in a city that's what I think is the coolest thing that were to be able to do it we can do it here in the city of almost 8 million people or or a metro area that many people we know that at the sample size you can take that everywhere so that'll be a little be very exciting yeah so just last weekend so I kinda mentioned real briefly that we are with JJ Virgin this past week and we were actually in Scottsdale for our healthcare unsecured group known as the Meiser mastermind group I love hanging with those people that are so smart so cool and something you know we talked a lot of people I met somebody who I'm a big fan of Dr. Terry Walz she's so brilliant yeah she wrote the walls protocol my good friend Linda Snyder introduced me to her oh man two years ago because she said you have to read this book she actually suffers from something kind of similar to MS that Dr. walls as essentially treated with diet using this protocol right Linda action is a form of ataxia and she said that using the diet protocols well and so I've been familiar with the Dr. walls for a long time so is really cool to hang with her and talk a little bit and that one of the coolest things is that with this big group of supersmart people there was an impromptu band formed with the masterminds how elusive I get this without getting a glare on it yeah so I have noted in this video I know he is not this action off my phone weird going to if you're listening okay is upstairs it's just a warm-up is okay as is now as I was really funny so you busted your warm-up is nice to have what I do have a Scott Antoine on the base there is let out into one of the base we had Darren Engels now this is a here maybe this is this is as the night went on you guys finally started to play so that's what happens when you get super smart people just throw some instruments around their ability I used to play that 20 years ago abandoned our hosting a throwback radio show so badly I really minutes that's awesome I had about a blast doing out of those folks if you're a musician once musician you always wanted to get together and jam 7000 tons of funds I really appreciate to call KJ Bailey Panetta get a minute was that was it was fun that will in his name also Sammy on guitar goodness gracious guy can rip as awesome I love that so yeah because of the incredible troubles really fun doing that go to the mastermind that was awesome when also I do I was on Debbie Potts is the whole athlete podcast cells fund that is really cool as it turns out she's going to be in the mastermind I believe we are discussing interference and entering the whole health in your into after athletics her her podcast is quite interesting it's pretty awesome whole whole athlete great yes it's called the whole athlete Debbie pot so other than that as far as the family goes where that star test season sets, with its talk about oh they go to the startups you have United taxes it's ridiculous don't don't bother standardized test don't go to sleep look it up online is awesome so but everything else is going cool from our standpoint about you diving is good trip to Arizona was terrific great to rekindle with a lot of those great friendships and I keep the business minds alliance that you know you 70 people well but way home you're with me I Slim I found my pocket lost in an uber big shout out to Stefon Huber driver from Phoenix and thank you for overnighting my phone to make is that is that it was nice but I will say I took a break from the phone for a whole today's bad I liked it collected a lot so if you ever feel like yourself get a little overwhelmed the phone on silence and go somewhere else is that today's way would you know how they were talking about what if we go back to Austin for the for another mastermind I think you're looking at hotel more evil think okay I looked up and they got a hold like it's like phone free hotel campus and how well you can just lock it up and put in the sleeping bag so the next sort of take your phone from you so you can just disconnect elastomer went to Jack White concert they had us put our phone so you want take video and you won't take photos wanted him on the stage you have you put I came out with a call to Q bag or something like that but you basically put it in this pouch you keep it think it's fun it's awesome it makes everybody be in the moment oh yeah is really really cool so other things happen I came home and I know if you know this or not but actually do I know you and nobody listeners you may not know this my wife I love the life she likes to run the menagerie at our house so I came home to another new dog thanks for having told Ken about this yet BSA nice Aussie came running down the stairs… That an Aussie and that little I think it is really bad at recognizing specific breeds but regardless the AC is a pretty cool dog 32 years old but apparently his owner lost in my life contacted contacted her she's she's elderly can't I can't keep her so boys of Artie named him about seven different names and were traveling have a feeling that he's he's now a permanent fixture in the speaking of Marie and a podcast and of Wise County taxes if you've ever heard of Ater from Decatur County see allies why your old craps they now podcast up there called wise weekly and Marie was on there just as last week I think on their third ever episode talking about the happenings around Wise County so if you care about that region and are curious about eight or from Decatur did not chicken that's awesome pay for our listeners out there I would like to define menagerie oh yeah sorry about that menagerie a collection of wild animals kept in captivity for exhibition that's what we do Marie is becoming beneficial Del Toro the collector from guardians of the galaxy that's what we want to do and we done with these sweet chickens in Maine if apparently we already are no kill shelter also known as my home no kill shelter yes so then we would like to contribute their animal so that Marie can continue collecting wild animals kept in captivity for exhibition otherwise known as a menagerie to just pretend like you can't take care of anymore and apparently safe at our house while on the spinning network I did give a listen to the rich solution you had talked about it earlier and Gwen Rich is the author of stop complaining she was diagnosed with an incurable breast cancer and she's basely to challenge that entire diagnosis she spreading her own influence of positivity and basically you can create your own good luck it was an awesome show it's Wednesdays live 10 Eastern nine Central on Spinney.com on the spinning network that's the rich solution with gray and rich it is lovely because it tied in so well to what we've learned from the but well with with good health making great food choices etc. but when Winmark was on the show talking about his cancer prognosis me they said that nobody's live he's nine years out he still here is doing great so what episode was a traveling on episode number three look from Mark Semel and Mark Simone and the survivor of cancer so it's really interesting about about the shows at each show has something different that I really like about church say which was your favorite show Mike I can't pick one because each one of the with different some are more emotional somewhere more scientific thinking today were to laugh a lot I think today Robo's gonna bring some laughs there's probably very little very little doubt last thing only now I did all that so were all caught up so Ken was on the corner you want to geek out in some science right now I think we should so always talk about how all health begins and ends in the gut and an article came out just this month out of Texas Christian University TCU what they were looking at is this a linking gut inflammation and how it can actually cause brain inflammation and then the brain inflammation can affect us in ways that possibly we are completely unaware of like decision-making and impulse control so let's give a little background about this and the reason why we brought about trying to heal is that we talk about SEBO a lot small intestinal bacterial overgrowth but given the limitations about how to diagnose that there is some confusion around that we don't really understand how prevalent it is or how many people actually have it but what we do know is that the microbiota or or micro biome which were always talking about desert mojo talk about at all times to look everyday the time of the story on that right or despite Elsa's growth in a way that it shouldn't be or drawing word should not be which is bacterial overgrowth has been linked to inflammation and autoimmune diseases that we do know now our intestines have a tight junction in our brains have one also called the blood brain barrier this is the first time that I have seen an article where they showed mechanistically that the tight junction in the intestine similar to the blood-brain barrier right all may have died and you have an hour talking gut brain and that the two barriers can be very similar just to reset if you're listening in and this is these are new terms for you essentially the barrier the blood brain barrier is there to prevent certain small things from passing over into the brain tissue correct and so those people that have suffered from this have heard of a term called leaky gut right I methodically could bring no that's it it's pretty wild so new evidence showing that intestinal permeability or leaky gut can actually be caused by molecule called zombie will and don't worry about the this science is your part but design you will and is now been shown that it can cause blood brain barrier permeability in other words is only because what you got any calls we could bring this is the first time in articles actually looked at something like this because we've always been trying to discuss that there is this if you have intestinal inflammation or I have been saying this for long time that that is been linked to other problems like anything that can create problems in the brain well quite honestly we talked about Dr. Terry walls but one of the reasons why her wall protocol changing your diet may help is because you stop this inflammatory process and the multiple sclerosis plaques don't form as much so that something to keep in months another's evidence to show that chronic intestinal inflammation has been linked to autism Parkinson's Alzheimer's psychiatric disorders and all the stuff so here's a mechanism of how to it because we have this microbiota got brain access it gets really complex in the brain talks to the micro biome the micro Barnum send signals to the break it could be done to the vagus nerve but can also be done through hormones are archly being released and different inflammatory mediators at all this other stuff bottom line is you need to make sure that you protect your micro biome because it's communicating with your brain and if you have this bios was in the wrong place that intestinal permeability gets a little bit out of control so they're looking at this and they realize that not only will you have information but you can start affecting what's called the HPA axis or the hypothalamus pituitary axis there were showing that when you've got information you have increased cortisol which leads to more information and now we have that model of okay fight or flight all the time follow me here so far yeah I am so far have you got to the study yet they had to do all this background actually explain why they want to do this particular type of study so this increased stress through cortisol in this inflammatory process could be causing a few other things this is kind of like a mini course in the brain got access they theorized that when you have things like this going on not only can you have these diseases overlong. What if you induce an inflammatory response in the gut and how does it affect you in the short term okay so they took 159 people without any prior history of mental illness any prior history of any got issues and then what they did is they injected them with an inflammatory mediator okay meaning, to create gut inflammation actually do something called like a polysaccharide at all like a polysaccharide is the it said the coding of a bacterial cell right so this is the thing that actually leaks through when you have intestinal permeability in the body reacts to it and then that leads to this whole inflammatory process started just to summarize your saying that they use basically an artificial trigger to show that Greg and were going to induce some gut inflammation let's see what happens I'll take it further they used an artificial SEBO trigger also I actually induced how the body responds to bacterial overgrowth will okay and what they showed was pretty wild so what happened is when they injected this it created a subclinical level of inflammation that they could measure by measuring all these different parameters they wanted to know that when you have this inflammatory process it crosses the blood brain barrier meaning now you create a little bit of brain inflammation what do to the immediate thought process it can be good is fascinating what it showed that what they found is that this information even subclinical inflammatory processes in healthy people led to poor decision-making lack of impulse control characterized by lack of focus an inability to delay gratification which is fascinating and they actually show that there was some movement towards somewhat destructive behavior like gambling and things like that even in the short so they should with these people that the low-level inflammatory process kinda leads to some social processes which can lead to a destructive style of life wow that was just a curiosity was Charlie Sheen one of these one of the subjects so Charlie Sheen was actually the the cofounder and the leader of this at Texas Christian University letter he is so anyways I just really wild because basically what they're getting at here is I see this with my patients all the time patients come in and will save man I was perfectly fine and then five years ago I got sick and that I been bloated ever since quite honestly I'm super anxious and depressed I don't really want to be around people so one of the things that they saw was anhedonia were people did not want to socially interact with the had these inflammatory markers up so I have seen firsthand that when I treat people's guts and they get better without trying to and we decreased the neuro- inflammatory process with the CBD that I will have people tell me you think you're just a whole lot better I've always wondered why like this it is at the gut now we realize that the judge creating this inflammatory process I would love to hear from people that if you ever experience anything like that like maybe a cool story after taking out trying to heal and KB MD CBD that maybe do you a fortnight addiction or whatever addiction that you might have gets better hello we can start treating addiction medicine through the gut that's amazing is it – he doesn't even surprise me if it seems like every time I turn around you're going to find that mother nature has an answer as multifaceted just be healthy just slow down the inflammation and what is it that we can do wild how much it ties back to you don't have to eat crazily you don't have to do a bunch of crazy stuff it's just use mother nature polyphenols CBD better diet good exercise get good sleep and suddenly you tell yourself get on the Betty pillars of health it really is there just awesome if you could just know that every single month something cool is going to come to your house so that you could have these things to help you with your pillar of health heal your gut protect your brain get you to sleep well and feels that might be some foreshadowing while who knows maybe maybe you have an answer that sometime soon left ON you know what it such as humans that experiences like that but you have a new dog maybe you know separation anxiety in animals sure there's other things that can actually happen with animals now maybe we have a reason why that's going on also and possibly things like CBD can help animals what they want it we've got less than a minute but here joined the show as we hinted at earlier it's going to be Robo Hendrickson he's got incredible knowledge his company's debt is deftly dedicated to research for better animal health and they do it with a an arm for charity which can make a difference worldwide so little Hendrickson will be here and I think he'll be able to address a lot of that the funny thing is is not only are they interested in is better health they know that so much of the health of those animals including large animals comes through the gut and they're actually willing to add to kind of expand that idea research role vesicles for developers were to dig a little bit go to love my Tommy.com/spoony putting code spooning for this, not trying to absolutely KPMG health.com will see you here at the bottom of the hour and just two minutes if you are trying to quit drinking or doing too many drugs listen to me you don't know me and will never meet I had a problem like you want I drank and used a party a little too much till it got out of control and almost ruined my life I realize I needed help to fix my problem before it totally destroyed me if you tried to fix your drinking and drug problem and you know you can't do it alone you need to call the national treatment advisors they'll immerse you into a 30 day program to replace your old habits with new habits and totally change your life and if you have PPL private health insurance the entire program may be covered fix your problem right now before it gets any worse get clean call now and learn more 800-296-1252 800-296-1252 800-296-1252 800-296-1252 fast-track student loans can get your student loans out of the vault stop any wage garnishments stop collection calls and stop seizure of your tax refund give yourself a break to stop the stress and get your student loan payments down to as little as $25 a month based on what you can afford to pay 800-709-4395 800-709-4395 800-709-4395 800-709-4395 now you can fly anywhere in the world and paid discount prices on your airline tickets flight today to Lundy's harassment to read or anywhere else you want to go and pay a lot less guarantee quality international travel department right now low-cost airlines 800-452-1075 800-452-1075 that's 800-452-1075 okay we are now back for the second half hour episode to neglect a project I married Grigor here with your host Ken Brown and now to my right we got the Robo Hendrickson of Photobucket health as well as well just whole ton of other companies with the Robo hey guys thanks for having me absolutely thanks for driving the whole 22 minutes ago here is like 45 minutes I think total so get a new window snow trail to five minutes as this should take in the tunnel I should should you have enough doctors in a tunnel so either way that Manso full bucket health and with us we start with the you got to get smash factory yeah Dragon yes rock animal health so much of that falls underneath the angles of all your companies I'm busy I'm a partner and most of them/bacterium I'm you know is just my baby but the others on partners and because I found that I'm really not good a whole lot so you surround myself with good people and partner Alonso was exactly how we met means basically setting surrounded by by good folks and that brought together course I will get that in the second but when you're really good friends course at Michael Lovett she is the reason why yeah we met which is awesome so just to take the listers back you may not know little about Robo you grew up in South Dakota you are in rodeo yes and that your dad was a yeah I was of a veterinarian as well now my brother still runs is a lamp clinic all of South Dakota yeah so yeah I'm you know growing up in western South Dakota was a stretch to you know we we we had it dad was not only a practicing veterinarian but the love of his life was ranching so we also had a ranch and so dad not only worked his guts out you know going on calls and pulling calves in the wintertime but then he come home and feed you don't burn the ranch and you'll growing up that was just how we we grew up into my first jobs were scooping out the stalls and cleaning cages and and when I was little boy and so he had to work on this one absolutely amazing are actually the first clinic he launched when when he first got into his meal started his own practice and left the practice he was working for it was in our house our kitchen turn table turned into the operating table and that I got here one of those stories so yeah he he he moved stainless steel big old table in the in the kitchen and the the front entryway porch we had a couple couches that was the waiting room removed my me and my brother out of one room into in with my sister in the back and turned our room into the recovery room yeah so that's we did that in our little barn on the place and turn that into the large animal clinic and then probably live like I know what else I don't remember how long we live like that but I remembered that he moved a double wide mobile home next door with the basement under we moved in there and thought we were in a palace because that was no longer the clinic and that was our house and on and he was in that practice for several years and then he moved to a better location and built a nice practice and it still there today and you know it was sold to a big chain of of clinics in the My brother and my brother started managing after my mom retired she was the she was the bookkeeper accountant nice nice you know customer service skills let me just jump in the really quick so just informed by producer Jeff that solely from the first hour that I had mentioned Linda Snyder is called in from Omaha Nebraska limit you there skillet did you hear me mention your name for our now now now so have real dad I know longer he was just on the story about how he got kicked out of his bedroom to make a recovery room you know you're over there is a radiologist just a nice controlled area you know that I don't know some would not consider a real job either Linda where do a great one of the people that were our guest today is Robo and he worked for over he owns a company called full bucket we got to talk to were to get into this later but they are to do some charitable work and since I met Terry walls as we can you name got brought up a lot and I just thought it be really cool for maybe you explain your experience that what you been going through and what you're hoping to do I laughed out loud now about 21 years old now and I knew I had a genetic charter for my dad and how they did have a big chain and get paid and he and I have a cannot play with I knew I had chronic debilitating. He called my dad heavily against me incarnation or difficulty walking my like catalytic activity or anything like that having a child and to lock hello I need a backhand that claim to be an election and they told me that I end up in about A 40 I'm audit now and let Which is great that they really don't I can't help anyway I am sorry if the heating get family and other people who have me that they may be taken then hit their take a proactive role in trying to heal I let her down the path that his book Mike came to help might have chemo content and to lay his hand and a little bit to call thinking you really made like brown patch like an alert like yeah man, hot dog given it well make the difference in my life started slowly and I can't really just jump into anything I had to make his kind: Clinton Franey and Gary Frei. He had not I like that and things like that then she said to getting into my like getting more and I got frame and having here and I can't think like you all knifing time together I think really hard for me and my knee flight down to the point where other people are like fishing and I are shocked look good I'm getting very wet back that's exactly what you said whenever she first started changing the way that she ate and then she made Linda this is Eric and that's an amazing story that you've you put yourself in that contradictory but talking to Terry she she said the people in believing her Terry actually going to be listed in this director told me that she's trying to set up with University a randomized trial were looking at MS people using just the wall protocol versus traditional MS drugs just comparing that to stewardess so I think it's a I think your huge I think anybody suffering from any chronic neurologic disorder needs to hear your story and I think one of the things that you discovered that you realize that a lot of you don't have access to we I have sponsored your charity for three years in a row to tell people a little bit about what you're trying to do for those with ataxia I think that it really only cover part of what you really me tell you how to prepare a medication that you ship timeshare ABB or getting getting tired of having a wheelchair ramp happy I have a banshee I think I found that there is any financial need in the community and I'm a little bit like how I did that her final MP3 everyone not realizing how much work like companies that are exactly like ship this is what many people help their life. But it be better, I applied because were able to happen out and generate a letter back and filled with many different anything unpacking hand and peek at whatever you need help with make your life better weather if you look at our timeshare origin something like crap I have been where I believe a grandparent and never able to help people go to Nebraska ataxia.org right but back to some animals rose just in the middle of tells about his cool upgrade to a double wide trailer in South Dakota Dakota thank you that's amazing it's crazy how many parallels there are two I know which what you not talked about for you on them on the Mike Cyr Robo but in terms of health for animals health for humans basically if you want to get the most out of your life and your animals like you have to be healthy and absolutely I can fast-track real quick because there's some neat stuff between then and now you know I when I left the ranch try to go to college for little bit delayed really I realize I wasn't very good at that actually winning the Privette yeah that I come home and I'd see my dad working 16 hours a day slogging through the cold alone I don't know I love animals but not like he does show so I you know I bebop dried was rodeo going at that time and I went and got a college scholarship and I wrote you yeah I know and then and then I went on professionally and your bareback rider correct yeah I got a bareback professionally and did a lot of events when I was younger but how to get into will you know when you grow up on a ranch in South Dakota it's not that big of a stretch to say no horse can you you you that's what you do for nighters that you know we didn't have a lot of that going on but yeah you all your friends are in it and your heroes all rodeo cowboy and that was a it was a culture is really what it was it was a community culture thing in that state is very proud of that culture and so you dreamed of being a Phil Moses because shoes and doing that so you know when I was laid up with it for a while and but there was always something you know I was always really interested in other things like I was really an odd man out can I have been my whole life might my buddies listen to country music and note the things that you know when they were in their off time they would be working on spurs or they were training colts and I was drawing you know furniture in a notebook and I was you listen to you Depeche Mode and massive attack and my interests were about design and art and we would travel all over the country and I wanted to go see the museums you know things like that so is living out later and and did you have little or is this over you just the rest of the family I really don't know no I if you did it it wasn't shared with me a whole lot had to come from somewhere but the I always had this spirit for new things and I knew there was something else out there there you I grew up in an area that was little bit close mind I won't say close minor but there are some blinders on their you know it's just disclosure minded right right and it was like my parents were great they were very loving people but they weren't the you know you can do anything that you view the world is your oyster I get that but here's a story so he goes back to okay now if people some of the following is wrong with door kicked we didn't know it even uses saddle also I was thinking about that when when I was on my drive over here remembered something that so when I was in that old house and that it turned it into clinic can move me and my brother and sister into the back and I my very first memory is the one that I was remembering only some on psilocybin or something my first memory was I am I had to be for five years old because we were still in the old house and it would be a hot summer day in out my back the back window was a was a swing set in there was grass this belly hi everyone backing up we didn't know we having launchers it was not no native pastors everywhere so native grass and was really sick and was all around the swingset and I was the window was open and it was hot outside in the inland South Dakota that means it was 70 and and I was looking out the way I remember looking out the window in the Whippoorwill's were were singing and I know if you've ever heard a whippoorwill saying but that's what made me look out the window and it was blazing hot skies were blue blue blue just a few clouds and I was overcome with this unbelievable feeling I had no idea what was knows little boy but I'm kinda getting like choked up thinking about that feeling it when all over my body and it filled my heart and my soul and I had no idea what it was but it was about the glorious mess of life like how beautiful it was the sound and smell in the view but it was also about the future like I knew your four yeah I knew there was a future coming right and that I know what it was but it was for leg get ready go on expedition and you're really really excited before you go you know it's the anticipation and it just took me over I remember that that moment and I have had that I used to have that moment a lot it would get so excited and I would know so cool was an event happen or even if it's bad it's going to be coolest life and it didn't scare me it just filled me with like love and and I don't like it even tingled and over the years it's become less and less and less you know as you get older you think it's less and less just the experiences you have and you change you know you you go from seeing the future as this amazing I'm going to go to Mars to go see the universe two no watching my dad die just a few weeks ago and you realize though there is that point my life there was no and that was really ironic is it not long after that I actually got obsessed over death like it scared me so bad I was laying in bed tonight I was thinking shift ends I don't that's not good wanted and you know it was you can remember so clearly Brink is what you do is you painted a picture that story I knew exactly what was going on that is so embedded in the printed and you yeah that's one thing what you think we have less of it because you're describing it to a point where I think you can go back to that whenever you want when when you when you have that type that's that neurolinguistic programming type thing you can trigger Aiken I wanted to find out what a whippoorwill sounded like okay I have I sleep so that's going on that get you to look you that you all hope yeah and I'm sorry to hear about your father a few weeks ago now you're sitting around going this is but you can recant that story so vividly that that is you that is actually you this is just I think you have the ability to go back to hello and I are other angry you know you get you you know the perils of life the ups and downs and the experiences slowly come to Calais you mean and I don't mean that in the we know a physical way like calluses on my hands from just doing work you know is as a protective nature it's therefore get calluses for reason I think that's part of your physical makeup to that you you grow calluses visit you know mentally psychologically to protect yourself and to you know as you go through life without question yeah absolutely and when you're when your kids are it's often very very thin and as you get older it's thicker and harder and it's to prepare you or maybe I don't know but yeah I do when I get the opportunity think back on on those memories that it does like I said on my way over here got goosebumps thinking about the whippoorwill that the grass blowing in the future and but I think I was lucky to have that moment and and pay attention to it because it really change me and the people I was surrounded with and that's why was different was that I was a dreamer really if you want to call that that's really what it was I was a big dreamer and and so I was always dreaming should and I like to write it down and elected notes might be poetry one day it might be aggressive furniture houses or inventions I have just stacks of notebooks over the years inventions and so home of fast-forward I was actually rodeo going and I think it was in Colorado or Arkansas somewhere and I Met a bull rider and he him and I and a couple of the guys stayed up at a hotel because it's what you do you thereby shacks up safe journey and you won one room in 20 guys and I guess so so so we would we were staying up and play music and writing songs and talking in and he somehow everybody's got past I was just him and I and we were sharing those stories about he was an artist and he would draw on very very very creative Dennis was amazing and soon as I heard that it ran out to the van and grab my stack of notebooks and brought him his arm been 21 two somewhere in there mind somewhere in there was it was it was I tried college I kicked out if the road I was just doing no construction and Brody owing and working ranches whatever I could to make a living picture, worthless as a employee when you're rodeo so so II I was somewhere along there and it was at that you know were still kids basically and and I showed them all the stuff and he goes man you you should be a creative director at an agency oh what out of what you have no idea you know what that was all me I never put it together like I did your watch commercials and I listen to my radio but I didn't know there was actually job applying just behind it I just had this vision of like you the next day at the rodeo competition on a bareback agency so so I I'd won a scholarship actually no I had one scholarship I'd gotten offer to go to this little junior college in Kansas in the Coach Lucy was good enough to offer me a scholarship to type my grades and I had actually work my way back up to work it could be collegially sure and and so I did I went to this'll junior-college and got my grades up and then they competed the second year note did good enough that that I won a scholarship at the national college finals and I could kinda use it anywhere wanted to because of the national you know program and by that time no I knew I wanted to kinda what I wanted him to go into some sort of your creative career there's only two colleges in the states that have a rodeo program because you need to go use a rodeo scholarship somewhere whatever rodeo program and no design marketing and you know was sub San Luis Obispo California and Hayes Kansas and so I went out and toward the Cal poly out there in California and for week I stayed with guys were on the team out there and all man the pretty girls in the sunshine and beaches and I was this is is where I'm going till I found out what it cost to you know my scholarship was good for books tuition stuff like that but not not food not only expend as I will ship myself what himself you paid $600 a month and there's five of you living in the shoebox notice or pay attention to what is in causes and I went to Hayes dances that were they had a brew exit route letter program in Hayes and it was a great program and went there and I different courses and slowly started to work in the graphic design and things like that and so then then when I was still rodeo on and I left there and went to Cheyenne frontier days and I tore my knee out and was dating this girl was your first major is this whole time you're talking about no I want to go into that host competition just banged I read for knee surgeries for shoulder surgeries and how many broken bones but that the died I tore my knee out in in Cheyenne and was dating this girl that was living in Texas okay so I went was checked up with her laying on the couch my knee up she is you need a damn job I word my knee you know my knees all bunged up Boyd only done physical labor in no work to us was right and Coulter swinging a hammer pouring concrete and you know and she said all menu you can you know how to design and advertising stuff yeah I forgot about that because when I left college I Jaswant Rhody on so that started the process of me working for an magazine laying out ads in the back of the magazine change my trajectory my life and a whole new chapter and give up my boots and spurs and bought black advertising close in a Range Rover became a Duchamp is a perfect segue working alone old and that was was awesome I was totally drawn in a hammer like that usually so well just a reset we are coming up at the end of the half hour but Robert Hendrickson here with us basically this is an incredible journey of how he took inspiration from his childhood great parents they cared a lot about him gave him lots of direction in terms of what it is you need to do to achieve something he just chose a different path and I cannot wait the next hour to dig into what that path looks like now and how it's helping people around the world around the world so quick to demand as Mooney.com there's plenty of great shows on the lineup in a course if you want to check in with some KB MD CBD go to KB MD health.com that's K BMD health.com will be back in about four minutes to finish our last hour with Rollo Hendrickson of full bucket season this is the only 24 hour take anywhere platforms dedicated to food and fun clear spoony this hour from Townhall.com, Wall Street has opened sharply lower this morning with trade jitters continuing to trouble the market both here at home and abroad US China trade talks to resume later today Chinese trade negotiators are back here in the nation's capital for more trade talks and this time there staring at a Friday deadline and the possibility of higher tariffs Pres. Trump has threatened to increase tariffs to 25% on some $200 billion of Chinese goods unless a deal is reached that's White House correspondent Greg Clugston Sen. Bernie Sanders and Representative Alexandria LEO Cortez proposing new regulations on banks is to prominent anti-Was making a point of Facebook live stream Sanders describes himself as a democratic socialist because you Cortez known to buddy for her radical proposals like the green new deal their proposals are likely to dispel this criticism from Majority Leader Mitch McConnell Democrats I'm determined to make the current wave of prosperity and economic opportunity short-lived contrast he says to the Republicans Pro opportunity progrowth agenda by noon Capitol Hill VP Penn says the trust administration's had it with activist judges federal district courts issuing rulings blocking national policies and our administration will seek opportunities to put this very question before the Supreme Court to ensure that decisions affecting every American are made either by those elected to represent the American people or by the highest court in the land North Korea Haddad again launching a couple of suspected short range missiles of this second launch in less than a week and on Wall Street the cabbage is all down more than 1% right now the Dow is off 319 points the S&P down 35 the NASDAQ 122 lower part of the story said Townhall.com never forgotten apparel is more than just a premium women's and men's clothing line it's a movement to remind us to wear American-made and serve those who serve us our heroes never forgotten apparel gives 20% of their total sales to nonprofits that support homeless veterans and off-duty firefighters and 50% to individual veterans and firefighters in need nationwide checkout never forgotten apparel.com use promo code Matt and ATT and get 15% off your purchase got an old car you can donate it whether it's running or not to the United breast cancer foundation and save a life they'll even come and pick it up for free the United breast cancer foundation has saved hundreds of women's lives through their free or low-cost breast screening exams but now they need your help the United breast cancer foundation wants to save more lives through early detection by offering women free or low-cost breast screening exams in donating your old car SUV or truck whether it's running or not helps pay for them plus you get a charitable tax deduction help the United breast cancer foundation save lives by donating your old car SUV or truck call now for free pickup 800-245-0823 800-245-0823 800-245-0823 all right now that number again is 800-245-0823 Dr. Kim Brown here a host of project with my cohost Eric Rieger I've seen in my practice that upfront is a whole lot more than just the bloating product yes it is a whole lot more than just exploding because the polyphenols if you find in Alicante what are some of these polyphenols these polyphenols help you have more energy and polyphenols are great that sounds like a hellhole more people than just loading go to love my family.com/welcome back is the second hour of project episode number 10 we are joined on this so with the awesome storyteller Rober Hendrickson of Photobucket health click reset study.com what's it like this and lots of great great shows up and down the playlist and of course you can always check out live broadcasts of gut check project every Thursday 10 Eastern nine central the course is split to support the program love my tummy.com/spoony love my tummy.com/spooning pickup Sumatran teal save some money and I were joined by Robert Henderson today who may be a little interested in good health for animals just like we offer humans absolutely were where we left we just left off your on the couch girlfriend basis that you need to go get a job and didn't Texas right so just talking Fort Worth Geiser was we were living in Botta little 16 foot what long mobile home and drag it out of the mud Burlison ticket Aubrey oh and yeah North Northeast lived there was little trailer park out there set it up in started fixing it up and that was my first fixer-upper house isolation made money selves to ice is a bad so that was I think we lived there a year you're in half and and again so I I consider transition from the rodeo guide to the ad guy I got a job work unit one there is little tweak there that's kind of interesting is that growing up in South Dakota and on ranches in the light of 9 to 5 cubicle job scared the ship out of me very inspiring know you you you think I got it like prison who would do that then and so when she said you need a job you know how to do design and advertising and so I I got she gave me newspaper I found this job working for this magazine some graphic design layout ads in the back amazing so I was a sub magazine player feel like was that no animal magazine or know how it was that there was a conflict of study breaks magazine college publication is based out of Austin they had a UMT version and it said its franchise to a bunch of different angle and so start out just a graphic designer there and you know computers were being used it was laborious process Tobit it was no longer doing Ruby lifting all that stuff but you're laying out magazines and computer Mac and so that was quite experience is 93-ish forests and also Mac was about as big room in one sense of power absolutely I kinda cussed myself because we had for five of them in the office there in Denton I bet there was signature to on some of them inside because they were some of the very first you know Max Shipton but I went to work in laying out these little ads in the in a business owners and come in and sit down with me and we together we can come up with the ad you not be like the size of a business card we spent an hour trying to come up with copy and no offer and I freaking loved it I just as the first job that didn't bore me I would work 16 hours a day just literally look up all shed it's midnight is fastening so some people would view that all would be like prison but your you are free because you're in your own head first time I could actually use it was the first time I use my brain to make money was much money it was making ship but it I was getting paid yeah think I like concept so back to you know that started and then when I*get better and better or I started doing some freelance work around Metroplex and four different ad agencies and I would just do little add stuff layouts and things and then I finally got kind of more of a full-time position at an agency in Fort Worth with a couple ladies and and I got along with one of the partners very very well and I started developing my craft getting better at it and I had a strategic mind I've always never been a really good designer but I love design so I've worked at it very hard I wasn't talented but I have a passion for but I naturally took to strategy but I naturally took to position the brand doing something with that and so she knew you just elaborate on that little bit so your urine ad person but when you say strategies like you already seen the buyer journey yeah I just fall into place in my mind and because I was a dreamer I could manifest the future with it and see what was going to be someday it just immediately, like I know this can be this I can picture the store employee knows that the customers there and everything been looking what you know the experience and but the and we were selling ads these companies would come doesn't want to slap lipstick on a pig and then say we want you to do new branding no designer Stover so we would but the whole time it was frustrating because I knew the products sucked and I knew that the customer service department was you know crap and I knew everything inside is broken but the we they want us to make the façade look good and it is very frustrating and so I started to develop like programs and sessions on how to teach them that if you fix the inside first that the outside will take care of itself right and we actually know when I became I work my way up to creative director and then and then one of the ladies and I became partners we started to our own agency and an group and we we did a really good job we we planted Sony electronics and Blockbuster and I helped launch XM satellite radio and we had some great clients and it was a lot of fun working in that agency business in the 90s to thousands and I was pretty pretty while we had a great office in Fort Worth and lots of cool parties and this was creative yet yeah so and my partner I guess the biggest part of that was the first exposure to having a very very calm competent partner that offset my weaknesses which there's a lot slight yeah I'm I'm a weak structure I need a lot of support so gender was a brilliant smart you know wasn't never went to college but she was classy which means she knew when to cuss and not sheep cuss properly but she was self-made and she was cheap you know basically handled everything but the creative and strategy should just let me have the and she appreciated what I did and we got along very well and through the agency in an I learned so much and I was trying to teach these companies you know we were selling these strategy sessions like a brand speak and a few others and bits and pieces and parts but not really buy into the whole methodology they wouldn't do the whole thing and and so she wanted to retire and and I thought that you know I could and this was when the agency business was really taken a tanker you know in the late 2002 laptop computer started taking over our business because now people could lay out their own stuff and do their own design team with Photoshop and became much easier for the general public can and so you know we luckily we were able to exit that business and I kept the digital alarm and worked in building websites and stuff up until 2009 and Ben was didn't like it close just to mass that did that fulfill the same creative blowdown with the other with no because by then it didn't didn't didn't you know it it did but like I said we get calloused I about stepped into that role we did some really neat stuff and back then you know we're you know it cost you $300,000 get a website built by us but yeah Laurent well was because everything was hard I could get it done for 500 now she's coming they would charge company's outrageous amounts it had to be much harder because it was hard I was because I had to hire guys that were they came from ARPANET now to help develop ARPANET that so we had to hire to help you know to do the programming on the websites is there wasn't tools is all you had to write code it's all everything Rocco data and in so you know the the technical aspect really because it was new I'm curious I was ate up with it at first but once I got over that I was like okay code is boring kind of mean it's not boring but it to get good got boring for me and doing Google AdWords programs back then which is what we also did after a while I realized a lot of spreadsheets and so sorry you know I sold my part to my partner and and try to transition and some of things I was doing some consulting work for different companies pay the bills my wife contracted chronic Lyme disease or didn't contract she'd been finally diagnosed after three or four years of trying to figure out what was wrong and we had two babies and lata should happen in a short amount of time that really guided me and and I was really like I didn't know how to handle this kind of situation it was just in August thinking negatively and was scared you know I'd never had responsibility before in the wake up when the two freaking kids and a wife and only can it do this and one day so I did I didn't know what I wanted to do I didn't I was interested in a lot of things I don't know what I want to do I don't Fisher hobby per se but I knew what I didn't want to do so I sat down not try to make this fast as I want to talk about full bucket we do have another half-hour so you know I like it when they hear you now to shut me up so no I think the beauty of your brain as you paint a very convincing picture so you're a good storyteller this is this is the campfire effect going on right here I'm just I enjoy the story like I moved from sent from South Dakota with you very well if we are having cocktails that he would be better for you like not get sidetracked next Sunday for cocktails. Yes sir silicide and decriminalized but I love you guys told me that I heard you know Chip bigger said that it lost and you guys I came in holy crap now it's amazing this is a very close vote I'm very excited so so the I didn't know what I wanted to do and was very frustrating and I was consulting for some private equity companies to pay her bills and and was very I was kind of desperate way I was well I I've missed a little part where I partnered up with the wrong person after left the web buzzer I tried to launch a niche advertising network online network at that time Google ad ad since in Google AdWords what really keyed in very well with the algorithms and the targeting and so there was a lot of opportunity to create niche ad networks there were all online but aligning people in partnered up with a guy that I didn't know that well but had what I needed which was a development team started sinking money into that and the partnership we didn't have the same ethics of counseling with the same and so it went belly up and Charlotte had basically and… While you're still you got the kids the wire is not a good day my son when we started it was really taking off and we were going to make a lot of money and and but that's why that's why I have this belief now that the people you work with this way more important than what you're doing way more important than the ideas is it's nice if it's a good idea it's better if it's a great idea but they're both irrelevant if the people you're working with her ship so anyhow so took a nosedive try to regroup very frustrated you know feeling worthless but knew that okay other people are here I didn't know what I wanted to do and I was very freshly that so one morning I woke up and I together no pattern I should write down what I don't like to do and I just started writing what things do I not like about working business and whatever start a fillets pages there's a lot of things that you that you don't like if you really start looking into that experience take you into a more negative place because that could that could go to a rabbit hole in my brain renders like holy cow I don't like a lot of what we know you know it really didn't it was a little bit cathartic because you know that floats around in you anyways and all day your little bit bombarded by it pain being being being but writing it down and actually looking at it on all yeah I don't don't like it when somebody comes in and you know makes me stop what I'm doing and do something else sounds like a simple thing but I was in the what I was doing and now you're trumping my I hated that so it was cathartic to see it on paper know that's why you get during the day I get that little is a somebody stop me from doing what I was working on your heart as you get into a flow's yeah and then somebody interrupts that you have to work your way back into that flow state you down so you know at the end of that cannot by the way I didn't have any like direction I was doing this and so I start writing all things of like and then I realize at the end of five pages and hundreds of things I went back to it and said all right will a lot of these are very similar the these are they all sound different are there but there really fall under one bucket sure diesel fund this bucket they all have the same kind of that the cause itself these are all symptoms of cause itself was kind of the same overarching I do not but I just realize they were they were similar so I put them in their own buckets and I ended up with like eight buckets and and so I had eight verticals that these are things that I don't like with you know being told what to do you know working on my own schedule all these things essentially was you know I don't want to work for somebody else well and then there was another one about I don't want to work on things that don't have inherent value for humanity and for me and make me feel good and I wanted things that might girls would be proud that dad working on those things and I wanted something I wanted to have products that Steve and served well lets you know that all fall under no a bucket and so when I was done I had these eight core things and should others flip one of work for somebody else be my own us right if if I don't want you know my life I don't want what I do to be I have no value for society for me or for my family then I need to have something that does and so on so forth and I had eight things and wrote those on a piece of paper Nicole my eight manifestoes and immediately coming within heartbeat whole bunch of stuff made sense my life I had a couple of opportunities that I've been dragging my feet on and immediately I realize why was dragging my feet they didn't meet these criteria yeah because I knew I still didn't know what I wanted to do but if it had these eight things what view I want to be happy if if

Fotbolti.net
Hannes fór yfir málin í hljóðveri X977

Fotbolti.net

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2019


Landsliðsmarkvörðurinn Hannes Þór Halldórsson mætti í hljóðver X977 og ræddi við Elvar Geir og Tómas Þór. Umtöluð skipti hans í Val, staða landsliðsins og margt fleira var til umræðu í skemmtilegu spjalli.

The Finding Impact Podcast
FIP 89: High Tech Bio Tech for Development with Eddy Agbo of Fyodor Biotech

The Finding Impact Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2018 37:24


For the second episode in our high tech for development episode, I'm speaking to Eddy Agbo of Fyodor Biotech. We speak about early diagnostic methods that are changing the game for global health and the opportunities these represent for social enterprise. Eddy is the CEO of Fyodor Biotech, he's a PHD from Utrecht University in the Netherlands in molecular genetics and has a post-doctoral fellowship in medicine and infectious diseases at John Hopkins. Fyodor Biotech is building a portfolio of non-invasive fever diagnostic products for emerging markets, of which one, they're now commercialising, is the Urine Malaria Test (UMT) – a test for malaria that tells within 25minutes if a fever is malaria, using only a few drops of urine. On this episode you'll learn: Malaria diagnosis is a field that hadn't evolved for over a hundred years until the 1970s, and then again today. So the time to big disruption has reduced from 100 years to 40. The big innovation has been to remove the guess work in whether someone has malaria or not. The UMT product took 8 years to get to market, and has been sold commercially now for two years in Nigeria and Liberia only. Their strategy is to target the private healthcare sector first. They started developing the product in the market crash of 2008 so funding was a challenge, so they had to bootstrap and form strategic partnerships. They competed for public grant funding in the life sciences sector from the US or British governments. They were able to raise equity funding from different funders during the development stage. When the technology was developed and in people's hands, it made a difference to their funding, and they received much more interest from investors. They're distributing to both business and consumers. They're working with major pharmaceutical distributors, but are also allowing customers to purchase directly from them. They have distribution partnerships with a range of suppliers, mostly of the online marketing kind. They went to the Nigerian market first, because of the size of that market, because they wanted to get to scale in a market where the impact could be felt and where they could eventually achieve a lower price point for the public sector. And Nigeria has a large private health sector which is key to their growth strategy. Their partnership with John Hopkins was due to a key part of the technology they licensed from them. They have a global, exclusive license from them, which was critical because of the credibility it has brought and the resources they've drawn on to help them succeed. They do their early stage research in the US and later stage development in the target market. This meant bringing blood and urine samples into the US, and the red tape was such a challenge. But it was something John Hopkins was able to help with, since they had extensive experience with this. John Hopkins also provided some crucial early introductions that helped with funding and access to important resources in the product development. They implemented a major clinical trial (2000 participants) that built compelling evidence that helped with investor funding. It was published in leading journals (see link below) Functionality testing had to show that a certain skilled level of operator can do the tests, and that an acceptable product shelf life could be. Eddy's vision is to build a portfolio of products that could help populations in the developing world with a fever, to help in the initial diagnostic stages, to know what has caused the fever and remove the presumptive diagnostic process in patient care. Links to resources fyodorbio.com Clinical Performance Evaluation of Fyodor Urine Malaria Test (UMT) Journal in Journal of Clinical Microbiology: Multicenter Pivotal Clinical Trial of Urine Malaria Test for Rapid Diagnosis of Plasmodium falciparum Malaria Connect with guest Contact website form

Organic Gardener Podcast
Replay of 63: Montana Wildlife Gardener | David Schmetterling | Missoula, MT

Organic Gardener Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2017 67:22


Originally published Jul 20, 2015 David Schmetterling is a wildlife gardener and biologist living in Missoula Montana who has created a wildlife garden on a small city lot. Using only native plants David and his wife have created a natural landscape that is home to countless birds, butterflies, and other insects that needs no water or irrigation other then the vegetables they grow in their greenhouse and beds. This amazing interview shares David’s passion and knowledge for growing a place that is an extension of home and lifestyle that is enjoyable and sustainable! Check out his blog at the  Montana Wildlife Gardener (http://montanawildlifegardener.blogspot.com)  to learn more about his amazing educational garden and yard. Tell us a little about yourself. I’m a biologist by trade, a wildlife biologist, but my interests are more broad then that. I’m fascinated by the natural world,  I consider myself a naturalist more then just a wildlife biologist in that I love birding, insects, plants and everything related, and obviously my career path has taken me to a place where I can do that full time. I also have a background in art, architecture and design. I love building things. That’s kind of where my interest in art and architecture really started at an early age as well. I’m a welder, and woodworker, in college I painted. I just like to make things. I love to cook, probably because I love to eat and that really keeps me busy gardening. I grew up in Maryland.  I’ve lived in Missoula, MT for 22 years now, it’s a wonderful place to be for a lot of reasons,  especially with a career in Fish and Wildlife management. How did you get to Missoula from Maryland? It’s a good questions. I love growing up where i did in Maryland, I had a lot of opportunities and had a lot of opportunities to explore the Eastern hardwood forests and things like that. I loved growing up there in terms of wildlife and amphibians, and reptiles, it’s such a neat place to be from. Montana, from a young age, it was always a place I really had a fascination and I hoped I would someday be able to come out here and fortunately I was able to get a job here and stay. Me too, I read a book about Montana in Fourth grade, and in college I got a map out and said this is where the trees are, and FVCC wasn’t quite big enough so I headed to UMT and then met my husband in Eureka planting trees and I’ve been here ever since, 22 years ago. I have sort of a funny story, I went to school in Missoula with this girl, and she was like, I want to go to Maryland, doesn’t that just sound so pretty Merry-land? That’s true. It’s pretty neat, I have really fond memories of it. I think that’s something expressed in my gardening. Just a sense of place,  and whether you’re in Maryland or in Montana, there’s so much to love about those places and every place in between, and the uniqueness of our landscapes and the diversity of our plants and wildlife and landscapes and its so important to preserve. And that’s one of my biggest problems with the landscape design industry is the homogenization of the U.S. Because we have such a diverse, there’s such diverse pallets of plants and animals that are nowhere else in the world, and so many people are so quick to give up on those, and transform their garden into what unfortunately is an ideal from France or England or something else, and not our climate or not our place. I think my blog,  Montana Wildlife Gardener (http://montanawildlifegardener.blogspot.com)  if I still lived in Maryland would would have a much much different take on things. Equally beautiful and an equal representation of the place I still choose to be. Maybe after we can talk about some people from Maryland I can use for a guest? Susan Harris, and Garden Rant …. Tell me about your first gardening experience? That’s a great question, I don’t know that... Support this podcast

UMT'T : 움트
Ep 14. 근황토크

UMT'T : 움트

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2017 28:46


umt
Mash-Up Saturdays
DJ AndRave - Mash-Up Субботы 29

Mash-Up Saturdays

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2016 73:03


Лайв записан на шикарнейшей тусе  в баре Территория на Сходненской.Tracklist: | Carla's Dreams & A-one & Tony Junior Sub Pielea Mea (D' Luxe Mash Up)| Мот vs UMT 92 Дня (Zak Mash Up)| Jay-Z & Kanye West Niggas In Paris (DJ Savin & DJ Alex Pushkarev Remix) | Sofia Carson Im Gonna Love You (Alex Shik Remix)| Monatik Кружит (Vincent & Diaz Remix)| LP feat. Swanky Tunes & Going Deeper Lost On You (Alexx Slam Edit)| Cappella U Got 2 Know (Necola Remix)| Two Feet Go Fuck Yourself (Stanislav Shik & Sad Panda Remix)| Narcotic Thrust I Like It (Dj Jurbas Remix)| MiyaGi & Эндшпиль #тамада (MY remix)| Mario Joy California| Tinie Tempah & Cali P Pass Out (Remix)| 50 CENT P.I.M.P.| Colours All The Way Up (Goja & Nati & Colours Remix)| Soundlovers Run Away (Necola Remix) | IOWA 140 (Astero Club Remix)| Christina Aguilera x Luca Debonaire Ain't No Other Party Zone (Denis Bravo & AID Mash-Up)| Пика УЕ (Kolya Funk & Eddie G Remix)| Fifth Harmony ft. Kid Ink & Sky Fox vs DNK Worth It (Zak Moombathon Mash Up)| Boogie Bitches & Каста Вокруг Шум (Denis Bravo & AID Mash-Up)| Ленинград Сиськи (Denis Denisoff Remix)| Lil Wayne, Wiz Khalifa & Imagine Dragons Sucker For Pain (Rakurs Remix)| T-Killah Vs.Tom Tyger Это Нормально (Oliver Back Mash-up)| Lil Mama Vs Slim & Alex Shik & Mike Prado Gloss Gold (Dj Kuznetsoff Vs Dj Fiolet Mashup) | Carla's Dreams & A-one & Tony JuniorSub Pielea Mea (D' Luxe Mash Up) Мот vs UMT92 Дня (Zak Mash Up) Jay-Z & Kanye WestNiggas In Paris (DJ Savin & DJ Alex Pushkarev Remix) Sofia CarsonIm Gonna Love You (Alex Shik Remix) MonatikКружит (Vincent & Diaz Remix) LP feat. Swanky Tunes & Going DeeperLost On You (Alexx Slam Edit) CappellaU Got 2 Know (Necola Remix) Two FeetGo Fuck Yourself (Stanislav Shik & Sad Panda Remix) Narcotic Thrust I Like It (Dj Jurbas Remix) MiyaGi & Эндшпиль#тамада (MY remix) Mario JoyCalifornia Tinie Tempah & Cali PPass Out (Remix) 50 CENTP.I.M.P. ColoursAll The Way Up (Goja & Nati & Colours Remix) SoundloversRun Away (Necola Remix) IOWA140 (Astero Club Remix) Christina Aguilera x Luca DebonaireAin't No Other Party Zone (Denis Bravo & AID Mash-Up) ПикаУЕ (Kolya Funk & Eddie G Remix) Fifth Harmony ft. Kid Ink & Sky Fox vs DNKWorth It (Zak Moombathon Mash Up) Boogie Bitches & КастаВокруг Шум (Denis Bravo & AID Mash-Up) ЛенинградСиськи (Denis Denisoff Remix) Lil Wayne, Wiz Khalifa & Imagine DragonsSucker For Pain (Rakurs Remix) T-Killah Vs.Tom TygerЭто Нормально (Oliver Back Mash-up) Lil Mama Vs Slim & Alex Shik & Mike PradoGloss Gold (Dj Kuznetsoff Vs Dj Fiolet Mashup)

Mash-Up Saturdays
DJ AndRave - Mash-Up Субботы 29

Mash-Up Saturdays

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2016 73:03


Лайв записан на шикарнейшей тусе  в баре Территория на Сходненской.Tracklist: | Carla's Dreams & A-one & Tony Junior Sub Pielea Mea (D' Luxe Mash Up)| Мот vs UMT 92 Дня (Zak Mash Up)| Jay-Z & Kanye West Niggas In Paris (DJ Savin & DJ Alex Pushkarev Remix) | Sofia Carson Im Gonna Love You (Alex Shik Remix)| Monatik Кружит (Vincent & Diaz Remix)| LP feat. Swanky Tunes & Going Deeper Lost On You (Alexx Slam Edit)| Cappella U Got 2 Know (Necola Remix)| Two Feet Go Fuck Yourself (Stanislav Shik & Sad Panda Remix)| Narcotic Thrust I Like It (Dj Jurbas Remix)| MiyaGi & Эндшпиль #тамада (MY remix)| Mario Joy California| Tinie Tempah & Cali P Pass Out (Remix)| 50 CENT P.I.M.P.| Colours All The Way Up (Goja & Nati & Colours Remix)| Soundlovers Run Away (Necola Remix) | IOWA 140 (Astero Club Remix)| Christina Aguilera x Luca Debonaire Ain't No Other Party Zone (Denis Bravo & AID Mash-Up)| Пика УЕ (Kolya Funk & Eddie G Remix)| Fifth Harmony ft. Kid Ink & Sky Fox vs DNK Worth It (Zak Moombathon Mash Up)| Boogie Bitches & Каста Вокруг Шум (Denis Bravo & AID Mash-Up)| Ленинград Сиськи (Denis Denisoff Remix)| Lil Wayne, Wiz Khalifa & Imagine Dragons Sucker For Pain (Rakurs Remix)| T-Killah Vs.Tom Tyger Это Нормально (Oliver Back Mash-up)| Lil Mama Vs Slim & Alex Shik & Mike Prado Gloss Gold (Dj Kuznetsoff Vs Dj Fiolet Mashup) | Carla's Dreams & A-one & Tony JuniorSub Pielea Mea (D' Luxe Mash Up) Мот vs UMT92 Дня (Zak Mash Up) Jay-Z & Kanye WestNiggas In Paris (DJ Savin & DJ Alex Pushkarev Remix) Sofia CarsonIm Gonna Love You (Alex Shik Remix) MonatikКружит (Vincent & Diaz Remix) LP feat. Swanky Tunes & Going DeeperLost On You (Alexx Slam Edit) CappellaU Got 2 Know (Necola Remix) Two FeetGo Fuck Yourself (Stanislav Shik & Sad Panda Remix) Narcotic Thrust I Like It (Dj Jurbas Remix) MiyaGi & Эндшпиль#тамада (MY remix) Mario JoyCalifornia Tinie Tempah & Cali PPass Out (Remix) 50 CENTP.I.M.P. ColoursAll The Way Up (Goja & Nati & Colours Remix) SoundloversRun Away (Necola Remix) IOWA140 (Astero Club Remix) Christina Aguilera x Luca DebonaireAin't No Other Party Zone (Denis Bravo & AID Mash-Up) ПикаУЕ (Kolya Funk & Eddie G Remix) Fifth Harmony ft. Kid Ink & Sky Fox vs DNKWorth It (Zak Moombathon Mash Up) Boogie Bitches & КастаВокруг Шум (Denis Bravo & AID Mash-Up) ЛенинградСиськи (Denis Denisoff Remix) Lil Wayne, Wiz Khalifa & Imagine DragonsSucker For Pain (Rakurs Remix) T-Killah Vs.Tom TygerЭто Нормально (Oliver Back Mash-up) Lil Mama Vs Slim & Alex Shik & Mike PradoGloss Gold (Dj Kuznetsoff Vs Dj Fiolet Mashup)

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Ep 13. with Guest - 유지은선생님

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Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2016 25:41


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All of Sonar.1
Biweekly Special #14 – Thoughts about UMT

All of Sonar.1

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 23, 2016 8:18


Biweekly Special #14 – Thoughts about UMT by Sonar.1

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Ep 12. with Guest - 안성환선생님

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Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2016 29:15


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Ep 11. with Guest - 황태준선생님

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Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2016 26:35


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Ep 10. 선곡의 Tip I

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Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2015 11:40


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Ep 09. 음악극이야기

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Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2015 19:13


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Ep 08. 붐웨커가 뭐야? (What is Boomwhackers?)

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Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2015 19:46


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Ep 07. 재창조 연주 part.1

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Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2015 18:59


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Ep 06. 기억에 남는 세션

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Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2015 18:21


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Ep 05. 내 인생의 OST

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Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2015 17:25


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Ep 04. 영화속의 음악치료 (뮤직 네버 스탑)

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Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2015 16:50


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Ep 03. Hello song & Goodbye song

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Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2015 15:24


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Ep 02. 우리는 누구?

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Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2015 13:54


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Ep 01. 움트의 탄생

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Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2015 7:51


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Confidently Insecure
**BONUS EPISODE** ThanksGiving-Back To YOU! | Zach Noe Towers

Confidently Insecure

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 1969 66:44


I just wanted to take a sec to seriously say thank you to each and every listener who has supported this podcast. I wouldn't do any of this if it wernt for you guys. This episode was the LEAST I could do for all the happiness and joy YOU guys have given me! I DID THIS EPISODE because I wanted you all to connect. To follow each other, slide into those DMS, book the service, share the GoFundMe, LETS GET THESE CONFIDANTS CONNECTED!! I want you all to be friends!!  Follow our cute guest zach @zachnoetowers   HERE ARE ALL THE THINGS TALKED ABOUT TODAY:  @betta_with_butta https://www.bettawithbutta.com/ @tipsytin https://www.instagram.com/tipsytin/?hl=en   Bai.rae designshttps://www.instagram.com/bairae.designs/?igshid=1l12x2d57k3dr MY BFF's FOLK BAND:https://open.spotify.com/track/6Bs9B5s1cfnp3CLgkiXNdc?si=q9DPCT7YQeS3ljSbEtEKgQ https://macabreamericana.com/store Sustainable bikinis @vega.bella.swim   TRIGGER WARNING: sucidehttps://www.gofundme.com/f/1tdbgibis0   UK based editor AmyEditsStuff@gmail.com   Asylum Stoneshttps://www.etsy.com/shop/AsylumStones   Service Dog for Annesleyhttps://www.gofundme.com/f/a-successor-for-willow-service-dog-for-annesley   Robyn fighting PKD https://www.gofundme.com/f/fighting-pkd   Editor and writer!https://mercedeskilleen.com/   AutieandLace on ETSYhttps://www.etsy.com/shop/AutieandLace?ref=search_shop_r edirect   Katherine & UMT www.UMT.edu/FOODPANTRY    Help Bennett with her physcial therapy!  https://chivecharities.org/story/bennett-s     Salt Lake City @Buttersugarwhisk     A podcast about movies! https://www.instagram.com/wepickpics/   Shari needs a kidney! https://www.gofundme.com/f/kptransplantforshari https://www.facebook.com/groups/765283607256554/permalink/804892456629002/   Read Emilie's queer ass book! https://emilienantel.com/     FOLLOW US: Podcast Instagram/Twitter: @ConfidentlyPod Host @KelseyDarragh   DROP US A LINE: Confidentlyinsecurepodcast@Gmail.com   CONFIDENTLY INSECURE MERCH: https://store.dftba.com/products/confidently-insecure-shirt                 artwork by @backspace.tv   photo by @isergiogarcia  Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/confidently-insecure/donations