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A Sydney-based Japanese football fan, Hiroki Fujiwara, travelled to the United States for the FIFA World Cup 2026 and watched Japan's match against the Netherlands. We spoke to him about the atmosphere and the ticketing experience. - シドニー在住の藤原弘樹さんは、前回カタール大会に続き、今回もFIFAワールドカップの開催国であるアメリカへ駆けつけ、日本代表対オランダ戦を観戦しました。試合の様子やチケット事情などについて聞きました。SBSの日本語放送は火木金の午後1時からSBS3で生放送!火木土の夜10時からはおやすみ前にSBS1で再放送が聞けます。SBS日本語放送ポッドキャストから過去のストーリーを聞くこともできます。無料でダウンロードできるSBS Audio Appもどうぞ。SBS 日本語放送のFacebookとInstagramもお忘れなく。
Turtlenecks suck.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Grow, cook, eat, arrange with Sarah Raven & Arthur Parkinson
This Christmas might feel a while away, but if there's one way to prepare right now for a more stunning and sustainable tree, it's with alliums.Sarah's love of alliums is well-documented on the podcast, but this week she's recalling some of the most show-stopping varieties with which to decorate this Christmas, and the joys that they'll bring as ‘colour baton-carriers' in spring.In this episode, discover:Which alliums are perfect for bridging the gap between tulips going over and sweet peas emergingSome extravagant, statement-making varieties like the remarkably tall ‘Summer Drummer' or sculptural shapes of ‘Magic'Tips for preparing your alliums to sustainably decorate your tree this ChristmasProducts mentioned:Allium hollandicum 'Purple Sensation'https://www.sarahraven.com/products/allium-hollandicum-purple-sensationAllium cristophiihttps://www.sarahraven.com/products/allium-cristophiiAllium nigrumhttps://www.sarahraven.com/products/allium-nigrumAllium stipitatum 'Summer Drummer'https://www.sarahraven.com/products/allium-stipitatum-summer-drummerAllium schubertii 'Magic'https://www.sarahraven.com/products/allium-schubertii-magicAllium jesdianum 'Purple Rain'https://www.sarahraven.com/products/allium-purple-rainSee our events: https://www.sarahraven.com/courses-eventsGet in touch: info@sarahraven.comShop on the Sarah Raven Website: https://www.sarahraven.com/Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sarahravensgarden/Follow Sarah: https://www.instagram.com/sarahravenperchhill/Order Sarah's latest books: https://www.sarahraven.com/gifts/gardening-books?sort=newest
Efforts to secure year-round nationwide sales of E15 ethanol fuel remain active in the U.S. Senate, offering renewed hope for corn growers seeking expanded demand for their crop. NAFB News ServiceSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The shelter season may end with the cold weather — but homelessness doesn't. On this episode of The Valley Today, host Janet Michael catches up with Robyn Miller, Executive Director of WATTS (Winchester Area Temporary Transitional Shelter), to talk about what the organization is doing right now in June — the year-round case management, the two transitional homes, the cooling center that currently has no home of its own, and the everyday work of helping someone get their birth certificate so they can get a driver's license, so they can get a job, so they can get a place to live. Robyn explains why the goal at WATTS is, paradoxically, to put WATTS out of business — and walks Janet through the patchwork of partner organizations that make that possible, from Winchester CCAP to Family Promise Winchester Area to the Concern Hotline to the Winchester Police Department's addiction recovery team. Plus: the lineup of summer and fall fundraisers that keep the lights on at a privately-funded nonprofit — Caring & Sharing at Greenwood Fire Hall, the Walt Cunningham Memorial Golf Tournament at Rock Harbor, and the wildly popular Cheesin' for a Reason on the Old Town Walking Mall in November. UPCOMING WATTS EVENTS & FUNDRAISERS Caring & Sharing — Friday, August 15, 2026 • Greenwood Fire Hall • An evening of music, food, and raffles celebrating WATTS volunteers and guests, with success stories told in their own voices. Walt Cunningham Memorial Golf Tournament — Thursday, October 2, 2026 • Rock Harbor Golf Course • Lunch by Billy Sous Named in memory of the man who got the United Methodist Church involved with WATTS. Cheesin' for a Reason — Friday, November 14, 2026 • Feltner lot at Boscawen and Loudoun Streets (Old Town Walking Mall, downtown Winchester) • Local restaurants compete with grilled cheese and tomato soup. Last year's winners: T.T. Walls and Water Street Kitchen. Over 1,000 participants in 2025. HOW TO HELP • Donate online at WATTS-homelessshelter.org • Become a Hero for WATTS — $10/month recurring (yes, you'll get free pancakes at Clem's Kitchen) • Volunteer at any of the fall fundraisers — sign-ups for Cheesin' for a Reason open in August • Sign up to serve meals during the Thanksgiving or Christmas shelter weeks • Donate or rent a building for the cooling/warming center — even nominal rent is welcome (creative arrangements have tax benefits) LINKS & RESOURCES • WATTS website: WATTS-homelessshelter.org • WATTS on Facebook and Instagram: search "Help WATTS" • Partner organizations mentioned: Winchester CCAP, Family Promise Winchester Area, Winchester Rescue Mission • Comprehensive local resource directory — Concern Hotline (the most accurate, up-to-date list) • Winchester Police Department Addiction Recovery Team • Community Paramedic THE VALLEY TODAY with Janet Michael — A decade of conversations. New podcast episodes drop weekdays at 11 AM. Catch the show on The River 95.3 and Fox Sports 1450 AM weekdays just after noon. Subscribe and listen at thevalleytodaypodcast.com — available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and wherever you get your podcasts. If you enjoy the show, please take a moment to leave a rating or review — it helps more listeners find us. Connect with us: Facebook — facebook.com/ValleyTodayFanPage Instagram — instagram.com/thevalleytoday
Happy Pride month, everybody! This week, we discuss our history with Pride, our current feelings on it, and tips for newbies – and we also recommend some of our favorite gay movies. Year-Round vs. One Month | Our Pride Feelings | Self-Expression | Body-Positivity | Queer History & Art | BloodSisters (1995) | Word is Out (1977) | Framing Agnes (2022) | P.S. Burn This Letter Please (2020) | Pride (2014) | The Fathers Project (2020) | The Birdcage (1996) | Brokeback Mountain (2005) | Portrait of a Lady on Fire (2019) | How to Survive a Plague (2012) | Heightened Scrutiny (2025) | Who's Allowed at Pride? | Gatekeeping | Cops & Corporations | The Actual Parade | Planning Your Pride | Outfits Credits:Music by PROTODOMEArtwork by Addison FinchBecome a patron to support the show and get access to our private Discord, monthly bonus episodes, and your name mentioned on the show.
What really happens once the shooting season comes to an end? In this episode we explore the work, planning and countryside management that continues long after the final day in the field.Guests include BASC's deputy director of shooting and operations, Terry Behan and Paul Childerley from Childerley Sporting, who discuss the realities of the off-season, from habitat conservation and shoot preparation, to deer management, sustainability and the growing interest in food provenance.This episode shines a light on the relentless work that keeps the countryside moving long after the shooting stops.
Jacki Marks, global head of trade brands at ALG Vacations (ALGV), talks with James Shillinglaw of Insider Travel Report about the evolution of Travel Advisor Appreciation Month, how ALGV is pairing strong consumer offers with advisor incentives to drive conversion, and the launch of the new Advisor Portal designed to help advisors make smarter business decisions and grow more efficiently. Marks also highlights ALGV's continued investment in advisor support through tools, education and community initiatives. For more information, visit www.algvacations.com. All our Insider Travel Report video interviews are archived and available on our Youtube channel (youtube.com/insidertravelreport), and as podcasts with the same title on: Spotify, Pandora, Stitcher, PlayerFM, Listen Notes, Podchaser, TuneIn + Alexa, Podbean, iHeartRadio, Google, Amazon Music/Audible, Deezer, Podcast Addict, and iTunes Apple Podcasts, which supports Overcast, Pocket Cast, Castro and Castbox.
Many row crop farmers are concerned about having access to an array of crop protection tools. EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin explains the shrinking backlog of approvals, how the agency will continue to engage with the Make America Healthy Again movement, and year-round E15. Plus, Mitchell Hora with Continuum Ag outlines the testimony he gave on the 45Z Clean Fuel Production Tax Credit and Megan Boutwell with Stillwater Associates discusses how state low carbon fuel standards are shifting demand for ag products.Want to receive Newsmakers in your inbox every week? Sign up! http://eepurl.com/hTgSAD
A bill to allow year-round sales of E15 passed the full House and now awaits a vote in the Senate. Nebraska Sen. Deb Fischer details the push for E15, as well as her farm bill priorities ahead of text being released in June. Plus, former Chief Ag Negotiator and current president and CEO of the National Milk Producers Federation Gregg Doud discusses his key takeaways from the bilateral meeting between President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping. Tammi Arender provides an update from the field on Reservoir Farms, a new ag tech innovation hub in California.Want to receive Newsmakers in your inbox every week? Sign up! http://eepurl.com/hTgSAD
Send us Fan MailIn this episode, Deb Hatley shares the story behind rebuilding the former Wolf Ridge into Hatley Pointe — from major infrastructure challenges and leadership lessons to a bigger vision centered on hospitality, community, and creating a boutique mountain experience that feels intentional from the moment guests arrive.We talk about first impressions of the mountain, the unexpected renovation challenges that led to a full rebuild, and how every detail of the guest journey is being reimagined from arrival to apres. Deb also shares how inspiration from places like Snowmass and European resorts helped shape a focus on service, atmosphere, and shorter lift lines, along with the harder moments — from timeline pressure and refunds to the bull wheel failure that tested her fortitude.At its core, this is a conversation about building trust, balancing growth with guest experience, and what it really takes to operate and evolve a ski resort in the Southeast. We also look ahead to what's next for Hatley Pointe as a true four-season destination, including lift-served mountain biking and expanded year-round access. If you care about mountain tourism, hospitality leadership, skiing and riding, or the future of outdoor recreation in the Blue Ridge, you'll get a lot from this one.Mike AndressHost, Exploration Local828-551-9065mike@explorationlocal.comPodcast WebsiteFacebookInstagram: explorationlocal
The National Corn Growers Association (NCGA) has achieved a significant milestone with the House's approval of legislation allowing year-round E15 fuel sales
A man reads about a murder in his morning paper over breakfast in his Piccadilly rooms. That should be the end of it. But something follows him from that reading — something that refuses to stay on the page. And when fate places him in the jury box at the murder trial itself, he begins to count his fellow jurymen, there there should be twelve, he counts thirteen...Dickens wrote this story with a title that is itself a warning. Whether you take that warning as a comment on the narrator, on the law, or on the nature of what follows, is a question the story leaves carefully unanswered. *"To Be Taken with a Grain of Salt"* was first published in the Christmas 1865 edition of *All the Year Round*, Dickens's own literary journal, as part of a collection entitled *Doctor Marigold's Prescriptions*. It was later republished under the titles *The Trial for Murder* and *The Thirteenth Man*.Charles Dickens (1812–1870) was born in Portsmouth and is widely regarded as the greatest English novelist of the Victorian era. He was also one of the finest writers of ghost stories in the language, and this story was considered the definitive English ghost story for decades, before M.R. James arrived to claim that title.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-classic-ghost-stories-podcast--7002956/support.*To buy my paperback books:* https://books.by/tony-walker-booksThe Classic Ghost Stories Newsletter — short essays on the genre, odd discoveries, and recommendations. Free, fortnightly. Subscribe: https://www.classicghost.com/#/portal To buy my ebooks and audiobooks: payhip.com/TheClassicGhostStoriesPodcastOr, if you'd just like to make a one-off gesture of thanks for my work https://buymeacoffee.com/10mn8sk *Intro and Outro Music by The Heartwood Institute*
It's Friday, May 15. Here are today's top stories around Central Indiana. Want to go deeper on the stories you hear on WFYI News Now? Visit wfyi.org and follow us on social media to get local news every day. WFYI News Now is hosted by Barb Anguiano and produced by Zach Bundy. Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts.
In this episode of the RKD Group: Chat podcast, we sit down with Kendra Mungra, Director of Communications at Toys for Tots. With a background in marketing, communications and entrepreneurship, Kendra brings a creative and deeply human-centered approach to donor engagement—especially when it comes to monthly giving and building sustainable support. As Toys for Tots approaches its 80th anniversary, Kendra is helping evolve public perception of the organization from a holiday charity into a year-round force for children in need.
Little Buffalo State Park is the place that kicked off my love for Pennsylvania's state parks. I've told this story many times, but I'll do it quickly here right now. In 2020, my wife Abby and I were looking for something to do after brunch. The world was beginning to open up during the COVID 19 pandemic and we didn't want to spend any more time cooped up in our house. So, we went for a drive through Perry County and happened upon Little Buffalo State Park. On this beautiful day we were treated to majestic scenery. The trees and mountains reflecting off Holman Lake. In a time of such uncertainty, it felt like heaven. Like – for a moment – we were the only ones being treated to this spectacular nature. My unexpected visit to Little Buffalo that afternoon would lead me onto my journey where I would run a mile in all 121 state parks in Pennsylvania in 2021. And after 224 days, the last park in that journey was Little Buffalo. It was only fitting. That #121In21 Challenge led me to volunteering for outdoor organizations, serving on boards and committees, speaking to groups, starting this podcast and advocating for public lands. It all started with Little Buffalo State Park. We'll be going deep into the park on this episode - from its historic buildings and hiking opportunities, to its yearly events and popular community pool. On this episode, I speak with Jim Eckert and Mindy Wilt. Jim is the manager and Mindy is the educator at Little Buffalo State Park. Be sure to support our 2026 sponsors:Keystone Trails AssociationPurple Lizard MapsPennsylvania Parks and Forests FoundationSisters' SunflowersDiscover Clarion CountyGo Laurel Highlands Support the showVisit our website to learn more about the podcast, to purchase merch and to find out about our incredible sponsors. Follow us on Instagram and Meta to stay connected. Hosting, production and editing: Christian AlexandersenMusic: Jon SauerGraphics: Matt Davis
You spent the money on herbs. You watched them grow. Now what? There's a whole season of flavor sitting in your garden, and most of it never makes it to your kitchen. This episode walks you through how to actually use what you grow — fresh, dried, frozen, and blended — from the first oregano harvest in spring all the way through cilantro in winter. Free Download: Herbs Quick Reference Chart A handy cheat sheet for growing and using your favorite kitchen herbs. http://journeywithjill.net/herbchart
This week on the Newberg Pod, Ricky Gervais rescues beagles and bears, Paul Hollywood allegedly goes 96 mph to save a cat, and Hayden Panettiere enters the conversation for reasons that somehow make sense by the end. We talk about the Kevin Hart roast, the least attractive hobby someone you liked can have, and whether mall Santas spend the entire offseason emotionally preparing for sticky children and panic sweating parents. We also debate whether anyone will ever actually use their doomsday bunker, the most useless consumer rewards systems in America, and play MFK with a drive in, a mall, and a cider mill. Plus rapid fire questions including favorite spectator sports, favorite cereals, favorite cereal killers, whether love at first sight only works if you never have to see the person again, and which famous serial killer would be the absolute worst person to get trapped in a car with for eight hours. All this and the usual chaos on the Newberg Pod. Please like and subscribe and follow us on youtube: https://youtu.be/_HcflGFjYE0
Watch Here : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F5G6lxmNrf0 Website: https://vigoroussteve.com/ Consultations: https://vigoroussteve.com/consultations/ eBooks: https://vigoroussteve.com/shop/ YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/user/VigorousSteve/ Workout Clips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWi2zZJwmQ6Mqg92FW2JbiA Instagram: https://instagram.com/vigoroussteve/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@vigoroussteve Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/VigorousSteve/ PodBean: https://vigoroussteve.podbean.com/ Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2wR0XWY00qLq9K7tlvJ000 Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/vigoroussteve
In this episode of The Kirk Miller Podcast, Kirk breaks down the 10 non-negotiable standards that the best Built to Last clients live by. This isn't about quick fixes, short-term diets, or relying on motivation. It's about building a lifestyle and identity that keeps you in shape year-round — regardless of how busy life gets. These are the standards most people ignore… but they're the ones that actually work. In this episode, Kirk covers: Why habits matter more than motivation Why training is a non-negotiable (even when you don't feel like it) How your environment shapes your results The importance of structured eating Why performance should come before aesthetics How emotional control impacts your consistency Why quick fixes always fail long-term How to stay on track when life gets chaotic Why sleep is one of the biggest performance drivers The mindset shift needed to stop settling for average This is what separates people who get in shape… from those who stay in shape. For more information on what was discussed in this episode head to https://www.builttolast.co/apply The Kirk Miller Podcast is the show for business leaders and peak performers to get into the best physical and mental shape of their lives and unleash from within confidence they never thought possible.
04/30 Hour 1: Jason Dropped The Ball In Fantasy - 1:00 Old Lady Called Out Cakes At Harris Teeter - 11:00 Should Year-Round School Be Considered - 32:00
From 04/30 Hour 2: The Sports Junkies debate if school should be year-round.
Joe's Premium Subscription: www.standardgrain.comGrain Markets and Other Stuff Links —Apple PodcastsSpotifyTikTokYouTubeFutures and options trading involves risk of loss and is not suitable for everyone.Farm bill votes are underway—amendments Wednesday night, final vote expected Thursday. The E15 fuel controversy nearly derailed it, but that plan's been dropped. Bipartisan support is building despite House Democrat leadership opposition, as farmers facing rising costs and bankruptcies need relief now.Senator Cindy Hyde-Smith is pushing to cut fertilizer costs with the Lowering Input Costs for American Farmers Act, targeting tariffs on phosphate imports from Morocco — which controls over 70% of global phosphate reserves. The American Farm Bureau and American Soybean Association are on board.Oil surged nearly 7% Wednesday to $106.88/barrel as Strait of Hormuz disruptions look increasingly long-term. Trump says the blockade holds until Iran agrees to a nuclear deal — and Tehran isn't blinking. Markets are starting to price in a real supply shock, not just geopolitical noise.Wheat futures pulled back slightly after hitting a near two-year high, settling at $6.53/bu on the July26 contract. Drought concerns across the Plains remain, and the forecasted rain is expected to miss the driest areas. Corn and soybeans both closed higher.Bunge raised its 2026 profit outlook after a strong Q1 beat—higher soybean oil prices, solid crush margins, and rising biofuel demand driven by new EPA mandates are all tailwinds. Trade tensions and supply chain risk remain the key unknowns.US ethanol production dipped to 1.01M bpd last week, down 3% week-over-week. Stocks fell to 25.88M barrels. Despite the drop, Corn Belt ethanol margins remain solidly positive at 15–40 cents.
An EMS previewAhead of their session at Experiential Marketing Summit 2026, this episode of Invision's Inside the Brand Experience, Invision's Rodrigo Espinosa, SVP, Integrated Campaigns, sat down with Sara Grauf, SVP of Experience Development at the San Francisco Giants, to talk about how one of the most iconic franchises in sports is redefining what it means to engage fans today.From her 25-year journey with the Giants, Sara shared how the organization has evolved from a transactional model, selling tickets and calling it a day, into a year-round, experience-driven brand. They explored how every touchpoint, from the moment fans arrive in the neighborhood to what they eat and share on social, is intentionally designed to build deeper connection.This isn't just about baseball. It's about designing for relationships, not transactions, and creating moments people want to come back to again and again.
Welcome to Inside D.C., where we break down how decisions in Washington shape the tools you use on your farm. This week, Brownfield's Carah Hart and Randy Russell, an ag lobbyist, talk about movement on a skinny farm bill, the push for year-round E15, rising fertilizer costs, and what potential farmer assistance could look like in the months ahead. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
American Institute of CPAs - Personal Financial Planning (PFP)
In this episode, Cary Sinnett sits down with Dr. Brianne Smith to explore how CPAs can turn tax work into fully integrated personal financial planning. Drawing on decades of experience leading both a CPA firm and an advisory practice, Brianne breaks down what really changes when you move beyond compliance and step into ongoing client relationships. They unpack the real barriers holding professionals back, how the PFS credential accelerates the shift, and why the future belongs to advisors who can connect tax and planning into one seamless client experience. Key answers you'll get: How can financial planning shift from an add-on to a core part of a CPA's value proposition? What is one of the pricing models that can reshape both client behavior and advisor relationships? What practical first steps could a CPA take to integrate planning without disrupting their existing practice? AICPA resources: Pathways to Practicing Personal Financial Planning Checklist: Building a PFP business Analysis of a Tax Return for Financial Planning Opportunities Guide to Investment Advisory Business Models This episode is brought to you by the AICPA's Personal Financial Planning Section, the premier provider of information, tools, advocacy, and guidance for professionals who specialize in providing tax, estate, retirement, risk management and investment planning advice. Also, by the CPA/PFS credential program, which allows CPAs to demonstrate competence and confidence in providing these services to their clients. Visit us online to join our community, gain access to valuable member-only benefits or learn about our PFP certificate program. Subscribe to the PFP Podcast channel at Libsyn to find all the latest episodes or search "AICPA Personal Financial Planning" on your favorite podcast app.
With Congress back in session following a two-week recess, the Renewable Fuels Association is renewing its push for legislation allowing year-round sales of E15. The group says the policy is critical as Americans face rising fuel prices and farmers navigate ongoing economic challenges. NAFB News ServiceSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this solo episode of The Association Insights Podcast powered by OnWrd & UpWrd, host Colleen Gallagher explores how leading associations are rethinking their annual meetings—not just as events, but as strategic opportunities to build visibility, credibility, and momentum that lasts well beyond the closing session.
Medical experts know that fresh vegetables play a very beneficial role in health but if you can't afford them, you're mostly out of luck. Fixing this situation is the latest passion of Mark Masselli, co-host of “Conversations on Health Care” and president, CEO, and founder of Moses/Weitzman Health System. In this special episode, co-host Margaret […] The post Why is a Health Innovator Growing Fresh Veggies Year-Round? Mark Masselli's Next Big Vision appeared first on Healthy Communities Online.
This is the 4PM All-Local update on Thursday, April 9.
Coach Tory and Coach Don preview episode 415, thank patrons, and highlight Nebraska hosting UCLA with over 8,000 fans as a possible true home-field regular-season attendance record, noting softball's growth. The city of the week is Bloomington, Indiana, and they promote Square Cuts training discs and sponsors EAS and Elite Sporting Goods. A listener reports Tennessee varsity games canceled due to a severe umpire shortage; they discuss poor treatment of officials and encouraging more people to umpire. In the lead-off segment, they debate year-round softball, risks of burnout and injury, and advocate balancing commitment with multi-sport participation. They explain the “Rule of Thirds” for great, average, and terrible days and emphasize performing through adversity using goals. The coaching tip stresses pitchers practicing fielding, overhand throwing, and situational awareness, including a two-ball drill. Tory also criticizes an overly small TV strike zone in college games and its effects on pitchers, offense, and record comparisons.Support the show
When your income is tied to client work, it naturally fluctuates. Some seasons feel full and expansive, while others feel slower and uncertain. Over time, that inconsistency can start to feel stressful, especially when you're trying to plan ahead, support your family, or create more ease in your day-to-day life. This is where passive income can make a meaningful difference. Passive income doesn't just add another revenue stream. It helps create a more stable, supported business overall.Learn More About The Showit Shop SystemHosted by Kelly Zugay of With Grace and Gold® — The Brand It, Build It Podcast, a chart-topping small business marketing podcast, equips you to build and grow your creative small business with purpose and strategy.Podcast Show Notes: https://withgraceandgold.com/category/podcast/With Grace and Gold on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/withgraceandgoldFree Resources from With Grace and Gold: https://www.withgraceandgold.com/freeHonored as Showit Designer of the Year, With Grace and Gold® has proudly served thousands of small businesses and creative founders worldwide through award-winning, elevated, purpose-driven brand and Showit web design since 2014. For custom brand design services, custom Showit web design services, and easy-to-customize Showit website templates for fine art photographers, event planners, wedding professionals, interior designers, and creatives, please visit With Grace and Gold: www.withgraceandgold.com
The renewable fuels industry got some good news about the new Renewable Volume Obligations. Chad Smith has more.
Kelly Canyon is introducing a new five-year plan to turn the ski resort into a year-round spot. Several events are happening this summer, with multiple projects beginning soon.
After seven years on the road, we've been in the right place at the right time and the wrong places at the worst possible times. Right now we're sitting in Flagstaff at 57 degrees, two days after leaving Yuma, where it was over 100 degrees. Same state. Same month. Completely different world. In this episode, we break down seasonal RV travel, sharing real stories behind what works and what doesn't, no matter what time of year you're hitting the road. In this episode: How to keep your RV cool when the heat wins The best places to be in spring and why the window closes fast Where we've spent our summers Why fall is our favorite season on the road, and where to go Where we winter and tips for keeping warm Full show notes and links: thefaiolas.com/167 Connect with us Leave us a voice message: thefaiolas.com/message Email: hi@thefaiolas.com
Should your son play baseball year round? MLB agent Matt Hannaford breaks down why scouts and college coaches actually WANT to see multi-sport athletes — and why the pressure to specialize at 10-12 years old is doing more harm than good. WHAT YOU'LL LEARN ✓ Why MLB scouts and college recruiting coordinators attend players' OTHER sports ✓ The real reason year-round baseball pressure exists (and who profits from it) ✓ At what age specializing actually makes sense — and why 10-12 is too early ✓ How a first-round MLB draft pick used soccer skills to become an elite shortstop ✓ The one question to ask your son before making any decision about sports ——— Year-round baseball has become the default for families with talented young players. Travel baseball tournaments run 12 months a year, travel ball coaches pressure families to commit to every event, and the fear of falling behind pushes parents to drop every other sport by age 10. But here's what 25 years as an MLB agent has taught Matt Hannaford: the players who make it to the highest levels are overwhelmingly multi-sport athletes. Scouts don't just evaluate your son's swing. They evaluate his athleticism, leadership, footwork, and competitive instincts — skills that come from playing football, basketball, soccer, and other sports during the off-season. Matt shares the story of Michael Garciaparra (sound familiar? He's Nomar's brother), a first-round pick by the Seattle Mariners — who played four sports in high school. The scout who drafted him credited his soccer background for the athleticism that made him a standout shortstop. This episode tackles the three forces pushing families toward early specialization: travel baseball organizations that demand year-round commitment, high school coaches who discourage second sports, and the rising MLB draft signing bonuses that make parents feel like every missed tournament is a missed opportunity. Matt's advice is clear: if your son is 10-15 years old and wants to play multiple sports, let him. The decision to specialize can wait until 16-18 when you actually have enough information to make it wisely. ——— ▶ Watch next: https://youtu.be/mheMuyG3IDg ▶ Full playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL5H4dTL0Gs4tsaF8gTNfIV_KiKbwntzjm ——— ABOUT THE HOST Matt Hannaford is a 25-year MLB agent who has navigated the college recruiting process, MLB Draft, and professional baseball landscape for hundreds of families. The Most Valuable Agent Podcast gives parents and players the insider knowledge they need to make smarter decisions about travel baseball, recruiting, and player development.
More work does not always mean better performance. Sometimes it is the reason progress stalls.Welcome to Oak Performance Radio, which explores what high-level performance actually demands. The show looks at training, preparation, and decision-making through the lens of real athletes, real coaches, and real environments on the field and beyond it.Episode HighlightsIn today's episode, Tommy Hansen of Perform 4 Life breaks down what balanced athletic development actually looks like in real training environments. He explains why year-round consistency matters more than short bursts of effort, how overloading one area can limit progress, and why many athletes plateau despite doing more work. We also addresses the confusion created by conflicting advice across coaches, therapists, and medical professionals, and why alignment across a support team is critical for long-term performance and health.Episode OutlineTommy Hansen's background and work with volleyball athletesChanges in high school athletics and rising injury ratesThe impact of social media and early specializationGaps in athletic development and the need for balanceThe 33/33/33 approach: skill, training, recoveryManaging workload across seasons and schedulesThe role of consistent training during in-season periodsImportance of rest, sleep, and nutritionChallenges with doctor's notes and restricted trainingStrength and conditioning misconceptions in volleyballThe downside of excessive private hitting lessonsStructuring efficient and purposeful practice sessionsControlled vs. non-controlled training environmentsConflicting advice across coaches, PTs, and doctorsThe need for better communication with parentsCoaches stepping outside their specializationBlending disciplines for better athlete outcomesEpisode Chapters00:00 Show intro & guest re-introduction01:52 How youth sports & athletes have changed04:35 Genetic freaks vs average athletes & showcase culture08:25 Skill vs athleticism and misused camp money11:44 Workload management & balancing court and training16:20 College vs club: why athletes often jump higher in college21:19 Annual planning: off-season, club, school-season training29:31 Consistency, novelty stimulus & avoiding burnout40:41 Time-wasting drills, private lessons & “more is better” myth53:41 Injuries, bad doctor notes & why immobilizing backfires1:05:00 Bridging coaching, PT, volleyball & serving the athlete's career1:14:00 Wrap-up, coaching responsibility & future conversationsAction TakenBegin planning a personal podcast concept and next stepsSchedule a follow-up conversation for a part three episodeConclusionProgress is not built by stacking more sessions or chasing every opportunity. It comes from understanding how each piece of training fits together. When skill work, strength training, and recovery are aligned, athletes move forward with less friction. Without that structure, even the hardest work can lead to stalled results or setbacks.CTAFollow the show and stay connected for more conversations on performance, training, and decision-making.Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/oakperformancelabInstagram: @oakperformanceConnect with Tommy Hansen@freestyle_jump_guyThank you for listening. Real progress comes from clear decisions and the discipline to stay consistent with them.
A first-hand review of Universal Horror Unleashed in Las Vegas, as Jim Hill and Eric Hersey explore Universal's bold attempt to bring Halloween Horror Nights to a permanent, year-round venue. Recording from the Luxor, the duo walks through their entire experience - from navigating Area 15 to stepping inside each house, scare zone, and live show. Eric takes on his very first full-scale Universal horror event, while Jim offers behind-the-scenes insight into how these scares are created and why they work so well. The result is a detailed, honest review of what may be the future of Universal's horror business. HIGHLIGHTS • Full review of Universal Horror Unleashed, including location, layout, and how it compares to traditional Halloween Horror Nights • Texas Chainsaw Massacre house breakdown and why it's a brutal first experience for newcomers • Scarecrow: The Reaping and how Universal balances original concepts with established horror IP • How “boo holes,” misdirection, and 90-second pulsing create a more intense, personal scare experience • Interactive elements including roaming characters, tarot readings, themed bars, and the Jack the Clown live show HOSTS • Jim Hill - IG: @JimHillMedia | X: @JimHillMedia | Website: JimHillMedia.com • Eric Hersey - IG: @erichersey | X: @erichersey | Website: strongmindedagency.com FOLLOW • Facebook: JimHillMediaNews • Instagram: JimHillMedia • TikTok: JimHillMedia SUPPORT Support the show and access bonus episodes and additional content at Patreon.com/JimHillMedia. PRODUCTION CREDITS Edited by Dave Grey Produced by Eric Hersey - Strong Minded Agency If you would like to sponsor a show on the Jim Hill Media Podcast Network, reach out today. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Books aren't “news” on their own anymore—and repeating “buy my book” is one of the fastest ways to burn out (and lose your audience's attention).In this episode, we break down a smarter, more sustainable approach: borrowed buzz—anchoring your marketing to moments people are already paying attention to. Think holidays, awareness months, seasonal shifts, and even quirky observances that give you a natural, timely reason to talk about your book again and again—without sounding repetitive or pushy.We unpack why this works, including the psychology behind seasonal buying behavior and emotional relevance, and how aligning your message with what's already on your audience's radar can dramatically improve engagement and conversion.Then we get tactical:How far in advance to plan for major holidays vs. quick-hit promotionsWhen to pitch podcasts, media, and local outlets for maximum tractionHow to build simple, repeatable campaigns around awareness months and niche observancesReal examples you can adapt immediately—from big cultural moments to offbeat hooks like Maple Syrup SaturdayWe also focus on execution—where most authors fall short. You'll learn how to align your social content, email marketing, and pitch angles around a single theme, where to incorporate seasonal messaging on your Amazon page (and where not to), and how to use AI to brainstorm ideas without losing strategy or control.Finally, we cover the biggest mistakes—like forcing irrelevant tie-ins or starting too late—and how to avoid them.If you want your marketing to feel more strategic, more consistent, and a lot less exhausting, this is the playbook.If you want your marketing to feel more fun, more strategic, and a lot less exhausting, hit play. Subscribe, share this with an author friend, and leave a review wherever you listen to the show.Send us your feedback!Help shape our 2026 content by taking our 30-second listener poll!
Inside Leon 1909: Fire, Flavor & Hospitality on New York's Shelter IslandJoin Claudia Saric and Spencer Michiel as they sit down with Valerie Minchin, first-time restaurateur, and Armand Joseph, Detroit-born Palestinian-American chef, to explore the story behind Leon 1909, New York's Shelter Island's must-visit destination restaurant.From flipping homes in the Hamptons to opening a live-fire culinary hotspot, Valerie shares the highs, lows, and unexpected lessons of launching a restaurant in a seasonal, island community. Armand gives an insider look at cooking over a 14-foot open hearth, sourcing local fish and ingredients, preserving seasonal flavors, and building a kitchen culture rooted in mentorship and empathy.Discover:The journey from a Capital One bank to a stunning restaurant space.How live-fire cooking shapes every dish at Leon 1909.Challenges of running a year-round restaurant in a seasonal town.Innovative staffing solutions, including J1 students and staff housing.The importance of empathy, mentorship, and leadership in the kitchen.Tips for aspiring chefs and restaurateurs looking to make their mark.Why Eastern Long Island is an underrated culinary region.Thoughts on industry trends, sustainable wages, and local sourcing.Whether you're dreaming of opening your own restaurant, love culinary stories, or just want a taste of Shelter Island's vibrant food scene, this episode is packed with insight, inspiration, and a behind-the-scenes look at Leon 1909.Timestamps:0:52 – Introduction to Leon 19091:01 – Meet Valerie Minchin & Armand Joseph2:00 – Valerie's journey from psychology to restaurateur3:17 – Transforming a former bank into a live-fire restaurant4:10 – Life and inspiration on Shelter Island5:18 – Honoring family legacy through the restaurant's name6:01 – Cooking over live fire: challenges and techniques8:10 – Using local, foraged, and preserved ingredients11:17 – Managing a seasonal business & staffing challenges15:27 – Building a family-like team and mentorship culture22:03 – Advice for young chefs and leadership lessons25:05 – Hard realities of owning a restaurant27:17 – Spotlight on underrated East End ingredients28:41 – Why you need to visit Leon 190929:08 – Industry trends that need to change⭐ Brought to you by Back of HouseYour most trusted resource for restaurant tech. Stop guessing and start making data-driven decisions for your business.Learn more at: https://backofhouse.io/⭐ Proudly Sponsored by:RestauRentThe no-fee booking platform helping restaurants and venues book private events.Try it risk-free (3 months free): https://bit.ly/soyouwanttorestaurentScience on CallOffering 2/47/365 restaurant tech support.Sign up at https://bit.ly/scienceoncall⭐ Connect with the PodcastFull Episodes: https://linktr.ee/soyouwanttorunarestaurantFollow Claudia: @claudia.saricFollow Spencer: @restaurantspenny⭐ Learn more about Leon 1909https://www.leon1909.com/about
Yahshua and Margarita are back after brief hiatus. This episode Margarita explains how Yahshua spends all year watching sports and how their schedules have to work around his sports watching.
Read Across Connecticut Week offers a great chance for educators to celebrate reading with their students—but how do we keep encouraging reading year round? In this episode, Simsbury library media specialist Jamie Sepa talks with CEA President Kate Dias and Vice President Joslyn DeLancey about the importance of school libraries and how to sustain that joy of reading in children—and adults—the other 51 weeks of the year. Did you celebrate Read Across Connecticut with your class? A contest is currently being held, open to all Connecticut public school classrooms, offering a chance to win one of four $500 classroom libraries. Submit photos of your class showing how they made reading a llama fun during Read Across Connecticut week now through March 20 for a chance to win. To enter visit readacrossct.org.
Joining us in this episode of Living Off Rentals is a mid-term rental investor and team member at Furnished Finder. With 12 mid-term rentals across multiple states, our guest for today has built a flexible portfolio designed to generate strong cash flow and offer long-term optionality. Katie Lyon shares how she discovered mid-term rentals while working in commercial real estate, why she believes they offer the perfect middle ground between long-term and short-term rentals, and how arbitrage helped her scale quickly without waiting on down payments. She also breaks down market selection, pricing strategies, screening best practices, and how to utilize platforms like Furnished Finder to reduce vacancies and maintain control over your bookings. Listen and enjoy! Key Takeaways: [00:00] Introducing Katie Lyon and her background [02:25] How Katie discovered mid-term rentals and why they stood out [04:28] Scaling to 12 properties in two and a half years [05:45] Rental arbitrage defined and how it works with mid-term rentals [06:57] What makes a good arbitrage deal [09:20] How Katie selects markets and identifies real demand drivers [14:43] Mid-term vs. short-term vs. long-term [19:28] Financing owned properties with DSCR loans and local banks [20:56] How Furnished Finder differs from Airbnb and Vrbo [23:15] Screening mid-term tenants is critical [24:28] How to reduce vacancy and fill calendar gaps [27:45] Listing on multiple platforms and staying in control [29:13] Pricing mid-term rentals using comps and amenities [30:05] Amenities that justify higher rent (pets, laundry, parking) [33:28] Real-world tenant stories and unique use cases [37:47] Markets where mid-term rentals may not work [40:17] Connect with Katie Lyon [42:43] Outro Guest Links: Website: https://www.furnishedfinder.com/ Podcast: https://www.furnishedfinder.com/Resources/podcast Show Links: Living Off Rentals YouTube Channel – youtube.com/c/LivingOffRentals Living Off Rentals YouTube Podcast Channel - youtube.com/c/LivingOffRentalsPodcast Living Off Rentals Facebook Group – facebook.com/groups/livingoffrentals Living Off Rentals Website – https://www.livingoffrentals.com/ Living Off Rentals Instagram – instagram.com/livingoffrentals Living Off Rentals TikTok – tiktok.com/@livingoffrentals
Listen and subscribe to Money Making Conversations on iHeartRadio, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, www.moneymakingconversations.com/subscribe/ or wherever you listen to podcasts. New Money Making Conversations episodes drop daily. I want to alert you, so you don’t miss out on expert analysis and insider perspectives from my guests who provide tips that can help you uplift the community, improve your financial planning, motivation, or advice on how to be a successful entrepreneur. Keep winning! Two-time Emmy and Three-time NAACP Image Award-winning, television Executive Producer Rushion McDonald interviewed Rhonda Spratt. Founder of Bella Luv, a Georgia‑based nonprofit (referred to in the transcript as Ghost Pink / Bella Luv) dedicated to year‑round breast cancer awareness, early detection advocacy, and compassionate support for women undergoing treatment. Inspired by her mother’s experience and eventual passing from metastatic breast cancer, Spratt explains her mission to move beyond October awareness campaigns and create continuous impact through education, community engagement, and personalized care boxes for women in active treatment. The conversation touches on her personal grief journey, her motivations, the work required to run a nonprofit, her practices for emotional balance, and her vision to normalize year‑round breast cancer education.
Listen and subscribe to Money Making Conversations on iHeartRadio, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, www.moneymakingconversations.com/subscribe/ or wherever you listen to podcasts. New Money Making Conversations episodes drop daily. I want to alert you, so you don’t miss out on expert analysis and insider perspectives from my guests who provide tips that can help you uplift the community, improve your financial planning, motivation, or advice on how to be a successful entrepreneur. Keep winning! Two-time Emmy and Three-time NAACP Image Award-winning, television Executive Producer Rushion McDonald interviewed Rhonda Spratt. Founder of Bella Luv, a Georgia‑based nonprofit (referred to in the transcript as Ghost Pink / Bella Luv) dedicated to year‑round breast cancer awareness, early detection advocacy, and compassionate support for women undergoing treatment. Inspired by her mother’s experience and eventual passing from metastatic breast cancer, Spratt explains her mission to move beyond October awareness campaigns and create continuous impact through education, community engagement, and personalized care boxes for women in active treatment. The conversation touches on her personal grief journey, her motivations, the work required to run a nonprofit, her practices for emotional balance, and her vision to normalize year‑round breast cancer education.
Taxes don't have to be the thing you avoid until April. In this episode of The Portrait System, Nikki sits down with Heather Leicy (tax prep educator + bookkeeper + working photographer) to break down photographer tax deductions, year-round tax prep, and the biggest “can I write this off?” mistakes.You'll learn:What to do monthly so you're not scrambling at tax timeA simple system for setting aside 20–30% for taxesCommon photographer deductions: education, software, gear, website costs, client giftsThe truth about meals/coffee write-offs (when it counts, when it doesn't)Home office deduction basics and “dedicated space” rulesWhy mileage tracking is one of the most missed deductions (and the app Heather recommends)A simple breakdown of LLC vs S-corp taxation and why it's a math decisionWhy sales tax rules vary so much by state (digital vs physical vs services)Important: This episode is for educational purposes only and is not tax, legal, or accounting advice. Tax laws vary by location and change over time. Always consult a qualified CPA/tax professional about your specific situation.Find HeatherInstagram: @heather.marie.LeicyCommunity: Conquer Community – theconquercommunity.comIf you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe, leave a review, and share it with a photographer friend who needs a tax reset.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Listen and Subscribe to Money Making Conversations on iHeartRadio, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts. New Money Making Conversations episodes drop daily. I want to alert you, so you don’t miss out on expert analysis and insider perspectives from my guests who provide tips that can help you uplift the community, improve your financial planning, motivation, or advice on how to be a successful entrepreneur. Keep winning! Two-time Emmy and Three-time NAACP Image Award-winning, television Executive Producer Rushion McDonald interviewed Rhonda Spratt. Founder of Bella Luv, a Georgia‑based nonprofit (referred to in the transcript as Ghost Pink / Bella Luv) dedicated to year‑round breast cancer awareness, early detection advocacy, and compassionate support for women undergoing treatment. Inspired by her mother’s experience and eventual passing from metastatic breast cancer, Spratt explains her mission to move beyond October awareness campaigns and create continuous impact through education, community engagement, and personalized care boxes for women in active treatment. The conversation touches on her personal grief journey, her motivations, the work required to run a nonprofit, her practices for emotional balance, and her vision to normalize year‑round breast cancer education.
Jane Herman, the founder of denim line The Only Jane, author of the popular Substack Jane on Jeans, and newly appointed WWW editor in residence, is a denim expert. In this episode, Who What Wear co-founder and Chief Content Officer Hillary Kerr sits down with Herman for a 2026 denim digest, where they discuss the five types of jeans you need for a complete wardrobe. Plus, she gives recommendations for specific styles to help you transition away from baggies and barrels, and shares simple styling hacks for altering your jeans at home.