Mike Rowe
Animateur de télévision
Américain
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son anniversaire est dans 334 jour(s)
Fiche d’identité de
la vedette Mike Rowe
Nom complet / vrai nom :
Michael Gregory Rowe
Lieu de naissance :
Baltimore
(Continent de naissance :
Amérique
Pays de naissance : Etats-Unis
Ville de naissance : Baltimore)
Activité / Métier :
Animateur de télévision
(Secteur d'activité de la star :
Radio / TV / Web, Télévision)
Nationalité :
Américaine
(Nationalité d'un pays en :
Amérique)
Âge actuel :
64 ans
(Age entre 60 ans et 64 ans,
Souhaitez son anniversaire dans 334 jour(s).
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Taille :
1m83
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Entre 1m80 et 1m89)
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de la star Mike Rowe
Source : Page Wikipedia de la célébrité
Dernières publications de Mike Rowe
Animateur de télévision sur Instagram Twitter Youtube
Consultez les dernières publications de la célébrité Mike Rowe Animateur de télévision en fonction de sa présence sur les réseaux sociaux. Que se soit les dernières photos de son compte Instagram, ses derniers tweets sur twitter, ses derniers posts sur Facebook, ses derniers clips vidéos sur Youtube ou encore les dernières séquences diffusées sur son compte Snapchat.
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Where Does Craftsmanship Fit In A Disposable World? | Evan Voyles #479 | The Way I Heard It
I sat down with Evan Voyles—neon sign maker, collector of odd things, and one of the most interesting craftsmen I’ve ever met—and we picked up a conversation we started 10 years ago in a trashed-out workshop in Austin.
Back then, I thought he was a guy who bent glass and made signs. Turns out, he’s a guy who bends reality, questions everything, and somehow makes a living doing it.
We talk about what craft actually means in a world full of shortcuts, why the best marketing doesn’t feel like marketing, and how something as simple as a neon sign can outlast trends, technology, and maybe even common sense. Along the way, we want into cowboy boots, house fires, seagulls, crows, bad business deals, great stories, and the uncomfortable truth that sometimes losing everything is exactly what you need.
Evan doesn’t advertise. He doesn’t chase customers. He lets the work speak first—and if you’re paying attention, it says quite a bit. This is a conversation about making things, breaking things, and figuring out what’s worth keeping. If you’ve ever wondered where craftsmanship fits in a disposable world, this one’s for you.
Somebody’s still gotta do it.
Watch Evan's episode on my show, Somebody's Gotta Do It:
https://youtu.be/vx5L-u_TUvc
A Special Thanks To:
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Our friends at American Giant, making the softest sweatshirts made in America. Get 20% off your first order with code: MIKE
https://bit.ly/AGxTWIHI
#podcast #craft #art
If you like me, and even if you don't, subscribe to my channels and follow me. Much obliged.
https://www.youtube.com/@therealmikerowe
https://www.youtube.com/@therealmikeroweshorts
https://www.youtube.com/@PYSKshow
http://instagram.com/mikerowe
http://facebook.com/TheRealMikeRowe
https://twitter.com/mikeroweworks
00:00 Reconnecting with Evan
11:23 How craft has changed
16:40 Consumer care
21:16 The magic of neon
25:50 The displacement theory
31:27 Evan's rare vest find
38:48 My experience with crows
43:57 Left vs. right handed theory
49:37 The fire that destroyed everything
54:32 Form over function?
01:01:21 Talking poetry
01:05:05 Why Evan doesn’t advertise
01:11:02 Podcast advertising ️
01:16:38 We made a song -
Adam Carolla’s Neighborhood Burned Down & Rebuilding Might Be Worse | #477 | The Way I Heard It
Adam Carolla watched his neighborhood burn. Then he watched something else burn even slower—the system that’s supposed to rebuild it.
In this clip, Adam walks me through what it’s actually like to lose everything around you—and then try to navigate the maze of permits, regulations, and “safety” regulations that follow. We’re not talking about a few forms and a building inspector. We’re talking about foundations that cost millions before you even pick up a hammer—months or years of waiting—and a process so complicated even the people who can afford to rebuild might not bother.
Adam is not guessing. He’s a contractor and knows how this works. And according to him, what used to be straightforward has become something closer to impossible. This isn’t just about Malibu. It’s about what happens when good intentions turn into gridlock…and when rebuilding anything—homes, cities, common sense—starts to feel like a lost art.
Watch the full conversation with Adam:
https://bit.ly/TWIHI477AdamCarolla
My foundation is awarding millions of dollars in work ethic scholarships to men and women willing to learn a skilled trade. Apply now at:
https://bit.ly/mrwscholarships
#podcast #california #fire
If you like me, and even if you don't, subscribe to my channels and follow me. Much obliged.
https://www.youtube.com/@therealmikerowe
https://www.youtube.com/@therealmikeroweshorts
https://www.youtube.com/@PYSKshow
http://instagram.com/mikerowe
http://facebook.com/TheRealMikeRowe
https://twitter.com/mikeroweworks
00:00 Escaping the fires
04:44 The challenges with rebuilding ️ ️
08:18 How California is handing out permits ️
12:25 The one house that is being rebuilt ️
16:50 Adam’s fascination with construction -
Millions Aren’t Working And It’s Not What You Think | Nick Eberstadt From #478 | The Way I Heard It
What happens when the richest, healthiest, best-educated generation in history decided—quietly, almost imperceptibly—to stop showing up? In this clip, I sit down with economist Nick Eberstadt to wrestle with a question that might be hiding in plain sight…and might also be the most important one nobody’s really asking—what’s going on with us?
We talk about shrinking populations, rising loneliness, and something Nick calls the “new misery”—a kind of modern discontent that doesn’t look anything like the poverty our grandparents fought through but feels just as real. We dig into men without work, the quiet exodus from the labor force, and the uncomfortable truth that having more has not necessarily made us happier or more connected.
This isn’t a conversation about doom and gloom. It’s about patterns, blind spots, and the strange disconnect between abundance and fulfillment. It’s about what happens when the rules change but nobody gets the memo.
And maybe most importantly, it’s about whether we still have what it takes to fix it.
Watch my full conversation with Nick:
https://bit.ly/TWIHI478NickEberstadt
My foundation is awarding millions of dollars in work ethic scholarships to men and women willing to learn a skilled trade. Apply now at:
https://bit.ly/mrwscholarships
#podcast #america #work
If you like me, and even if you don't, subscribe to my channels and follow me. Much obliged.
https://www.youtube.com/@therealmikerowe
https://www.youtube.com/@therealmikeroweshorts
https://www.youtube.com/@PYSKshow
http://instagram.com/mikerowe
http://facebook.com/TheRealMikeRowe
https://twitter.com/mikeroweworks
00:00 Behind the population decline
03:07 The new misery
05:49 Men without work
11:37 Don't bet against America
16:38 We need welfare reform
21:33 Hope for the future -
Why 7 Million Men Are NOT Working. Now What? | Nick Eberstadt #478 | The Way I Heard It
I sat down with Nick Eberstadt, an American political economic, to talk about the numbers—and somewhere along the way, the numbers started talking back.
For years, we’ve been told the biggest threat to humanity is overpopulation. Too many people and not enough resources. Turns out…that might be exactly backwards. Birth rates are falling, families are shrinking, and much of the world is already below replacement level.
At the same time, we’ve never been richer, safer, or more comfortable—and yet, somehow, more disconnected and more miserable. Millions of working-age men have simply checked out. Not working and not looking for work. And the metrics we trust? They’re missing from most of it.
Nick and I get into the collapse nobody’s really talking about, the rise of what Nick calls “the new misery,” and why the future of work might belong to welders before coders. It sounds dark. Sometimes it is. But if history’s any guide, we’ve been here before—and betting against America has never been a great strategy.
The question is…are we paying attention to the right arithmetic?
Check out Nick's new book, America's Human Arithmetic:
https://amzn.to/47OuqhB
My foundation is awarding millions of dollars in work ethic scholarships to men and women willing to learn a skilled trade. Apply now at:
https://bit.ly/mrwscholarships
#podcast #america #work
If you like me, and even if you don't, subscribe to my channels and follow me. Much obliged.
https://www.youtube.com/@therealmikerowe
https://www.youtube.com/@therealmikeroweshorts
https://www.youtube.com/@PYSKshow
http://instagram.com/mikerowe
http://facebook.com/TheRealMikeRowe
https://twitter.com/mikeroweworks
00:00 Are we in a bad place right now?
03:49 The population scare we got completely wrong
07:40 Are we actually running out of people?
11:22 China’s one-child policy
15:33 Why we’re miserable despite having everything
21:39 What experts keep getting wrong about people
25:56 The surprising story of Ogden Nash
31:22 Nick’s childhood
40:29 Are we ready for what AI is about to do?
45:42 The most important skill nobody teaches
49:29 What happens when we have too much of everything
54:10 Can we actually fix these problems?
59:46 What happened to Harvard?
01:06:54 Why you should never bet against America -
It’s Not The Story You’ve Been Told | Scott Flansburg From #241 | The Way I Heard It
Tonight, after weeks of March Madness, a national champion will be crowned. As you settle in to watch the final game, you might want to ask yourself a simple question: What if the story of basketball itself… isn’t true?
In this episode, I sat down with Scott Flansburg—also known as the “Human Calculator”—who stumbled into something he never saw coming: a 130-year-old mystery that calls the origin story of basketball into serious question. And I do mean serious.
What began as a harmless curiosity about Dr. James Naismith quickly turned into something far more unsettling—conflicting timelines, rewritten narratives, and a small village in upstate New York that may have been written out of history altogether.
We’re talking about Herkimer, a place most people have never heard of. A place that, according to Scott, may be the real birthplace of basketball—complete with the first game, the first rim, the first net… and a teenager named Lambert Will who never got the credit.
So, while millions tune in to watch the championship, this conversation asks a different kind of question: What if we’ve been cheering for a story that was wrong from the start?
If you like your sports with a side of mystery—and your history with a few loose threads—this one’s worth your time.
#podcast #basketball #history
My foundation is awarding millions of dollars in work ethic scholarships to men and women willing to learn a skilled trade. Apply now at:
https://bit.ly/mrwscholarships
If you like me, and even if you don't, subscribe to my channels and follow me. Much obliged.
https://www.youtube.com/@therealmikerowe
https://www.youtube.com/@therealmikeroweshorts
https://www.youtube.com/@PYSKshow
http://instagram.com/mikerowe
http://facebook.com/TheRealMikeRowe
https://twitter.com/mikeroweworks -
The Hidden Crisis That Could Change Everything | Michael Cadenazzi From #476 | The Way I Heard It
In this clip from my conversation with Mike Cadenazzi, the Assistant Secretary of War for Industrial Base Policy, we get into something that sounds like science fiction but isn’t—polymetallic nodules. Little lumps sitting quietly on the ocean floor, packed with the very materials we need to power…well, everything. Your phone. Your car. Your data centers. Your national defense.
Here’s the part that’ll keep you up at night: we’re not short of these resources. Not even close. We’ve got them, or we can get them. What we don’t always have is the will to go get them—or the clarity to understand what’s at stake, if we don’t.
Because this isn’t just about energy or economics. It’s about supply chains, national security, and a growing realization that the things we depend on most are, in many cases, controlled by people who don’t necessarily wish us well. Mike (Cadenazzi) lays it out plainly—no rocks, no factories. No materials, no future. And yet, somehow, we’ve managed to convince ourselves that the problem is scarcity, when the real issue might be…hesitation.
We also talk about the uncomfortable tradeoffs—the environmental concerns, the history of “dirty” processes, and the question non one seems eager to answer: if we’re going to get these materials (and we are), where—and how—should we do it? There’s a moment that stuck with me. A reminder that sometimes the real treasure isn’t buried—it’s been sitting right in front of us all along.
Have a look and then decide for yourself what’s more dangerous—the risks we take to move forward…or the ones we take by standing still.
Watch the full conversation with Michael:
https://youtu.be/TlJ0jW_Rl_U
My foundation is awarding millions of dollars in work ethic scholarships to men and women willing to learn a skilled trade. Apply now at:
https://bit.ly/mrwscholarships
#podcast #china #job
If you like me, and even if you don't, subscribe to my channels and follow me. Much obliged.
https://www.youtube.com/@therealmikerowe
https://www.youtube.com/@therealmikeroweshorts
https://www.youtube.com/@PYSKshow
http://instagram.com/mikerowe
http://facebook.com/TheRealMikeRowe
https://twitter.com/mikeroweworks
00:00 Becoming more metal independent
05:06 Is history repeating itself?
09:59 How much time do we have?
12:46 A cause of the skills gap
14:38 Manufacturing in America
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