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Showing episodes and shows of
Gavin Carter
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Flight Footprints
How an Iraqi MiG-25 Escaped Two F-15s: Understanding Gulf War Air Combat
January 17, 1991: Two state-of-the-art F-15 Eagles lock onto an outdated Iraqi MiG-25. What happens next breaks every rule about modern air combat. In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals how speed, desperation, and split-second decisions turned the hunter into the hunted over the Persian Gulf. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why the "unbeatable" F-15's 104-0 kill ratio met its match against 1960s Soviet engineering • How the MiG-25's Mach 3.2 capability (2,500 mph) created an escape route no one saw coming • The tactical mistake that turned a sure kill into aviation history's most embarrassing chase 👤 Perfect for: aviation enthusiasts and military history buffs who want the untold s...
2026-03-25
14 min
Flight Footprints
How Ship Design Flaws Killed Entire Cargo Fleet: The MB Darbisher Case
What if a single cargo ship's disappearance exposed design flaws that threatened thousands of sailors worldwide? In December 1980, the MB Darbisher vanished without a trace in the South China Sea, carrying 42 crew members and 24,000 tons of grain. But as Gavin Carter reveals in this investigation, the real story wasn't about one ship - it was about an entire fleet built with deadly compromises. 🎯 What You'll Discover: • Why at least three other Bridge-class ships suffered catastrophic structural failures around the same time • How corporate cost-cutting decisions created floating death traps that families are still fighting for answers about today • The shocking truth abo...
2026-03-24
13 min
Flight Footprints
Why Your 8-Hour Flight Could Take 3 Hours (The Supersonic Truth Nobody Tells You)
What if your next cross-country flight could take 3 hours instead of 8? In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals why supersonic passenger jets aren't just possible - they're already being built, and the engineering behind them is absolutely mind-blowing. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why the Concorde could fly New York to London in 3.5 hours at Mach 2.04 (and what killed it) • How Boom Supersonic's new Overture jet will carry 80 passengers at nearly twice the speed of sound • The NASA breakthrough that turns deafening sonic booms into quiet 75-decibel "thumps" • Why modern designs use 75% less fuel per passenger than the Concorde ever did 👤 Perfect for: anyone who's e...
2026-03-23
09 min
Flight Footprints
The US Navy's Secret Flying Aircraft Carriers That Actually Worked
What if America's most audacious military experiment actually worked? In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals how the U.S. Navy operated flying aircraft carriers that could launch and recover fighter planes in mid-air during World War II. These weren't just concepts, they were real ships longer than the Titanic that carried their own air force. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How the USS Akron and USS Macon pulled off over 200 successful mid-air fighter recoveries • Why these 785-foot flying behemoths could stay airborne for 78+ hours straight • The shocking $150 million price tag (in today's money) for each experimental airship 👤 Perfect for: aviation enthusiasts and history buff...
2026-03-23
09 min
Flight Footprints
The Only Fighter Jet That's Never Lost: F-15's 50-Year Secret
What if I told you there's a fighter jet so dominant it's literally never lost an air battle? Not once. In 50 years. In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals how the F-15 Eagle achieved the impossible: a perfect 104-0 combat record that has military strategists worldwide studying its blueprint for invincibility. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How one F-15 pilot flew home safely after losing his entire right wing in a mid-air collision • The radar system that tracks 24 enemy targets while engaging 8 simultaneously • Why the F-15 can rocket from ground level to 30,000 feet in under 60 seconds • The engineering decisions from the 1970s that still give...
2026-03-23
11 min
Flight Footprints
The $2M Antarctic Vehicle That Disappeared Forever
What if America's most ambitious Antarctic expedition ended with a $2 million machine frozen in place, never to be seen again? In this episode, Gavin Carter uncovers the spectacular failure of the Antarctic Snow Cruiser, a 75,000-pound behemoth that was supposed to conquer the bottom of the world but couldn't even climb a small hill. 🎯 What You'll Discover: • How a 55-foot vehicle with airplane-sized tires got stuck in snow on day one • Why the $150,000 machine (worth $3 million today) carried a Beechcraft plane on its roof • The engineering miscalculations that turned America's polar dream into a frozen nightmare • What happened to the massive veh...
2026-03-23
11 min
Flight Footprints
The Soviet Pilot Who Stole Russia's Most Secret Fighter Jet and Changed the Cold War
What if one desperate Soviet pilot's 30-minute flight to freedom became the most valuable intelligence coup of the Cold War? In 1976, Lieutenant Viktor Belenko didn't just defect to Japan - he delivered the USSR's most guarded aviation secret directly into American hands. In this episode, Gavin Carter uncovers how a single act of defiance changed military aviation forever. 🎯 What You'll Discover: • How Belenko's MiG-25 could hit Mach 3.2 and climb to 80,000 feet, speeds that terrified NATO • The 67-day examination that revealed Soviet engineering secrets worth billions • Why this 29-year-old pilot risked everything after witnessing the brutal reality of Soviet life • How one landing...
2026-03-23
16 min
Flight Footprints
The Soviet Sub That Broke Physics and Terrified NATO
What if a Soviet submarine moved so fast underwater it literally broke the laws of physics? In 1971, K-222 hit 44.7 knots submerged and sent NATO into a panic that lasted decades. Gavin Carter uncovers how one experimental sub became both the Soviet Union's greatest underwater achievement and their most expensive mistake. This isn't just about speed. It's about a reactor running at 900°F, a titanium hull that cost more than entire countries' defense budgets, and the engineering nightmare that made it all possible. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How K-222's liquid metal reactor worked and why it terrified Soviet engineers • The insane manufact...
2026-03-23
12 min
Flight Footprints
How the Navy Built Flying Aircraft Carriers in the 1930s
Picture this: the U.S. Navy decided to build aircraft carriers that could fly. Not just any flying machines, but massive 785-foot airships carrying fighter planes in their bellies. In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals how the 1930s Navy created floating airports in the sky and why it ended in spectacular disaster. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How the USS Akron stretched longer than two football fields and cost $100 million in today's money • Why these airships could fly for 78 hours straight and travel 10,000 miles without landing • The tragic night 73 people died when the Akron crashed into the Atlantic during a thunderstorm 👤 Perfect for: history...
2026-03-23
13 min
Flight Footprints
How Lockheed's Nuclear Flying Carrier Actually Worked: The CL-1201 Explained
What if the U.S. military had built a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier that could fly for 41 straight days without landing? In 1969, Lockheed actually designed exactly that: the CL-1201, a flying fortress so massive it would have made today's supercarriers look like dinghies. Gavin Carter breaks down the engineering madness behind this Cold War fever dream that almost became reality. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How Lockheed planned to keep a 560-foot aircraft airborne for over a month using nuclear power • Why the military wanted a flying base that could carry 22 fighter jets plus helicopters • The two versions designed: one for attack missions, one hauli...
2026-03-22
15 min
Flight Footprints
How Asymmetrical Wings Could Make Planes 30% More Fuel Efficient
What if everything we know about airplane wing design is wrong? For 70 years, aviation engineers have obsessed over perfect symmetry, but NASA engineer Robert Jones spent decades proving that lopsided wings could change air travel forever. In this episode, Gavin Carter uncovers the untold story of oblique wing aircraft that could make planes 30% more fuel efficient while flying faster than ever before. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why Jones's 1952 oblique wing concept was decades ahead of its time at NACA • How the AD-1 demonstrator could rotate its entire wing 60 degrees mid-flight • The engineering breakthrough that makes oblique wings lighter than traditional variable sweep des...
2026-03-21
13 min
Flight Footprints
How Soviet Flying Aircraft Carriers Actually Worked in the 1930s
Picture this: In the 1930s, while most countries were still figuring out basic aircraft carriers, the Soviet Union was literally strapping fighter planes to massive bombers and calling them flying aircraft carriers. And here's the wild part: they actually worked. In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals how these airborne behemoths changed aerial warfare and why their ingenious design was decades ahead of its time. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How the TB-3 bomber carried five aircraft at once using Vladimir Vakhmistrov's revolutionary attachment system • Why the August 26, 1941 attack on Romania's Cernavodă Bridge proved these weren't just crazy experiments • The mind-blowing engineering that let fighte...
2026-03-20
13 min
Flight Footprints
How France Built the World's Fastest Trains: Engineering vs Opportunity
Why did France dominate high-speed rail while America stuck with cars and planes? In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals how a 1970s energy crisis accidentally created the perfect storm for the world's fastest trains. Spoiler: it wasn't just about better engineering. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How the 1973 oil crisis forced France to abandon their gas turbine train project and pivot to electric • Why the TGV's 357.2 mph world record still stands after 17 years (and what makes it so hard to beat) • The clever "distributed traction" system that puts motors in every car instead of just one locomotive • How cutting Paris to Lyon travel time...
2026-03-19
12 min
Flight Footprints
How the F-15 Eagle Became the World's Most Dominant Fighter Jet
Zero losses. 104 kills. When the F-15 Eagle first took to the skies in the 1970s, Soviet pilots knew they were facing something terrifyingly new. In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals how American engineers turned Vietnam War failures into the most dominant air superiority fighter ever built. 🎯 What You'll Discover: • Why the F-15's 50,000 pounds of total thrust made Soviet MiGs obsolete overnight • The $120 billion gamble that gave America uncontested air dominance for 50 years • How tracking 24 targets simultaneously while engaging 8 redefined aerial warfare • The design philosophy that prioritized killing enemy aircraft over everything else 👤 Perfect for: aviation enthusiasts and anyone fascinated by how militar...
2026-03-18
13 min
Flight Footprints
How Navy Hydrofoil Ships Actually Worked: 1960s Flying Warship Technology
In the 1960s, the U.S. Navy built warships that could literally fly above the water at 50+ knots. These weren't science fiction concepts but real 320-foot vessels with massive underwater wings that lifted them clean out of the ocean. In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals how the USS Plainview and other hydrofoil warships represented one of naval engineering's most ambitious experiments, and why this incredible technology ultimately sank into obscurity. 🎯 What You'll Discover: • How the USS Plainview's 400-ton hydrofoil system could lift a destroyer-sized ship completely out of rough seas • Why Soviet submarines forced the Navy to build ships faster than an...
2026-03-17
13 min
Flight Footprints
How Soviet Engineers Built a Deadly Airliner: The Tu-104 Design Process
What if the Soviet Union's proudest aviation achievement was actually a flying death trap that killed over 1,000 people? In this episode, Gavin Carter exposes the shocking truth about the Tu-104, the USSR's first jet airliner that was rushed into service with fatal design flaws deliberately hidden from the world for decades. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How Soviet engineers converted a military bomber into a passenger plane in just 18 months, cutting every safety corner imaginable • The terrifying "flutter" phenomenon that caused wings to shake so violently they literally tore off mid-flight • Why crash details were classified for 40 years while authorities blamed innocent pilots fo...
2026-03-16
14 min
Flight Footprints
Flying Wings: How Jack Northrop's Revolutionary Aircraft Actually Worked
Jack Northrop built aircraft that looked like they came from the future, with wings that stretched 172 feet but bodies only 53 feet long. His flying wing bombers could carry massive payloads thousands of miles using 25% less fuel than conventional planes. So why did the military kill this revolutionary design? In this episode, Gavin Carter uncovers the politics, crashes, and missed opportunities that buried one of aviation's most elegant innovations. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How the YB-49 matched conventional bomber performance while using radical wing-only design • Why two fatal crashes during testing gave flying wings a reputation they couldn't shake • The real reason the Air F...
2026-03-15
13 min
Flight Footprints
How Giant Hovercraft Actually Worked: The Physics Behind 1960s Transport Dreams
Picture this: 400 passengers and 60 cars gliding across the English Channel in just 35 minutes, floating on a cushion of air at 50 mph. In this episode, Gavin Carter uncovers why these magnificent floating giants promised to revolutionize transport but ended up as expensive museum pieces. These weren't just oversized toys. The SR.N4 hovercraft represented serious engineering ambition, carrying more passengers than many commercial aircraft while skimming over water, ice, and land with equal ease. So what went wrong? 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why hovercraft burned 4x more fuel per passenger than regular ferries (spoiler: physics is expensive) • How weather became the ultimate enemy...
2026-03-14
13 min
Flight Footprints
XB-70 Valkyrie: How America Built a Mach 3 Bomber That Never Saw Combat
In this episode, Gavin Carter uncovers the story of America's most ambitious bomber that flew faster than a speeding bullet but never dropped a single bomb. The XB-70 Valkyrie could outrun most modern fighter jets at Mach 3.1, yet became a $3 billion museum piece before it even entered service. Why did the Air Force kill their supersonic dream machine? 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How engineers solved the impossible physics of flying a 500,000-pound aircraft at three times the speed of sound • Why the XB-70's revolutionary wing-folding design made it more stable than a sports car at 2,000 mph • The surprising reason this technolog...
2026-03-13
11 min
Flight Footprints
Nuclear Ships: How the NS Savannah Changed Maritime History
Imagine spending $350 million on a ship so revolutionary that entire countries refused to let it dock. In this episode, Gavin Carter uncovers the fascinating story of the NS Savannah - the world's first nuclear-powered civilian vessel that could cruise for 3.5 years without refueling, yet found itself banned from ports across the globe. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why the NS Savannah's radiation levels were actually safer than a commercial airline flight • How 1.4 million curious visitors in 32 countries got exclusive tours of this nuclear marvel • The real reason ports banned the ship (spoiler: it wasn't about safety) • What this $46.9 million experiment revealed about public fear...
2026-03-12
14 min
Flight Footprints
MiG-25 Foxbat: How Soviet Engineers Built the World's Fastest Interceptor
In 1976, a Soviet pilot handed the West its biggest intelligence coup in decades when he defected with the USSR's most feared aircraft: the MiG-25 Foxbat. What American engineers discovered when they took it apart completely changed how they thought about Soviet aviation. In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals the shocking engineering secrets hidden inside the world's fastest interceptor. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why the MiG-25's "primitive" vacuum tube electronics were actually genius design choices • How Western intelligence got the aircraft's weight wrong by nearly 30,000 pounds • The real story behind Viktor Belenko's daring defection that exposed Soviet aviation secrets • Why this interceptor...
2026-03-11
16 min
Flight Footprints
Antarctic Snow Cruiser: How America's Polar Vehicle Failed Spectacularly
What happens when America builds a 37-ton "super vehicle" for Antarctica and it can't even move 100 yards on snow? In this episode, Gavin Carter uncovers the spectacular failure of the Antarctic Snow Cruiser, a $150,000 engineering disaster that perfectly captures what happens when ambition crashes into physics. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How Thomas Poulter designed a 55-foot polar fortress in just 11 months with zero testing • Why a vehicle built for snow had tires so smooth they couldn't grip ice • The exact moment this engineering marvel became a frozen monument to overconfidence 👤 Perfect for: curious listeners who love stories of ambitious projects gone hilariously...
2026-03-10
16 min
Flight Footprints
How the Soviet VVA-14 Could Take Off Vertically and Land on Water
Picture this: the Soviet Union builds an aircraft that takes off like a helicopter, flies inches above ocean waves, and hunts submarines. Sounds like science fiction? In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals the incredible true story of the VVA-14, an engineering marvel that defied every aviation rule and nearly changed naval warfare forever. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How Italian designer Robert Bartini convinced Stalin to fund his submarine-hunting dream machine • Why ground effect flight can boost efficiency by 40% but almost killed the test pilots • The shocking reason Soviet factories sabotaged their own cutting-edge aircraft project • What happened to the only prototype that exists...
2026-03-09
11 min
Flight Footprints
How Japan's SCMaglev Train Reaches 375 MPH: The Science Behind Magnetic Levitation
A train that flies at 375 mph without touching the tracks? Japan's SCMaglev just broke physics as we know it, but here's the twist: it costs five times more than bullet trains and carries fewer passengers. In this episode, Gavin Carter uncovers the mind-bending science behind magnetic levitation and why Japan's betting $64 billion on a technology that seems to defy common sense. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How superconducting magnets cooled to -452°F create invisible tracks in mid-air • Why the world's fastest train will actually slow down to 320 mph for passengers • The shocking cost comparison: $64 billion for just 178 miles of track • What happens when...
2026-03-08
12 min
Flight Footprints
How Inflatable Airplanes Actually Work: The Physics Behind This Wild Aviation Idea
What if military engineers spent decades trying to make airplanes you could literally blow up with a pump? In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals the wild story of inflatable aircraft - a real military program that sounds like something from a cartoon but actually flew (sort of). 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How Goodyear's GA-33 Inflato-plane weighed just 240 pounds and packed into a space smaller than a closet • Why the military thought rubber airplanes were the future of covert operations and emergency rescue • The tragic reality of test flights that killed pilots and ended the program for good 👤 Perfect for: aviation enthusiasts and anyone w...
2026-03-07
13 min
Flight Footprints
How the World's Largest Plane Started as a Soviet Space Shuttle Carrier
Picture a plane so massive it makes a Boeing 747 look like a toy car. The Antonov AN-225 wasn't just big - it was impossibly huge, with a 290-foot wingspan that could swallow an entire football field. But here's the twist: this aviation giant was never meant to haul cargo. In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals how the world's largest aircraft started life as a glorified truck for the Soviet space program. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How six turbofan engines producing 51,000 pounds of thrust each kept this 640-ton monster airborne • Why a $16.4 billion space program that flew exactly once created aviation history by acci...
2026-03-06
12 min
Flight Footprints
How France Built a Wingless Plane That Took Off Like a Rocket
What if someone told you France built a rocket-powered aircraft that had no wings and took off straight up? Sounds impossible, but in 1959, French engineers actually flew one. In this episode, Gavin Carter uncovers the wild story of the C450 Coléoptère, an 8-meter tall cylinder that defied everything we thought we knew about flight. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why French engineers thought a wingless rocket-plane could solve the Cold War's biggest aviation problem • How a giant ring around the fuselage actually created enough lift to fly (the physics will blow your mind) • The exact moment everything went wrong on flight nine...
2026-03-05
10 min
Flight Footprints
How the 9-Wing Caproni Ca.60 Was Supposed to Revolutionize Flight in 1921
What if a plane with nine wings and the luxury of an ocean liner was supposed to make the Wright Brothers look like amateurs? In 1921, Italian engineer Gianni Caproni built the Ca.60 Noviplano, a flying hotel that promised to carry 100 passengers across the Atlantic. In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals why this engineering marvel became aviation's most spectacular failure after just two test flights. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How Caproni crammed nine wings, eight engines, and 3,200 horsepower into one massive aircraft • Why the passenger cabin had smoking lounges and sleeping berths like a luxury cruise ship • The exact moment everything went wrong on...
2026-03-04
13 min
Flight Footprints
How the Soviet Union Built the World's Largest Helicopter: The Mil V-12 Story
Picture this: the Soviet Union secretly built a helicopter so massive it could carry 30 cars at once, all to move nuclear missiles without anyone noticing. But by the time it actually flew in 1968, spy satellites had already made the entire project completely useless. In this episode, Gavin Carter uncovers the wild story behind the Mil V-12, the largest helicopter ever built. 🎯 What You'll Discover: • How Soviet engineers created a flying monster with 219-foot wingspan (bigger than a Boeing 737) • Why the military needed to secretly transport 44-ton nuclear missiles across the USSR • The bizarre four-rotor design that looked like a giant X from ab...
2026-03-03
12 min
Flight Footprints
How Concorde's Operating Costs Made Supersonic Flight Too Expensive
What if the world's fastest passenger jet was too expensive for anyone but the ultra-wealthy to actually fly? In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals the shocking economics behind the Concorde's spectacular failure: it wasn't about the technology being bad, it was about basic math making supersonic flight impossibly expensive. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why a round-trip Concorde ticket cost $12,000 in today's money (about 10x more than regular flights) • How burning 25,000 gallons of fuel per Atlantic crossing killed profitability • The real reason only 14 Concordes ever carried passengers, despite decades of development 👤 Perfect for: anyone who's wondered why we don't have supersonic passenger flights anym...
2026-03-02
11 min
Flight Footprints
How Japan Built Underwater Aircraft Carriers: The I-400 Submarine Story
Picture this: submarines the size of destroyers, hidden beneath Pacific waves, each carrying three bomber planes ready to strike American cities. In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals how Japan's I-400 submarines represented the most ambitious underwater warfare project ever attempted, combining cutting-edge engineering with a desperate bid to change the course of WWII. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why Japan's 400-foot submarines could stay submerged for 120 days and surface anywhere along the US coastline • How crews assembled, fueled, and launched bomber planes in just 45 minutes after breaking surface • The original plan to bomb the Panama Canal with 18 submarine carriers that never happened • Why the fir...
2026-03-01
12 min
Dale Carter's America
State of the Union - DCA247
On this episode, Dale and Kurt discuss the State of the Union address's most viral moments and its ramifications. Plus, SCOTUS blocks tariffs, Dale officially files as a candidate, Cynda Rader joins to discuss her campaign to become the mayor of Lee's Summit, AOC embarrasses herself in Munich, Mamdani proposes new tax increases in NYC, Gavin Newsom has as cringe worthy moment talking to black people, and the USA Men's Olympic hockey team brings home gold.SPECIAL GUEST: CYNDA RADERMake sure to like, comment, subscribe, and share Dale...
2026-02-28
1h 14
Flight Footprints
How Germany's Jet-Powered Hover Transport Actually Worked
Ten jet engines on a single aircraft sounds like overkill. But in 1960s Germany, engineers thought it was the perfect solution for a hover transport that could land anywhere without a runway. In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals why the Do-31 project became one of aviation's most expensive lessons in the difference between "can we build it?" and "should we build it?" 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How German engineers crammed 10 separate jet engines into one aircraft and actually made it fly • Why managing takeoff required pilots to control more throttles than a pipe organ has keys • The real cost of this engineeri...
2026-02-28
13 min
Flight Footprints
How Giant Flying Boats Actually Worked and Why They Disappeared
Giant flying boats once ruled luxury aviation, carrying passengers across oceans in floating palaces that cost more than today's private jets. So why did these engineering marvels vanish almost overnight? In this episode, Gavin Carter uncovers the brutal economics and surprising geography that killed off aviation's most ambitious dreams. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why the Saunders-Roe Princess cost £90 million in today's money but flew only 47 hours total • How 5,000 new airports by 1950 made water landings obsolete faster than manufacturers could adapt • The hidden fuel penalty that made flying boats 30% less efficient than their land-based rivals • Why Pan Am's 18-hour Atlantic crossings couldn't compete with...
2026-02-27
13 min
The Nest
Episode 17: Greek Week Preview with ASB Leaders Charlie Colgan and Gavin Fitzpatrick
Drop into “The Nest” as the team sits down with ASB Leaders Charlie Colgan and Gavin Fitzpatrick. The team discusses all things Greek Week. The team also explores how ASB has impacted both during their time at AGHS. Drop in and learn some tricks to winning Greek Week while learning more about Charlie and Gavin.
2026-02-26
36 min
Flight Footprints
Ekranoplans: How Soviet Wing-in-Ground Aircraft Actually Worked
Picture this: Soviet engineers built 550-foot flying machines that skimmed water at 460 mph, carrying more cargo than a C-130 while burning half the fuel. Then politics and physics grounded the entire program forever. In this episode, Gavin Carter uncovers the rise and fall of ekranoplans, the "Caspian Sea Monsters" that could have changed transportation history. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why the KM ekranoplan was bigger than a Boeing 747 but flew just 16 feet off the water • How ground effect physics let these 544-ton giants outperform helicopters by 1,000% • The secret military advantages that made the Soviet Navy go all-in on this technology • What really kill...
2026-02-26
13 min
Flight Footprints
How the Fairey Rotodyne Could Take Off Like a Helicopter and Fly Like a Plane
What if a single aircraft could have solved traffic jams forever, but politics and noise complaints killed it before you ever got the chance to ride one? In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals the incredible story of the Fairey Rotodyne: a 1950s flying machine that took off straight up like a helicopter but flew forward like an airplane at 185 mph. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How the Rotodyne carried 40 passengers twice as fast as any helicopter, using just a 100-foot landing pad • Why 350 successful flight hours and 230 perfect takeoffs weren't enough to save this revolutionary aircraft • The real reason tip jet noise at 113 de...
2026-02-25
12 min
Flight Footprints
How Airbus A300 Almost Failed: The Free Plane Strategy That Saved It
Imagine spending $100 million just to give your product away for free. That's exactly what Airbus did when their revolutionary A300 was dying on the runway, selling only 15 planes in three years. In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals how this desperate gamble didn't just save the aircraft - it shattered America's stranglehold on commercial aviation forever. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why the world's first twin-engine wide-body almost became aviation's biggest flop • How Eastern Airlines' free six-month test flight turned into a 23-plane order that saved Airbus • The fuel efficiency breakthrough that made Boeing and McDonnell Douglas scramble to catch up • Why European governments...
2026-02-24
12 min
Flight Footprints
How Britain's APT Tilting Train Actually Worked: The Engineering Marvel That Failed
What if Britain's most promising train made passengers so sick they begged to get off? In 1981, the Advanced Passenger Train promised to revolutionize rail travel at 155 mph, but its ingenious tilting technology turned into a motion sickness nightmare that killed the entire project. In this episode, Gavin Carter uncovers how brilliant engineering met brutal reality when the APT's aggressive tilting mechanism made test passengers violently ill during its rushed public debut. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How the APT's tilting system could theoretically reach 155 mph on existing Victorian tracks (compared to 125 mph for conventional trains) • Why the same tilting technology that worked perfect...
2026-02-23
13 min
Flight Footprints
How Nuclear Bombers Accidentally Dropped Nukes on US Soil During Cold War
What if America accidentally nuked itself multiple times during the Cold War? In this gripping episode, Gavin Carter reveals the shocking reality of Operation Chrome Dome, where nuclear-armed bombers circled the globe 24/7 for years. The result? Multiple atomic bombs dropped on US soil and allied territory by accident. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How 12 B-52 bombers carried live nukes around the clock and why this terrifying strategy seemed necessary • The 1961 Goldsboro incident where two hydrogen bombs nearly detonated over North Carolina • Why the US military had to secretly remove 1,400 tons of contaminated Spanish soil in 1966 • The classified Greenland crash that spread plutonium across an A...
2026-02-22
13 min
Flight Footprints
How the Air Force Planned to Turn 747s into Flying Aircraft Carriers
What if the military's wildest aviation dreams almost became reality? In 1973, the US Air Force seriously considered turning Boeing 747s into flying aircraft carriers that could launch fighter jets at 30,000 feet. In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals how close this incredible concept came to changing air warfare forever. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How a single 747 could carry 10 microfighter jets and deploy them anywhere within 18 hours • The ingenious launch system using the plane's cargo door and why recovery was even more dangerous • Why the Air Force abandoned this billion-dollar concept despite promising test results 👤 Perfect for: aviation enthusiasts and history buffs who love discove...
2026-02-21
12 min
Flight Footprints
How the Soviet Tu-114 Propeller Plane Broke Every Aviation Speed Record
What if a Soviet propeller plane could outrun jets while carrying 220 passengers at 540 mph? In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals how the Tu-114 broke every aviation record by taking bomber engineering and slapping windows on it. This wasn't just fast for a prop plane. It was faster than first-generation jets while hauling more passengers than anyone thought possible. The Soviets basically said "forget what you think you know about aviation" and built something that shouldn't have worked but absolutely did. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How 15,000-horsepower engines and 18-foot contra-rotating props created aviation's loudest success story • Why passengers needed cotton balls for the...
2026-02-20
12 min
Flight Footprints
How Japan's 1964 Bullet Train Actually Works and Changed Transportation Forever
In 1964, Japan shocked the world by proving trains could beat airplanes. The Shinkansen bullet train didn't just cut travel time in half between Tokyo and Osaka - it redefined what transportation could be. In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals how this engineering marvel sparked a global revolution that's still reshaping how we move around the planet. 🎯 What You'll Discover: • Why the Shinkansen has zero passenger deaths in 60 years (the safety secret other countries copied) • How Japanese engineers achieved 36-second average delays across millions of trips • The surprising reason bullet trains actually beat planes for medium-distance travel • Why China, France, and Spain rushe...
2026-02-19
12 min
Flight Footprints
DC-10 Safety: How Design Flaws and Media Coverage Created a Crisis
What if one of aviation's most feared aircraft was actually safer than its biggest competitor? The DC-10's deadly reputation wasn't about the plane itself, but a toxic mix of rushed design, corporate corners cut for $100, and media coverage that turned every incident into front-page terror. In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals how perception became reality and destroyed a perfectly flyable aircraft. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why McDonnell Douglas had just 2.5 years to build the DC-10 from scratch (spoiler: corporate desperation) • The $100 cargo door decision that killed 346 people and how manual locks became a death trap • Why the FAA's 37-day worldwide grounding...
2026-02-18
13 min
Flight Footprints
How the SR-71 Blackbird Stayed Untouchable at Mach 3
Picture this: an aircraft so fast that even when enemy radars spotted it perfectly, missiles still couldn't catch up. In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals how the SR-71 Blackbird turned physics into its ultimate defense system, flying so high and fast that "untouchable" became literal fact. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why the SR-71's titanium skin got hot enough to cook dinner at cruise speed (seriously, 800°F) • How fuel tanks that leaked on the ground were actually brilliant engineering, not design flaws • The shocking truth: 4,000+ missiles fired at Blackbirds over 24 years with zero hits 👤 Perfect for: aviation enthusiasts and anyone fascinated by engineerin...
2026-02-17
12 min
Flight Footprints
Bristol Brabazon: How Britain Built a Flying Hotel That Nobody Wanted
What if Britain built a luxury airliner so extravagant it had movie theaters and cocktail bars, but completely missed what passengers actually wanted? In this episode, Gavin Carter uncovers the spectacular rise and fall of the Bristol Brabazon, a flying hotel that cost the equivalent of $200 million today and changed aviation forever by showing the industry exactly what NOT to build. 🎯 What You'll Discover: • Why Britain's 177-foot luxury airliner could only carry 100 passengers when competitors packed in 300+ • The engineering nightmare of powering a plane larger than a Boeing 747 with eight propeller engines • How this magnificent failure taught airlines that speed beats lux...
2026-02-16
13 min
Flight Footprints
How the Convair 990A Became the World's Fastest Subsonic Airliner
What if the fastest passenger plane ever built was also one of aviation's biggest commercial disasters? In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals how Convair's obsession with speed created a 625 mph marvel that airlines couldn't afford to fly. The Convair 990A could outrun every other airliner by 100 mph, but that extra speed came with a $425 million price tag that nearly killed the company. Only 37 were ever built, making this the rarest of aviation's speed demons. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why those weird wing pods made the 990A 3% faster but scared away passengers • How Convair lost roughly $4 billion (in today's money) chasing the wrong g...
2026-02-15
12 min
Flight Footprints
How Jet Trains Could Have Reached 300 MPH: The 1970s Transport Revolution
Picture a train that could have hit 300 mph in the 1970s, floating above its tracks like something from science fiction. These jet-powered rail cars were real, tested, and totally doable. So why are you still stuck on trains that barely crack 150 mph? In this episode, Gavin Carter uncovers the wild story of hover trains and why we chose boring over brilliant. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How the British APT-E hit 152 mph in 1975 and why engineers thought that wasn't fast enough • The real reason France's Aerotrain consumed 3x more fuel than regular trains (spoiler: physics is unforgiving) • Why building hover train infrastructure would hav...
2026-02-14
13 min
Flight Footprints
How America's Supersonic Jet Program Failed: The Boeing 2707 SST Explained
America approved $1.3 billion to build a supersonic jet that would make Concorde look slow, then killed it before anyone ever got to fly. In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals why the Boeing 2707 SST became aviation's most expensive failure and what it tells us about the hidden costs of pushing technology too far, too fast. 🎯 What You'll Discover: • Why Boeing's swing-wing design created engineering nightmares that forced a complete restart • How 15,000 damage claims from sonic boom tests in Oklahoma City helped kill the program • The real reason Congress pulled funding after investing billions (hint: it wasn't just money) • What happened to the enginee...
2026-02-13
13 min
Flight Footprints
How the Dassault Mercure Failed: Engineering Excellence vs Market Reality
What if a plane that was 15% more fuel-efficient than the Boeing 737 still became one of aviation's biggest commercial disasters? In this episode, Gavin Carter uncovers the incredible story of the Dassault Mercure: a technically brilliant aircraft that proves engineering excellence doesn't guarantee market success. Only 12 Mercure aircraft were ever built despite burning less fuel than its competition. This French masterpiece cost $1.2 billion to develop (in today's money) and was perfectly designed for one specific job. The problem? The airline industry wanted flexibility, not perfection. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why being too specialized killed a superior aircraft design • How Air Inter became the Mer...
2026-02-12
13 min
Flight Footprints
How the Soviet Buran Space Shuttle Actually Worked: Better Than NASA's?
What if the Soviets secretly built a space shuttle that was actually better than NASA's? In 1988, the Soviet Union launched Buran, a space shuttle that flew once and then disappeared into history when the USSR collapsed. In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals the shocking truth about this engineering marvel that outperformed America's space shuttle program. 🎯 What You'll Discover: • How Buran could carry 30 tons to orbit versus NASA's 24 tons and stay in space for 30 days • Why mounting engines on the booster instead of the shuttle made Buran exponentially safer • The $30 billion program that used stolen NASA documents but created superior Soviet engineeri...
2026-02-11
12 min
Flight Footprints
How the World's First Jet Airliner Failed: De Havilland Comet Engineering
What if the world's first jet airliner was also one of the deadliest planes ever built? The de Havilland Comet promised to revolutionize air travel in 1952, cutting flight times in half with its sleek design and 500 mph speeds. But within two years, three Comets literally disintegrated mid-flight, killing 99 passengers and nearly ending the jet age before it began. In this episode, Gavin Carter uncovers the shocking engineering flaw that turned aviation's greatest triumph into its most devastating lesson. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why square windows created stress points 3x more dangerous than round ones • How the Comet's metal fatigue problem was like sl...
2026-02-10
12 min
Flight Footprints
How the L-1011 Auto-Landing System Actually Worked
Picture this: an aircraft so smart it could land itself in zero visibility while pilots just watched. The Lockheed L-1011 TriStar was basically the iPhone of commercial aviation in 1972, packed with tech that wouldn't become standard for decades. So why did this engineering marvel become one of aviation's biggest commercial failures? In this episode, Gavin Carter uncovers how brilliant innovation crashed into brutal business reality. 🎯 What You'll Discover: • Why Lockheed needed to sell 500 L-1011s just to break even (spoiler: they only sold 250 total) • How the world's first fully automated landing system actually worked in practice • The $1.4 billion gamble that nearly de...
2026-02-09
13 min
Flight Footprints
Why You Wouldn't Want to Fly on the Soviet Concorde: TU-144 Fatal Flaws
What if I told you that Soviet engineers built a supersonic passenger jet that was so dangerous, it killed 14 people at an air show and made conversations impossible mid-flight? In this episode, Gavin Carter reveals how the TU-144, Russia's answer to the Concorde, became one of aviation's most spectacular failures due to engineering shortcuts and political pressure that put speed over safety. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • How the TU-144 beat Concorde's first flight by two months but crashed spectacularly at the 1973 Paris Air Show • Why cabin noise reached 90 decibels, forcing passengers to pass handwritten notes to communicate • The engineering compromises that led to on...
2026-02-05
14 min
Fable FellaZ
50. A Christmas Present for a Lady
Woah okay it's that type of year! The opposite of a warm one! It's Christmas Day! What better way to spend it than with your Fellaz? Not to mention that today we are joined by a bonus fella, Gavin! Gather round the yule log and listen to a story about a teacher who gets absolutely buried in soap! Gavin recommends: A Half Built Garden, by Ruthanna EmrysWant more recommendations? Check out our friend Julia's channel: youtube.com/@enbylibrary Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
2025-12-25
1h 28
Two Guys and a Pint
Greatest American Heroes!
Navy veterans Paul Arneth and John "JC" Carter join Gavin and Brian to talk about their time in the military. Mr. Arneth was a jet fighter pilot flying missions over Vietnam and JC was the Captain of the USS Bataan. Hear what life was like for them and what they did after they retired.Recorded: June 22nd, 2025.Media by Erin Hartgraves and Carolyn ArnethResearch by Denise Tramposch2GAAP Logo Design: Erin HartgravesAudio/Technical Consultant: Eric JonesTwo Guys and...
2025-06-30
53 min
The Carter Cadence
The Carter Cadence: Episode #10 - Cartersville's Conor Foster
Welcome to The Carter Cadence: A NWGA Football Podcast- This week's interview: Cartersville Coach Conor Foster- This week's Player Spotlight: Northwest Whitfield's Gavin Nuckolls- This week's NWGA Throwback: Trion's 1974 State ChampionshipFollow Brooks on X, Instagram, and YouTubeFollow NWGA Football on Facebook
2025-05-01
40 min
Dale Carter's America
DCA203 - Darron Story
On this episode, Dale sits down with local radio personality and speaker Darron Story to discuss their shared radio history, Darron's faith journey, and his thoughts on criminal justice. Plus, Dale and Kurt discuss Trump and Vance's heated sit down with Zelensky, Jake Tappers' flip on Biden's mental health, Gavin Newsom's new podcast, and the economic boycott schedule.SPECIAL GUEST: DARRON STORYMake sure to like, comment, subscribe, and share Dale Carter's America with your friends! Follow us on Facebook and Instagram and join in on the conversation. Thanks for tuning in...
2025-03-03
1h 17
History Book Club
SAS Rogue Heroes Series 2 with Gavin Mortimer
Gavin Mortimer joins me this week for a rollicking ride through the invasion of Sicily and Italy with the SAS and Paddy Mayne, Bill Stirling and his brother David. We discuss the portrayal Mayne, what the show gets right, and what it gets wrong. Rogue Heroes S2 stars Jack O'Connell and Connor Swindells.!SPOILER ALERT!Gavin is the author of The Phoney Major, a new book that examines both Stirling and Mayne closely, and one that has exploded the myth of David Stirling, so he's well placed to discuss the series.Gavin Mortimer L...
2025-01-15
43 min
History Book Club
The SAS in Italy with Gavin Mortimer
Early on the 10th July 1943, advance units of elite British troops landed on the island of Sicily, and began series of raids against the Germans to allow the larger force to land on the beaches, and so began the invasion of Sicily. The unit tasked with this key job was the SAS, now a ruthless fighting force. joins to discuss.Joining to discuss is Gavin Mortimer author of The SAS in 1943: Operations in Sicily and Italy.Episode LinksThe SAS in 1943: Operations in Sicily and ItalyAspects of History Links
2024-11-02
59 min
Talking the Plank
Talking the Plank: Pirate Boys Soccer Playoff Preview Ep.4
Gavin talks with boys soccer players Senior Carter Bosanec and Junior Ben Toth. They go over their upcoming matchup against Waukesha West, and how they've got here from an up and down season.
2024-10-30
16 min
The Arrington Gavin Show
The Arrington Gavin Show Ep. 187 "Lauryn Continues To Kill Us Softly"
- Actor John Amos Passes Away at 84 - Former President Jimmy Carter turns 100 years old - Turmoil happening with the iconic Grammy Winning Group "The Fugees" - Former Mayor of Detroit gives his take on the Federal Case involving NYC Mayor Eric Adams
2024-10-15
1h 00
Sideline Talk
Gavin Rochford-Smith, 360 Soccer GVL
We had the pleasure this week of sitting down with Gavin Rochford-Smith, Owner and Founder of 360 Soccer GVL. Gavin has a unique take on youth soccer and youth sports, as he played his youth soccer at a high level in England, and was recruited and played College Soccer in the United States. He talks about his journey and how it led him to opening 360 Soccer GVL, one of the most well known soccer training programs in the Upstate of SC. Gavin is Faith, Family, and Soccer. We loved recording this episode! We hope you enjoy the show!
2024-04-22
1h 21
History Book Club
English Football with Gavin Mortimer
We've ignored the suitcase from Sepp Blatter bulging with cash and returned to football's roots to discuss the origins in England, the class system, the rise of the working class and the might Preston North End side of 1888/89 - thought Arsene Wenger did it first with the Invincibles and diet? Well you'd be wrong - it was PNE under William Sudell. We also look at public (private) schools - click here for the rules of Harrow Football (still played today), transport, technology and the two world wars, plus a rant about VAR.Gavin Mortimer Links
2024-02-24
50 min
Cloudbase Mayhem Podcast
#213 Pierre Carter and Into Thin Air
South African pilot and adventurer Pierre Carter has been at this game for a very long time, and he hasn't wasted any time chasing thin air dreams. Pierre has been knocking off the world's seven summits for nearly 20 years (some of them several times), and has flown off all but Denali (because it's illegal) and has only Antarcticas Mt Vinson remaining. In between his efforts to summit and fly off the worlds highest peaks Pierre competed in the Red Bull X-Alps three times, organized the X-Berg hike and fly race in South Africa and most recently had a bit of...
2024-02-09
1h 41
Podcast – CLOUDBASE MAYHEM
#213 Pierre Carter and Into Thin Air
South African pilot and adventurer Pierre Carter has been at this game for a very long time, and he hasn't wasted any time chasing thin air dreams. Pierre has been knocking off the world's seven summits for nearly 20 years (some of them several times), and has flown off all but Denali (because it's illegal) and has only Antarcticas Mt Vinson remaining. In between his efforts to summit and fly off the worlds highest peaks Pierre competed in the Red Bull X-Alps three times, organized the X-Berg hike and fly race in South Africa and most recently had a bit of...
2024-02-09
1h 41
History Book Club
SAS Debate: David Stirling - Founder or Phoney? With Gavin Mortimer & Tom Petch
David Stirling was a great salesman, and so have we been seduced into thinking he's not really responsible for the founding of the SAS, and it was instead his brother?We have two distinguished historians join Ollie to debate the question. Both are previous guests of the pod, so this is your opportunity to find the truth or is the question more complicated?Links DiscussedDavid Stirling: The Phoney Major, by Gavin Mortimer2SAS: Bill Stirling and the forgotten special forces unit of World War II, by Gavin Mortimer...
2023-12-23
51 min
Cloudbase Mayhem Podcast
#200- Going pear shaped in Pakistan
Pilots and friends Pierre Carter, Jeremy Holdcroft, Scott Baker, Richard "Barbs" Barber and legendary mountaineer Andy De Klerk set off this June to attempt to break the altitude record by flying up the Baltoro Glacier to K2 in Pakistan. Everything was going well...until it wasn't. Andy suffers a heart attack (in the air!), and Scott breaks the rule of not making a tricky situation worse by blowing a landing on the wrong side of the river and suffers a broken ankle and leg, which turns into an epic on its own. A wild story from a wild part of...
2023-08-04
1h 55
Podcast – CLOUDBASE MAYHEM
#200- Going pear shaped in Pakistan
Pilots and friends Pierre Carter, Jeremy Holdcroft, Scott Baker, Richard "Barbs" Barber and legendary mountaineer Andy De Klerk set off this June to attempt to break the altitude record by flying up the Baltoro Glacier to K2 in Pakistan. Everything was going well...until it wasn't. Andy suffers a heart attack (in the air!), and Scott breaks the rule of not making a tricky situation worse by blowing a landing on the wrong side of the river and suffers a broken ankle and leg, which turns into an epic on its own. A wild story from a wild part of...
2023-08-04
1h 55
ACNYC Commentary
New Decade Blues - Complete Studio Album
After over a year of working, we's done. Great, eh? 1. Story 3:01 2. Nothing to Say 3:08 3. Voices (feat. A$AP Rocky) 3:06 4. Candles (feat. Twon G) 2:27 5. Pikachu 2:32 6. Couldn't Find You 3:41 7. One Night 3:27 8. Colors 2:49 9. I Know 3:30 10. What's Up (feat. Valious) 3:10 11. All I Want 2:39 12. Misery 2:25 13. Seasons Remix (with Maroon 5) 3:42 14. No Rush (feat. Kevv) 3:24 15. Blue Cherry 2:48 16. Golden Boy 2:23 17. I'm So Happy 2:18 18. Glow 2:10 19. Circles 2:32 20. Punishment 3...
2023-05-26
2h 52
History Book Club
SAS Rogue Heroes with Gavin Mortimer
Gavin Mortimer joins me this week for a rollicking ride through the early days of the SAS with David Stirling, Paddy Mayne and Jock Lewes. We discuss the portrayals of Stirling and Mayne, what the show gets right, and what it gets wrong. Rogue Heroes stars Connor Swindells, Jack O'Connell and Alfie Allen.!SPOILER ALERT!Gavin is the author of The Phoney Major, a new book that examines both Stirling and Mayne closely, and one that has exploded the myth of David Stirling, so he's well placed to discuss the series.Gavin Mortimer...
2023-01-14
55 min
Read by Daylight
The Doctor: A Shocking Backstory
He's gonna zap ya. Prepare the Pepe Silvia gif reactions, it's time to talk about the killer with a potentially bonkers pseudo-coverup attached to his backstory. Is he fully fiction? Was he originally based on a real person before having his identity scrubbed at the last minute to protect the game from criticism in another country? Regardless, Herman Carter is the second Black man in Dead by Daylight and they did NOT handle that side of him well. Find Caroline on Twitter @SaucyMincks Find Gavin at @GavGaddis or @GavinGWhiz Do not find Cole. Find...
2022-12-12
1h 18
Outside the Oval
Ep 21: Breaking down Conference Championship Weekend
On this week's Outside the Oval, host Gavin Frick breaks down a loaded Conference Championship weekend. From the SEC to the ACC, to NC State and Northern Arizona, Frick covers it all. During the show, Notre Dame's ACC Champion Carter Soloman joins the show and talks about his recent victory, while Utah's PAC 12 runner-up Emily Venter joins the show to share a little bit about her race and the rest of her season as well. This, and a whole lot more on this week's trip Outside the Oval.
2022-11-01
22 min
History Book Club
David Stirling - The Phoney Major of the SAS in WW2 with Gavin Mortimer
On this week's show, my guest is Gavin Mortimer, author of The Phoney Major, a revision on the revision which exposes Stirling not as the founder of the SAS, but instead as a fraud, a bungling special forces soldier and a narcissistic man who excelled at creating the image that is maintained today. Instead his brother founded the SAS, and Paddy Mayne was the true leader.Gavin Mortimer LinksThe Phoney MajorWinged DaggerWho Dares Wins movie with Lewis CollinsAspects of History LinksAspects of...
2022-05-28
1h 15
Mind Your Business
MYB with Jamillah Lodge & Gavin Carter (July 28 2021)
Gavin Carter, owner of Gavin's Butter, joined the 2021 Enterprise Bermuda Incubator Programme, and talked about his business and his experience in the EBI so far.
2021-07-28
35 min
Gobble 'Em Up Presented By Duncan Mazda Blacksburg
Special Guest Evan Hughes Joins The Show: His Young Career, The ACC Network, TSL Podcast, 3304 Sports, Favorite Hokie Memories. Hoops Adds Michael Durr, Baseball and Softball Are Hot!!
In Episode 38 of Gobble 'Em Up, host Carter Hill is pleased to be joined by ACC Network Play-by-Play and Tech Sideline Podcast Host Evan Hughes to talk about his time at Virginia Tech, the impact of Bill Roth, the 3304 Sports program, hosting the TSL Podcast, his career, Virginia Tech Baseball, and the best part about being a Hokie! Carter then discusses the impact of Mike Young adding South Florida transfer Michael Durr into the fold, and what it means for Tech basketball next season, before he then closes it out discussing Tech softball, Gavin Cross hitting for the cycle...
2021-04-09
58 min
Perspectives - Espace spirituel anglophone
Special Easter | Happy Easter | by the Perspectives Team
Cette année, pour le dimanche de Pâques, toute l'équipe de l'espace spirituel anglophone, Perspectives vous propose une émission spéciale avec la participation de David Hawken, Carolyn Carter, Anne Chittick, Derel Chittick, Roy Carter et Gavin Brown.Hébergé par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
2021-04-04
15 min
The Rewired Radio Podcast
The Rewired Radio Show - The Elephant In The Room Episode
Welcome to Episode 9 of Season 3 of The Rewired Radio Show!Kevin & Gavin Carter re-join you amazing bunch again as the light at the end of the tunnel is getting closer!This week, we have belter tunes and we introduce the Magnificent "The Drift"...
2021-03-12
3h 17
The Vanguard
Lee Carter Interview - The Vanguard Podcast
Zac & Gavin interview Lee Carter, candidate for Governor of Virginia. Follow The Vanguard on Twitter @vanguard_pod
2021-02-24
30 min
The Rewired Radio Podcast
The Rewired Radio Show - The Don't Talk Over The Lyrics Episode - ft. The Duke Of York
The Rewired Radio Show - The Don't Talk Over The Lyrics Episode Sponsored by The Duke Of York, Lichfield. Draft beer delivered to your door! Kevin Carter and Gavin Carter are back for Episode Six of Season Three. Among the usual great music and mad...
2021-02-19
2h 48
Paid in Exposure Photography Podcast
Ep 52: Toxic Photographers Around You?
More Vogue Promoting Photographers - 11:30 Would You do a Therapy Session? - 18:30 Are You Surrounded by Toxic Photographers? - 31:20 #NoMorePie QTNA What CRM Program are You Using - 42:00 STOP BOOKING MODELS - 46:00 Issues with Canon R5 - 49:00 What's Up with the POTUS Seat - Joe Rogan Meets Kanye - 1:24 Can the JBP Boys Survive without Joe? - 1.34 Expose Yourself Notebook Question: Worst Sex Experience - Last Minute Highlights: Cardi, Netflix, Da Baby and Dewayne Carter Trump Follow Ke: https://www.instagram.com/kss7_/ Follow Gavin - https://www.instagram.com/iam_gavinb/ --- Support this p...
2020-11-05
1h 50
Left Guard Tackle Fantasy Football
TE Consistency Ranks
In this episode we dive into the numbers on TEs. We talk about the good, bad and ugly and as always we have our would/would not draft section after each group, which sparked a rather lively debate about Darren Fells
2020-06-11
59 min
Left Guard Tackle Fantasy Football
NNL Least Consistent WRs
In this episode we talk about the WRs who struggled the most this past season. For some reason, we were able to tie in some Matrix, Baskin Robbins, McGregor and Designated Driver references. Join us for another good time!
2020-05-23
59 min
Left Guard Tackle Fantasy Football
NNL Most Consistent WRs
In this episode we talk about the most consistent WRs from last season, which include some of the big names you’d expect but also a couple who may surprise you! Pair that with the Star Trek, Madagascar and Turf Toe jokes, this is definitely a must listen
2020-05-17
58 min
Left Guard Tackle Fantasy Football
Least Consistent RBs
In this episode we continue our NNL series and talk about the least consistent RBs in the Top 25. As expected, these aren’t guys we really get overly excited about so the puns were plentiful in this one.
2020-05-13
49 min
Left Guard Tackle Fantasy Football
Most Consistent RBs
In this episode we talk about the most consistent RBs in the game this past year, which include guys like CMC, Zeke, and even Todd Gurley. Tune in for the facts, stay for the terrible puns!
2020-05-09
50 min
Left Guard Tackle Fantasy Football
Numbers Never Lie Least Consistent QBs
In this episode we talk about some of the guys who were just all around bad last year and some who were great but had a lot of ups and downs throughout the season. There are some surprising names in here and then some who seemed to be a lock. Join us for a highly debated back and forth episode of QB talk!
2020-05-03
57 min
Left Guard Tackle Fantasy Football
Numbers Never Lie Most Consistent QBs
We kick off our NNL Consistency series by talking about just how good some of these QBs were on a week in and week out basis. There are a few surprises in here like Ryan Tannehill and Josh Allen, but also the known guys like Lamar and Mahomes. Join us for an informative and fun episode!
2020-04-30
41 min
Left Guard Tackle Fantasy Football
Rookie Outlooks
In this episode we talk about some of the fantasy relevant guys who just got drafted this year. We give our outlooks for them going into the 2020 season and some long-term dynasty thoughts as well.
2020-04-27
55 min
Left Guard Tackle Fantasy Football
TE Finishers & Hot Takes
In this episode, we cover the Top 10 TEs from last season plus the other guys worth mentioning. Then we go head first into some Hot Takes on guys like Jack Doyle, Evan Engram and more!
2020-04-23
59 min
Left Guard Tackle Fantasy Football
WR Wrapup and Hot Takes
Join us for this episode as we give our always spicy and entertaining hot takes! Tune in to hear what we are thinking about OBJ, Julian Edelman, Deandre Hopkins, Davante Adams and more!
2020-04-20
59 min
Left Guard Tackle Fantasy Football
WR Finishers 11-30
In this episode we give our thoughts on the guys who finished in the 11-30 range last year. We talk about guys like Mike Evans, Tyreek Hill, OBJ, Amari Cooper, and many more!
2020-04-17
58 min
Left Guard Tackle Fantasy Football
Top 10 WR Finishers
We talk about the WRs who finished in the Top 10 last season, guys like Michael Thomas, Chris Godwin, Cooper Kupp, D-Hop and more. Then we give our takes on guys who we think will finish in the top 3 next year and those who will fall out of the top 10
2020-04-14
56 min
Left Guard Tackle Fantasy Football
RB Wrapup and Hot Takes
In this episode we finish up our talk on some of the RBs we haven’t hit on yet, guys like Devin Singletary, Kareem Hunt, and James Conner. After that we go head first into our hot takes where we discuss our thoughts on Saquan Barkley, Kerryon Johnson, Josh Jacobs, Leonard Fournette, and more!
2020-04-11
1h 14
Left Guard Tackle Fantasy Football
RB Finishers 11-30
Join us for this episode as we talk about RBs 11-30! Here our thoughts about guys like Saquan, Kamara, Josh Jacobs, Lev Bell and more!
2020-04-08
58 min
Left Guard Tackle Fantasy Football
Top 10 RB Finishers
In this episode we break down our 2019 Top 10 RB Finishers. We talk about guys like CMC, Derrick Henry, Zeke and more! Also, we give our picks for who we think is most likely to drop out of the top 10 and who we think is most likely to crack the top 3.
2020-04-05
52 min
Left Guard Tackle Fantasy Football
QB Wrapup and Hot Takes
In this episode, we talk about the QBs we haven’t touched on yet, guys like Stafford, Bridgewater and Cam, to give an overview of their season and outlook on next year. Then we dive into our QB Hot Takes, which involve Aaron Rodgers, Kyler Murray, Tom Brady, Carson Wentz, and Matt Stafford to name a few. Join us for this fun and heated episode of back and forths.
2020-04-02
58 min
Left Guard Tackle Fantasy Football
QB Finishes 11-25
In this episode we break down the finishes of the QBs who finished between 11 and 25 last season in fantasy football. We have some spirited and interesting debate about guys like Tom Brady, Mitch Trubisky, Baker Mayfield, Jared Goff and many more. Tune in and tune out all the craziness going on around you for about of hour of fun debate and back and forth about some quarterbacks.
2020-03-31
57 min
Left Guard Tackle Fantasy Football
Top 10 QB Finishers
In this inaugural episode of the Left Guard Tackle Fantasy Football podcast, we discuss the top 10 QBs in fantasy football from 2019.
2020-03-28
54 min
Get Top 100 Audiobooks in Teens, Fiction & Literature
Boy Audiobook by Blake Nelson
Please visit https://fashabooks.com/aff/fashabooks/1637 to download full audiobooks of your choice for free. Title: Boy Author: Blake Nelson Narrator: Vikas Adam Format: Unabridged Length: 8 hrs and 22 mins Language: English Release date: 06-06-17 Publisher: Tantor Audio Ratings: 4 of 5 out of 3 votes Genres: Teens, Fiction & Literature Publisher's Summary: Every school has them: the cool kids. The insiders. Gavin Meeks is one of them. He lives an easy life of parties, girls, snowboarding adventures, and whatever else comes his way. But when dark, dramatic Antoinette crash-lands at Evergreen High, the entire school feels the impact. Antoinette has seen things...
2017-06-06
05 min