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Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson, 30-year Army veteran, former Chief of Staff to Secretary Colin Powell, and Senior Fellow at the Eisenhower Media Network, discusses the deep structural rot he believes is consuming American democracy and its military empire. Drawing on his experience from Vietnam through the Iraq WMD debacle, Wilkerson argues that the United States has become a force as much for evil as for good, and that the current war against Iran represents the most reckless and dangerous expression of that trajectory yet. He traces the unravelling of legitimate statecraft from the post-Cold War squandering of peace dividends, through 9/11 and the institutionalisation of torture under George W. Bush, to what he describes as the Caligula-like presidency of Donald Trump—whom he regards as history's most brazen grifter and the architect of an illegal war of choice. Wilkerson raises urgent alarm about Pete Hegseth's injection of Christian Zionist ideology into the Pentagon's ranks, the militarisation of domestic law enforcement, the looming threat of cancelled midterm elections, and the very real spectre of a second American civil war. A searing, unflinching conversation with one of Washington's most candid and consequential insiders. Get full access to Savage Minds at savageminds.substack.com/subscribe
Col. (ret.) Lawrence Wilkerson held a position in government Secretary of State Colin Powell's Chief of Staff. He talks Iran, likelihood of ground troops, military draft in the United States, China's plan to replace the dollar, Venezuela, Cuba, and much more. PLEASE SUBSCRIBE LIKE AND SHARE THIS PODCAST!!! Watch Show Rumble- https://rumble.com/v774cza-trump-administration-is-ending-the-republic-col.-larry-wilkerson.html YouTube- https://youtu.be/DrT1AHF1AMk Follow Me X- https://x.com/CoffeeandaMike IG- https://www.instagram.com/coffeeandamike/ Facebook- https://www.facebook.com/CoffeeandaMike/ YouTube- https://www.youtube.com/@Coffeeandamike Rumble- https://rumble.com/search/all?q=coffee%20and%20a%20mike Substack- https://coffeeandamike.substack.com/ Apple Podcasts- https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/coffee-and-a-mike/id1436799008 Gab- https://gab.com/CoffeeandaMike Locals- https://coffeeandamike.locals.com/ Website- www.coffeeandamike.com Email- info@coffeeandamike.com Support My Work Venmo- https://www.venmo.com/u/coffeeandamike Paypal- https://www.paypal.com/biz/profile/Coffeeandamike Substack- https://coffeeandamike.substack.com/ Patreon- http://patreon.com/coffeeandamike Locals- https://coffeeandamike.locals.com/ Cash App- https://cash.app/$coffeeandamike Buy Me a Coffee- https://buymeacoffee.com/coffeeandamike Bitcoin- coffeeandamike@strike.me Mail Check or Money Order- Coffee and a Mike LLC P.O. Box 25383 Scottsdale, AZ 85255-9998 Sponsors Vaulted/Precious Metals- https://vaulted.blbvux.net/coffeeandamike McAlvany Precious Metals- https://mcalvany.com/coffeeandamike/
Mike Stephen learns about inspiring the next generation of civil engineers from Pinpoint Scholars Foundation founder & president Michael Bempah, replays his visit to The Levee bar in the Hermosa neighborhood, and discovers the Secret History of local saxman Ed Wilkerson Jr.
War rarely begins with a single decision; it grows from motives, misreads, and momentum. We sit down with Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson to map how a promised era of “no new wars” gave way to a high-stakes confrontation with Iran that could redraw the strategic landscape. He unpacks an unsettling mix of incentives—profit for well-connected investors, donor appeasement, and domestic distraction—that, layered atop alliance politics with Israel, pushed Washington onto an escalation ladder with few exit ramps. We walk through the hard realities of deterrence, from Netanyahu's saber-rattling and nuclear ambiguity to the very real prospect of great-power entanglement. If a nuclear-armed state strikes a non-nuclear Iran, global norms shatter and condemnation surges, while Russia and China, already tightening ties to Tehran, weigh their leverage. Wilkerson explains why even “limited” nuclear use becomes a civilization-scale risk once the United States, Russia, and China—each with thousands of advanced warheads—are forced into a confrontational posture. That alone should demand humility and restraint. Beyond headlines about missiles and speeches, the logistics are grim. Iran's layered strategy of cheap drones and rockets is designed to drain expensive Patriot and naval interceptors, opening windows for heavier strikes. Maritime chokepoints—Hormuz and Bab el-Mandeb—become economic pressure valves, where selective disruption could upend oil flows, food shipments, and global trade. Quiet diesel-electric submarines operating in the acoustically favorable North Arabian Sea complicate any escort mission and raise the chance of a sudden, costly loss. And talk of U.S. ground forces? A recipe for a grinding, urban-and-mountain war that repeats the most painful lessons of Iraq and Afghanistan. We close on the long tail: how mass casualties, perceived impunity, and widening fronts unify otherwise divided communities, supercharge extremist recruitment, and tempt desperate states toward nuclear proliferation. Power isn't just force; it's legitimacy, alliances, and foresight. If we want stability, we have to rebuild credibility with clear aims, disciplined strategy, and diplomacy that matches the stakes. If this conversation moved you, subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest question about de-escalation—we'll tackle it in a future show.
PRL 3-4-26 Ken Watlington, Brant Wilkerson, Rahjai Harris, Matt Stillwell, J-Bone check in from Wilmington by Pirate Radio
Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson — former Chief of Staff to Colin Powell at the State Department and Joint Chiefs — joins Paul Jay and gives his unfiltered assessment of the U.S. war on Iran. Wilkerson argues the conflict is unconstitutional, unwinnable, and strategically catastrophic. Topics include: Iran's military resilience and long-term strategy, Israel's nuclear threats, the depletion of U.S. and Israeli air defense munitions, China's push to replace the dollar with the renminbi, the collapse of American alliances worldwide, the threat to the 2026 midterm elections, and whether impeachment proceedings against Trump are inevitable.
Send Us A Message or Ask Us A Question? Spiritual Astrology, Hypnosis, and Self-Talk: Marvin on Purpose, Healing, and Authentic SelfHost Savia Rocks opens season seven of the Us People Podcast with a legacy-focused message about shedding cultural conditioning and reframing trauma, then interviews Marvin, a spiritual astrologer, coach, and author. Marvin shares growing up in Virginia Beach near the Edgar Cayce Foundation, early metaphysical influences, and decades of chart work, describing astrology as mapping soul purpose, past patterns, and future growth through energy and cycles. He explains how he uses charts to identify conflicts, then often combines this with hypnosis to work with the subconscious mind, protection responses, anxiety, and beliefs, including quantum hypnosis and past-life regression influences. Marvin discusses karmic patterns through the moon, ascendant, Pluto, and nodes, introduces his book "Soul Fusion Healing," and emphasizes self-talk as a major source of harm or strength. He provides websites and book locations, and the episode closes with thanks and a song excerpt.00:00 Legacy and Trauma01:10 Season Seven Welcome01:47 Meet Marvin02:34 Origins and Influences05:07 Identity and Purpose07:05 Spiritual Astrology Basics10:15 Reading Charts in Practice12:11 Cycles Venus and Mars14:39 Hypnosis and the Mind24:11 Quantum Healing Explained25:35 Karmic Patterns in Charts28:22 Karmic Chart Markers29:59 Why He Wrote The Book30:42 Ego Versus Soul Mind32:54 Healing Through Hypnosis34:13 Self Talk And Strength37:55 Beliefs And Relationships40:33 Clearing Misconceptions42:06 Asking Guides Out Loud44:33 Finding Marvin Online46:12 Podcast Farewell And Outro48:47 Closing Song Lyricshttps://www.linkedin.com/in/marvinwilkerson/https://www.facebook.com/BetterLifeHypnosis/https://www.instagram.com/betterlifehypnosis1/https://www.youtube.com/@MarvinWilkerson-m3yThank you so much Marvin for your energy that manifests beauty and harmony but most of all the gratitude of life - Savia Rocks Support the show
Hoosier hoops legends Kent Benson and Bobby Wilkerson are back on to celebrate the 50th anniversary of their fabled 1976 championship season under the one and only Coach Knight. Bobby and Kent reflect on being honored at Assembly Hall earlier this month with their teammates, what it has meant to be the last undefeated team in college basketball, and what it was like to watch this year's football team join them in eternal glory as undefeated national champions. And you simply can't miss hearing all about the fight that almost went down in their hotel lobby during their historic title run in '76!! All that and so much more from two of the greatest Hoosiers to ever don the candy stripes!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Stories we're covering this week:• Local Ballot Set for May City Council and School Board Races• Voters Will See Local Names on March 3rd State Primary Ballot• Mansfield Woman Pleads Guilty to Federal Child Exploitation Charges• Mansfield Man Held on $1 Million Bond in Homicide and Child Abduction Case• State Issues Emergency Order Against Local Crypto Firm• Legacy Grad Carries Her Talent to a National Spotlight• In Sports, baseball, basketball, and soccerIn the Features Section:• Angel Biasatti talks how your sleep posture could be the key to a great day in Methodist Mansfield News to Know• Brian Certain serves up a friendship drink for the multi-person group chat in this week's Cocktail of the WeekIn the talk segment, Steve concludes his in-studio talk with retired prosecuting attorney Denise Wilkerson. We are Mansfield's only source for news, talk and information. This is About Mansfield.
David Wilkerson's “Last Days” sermon is a sober warning drawn from Scripture that the final period before Christ's return will be marked not only by outward turmoil, but by deep spiritual decline, deception, and lukewarm faith within the church itself. Wilkerson emphasizes that the greatest danger is not wars or disasters, but believers drifting from holiness, becoming distracted by worldly pursuits, and losing their urgency for repentance and prayer. He calls Christians to remain spiritually awake, grounded in God's Word, and fully committed to Christ, stressing that the faithful remnant will endure by maintaining purity, discernment, and unwavering trust in God's promises as the world grows increasingly unstable.
Galen Clavio and Grace Ybarra are back with a midweek IU athletics update — and this one is all about Indiana men's basketball finding traction.They open with the Hoosiers' 92–74 win over Oregon, highlighted by another monster scoring night from Lamar Wilkerson and a huge efficiency game from Sam Alexis. The conversation then turns to what's changing under head coach Darian DeVries (including how he's adjusting Alexis' usage), why Indiana's offense is beginning to feel more sustainable, and the one looming concern: a defensive trendline that's drifting the wrong way even as the wins pile up.From there, it's a forward look at Illinois—matchup strengths/weaknesses, injury questions, and what Indiana needs to do to steal one on the road—before zooming out to bracketology and the Big Ten Tournament seeding mess (yes, including the dreaded 11 a.m. tips).
Stories we're covering this week:• Michele Gooch Announces Candidacy for MISD School Board• Mansfield Teen Sentenced in Florida School Swatting Case• We'll Talk About Movin' Downtown Dirt in A Moment With the Mayor• Mansfield Mission Center Breaks Ground on New Facility• State Historical Marker Approved for Mansfield Community Leader• Public Input Welcome at Upcoming Desegregation Meeting• Goodwill to Open Larger Mansfield Store in April• Visit Mansfield Lists the Best Places to Locally Propose Marriage• In Sports, North Texas SC Signs MLS SuperDraft PickIn the Features Section:• Angel Biasatti talks about the role protein plays in your daily diet in Methodist Mansfield News to Know• We will talk with the city's Director of Regulatory Compliance on this week's 40 Under 40• Brian Certain serves up a drink that he describes as committed, deep and layered in this week's Cocktail of the WeekIn the talk segment, Steve talks with retired prosecuting attorney Denise Wilkerson. We are Mansfield's only source for news, talk and information. This is About Mansfield.
Indiana demolished Oregon 92-74 behind Lamar Wilkerson's nuclear 41-point performance at Assembly Hall, moving to 17-8 overall and 8-6 in Big Ten play. After missing his first five shots and not scoring until seven minutes remained in the first half, Wilkerson erupted for 16 points to close the opening period and then added 25 in a second half where Indiana shot an absurd 81% from the field, finishing with a 1.8 points-per-possession output that erased any doubt about the final outcome.Andy Bottoms, Ryan Phillips, and Coach Bob Moats break down the offensive clinic and what it means moving forward:How Wilkerson became just the fifth Indiana player since George McGinnis to record multiple 40-point games in a season, now leading the Big Ten in conference scoring at 24.4 points per gameSam Alexis's continued emergence with another perfect shooting night (8-of-8) and dominant defensive performance against Nate Biddle, opening up the offense early when shots weren't fallingWhy Indiana's second-half offensive explosion (11-of-11 on two-pointers, missing only four total field goals) showcased the full potential of Darian DeVries's system against overmatched opponentsConor Enright's steady excellence as a floor general (eight assists, six rebounds, plus-22 in 36 minutes) proving he's far exceeded expectations as a Big 10 starting point guardThe defensive lapses in the second half that allowed 1.42 points per possession—something that could prove costly against Illinois's top-ranked offense in six daysNick Dorn's confidence-restoring second half after struggling while battling illness, hitting clutch threes and free throws when Indiana needed scoring balanceWhat this five-of-six stretch says about coaching development and veteran play compared to earlier season strugglesPlus, as always: the big moments you might have missed, stats that stood out, and our game ball and hustle award.This episode brought to you by the Back Home Network and Homefield Apparel.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
00:00 – 21:35 – Lamar Wilkerson drops 41 as IU routs Oregon, Ivica Zubac discusses coming to the Pacers, Bears reportedly have an offer from Portage for a fully-funded domed stadium, Quinn Buckner tells a story about Bob Knight after they won the championship in 1976 that resonates today 21:36 – 36:44- Tom Crean joins us to discuss seeing his name going into the rafters at Marquette and getting together with his former players like Dwyane Wade, Lamar Wilkerson’s night against Oregon, other college hoops thoughts, how wide open it is this season, Cody and Luke Zeller, his thoughts on Bob Knight getting a statue at Assembly Hall 36:45 – 47:34 - Pacers head coach Rick Carlisle joins us and discusses the season-ending ACL teal for Johnny Furphy, his words of encouragement to Furphy, the Zubac trade and how it came to be, why he thinks the center position is coming back, roster construction and the salary cap, Bennedict Mathurin, screens with Zubac going forwardSupport the show: https://1075thefan.com/the-wake-up-call-1075-the-fan/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tom Crean joins us to discuss seeing his name going into the rafters at Marquette and getting together with his former players like Dwyane Wade, Lamar Wilkerson’s night against Oregon, other college hoops thoughts, Cody and Luke Zeller, his thoughts on Bob Knight getting a statue at Assembly Hall & MORE! Support the show: https://1075thefan.com/the-wake-up-call-1075-the-fan/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
00:00 – 12:40 – The Hoosiers roll past Oregon in a night where they honor the 1976 championship team, Lamar Wilkerson drops 41 points, Darryn Peterson sits out as Kansas hands Arizona their first loss last night, Olympics last night, Johnny Furphy officially diagnosed with a torn ACL 12:41 – 21:34 – Morning Checkdown 21:35 – 43:02 – Lamar Wilkerson drops 41 as IU routs Oregon, Ivica Zubac discusses coming to the Pacers, Bears reportedly have an offer from Portage for a fully-funded domed stadium, Quinn Buckner tells a story about Bob Knight after they won the championship in 1976 that resonates today 43:03 – 1:09:06 – Colts thoughts: Should the Colts use the franchise tag on Alec Pierce or Daniel Jones, the guys debate what a fair contract for Pierce and Jones would be, Michael Pittman Jr. believes his future in Indy is cloudy heading into an uncertain off-season, Morning Checkdown 1:09:07 – 1:15:39 – Kevin and James discuss college hoops as we await Rick Carlisle calling in 1:15:40 – 1:28:03 – Can Purdue get back on track ahead of the NCAA Tournament?, why is Reggie Wayne being unfairly punished by the Pro Football Hall of Fame despite having HOF numbers? 1:28:04 – 1:51:00– Tom Crean joins us to discuss seeing his name going into the rafters at Marquette and getting together with his former players like Dwyane Wade, Lamar Wilkerson’s night against Oregon, other college hoops thoughts, Cody and Luke Zeller, his thoughts on Bob Knight getting a statue at Assembly Hall, Morning Checkdown 1:51:01 – 2:03:55 – Pacers head coach Rick Carlisle joins us and discusses the season-ending ACL teal for Johnny Furphy, his words of encouragement to Furphy, the Zubac trade and how it came to be, why he thinks the center position is coming back, roster construction and the salary cap, Bennedict Mathurin, screens with Zubac going forward 2:03:56 – 2:13:18 – Doesn’t sound like Ivica Zubac is playing for the Pacers soon, Siakam’s All-Star nod, cookie fightsSupport the show: https://1075thefan.com/the-wake-up-call-1075-the-fan/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Indiana survived a nail-biting overtime thriller against Wisconsin, winning 78-77 after blowing a 14-point first-half lead and trailing by four with under a minute left in regulation. Lamar Wilkerson, appearing to battle through injury late, scored Indiana's final 10 points of regulation including a clutch layup with under three seconds to force overtime, then became the only Hoosier to score in the extra period as Indiana improved to 16-8 overall and 7-6 in Big Ten play with a crucial victory over a tournament-caliber opponent.Andy Bottoms, Coach Brian Tonsoni (live from Assembly Hall), and Coach Bob Moats break down the gutsy win and questionable finish:How Sam Alexis dominated with 19 points on 9-of-10 shooting and five blocks, proving Indiana can win when the three-point shot isn't falling (just 5-of-22 from deep) by attacking inside for 44 paint pointsThe defensive game plan that held Wisconsin to 38% shooting and forced their offense into uncomfortable spots, including varied ball screen coverages tailored to different shootersWhy Indiana's late-game execution remains a glaring weakness—giving up an 11-point lead in the final four minutes with stagnant offense and defensive breakdowns before Wilkerson's heroicsConnor Enright's massive charge call in overtime when everyone was screaming for Indiana to foul, putting officials in position to make the game-deciding callThe controversial finish including the non-travel call on Alexis and the foul on Wilkerson's game-winner that sent Greg Gard into a meltdownTucker DeVries playing all 45 minutes doing everything but scoring in bunches, plus Josiah Miles's critical defensive minutes when Nick Dorn struggledWhat this win means for Indiana's tournament resume—picking up a quality home win over a team on the same seed line while showing the resilience to close out tight gamesPlus, as always: the big moments you might have missed, stats that stood out, and our game ball and hustle award.This episode brought to you by the Back Home Network and Homefield Apparel.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Marvin L. Wilkerson, CH. CI., CM.NLP Certified Hypnotist, Astro-Psychology, Master NLP “A Recipe for Healing” Amazon Author Page www.astromarv.com About Marvin Lee Wilkerson Marvin L. Wilkerson is a lifelong seeker for truth about life's psychologies and mysteries. As such Marvin's quest has taken him down many paths to become a true mystic. Each path that resonates with him is seriously examined and practiced. At this point in his life, Marvin has developed an expansive knowledge of several fields and modalities to discovering self-realization, each one reflecting and validating one another. These points of reference allow for an unusual depth of observation, analysis, direction, healing and teaching. His independent nature and extensive curiosity have led Marvin to become a Master Astrologer, Cosmo-psychologist, Hypnotherapist, Medical Hypnotism, Certified Hypnosis Instructor, Master Neuro-linguistic Programming (NLP), an expert on Native American Spiritually and Medicine Wheels, Shamanism, Planetary cycles and phases, Galactic Human Heritage, Metaphysics, Spirit of Tarot, with studies in Psycho Neuroscience and healing techniques. Since he first began to study the rewards of hypnotherapy in the 1980s, Marvin is likewise able to tie it in with his other life studies as the founder of Better Life Hypnosis; Marvin uses his certifications with the National Guild of Hypnotists, Inc. (NGH), to assist his clients further. He offers them a way to reach a mind-state that will serve their life purposes; to break destructive habits, evolve, and strengthen their direction to happiness. Marvin is a full time practitioner offering personal consultations, lectures, and workshops using the many tools to facilitate self-awareness including Astrology consultations, Spiritual counseling and has a full time practice in Hypnotherapy with his business Better Life Hypnosis. He is located in Nashville, Tennessee.
In this episode, we discuss Exodus 20:13–17, and Audrey Wilkerson shares about God's powerful redemption at work in her family's adoption story.
Lamentations 3 - Mark Wilkerson - Wednesday Evening, January 28, 2026 by First Baptist Church of Hammond
Brenda Darden Wilkerson's journey from pre-med student to computer science pioneer reveals how systemic inequities are created by human choice and can therefore be unmade by human action. When she discovered Chicago's third-largest school district had no computer science curriculum, she recognized this was not an educational gap but deliberate exclusion—a policy decision that robbed marginalized communities and the entire innovation ecosystem of untapped talent and perspective. Her founding of Computer Science for All, which inspired the Obama administration's national initiative, proved that incremental changes generate momentum for systemic transformation. At AnitaB.org, Wilkerson applies rigorous data-driven insights that challenge corporate inaction. Decades of research prove diverse teams reach profitability faster and innovate more effectively, yet companies ignore these facts because equity feels like surrendering power. From women's health innovations to AI bias, Wilkerson demonstrates that systemic inequities operate through power structures that determine whose needs warrant resources and attention, making the inclusion of diverse perspectives a practical necessity for innovation, not merely a moral imperative. Brenda Wilkerson's mission across education, technology, healthcare, and algorithmic justice reflects her conviction that meaningful change requires confronting biases and building coordinated efforts across institutions. To engage with her work and connect with a global community of women in technology driving systemic change, visit AnitaB.org or connect with Brenda directly on LinkedIn. Her persistent advocacy proves that equity cannot be achieved in isolation—it requires people willing to ask difficult questions and challenge assumptions in pursuit of systems that genuinely serve everyone. For the accessible version of the podcast, go to our Ziotag gallery.We're happy you're here! Like the pod?Support the podcast and receive discounts from our sponsors: https://yourbrandamplified.codeadx.me/Leave a rating and review on your favorite platformFollow @yourbrandamplified on the socialsTalk to my digital avatar Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Life creates many in-between moments. Sometimes those moments look like: staring at broken drywall and hanging lights in a thousand-square-foot former law office, wondering if you just made the biggest mistake of your life. In this inspiring episode of The Space In-Between, I sit down with my neighbor, gym owner, and fellow Teddy Roosevelt admirer, Graham Wilkerson, founder of Genesis Sports Performance and Athlete Lead Engine.Graham's story isn't just about building a successful fitness business—it's about grit, sacrifice, and the deep personal belief it takes to create something meaningful when the outcome is completely uncertain. From emptying his bank account as a 23-year-old history major with zero industry experience, to working 60-hour weeks while watching his friends get married and go on vacations, Graham shares the raw reality of entrepreneurship that most people don't talk about.We dive into the moment his now-wife Shelby paid for his St. Bernard's emergency surgery because he couldn't afford it—and how that became the wake-up call that changed everything. Graham opens up about nearly quitting, partnering with his former competitor Dale Speckman, surviving COVID, and how the Teddy Roosevelt quote "Nothing in the world is worth having or worth doing unless it means effort, pain, and difficulty" became so foundational to his journey that he had it tattooed on his chest.Whether you're building a business, navigating a career transition, or simply trying to find your footing during an uncertain season, this conversation offers powerful insights on staying the course when the future feels impossible to see.To accompany today's episode, Graham and I are extending a members-only promotion as a thank you to the current members of Genesis Gym. If you are a member of Genesis Gym and email the song title mentioned in a particularly emotional moment of the episode to hello@dininesig.com you will be entered to win a chance at a free month of gym membership.Also, if you'd like to continue the conversation, join Dinine live in Indianapolis, March 13th, for the b3 Lab: Be Brave, Be Bold, Believe.Key Takeaways:How embracing discomfort and uncertainty can become the foundation for lasting successThe importance of finding business partners who complement your strengths, even former competitorsWhy the "soft skills" of relationship-building matter more than technical expertise in service industriesHow becoming a parent can clarify your purpose and reshape your prioritiesThe concerning trend of youth athlete over-specialization and what parents can do about itResources:Dinine's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dinine-sig-917784252/Dinine's website: https://dininesig.com/Dinine's Instagram: @dininesigDinine's TikTok: @dinine.sigGenesis Sports Performance: https://genesissportsperformance.com/Graham Wilkerson's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/graham-wilkerson-33656451//indyb3.com join Dinine & friends for a day of self-discovery.
In 1973, David Wilkerson delivered what would become one of his most referenced and controversial messages, later known as The Vision. Speaking with pastoral urgency rather than sensationalism, Wilkerson warned that Western society was entering a period of moral collapse marked by financial instability, rising lawlessness, sexual confusion, and a church drifting toward compromise. He described economic shaking that would expose false security, alongside a culture increasingly hostile to biblical truth.Central to the sermon was Wilkerson's warning that judgment would begin in the house of God. He cautioned that many churches would abandon repentance, holiness, and the authority of Scripture in favor of comfort and popularity. Yet the message was not despair-driven. Wilkerson emphasized that God would preserve a remnant marked by humility, prayer, and obedience, and that revival would arise not through programs or politics but through brokenness and repentance.Wilkerson closed with hope rooted firmly in Christ, urging believers to stand unmoved, live cleanly, and trust God fully as the world around them grew darker. For listeners then and now, the sermon resonates less as prediction and more as diagnosis, a sober call to spiritual vigilance in an age of deception.Website: thefacthunter.comEmail: thefacthunter@mail.com
Bob Moats and Mike Wiemuth check in from opposite sides of the country to discuss IU's impending national championship matchup with Miami, dissect the Hoosiers' recent basketball struggles, and explore what reasonable expectations look like for both programs right now.The Rose Bowl That Wasn'tBob and Mike open with the bittersweet realization that their long-planned Back Home Network meetup this weekend could have been in Miami for the national championship game instead of Bloomington for an Iowa basketball matchup. They discuss IU's status as an 8.5-point favorite over Miami, the narrative that IU "hasn't been tested" despite beating Ohio State, Oregon, and Alabama by a combined margin that would make Sherman's March to the Sea look gentle, and why Miami fans might want to check out Homefield Apparel's vintage Hurricanes collection before Monday's game.Basketball's Reality CheckThe conversation shifts to IU basketball's brutal week—blowing a 16-point lead to Nebraska and getting boat-raced by Michigan State at Breslin. Bob and Mike break down what's actually happening beyond the disappointing results:The roster gaps they identified in the preseason are showing up exactly as predicted—too many elite shooters, not enough drivers or rim protectionLamar Wilkerson is performing at a legitimate All-American level (near 10 BPM), but when defenses key on him and Tucker DeVries, IU struggles to generate offense elsewhereConerway is the only true penetrator, and when teams neutralize him, the offense becomes predictable and easy to defendAgainst physically superior teams like Michigan State, IU's passing windows close dramatically and their carefully designed actions don't create the same looks they get in practiceThe Roster Construction StoryMike explains the brutal timeline Darian DeVries faced building this roster—hired in mid-April right as the portal was opening, with top guards already off the board before IU even had a full staff assembled. They discuss how next year's portal cycle can address many of these gaps, and why this season's limitations don't predict future struggles.Scheme and PsychologyBob dives into the X's and O's, noting IU is getting nearly 20% of their possessions off cuts and off-ball screens—historically high for DeVries—because they have to manufacture offense without dominant drivers or post players. When defenses adjust and take away these actions, IU doesn't have a clear "what's next" option. The mental side matters too: watching players tunnel-vision toward Wilkerson late in games or run actions mechanically rather than reading the defense shows a team still figuring out who they are.Looking AheadThey close by previewing Saturday's Iowa game as a better measuring stick than the Michigan State beatdown, discussing upcoming video breakdowns of IU's offensive schemes, and teasing a deep dive into Curt Cignetti's historical context as potentially IU's greatest athletic department hire ever—regardless of Monday's outcome in Miami.This episode brought to you by the Back Home Network and Homefield Apparel.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
On this episode of the podcast, Dr. Scott Jensen and his running mate Phouthaivanh Wilkerson join Amanda Head for a candid conversation about how the state of Minnesota got to where it is, and how they plan on fixing it.Dr. Jensen, a longtime family phyisician and native Minnesotan, breaks down the fiscal mismanagement, explosive government spending, and widespread fraud that have left taxpayers with little to show for billions in surplus dollars.Wilkerson, a nearly 30-year law enforcement veteran and lawful immigrant who fled Laos as a result of the Vietnam War, shares her powerful American story and explains how public safety, compassion, and the rule of law must coexist. Together, they discuss illegal immigration, ICE enforcement, strained relations between law enforcement and communities, generational shifts in politics, and the urgent need to restore accountability, affordability, and trust in Minnesota government.You can learn more about their campaign for Minnesota Governor and Lt. Governor by visiting the campaign website: drscottjensen.com. Dr. Jensen is also on Facebook, X and more which you can find by searching for his respective handle: @DrScottJensen.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
In today's God Sighting, Adrienne Wilkerson, Director of Communications for Episcopal Community Services, shares a brief reflection on a moment when God's presence became visible in an unexpected way. May this reflection open your eyes to the grace quietly unfolding around you.To learn more about the work of ECS, visit: https://www.ecscalifornia.org/Faith to Go is a ministry of The Episcopal Diocese of San Diego. Click here to learn more about EDSD's great work in our region and how you can support this ministry.Remember to get in contact with us!Email: faithtogo@edsd.orgInstagram: @faithtogo
Late Christian evangelist David Wilkerson's legacy lives on, as Teen Challenge continues to transform lives and help people break addictions.The Christian Post's Leonardo Blair joins Billy Hallowell to explain how Wilkerson ended up having an encounter that "would ultimately lead him, with the help of his younger brother, Don Wilkerson, to start a street ministry in 1958 targeting young drug addicts and gang members in New York City, which became Teen Challenge."Listen to the powerful story.
Col. Lawrence Wilkerson talks Russia, Ukraine, China, the collapse of Europe's economy and more. Then Junaid S Ahmad talks Pakistan, Imran Khan and why Zionism will fail. And then filmmakers Tami Gold and JT Takagi talk about Third World Newsreel and revolutionary film. For the full discussion, please join us on Patreon at - https://www.patreon.com/posts/patreon-full-jt-146035006 Lawrence Wilkerson is a retired US army colonel and former chief of staff to United States Secretary of State Colin Powell. He is an anti-war critic of U.S. foreign policy and a member of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity. Junaid S Ahmad teaches Law, Religion and Global Politics and is the Director of the Centre for the Study of Islam and Decolonization (CSID), Islamabad, Pakistan. He is a member of the International Movement for a Just World (JUST), the Movement for Liberation from Nakba (MLN) and Saving Humanity and Planet Earth (SHAPE). Tami Kashia Gold is a multidisciplinary artist, cultural worker and a professor at Hunter College CUNY. Her teaching focuses on documentary production and LGBTQ non-fiction studies. As a filmmaker, Tami has produced RFK In The Land Of Apartheid; Signed, Sealed and Delivered: Labor Struggle in the Post Office; The Last Hunger Strike: Ireland 1981; Another Brother, among others. Tami is a recipient of a Rockefeller, Guggenheim and Fulbright Fellowships; NY/NJ Video Arts Fellowships; AFI Independent Filmmakers Fellowship and Tribeca Audience Award; GLAAD Media Award; Urban Visionaries Award, Museum of Television and Radio; Excellence in the Arts Award from the Manhattan Borough President; Cine Golden Eagle Award;1st Place Athens International Film and Video Festival; HUGO Award; Gold Plaque Chicago International Film Festival; Director's Choice Award, Black Maria; Video Golden Apple Award; National Media Network Festival among others. JT Takagi (Orinne JT Takagi) is an award-winning independent filmmaker and sound recordist. Her films are primarily on Asian/Asian-American and immigrant issues and include BITTERSWEET SURVIVAL, THE #7 TRAIN, THE WOMEN OUTSIDE, and NORTH KOREA: BEYOND THE DMZ, which all aired on PBS. As a sound engineer, she has recorded for numerous public television and theatrical documentaries with Emmy and Cinema Audio Society nominations including the 2018 Oscar-nominated and Emmy-winning STRONG ISLAND by Yance Ford, BLACK PANTHERS: VANGUARD OF THE REVOLUTION, and TELL THEM WE ARE RISING by Stanley Nelson, and others. She also manages Third World Newsreel, a non-profit alternative media center, and serves on the boards of both community and national organizations working on peace and social justice. ***Please support The Katie Halper Show *** For bonus content, exclusive interviews, to support independent media & to help make this program possible, please join us on Patreon - https://www.patreon.com/thekatiehalpershow Get your Katie Halper Show Merch here! https://katiehalper.myspreadshop.com/all Follow Katie on Twitter: https://x.com/kthalps Follow Katie on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kthalps Follow Katie on TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@kthalps_
12/17/2025 – DawnChere Wilkerson –on walking through seasons of waiting
Colonel Lawrence (Larry) Wilkerson is a retired US Army Colonel who served in the military for 31 years and was the former chief of staff to General Colin Powell in his role as Secretary of State and earlier as a General Powell's special assistant when he served as the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. He is a Distinguished Adjunct Professor of Government and Public Policy at the College of William and Mary in Virginia. Col. Wilkerson was an outspoken critic of the Iraq War, the Bush and Cheney White House, and the Biden administration's fueling the current military engagements underway in Ukraine and Palestine at the expense of peaceful negotiations.
In Part Two, Col. Lawrence Wilkerson confronts the U.S. attacks on civilian boats in the Caribbean and Eastern Pacific—killings now broadcast openly on television—and says they violate not only international law but the military code he lived by as an Army officer. With Pete Hegseth installed as Secretary of War, Wilkerson argues that the United States is sliding into a new era of impunity, where the drug “war” becomes a pretext for murder, the laws that govern armed conflict are discarded, and the nation risks its own Constitution and a real war.
And ... Lamar Wilkerson just hit another 3-pointer.Indiana bounced back emphatically from back-to-back losses, demolishing Penn State 113-72 at Assembly Hall to improve to 8-2 on the season and 1-1 in Big Ten play. Lamar Wilkerson authored one of the greatest offensive performances in program history, scoring 44 points on just 24 minutes while breaking both the Assembly Hall single-game scoring record and IU's single-game three-pointer record with 10 triples.Andy, Ryan, and Jerod break down a dominant performance where Indiana's offense clicked on all cylinders and the Hoosiers looked like a completely different team than the one that struggled against Minnesota and Louisville.Wilkerson's historic shooting display and how he attacked at all three levels, not just from beyond the arc, while maintaining unselfish play with four assists.The fast start that set the tone, with Wilkerson hitting three straight threes after IU's first miss and Indiana never trailing again.Reed Bailey's strong response to coming off the bench, scoring 18 points on perfect shooting while cutting harder and playing more aggressively.Tayton Conerway's all-around excellence with 17 points and seven assists, plus his defensive intensity that helped force 14 Penn State turnovers.The stunning offensive efficiency numbers, including 68.9% shooting from the field, 54.8% from three, and 30 assists on 42 field goals.Nick Dorn's continued development showing he can score off the dribble, not just from three-point range, as he reached double figures for the third time in four games.Plus, looking ahead to Saturday's marquee matchup at Kentucky between two teams ranked in the top 21 of KenPom, plus reflections on Indiana football's historic Big Ten Championship victory over Ohio State.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
In Part One, Col. Lawrence Wilkerson explores how Trump's new National Security Strategy revives the Monroe Doctrine in a sweeping attempt to reassert U.S. dominance across the Americas. Pushing China out of Latin America, he argues, will not prevent a showdown—only shift its timing, as the United States simultaneously pours resources into Indo-Pacific military power. With Washington drawing back from Europe and targeting Venezuela and its neighbors under the convenient banner of the "war on drugs,” Wilkerson suggests that this doctrine risks undermining the Constitution and edging the country toward a real war. With host Barry Stevens.
✨ New Episode Drop!What if the words you wear could change how you feel about yourself?In this inspiring episode of LiveLifeBHappy/24/7 (UN-PLUGHD), host Jonva Ven sits down with Kimberly Wilkerson, founder of Token Clothing Company™, to explore how fashion can empower, heal, and ignite confidence from the inside out.From Miss Wyoming to speech-language pathologist to fashion entrepreneur, Kimberly's story is a testament to faith, courage, and the power of purposeful design.
Join Kosta and his guest: Jennifer Wilkerson, Putnam County Circuit Court Clerk.In this episode: Jennifer, you've spent more than twenty-five years working throughout our justice system: from law enforcement and non-profit advocacy, and now the Circuit Court Clerk's Office. When you think about all the experiences you've had with the justice system and our community, what does justice mean to you? A lot of people have heard or seen the title Circuit Court Clerk, but most of us don't truly understand the weight and complexity behind it. What is the real responsibility of your office, and what happens if the Clerk's Office doesn't function well? Your job isn't easy. Managing court dockets for seven courts and seven judges is no small task. In your opinion, what's the greatest determinant of whether our court system is running smoothly or not? Better Together with Kosta Yepifantsev is a product of Morgan Franklin Media and recorded in Cookeville, TN.This episode of Better Together with Kosta Yepifantsev is made possible by our partners at Miss Sallie's Market.Find out more about Miss Sallie's Market:https://www.misssallies.com
We live in a world that often feels grimdark—bleak news cycles, polarization, war, fear for the next generation, personal disappointments and unanswered prayers. In this Advent message, Pastor Bryan Wilkerson takes us from grimdark, hopepunk, and hopecore in pop culture to the quiet story of Zechariah and Elizabeth in Luke 1. Their long season of delayed dreams and unfulfilled prayer becomes a powerful window into: What hope is Why hope matters so much Where we ultimately find real hope Through their story, we discover: Hope sustains us – even when it's feeble. Hope rewards us – even when it's not what we expected. Hope inspires us – even when fulfillment is still in the distance. And ultimately, we learn that hope isn't mainly about what, when, or how… hope is about Who. “The hopes and fears of all the years are met in Thee tonight.” Wherever life feels dark or uncertain—personally or globally—this message invites you to bring those longings to Jesus and ask Him to “do something good with them,” in His way and His time. Big Idea Hope is the expectation that God will do something good — and that hope is anchored in the person of Jesus. Key Scriptures Luke 1:5–25, 57–79 Luke 1:79 Hebrews 11–12 (referenced) Romans 8 (implied; God working for good)
We can ask God anything because He is the answer! When we need guidance, clarity, and direction, we get to call upon our Wonderful Counselor! His wisdom leads us to peace and freedom. Join Laurie Crouch, Stephanie Ike Okafor, Dr. DeeDee Freeman, Robyn Wilkerson, and Jeannie Munsey for this special Christmas conversation on how to receive wisdom and direction from our All-Knowing, All-Powerful Savior. ------- If you missed last week's conversation, we encourage you to go back and listen to “The Power of ‘Thank You'” ------- Do you want more Better Together? We have 1100+ conversations available! Start watching now for free on the TBN+ app! -------- If you need prayer, join our community on Instagram // Facebook // YouTube // TikTok and let us know how we can pray for you! --------- Better Together is TBN's first daily original program made by women for women! We discuss faith, family, friends, and so much more—no topic is off-limits. Find out what happens when real friends get together for real conversations. --------- Antique Candle Co: Use “BETTERTOGETHER” to get a free Gift Set with your purchase of $40 or more now at antiquecandleco.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Perfection… it doesn't happen very often in sports. The '72 Dolphins are the only team to ever have a perfect season in the NFL. Mary Lou Retton nailed a perfect vault in the '84 Games to secure her Gold medal. Michael Jordan's Bulls were a perfect 6-0 in their trips to the NBA Finals. And in college basketball, it's been 50 years since a mens team went undefeated and won the National Championship. That team was the 1975-76 Indiana Hoosiers. Bobby Knight's team was a special group of players that sacrificed individual prowess for the good of the team. And it worked… to perfection. Kent Benson was a 2-time All-American at IU and on the cover of the December 1, 1975 issue of Sports Illustrated as the Hoosiers were the pre-season favorite to win it all. There would be no SI jinx on this team. They were too good. They were ready for the challenge each time they hit the floor thanks to an abundance of talent and a coach that had them prepared and focused like no other. And it was that preparation that separated this team from the others. Coach Knight said, “The key is not the will to win… everybody has that. It is the will to prepare to win that is important.” Led by Benson and Scott May and Quinn Buckner, the Hoosiers finished 32-0 that season… 33-0 if you ask Benson, who joins us on the Past Our Prime podcast and tells us that beating the defending Gold Medal winning Soviets should count in their final tally. But Benson is still the ultimate team centered center. When asked to come on our show to talk about that great team, he said yes… but he'd like Bobby Wilkerson, the 6'7 defensive specialist who would jump center for the Hoosiers to join him. And the two former #1 draft picks come together again on POP 50 years after they were a part of something that changed their lives for forever. The last team in college hoops to have a perfect season and if you ask Benson, probably the last one to ever do it. Benson and Wilkerson talk about that team and what made them such a close group. How beating UCLA in the season opener was just the beginning of this historic season and how their coach never took anything for granted and had them ready one game at a time. 32 games later… it all paid off. A perfect season. Bobby Wilkerson and Kent Benson on the Past Our Prime podcast. Listen and download a perfect show wherever you get your podcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A simple "thank you" holds the power to transform our lives, repair relationships, and bring peace to any storm. When we live with a sense of gratitude, our hearts grow to care for others in ways we never imagined. In this conversation, Laurie Crouch, Sheila Walsh, Toni Collier, Robyn Wilkerson, and Blynda Lane share the transformative power of a simple "thank you" in shaping relationships and experiencing joy in every season. ------- If you missed last week's conversation, we encourage you to go back and listen to “How Gratitude Unlocks Blessing.” ------- Do you want more Better Together? We have 1100+ conversations available! Start watching now for free on the TBN+ app! -------- If you need prayer, join our community on Instagram // Facebook // YouTube // TikTok and let us know how we can pray for you! --------- Better Together is TBN's first daily original program made by women for women! We discuss faith, family, friends, and so much more—no topic is off-limits. Find out what happens when real friends get together for real conversations. ----- Antique Candle Co: Use “BETTERTOGETHER” to get a free Gift Set with your purchase of $40 or more now at antiquecandleco.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Aaron Wilkerson, the founder of Data in the D, is back (previous episode). The conversation covers a wide range of topics including Aaron’s recent Data in the D conference, the intricacies of organizing such an event, and the challenges and opportunities surrounding AI. The discussion also touches on the dynamics of Detroit’s tech and data community, the importance of fostering connections within the industry, and insights into balancing modernization with business fundamentals. Listeners are also invited to monthly meetups for networking and professional growth.
Indiana proved it can hang with legitimate competition as the Hoosiers knocked off Marquette 100-77 in Chicago, methodically building a lead behind Tucker DeVries' unconscious first-half shooting (24 points on 8-12, 5-7 from three) before Lamar Wilkerson took over in the second half to fend off every Marquette run. Despite significant foul trouble that had multiple starters sitting with three or four fouls, IU never let the lead dip below 10 points and played their walk-ons in the final minute of a neutral-site game against a Big East opponent—a sentence nobody expected to write in November.Andy, Ryan, Coach Tonsoni, and Coach Moats break down how this victory against Shaka Smart's pressure defense validated everything we saw in the early games, examining the adjustments that kept IU in control despite 25 team fouls, and celebrating a performance that moved Indiana to 21st in KenPom.Tucker DeVries' masterclass setting the tone with 24 first-half points, including the heads-up pass to Sicily after slow-playing Marquette into thinking he'd pull it outLamar Wilkerson's second-half takeover with 15 points and multiple dagger threes that stopped every Marquette run cold when DeVries sat with foul troubleTrent Sisley stepping up huge in extended minutes (30 total, 16 in second half) with 11 second-half points including the crucial crosscourt pass to Wilkerson for a momentum-killing threeThe offensive versatility: ghost screens, guard-to-guard ball screens, backdoor cuts off face-guarding, and constant counters to everything Shaka Smart threw at them27 assists on 33 made field goals with only eight turnovers against havoc pressure, plus the starting three guards combining for 21 assists and just three turnoversManaging foul trouble masterfully—playing guys with 3-4 fouls extended minutes, backing off ball pressure strategically, and only having one disqualificationSam Alexis and Jasai Miles eating critical bench minutes when foul trouble hit, with Alexis going for 13 and 5 in 26 minutes as a plus-34And much more.On the mics: Andy Bottoms, Ryan Phillips, Brian Tonsoni, and Bob MoatsSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Paralympic Swimming Bronze Medalist Evan Wilkerson details his dramatic 2025 win in Singapore, battling E. coli, burnout, and learning the vital lesson of rest.
Dick Cheney, architect of the Iraq War, died on November 3rd. The next day, democratic socialist Zohran Mamdani won New York's mayoral race. Col. Lawrence Wilkerson, Colin Powell's former Chief of Staff, calls the timing symbolic of America's potential turning point. Speaking from inside the Bush administration, Wilkerson delivers a scathing account of how Cheney became "co-president," systematically lied about Iraqi WMDs, and led the nation into an illegal war. He explains why Powell's UN presentation was built on false intelligence, how the administration abandoned international law and authorized torture, and why Obama failed to hold anyone accountable. "We should have all been tried for war crimes," Wilkerson states. From the lies that killed a million Iraqis to complicity in Gaza's genocide, this is essential viewing on American empire and accountability.
The true story of America is that it was built on a caste system comparable to India's, says Pulitzer-prize-winning American journalist Isabel Wilkerson. The author argues that it's key to recognize the roots of the U.S. caste "structure" as she calls it, to understand why conflicts relating to race and class persist. Wilkerson delivered the 2025 Beatty Lecture at McGill University in Montreal.
Indiana proved we can compete with high-level opponents in their second exhibition, grinding out a thrilling 76-74 victory over 17th-ranked Baylor in a game that felt nothing like an exhibition. Tayton Conerway's clutch drive with 12 seconds left provided the game-winner as the Hoosiers overcame a 31-18 first-half deficit to show the mental toughness and fight that could define this season.The crew breaks down how this hard-fought win revealed both the ceiling and the limitations of this Indiana roster, discussing the adjustments that sparked the comeback, the players who stepped up in key moments, and what it all means heading into the regular season.First Half: Surviving the Athletic MismatchHow Baylor's length and athleticism dominated early and the key adjustments Indiana made to chip away at the 13-point deficitBob Moats on Indiana's aggressive ball pressure and passing lane disruption that forced turnovers even when getting beat off the dribbleThe backdoor cuts and defensive switches that kept IU competitive despite being physically overmatchedWhy the free-flowing offense from the Marian game struggled against elite size and speedSecond Half: Finding Ways to WinThree perimeter scorers carry the load: Wilkerson (12 second-half points), Conerway (13), and DeVries (9)The 20-of-21 free throw performance (95.2%) that became Indiana's path to victory when threes went cold (6-24, 25%)Jerod's excitement about the no-fouling-out trial run after Wilkerson picked up his fifth foul but stayed in the gameCoach Tonsoni's courtside observations on ball reversal concepts and how Indiana wore down Baylor with defensive intensityReality Checks and Encouraging SignsWhy Reed Bailey and Trent Sisley struggled against Baylor's athleticism and what matchup-dependent performances mean for this rosterOvercoming a staggering 44-25 rebounding deficit and 18-3 second-chance points disadvantage through hustle and executionTucker DeVries' all-around brilliance (18 points, 6 boards, 5 assists in 38 minutes) playing a step ahead mentallyThe mental toughness that allowed seven players to log heavy minutes and never quit despite physical limitationsOn the mics: Jerod Morris, Brian Tonsoni, Bob Moats, and Ryan PhillipsSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Michael Wilkerson on the Loss of Charlie Kirk on Discourse in America. Michael Wilkerson is the author of Puritans, Pilgrims, and Prophets, Why America Matters: The Case for a New Exceptionalism (2022) and Stormwall: Observations on America in Peril (2020). More at stormwall.com.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
What does it take to win an Olympic medal—while navigating the mental and emotional rollercoaster of the Games?On today's episode, Dr. Gervais sits down with Olympic silver medalists Brandie Wilkerson and Melissa Humana-Paredes, their legendary coach Marcio Sicoli, and moderator David Belasco to go behind the curtain of Team Canada's incredible 2024 beach volleyball run.This is more than a sports story, it's a masterclass in resilience, trust, and unlocking human potential under the world's brightest spotlight. From navigating emotional turbulence to breaking routines that held them back, this conversation reveals the uncommon mindset and team culture that fueled their breakthrough.In this conversation, you'll learn:How radical honesty built trust that carried them through pressureWhy shared values created unshakable team alignmentThe emotional reality of Olympic highs and lowsHow breaking routines unlocked their best performanceLessons in leadership, resilience, and culture from the Olympic stageThis rare inside look at Team Canada's silver medal journey will inspire you to rethink what's possible when purpose, honesty, and courage collide.-------------------------------------Links & ResourcesSubscribe to our Youtube Channel for more conversations at the intersection of high performance, leadership, and wellbeing: https://www.youtube.com/c/FindingMasteryGet exclusive discounts and support our amazing sponsors! Go to: https://findingmastery.com/sponsors/Subscribe to the Finding Mastery newsletter for weekly high performance insights: https://www.findingmastery.com/newsletter Download Dr. Mike's Morning Mindset Routine: findingmastery.com/morningmindset!Follow on YouTube, Instagram, LinkedIn, and XSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Welcome to the VOUS Church Podcast.In today's message, Pastor DawnCheré Wilkerson builds on our collection of talks, New Days, Same Demons, by asking a challenging question, “Are You Satisfied?” We're reminded to seek Jesus and not a sign, for we live by faith, not by sight.In case you missed it, recorded in the heart of Miami, FL, VOUS Worship's newest album, Dying To Be Different (Stripped), is out now! Listen wherever you stream music at http://vouschurch.com/worship.