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Whiskey River take our minds right into one of the most consequential country records ever made! Cody and Hilary dig into "Shotgun Willie," the album that Willie considered as him "clearing his throat." With the man and the legend already firmly established with a handful of country standards under his belt, here the myth began.Nashville didn't understand him, so Willie headed to Austin to hang out with the weirdos and the hippies. There he found his place, got cozy, and proceeded to spearhead a movement that would rewrite the book about what country music is.Willie Nelson is an American legend, and "Shotgun Willie" is where we get our first glimpse of him fully in his comfort zone.Thanks for listening! Check out everything we have going on via the info below: Instagram: @earwaxpod TikTok: @earwaxpod Amoeba on Instagram: @amoebahollywood @amoebasf @amoebaberkeley Questions, Suggestions, Corrections (surely we're perfect): earwaxpodcast@amoeba-music.com Credits:Edited by Claudia Rivera-TinsleyAll transition music written and performed by Spencer Belden"EarWax Main Theme" performed by Spencer Belden feat. David Otis
Whiskey River owner Rob Koziel and Drake, President of Cowboys for a Cause, discuss their annual Christmas event.
SAN ANGELO, TX — A second member of a biker gang has been sentenced to prison following the deadly October 2, 2022, brawl at the Whiskey River Saloon, 125 E. Concho Ave., that resulted in the death of U.S. Marine Bryce Rudisell. A biker lands on a car after a high speed collision, another biker is killed by a pack of pit bulls, and a ladies social club serves meals to the homeless. Join us as we discuss.Please consider sponsoring the channel by signing up for our channel memberships. You can also support us by signing up for our podcast channel membership for $9.99 per month, where 100% of the membership price goes directly to us at https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-dragon-s-lair-motorcycle-chaos--3267493/support. Follow us on:Instagram: www.instagram.com/BlackDragonBikerTV on Instagram. Thank you!TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@blackdragonbikertv Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/jbunchiiFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/blackdragonbikerBuy Black Dragon Merchandise, Mugs, Hats, T-Shirts Books: https://blackdragonsgear.comDonate to our cause:Cashapp: $BikerPrezPayPal: https://tinyurl.com/yxudso8zZelle: jbunchii@aol.com Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/BlackDragonNPSubscribe to our new discord server https://discord.gg/dshaTSTSubscribe to our online news magazine www.bikerliberty.comSubscribe to Black Dragon Biker TV YouTube https://tinyurl.com/y2xv69buSubscribe to our Prepper Channel “Think Tactical”: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-WnkPNJLZ2a1vfis013OAgGet 20% off Gothic biker rings by using my special discount code: blackdragon go to http://gthic.com?aff=147Join my News Letter to get the latest in MC protocol, biker club content, and my best picks for every day carry. https://johns-newsletter-43af29.beehiiv.com/subscribe Get my new Audio Book Prospect's Bible from these links: United States https://adbl.co/3OBsfl5United Kingdom https://adbl.co/3J6tQxTFrance https://bit.ly/3OFWTtfGermany https://adbl.co/3b81syQ Help us get to 30,000 subscribers on www.instagram.com/BlackDragonBikerTV on Instagram. Thank you!
Today on LIVE! Daily News, Whiskey River Saloon has closed its doors just as one of the men involved in the fight where US Marine Bryce Rudisell was killed has been sentenced, a local butcher shop is offering to help out during the holidays, and a crash sent a truck through a traffic signal.Also, two great interviews with ASU. Today's Top Stories: Planning a Trip to San Antonio This Weekend? Major Closures Could Impact Travel (11/13/2024)Wall's Gunnar Dillard Signs to Play Baseball for University of Oklahoma (11/13/2024)San Angelo Man Arrested for Pointing Handgun at Concerned Citizen (11/13/2024)Mother Sentenced to 50 Years for Role in Son's Death; Body Was Left With Siblings for Nearly a Year (11/13/2024)Second Biker Gang Member Sentenced for Deadly Whiskey River Bar Fight (11/13/2024)Local Butcher Shop Offers Smoked Turkey for Holidays (11/13/2024)Former Prosecutor Arrested in Connection With Decapitation of Mayor (11/13/2024)Man Involved in Whiskey River Saloon Stabbing Sentenced (11/13/2024)Police: Driver Disregards Red Light, Takes Out Traffic Light in Crash (11/13/2024)CBP Seizes $31M in Meth Concealed in Serrano Peppers (11/13/2024)Popular San Angelo Bar Whiskey River Saloon Closes Abruptly (11/13/2024)San Angelo Drinking Water Exceeds Federal Safety Limit for Byproducts (11/13/2024)Angelo State Earns 11th Year of National Recognition for Veteran Support (11/13/2024)Odessa Council Approves Gender-Based Restroom Ordinance (11/13/2024)Final Supermoon of 2024 Rises This Week After Meteor Showers (11/13/2024)3 Charged After Allegedly Locking 6-Year-Old in Dryer and Turning It On (11/13/2024)Top 5 Playoff Football Games to Watch in West Texas This Week (11/13/2024)One Person Sent to Hospital After Morning Crash (11/13/2024)‘Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles' Stars Set to Visit San Angelo (11/13/2024)Bronte, Water Valley Punch Tickets to Regional Volleyball Tournament in San Angelo (11/13/2024)2024 West Texas High School Volleyball Playoff Schedule (11/13/2024)Cold Front Brings Mild Temps to San Angelo Area (11/13/2024)Deadly Conduct and Possession of Lewd Child Imagery Tops Booking Report (11/13/2024)Abilene Man Dies in Rollover Crash After Failing to Wear Seatbelt (11/12/2024)ASU Jazz Ensembles to End Fall Season with Free Concert (11/12/2024)Texas DPS Trooper Identifies Over 20 Trafficking Victims, Earns National Award (11/12/2024)Goodfellow AFB to Host 42nd Annual Santa's Market, Open House (11/12/2024)TPWD Updates Oyster Farming Rules, Closes Areas in Galveston Bay (11/12/2024)Trump Appoints Musk and Ramaswamy to Lead New Efficiency Department (11/12/2024)Human Skulls Found in New Mexico May Link to 2019 Missing Person Case (11/12/2024)Pfluger Criticizes EPA's New Methane Emissions Fee (11/12/2024)
If you're looking for an intense, in-your-face way to enjoy the World's Oldest Rodeo – Prescott Frontier Days has just the seats for you. Be part of the heart-pounding action of the 137th World's Oldest Rodeo by joining us for the Whiskey River Tavern Corral! For the first time ever, fans will have the chance to sit closer than any other attendees – within feet of the main arena where the action is. This spectacular showing is limited to 24 people per performance with the purchase of a 0 package. These seats will be located between the arena and the... For the written story, read here >> https://www.signalsaz.com/articles/a-new-way-the-worlds-oldest-rodeo-the-whiskey-river-tavern-corral/Check out the CAST11.com Website at: https://CAST11.com Follow the CAST11 Podcast Network on Facebook at: https://Facebook.com/CAST11AZFollow Cast11 Instagram at: https://www.instagram.com/cast11_podcast_network
Aj gets alcohol poisoning while Dee plays in his own feces in today's gripping yet typical Irish disaster episode. Our Website The Store Insta Reddit Patreon
Welcome back to another episode, this one is a great time. let me know if you like the new intros Badmotivatorbarrels.com/shop/?aff=3 https://www.instagram.com/zsmithwhiskeyandmixology?utm_source=ig_web_button_share_sheet&igsh=ZDNlZDc0MzIxNw== Patreon.com/the_whiskeyshaman Whiskeyshamanpodcast@gmail.com When you hear “Texas” and “whiskey” together, what comes to mind? Do the words conjure an image of John Wayne sauntering into a West Texas frontier saloon? Or maybe you think of one of the many country songs about whiskey recorded by Texans, like Kris Kristofferson's “Whiskey, Whiskey” or Willie Nelson's “Whiskey River.” Given how closely tied whiskey and Texas are in the public imagination, it might surprise you to know that twenty years ago, there were no whiskey distilleries at all in the Lone Star State. The history of whiskey in Texas is one of long gaps, pervasive struggles, and underground bootleggers. During the 19th century, there were a number of distilleries in Texas, some legal and others . . . less so. But that all changed with Prohibition, when the state's distilling traditions were almost stamped out for good. Distilling became legal in Texas again in 1935, but the state's whiskey distilleries quite simply never recovered from the Volstead Act. Not until recently, that is. It's remarkable how things can change in a couple of decades. When Texas decides to do something, there are no half-measures—and whiskey distilling is no exception. Since the founding of Texas's first two distilleries in Central Texas in the late aughts, Texas bourbons, ryes and single malts have exploded onto the world stage. As a matter of fact, it took only a handful of years after those first distilleries were founded before Texas distilleries began to win major awards alongside stalwarts from Kentucky and Scotland and Ireland—and these days the Lone Star State is now being spoken of as a major world center for top-shelf craft whiskey. In 2012, a Balcones Single Malt won first prize at London's prestigious “Best in Glass” competition, beating out rivals from storied Scottish houses like The Macallan and Glenmorangie. In the years since that historic upset, Texas distilleries have continued their string of upsets. In 2020, Ironroot Republic's Harbinger Bourbon Whiskey was named the “World's Best Bourbon,” and in 2022, Acre Distilling's Longhair Jim Bourbon took home gold at the US Open Whiskey and Spirits Competition. Am I just grumpy, or is it something else? The stereotype of the grumpy old man could have its roots in a condition known as irritable male syndrome. It's clinically referred to as andropause, or male menopause. Like female menopause, andropause includes physical and emotional changes that also seem dependent on changes in hormone levels. Irritable male syndrome can have a big impact on your relationships. To know whether you're experiencing irritable male syndrome, and how you might treat it and improve your relationships, it's important to recognize some of the more obvious symptoms.
SAN ANGELO, TX — Today on LIVE!, a predator has taken a plea deal after abusing a child, the defense rests in the Ray Vera Murder Trial, and the nastiest and cleanest restaurants in San Angelo! Also, Stacey Greaves stops by the LIVE! Studio and talks with Yantis Green!As the San Angelo Rodeo Ramps Up, So Does Angelo State's Rodeo Team's First Season (04/09/2024)Motorcyclist Killed After Ramming Rear of Semi-Trailer (04/09/2024)Whiskey River Trial Finds Vera Guilty of Murder (04/09/2024)Money for Nothing in Harris County, Houston (04/09/2024)San Angelo Stock Show And Rodeo Championship Cook-Off Results (04/09/2024)ASU Belle's Spence Named USTFCCCA National Athlete of the Week (04/09/2024)The First Flight of Shannon's Airmed1 Happened 30 Years Ago (04/09/2024)Last Month's Dirtiest Restaurants in Town (04/09/2024)Prosperity Bank to Break Ground on New Location (04/09/2024)Whiskey River Murder Trial Defense Rests After Expert Witness Not Allowed to Testify (04/09/2024)Abilene Zoo Mourns the Loss of Young Giraffe (04/09/2024)Angelo State Accounting Professor Selected for Endowed Chair (04/09/2024)Young Anglers Set to Break Records with Local Catches (04/09/2024)Fort Concho Speaker Series Weekly Presentations (04/09/2024)Plea Deal Sends San Angelo Man to Prison for Lewd Child Abuse (04/09/2024)Thunderstorms Possible in the Area Tuesday (04/09/2024)Eclipse Booking Report: Stalking, Deadly Conduct & Drug Dealing (04/09/2024)No. 18 Angelo State Takes 3 of 4 from A&M International (04/09/2024)Mike Hernandez Unleashed (04/08/2024)Witnesses Describe Fatal Fight at Whiskey River Saloon (04/08/2024)Angelo State Percussion Ensemble Presents Spring Concert (04/08/2024)
It's only February, but beverage companies are already setting the stage for the rest of 2024 with new products, big investments, and… TV ads? Today, Kate Bernot and me, Beth Demmon, recap the best and most blah Super Bowl commercials, discuss the potential of high and low ABV products, and you'll hear from Drinkways Editor Emma Janzen about the economic outlook for spirits this year. This is the Gist.
The Moneywise Radio Show + Podcast Wednesday, November 29th BE MONEYWISE. Moneywise Wealth Management I "The Moneywise Guys" podcast call: 661-847-1000 text in anytime: 661-396-1000 website: www.MoneywiseGuys.com facebook: Moneywise_Wealth_Management instagram: MoneywiseWealthManagement linkedin: MoneywiseWealthManagement Guest: Lois Henry, CEO for SJV Water website: https://sjvwater.org/
Singles Going Around- Chilli Burgers, Winchesters and Rickaritas.Had me a real good time with this weeks podcast!Faces- "Had Me A Real Good Time (At The BBC)AC/DC- "Love Hungry Man"Dennis Wilson- "What's Wrong"The Beatles- "Rain"Willie Nelson- "I Gotta Have Something I Ain't Got"Led Zepplin- "Bron-Y-Aur Stomp"Captain Beefheart & The Magic Band- "You Know Your A Man"13th Floor Elevators- "Never Another"Neil Young & Crazy Horse- "The Losing End"Faces- "Twistin' The Night Away" (At The BBC)Bob Dylan- "Down Along The Cove"Willie Nelson- "Whiskey River" (Alternate Version)Led Zepplin- "Since I Been Loving You"AC/DC- "Night Prowler"
For this Veteran's Day Special, Cole and April Bixler from Whiskey River return to the show. Their last appearance was back in episode 14. This amazing couple are not only musicians, they are Veterans as well as certified Bourbon Stewards. We have a great time drinking through a couple of patriotic bourbons while catching up. They also play a couple of songs... one of which is their new single "Two Party System". This is a great episode you will not want to miss. Thank you to our sponsors, Blanton's Bourbon Shop and Pints and Barrels. Be sure to check out our private Facebook group, "The Bourbon Roadies" for a great group of bourbon loving people. You will be welcomed with open arms!
Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 871, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: rhythm and booze 1: His beach bum anthem "Margaritaville" made its Top 40 debut in 1977. Jimmy Buffett. 2: This 1958 hit by The Champs with a liquor as its title has been covered by numerous artists. "Tequila". 3: "Don't Come Home A Drinkin' (With Lovin' on Your Mind)" is a classic song by this First Lady of Country Music. Loretta Lynn. 4: This country legend recorded the hits "Fifteen Beers" and "Take This Job and Shove It". Johnny Paycheck. 5: Willie Nelson often begins his live shows with his 1979 hit about this alcoholic "River". "Whiskey River". Round 2. Category: 5-letter capitals 1: 12 avenues radiate from Place Charles de Gaulle in this city. Paris. 2: Bridges crossing the Nile River in this capital include El Gama'a and El Giza. Cairo. 3: The ancient Greeks called this Jordanian capital Philadelphia. Amman. 4: In 1809 one of the first revolts for independence in Latin America broke out in this Ecuadoran capital. Quito. 5: Haiphong near the Gulf of Tonkin serves as this city's main port. Hanoi. Round 3. Category: a heavenly category 1: A Lerner and Lowe song lyric goes, "Thank heaven for" these people, "they grow up in the most delightful way". little girls. 2: The Indian game moksha-patamu (heaven and hell) gave us this Milton Bradley game that has its ups and downs. Chutes and Ladders. 3: The John Jakes novel "Heaven and Hell" takes place directly following this war. the Civil War. 4: In Genesis 1, God gave the name Heaven to this, from the Latin for "support". the firmament. 5: The final movie in Oliver Stone's Vietnam trilogy, this film starred Hiep Thi Le and Tommy Lee Jones. Heaven and Earth. Round 4. Category: "bril"-liant! 1: A rapid chaotic beating of the heart muscles in a nonsynchronous way. fibrillation. 2: 1964buildingblocksfor a wackyWarholwork. Brillo. 3: A crude cart used to carry the condemned to the guillotine during the French Revolution. a tumbril. 4: Miles Franklin was only a teenager when she penned this bestseller about growing up in Australia's outback. My Brilliant Career. 5: 12-letter word for an oily men's hair cream to keep hair in place and make it look glossy. brilliantine. Round 5. Category: warner bros. cartoons 1: "Carnivorous vulgaris" is one of this Roadrunner-chasing rascal's "scientific" names. the (Wile E.) Coyote. 2: This "scent-imental" skunk was named after Charles Boyer's character in the film "Algiers". Pepé Le Pew. 3: This "fastest mouse" made his debut in 1953's "Cat-Tails for Two". Speedy Gonzales. 4: This "roughest, toughest he-man hombre that's ever crossed the Rio Grande" could never beat Bugs Bunny. Yosemite Sam. 5: This animal is the symbol of the new Warner Bros. network. Michigan J. Frog. Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia! Special thanks to https://blog.feedspot.com/trivia_podcasts/
Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 871, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: rhythm and booze 1: His beach bum anthem "Margaritaville" made its Top 40 debut in 1977. Jimmy Buffett. 2: This 1958 hit by The Champs with a liquor as its title has been covered by numerous artists. "Tequila". 3: "Don't Come Home A Drinkin' (With Lovin' on Your Mind)" is a classic song by this First Lady of Country Music. Loretta Lynn. 4: This country legend recorded the hits "Fifteen Beers" and "Take This Job and Shove It". Johnny Paycheck. 5: Willie Nelson often begins his live shows with his 1979 hit about this alcoholic "River". "Whiskey River". Round 2. Category: 5-letter capitals 1: 12 avenues radiate from Place Charles de Gaulle in this city. Paris. 2: Bridges crossing the Nile River in this capital include El Gama'a and El Giza. Cairo. 3: The ancient Greeks called this Jordanian capital Philadelphia. Amman. 4: In 1809 one of the first revolts for independence in Latin America broke out in this Ecuadoran capital. Quito. 5: Haiphong near the Gulf of Tonkin serves as this city's main port. Hanoi. Round 3. Category: a heavenly category 1: A Lerner and Lowe song lyric goes, "Thank heaven for" these people, "they grow up in the most delightful way". little girls. 2: The Indian game moksha-patamu (heaven and hell) gave us this Milton Bradley game that has its ups and downs. Chutes and Ladders. 3: The John Jakes novel "Heaven and Hell" takes place directly following this war. the Civil War. 4: In Genesis 1, God gave the name Heaven to this, from the Latin for "support". the firmament. 5: The final movie in Oliver Stone's Vietnam trilogy, this film starred Hiep Thi Le and Tommy Lee Jones. Heaven and Earth. Round 4. Category: "bril"-liant! 1: A rapid chaotic beating of the heart muscles in a nonsynchronous way. fibrillation. 2: 1964buildingblocksfor a wackyWarholwork. Brillo. 3: A crude cart used to carry the condemned to the guillotine during the French Revolution. a tumbril. 4: Miles Franklin was only a teenager when she penned this bestseller about growing up in Australia's outback. My Brilliant Career. 5: 12-letter word for an oily men's hair cream to keep hair in place and make it look glossy. brilliantine. Round 5. Category: warner bros. cartoons 1: "Carnivorous vulgaris" is one of this Roadrunner-chasing rascal's "scientific" names. the (Wile E.) Coyote. 2: This "scent-imental" skunk was named after Charles Boyer's character in the film "Algiers". Pepé Le Pew. 3: This "fastest mouse" made his debut in 1953's "Cat-Tails for Two". Speedy Gonzales. 4: This "roughest, toughest he-man hombre that's ever crossed the Rio Grande" could never beat Bugs Bunny. Yosemite Sam. 5: This animal is the symbol of the new Warner Bros. network. Michigan J. Frog. Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia! Special thanks to https://blog.feedspot.com/trivia_podcasts/
Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 871, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: rhythm and booze 1: His beach bum anthem "Margaritaville" made its Top 40 debut in 1977. Jimmy Buffett. 2: This 1958 hit by The Champs with a liquor as its title has been covered by numerous artists. "Tequila". 3: "Don't Come Home A Drinkin' (With Lovin' on Your Mind)" is a classic song by this First Lady of Country Music. Loretta Lynn. 4: This country legend recorded the hits "Fifteen Beers" and "Take This Job and Shove It". Johnny Paycheck. 5: Willie Nelson often begins his live shows with his 1979 hit about this alcoholic "River". "Whiskey River". Round 2. Category: 5-letter capitals 1: 12 avenues radiate from Place Charles de Gaulle in this city. Paris. 2: Bridges crossing the Nile River in this capital include El Gama'a and El Giza. Cairo. 3: The ancient Greeks called this Jordanian capital Philadelphia. Amman. 4: In 1809 one of the first revolts for independence in Latin America broke out in this Ecuadoran capital. Quito. 5: Haiphong near the Gulf of Tonkin serves as this city's main port. Hanoi. Round 3. Category: a heavenly category 1: A Lerner and Lowe song lyric goes, "Thank heaven for" these people, "they grow up in the most delightful way". little girls. 2: The Indian game moksha-patamu (heaven and hell) gave us this Milton Bradley game that has its ups and downs. Chutes and Ladders. 3: The John Jakes novel "Heaven and Hell" takes place directly following this war. the Civil War. 4: In Genesis 1, God gave the name Heaven to this, from the Latin for "support". the firmament. 5: The final movie in Oliver Stone's Vietnam trilogy, this film starred Hiep Thi Le and Tommy Lee Jones. Heaven and Earth. Round 4. Category: "bril"-liant! 1: A rapid chaotic beating of the heart muscles in a nonsynchronous way. fibrillation. 2: 1964buildingblocksfor a wackyWarholwork. Brillo. 3: A crude cart used to carry the condemned to the guillotine during the French Revolution. a tumbril. 4: Miles Franklin was only a teenager when she penned this bestseller about growing up in Australia's outback. My Brilliant Career. 5: 12-letter word for an oily men's hair cream to keep hair in place and make it look glossy. brilliantine. Round 5. Category: warner bros. cartoons 1: "Carnivorous vulgaris" is one of this Roadrunner-chasing rascal's "scientific" names. the (Wile E.) Coyote. 2: This "scent-imental" skunk was named after Charles Boyer's character in the film "Algiers". Pepé Le Pew. 3: This "fastest mouse" made his debut in 1953's "Cat-Tails for Two". Speedy Gonzales. 4: This "roughest, toughest he-man hombre that's ever crossed the Rio Grande" could never beat Bugs Bunny. Yosemite Sam. 5: This animal is the symbol of the new Warner Bros. network. Michigan J. Frog. Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia! Special thanks to https://blog.feedspot.com/trivia_podcasts/
This week, legendary singer-songwriter Ray Wylie Hubbard—one of Willie's oldest running buddies and a founding father of Americana music—talks about the signature song that opens every Willie show, “Whiskey River.” It might as well be the national anthem of Texas, but for Ray it prompts some highly personal, absolutely hilarious memories of times he's heard Willie play it, before sending him deep into that time he was kidnapped by Willie's road crew, the reasons drummer Paul English was NOT a fan of the Eagles...and Willie's smile.
Johnny Cash "A Boy Named Sue"Willie Nelson "Whiskey River"Otis Redding "Ole Man Trouble"Lightnin' Hopkins "Moving On Out Boogie"Janis Martin "Bang Bang"Benny Goodman "Ida, Sweet As Apple Cider"Albert King "Personal Manager"Lucinda Williams "Me and My Chauffeur"The Kinks "20th Century Man"Freakwater "Number One with a Bullet"Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys "Stay a Little Longer"Danny Barker "Ham & Eggs"Thelonious Monk Quartet "Blue Monk"The Big Three Trio & Willie Dixon "Don't Let That Music Die"The Carolina Chocolate Drops "Hit 'Em up Style"Coleman Hawkins "Body And Soul"Willie Brown "Future Blues"Little Miss Cornshucks "Try A Little Tenderness"Bettye LaVette "I Still Want To Be Your Baby (Take Me Like I Am)"Minutemen "This Ain't No Picnic"Mississippi Fred McDowell "Louise"Neko Case "Set out Running"Turner Junior Johnson "When I Lay My Burden Down"Songs: Ohia "Farewell Transmission"Bob Dylan "I Dreamed I Saw St. Augustine"Broken Social Scene "Anthems for a Seventeen-Year-Old Girl"Neil Young "L.A."Uncle Tupelo "Still Be Around"Valerie June "Astral Plane"Tom Waits "I Never Talk to Strangers"Bette Midler "I Never Talk to Strangers"Bertha "Chippie" Hill "Panama Limited Blues"Built To Spill "Understood"Townes Van Zandt "Tecumseh Valley"Elvis Costello "Dr. Watson, I Presume"Charles Sheffield "It's Your Voodoo Working"Alvin Youngblood Hart "Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down"Lucero "Macon If We Make It"Big Bill Broonzy "When Did You Leave Heaven"John Prine "Often Is a Word I Seldom Use"Oscar Brown, Jr. "But I Was Cool"Hank Williams "My Son Calls Another Man Daddy"Cory Branan "Jolene"The Mountain Goats "New Monster Avenue"
About Cindy: "I became a member of a popular local Country Music TV show when I was 12. Throughout my teens, I traveled to Nashville & performed on several shows, including the Grand Ole Opry. During my 20's, I developed my own style, formed my own band. I sang & played bass guitar & changed from Country to Southern Rock. After my band desolved, I joined as a front person in a Top 40 Rock band during the late 80's - early 90's. I retired from the music scene to spend more time with my children in their teen years. I eventually went back to my country roots & formed a band with my husband in 2001. We traveled to country opry's, which was short-lived. We became involved in the music at our church. In 2007, after a traumatizing fall, I became disabled & eventually quit singing in my church. In 2022, I became a member of The Bement Country Opry & play 2 shows a month.About Ron: After being in a band in Indiana, I moved back to Illinois to live with family. I met my wife while singing in a karaoke contest in July of 2001. I was determined to get to know her. We formed a band and played every Tuesday night in a local bar. I am a drummer and she plays bass. After we got married in November of that same year, we got tired of the bar scene very quickly. In 2001 we turned our musical talents toward ministry in our church. We still love to karaoke on occasion & I hope to be recording more songs in the future. I am currently in a band called Whiskey River. I mostly enjoy doing shows with my wife, singing in a band or at country opry shows. I sing Classic Country. As Merle would say... "I take a lot of pride in what I am"!!LINKS:Cindy (Peddycoart) Crawford You Tube https://www.youtube.com/@cindypeddycoart-crawford5312Ronnie Crawford You Tube https://www.youtube.com/@ronniecrawford5180/videosBement Country Opryhttps://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100057571264939Support the showFind us on Social Media Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CuBandsandFansInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/cubaf2018/Website: https://cubandsfan4.wixsite.com/cubandsandfansPodcast are on our web site Home Grown KIO Group on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/876171327104082Classic Hits WKIO ( Home Grown KIO Show Sunday's at 7pm)https://www.news-gazette.com/wkio/
The guys are joined by Brandon Roost, owner of Whiskey River Trading Company. They talk about his journey into art, sales, axes and axe handles, and discuss the intricacies of Brandon's perspective on the maker/seller/buyer "game".Check out Brandon and Whiskey River on YouTube, Instagram, and online here...https://www.youtube.com/c/WhiskeyRiverTradingCo@whiskeyrivertradingcoWhiskeyrivertrading.comCheck out The Art of Craftsmanship on YouTube, Instagram, and Patreon here...youtube.com/theartofcraftsmanship@theartofcraftsmanship@theartofcameraguypatreon.com/theartofcraftsmanshipRecommendations:Devon:What Next on YouTubehttps://www.youtube.com/@WhatNextVidsBrandon:@aaronwitthttps://www.youtube.com/c/AaronWittDustin:Outdoor Boyshttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5hlettYK0s8Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
For our 13th show, things at the Magic Kingdom get a little weird. This might be classified as our first “and Spaces Beyond”show. Our premise assumes that Disney execs make a proclamation that “Americana is out, we don't want any more viral videos of Hall of Presidents, etc., let's change Liberty Square into something new”. But in doing so, we learn about a long-held secret of what the “Magic” Kingdom really is - and the real reason Liberty Square disappears. A familiar caller into AM radio's late night Art Bell talk show reveals a grand conspiracy, and we get the full tour of this shocking “new land”. Jeff and Mark start the show with thoughts about EPCOT's Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind - Wonders of Xandar Experience today's version of Liberty Square: https://youtu.be/B2Ik11bMCmY Follow DisneySpace on Twitter @DisneySpacePod and on Facebook at DisneySpace Follow Jeff on Twitter and Instagram @WDWscope Follow Mark on Twitter @6MilesTall Art Bell Vault: https://www.coasttocoastam.com/art-bell/ Who is the secret “Mr. Caller”? https://youtu.be/iZh8RQHfd0Q The Wooden Telephone: https://youtu.be/_1M1jgF-7Q8 The Statesman: https://youtu.be/WitIpuHP8xM Colt Revolvers: https://www.colt.com/category/revolvers Special Colt 45: https://youtu.be/VwyV6M-u2xE Safe practice with a single action revolver: https://youtu.be/mHLS7VrBb3w Billy Dee Williams Colt 45: https://youtu.be/0pK5HmuCMBM Two-Gun Goofy: https://youtu.be/FGj1xRM9VHU Statesman Old Forester Bourbon: https://www.oldforester.com/products/old-forester-statesman-bourbon/ https://youtu.be/8eQeUDsY7dU Cotter Pin Bar and Grill: https://youtu.be/8t74s_8kK7s Whiskey Tripping Cars: https://youtu.be/qy4tVMpW--8 Search the audiobook “Driving with the Devil” on Audible Lillian Disney interview: https://youtu.be/nX-gO0tgZ9U Walt and Lillian's Orange Crush Scotch: https://youtu.be/0QB4iTjgNsg Peter Quill's EPCOT: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLeCDRk6O2hhPT6Z1yFrvz9bbZCcj6V9pE Space220 Website: https://www.space220fla.com Check out the music playlists for Whiskey Road and Bourbon Alley: Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/6QsmGgrWzR7n4i5DIFHZui?si=4RLtY8r5QQK7Dri7UQPYqg Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/playlist/whiskey-road-and-bourbon-alley/pl.u-oZyllR1TPE3253 YouTube: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLeCDRk6O2hhODxUicUHGelWRUSCvJgfsN Check out the music album by Billy Dee Williams: Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/album/0JkIMNmMe6t7EklK6f2RGc?si=xgOyw1bLS9ukrF9m6xkNJA Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/album/lets-misbehave/925439100 Check out the soundtrack of Cars 3: Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/album/2pBzQQ2NGZSIFv9ehTROhS?si=a5A42jUIR6WjbeL1dg55uw Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/album/cars-3-original-motion-picture-soundtrack/1440792717 YouTube: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLEhFfahfkybQJU8Qd5TM1aT-K-5Orlp_y Check out the soundtrack of Emmett Otter's Jug Band Christmas: Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/album/6Q3q59vjxtWBS2gt3LQXp2?si=z3IEKRfBQx2d99qYIh54nA Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/album/jim-hensons-emmet-otters-jug-band-christmas-music-from/1577212223 YouTube: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_kozwLjNeDQvi40gzauxJQz1pInYS4x7_c Check out the soundtrack of The Kingsman: The Golden Circle: Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/album/77dpznYouiYsKpKirLb49p?si=JA1i95jaQ6u3ueDOug3Irg Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/album/kingsman-the-golden-circle-original-motion-picture-score/1512826712 YouTube: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mvf6JJavPFNYs1Hj-CGqQ10aBG953ZnqI Check out the soundtracks of Coyote Ugly: Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/4xVPRfAanB3ElPxxOlFfWL?si=5AFGzfHhQfWeCsXCknjAcg Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/album/coyote-ugly-soundtrack-from-the-motion-picture/72267368 YouTube: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLlLKya9FPX267JoLPdUvxRsPjkVDel2JL Dale Jr's Whiskey River: https://youtube.com/channel/UCKWLZPBdBq8V16m-b-Be0Aw The American Diamond book
Lieutenant David Haynes, a police officer who works on the North Side of the city, made his weekly visit to the WGN Radio studios and the Bob Sirott Morning Show. Lt. Haynes, who co-authored “The Beat Cop's Guide to Chicago Eats,” reviewed Whiskey River. Located at 1850 Waukegan Rd. in Glenview, the restaurant serves cheeseburgers, […]
I listen to and comment on the song Hard Times from the EP Race Records Show notes: -I just found out it's a cover -Race Records and Our Country -The history of Hard Times -Reclaiming through her own voice -The term Race Records -The music -Money and happiness -I'm rambling -Helping people -The build -Her voice -Relaxing, uplifting, and validating -The Resurrectors -Live -Taking back the song -Reaching a peak -What music does -The lyrics -Taking stock in the pleasures and tears -Feeling your feelings -Solidarity -Pause -Drinking while sad -Anxiety, future tripping, anticipation -Game face -Expressing instead of bottling up -Constructive ways to express yourself -Ways that don't help -Find a safe space -Whiskey River -When Race Records ended… -Goodnight America -I hope to see them live -Concerts -Get your news from a credible source (New York Times, BBC, NPR, USA Today, etc.) -Get vaccinated and boosted for yourself and others Twitter https://twitter.com/mmampodcast Facebook https://www.facebook.com/mmampodcast Apple Podcasts https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/music-movies-and-other-stuff/id1236495556?mt=2 Podbean https://mmam.podbean.com/ Email mmampodcast@gmail.com © MMAMPodcast 2022 All Rights Reserved
Co-Hosts Thomas Gerson and Dylan Stickels discuss bad workplace habits, Superbowl LVI, and Benny Blanco. Additional topics include the Whiskey River, Waylon Jennings, Fast&Furious, and human cloning. FOLLOW US: Thomas Gerson - https://linktr.ee/tgersoncomedy Dylan Stickels - https://www.instagram.com/_stickels_/
Let's listen to some of the best roots music to come out of 2021 as we look forward to 2022! "Whiskey River" by Miko Marks "Goodbye, Honey, You Call that Gone" by Jake Blount "Mama's Milk" by Sunny War "Deep Water Blues" by Adia Victoria "Tender Organs" by Amythyst Kiah "Someone That I Used to Be" by Joy Oladokun
About RobertR2 advocates for Liquibase customers and provides technical architecture leadership. Prior to co-founding Datical (now Liquibase), Robert was a Director at the Austin Technology Incubator. Robert co-founded Phurnace Software in 2005. He invented and created the flagship product, Phurnace Deliver, which provides middleware infrastructure management to multiple Fortune 500 companies.Links: Liquibase: https://www.liquibase.com Liquibase Community: https://www.liquibase.org Liquibase AWS Marketplace: https://aws.amazon.com/marketplace/seller-profile?id=7e70900d-dcb2-4ef6-adab-f64590f4a967 Github: https://github.com/liquibase Twitter: https://twitter.com/liquibase TranscriptAnnouncer: Hello, and welcome to Screaming in the Cloud with your host, Chief Cloud Economist at The Duckbill Group, Corey Quinn. This weekly show features conversations with people doing interesting work in the world of cloud, thoughtful commentary on the state of the technical world, and ridiculous titles for which Corey refuses to apologize. This is Screaming in the Cloud.Corey: It seems like there is a new security breach every day. Are you confident that an old SSH key, or a shared admin account, isn't going to come back and bite you? If not, check out Teleport. Teleport is the easiest, most secure way to access all of your infrastructure. The open source Teleport Access Plane consolidates everything you need for secure access to your Linux and Windows servers—and I assure you there is no third option there. Kubernetes clusters, databases, and internal applications like AWS Management Console, Yankins, GitLab, Grafana, Jupyter Notebooks, and more. Teleport's unique approach is not only more secure, it also improves developer productivity. To learn more visit: goteleport.com. And not, that is not me telling you to go away, it is: goteleport.com. Corey: You know how Git works right?Announcer: Sorta, kinda, not really. Please ask someone else.Corey: That's all of us. Git is how we build things, and Netlify is one of the best ways I've found to build those things quickly for the web. Netlify's Git-based workflows mean you don't have to play slap-and-tickle with integrating arcane nonsense and web hooks, which are themselves about as well understood as Git. Give them a try and see what folks ranging from my fake Twitter for Pets startup, to global Fortune 2000 companies are raving about. If you end up talking to them—because you don't have to; they get why self-service is important—but if you do, be sure to tell them that I sent you and watch all of the blood drain from their faces instantly. You can find them in the AWS marketplace or at www.netlify.com. N-E-T-L-I-F-Y dot com.Corey: Welcome to Screaming in the Cloud. I'm Corey Quinn. This is a promoted episode. What does that mean in practice? Well, it means the company who provides the guest has paid to turn this into a discussion that's much more aligned with the company than it is the individual.Sometimes it works, Sometimes it doesn't, but the key part of that story is I get paid. Why am I bringing this up? Because today's guest is someone I met in person at Monktoberfest, which is the RedMonk conference in Portland, Maine, one of the only reasons to go to Maine, speaking as someone who grew up there. And I spoke there, I met my guest today, and eventually it turned into this, proving that I am the envy of developer advocates everywhere because now I can directly tie me attending one conference to making a fixed sum of money, and right now they're all screaming and tearing off their headphones and closing this episode. But for those of you who are sticking around, thank you. My guest today is the CTO and co-founder of Liquibase. Please welcome Robert Reeves. Robert, thank you for joining me, and suffering the slings and arrows I'm about to hurled directly into your arse, as a warning shot.Robert: [laugh]. Man. Thanks for having me. Corey, I've been looking forward to this for a while. I love hanging out with you.Corey: One of the things I love about the Monktoberfest conference, and frankly, anything that RedMonk gets up to is, forget what's on stage, which is uniformly excellent; forget the people at RedMonk who are wonderful and I aspire to do more work with them in different ways; they're great, but the people that they attract are invariably interesting, they are invariably incredibly diverse in terms of not just demographics, but interests and proclivities. It's just a wonderful group of people, and every time I get the opportunity to spend time with those folks I do, and I've never once regretted it because I get to meet people like you. Snark and cynicism about sponsoring this nonsense aside—for which I do thank you—you've been a fascinating person to talk to you because you're better at a lot of the database-facing things than I am, so I shortcut to instead of forming my own opinions, I just skate off of yours in some cases. You're going to get letters now.Robert: Well, look, it's an occupational hazard, right? Releasing software, it's hard so you have to learn these platforms, and part of it includes the database. But I tell you, you're spot on about Monktoberfest. I left that conference so motivated. Really opened my eyes, certainly injecting empathy into what I do on a day-to-day basis, but it spurred me to action.And there's a lot of programs that we've started at Liquibase that the germination for that seed came from Monktoberfest. And certainly, you know, we were bummed out that it's been canceled two years in a row, but we can't wait to get back and sponsor it. No end of love and affection for that team. They're also really smart and right about a hundred percent of the time.Corey: That's the most amazing part is that they have opinions that generally tend to mirror my own—which, you know—Robert: [laugh].Corey: —confirmation bias is awesome, but they almost never get it wrong. And that is one of the impressive things is when I do it, I'm shooting from the hip and I already have an apology half-written and ready to go, whereas when dealing with them, they do research on this and they don't have the ‘I'm a loud, abrasive shitpostter on Twitter' defense to fall back on to defend opinions. And if they do, I've never seen them do it. They're right, and the fact that I am as aligned with them as I am, you'd think that one of us was cribbing from the other. I assure you that's not the case.But every time Steve O'Grady or Rachel Stephens, or Kelly—I forget her last name; my apologies is all Twitter, but she studied medieval history, I remember that—or James Governor writes something, I'm uniformly looking at this and I feel a sense of dismay, been, “Dammit. I should have written this. It's so well written and it makes such a salient point.” I really envy their ability to be so consistently on point.Robert: Well, they're the only analysts we pay money to. So, we vote with our dollars with that one. [laugh].Corey: Yeah. I'm only an analyst when people have analyst budget. Other than that, I'm whatever the hell you describe me. So, let's talk about that thing you're here to show. You know, that little side project thing you found and are the CTO of.I wasn't super familiar with what Liquibase does until I looked into it and then had this—I got to say, it really pissed me off because I'm looking at it, and it's how did I not know that this existed back when the exact problems that you solve are the things I was careening headlong into? I was actively annoyed. You're also an open-source project, which means that you're effectively making all of your money by giving things away and hoping for gratitude to come back on you in the fullness of time, right?Robert: Well, yeah. There's two things there. They're open-source component, but also, where was this when I was struggling with this problem? So, for the folks that don't know, what Liquibase does is automate database schema change. So, if you need to update a database—I don't care what it is—as part of your application deployment, we can help.Instead of writing a ticket or manually executing a SQL script, or generating a bunch of docs in a NoSQL database, you can have Liquibase help you out with that. And so I was at a conference years ago, at the booth, doing my booth thing, and a managing director of a very large bank came to me, like, “Hey, what do you do?” And saw what we did and got angry, started yelling at me. “Where were you three years ago when I was struggling with this problem?” Like, spitting mad. [laugh]. And I was like, “Dude, we just started”—this was a while ago—it was like, “We just started the company two years ago. We got here as soon as we could.”But I struggled with this problem when I was a release manager. And so I've been doing this for years and years and years—I don't even want to talk about how long—getting bits from dev to test to production, and the database was always, always, always the bottleneck, whether it was things didn't run the same in test as they did, eventually in production, environments weren't in sync. It's just really hard. And we've automated so much stuff, we've automated application deployment, lowercase a compiled bits; we're building things with containers, so everything's in that container. It's not a J2EE app anymore—yay—but we haven't done a damn thing for the database.And what this means is that we have a whole part of our industry, all of our database professionals, that are frankly struggling. I always say we don't sell software Liquibase. We sell piano recitals, date nights, happy hours, all the stuff you want to do but you can't because you're stuck dealing with the database. And that's what we do at Liquibase.Corey: Well, you're talking about database people. That's not how I even do it. I would never call myself that, for very good reason because you know, Route 53 remains the only database I use. But the problem I always had was that, “Great. I'm doing a deployment. Oh, I'm going to put out some changes to some web servers. Okay, what's my rollback?” “Well, we have this other commit we can use.” “Oh, we're going to be making a database schema change. What's your rollback strategy,” “Oh, I've updated my resume and made sure that any personal files I had on my work laptop been backed up somewhere else when I immediately leave the company when we can't roll back.” Because there's not really going to be a company anymore at that point.It's one of those everyone sort of holds their breath and winces when it comes to anything that resembles a schema change—or an ALTER TABLE as we used to call it—because that is the mistakes will show territory and you can hope and plan for things in pre-prod environments, but it's always scary. It's always terrifying because production is not like other things. That's why I always call my staging environment ‘theory' because things work in theory but not in production. So, it's how do you avoid the mess of winding up just creating disasters when you're dealing with the reality of your production environments? So, let's back up here. How do you do it? Because it sounds like something people would love to sell me but doesn't exist.Robert: [laugh]. Well, it's real simple. We have a file, we call it the change log. And this is a ledger. So, databases need to be evolved. You can't drop everything and recreate it from scratch, so you have to apply changes sequentially.And so what Liquibase will do is it connects to the database, and it says, “Hey, what version are you?” It looks at the change log, and we'll see, ehh, “There's ten change sets”—that's what components of a change log, we call them change sets—“There's ten change sets in there and the database is telling me that only five had been executed.” “Oh, great. Well, I'll execute these other five.” Or it asks the database, “Hey, how many have been executed?” And it says, “Ten.”And we've got a couple of meta tables that we have in the database, real simple, ANSI SQL compliant, that store the changes that happen to the database. So, if it's a net new database, say you're running a Docker container with the database in it on your local machine, it's empty, you would run Liquibase, and it says, “Oh, hey. It's got that, you know, new database smell. I can run everything.”And so the interesting thing happens when you start pointing it at an environment that you haven't updated in a while. So, dev and test typically are going to have a lot of releases. And so there's going to be little tiny incremental changes, but when it's time to go to production, Liquibase will catch it up. And so we speak SQL to the database, if it's a NoSQL database, we'll speak their API and make the changes requested. And that's it. It's very simple in how it works.The real complex stuff is when we go a couple of inches deeper, when we start doing things like, well, reverse engineering of your database. How can I get a change log of an existing database? Because nobody starts out using Liquibase for a project. You always do it later.Corey: No, no. It's one of those things where when you're doing a project to see if it works, it's one of those, “Great, I'll run a database in some local Docker container or something just to prove that it works.” And, “Todo: fix this later.” And yeah, that todo becomes load-bearing.Robert: [laugh]. That's scary. And so, you know, we can help, like, reverse engineering an entire database schema, no problem. We also have things called quality checks. So sure, you can test your Liquibase change against an empty database and it will tell you if it's syntactically correct—you'll get an error if you need to fix something—but it doesn't enforce things like corporate standards. “Tables start with T underscore.” “Do not create a foreign key unless those columns have an ID already applied.” And that's what our quality checks does. We used to call it rules, but nobody likes rules, so we call it quality checks now.Corey: How do you avoid the trap of enumerating all the bad things you've seen happen because at some point, it feels like that's what leads to process ossification at large companies where, “Oh, we had this bad thing happen once, like, a disk filled up, so now we have a check that makes sure that all the disks are at least 20, empty.” Et cetera. Great. But you keep stacking those you have thousands and thousands and thousands of those, and even a one-line code change then has to pass through so many different tests to validate that this isn't going to cause the failure mode that happened that one time in a unicorn circumstance. How do you avoid the bloat and the creep of stuff like that?Robert: Well, let's look at what we've learned from automated testing. We certainly want more and more tests. Look, DevOp's algorithm is, “All right, we had a problem here.” [laugh]. Or SRE algorithm, I should say. “We had a problem here. What happened? What are we going to change in the future to make sure this doesn't happen?” Typically, that involves a new standard.Now, ossification occurs when a person has to enforce that standard. And what we should do is seek to have automation, have the machine do it for us. Have the humans come up and identify the problem, find a creative way to look for the issue, and then let the machine enforce it. Ossification happens in large organizations when it's people that are responsible, not the machine. The machines are great at running these things over and over again, and they're never hung over, day after Super Bowl Sunday, their kid doesn't get sick, they don't get sick. But we want humans to look at the things that we need that creative energy, that brain power on. And then the rote drudgery, hand that off to the machine.Corey: Drudgery seems like sort of a job description for a lot of us who spend time doing operation stuff.Robert: [laugh].Corey: It's drudgery and it's boring, punctuated by moments of sheer terror. On some level, you're more or less taking some of the adrenaline high of this job away from people. And you know, when it comes to databases, I'm kind of okay with that as it turns out.Robert: Yeah. Oh, yeah, we want no surprises in database-land. And that is why over the past several decades—can I say several decades since 1979?Corey: Oh, you can s—it's many decades, I'm sorry to burst your bubble on that.Robert: [laugh]. Thank you, Corey. Thank you.Corey: Five, if we're being honest. Go ahead.Robert: So, it has evolved over these many decades where change is the enemy of stability. And so we don't want change, and we want to lock these things down. And our database professionals have become changed from sentinels of data into traffic cops and TSA. And as we all know, some things slip through those. Sometimes we speed, sometimes things get snuck through TSA.And so what we need to do is create a system where it's not the people that are in charge of that; that we can set these policies and have our database professionals do more valuable things, instead of that adrenaline rush of, “Oh, my God,” how about we get the rush of solving a problem and saving the company millions of dollars? How about that rush? How about the rush of taking our old, busted on-prem databases and figure out a way to scale these up in the cloud, and also provide quick dev and test environments for our developer and test friends? These are exciting things. These are more fun, I would argue.Corey: You have a list of reference customers on your website that are awesome. In fact, we share a reference customer in the form of Ticketmaster. And I don't think that they will get too upset if I mention that based upon my work with them, at no point was I left with the impression that they played fast and loose with databases. This was something that they take very seriously because for any company that, you know, sells tickets to things you kind of need an authoritative record of who's bought what, or suddenly you don't really have a ticket-selling business anymore. You also reference customers in the form of UPS, which is important; banks in a variety of different places.Yeah, this is stuff that matters. And you support—from the looks of it—every database people can name except for Route 53. You've got RDS, you've got Redshift, you've got Postgres-squeal, you've got Oracle, Snowflake, Google's Cloud Spanner—lest people think that it winds up being just something from a legacy perspective—Cassandra, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera, CockroachDB. I could go on because you have multiple pages of these things, SAP HANA—whatever the hell that's supposed to be—Yugabyte, and so on, and so forth. And it's like, some of these, like, ‘now you're just making up animals' territory.Robert: Well, that goes back to open-source, you know, you were talking about that earlier. There is no way in hell we could have brought out support for all these database platforms without us being open-source. That is where the community aligns their goals and works to a common end. So, I'll give you an example. So, case in point, recently, let me see Yugabyte, CockroachDB, AWS Redshift, and Google Cloud Spanner.So, these are four folks that reached out to us and said, either A) “Hey, we want Liquibase to support our database,” or B) “We want you to improve the support that's already there.” And so we have what we call—which is a super creative name—the Liquibase test harness, which is just genius because it's an automated way of running a whole suite of tests against an arbitrary database. And that helped us partner with these database vendors very quickly and to identify gaps. And so there's certain things that AWS Redshift—certain objects—that AWS Redshift doesn't support, for all the right reasons. Because it's data warehouse.Okay, great. And so we didn't have to run those tests. But there were other tests that we had to run, so we create a new test for them. They actually wrote some of those tests. Our friends at Yugabyte, CockroachDB, Cloud Spanner, they wrote these extensions and they came to us and partnered with us.The only way this works is with open-source, by being open, by being transparent, and aligning what we want out of life. And so what our friends—our database friends—wanted was they wanted more tooling for their platform. We wanted to support their platform. So, by teaming up, we help the most important person, [laugh] the most important person, and that's the customer. That's it. It was not about, “Oh, money,” and all this other stuff. It was, “This makes our customers' lives easier. So, let's do it. Oop, no brainer.”Corey: There's something to be said for making people's lives easier. I do want to talk about that open-source versus commercial divide. If I Google Liquibase—which, you know, I don't know how typing addresses in browsers works anymore because search engines are so fast—I just type in Liquibase. And the first thing it spits me out to is liquibase.org, which is the Community open-source version. And there's a link there to the Pro paid version and whatnot. And I was just scrolling idly through the comparison chart to see, “Oh, so ‘Community' is just code for shitty and you're holding back advanced features.” But it really doesn't look that way. What's the deal here?Robert: Oh, no. So, Liquibase open-source project started in 2006 and Liquibase the company, the commercial entity, started after that, 2012; 2014, first deal. And so, for—Nathan Voxland started this, and Nathan was struggling. He was working at a company, and he had to have his application—of course—you know, early 2000s, J2EE—support SQL Server and Oracle and he was struggling with it. And so he open-sourced it and added more and more databases.Certainly, as open-source databases grew, obviously he added those: MySQL, Postgres. But we're never going to undo that stuff. There's rollback for free in Liquibase, we're not going to be [laugh] we're not going to be jerks and either A) pull features out or, B) even worse, make Stephen O'Grady's life awful by changing the license [laugh] so he has to write about it. He loves writing about open-source license changes. We're Apache 2.0 and so you can do whatever you want with it.And we believe that the things that make sense for a paying customer, which is database-specific objects, that makes sense. But Liquibase Community, the open-source stuff, that is built so you can go to any database. So, if you have a change log that runs against Oracle, it should be able to run against SQL Server, or MySQL, or Postgres, as long as you don't use platform-specific data types and those sorts of things. And so that's what Community is about. Community is about being able to support any database with the same change log. Pro is about helping you get to that next level of DevOps Nirvana, of reaching those four metrics that Dr. Forsgren tells us are really important.Corey: Oh, yes. You can argue with Nicole Forsgren, but then you're wrong. So, why would you ever do that?Robert: Yeah. Yeah. [laugh]. It's just—it's a sucker's bet. Don't do it. There's a reason why she's got a PhD in CS.Corey: She has been a recurring guest on this show, and I only wish she would come back more often. You and I are fun to talk to, don't get me wrong. We want unbridled intellect that is couched in just a scintillating wit, and someone is great to talk to. Sorry, we're both outclassed.Robert: Yeah, you get entertained with us; you learn with her.Corey: Exactly. And you're still entertained while doing it is the best part.Robert: [laugh]. That's the difference between Community and Pro. Look, at the end of the day, if you're an individual developer just trying to solve a problem and get done and away from the computer and go spend time with your friends and family, yeah, go use Liquibase Community. If it's something that you think can improve the rest of the organization by teaming up and taking advantage of the collaboration features? Yes, sure, let us know. We're happy to help.Corey: Now, if people wanted to become an attorney, but law school was too expensive, out of reach, too much time, et cetera, but they did have a Twitter account, very often, they'll find that they can scratch that itch by arguing online about open-source licenses. So, I want to be very clear—because those people are odious when they email me—that you are licensed under the Apache License. That is a bonafide OSI approved open-source license. It is not everyone except big cloud companies, or service providers, which basically are people dancing around—they mean Amazon. So, let's be clear. One, are you worried about Amazon launching a competitive service with a dumb name? And/or have you really been validated as a product if AWS hasn't attempted and failed to launch a competitor?Robert: [laugh]. Well, I mean, we do have a very large corporation that has embedded Liquibase into one of their flagship products, and that is Oracle. They have embedded Liquibase in SQLcl. We're tickled pink because that means that, one, yes, it does validate Liquibase is the right way to do it, but it also means more people are getting help. Now, for Oracle users, if you're just an Oracle shop, great, have fun. We think it's a great solution. But there's not a lot of those.And so we believe that if you have Liquibase, whether it's open-source or the Pro version, then you're going to be able to support all the databases, and I think that's more important than being tied to a single cloud. Also—this is just my opinion and take it for what it's worth—but if Amazon wanted to do this, well, they're not the only game in town. So, somebody else is going to want to do it, too. And, you know, I would argue even with Amazon's backing that Liquibase is a little stronger brand than anything they would come out with.Corey: This episode is sponsored by our friends at Oracle HeatWave is a new high-performance accelerator for the Oracle MySQL Database Service. Although I insist on calling it “my squirrel.” While MySQL has long been the worlds most popular open source database, shifting from transacting to analytics required way too much overhead and, ya know, work. With HeatWave you can run your OLTP and OLAP, don't ask me to ever say those acronyms again, workloads directly from your MySQL database and eliminate the time consuming data movement and integration work, while also performing 1100X faster than Amazon Aurora, and 2.5X faster than Amazon Redshift, at a third of the cost. My thanks again to Oracle Cloud for sponsoring this ridiculous nonsense. Corey: So, I want to call out though, that on some level, they have already competed with you because one of database that you do not support is DynamoDB. Let's ignore the Route 53 stuff because, okay. But the reason behind that, having worked with it myself, is that, “Oh, how do you do a schema change in DynamoDB?” The answer is that you don't because it doesn't do schemas for one—it is schemaless, which is kind of the point of it—as well as oh, you want to change the primary, or the partition, or the sort key index? Great. You need a new table because those things are immutable.So, they've solved this Gordian Knot just like Alexander the Great did by cutting through it. Like, “Oh, how do you wind up doing this?” “You don't do this. The end.” And that is certainly an approach, but there are scenarios where those were first, NoSQL is not a acceptable answer for some workloads.I know Rick [Horahan 00:26:16] is going to yell at me for that as soon as he hears me, but okay. But there are some for which a relational database is kind of a thing, and you need that. So, Dynamo isn't fit for everything. But there are other workloads where, okay, I'm going to just switch over. I'm going to basically dump all the data and add it to a new table. I can't necessarily afford to do that with anything less than maybe, you know, 20 milliseconds of downtime between table one and table two. And they're obnoxious and difficult ways to do it, but for everything else, you do kind of need to make ALTER TABLE changes from time to time as you go through the build and release process.Robert: Yeah. Well, we certainly have plans for DynamoDB support. We are working our way through all the NoSQLs. Started with Mongo, and—Corey: Well, back that out a second then for me because there's something I'm clearly not grasping because it's my understanding, DynamoDB is schemaless. You can put whatever you want into various arbitrary fields. How would Liquibase work with something like that?Robert: Well, that's something I struggled with. I had the same question. Like, “Dude, really, we're a schema change tool. Why would we work with a schemaless database?” And so what happened was a soon-to-be friend of ours in Europe had reached out to me and said, “I built an extension for MongoDB in Liquibase. Can we open-source this, and can y'all take care of the care and feeding of this?” And I said, “Absolutely. What does it do?” [laugh].And so I looked at it and it turns out that it focuses on collections and generating data for test. So, you're right about schemaless because these are just documents and we're not going to go through every single document and change the structure, we're just going to have the application create a new doc and the new format. Maybe there's a conversion log logic built into the app, who knows. But it's the database professionals that have to apply these collections—you know, indices; that's what they call them in Mongo-land: collections. And so being able to apply these across all environments—dev, test, production—and have consistency, that's important.Now, what was really interesting is that this came from MasterCard. So, this engineer had a consulting business and worked for MasterCard. And they had a problem, and they said, “Hey, can you fix this with Liquibase?” And he said, “Sure, no problem.” And he built it.So, that's why if you go to the MongoDB—the liquibase-mongodb repository in our Liquibase org, you'll see that MasterCard has the copyright on all that code. Still Apache 2.0. But for me, that was the validation we needed to start expanding to other things: Dynamo, Couch. And same—Corey: Oh, yeah. For a lot of contributors, there's a contributor license process you can go through, assign copyright. For everything else, there's MasterCard.Robert: Yeah. Well, we don't do that. Look, you know, we certainly have a code of conduct with our community, but we don't have a signing copyright and that kind of stuff. Because that's baked into Apache 2.0. So, why would I want to take somebody's ability to get credit and magical internet points and increase the rep by taking that away? That's just rude.Corey: The problem I keep smacking myself into is just looking at how the entire database space across the board goes, it feels like it's built on lock-in, it's built on it is super finicky to work with, and it generally feels like, okay, great. You take something like Postgres-squeal or whatever it is you want to run your database on, yeah, you could theoretically move it a bunch of other places, but moving databases is really hard. Back when I was at my last, “Real job,” quote-unquote, years ago, we were late to the game; we migrated the entire site from EC2 Classic into a VPC, and the biggest pain in the ass with all of that was the RDS instance. Because we had to quiesce the database so it would stop taking writes; we would then do snapshot it, shut it down, and then restore a new database from that RDS snapshot.How long does it take, at least in those days? That is left as an experiment for the reader. So, we booked a four hour maintenance window under the fear that would not be enough. It completed in 45 minutes. So okay, there's that. Sparked the thing up and everything else was tested and good to go. And yay. Okay.It took a tremendous amount of planning, a tremendous amount of work, and that wasn't moving it very far. It is the only time I've done a late-night deploy, where not a single thing went wrong. Until I was on the way home and the Uber driver sideswiped a city vehicle. So, there we go—Robert: [laugh].Corey: —that's the one. But everything else was flawless on this because we planned these things out. But imagine moving to a different provider. Oh, forget it. Or imagine moving to a different database engine? That's good. Tell another one.Robert: Well, those are the problems that we want our database professionals to solve. We do not want them to be like janitors at an elementary school, cleaning up developer throw-up with sawdust. The issue that you're describing, that's a one time event. This is something that doesn't happen very often. You need hands on the keyboard, you want people there to look for problems.If you can take these database releases away from those folks and automate them safely—you can have safety and speed—then that frees up their time to do these other herculean tasks, these other feats of strength that they're far better at. There is no silver bullet panacea for database issues. All we're trying to do is take about 70% of DBAs time and free it up to do the fun stuff that you described. There are people that really enjoy that, and we want to free up their time so they can do that. Moving to another platform, going from the data center to the cloud, these sorts of things, this is what we want a human on; we don't want them updating a column three times in a row because dev couldn't get it right. Let's just give them the keys and make sure they stay in their lane.Corey: There's something glorious about being able to do that. I wish that there were more commonly appreciated ways of addressing those pains, rather than, “Oh, we're going to sell you something big and enterprise-y and it's going to add a bunch of process and not work out super well for you.” You integrate with existing CI/CD systems reasonably well, as best I can tell because the nice thing about CI/CD—and by nice I mean awful—is that there is no consensus. Every pipeline you see, in a release engineering process inherently becomes this beautiful bespoke unicorn.Robert: Mm-hm. Yeah. And we have to. We have to integrate with whatever CI/CD they have in place. And we do not want customers to just run Liquibase by itself. We want them to integrate it with whatever is driving that application deployment.We're Switzerland when it comes to databases, and CI/CD. And I certainly have my favorite of those, and it's primarily based on who bought me drinks at the last conference, but we cannot go into somebody's house and start rearranging the furniture. That's just rude. If they're deploying the app a certain way, what we tell that customer is, “Hey, we're just going to have that CI/CD tool call Liquibase to update the database. This should be an atomic unit of deployment.” And it should be hidden from the person that pushes that shiny button or the automation that does it.Corey: I wish that one day that you could automate all of the button pushing, but the thing that always annoyed me in release engineering was the, “Oh, and here's where we stop to have a human press the button.” And I get it. That stuff's scary for some folks, but at the same time, this is the nature of reality. So, you're not going to be able to technology your way around people. At least not successfully and not for very long.Robert: It's about trust. You have to earn that database professional's trust because if something goes wrong, blaming Liquibase doesn't go very far. In that company, they're going to want a person [laugh] who has a badge to—with a throat to choke. And so I've seen this pattern over and over again.And this happened at our first customer. Major, major, big, big, big bank, and this was on the consumer side. They were doing their first production push, and they wanted us ready. Not on the call, but ready if there was an issue they needed to escalate and get us to help them out. And so my VP of Engineering and me, we took it. Great. Got VP of engineering and CTO. Right on.And so Kevin and I, we stayed home, stayed sober [laugh], you know—a lot of places to party in Austin; we fought that temptation—and so we stayed and I'm texting with Kevin, back and forth. “Did you get a call?” “No, I didn't get a call.” It was Friday night. Saturday rolls around. Sunday. “Did you get a—what's going on?” [laugh].Monday, we're like, “Hey. Everything, okay? Did you push to the next weekend?” They're like, “Oh, no. We did. It went great. We forgot to tell you.” [laugh]. But here's what happened. The DBAs push the Liquibase ‘make it go' button, and then they said, “Uh-Oh.” And we're like, “What do you mean, uh-oh?” They said, “Well, something went wrong.” “Well, what went wrong?” “Well, it was too fast.” [laugh]. Something—no way. And so they went through the whole thing—Corey: That was my downtime when I supposed to be compiling.Robert: Yeah. So, they went through the whole thing to verify every single change set. Okay, so that was weekend one. And then they go to weekend two, they do it the same thing. All right, all right. Building trust.By week four, they called a meeting with the release team. And they said, “Hey, process change. We're no longer going to be on these calls. You are going to push the Liquibase button. Now, if you want to integrate it with your CI/CD, go right ahead, but that's not my problem.” Dev—or, the release team is tier one; dev is tier two; we—DBAs—are tier three support, but we'll call you because we'll know something went wrong. And to this day, it's all automated.And so you have to earn trust to get people to give that up. Once they have trust and you really—it's based on empathy. You have to understand how terrible [laugh] they are sometimes treated, and to actively take care of them, realize the problems they're struggling with, and when you earn that trust, then and only then will they allow automation. But it's hard, but it's something you got to do.Corey: You mentioned something a minute ago that I want to focus on a little bit more closely, specifically that you're in Austin. Seems like that's a popular choice lately. You've got companies that are relocating their headquarters there, presumably for tax purposes. Oracle's there, Tesla's there. Great. I mean, from my perspective, terrific because it gets a number of notably annoying CEOs out of my backyard. But what's going on? Why is Austin on this meteoric rise and how'd it get there?Robert: Well, a lot of folks—overnight success, 40 years in the making, I guess. But what a lot of people don't realize is that, one, we had a pretty vibrant tech hub prior to all this. It all started with MCC, Microcomputer Consortium, which in the '80s, we were afraid of the Japanese taking over and so we decided to get a bunch of companies together, and Admiral Bobby Inman who was director planted it in Austin. And that's where it started. You certainly have other folks that have a huge impact, obviously, Michael Dell, Austin Ventures, a whole host of folks that have really leaned in on tech in Austin, but it actually started before that.So, there was a time where Willie Nelson was in Nashville and was just fed up with RCA Records. They would not release his albums because he wanted to change his sound. And so he had some nice friends at Atlantic Records that said, “Willie, we got this. Go to New York, use our studio, cut an album, we'll fix it up.” And so he cut an album called Shotgun Willie, famous for having “Whiskey River” which is what he uses to open and close every show.But that album sucked as far as sales. It's a good album, I like it. But it didn't sell except for one place in America: in Austin, Texas. It sold more copies in Austin than anywhere else. And so Willie was like, “I need to go check this out.”And so he shows up in Austin and sees a bunch of rednecks and hippies hanging out together, really geeking out on music. It was a great vibe. And then he calls, you know, Kris, and Waylon, and Merle, and say, “Come on down.” And so what happened here was a bunch of people really wanted to geek out on this new type of country music, outlaw country. And it started a pattern where people just geek out on stuff they really like.So, same thing with Austin film. You got Robert Rodriguez, you got Richard Linklater, and Slackers, his first movie, that's why I moved to Austin. And I got a job at Les Amis—a coffee shop that's closed—because it had three scenes in that. There was a whole scene of people that just really wanted to make different types of films. And we see that with software, we see that with film, we see it with fashion.And it just seems that Austin is the place where if you're really into something, you're going to find somebody here that really wants to get into it with you, whether it's board gaming, D&D, noise punk, whatever. And that's really comforting. I think it's the community that's just welcoming. And I just hope that we can continue that creativity, that sense of community, and that we don't have large corporations that are coming in and just taking from the system. I hope they inject more.I think Oracle's done a really good job; their new headquarters is gorgeous, they've done some really good things with the city, doing a land swap, I think it was forty acres for nine acres. They coughed up forty for nine. And it was nine acres the city wasn't even using. Great. So, I think they're being good citizens. I think Tesla's been pretty cool with building that factory where it is. I hope more come. I hope they catch what is ever in the water and the breakfast tacos in Austin.Corey: [laugh]. I certainly look forward to this pandemic ending; I can come over and find out for myself. I'm looking forward to it. I always enjoyed my time there, I just wish I got to spend more of it.Robert: How many folks from Duckbill Group are in Austin now?Corey: One at the moment. Tim Banks. And the challenge, of course, is that if you look across the board, there really aren't that many places that have more than one employee. For example, our operations person, Megan, is here in San Francisco and so is Jesse DeRose, our manager of cloud economics. But my business partner is in Portland; we have people scattered all over the country.It's kind of fun having a fully-distributed company. We started this way, back when that was easy. And because all right, travel is easy; we'll just go and visit whenever we need to. But there's no central office, which I think is sort of the dangerous part of full remote because then you have this idea of second-class citizens hanging out in one part of the country and then they go out to lunch together and that's where the real decisions get made. And then you get caught up to speed. It definitely fosters a writing culture.Robert: Yeah. When we went to remote work, our lease was up. We just didn't renew. And now we have expanded hiring outside of Austin, we have folks in the Ukraine, Poland, Brazil, more and more coming. We even have folks that are moving out of Austin to places like Minnesota and Virginia, moving back home where their family is located.And that is wonderful. But we are getting together as a company in January. We're also going to, instead of having an office, we're calling it a ‘Liquibase Lounge.' So, there's a number of retail places that didn't survive, and so we're going to take one of those spots and just make a little hangout place so that people can come in. And we also want to open it up for the community as well.But it's very important—and we learned this from our friends at GitLab and their culture. We really studied how they do it, how they've been successful, and it is an awareness of those lunch meetings where the decisions are made. And it is saying, “Nope, this is great we've had this conversation. We need to have this conversation again. Let's bring other people in.” And that's how we're doing at Liquibase, and so far it seems to work.Corey: I'm looking forward to seeing what happens, once this whole pandemic ends, and how things continue to thrive. We're long past due for a startup center that isn't San Francisco. The whole thing is based on the idea of disruption. “Oh, we're disruptive.” “Yes, we're so disruptive, we've taken a job that can be done from literally anywhere with internet access and created a land crunch in eight square miles, located in an earthquake zone.” Genius, simply genius.Robert: It's a shame that we had to have such a tragedy to happen to fix that.Corey: Isn't that the truth?Robert: It really is. But the toothpaste is out of the tube. You ain't putting that back in. But my bet on the next Tech Hub: Kansas City. That town is cool, it has one hundred percent Google Fiber all throughout, great university. Kauffman Fellows, I believe, is based there, so VC folks are trained there. I believe so; I hope I'm not wrong with that. I know Kauffman Foundation is there. But look, there's something happening in that town. And so if you're a buy low, sell high kind of person, come check us out in Austin. I'm not trying to dissuade anybody from moving to Austin; I'm not one of those people. But if the housing prices [laugh] you don't like them, check out Kansas City, and get that two-gig fiber for peanuts. Well, $75 worth of peanuts.Corey: Robert, I want to thank you for taking the time to speak with me so extensively about Liquibase, about how awesome RedMonk is, about Austin and so many other topics. If people want to learn more, where can they find you?Robert: Well, I think the best place to find us right now is in AWS Marketplace. So—Corey: Now, hand on a second. When you say the best place for anything being the AWS Marketplace, I'm naturally a little suspicious. Tell me more.Robert: [laugh]. Well, best is, you know, it's—[laugh].Corey: It is a place that is there and people can find you through it. All right, then.Robert: I have a list. I have a list. But the first one I'm going to mention is AWS Marketplace. And so that's a really easy way, especially if you're taking advantage of the EDP, Enterprise Discount Program. That's helpful. Burn down those dollars, get a discount, et cetera, et cetera. Now, of course, you can go to liquibase.com, download a trial. Or you can find us on Github, github.com/liquibase. Of course, talking smack to us on Twitter is always appreciated.Corey: And we will, of course, include links to that in the [show notes 00:46:37]. Robert Reeves, CTO and co-founder of Liquibase. I'm Cloud Economist Corey Quinn, and this is Screaming in the Cloud. If you've enjoyed this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice along with an angry comment complaining about how Liquibase doesn't support your database engine of choice, which will quickly be rendered obsolete by the open-source community.Corey: If your AWS bill keeps rising and your blood pressure is doing the same, then you need The Duckbill Group. We help companies fix their AWS bill by making it smaller and less horrifying. The Duckbill Group works for you, not AWS. We tailor recommendations to your business and we get to the point. Visit duckbillgroup.com to get started.Announcer: This has been a HumblePod production. Stay humble.
USA Today Bestselling author Katherine Garbera joins us today on the podcast! Katherine is the author of over 100 books with titles that are part of the Harlequin Desire line, the Harlequin Blaze line, Silhouette Bombshell, Tule Publishing's Texas Born line and Holiday line..and probably more! Her bibliography is inspiring. She shares with us today what her most recent release, Texas Christmas Dare is about which is book 1 in her new series with Tule Publishing, The Rossis of of Whiskey River series. You can check out Katherine's website here. Keep up with Katherine on Facebook here. You can follow her on Instagram here. Katherine is on BookBub here. ♡ You can find Katherine on Tule Publishing's website here. Find her books on Harlequin's website here. Find her books on Mills & Boon UK's website here. Find her books on Mills & Boon Australia's website here. For a list of all the places where you can find the podcast along with where you can find us on social media, click here for our linktree! Our Email is thecategoricallyromancepod@gmail.com ♡ This podcast is engineered by Sincere Alexander and contains music from Lukrembo
Today, we are making my Whiskey River Pork Chops, with a Honey-Butter Glaze (along with a special something something thrown in).
Drinking songs can be the life of the party - or the balm for a broken heart. Both Erica and Jerry pick a sad drinking song, but one is joyful and one has long term regret. Plus! The Champs featuring Pitbull!
This episode we are hunting beavers, stealing snickers and cleaning brothels. Weird news gets an update with a twist added to it. Someone probably sets a record for the amount of beans that one person has eaten in one sitting and one of the other guys is thinking about a career change. Come join us on this episode as we head to the Wild Wild West!
you can find us on Facebook at http://facebook.com/amarillorockspodcast https://www.patreon.com/amarillorocks Still Austin (stillaustin.com) Leftwoods (Leftwoods.com) Thick the Kings of Texas Schwag Rock Where's Ed Abbey when you Knead him (not available online) 2002 Cowboys and Engines (a concept Piece) Matt Martindale Aint Afraid https://open.spotify.com/track/2XZf5IuWq76wXzJZbH48r4?si=0056ae00d02a4a0a Lyric Lee S.o.S. Different ft Sonnett https://soundcloud.com/lyric-lee-imalyricist Amarillo Music Scene ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Friday 9-10 Spicy Mikes - 6pm James Owens Hoots 10 pm - Summer Dean - -Special Announcement - January 16 -Son Volt - $50 @$15 , advance $20 sept 17 ,Day of $23 - Marshalls Tavern - 930 pm Loaded Six Chesneys - 8pm Jaime Richards Chalice Abbey - Rigby Summer and Kyle Reid 7pm ($15) Rounders - 9pm Texas transplants Craft Cocktail - GonFiv5 Crush - 730ish - Tanner Lane Band 730 Landshark Burgers - 7pm - the Smokey Janes Teddy Jacks 7pm - a town Rockers Metropolital Speakeasy - Alma Duo 8pm GLC- 8pm - Dale Watson and his Lonestars PSE- 7pm - Touching VooDoo Smokey Joes 8pm - Texas Blues Rangers Handlebar - Romano Carbajal Tokyo Japanese Steakhouse- 830 pm Dale Smith Skooterz - 10pm Black Heart Saints - (Free Show) special guest Profit Drama Whisky River - Red Dirt Rockers 9pm - Saturday - 9-11 Get Fit Jak Thurmond 2pm Broken Echo (?) Hoots 9pm Mason Lively 9pm 18+ (with Rhett Uhland) Crush - 8pm - Love Session Marshalls - 8pm - RFP Presents BIG HEAD BENJI - S.O.S. SilenT; Yung Kam Nyke Nguyen more TBA Starlight Ranch Event Center - Starlight Canyon - 7pm - Nelson Mckinney Band PSE - 7pm Bomb City Sound GLC- 8pm - Matt Martindale Chesneys 8pm - Ty Blackburn Smokey Jane on the Patio Smokey Joes - 8pm Luke Kuopke & the Bad Habits Metropolitan Speak Easy - Landshark Burgers - 7pm rien nash 6pm Handlebar - 7pm Caliche Dust Tokyo Japanese Steakhouse- 830 pm Dale Smith Bar Z Winery - Rak -45 5 pm Sunday - 9-12 Leftwoods- 9pm - JERK! La Frontera 5pm - La Hacienda - 7pm Smokey Joes- Ace Rodriguez 3pm Monday - 9-13 Smokey Joes- 6pm - Rounders - 7 pm Leftwoods 9pm Tuesday - 9-14 Leftwoods - Labellas - 6-8 Dale Smith Marshalls- Open Mic Nights with Sabin 8pm Colton Wilcher Smokey Joes 6pm (every Tuesday) Starlight Theatre - (Sam Houston Park) Crush - 7pm 575 Pizza Civic Circle - Andy Chase 630pm (every Tuesday) Wednesday - 9-15 Smokey Joes - Solano Project 6 pm (every Wednesday) Broken Spoke Ty Blackburn (every Wednesday) Rounders Buster Bledsoe Open Mic - 7pm (every Wedesday) Hoots - Wednesday Night is for Songwriters with Cameron Heard (every Wednesday) Leftwoods - 9pm PSE- Tennessee Tuck and Gary Wayne 6pm Crush Loudmouth Tooley 730 pm Whiskey River -8pm Thursday - 9-16 Leftwoods - 9pm The Barlow Amarillo Botanical Fardens - 6pm the Tweeks (Last show of the Summer) Labellas - Trent Britton 6-8pm Smokey Joes - 6pm PSE - 7pm - Mitchell Ford - (Last show - Moving to Lubbock) Marshalls - 9pm Crush - 730pm Landshark Burgers - Andy Chase - 630pm Hoots - Broken Spoke - Buster Bledsoe Open Jam 7pm
TJ and Jeff come on to for the very first Beartoes threesome! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/beartoes/support
TJ and Jeff sit down for the first ever threesome on Beartoes. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/beartoes/support
Dan dives into the fishing world and chats whiskey and more with Revelton Distillery about new and tasty products that you NEED to get your hands on. That, a conversation with Smokin' Joe, trivia, and more outdoors news just for you!
Joe from Whiskey River checked in to chat about the challenges local business owners face amid the pandemic.
PART 2 OF 2: On the occasion of Johnny Bush's passing in October of 2020, we've got a two-part podcast tribute to the man who epitomised Texas dancehall music. Part two has us digging back into the show archives for an episode which originally aired in July 2017. From the original show notes: In this episode, we're featuring a hard country album from Johnny Bush: "Here Comes The World Again" (1973). After having served in Ray Price's and Willie Nelson's bands, he had paid his dues and this was Bush's first release on a major label (RCA). "Whiskey River" (written by Bush) was just about to become a big hit and it seemed Johnny Bush's star was on the rise. In the summer of 1972, however, a mysterious vocal condition put Bush's well-known high notes at risk. He adopted tricks to get around it, but the impact was profound: within a few years, he could barely speak, and it was only many years later with some enterprising medical treatment that Bush was able to regain his singing abilities. This album came at a very uncertain time for "The Country Caruso", but you wouldn't know it from the material included. This is a fantastic collection of jukebox-friendly shuffles, drinking songs, broken-heart ballads and beer joint singalongs - fiddles and steel guitar abound. Highlights include the "Cold Grey Light Of Dawn", dancehall favourite "Green Snakes On The Ceiling" and "Here Comes The World Again".
PART 2 OF 2: On the occasion of Johnny Bush's passing in October of 2020, we've got a two-part podcast tribute to the man who epitomised Texas dancehall music. Part two has us digging back into the show archives for an episode which originally aired in July 2017. From the original show notes: In this episode, we're featuring a hard country album from Johnny Bush: "Here Comes The World Again" (1973). After having served in Ray Price's and Willie Nelson's bands, he had paid his dues and this was Bush's first release on a major label (RCA). "Whiskey River" (written by Bush) was just about to become a big hit and it seemed Johnny Bush's star was on the rise. In the summer of 1972, however, a mysterious vocal condition put Bush's well-known high notes at risk. He adopted tricks to get around it, but the impact was profound: within a few years, he could barely speak, and it was only many years later with some enterprising medical treatment that Bush was able to regain his singing abilities. This album came at a very uncertain time for "The Country Caruso", but you wouldn't know it from the material included. This is a fantastic collection of jukebox-friendly shuffles, drinking songs, broken-heart ballads and beer joint singalongs - fiddles and steel guitar abound. Highlights include the "Cold Grey Light Of Dawn", dancehall favourite "Green Snakes On The Ceiling" and "Here Comes The World Again".
The guys change things up a bit this week with the song "Whiskey River" by Willie Nelson, but the voice bringing you this cover is NOT from the main douche Sal, oh no its by Patient Zero aka The Taint Saint himself the king of the underscore; Andrew Shaver. The change up in the episode lead to some words of encouragement to do your thing, follow your passions. Whether it's for your own personal enjoyment or to start a business, learn that thing youve been wanting to do. The guys compare Cali weed to Colorado weed, and give pointers on how and where to buy when you go into legal states, as well as some food recommendations. Let us know what you think of Sal and Producer Sergio's "Viceland" show idea, should they take that trip and film it all? Shoot us an email or a tweet with any suggestions or comments Round 2: Last week we put out a give away and no one joined in, so well roll it over to this week. For this week's giveaway tweet us who was the 1st Marine in flight and why he was the 1st for your chance to win a copy of Sal's EP "Heroes." Remember reading is fundamental, read the damn descriptions! Make sure you listen to our boy Shaver's new single "Love Don't Come Easy" wherever you find your music or click the link below -->>> https://spoti.fi/3kRO2XJ
We're back from a birthday break with an action-packed episode! We catch you up on a wild couple weeks (which will explain the title), share some insights from a book Tyler just finished called "13 Things Mentally Strong Women Don't Do", and read some emails. Where else are you gonna get talk about limp dick pics, self-help, and herpes all in one place??
We take in a journey into more music, more video games and more drinking involved tune in and thanks for listening
Chris Cash, Roy Scott, and Brandon Roost of @WhiskeyRiverTradingCo talk about welding sculptures, forming a maker collective, and pivoting during economic uncertanity
so much good stuff came out this week.. Lets Talk About It!! Fun Fact: Johnny Bush wrote "Whiskey River" for Willie Listen to the full episode here: https://smarturl.it/TRPPodcast Merch: https://rdapparelco.com/ Tip Me Via PayPal.. https://rdapparelco.com/pages/donate Follow me on IG for Political Memes/News - @TheRedneckPatriot New Music Friday Playlists: https://linktr.ee/theredneckpatriot Thanks for listening and i hope everyone stays safe during this time..
The show opens with eSports confusing Ken, then the guys talk Sports wagering and Gambling in Iowa with Brian Ohrilko from the Iowa Gaming and Racing Commission, then it's time for Restaurant Radio with Stu's BBQ, Abelardo's, McAlister's Deli, Bennigan's on Merle Hay, Whiskey River in Ankeny and Ames and the Founder's Pub in Bondurant. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
The show opens with eSports confusing Ken, then the guys talk Sports wagering and Gambling in Iowa with Brian Ohrilko from the Iowa Gaming and Racing Commission, then it's time for Restaurant Radio with Stu's BBQ, Abelardo's, McAlister's Deli, Bennigan's on Merle Hay, Whiskey River in Ankeny and Ames and the Founder's Pub in Bondurant.
Welcome to the expanded edition of the show! Featuring an extra hour's worth of music not included in the radio version! This week we're featuring a slice of Texas dancehall music at it's best from Johnny Bush & The Bandoleros: "Live! At Dance Town USA" (1979). Recorded on New Years Eve 1979 (a Monday night) home town boy Johnny Bush brought his tight Texas country dance band back to Houston's Dance Town USA, a cavernous venue on the north side of town which he'd been a popular draw at for most of the 70s. Twin fiddles from Jimmy Harriss and John Schattenberg and steel from longtime Bandolero Rick Price lead the way through a dynamite hour-long set, whittled down by producers from the standard four hour show. "Whiskey River" was already a signature song for Bush by '79, and included are two-step-ready crowd favourites to this day: "Undo The Right" and "What A Way To Live", along with an ever relevant dig at mainstream country radio with "The Last Country Song". We dig into some fascinating, behind-the-scenes stories from the recording of this album and we'll also seek to recreate the sounds of a greater South Texas honky tonk circa 1979 in the process.
Welcome to the expanded edition of the show! Featuring an extra hour's worth of music not included in the radio version! This week we're featuring a slice of Texas dancehall music at it's best from Johnny Bush & The Bandoleros: "Live! At Dance Town USA" (1979). Recorded on New Years Eve 1979 (a Monday night) home town boy Johnny Bush brought his tight Texas country dance band back to Houston's Dance Town USA, a cavernous venue on the north side of town which he'd been a popular draw at for most of the 70s. Twin fiddles from Jimmy Harriss and John Schattenberg and steel from longtime Bandolero Rick Price lead the way through a dynamite hour-long set, whittled down by producers from the standard four hour show. "Whiskey River" was already a signature song for Bush by '79, and included are two-step-ready crowd favourites to this day: "Undo The Right" and "What A Way To Live", along with an ever relevant dig at mainstream country radio with "The Last Country Song". We dig into some fascinating, behind-the-scenes stories from the recording of this album and we'll also seek to recreate the sounds of a greater South Texas honky tonk circa 1979 in the process.
The guys are joined by Roger Harvey to discuss Willie Nelson’s “Shotgun Willie.” Plenty of other discussion including the Philly music scene, Tim Barry, writing your own bio section, albums that clear one’s throat, Topo Chico, creepy Leon Russell songs, “Whiskey River,” plenty of other talk about other Willie records and more fun conversation. Check out Roger at xorogerharvey.com/ Check out other episodes at RecordsRevisitedPodcast.com, Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, Castbox, iHeartMedia, Google Podcasts and Spotify. Additional content is found at: Facebook.com/recordsrevisitedpodcast or twitter @podcastrecords or IG at instagram.com/recordsrevisitedpodcast/
Native Kentuckian, Senior Whiskey Ambassador at Deutsch Brands and, Honorary Kentucky Colonel Joe Riggs (@Drinkswithjoe ) sits down to talk and taste whiskey with us!We talk about the travel that the job entails, the constant growth of line extensions and, support for bartenders over “influencers”.#HRN10Years #DrinkingOnTheRadioDon’t forget to click SUBSCRIBE and RATE the show if you can.Join us each week as industry leaders, Damon Boelte and Sother Teague, sit down with a wide range of hospitality and spirits experts from around the world to discuss everything that impacts our business.FOLLOW US ON INSTAGRAM:Damon Boelte @DamonBoelteSother Teague @CreativeDrunkSpeakeasy Podcast @SpeakeasyPodcast FOLLOW US ON TWITTER:Sother Teague @CreativeDrunkSpeakeasyRadio @SpeakeasyRadioJoin Heritage Radio Network on Monday, November 11th, for a raucous feast to toast a decade of food radio. Our tenth anniversary bacchanal is a rare gathering of your favorite chefs, mixologists, storytellers, thought leaders, and culinary masterminds. We’ll salute the inductees of the newly minted HRN Hall of Fame, who embody our mission to further equity, sustainability, and deliciousness. Explore the beautiful Palm House and Yellow Magnolia Café, taste and imbibe to your heart’s content, and bid on once-in-a-lifetime experiences and tasty gifts for any budget at our silent auction. Tickets available now at heritageradionetwork.org/gala.The Speakeasy is powered by Simplecast.
Relive another crazy Charlotte trip with Mitch and Brandon.
Host David Perry of Southeastern Fly gets together with Dan Sharley and they have a beer while talking about "people of the river". Both have some interesting outdoor moments and recount their own stories of people who manage to do a lot of things on the river. Some things are hard to believe. Stories include; The Bushwacker, Gravel Bar Meemaw, Whiskey River, Over-Under 40 guy, and there are others that will amuse you while making you ponder the people, you may have seen while fly fishing your favorite waters in the Southeast and abroad. So, sit down and have a beverage, mow the yard, or perhaps travel on a plane and listen while hurling through the air in a hollow metal tube. It's a good way to kill some time, heck tie some flies and enjoy the fun if that is more your style. It doesn't matter where you listen but it does matter that you do listen and enjoy your time with David and dan.
The boys sip on watermelon whiskey and dream of summer!
Jim and Randy sit down with Cole and April from Whiskey River to drink some Weller 107 and talk about their music. We discus their military service and how they met. They surprise us with a really special Four Roses cocktail for the second pour. Subscribe to catch every episode. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram @thebourbonroad. Find out more about Whiskey River at https://whiskeyriver.live/ Thanks to LogHeads Home Center for supporting this episode. Find out more about their fine rustic furniture at https://logheadshomecenter.com/
Jirka Petrů vyhrabal z archívu další hudební poklady z let šedesátých a sedmdesátých. Znáte třeba Almost Brothers, Whiskey River nebo Josefus?
Booze matters in every culture, but in the culture of the South, it matters in some peculiar ways. We have a drink and dive into the twisted roots of the South's liquor culture.
Marc and Lee begin this week’s episode with some sage advice for Andrew Jacobs followed by their review of the debut album from the band, Trooper. Next, the artist spotlight featuring songs from two newer artists, Mollie Marriot and Inglorious. They conclude the episode with their rockin’ tracks of the week, “Whiskey River” by Budgie and “Killed by Love” from the band FM. Until next week, Keep rockin’ and stay free! Links For Artist: https://www.amazon.com/Trooper/dp/B000VK37MC/ref=sr_1_5?s=music&ie=UTF8&qid=1539638751&sr=1-5&keywords=trooper
During a recent show at Club 7, I got to hang out backstage with Whiskey River, an absolutely epic Lynyrd Skynyrd tribute band. An awesome discussion about the band, what they're about, what sets them apart from other tribute bands, and what their ultimate goal is. I was able to capture some pretty good live audio, so be sure to check out the three songs at the end of the interview, including an absolutely jaw dropping rendition of the most famous of all Skynyrd songs. Due to the location of the interview, the background is a little noisy, but that just adds to the awesomeness! Be sure to check them out on all their social media pages! And if you get a chance to see them live, do it!!! Be sure to check them ot with Randy Hansen On October 20 at Emerald Downs!!! Whiskey River Links: www.whiskeycreek.net (yes, that's correct)! Also www.whiskeyriv.com Facebook: @WhiskeyRiver Skynyrd Tribute Twitter: @WRSkynyrd Misery Point Links miserypointradio.podbean.com Instagram: @miserypointradio Twitter: @MiseryPtRadio Fb: @miserypointradio Youtube:www.youtube.com/channel/UczOP_7ejdn1r814zoIZuR6Q
Playlist: Neal And The Vipers, One Drunken Kiss, Jeff Kossack, Float, Dustin Douglas & The Electric Gentlemen, Destiny, Johnny Sansone, Delta Coating, Wily Bo Walker, Walking With The Devil, Russ Green, First Thing Smokin, Artur Menezes, Give My Money Back, Buddy Guy, Nine Below Zero, Stone Stanley, Bitter End, Eric Corne, Short Wave Preachers, Dany Franchi, Real Love, Tom Hambridge, Whiskey Ghost, Willie Jackson, Why You Still Mad, John Clifton, Wild Ride, Michael Kaeshammer, Sweet Georgia, Jeff Jensen, Luck Is Gonna Change, Dana Fuchs, Faithful Sinner, Blind Lemon Pledge, Brimstone Joe, Samantha Martin & Delta Sugar, All Night Long, Mike Zito, Dying Day, Grand Marquis, Bad Seed, Little Boys Blue, Got A Mind Of Your Own, The Lucky Losers, You Left It Behind, Too Slim and the Taildraggers, Stories To Tell, James Armstrong, Second Time Around, Reverend Freakchild, Soul Of A Man, Kid Ramos, Mashed Potatoes And Chili, Comstock Station, Whiskey In The Mornin’, Jeff Pitchell, Whiskey River, Mojomatics, Soy Baby Many Thanks To: We here at the Black-Eyed & Blues Show would like to thank all the PR and radio people that get us music including Frank Roszak, Rick Lusher ,Doug Deutsch Publicity Services,American Showplace Music, Alive Natural Sounds, Ruf Records, Vizztone Records,Blind Pig Records,Delta Groove Records, Electro-Groove Records,Betsie Brown, Blind Raccoon Records, BratGirl Media, Mark Pucci Media and all of the Blues Societies both in the U.S. and abroad. All of you help make this show as good as it is weekly. We are proud to play your artists.Thank you all very much!
I did my second episode featuring the Bean Squad. Make sure to come out to the show at Whiskey River this wednesday March 7th. We had a lot of fun talking about dirty things mostly. I found out quite a bit about lady parts. The end got pretty real. Please enjoy! Links below! https://soundcloud.com/jizzydank/fukdoodaywan --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/matt-villegas/support
Lone Star Beer, Whiskey River, and Pollution Of The Mind. Playlist and other information at dollarcountry.org
Playlist: Liz Mandeville, Reefer And A Glass Of Wine, Christine Ohlman & Rebel Montez, Jungle Twist, Jeff Pitchell, Whiskey River, Empty Hearts,Joyful Noise, Jon Gindick,Wishing Well, Jim Koeppel, Johnny’s In The Doghouse, Vaneese THomas, Peace And Goodwill, Reverend Shawn Amos, Santa Claus Is Gonna Make It Right, Mike Zito, Wasted Time, Tas Cru, Road To My Obsession, MIssissippi Heat, Cupid Bound, Matthew Skoller, 747, The Fremonts, My Back Scratcher, The Smoke Wagon Blues Band, Hoodoo Woman, Sunshine Nights, NY Scene, Jeff Chaz, I Ain’t Nothin’ Nice, The John Weeks Band, Devil In My House, Darrin Yarbrough, Can’t You See, Mitch Hayes, Look At You, Mitch Kashmar, Alcohol Blues, MIchael Hornbuckle, Baby Rock, Raphael Wressnig & Igor Prado, Suffering With The Blues, The Jimmys, You Can’t Hurt Me Anymore, Biscuit Miller, Shake It Like Jello, Jay Willie Blues Band, You’ll Lose A Good Thing, James Montgomery, I Don’t Want To Have A Heart, Delta Generators, Day That I Met You, Popa Chubby, Caffeine And Nicotine, Brian Charette, Late Night Tv, Mojomatics, Soy Baby
Playlist: Eliza Neals, Jekyll And A Hound, The Tearaways, I Don’t Know And I Don’t Care, DeLaTorre, Ruins, Jay Willie Blues Band, Nobody But You, Alexis P. Suter Band, Climbin’ On Up THe Mountain, Alexis P. Suter Band, Big Mama, Alexis P. Suter Band, Can’t Find A Reason, Alexis P. Suter Band, Another Place And Time, Reverend Freakchild, Once Upon A Time In A Place Called Right Now, The Hitman Blues Band, Hammer Down, Tweed Funk, Who Is This, Gus Spenos, Walkin’ With Mr. Lee, The Mighty Soul Drivers, Stronger Than You Know, Erin Harpe & The Delta Swingers, Future Blues, Christine Ohlman & Rebel Montez, Highway 61, Funky Dawgz Brass Band, Do Whatcha Wanna, Spiritual Rez, Baby’s Mama, Max Creek, You’re The Only One, Diana Rein, Wicked, Royal Southern Brotherhood, I’ve Seen Enough To Know, AG Weinberger, The Blues Had A Baby And They Named It Rock N’ Roll, Sammy Eubanks, Blues All Mornin’, Blowing Smoke Rhythm And Blues Band, Don’t Fight It, The Bluesbones, Saved By The Blues, Shaka & The Soulshakers, Mr. Levy’s Grave, Jeff Pitchell, Whiskey River, Brian Charette, Late Night Tv, Mojomatics, Soy Baby
Justin Allgaier and Jonathan Davis fill everyone in on JR Motorsports Fan Day, Charlotte race week and even make a bet to ride the bull at Whiskey River! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Playlist: Danny Pease & The Regulators, Blood Sweat and Beers, Jerron “Blind Boy” Paxton, Trying To Make One Hundred, James Harman, Bonetime, JC Smith, Jump For Joy, Golden Novak Band, Hands On, Jason Ricci, Down At The Juke, Damon Fowler, Tightrope, Eddie Shaw, Louisiana Blues, Sugar Ray & The Bluetones, Hungry But Happy, Big Mean Sound Machine, Whoa Gosh, Brandon Santini, You Ruined Poor Me, Spiritual Rez, Wake Up Boy, Rusty Wright, Corvette Sunday, Josh Garrett, Honey For My Queen, Albert Castiglia, Till I Fell In Love With You, John Ginty/Albert Castiglia, The Quirk, Roots Of Creation, That’s How Strong My Love Is, Shawn Holt & The Teardrops, You Done Me Wrong, Jeff Pitchell, Whiskey River, Brian Charette, Late Night Tv, Mojomatics, Soy Baby.
intro music is "Whiskey River" by Bent Not Broken. [check out his EP!] (http://hotvodkarecords.limitedrun.com/products/547398-bent-not-broken-homemade-ep)championship drinkertugger?shitty blur referencetop shelf root beernews article about naked twister -http://www.kgw.com/story/news/2015/04/15/georgia-mom-arrested-teen-sex- pot-party/25848869/what's that going to do to the girl?killa calls inhail mary's and jumping jacksmormon dry humpingstrange transition into helping kids through the experience of loss … Continue reading
This week, we're recording from Clearwave Studios in gorgeous Decatur, where you can smell the Meow Mix wafting through the air. We talk with The Whiskey River Kings about their upcoming album called Desperate Times, dropping on June 30th. This week's episode is brought to you by The Invisible City on WLRH 89.3 in North Alabama. Look for The Whiskey River Kings and The Valley Roots at Invisible City Fest at Lowe Mill in Huntsville this September!