20 Burst results for "Cheryl Miller"

"cheryl miller" Discussed on Revision Path

Revision Path

04:10 min | 5 months ago

"cheryl miller" Discussed on Revision Path

"Thank you. Thank you. We keep doing this. And I'm like, I'm honored to be number 500. I know for sure this will be unless we're doing this again, and I'm a hundred years old, and. I expect a long life, but I don't expect that children do me again, but maybe so we don't ever know, you know? We don't know yet. And so I'm just listening. I think there's some places where I'm yet to arrive. You know, God doesn't show it to you on. And he doesn't give you everything that you want. And when your gift, you get sent and you get placed. So each and every day, I pray, okay, leave me what you want me to do next. So I think there are other schools, I think there are other projects that there are other kids in scholars and I'm proud of everyone slice that I've touched. And I'm grateful for all my allies in this season who've helped me. And they helped me greatly. For everyone who's supported me over the years, clients and the stories are truthful. A special prayer that God would thank you, because I can't thank you better than when the guy can touch your life and say, oh, well, that thank you came from Cheryl Miller and she prays for you. So that's what you want. You want God to thank you for how your kindness and open door to me has blessed me. Once again, I want to thank you for always supporting me and have an interest in everything that I've been doing. And I've been thanking everybody and I just want to make sure that I shout out to my universities that have accepted me and brought me into my new work and of course, you know, we mentioned University of Texas, Austin designed with doreen Lorenzo and cape canalis and everybody in Austin there has been great to have me and my new scholarship. And it really kind of started rolling with Nikki Newman at Williams university in Rhode Island

"cheryl miller" Discussed on Revision Path

Revision Path

05:03 min | 5 months ago

"cheryl miller" Discussed on Revision Path

"The prompts for the course, you know, I'm a publication designer. So we're teaching the craft of publication design, but the books that are being produced are not modernists. Solutions. It's like, okay, so where do you come from? What are you bringing to the conversation of the book you're designing? And I mean, it's intriguing. And I've been co teacher. I also teach grad school there. And what I'm finding, I teach the cash on thesis graduate course. I'm a corporate person there. And I did that also at Leslie, people are asking me to teach cast on thesis. Well, who better knows how to write a thesis than Cheryl Miller? Right. So to be a Professor of thesis capstone books and I come and partner with those professors that are well oiled machines, the crypt that we go through, it's my training. You know, I'm like, I've got a renowned thesis. It's crazy. One thesis, and here we are. General milli can do it thesis. And so sure I'm millikan teacher. I had to do it thesis. I'm teaching senior and graduate cast on thesis. Research and development. Now, at Howard, which is exciting, exciting is that they wanted me to teach that class. And so I think it's two years and have a room with them two or three years. I'm not sure either two or three, whichever one. The first two have taught that basic class two semesters. And then they asked me, can you do a part two? I'm like, a part two, a part one. And then I won an award last year. I was so honored. I got adjunct award Felicia Rashad, one of her first awards as dean. For this course. I'm like here goes my work again. So the courses unique. And it's transformative. And so they asked me what I do part two. And so part two and Howard

"cheryl miller" Discussed on Revision Path

Revision Path

04:25 min | 5 months ago

"cheryl miller" Discussed on Revision Path

"So my lived experience, my lived history, I've been an eyewitness to a lot of things. I've known a lot of people, so writing that out in different forms, which is really my scholarship and revelation. I'm creating footnotes. And then I'm documenting those notes in places where if you're going to really going to do the work, you'll find your own millicent. You'll find Sharon Miller found this out, you're going to find Sharon Miller's research. And so I'll be lucky if I get maybe three books out. But making sure the ingredients for you all to write, that's been a big part of my work, which is I'm in a sacred project of collecting black graphic design history that's in collections with Stanford University and Cooper union, her blue ballin center. It's sacred work because I find deceased this black designers and the states, I'm working with families that know that their loved one had some crazy kind of career and it's all in a box in the attic or in the basement and they don't know what to do with that ephemeral. And usually I show up giving them a place to have their work preserved and cataloged. So with that, that's really important. Because we can't write a history if it's all oral tradition and lost. And dry rotting in somebody's attic or basement. And I'm meeting so many families, like I have a daughter, I won't call her name. I have one on meeting this afternoon. I worked with seldon Dix's daughter. I worked with Dorothy Hayes, niece. They all tell me these incredible stories. And trust these sacred boxes that I will take care of. And thus far, Stanford has received the concept of this without charge, that's what they do. They bring in collections. They preserve art. They preserve that, I think they have MLK papers. This is what they do. And some people say, well, why didn't you take it to an HBCU and blah, blah, blah, blah. Sister Stanford will preserve the work freely for us. And so I've given everyone an invitation, some people have wondered my motive of my motive is, okay? Well, you keep that stuff in your attic if you want. Or you have an opportunity for somebody to come back, pick it up. And you have a name and a catalog, annotation, you have your own numbers, you don't come underneath Cheryl Miller and it's not I'm not the umbrella. You have your own node. You have your own archive. You have your own collection. And it's being preserved. And so, you know, we started with, I don't know, somewhere between 40 and 60 invitations. And it is sincere and it's real. And I think the ones that are really moving me are the ones of the states where the designers did. And I can't tell you, like my conversation with Dorothy Hayes is nice. It's just thank God for you. I inherited everything. My aunt left me everything. And I haven't had a clue what to do with it.

"cheryl miller" Discussed on The Her Hoop Stats Podcast

The Her Hoop Stats Podcast

06:17 min | 5 months ago

"cheryl miller" Discussed on The Her Hoop Stats Podcast

"Don't have it. You don't have it. Or something like that. That's the difference. There's a big difference. And understand where you're getting at that angels was, it felt more personal and I think that's right. And it felt more personal. And I think it was, you know, not after the game, but it was game was pretty much over. Yeah. And so I get it. It feels a little bit more disrespectful to the person and so from that aspect, I get it at the same time. Again, as someone who's watching this, primarily for their entertainment, and for the love of the game, I love the game. But I just thought it was so entertaining. And I don't like, you know, it's not because I love angel or whatever. I don't like dangerous. And that's awesome. There's awesome for the sport. I need someone to not like, if not, it's just people I like. I hear you. You can't go crazy go. Say what I would say a month. Say it. We're an hour, we're an hour and four minutes into this podcast. Anyone who doesn't anyone disagrees with us is out. They're probably left already. Okay. Okay. For me, okay. I've tried to look at this in a lot of different lenses, okay? I've looked at it as a teammate. Of angel Reese and Caitlin Clark. Okay. I've looked at it as a coach. Both of them, right? And as a mom, both of them. So I'm looking at it all these different ways. And I love that there's been, I mean, I've heard it on the radio. Oh, leave angel Reese alone. Let her live and put her hand up at her face, Caitlin did it. And I'm like, Caitlin didn't do the same thing. Although the motion was the same. And then they clipped the motion, but they don't clip the context behind how Caitlyn did it as opposed to how angel did it. And to me, yes, it's entertaining. Yes, to me, I love fire in the belly. And I, you know, as a player, I thought I was way more animated and I think I've told you this before. I mean, I was fired up for my teammates. You know, more than for myself. But going back to watching Cheryl Miller, it was the same way for her. Same way for Magic Johnson the same way for a lot of players that I admired when I was growing up, but for me, I think, you know, the integrity of the game gets compromised when we're comparing players that way. And I didn't like the comparison of it. The fact that it happened, it happened, okay? But don't compare it and say, this is the same thing that happened and you're looking at angel in a different way, you're looking at Caitlyn. You're not, right? It both things happen. Because both players play with passion and I love that. I love that. But when you are saying that they did the same thing. And why is one worse than the other? It's not the same thing for me. Yeah. Conceptually, it's not the same thing. So don't do that, okay? And don't pit those women against each other. And I think Kate and Clark tried to water that down right after by saying, I love Ames or Reese. She's a great player. And that's all it is. And then it turned into, you know, I've seen these memes where they've developed wrestlers, you know, one is angel and one is Caitlin and angels actually punching Caitlin Clark in the ring. And I'm like, why are we doing that to each other? Women. Well, I know you said you like all the wrestling and stuff. But for me, I'm like, why are you pitting one against the other? Okay, let's not do that to our women, okay? Let's permit our women to walk in their passion, however they want to display it. And let them be who they are, right? If angel Reese is who she is, then let her be that, right? Caitlin Clark and who she is, let her be that. Let's not say one is better than the other because of how they did the facial expression thing. Stop doing that to us. Like, we're allowed to have passion. We're allowed to be who we are. Unapologetically. And stop trying to pit us against each other and say, oh, you have it one way for one player, and then the other player you on her back. And I'm like, stop doing that, okay? Let's just respect the game for what it is. Let's have integrity in those moments when our women are displaying their emotion, which we are completely allowed to do. Unapologetically, as Serena Williams, like as me, like, there are so many things that I could say about my personal attacks that I have received on the way I exude my passion. But I don't care. 'cause that's how it goes, right? I love the game. That's how I'm gonna do it. Angel loves the game, that's how she's gonna do it. Caitlin loves it, she's gonna do it this way. But let's not have them be competitors in their passion. Let's not do that because that, I think, is shredding the game away. And everyone's like, oh, it's so good for women's basketball. It's good that you're finally seeing that 10 million people are seeing it. I think they're more eyes on it, but katelyn Clark also said, hey, I mean, they're not the only two people to talk trash out of the 300 song teams. But you're trying to, they're trying to paint this picture so badly that they hate each other and that they're pitted against each other and this one did it and then she gets scrutinized and the other one does it and she's her way of showing passion is displayed in different ways. Just not the case. And so stop trying to make that the narrative. That's what I'm saying. That's all I'm saying. And crash your point. People said like, oh, Caitlin never gets criticized to us. Y'all can go right here on the her hoops that's YouTube channel. Go look at our shorts.

"cheryl miller" Discussed on The Her Hoop Stats Podcast

The Her Hoop Stats Podcast

07:28 min | 5 months ago

"cheryl miller" Discussed on The Her Hoop Stats Podcast

"Here on the her hoop stats podcast network. I am Christy winter, Scott, joined as always by my guy. Gave Abraham Gabe. Listen, a you know, we haven't we haven't connected because you went to your first WNBA draft up there in New York. I went to the final four. We were both at the final four. So it's been a busy, a couple of weeks here, but I don't even know where to start. To tell you the truth. Tell you the honest truth. There's so much to talk about, but you know, I guess we have to start with the final four and the championship game and the lingeries after that carried over about women's basketball 10 million viewers 10 million viewers there were 20,000 people in the arena. I'm just a roundup, okay? It was over 19,000 close to 20 20. 20,000 folks were up in that thing. And it was so ridiculously exciting. It was fire. The whole tournament was fire, but the final four was insanely good. I thought it was, I thought it was the. Well, I've only been to two. But the ones I've watched, it was my favorite, just 'cause the stadium was electric. I mean, I thought every game, really. I mean, Virginia tech and LSU, great, great crowd, then you get to Iowa, South Carolina, which was a legendary, just a greatest basketball game I've ever been to. And then you get to LSU, Iowa, which was another just amazing crowd, amazing environment. And just to showcase from basketball, I think a lot of people got to see what we've been telling them, right? Just sit down and watch it. I promise you, just sit down and watch it, you're gonna have a good time. And a lot of people did, and now you know, I have people coming up to me and talking to me, like, oh, they know I work on as well. So now I get to talk a lot. If people are always like, hey, who's Caitlin Clark, who's Angela Reese or all these people? They all have opinions about it, which I think is just phenomenal for the sport. It is. And I mean, you know, it was incredible numbers, incredible momentum for the sport of women's basketball, but also incredible momentum for women in general to show themselves on that stage and for people not only to talk about it, but respect it and sit and watch all the games, right? But 10 million. I also was blown away by all those numbers. And just the growth, the continued respect that women's basketball has earned, okay? Over time. And, you know, every March, having played in the final four eons ago, it was still exciting for me. I am a minute ago, but for me, and I haven't posted anything about this because some things I like to keep to myself, you know, people don't really believe that. The thing I post everything that happens to me, and I definitely don't. But I haven't posted this yet. Not even if I told you this, because I saw you in passing it a couple of times there, I don't even know if I told you this. But I ran into Cheryl Miller, Gabe, and I totally internally passed out, like, just because, you know, just what she did for women's basketball when she came through and her error and to have her in the house. She walked right past me. And lucky, I was turning and speaking to some of this way because she walked right past. And I would have missed her. Had I been engaged in what was going on, but for me, you know, I'm always. I'm always everywhere. With my surroundings. But I was talking and I looked up and I was like, no way and just everything from that moment for the next ten minutes was slow motion and surreal. And I was ten years old again. And I hadn't met her thousands of 10,000s. Maybe a matter of probably ten times in total. One time I heard when I was in high school, you know, and I met her then that was my first time, and I had pictures with her and everything was like fangirl. And then a couple of times when she was coaching in the WNBA with Phoenix, who's my girl, Monique amber is if you're watching us, my dog. She actually played for Cheryl Miller, which I was just like, oh my God, you get to be around her every day. Like, but anyway, just over the years, just as a broadcaster, she was actually a broadcaster. She was an analyst on the game that I played in in the final four, which kind of led me to be in broadcasting, seeing her sitting there and almost getting knocked in the head with the ball and the layup line because I was freaking out that she was sitting there. But anyway, I digress just for a moment, but that's what it's all about, you know? The growth. When I'm talking about the growth of women's basketball it's on the shoulders of people like Cheryl Miller, who engaged me full on and let me hug her and hold her and cry my eyes out in a happy joyful way. I was insane. And then she grabbed my arm and took me over to where her phone was so she could take a picture on her phone. And I was just like, I got Sheryl Muller's grabbing me by the freaking arm. But it was just like, it was like, we were the only people in the arena at that point. And we were 20,000 people never for me, I was ten years old, 12 years old, whatever. And having heard that, it was a moment I'll never forget. I will post about it, but I just haven't been able to gather my thoughts about what that truly meant. But I always said, if I ever see her again, I was going to tell her how impactful she was in my life. And it sounds like so major and dramatic. It is, though. But it really was, like, for me, and I'm at the point now, I'm telling you the flat out truth. I'm not going to lie to people. I'm not going to say things that I don't mean. And so just to bump into her that way and just turn and see her and just fall out internally. It was quite a moment, but for me to be able to tell her that, to her face, and I thought it before, but I just didn't have the gumption. Years ago, to be able to help her for my thoughts to tell her that. But I said, man, if I ever see her again, I'm telling her that. So if you ever have thoughts in that way about people who've impacted your life, tell them on the spot, okay? Because I'm so grateful to have had that moment in Dallas. So on top of all the basketball games and, you know, the interactions with the players and the coaches and seeing them in that moment and reflecting on what that moment was for me as a student athlete, you know, it was just an amazing, I'm still decompressing from it, to be honest. But to top everything off to see and reconnect and tell Cheryl Miller, thank you. Man, I'm so full. And I just can't even quantify. What that moment meant for me personally in general, but with Cheryl Miller just, I mean, just, I don't know, just high volume, high volume joy. That gives me a lot of joy to hear you tell it. I'm really happy you shared that. And, you know, I think there's definitely young women and men out there that are looking up to you. And they're going to have the same story. So it's like this, it's like a coaching tree, right? Cheryl Marla got you in. You probably got someone else in. They're going to get someone else in. Deja Kelly is a WNBA draft. That's all I can think about really was like, you know, this young woman at some point when she's done playing a basketball just a couple of very long time from now. She's going to be doing what Christie does. And she's going to be hopefully looking up to Christie in order to in order to learn how to do it and do it right. And I just think that was really cool. But that is like the best part of these

"cheryl miller" Discussed on The Dan Patrick Show

The Dan Patrick Show

05:56 min | 6 months ago

"cheryl miller" Discussed on The Dan Patrick Show

"But I'm not going to, I'm not going to think about angel Reese and Caitlin Clark. This was a win for college basketball for women's college basketball. It should be viewed that way. But what I spend that moment after I won a national title in the game, I would do that. That's what I would do. I'd make the gesture in the game to her. Then it's back and forth. And you're having fun, it's competitive. And look, Caitlin Clark does that all the time. We found it cute. But then angel Reese does it, and then we're going to vilify fire. And I'm not going to do that today. You talk it, you have to accept it. I would do that when I played. I mean, I wanted you to know, and then when you turned it on me, it's on me. I got to eat it. And that's what happened here. When you think about LSU or South Carolina, all year long, ESPN was talking about Caitlyn Clark. In Iowa and showing the games, with that probably think what do we get to do to get noticed here? South Carolina defending champs. What do we get? We didn't we're not getting noticed at all. We're being viewed as bouncers at a bar or whatever the descriptions were. So I understand the animosity here. And yes, does race play a role in this? It does. Certainly on social media. But for me, angel Reese is a great player. Although she didn't have a great game, her stats may look that way, she won because of her teammates. And that surprised me a little bit that she was that kind of in your face after the moment there. But this has been building up for a couple of years. These other programs are like, do we get noticed? For years, Connecticut being in the backyard of ESPN. Got all the coverage. Paige Becker's goes down, Caitlin Clark steps up, now all of a sudden you got a darling in college basketball. But don't lose sight of what we saw the last couple of games here. Or the entire tournament. Women's game is fun to watch. And the ratings were really good. Friday night's game had more people watching than the NBA All-Star Game. There, you know, college basketball and I go back to Nancy Lieberman, Cheryl Miller, Annie Donovan, Annie Meyers. I mean, a lot of great, great, great Cheryl swoopes. I mean, there's so many great players. And it's just the evolution there. And they are talking trash, but we're talking about them talking trash.

"cheryl miller" Discussed on The Dan Patrick Show

The Dan Patrick Show

06:03 min | 6 months ago

"cheryl miller" Discussed on The Dan Patrick Show

"And they have great they have a really, really talented team. And we're the better team. But the officials didn't let Iowa play the way I would normally does. And part of that is due to LSU's defense. But to make this about angel Reese, not what I spend the moments after winning a national title, pointing toward my ring finger to Caitlin Clark. Almost stalking her to say, hey, come on, I want you to react to this. Caitlin Clark never said anything about it. Even afterwards. He's like, hey, they were very, very tough. I'm sure she's going to be bothered by this. But she talks, she talks junk on the floor all the time. And banks gestures. And for people to just show up and say, oh my God, did you see what she did? Yeah. I mean, she was in her, she was in her bag as she said, hey, I'm in my moment here and I did that. They were upset because Caitlyn Clark did that to a South Carolina player. But I'm not going to, I'm not going to think about angel recent Caitlin Clark. This was a win for college basketball for women's college basketball and it should be viewed that way. But what I spend that moment after I won a national title. In the game I would do that. That's what I would do. I'd make the gesture in the game to her. Then it's back and forth. And you're having fun, it's competitive. And look, Caitlin Clark does that all the time. We found it cute. But then angel Reese does it, and then we're going to vilify. And I'm not going to do that today. You talk it, you have to accept it. I would do that when I played. I mean, I wanted you to know, and then when you turned it on me, it's on me. I got to eat it. And that's what happened here. When you think about LSU or South Carolina, all year long, ESPN was talking about Caitlyn Clark. In Iowa and showing the games, well, they're probably thinking, what do we get to do to get noticed here? South Carolina defending champs. What do we get? We didn't we're not getting noticed at all. We're being viewed as bouncers at a bar or whatever the descriptions were. So I understand the animosity here. And yes, does race play a role in this? It does. Certainly on social media. But for me, angel Reese is a great player. Although she didn't have a great game, her stats may look that way. She won because of her teammates. And that surprised me a little bit that she was that kind of in your face after the moment there. But this has been building up for a couple of years. These other programs are like, do we get noticed? For years, Connecticut being in the backyard of ESPN. Got all the coverage. Paige Becker's goes down, Caitlin Clark steps up. Now all of a sudden you got a darling in college basketball. But don't lose sight of what we saw the last couple of games here. Or the entire tournament, women's game is fun to watch. And the ratings were really good. Friday night's game had more people watching than the NBA All-Star Game. College basketball and I go back to Nancy Lieberman, Cheryl Miller, Annie Donovan, Annie Meyers. A lot of great, great, great Cheryl swoopes.

"cheryl miller" Discussed on Winsidr WNBA Show

Winsidr WNBA Show

06:34 min | 7 months ago

"cheryl miller" Discussed on Winsidr WNBA Show

"So I remember calling my mom and being like, what if I what if I tried to find an amazing illustrator and do this really cool retelling of the history and not just the history of women's basketball because that sounds boring but like pop culture and fashion and storytelling. And so from there, it kind of grew. Then I tried to find an illustrator, and then I was like, well, to take it to the next level, I need a true insider, because although I played basketball, I certainly wasn't on Team USA. I wasn't in the W so I knew I needed that last piece to take it from what could have been a B plus to truly insider. Let me just say, by the way, it was not a boring history, because you told so many things that I think some people knew some people didn't. But how did you map that out? And what was it like working with the goat, the greatest of all time? Well, Simone is like, she's a game time performer, as you know. It was like every moment where we were putting together the pitch for it. And Simone wasn't, I mean, that's Simone. Sophia wasn't yet attached to the book. She was like, our number one choice, but we had three illustrators. So when we were pitching the book, it was just me and Simone. And I we would get on zooms because this was kind of post COVID with these book publishers. And it was really fun to see Simone. You know, we had talked beforehand, but I didn't coach her. I didn't coach Simone on anything to say, but like the lights go on, the book publisher zooms and she just any question they threw at her. She was just so dynamic with it. Just like she would be if she was like driving for a pull up jumper. She was just like so swagger Y. And it was fun in the making of the book. I was like, I'm the writer of the book. I didn't expect Simone to be like coming at me with like, let's tell the story of 1912. More so what from the outset that we talked about and that she was great on was like making one making the book really specifically accurate, no matter what level of basketball you were at. So like something so minute as like us reimagining NBA JMW NBA jam. And me being able to go to Simone Augustus and say, I plan to give, let's say swin cash, a 70% rating on her rebounding. Is that accurate? I've never, like, I can watch swin cash, but I don't know what true WNBA players think about Sue bird's defense, you know? I don't know. There are media storylines that get carried away, where it's like super, it's the greatest that everything, and Simone could come back and be like, she is great, but maybe her defense isn't great. I'm not saying she said that. But it was like stuff like that that I or like naming the best international players. Or so many people would tell me in Simone included like Deanna Nolan was just the most underrated player in W history. So it was like having that added layer is what I went to Simone for again and again. Unbelievable. I love the Nancy Lieberman story when she goes on The Today Show. We talked about the confidence and the swagger basically just being like flat out like pay me more. Like I deserve more and here's why. I mean, literally like look at our look at us right now, 2023, all these women demanding more, pushing the envelope. You know, it's no longer accept the scraps that you're given and just be happy that you have a league to play in. That was such a cool story. The Nancy Lieberman won. Yeah, I mean, Nancy, you get Nancy Lieberman on the phone, and maybe the two of you have already, or maybe you will, but she understands a good story in storytelling and there's a reason that her game was so legendary because she kind of takes it off the court now too with the way she kind of explains how things were and what her role what her role was. It was just so helpful. Actually, across a number of stories, like even the origin story of the WNBA included Nancy Lieberman, because she had these great stories about conversations with David stern. So it was always really nice when you got somebody on the phone or zoom where a lot of what they were sharing with you could be used across the book. Like Cheryl Miller was like that for me because I could a lot of her storytelling was fantastic for the iconic University of Southern California teams of the 80s, but also the original Team USA's with pat summit. So finding voices like that was just so helpful in telling this history. I have to ask with the WNBA jams like who was the person who checked Simone because I know she's a very cool person, but like nobody. Who told her she should put her three point shooting that low on the sliders. 'cause that is wrong. That's wrong. Let me go to it. The sad thing is, is I probably did that without anybody to check it. I love it. I love it. No, I was like looking through this and just like laughing about is Maya hitting up Simone. Like, why'd you put my three pointers so low? You know, what about that shot in Indiana? Come on. So true. I mean, this book is amazing. Everyone's got to read it. And you were talking about the different stories that popped up from talking to different people like Nancy Lieberman and I'm so curious. Like some of the stories in the book are known, right? We've heard about the kiss. The details of the kiss are obviously make it more amazing. We all watch that live or replays of it. But to hear the backstory of it and just kind of from one of their perspectives, I think, was amazing. And there's tons of stories of like that where we've heard this story. But there's also tons of stories that we hadn't heard before. And I'm curious for you, somebody who grew up in the game. What was one story that you had never heard of before before you started working on this book? Well, I mean, I could go on and on about that because that was really, again, I'll bring up my mom because I don't know how many times in the last two years I called her or sent her a very long voice memo about something I had discovered. Because going into going into doing this book, I guess my idea was that I understood women's basketball history because I knew who Cheryl Miller and Myers, you know, Lucy. The fact that I knew Lucia Harris, I thought just meant that I was head and shoulders above anyone else in terms of understanding the history of women's basketball.

Simone Nancy Lieberman swin basketball WNBA Simone Augustus Deanna Nolan NBA Sue bird Sophia USA pat summit Cheryl Miller David stern Nancy University of Southern Califor Maya Indiana Lucia Harris
"cheryl miller" Discussed on Revision Path

Revision Path

05:34 min | 11 months ago

"cheryl miller" Discussed on Revision Path

"I just found her book, eventually did some more search and found a website reached out on a whim and was like, I'm Ari sherry. I'm doing this research. I'm putting this stuff together. You know, I'd love to talk to you about this kind of stuff. I mean, when I first encountered Cheryl, like I said, back in 2014, she had kind of put design behind her. Like, she had had her design work and stuff. She had, I wouldn't say retired, but she raised the family, became a theologian. Like she was living at a totally different life, and then since then, of course, you know, doing the presentation and then more people finding out about her work, like now she's like, now she's doctor Cheryl Miller and has given lectures across the country and doing all kind of amazed stuff. And it's still out here, still out here doing this stuff. Like, it's beautiful. It's beautiful. It's beautiful. And so, I mean, with provision pattern, I'm certainly fortunate to be able to share that story and bring more awareness to people in general about what black folks are doing in design, like everywhere. Like I just had this year, my first black designer in South America, which is not wanted to have for a long time. I was like, I'm going to hit every continent, couldn't hit Antarctica. But I talked to a black designer on every continent so far, you know, with 2022 this year with someone in South America. So yeah, I just want to keep going and keep telling more stories and getting more folks on here to tell their stories. So folks know that we did. We did exist to that end about like the whole black squares thing in 2020 that summer, I was looking up like a bunch of like old ebony and jet magazines and stuff. And like Google has, I think Google has the full archive, the full digital archive of ebony magazine.

Ari sherry Cheryl Miller Cheryl South America Antarctica Google ebony magazine
"cheryl miller" Discussed on Revision Path

Revision Path

07:53 min | 1 year ago

"cheryl miller" Discussed on Revision Path

"Educators who started a charter school in Harlem was talking about how he wants to get his degree at Howard and he learned so much and but like as soon as he got out, he'd be able to change and improve the entire education system within two years. Three years, if he was being lazy, but he had all the information necessary and he was going to get in there and make all those changes. I think that's where I was when I first started teaching. I was really enthusiastic about the education that I got. I felt super empowered about it. And I immediately felt like I'm going to jump in and make all of these changes. The longer I've been teaching, the more I've realized that it's never an immediate change, you can never change the flow of the river that you're in. But you can disrupt the water. And if you make these minor disruptions over time, you can make and you can make an immediate impact. Well, not immediate, but you can make this impact for that immediate space, which you might not be able to change the flow of the water that you're currently in. And I think that's something that I've had to kind of sit with. And I guess be more strategic about what impact can I have and what impact will I be? Will I be okay with having if I can't change the entire flow of the river itself? What do you think about kind of the state of design education now as it relates to diversity? Because I'd imagine what the years that you've put on this conference now, and even changing the different schools that maybe you have gathered a bit of a reputation. A good reputation, I mean, but you know, from your perspective, how do you see design education? I think design education is at this really interesting spot. I think their topics about the colonizing design practice and there were a lot of people that are doing a lot of work on plural reversal approaches, professors such as Leslie in the well. Continue to do amazing things and encourage me and a lot of the stuff that I do. I think there are a lot of folks like Cheryl Cheryl Miller and her collaborations with designers off of the continent of America and working with Afro based designers. And it's something to bring their aesthetic and their design language into the forefront, I think, is also something that's really interesting. From an institution standpoint and a university standpoint, I think a lot of the difficulty ends up being and people being threatened by the change or being uncertain how to how to handle the new wave of demands that are coming for design institutions and programs, especially as the student populist becomes browner from one generation to the next. I think in a lot of ways, it's an exciting time to be a student and it's an exciting time to be a professor and see universities make room for these things to happen. I would imagine a difficult time for those that have no idea what steps to take next. If I've never had to consider anything other than Swiss design or anything other than the Bauhaus. And now you're saying that there are all of these other visual languages or aesthetical approaches or cultures that I should include in my curriculum and give equal amounts of respect to this one thing that I've made my bread and butter over the last 30 to 40 years. I can imagine that there's a lot of anxiety. But still, it's necessary in anxiety is never a reason to be paralyzed by anything. Have you encountered any of that, like from other educators? Yeah. Yeah, all the time. It's usually not as direct as this makes me feel nervous or I don't necessarily know how I can stack up to attempting to do this, but a lot of times it may come off in passive aggressive terms of we've done it this way for so long. And maybe you should just learn how to do it the way that we've been doing it before you make recommendations for changes. Yeah, I don't think people ever come out and say that, hey, this makes me feel uncomfortable and insecure about approaching this particular subject matter. Can I work with you on this? It's usually this attempt to kind of stopping the clock or slowing down change. And that's not necessarily me saying Texas 8 thing. I think that's something that's happening in a lot of places within the industry. Yeah, I've had a few other design educators on the show, particularly last year that spoke to that as well, and also speaking to how I guess students are looking for more from their design curriculum, they're looking for more from their design educators in terms of how they see the world now and the work that they're doing. They want to know how can they be more, I guess involved in different causes and stuff like that. From your perspective, like have you seen a similar kind of change over the years from your students? Yeah, definitely. So in my graduate research, and I was against state university, there were a few interviews that I did where I asked students how they ended up choosing their majors. And there were a number of students that ended up choosing a major just because some of the course material was interesting to them. So there's one student in particular that group in a predominantly white neighborhood, but that student was black. So that student felt that there wasn't enough access that he had to finding a more information about people that looked like him within the city and neighborhood he lived in. So he ended up taking a few African American history courses and then that ended up becoming his major because he fell in love with the subject matter. I feel like there were a number of visual students that I've taught that have been a part of design programs both at Texas state and la Roche and try see when I talk there and also I can't stay when I was a graduate assistant. And there's this interest in exploring visual languages that relate to them culturally that they can see themselves and I think it's really amazing for them when they find that, but it does create a space for a space of pedagogical opportunities for professors if we're willing to bravely lean into it. One conversation I had with a few of my cohorts recently, especially considering that Texas and the university is within the Southwest of the nation. I mentioned, I think it would be a really good idea. It's a start doing research and creating course work on materials around the influence of San Marcos has a huge Mexican population as this Texas in general. But trying to do this course on the influence of Mexican and southern American aesthetics on the design language of the Southwest. I feel like you teach a course like that to some of some of our students that are looking for something different than Swiss and Bauhaus design or your essential perspectives on things. I think that's also another opportunity where you can then teach something that allows a student to have a greater appreciation for a culture outside of themselves or give a student an opportunity to further contextualize their own identity and have a great appreciation for some of the things that they were exposed to without having full knowledge of what the richness of these things were. Now, along with those kinds of opportunities, you've also managed to network with and meet a lot of other black design educators. Tell me how that's been. It's been amazing to be completely honest with you. I have been able since the first day of black design to meet a number of people and try to find ways to collaborate and or talk about new pedagogical approaches or projects that are being offered in classrooms. I met consistently with kalina sales, doctor Perry sweeper and doctor roji in our.

Cheryl Cheryl Miller Harlem browner Howard Texas Leslie America la Roche San Marcos Southwest kalina Perry sweeper
"cheryl miller" Discussed on Revision Path

Revision Path

07:37 min | 1 year ago

"cheryl miller" Discussed on Revision Path

"We can make that happen. All right, we've got time for one last question and this comes from Maya W, who asks, you always ask guests to where they see themselves in the next 5 years. Where do you want revision path to be in the next 5 years? So my overall aspiration for revision path is to grow this into becoming a multimedia network. The biggest reason I think is to grow beyond sort of being typecast, you know, I mentioned before about how revision path is often misnamed or mislabeled as all these other things that it's not. Being able to grow revision path into a network allows or would allow me more places to really say this is what this is about. So, when I'm envisioning what this kind of multimedia network is we still continue the podcast because that's kind of the main Keystone of all of this, right? So I'd want to keep that maybe expand out to do other types of shows. There are other shows I would love to do. I would love to bring on other hosts on this platform. You know, maybe acquire some shows, have like a revision path network. That would be great. I would love to do something like that. I would wanna have an editorial arm or revision path where we bring back the blog and have a regular staff of writers. We bring back recognize and make that a printed annual design anthology. And I would even lump 28 days of the web into that as well, like bring that under the whole editorial arm. And then branch out and do video as well. I sort of tease that a little bit about the possibility of doing some sort of a weekly live show, maybe on Twitch or something like that. But I also want to do like short documentaries or licensed short documentaries, licensed web series, things like that. Basically really build this out so revision path becomes kind of a staple in the black community that deals with design. When I started revision path, I'd say probably one of the things that I really wanted to do was make sure to kind of inform people about who black designers are, like, why are we doing this? What is the reasoning behind all of this? And part of this also even stems from research that Cheryl Miller, who AIGA medalist, we've had her on the show before, has talked about in her 1985 thesis around basically why is it that there are more black designers in the industry and part of that being that a lot of black parents don't really understand what design is or they think of it as a hobby and not an actual profession. And so one of my hopes with expanding revision path into being this multimedia network is to provide enough information so people know what design is, like, the black community knows this is what design is. These are all the different sorts of things that you can do. And it's as viable of an option to go into as if you were to go into medicine or to go into sports or to go into engineering or whatever. You just have more information. I mean, granted, there's been a lot of talk and initiatives and things around stem and arts kind of gets lost in that sometimes it's lumped in as steam, you know, as opposed to stem so the egg gets thrown in there, but I want revision path to be this multimedia network that really lets people know that creativity and the black design industry of course is something that we're known for. These are the types of people that are doing it. These are the positions that are available. These are career paths that you can take. Basically just provide more information. Like I've been very fortunate that I know that the show is even taught in some schools. So there's current designers that are learning about this show and learning about the people on this show to help inform them as designers when they get out there in the world and create new things. Imagine the kind of reach that revision path can have if we're able to do that through more ways than just this podcast. Podcasting is great, don't get me wrong, but I also realize that the platform is the barrier to getting out to more people because everyone's not going to listen to a podcast. They may watch a YouTube video, they may read an article or something like that. So allow revision path to space to grow into those, particular types of media would be great. So next 5 years I'd want to do that. And of course, be able to do revision path full time. Like right now, revision path is very much still my nights and weekends project 'cause I work a 9 to 5 job. I would love to do revision path full time. And have the sustainable revenue from patrons and from companies and from sponsorships to be able to really do this full time and really crank out a bunch of great stuff. Like right now it's still, it's not still just me 'cause I do have a small team, but to even be able to expand that team out to do more would be great. So next 5 years, I hope to be there. I am putting things in place to make that happen. I just brought on a sponsorship director to help with getting more funds in for the show and turn that revenue into these things that I want revision path to eventually become. So I've got a plan for it. I just have to try to work the plan and hopefully, within the next 5 years, we will be there. And you'll be there too. Big big thanks to everyone who wrote in for this special mail bag episode, but actually a lot of questions I didn't even get around to. So if you have a question that you want answered, you know, send an intimate, I may do another one of these episodes in the future. And of course, I have to thank our wonderful sponsor for this episode, brevity and wit. Revenue wit is a strategy and design firm committed to designing a more inclusive and equitable world. They accomplish this to graphic design, presentations, and workshops around IDEA, inclusion, diversity, equity, and accessibility. If you're curious to learn how to combine a passion for IDEA with design, check them out at brevity and wit dot com. Brevity and width, creative excellence without the grinds. Revision path is brought to you by lunch. A multidisciplinary creative studio in Atlanta, Georgia. This podcast is created hosted and produced by me, Mari's cherry, with engineering and editing by RJ basilio. Our intro voice-over is my music man Dre with intro and outro music by yellow speaker. The background music that you heard for this episode, this comes courtesy of chill hot music and I'll put a link to the full mix in the show notes. Special shout out to all the artists themselves that are on this mix, HM serve, aso, mommy, coco bona, mama, Misha, sleepy fish, you talk a hirosaka, Gmail's arbor, less people, Harris Cole, nomadic Michelle, sugira, phantom power, beside and alum Iverson. So what'd you think of the episode? Better yet, what do you think about the podcast overall? We'd love to hear from you, so please don't be a stranger, hit us up on Twitter or Instagram, just search for revision path. Of course, you can send us a message directly on our website, revision path dot com, or you can leave us a rating and a review on Apple podcasts, Amazon music, or Spotify. Or all three, you know, leave us 5 star ratings on all of those that would be wonderful. Let everyone you know know about the show because it really helps us grow and reach more people all around the world. As.

Cheryl Miller Maya RJ basilio YouTube Harris Cole Mari Atlanta Georgia Iverson Michelle Instagram Twitter Spotify Amazon Apple
"cheryl miller" Discussed on The Drill Down

The Drill Down

08:20 min | 2 years ago

"cheryl miller" Discussed on The Drill Down

"Anyway what is your next drill down. This like a zen desk. Zen desk as indus- could share trades under z in shares fell fourteen percent today and they fall in four percent the year so then desk yeah shares on fourteen percent today. They announced his as a merger idea with the company that owns survey monkey. It's called memento. Seemed kinda weird. And i saw the headlines crossing mike. They zen desk wanna buy a survey monkey. Then this is like like a live chat software business for customers of all kinds of kind of a you know when you when you're on some website said you wanna talk to us right now. You're probably using software. Even talk to him to send desk people. They survey monkey have to do with that well. The stock market looked at this and said the hell survey monkey have to do his end as they looked merger and said this doesn't make any sense for either company Buying survey monkey for four point. One billion dollars worth of stock so soon as he announced this thing then desk will own about seventy eight percent of the combined company. A moment of cheryl miller on twenty two percent but when they announce this deal the stock market sold off both companies. Saying this doesn't make any sense. We don't even know the annals coming out saying we don't even know how to analyze because it doesn't make any sense so one wonders. What the ceo of desk might say explaining this males. Von was asked about this from right here in his desk headquarters in san francisco right down the street from the ferry building were the drilled on podcast is being created this very moment and what he said was it. This is an alzheimer's what you hear. A miguel savan talk about what survey monkeys platform and momentous. In the economic survey monkey platform has to offer you. A momentum and connie survey monkey platform has issued a democracy date. It is the world's largest feedback pat phone. And like you like you. Can you may be able to build some similar technology. You can never get the experience you can never get the the dna you can never get. The shooter missing cross platform person of asian tastic brands. You know There is a level of experience that we will never be able to match in in such a product. And this is we will like. We've always been talk. Most in many different ways you know and then we have a of causing big or whatever and customers. But i think that like really putting these things together and really executing on this vision of providing additional kind of a different depth and a richness on your customer pages by overlapping. Kind of what they say and do with what they with. How they how they think and feel you know is incredibly powerful and we believe that that it will create a whole new dimension on understanding and a whole new ridge of of your customers. Yes a richer picture. A four point one billion dollar richer picture. Isaac if you thought you couldn't put a price tag on june the sekwa they have put a four zero one billion dollar price tag on cua. The price tag is now falling because of markets. Not really agreeing with the notions behind this weird. Merger are coming up an announcement. This mark. Six months of daily podcasts. And it's been a blast We're going to change the pace of things going forward where to see what weekly podcast look like for a few months And see what's with how the my change the show. how much change audience. how i advertisers. And and everybody else might react. We hope our listeners. Most of all enjoy the show Weekly with a little more. Maybe a time and consideration for every episode But we appreciate the time you spent with us. We want you to stay with us on this journey as we go Weekly for while here and see what that feels like and who better to kick off the last daily show For now then our gas. Gm wide technology. Ceo niccolo massey. A niccolo has brought Now six packs to market The the first five of done pretty well. Indeed it's one of the best spec underwriters in all of wall street With other differ. Approach an interesting story when the on continuing the drill down is brought to you. By brain trust global talent network the matches highly skilled technical freelancers with the world's was reputable brands brain. Trust is helped clients like bacon. America goldman sachs porsche under armor and more build agile teams fast at a fraction of the cost visit brain. Trust dot com. That's b. r. a. n. t. dot com to learn more about all right. Welcome back to the podcast as promised nickel damasio joins us Niccolo so many ways. I could introduce you Your affiliation to the most important i should mention is that you are infected investor in the business podcast network the parent company of this podcast That disclosure aside. How how shall i. You know you've got all these different specs that you have sponsored under the d. m. y. Umbrella very true we we just ipo. D- our sixth one And speaking of of of being an investor corey. I don't feel like i get any special treatment for it'll be on us. You know we. We schedule we scheduled once a quarter or two and isn't like got an hour and a half of airtime every morning or something like that so unfortunately we also questioned anyone else. Exactly get tougher questions exactly. Yeah so why should they care about your crappy little spec offerings. Because we're the number one back franchise in the world actually so if you look at post Close share price performance. The diy franchise overall has been not just the most consistent return. But it's actually been the best returner Our first hispanics are trading. It about twenty dollars needs if doubled the third ones Up about fifteen or twenty percent right now and the rest of them are trading not around ten not down and so believe it or not tomasz. An icing to be competing for the top table. Most weeks it really depends on how a stocks move in ours. Move that we are friends. We've met exactly one time. I think at fell samba's house for a phil. Hellmuth book party launch dropping like rain longtime ago. There's a long time ago though. Come with polly petia an early facebook employee and a sponsor of minnie's banks including some that have virtually nothing. You know virgin maybe virgin galactic. Maybe the the biggest his offerings. And i think that's right. And there are a number of other performers featuring in the league tables but all of them have been much less consistent than now than he and i have been so the gore's brothers have done more facts Lecture mahthir i but they've been all over the place there's been a few other. Spellings has been quite volatile so Believe it or not corey even though the you know some people say. The market's gotten difficult. It has not gotten difficult if you're in the top five or top ten so are are six. Ipo just a few weeks ago was actually the second most oversubscribed subscribed deal idealize ever done was despite the fact that you know. It's been a non trivial summer for for some teams. So there's there's a flight to quality is underway is kind of the theme. I think that everyone should take away from this works. Just sorta like the early days of venture capital and private equity this going to be in carlos blackstone sequoias get built here W plenty of people that try and plan that fail but the the top five people are gonna do do quality deals and do equality job the ecosystem and decline particular particularly focused on being long-term greedy. So we're very focused on doing the right thing for all. The stakeholders are deals from the ipo to the pipe to of course the company's institutional investors in retail and deal after deal. We were focused on making sure that everyone is good experience with us.

alzheimer's miguel savan cheryl miller Ceo niccolo massey goldman sachs porsche nickel damasio Von niccolo mike san francisco Isaac Merger corey polly petia
"cheryl miller" Discussed on Revision Path

Revision Path

06:34 min | 2 years ago

"cheryl miller" Discussed on Revision Path

"That leverage within the industry. Yeah and i have to say. I mean i'm i'm pretty sure like in terms of those conversations that you mentioned the taking place since the sixties that's kind of where i think the genesis of it for design has also come from. I'd be remiss. If i didn't mention that. I feel like cheryl miller and many other luminaries it israel brawley beyond that but certainly i think these conversations have originated from a similar place because of course advertising was really well known back then and like even if you think about design as we look at it now. It grew out of that creative field so the kind of makes sense. They're switching gears. We spent a lot of time talking about what you're doing now with one hundred roses. Your adobe max talk. I see from looking at your instagram. That you're a huge marvel fan. So i wanna get the kennedy thacker origin story. Talk to me about where you're up. Yeah man so. I grew up in washington d. C. in maryland. Kinda like the dmv area you know dmv. You know maryland dc virginia. That's why i grew up. That's why i kinda before a move into new york senior year of high school. Even though i still finished my senior year of high school mother-in-law moved to new york so like finished high school and then kind of when college came when lincoln university came into the playoffs. Already living in new york. So i've been living in new york literally now more than half my life to be honest with you so that's kind of like where i up you know so days and nights d. the dmv. And then you like early adult years you know just been here in new york on percents so that's kind like my origin story in regards to just getting into the industry. I'll always say my story is nothing like fabulous like i don't have like these great stores to be like. Oh well you know. I was in may or olives and marcus graham project ours in the growth initiative or whatever the case may be like. that's not how i got into advertising. I would say my first couple years after college. I worked in the hospitality. Industry like conference centers and hotels and things of that nature doing a lot of technology work of the nature like sound systems. Projectors lighting audio things of that nature so like eight audiovisual technology. Whatever you wanna call it. But that's actually. What landed me into advertising as a freelancer doing that work. I landed into ogilvy. And the first day i was in the i didn't even know what all really was until i was like looking at the walls of the old ogilvy office and seeing like these different ads like the superman american express ads and things of that nature house like do they make commercials here and sure enough. They did and spend a little bit of time ogilby but then. While i was at olivia i got a call from j. At least the agency formerly known as j. Wt at the time asked me. If i was interested in job and i was like i don't even know what j. wti so. I asked one of the people at ob as this jay wbz. They're like oh it's just like here said they're a little bit older. I was like oh cool. went to j. Wbz on like a lunch break or whatever knocked out. That interview went for another interview. And i had the job and i spent thirteen. Years edgy. w. t. And out say twenty. Eleven is when i actually started like the dna. Work that i've been doing. And then i kinda left there on a high note doing the dna work but still doing the technical work as well so the technical work was always like the stuff that paid the bills but the dna work was something that i just didn't cause passionate about it so luckily had a few resources. That kinda let me do the i work and even when i was at ut in particular i created a program called the young commodores which is very similar to the growth initiative except it was in person it was definitely not over fifty young people from around the country. It was actually the first high-school college mashed up of multicultural. Students that learned about the business and worked on real life client so i created the young commodores and ran that for about three years and then at the end of those three years is when i decided to Leave jay wbz. And that's when. I left it for pr a little bit and then after pr. That's when i kinda created my own company can he thacker. But also before that department from gw wt is created on a rose from concrete. So nothing to fabulous but more just kinda falling into opportunities per se but also making the most out of those opportunities. I had them. Let's bring it back because you you kinda. You definitely put the foot on the gas there in regards to the origin story. But let's bring it back to those. Dmv years now. I heard that your mom was a copywriter so your mom was kind of in the in the ad industry as well as that. Is that where you got your sparks for this kind of work while my mom was a copywriter like berry berry berry berry berry berry berry briefly. I didn't realize that she was copywriter. Until hours at gw. T 'cause i was like. Is that what mom was doing because i remember going with her to like the studio and someone was like reading like the words that she wrote so. I didn't really understand it until i was actually in the advertising industry to kind of understand but my mom has lived like a million lives of needless to say and copywriter was like one of those. I mean. she's been a teacher. I mean she's still is a teacher but like as far as educating people. That's been like a really big bulk of her career but she did do a brief stint as a copywriter. what agency. I have no clue. Because i was like kid. I don't even think she remembers but yeah she had a brief stat. And then when i was actually in ad school shot to add house like i think this is what mom used to do back when i was like barely i can barely remember meals to say but yeah so the creative. Like arts per se has always been in me somewhat like. Don't get messed up. I can't draw to save my life so let's not even go there of any artists out there grabbed. Gbd's as i call them respect. Y'all i can't draw to save my life. But i can write a line or two. Needless to say. I know good copy. You know when i see it like on the writing side. That's something out. I've always done. I've always written stories or back in the high school days in the dmv. I used to ride a couple of rats. Did a couple of wrap showcases of that nature but Unfortunately during those days in the nineties on there was too great artists that came on the scene. That kinda made me feel like you know what you can't do. This and one goes by the name of the late great. Christopher wallace of the other two. Poxy core i was like okay. These a really good at this. I'm not.

new york jay wbz marcus graham cheryl miller maryland ogilvy office ogilby brawley Wbz lincoln university ogilvy kennedy adobe israel dc virginia berry berry berry berry berry olivia washington ut
"cheryl miller" Discussed on The Original Jeek Podcast

The Original Jeek Podcast

05:14 min | 2 years ago

"cheryl miller" Discussed on The Original Jeek Podcast

"The same team together which is just insane rarity. Yeah yeah and we talked about this before few episodes back just about them talk about briefly last year. Yeah yeah so that in itself is like. How often does that happen. But yeah that's just awesome. I can imagine like the stories when they got home. Just reliving the moment just talking about it How about in the dugout. After it happened junior junior finishes trot touch home goes the dugout high. Fives teammate sits down next to his dad's dad you realize you just hit a home run and then i just hit a home run. How crazy is right or even just sit down just like yeah so that like you know little not because you know like you get a certain age you kind of become competitive with your dad. Oh you know. I know me and my dad was always faster than me for the longest time until like probably must junior year high school Part of it was like he wasn't working out as much and stuff like that by that time and Yeah like that was in the moment just kind of became like i can take you. Now come on. Let's get on the track you get on the tracking. Nah we're good. Yeah but now it's like. Oh oh you were okay. Let's go hundred meters. Let's go you know so. Yeah i i can imagine. At least i know it was me and my dad. We'd definitely be have back and forth. Ooh i mean we that. Anyway i remember i would I would go to invitationals or stuff like that and By sometimes when he couldn't be there. And i'm like oh yeah like i remember when i ran my personal best at the time and it was like i had should had finally broke had finally broke ten seconds on the one hundred ten meters hurdles which is huge at s really huge. Yeah i was like ten like just under a like just under eleven. But i've i've finally broke it and Yeah my dad was like have fast. Actually run and i was like oh ten fifty nine or something like that or whatever it was. I remember exactly. He's like aw i am. When i was your age i was. I was like ten forty six. You still got a ways to go like you know. Just like the conversation. It was fun you know. Is that that fund. Mike back and forth conversation that banter whatever and that's why i can just imagine them going home and like sitting down around the table ready to eat dinner or whatever it just like that you're gonna show me up on just hit a home run right after me. That's what you thought you were going to like. You know so Yeah it's a great moment and like you said it's so rare for on the play like you see siblings. See that all the time you see. Siblings sea cousins cousins but you rarely see sun or even Just recently we had the son in his mother playing at the same time with pay. Please i i thought they. They made history because she's the first professional women's player to have a son play in the nba. I don't think she's actively playing these she might be. She was playing that game unless you play that game after looking at it was on their usc team. Back with cheryl miller and coup way back in the eighties. Like hey m is. She's up there. I don't know if you've played it. I could maybe i thought. They said she was playing. But i could. I could couldn't read it. She might be. I just like. I will be very surprised if pam was still playing pro ball at her age. And if you don't do payments paying me those the mother of nba player devel- mcgee. I don't know. Maybe maybe. I thought they were playing at the same time but i could be wrong but maybe you might be right me into league for a while. Yeah i just remember seeing it on on the you know at at the time i remember seeing on the news. It's been a while now so it wasn't that recent but yeah but that's super dolby. Played had active careers the same time or whether you know he played her career was beforehand. Still that that's very cool in another area. Your mother and son you know having pro careers as a.

last year Mike hundred meters ten seconds eighties one hundred ten meters first forth ten fifty nine ten under eleven cheryl miller forty six Fives teammate pam ball nba
"cheryl miller" Discussed on Mason & Ireland

Mason & Ireland

06:28 min | 2 years ago

"cheryl miller" Discussed on Mason & Ireland

"So in other words there was a club named after her because she'd sold concessions for years and years all the sudden the family shows up in. It's renamed the tony larussa lounge slurs allowed john. How should the white sox handled this mistake. Ever never even notified this woman's family. Well they from what it sounds like. This was something nice team. Did to honor a longtime employee. But it probably didn't really catch on. There's no significance to loretta other than the people that work there. The russa is a famous name so they're probably trying to get the lounge a little more action. You know to get it so it was probably a business decision but it is kinda cold that you would just strip loretta of any mention. Maybe they could find a different way to honor loretta. Or maybe put some put some items on the menu or whatever i mean. They didn't pay for it right. It was just a nice gesture. Nice gesture she'd worked there for six decades and they said you know what this is our longest working concessions person. Let's name the lounge after. I actually prefer loretta lounge to larussa. Larissa's famous enough. He doesn't need a lounge. Yeah you know. I'm not i they'd come off do faces for the way they handled it. But i'm not sure that the family to answer your original question has a leg to stand on here. They didn't have a financial interest they weren't paying for it. The white sox were just doing it to be nice. So i think they got to live with it. I do okay. Check guys twenty-three-year-old. Sabrina i n s q was a star women's player at oregon where she had twenty six triple doubles triple doubles. Just don't happen very much in women's basketball there've only been nine in twenty five years in the history of the wnba. But i in s q who now plays the new york. Liberty had one in just her sixth career game twenty four points twelve rebounds tennis says she becomes the youngest player in the history of the wnba to get a triple double in the first player. Ever to do it for the liberty to questions here. Michael how good is ionescu a chance to be like sue bird. Lisa leslie good. Is she in that class. She has a chance she's really special As good as sue bird or not even sue bird as good as diana. Taurasi teresi and cheryl miller let lisa leslie who else would be on the swoop sharing you know. Some who else will be on the right rush. she could be by the time she's done. Yeah she's that special okay. So here's my other question guys and think about this. This is like the crazy marketing guy in me okay. Should the nba put her in the skills competition at the all-star oh you kidding me you could put a twelve year old skills competition. It is that is retained skills. Competition lindsay could win cooperation competition. Stupid dot com and they should just get totally rid of that era saying if they don't in the current version jason tatum when it last year two players race against each other on identical osas first dribbling between five obstacle live grades. Fifth greatest. do that next. You've got to throw a pass through a hoop. I could age then. The players got dribble the full length of the court for a layup. Shortly after that they got dribble back down court and hit a three-pointer and then one from the top of the key the match ends when the first player hits the three pointer be competitive. Michael right put the women. And the w the three point shooting contest. That'll be fun. But don't you really sure this michael. Could you really put women in the three point shooting contest. Of course of course women could shoot from twenty two feet and twenty three feet. You know they don't. They're line shorter right. Yeah a couple of alabama foot book big deal. They can do it. Let's come on. That's easy yeah. I would be all in favor of it. I mean it'd be great for the sport it seems like you know. I think i read a piece somewhere. that the wnba has started to become quite profitable from the nba. That it's not the it's not money loser that it was the money poorly years. Yeah right yeah. They should add some flair to the all star. Weekend this up and bring women and for that stupid skill. They what act to the skills competition at a couple of like dribbling with two basketball cones. Something difficult like that. Yeah she's a sheesh. Alright thanks. Thanks for their backup. All-stock committee i gotta go to bone to pick with. You might go. that's that's coming up. I was really really taken kind of bone. Rip boat or chicken bone also rebuttal. What he's get and love ribs at and and also. I m predicted that it is no time to panic. I feel great about the lakers. Let's see if michael agrees coming up for. That's good go. I was going to say that's coming up for you. Mason in ireland seven ten. Espn we got game. Five tonight lakers vs suns in phoenix. No not expected. Anthony davis not expected. He is expected to be out with that Sore groin by the way ireland. Yeah driving up. You made me swerve on the freeway. What i sell. You said lebron's the most accomplished player in finals history. Well i right now playing right now. Oh playing right now. I thought you say ever bill. Russell wanted to pass him. Yeah we're going to remind him when. I when i got him but i didn't hear you say right now. I think michael i'm not. I'm not predicting the doom and gloom that a lot of other people are about tonight. I think the lakers can win this game. Of course of course they can. I'm not Okay i'm a little but yeah. I'm very confident. This team can win. The next yeah. I'm i'm a little. I mean if they lose tonight. I'll be honest. I'm gonna go into straight up completely. Well the the go on thursday. But i'll be completely you know better than most. The winning the nba title is hard hard to say that too. But not all the time. You remember shocking Koby went fifteen sixteen and to one hundred and fifteen and seventeen and one and end. The warriors went sixteen. Nine one right. I mean it can't be done easily but you're right for the most part. Ninety percent of time is very hard. So michael when you guys when the eighty-eight title. Yeah that was. Maybe the toughest mountain i've ever seen anybody climbed..

cheryl miller Michael Anthony davis Russell Mason Ninety percent thursday Lisa leslie ireland lindsay jason tatum twenty five years Sabrina diana twenty six two players last year sixteen ionescu lebron
"cheryl miller" Discussed on Wendell's World & Sports

Wendell's World & Sports

03:40 min | 2 years ago

"cheryl miller" Discussed on Wendell's World & Sports

"Ashe in in our leeann. Curt flood and wilma rudolph and jabbar. And willie mays and hank aaron in giancarlo. Tommy smith those guys where those guys heroes in it just goes on in on it on in on so we just my thought is we just need to keep that connection going so for those who might be growing up idolizing a level the bra that twenty something year old or that guy late teenage to know that lebron is the product of michael jordan. Who's a product of annot jason. Who's the product of a wilt chamberlain or someone like a colin cabinet. Who were speaking about. You know the stuff that he's going through. He's a product of mahmoud guru. He's a product of of a craig. Hodges he's a product of occurred flood. He's a product of a larry doby. He's the product of jack johnson. He's a product of joe louis in on and on and on on and on because when you're going in undaunting your wife it's gone and your kids around and they're gonna have their heroes. They might not recognize what lebron james is doing right now. They might not recognize the impact. That colin cabinet had. Because they're gonna have their heroes who are gonna be doing stuff to change society and make better so their job is going to be the two children and let me tell you back when i was your age. Lebron james though sleep on the impact that he had bubba wallace what he did for nascar though sleep on the impact that he had the williams sisters what they did for tennis though sleep on the impact that they have because the people that you're idolizing right now and talking about changing the world and making a better if it wasn't for those people then the personnel analyzing right now your generations colin cabinet your generations warren. Moon your generations. Arthur ashe your generation. Sugar ray robinson. Your generations jackie. Robinson your generation jack johnson would not have happened if it wasn't for those people so that is what i want to do regarding that and i hope in some small way that i did that without john. Carlos and tommie smith raises their fist. There is no colin kaepernick to remember that all the stuff that lebron is talking about. If it wasn't for magic if it wasn't for Mahmoud abdul roles. If it wasn't for those guys there would be no situation if it wasn't for jim brown. It wouldn't be a situation for the braun to have the platform. The have the impact that he has when he takes the status on any political situation any political issue regardless of what it is. We are now in. The generation of we are not going to just shut up in dribble and it was for those forefathers that came before them that have given the athletes of today of color the strength and gender by the way and gender. I mean making repeat. No sorry if it wasn't for billie. Jean king martina navratilova You wouldn't be able to do stuff that you did. If it wasn't for those female tennis players if a one four and out the gibson if a wonderful they obey dickerson the hairiest. Those situations wouldn't be available to someone like that. You know the women's basketball game the wnba. We see the young great often players wouldn't be possible if it wasn't for a show. Swoops cheryl miller and lisa leslie in Sue bird in those in those people so and all in all my goodness what who married..

michael jordan Tommy smith tommie smith jim brown lisa leslie lebron james Lebron james cheryl miller jack johnson Robinson john two children Carlos Jean king joe louis Arthur billie hank aaron giancarlo martina navratilova
"cheryl miller" Discussed on IINK Podcasts

IINK Podcasts

05:11 min | 2 years ago

"cheryl miller" Discussed on IINK Podcasts

"Hallo now estee ma'am up. Darby us on ma'am guess. How many covid country we'll t now it laker. Vr tiger school bationwide. It brought get rich data on donald gay beach then per basket. Tab are now looking Now own rocker now but yeah he did not want a good which dickey. But the does china hillock that amended. Mobile kissy awkward yoga day. To take another look cheryl miller detail. Would i look a lot chairman at the table. Do not by would be out on gillick detainee lucid amid the neck. Oh are not up now. Hearst of nickel acre banana. Give doyle maybe sat. Don't know but jan noak on oakwood to fanta argue or on kiddle cacharel go bust about at garrick. The what jared goff yagi. Nicole took it bradley. Kika ability unkind desire. Carry a bus unduly or copa rock. That he by latigo koby would will look to him. He up jenoptik perkasie bike. And i'm gary ghitti He had curtailing kikoko wool but he had their nikki orchestra. Daniela guilty then. Data to ski sat with diana or leak occupuied neighbor ga- john nicotine down but geico dot lana lake was member cushal. Jd child but shahnameh head warriors gear could come out eighty but Uptick was much took it easy. Get one keep it. Give a joke. Which child byard god lusa chapter should who took a hedge announce the lisa he say margaret. Atwood nanette gertrude. The on kid per or skudra up need john. John good will be hunky. Had died a hair on. What by portuguese by the p. What the by kit a gap watch nick. Bad p woodley kikuko here in china but that data birger now but then he q. s occur commit. Gada haiti shaya. The he be hoagie to pattani But the gender thus oh so much kiara but it but just subsets much. It dinky ya donors at that. He didn't that some will be daddy. Kiss the question. Why bus dirt took a hair a gala but calcutta which lobbied donio but lake. Wer need to get or nickel. You'll get on napkin. Wiscon- give you take your the or house. Leaky won't give me a bit. They yard t a good yoga. Dick building to gail kiss. Your article on kgo was skip us. Cushy cushy but took a hit dona a blake cannabis toward the must mayanja. A good wo- say here to cut sang on sat up you could say nationalguard a gala hypocrisy and not sugar the the before neath Bay it then job blakey annika bus up majority you satis- up near gala buddhika. Don't on his adult ruka. Beanie shed four phone jihad many but oblique ika rook each identity but Pity we'll get then. Our relationship is like a smooth road. Doha what elation should be ha- towards moon must gennabra totally speed raker. Ninety eighty what ha- fitness circuit will be job. Liquor gave high speed rail boldness much. I are given the selleck. Haney bus told us it could do back at egger by a vr nutty subvert. Maso speaker not eighty but was a boost. Deselect monica jetty. You'll get it knock her little tiny bite the a bus sin nacer sir at bella nitty what is by one hundred geeky cup. Bang office to keep up. A girl baffles la short. Wahad getty i g or kim right met capena. Piji thank you..

Nicole Daniela Doha John gary ghitti eighty kim doyle Ninety eighty one hundred geeky cup Atwood jared goff yagi Piji nanette gertrude jan noak latigo koby john each identity gala buddhika bella nitty
Inside The Women Of Troy

Around the Rim

03:12 min | 3 years ago

Inside The Women Of Troy

"Welcome inside a special edition of around the rim. One that tells the story of the nineteen eighty three and eighty four championship teams for the USC Trojans. Their women's basketball program was a trailblazer in. Its own way where they had almost a super team of some of the biggest names in college. Basketball Cheryl Miller Cynthia Cooper panic. Paula McGee What Dynasty. They were what a talented team so fun to watch. I'm your host. Let's China Robinson. Join as always by my fantastic and fabulous producer to Riga foster bradsby. Then we are going to take you inside with some of the biggest names in biggest contributors to the success of that team and people that can tell the story the best. That's right the China so to help us tell that story. We've enlisted. Six people knew this team the best head coach. Linda Sharp assistant coach. Fred Williams team captain Juliet Robinson Point Guard Rhonda Wyndham forward. Pamela MCGEE AND GUARD CYNTHIA COOPER DYKE. So throughout this podcast. You're going to hear them. Discuss their relationships together coming together as a team learning how to play with each other learning each other on the prime that they have in USC and what it meant to be a Trojan and what it was like as far as the landscape of women's basketball at that time the rivalries. I'm you're going to get to know more about the players in from their teammates themselves. And you'll hear clips from Geno Auriemma Reggie Miller. Doris Burke teasha Chiro the nineteen eighty-four Olympics Paula. Mcgee and the cause from the championship games of nineteen eighty three and one thousand nine hundred eighty four. Let's all get a history lesson from the inside of what was so special about USC. Women's basketball in the women of Louisiana Tech University and the University of Southern California trojans outlet more southern California at forward six three junior from Flint Michigan number eleven all over more southern California at Bulwer from Riverside California number thirty one zero southern California Singer. Six three junior from Flint Michigan over thirty southern California had guard a by rescued from New York City. We're southern yard five nine zero number or no

Paula Mcgee Basketball California USC Pamela Mcgee Flint Michigan Riverside California China Robinson Cynthia Cooper Cynthia Cooper Dyke Geno Auriemma Cheryl Miller Linda Sharp Doris Burke Riga China Louisiana Tech University Reggie Miller Fred Williams
Dunkumentary: the first dunk in women's college history

30 For 30 Podcasts

05:29 min | 4 years ago

Dunkumentary: the first dunk in women's college history

"Of perhaps the first women's dunk in college basketball history. It is also a bit of a mystery caper as well, I'll say that there is lots of controversy and lots we don't know about who the first woman to dunk is certainly Cheryl Miller is in the conversation. There is reporting that she did. So in high school. Cool. But this is about a college dunk about someone far less famous than Cheryl Miller and about something that was caught and lost on tape. Kate feagin, one of our favorite reporters tells the story. And again, if you like this one, you can check out the whole donkey memory series at ESPN dot com slash documentaries. Let's get to Kate story. This one is called missing milestone. It was two thousand nine in a sports reporter named read Albert Godley was researching a story for the Wall Street Journal. This is read talking to sportscenter that year, and the theme was that women's college basketball going above the Ren. And of course, he can write that without, you know, Google searching the first woman to slam dunk. He learned that the first dunk can happen twenty-five years earlier. I notice, you know, researching it in fact checking that there just wasn't that much information about it. And then it was sort of shaky and you'd read, you know, one story, and it would have won facts. And then a contradicting factor and other story read decided to find out what he could from someone who'd actually seem the dunk and I ended up talking to kitty blakemore kitty blakemore former coach at West Virginia university. It was a player on kitty squad who threw down that first dunk in a game. And I kind of asked her, you know, kiddie lake WI fi. Is it so shaky like aren't there no photos of this thing? And she said, well, there was this video. And I said great where where's that? Can. We get a hold of inch said, well, I tried to get the tape. And that's a whole nother story. Do you want to hear that? Kagin and MRs documentaries of podcast miniseries from PS PIN at celebrates the dunk in all its glory. This episode is the story of an early milestone in women's basketball in how it was lost to history. We'll get back to read Alber Gotti, the reporter in a few minutes. But our story of the first in the missing tape actually starts in nineteen Eighty-three. Coach blakemore was building her women's basketball team, the mountaineers at West Virginia university, a friend tipped her off to a tall teenager from Ohio who she might want to recruit. Her name, georgeanne wells. I kind of was like course to playing basketball because my height and being probably at in fifth grade six feet, maybe that was pretty tall by senior year of high school georgeanne was six foot six and still growing. In fact, she was about a head taller than most of the other players on the court and West Virginia wanted a really tall player in the back of coach blakemore is mine was the idea that maybe her little team could make history they can have the first female player to ever dunk blakemore successfully recruited georgeanne, she'd never dunked in high school the blakemore new the coaching staff could train her slam dunk, slam dunk slam done after a while. I mean, you're slammed up you're not used to doing that. I it can wear and tear almost like blisters on your hands with all this hard work and practice that I was doing better happen soon. Practice was no problem. But games were different. Every time. She tried to dunk in the game. They would grab hold over shorts or. Hold of her. So she couldn't dunk. Let's the back for minute and understand why at this point in women's basketball. No one had ever dunked. First of all the WNBA didn't exist yet and wouldn't for almost another fifteen years, but even college ball which had been around for a while. It was still developing. In fact, this was a critical moment because title nine had passed about a decade earlier so title nine states that any educational institution that receives federal funding is prohibited from discriminating on the basis of sex. This is Cheryl cookie in associate professor of American studies at Purdue in practice the new title nine law requires public schools have proportional funding athletics. So for example, if you've sixty percent girls in your school girls, receive sixty percent of funding as a result girl started playing more sports after the law passed when you have more girls more women playing sport and more access. There's an increased talent pool and the level of of competition is raised as a result. I think it also. So shifted the cultural expectations around what girls and women were capable of. Jan was part of that very first generation of girls witting creased access to playing sports. It was a moment. When women's basketball was developing and growing away at hadn't previously enjoyed gen she played her own small part and pushing the game forward. In her sophomore year with the D one mountaineers her squad traveled Elkins West Virginia there they played the university of Charleston golden eagles a detour team.

Basketball Cheryl Miller Coach Blakemore Georgeanne West Virginia University Reporter Kate Feagin Elkins West Virginia Espn Google West Virginia Wall Street Journal Alber Gotti Wnba Albert Godley University Of Charleston Golde WI Ohio Purdue Associate Professor
Kyrie Irving, Cheryl Miller and Holly discussed on The Jump

The Jump

00:17 sec | 5 years ago

Kyrie Irving, Cheryl Miller and Holly discussed on The Jump

"Idea that I would end up belonging to almost four different families. I had no idea. I had no idea about the history and no idea how inclusive this group is and what it means to be part of standing rock and be part of the United Nations. So I wanna thank all you guys for hosting myself. My sister and my best friend

Kyrie Irving Cheryl Miller Holly Morrison Diana Taraf United Nations Herro Angela Rogers Djamil Montclair New Jersey Atlanta Sioux Tribe Little Mountain Asia Depression Cairo Director Angeles Rossi Leded