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#jeff — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #jeff, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Absolute Green Arrow #1 Review: DC’s New Murder Mystery Hits the Bullseye
    Absolute Green Arrow #1 fires a poisoned arrow...
    comiccrusaders.com/comic-books
    #Absolute Green Arrow #Green Arrow #Absolute Green Arrow #1 #DC Comics #DC Absolute Universe #Pornsak Pichetshote #Rafael Albuquerque #Marcelo Maiolo #Jeff Powell #Absolute Black Canary #Dinah Lance #Oliver Queen #Comic Book Review #Comic Crusaders #DC Comics Review #The Longbow Killer

  2. Absolute Green Arrow #1 Review: DC’s New Murder Mystery Hits the Bullseye
    Absolute Green Arrow #1 fires a poisoned arrow...
    comiccrusaders.com/comic-books
    #Absolute Green Arrow #Green Arrow #Absolute Green Arrow #1 #DC Comics #DC Absolute Universe #Pornsak Pichetshote #Rafael Albuquerque #Marcelo Maiolo #Jeff Powell #Absolute Black Canary #Dinah Lance #Oliver Queen #Comic Book Review #Comic Crusaders #DC Comics Review #The Longbow Killer

  3. Absolute Green Arrow #1 Review: DC’s New Murder Mystery Hits the Bullseye
    Absolute Green Arrow #1 fires a poisoned arrow...
    comiccrusaders.com/comic-books
    #Absolute Green Arrow #Green Arrow #Absolute Green Arrow #1 #DC Comics #DC Absolute Universe #Pornsak Pichetshote #Rafael Albuquerque #Marcelo Maiolo #Jeff Powell #Absolute Black Canary #Dinah Lance #Oliver Queen #Comic Book Review #Comic Crusaders #DC Comics Review #The Longbow Killer

  4. Jeff Mullen | The Authority | Comic Crusaders Podcast #699
    ...
    comiccrusaders.com/comic-books
    #Jeff Mullen #The Authority #collectibles marketplace #comic collecting #card collecting #collectible grading #vaulted collectibles #Universal Public Grading Standard #Dynamics Inc #Comic Crusaders Podcast #Al Mega #comic book grading #trading cards #TCG collectibles #figurines #memorabilia #collectible authentication

  5. Jeff Mullen | The Authority | Comic Crusaders Podcast #699
    ...
    comiccrusaders.com/comic-books
    #Jeff Mullen #The Authority #collectibles marketplace #comic collecting #card collecting #collectible grading #vaulted collectibles #Universal Public Grading Standard #Dynamics Inc #Comic Crusaders Podcast #Al Mega #comic book grading #trading cards #TCG collectibles #figurines #memorabilia #collectible authentication

  6. Jeff Mullen | The Authority | Comic Crusaders Podcast #699
    ...
    comiccrusaders.com/comic-books
    #Jeff Mullen #The Authority #collectibles marketplace #comic collecting #card collecting #collectible grading #vaulted collectibles #Universal Public Grading Standard #Dynamics Inc #Comic Crusaders Podcast #Al Mega #comic book grading #trading cards #TCG collectibles #figurines #memorabilia #collectible authentication

  7. Comic Crusaders Podcast #655 - Jeff Haas/Vector Comics
    Jeff Haas Talks Malek: Reigning Devil, Indie Hustle, and Building Worlds Without Limits

    Jeff...
    comiccrusaders.com/podcast/com
    #Arcana Publishing #comic book Kickstarter #comic book podcast #Comic Crusaders #comic crusaders podcast #comics #creator interview #dark fantasy comics #graphic novels #Indie Comics #indie creators #Jeff Haas #Kickstarter Comics #Malek Reigning Devil #podcast

  8. Comic Crusaders Podcast #655 - Jeff Haas/Vector Comics
    Jeff Haas Talks Malek: Reigning Devil, Indie Hustle, and Building Worlds Without Limits

    Jeff...
    comiccrusaders.com/podcast/com
    #Arcana Publishing #comic book Kickstarter #comic book podcast #Comic Crusaders #comic crusaders podcast #comics #creator interview #dark fantasy comics #graphic novels #Indie Comics #indie creators #Jeff Haas #Kickstarter Comics #Malek Reigning Devil #podcast

  9. Comic Crusaders Podcast #655 - Jeff Haas/Vector Comics
    Jeff Haas Talks Malek: Reigning Devil, Indie Hustle, and Building Worlds Without Limits

    Jeff...
    comiccrusaders.com/podcast/com
    #Arcana Publishing #comic book Kickstarter #comic book podcast #Comic Crusaders #comic crusaders podcast #comics #creator interview #dark fantasy comics #graphic novels #Indie Comics #indie creators #Jeff Haas #Kickstarter Comics #Malek Reigning Devil #podcast

  10. WSV mit Traumtor, Drama und doch nur einem Punkt

    Nach einer spektakulären Schlussphase mit Blitz und Donner, in der der WSV mit letztem Einsatz auf den Siegtreffer…
    #Wuppertal #Deutschland #Deutsch #DE #Schlagzeilen #Headlines #Nachrichten #News #Europe #Europa #EU #1&1 #Ball #Fehr #Fußball #Germany #Gütersloh #Jeff #Kopf #Kopfball #Nordrhein-Westfalen #partie #Stadion #Traumtor #WSV #Zoo
    europesays.com/de/990306/

  11. Toronto Blue Jays manager John Schneider gives vote of confidence to Jeff Hoffman after latest meltdown

    The Toronto Blue Jays dropped their fourth consecutive game on Saturday, and sixth in their last seven, with…
    #NewsBeep #News #Toronto #apple-news #CA #Canada #jeff-hoffman--sports--baseball--player--player-statscom-709602 #toronto #toronto-blue-jays--sports--baseball--team--team-statscom-238
    newsbeep.com/ca/614878/

  12. Nationwide, just over a million children, mostly girls, participate in #cheer each year
    (some estimates are even higher),
    more than the number who play softball or lacrosse.

    And almost every part of that world is dominated by a single company: #Varsity #Spirit.
    It’s hard to cheer at the youth, high school or collegiate level without putting money in the company’s pocket.
    Varsity operates summer camps where children learn to do stunts and perform;
    it hosts events where they compete;
    it sells pom-poms they shake and uniforms they wear on the sidelines of high school and college football games.

    Each year, Varsity ships 4.6 million pieces of apparel,
    from $80 leopard-print “Cheer Mom” fleeces to custom uniforms covered in Swarovski crystals.

    Critics like Matt Stoller, an antitrust expert and the research director of the American Economic Liberties Project,
    claim that the cheer giant is a #monopolist whose dominance in its area rivals that of Google in tech
    and has had negative impacts for participants and their families.

    Varsity, based in Memphis, generates hundreds of millions of dollars in annual revenue,
    with gross profit margins at times topping 40 percent,
    making the company a cash cow for a series of private-equity owners.

    Parents have reported spending upward of $10,000 a year per child in competitive cheer,
    with Varsity controlling, by some estimates, more than 80 percent of that market.

    #Jeff #Webb, the man who founded Varsity, has been called “John D. Rockefeller with glitter”
    and the “Dark Sith Lord” of cheer
    by some of his detractors.

    Webb, now in his 70s, pioneered the gravity-defying acrobatics of modern cheer.

    He paired his innovations with a desire for control over every facet of the sport, which he pursued over the course of more than four decades

    nytimes.com/2024/10/22/magazin

  13. Nationwide, just over a million children, mostly girls, participate in #cheer each year
    (some estimates are even higher),
    more than the number who play softball or lacrosse.

    And almost every part of that world is dominated by a single company: #Varsity #Spirit.
    It’s hard to cheer at the youth, high school or collegiate level without putting money in the company’s pocket.
    Varsity operates summer camps where children learn to do stunts and perform;
    it hosts events where they compete;
    it sells pom-poms they shake and uniforms they wear on the sidelines of high school and college football games.

    Each year, Varsity ships 4.6 million pieces of apparel,
    from $80 leopard-print “Cheer Mom” fleeces to custom uniforms covered in Swarovski crystals.

    Critics like Matt Stoller, an antitrust expert and the research director of the American Economic Liberties Project,
    claim that the cheer giant is a #monopolist whose dominance in its area rivals that of Google in tech
    and has had negative impacts for participants and their families.

    Varsity, based in Memphis, generates hundreds of millions of dollars in annual revenue,
    with gross profit margins at times topping 40 percent,
    making the company a cash cow for a series of private-equity owners.

    Parents have reported spending upward of $10,000 a year per child in competitive cheer,
    with Varsity controlling, by some estimates, more than 80 percent of that market.

    #Jeff #Webb, the man who founded Varsity, has been called “John D. Rockefeller with glitter”
    and the “Dark Sith Lord” of cheer
    by some of his detractors.

    Webb, now in his 70s, pioneered the gravity-defying acrobatics of modern cheer.

    He paired his innovations with a desire for control over every facet of the sport, which he pursued over the course of more than four decades

    nytimes.com/2024/10/22/magazin

  14. Nationwide, just over a million children, mostly girls, participate in #cheer each year
    (some estimates are even higher),
    more than the number who play softball or lacrosse.

    And almost every part of that world is dominated by a single company: #Varsity #Spirit.
    It’s hard to cheer at the youth, high school or collegiate level without putting money in the company’s pocket.
    Varsity operates summer camps where children learn to do stunts and perform;
    it hosts events where they compete;
    it sells pom-poms they shake and uniforms they wear on the sidelines of high school and college football games.

    Each year, Varsity ships 4.6 million pieces of apparel,
    from $80 leopard-print “Cheer Mom” fleeces to custom uniforms covered in Swarovski crystals.

    Critics like Matt Stoller, an antitrust expert and the research director of the American Economic Liberties Project,
    claim that the cheer giant is a #monopolist whose dominance in its area rivals that of Google in tech
    and has had negative impacts for participants and their families.

    Varsity, based in Memphis, generates hundreds of millions of dollars in annual revenue,
    with gross profit margins at times topping 40 percent,
    making the company a cash cow for a series of private-equity owners.

    Parents have reported spending upward of $10,000 a year per child in competitive cheer,
    with Varsity controlling, by some estimates, more than 80 percent of that market.

    #Jeff #Webb, the man who founded Varsity, has been called “John D. Rockefeller with glitter”
    and the “Dark Sith Lord” of cheer
    by some of his detractors.

    Webb, now in his 70s, pioneered the gravity-defying acrobatics of modern cheer.

    He paired his innovations with a desire for control over every facet of the sport, which he pursued over the course of more than four decades

    nytimes.com/2024/10/22/magazin

  15. Nationwide, just over a million children, mostly girls, participate in #cheer each year
    (some estimates are even higher),
    more than the number who play softball or lacrosse.

    And almost every part of that world is dominated by a single company: #Varsity #Spirit.
    It’s hard to cheer at the youth, high school or collegiate level without putting money in the company’s pocket.
    Varsity operates summer camps where children learn to do stunts and perform;
    it hosts events where they compete;
    it sells pom-poms they shake and uniforms they wear on the sidelines of high school and college football games.

    Each year, Varsity ships 4.6 million pieces of apparel,
    from $80 leopard-print “Cheer Mom” fleeces to custom uniforms covered in Swarovski crystals.

    Critics like Matt Stoller, an antitrust expert and the research director of the American Economic Liberties Project,
    claim that the cheer giant is a #monopolist whose dominance in its area rivals that of Google in tech
    and has had negative impacts for participants and their families.

    Varsity, based in Memphis, generates hundreds of millions of dollars in annual revenue,
    with gross profit margins at times topping 40 percent,
    making the company a cash cow for a series of private-equity owners.

    Parents have reported spending upward of $10,000 a year per child in competitive cheer,
    with Varsity controlling, by some estimates, more than 80 percent of that market.

    #Jeff #Webb, the man who founded Varsity, has been called “John D. Rockefeller with glitter”
    and the “Dark Sith Lord” of cheer
    by some of his detractors.

    Webb, now in his 70s, pioneered the gravity-defying acrobatics of modern cheer.

    He paired his innovations with a desire for control over every facet of the sport, which he pursued over the course of more than four decades

    nytimes.com/2024/10/22/magazin

  16. Nationwide, just over a million children, mostly girls, participate in #cheer each year
    (some estimates are even higher),
    more than the number who play softball or lacrosse.

    And almost every part of that world is dominated by a single company: #Varsity #Spirit.
    It’s hard to cheer at the youth, high school or collegiate level without putting money in the company’s pocket.
    Varsity operates summer camps where children learn to do stunts and perform;
    it hosts events where they compete;
    it sells pom-poms they shake and uniforms they wear on the sidelines of high school and college football games.

    Each year, Varsity ships 4.6 million pieces of apparel,
    from $80 leopard-print “Cheer Mom” fleeces to custom uniforms covered in Swarovski crystals.

    Critics like Matt Stoller, an antitrust expert and the research director of the American Economic Liberties Project,
    claim that the cheer giant is a #monopolist whose dominance in its area rivals that of Google in tech
    and has had negative impacts for participants and their families.

    Varsity, based in Memphis, generates hundreds of millions of dollars in annual revenue,
    with gross profit margins at times topping 40 percent,
    making the company a cash cow for a series of private-equity owners.

    Parents have reported spending upward of $10,000 a year per child in competitive cheer,
    with Varsity controlling, by some estimates, more than 80 percent of that market.

    #Jeff #Webb, the man who founded Varsity, has been called “John D. Rockefeller with glitter”
    and the “Dark Sith Lord” of cheer
    by some of his detractors.

    Webb, now in his 70s, pioneered the gravity-defying acrobatics of modern cheer.

    He paired his innovations with a desire for control over every facet of the sport, which he pursued over the course of more than four decades

    nytimes.com/2024/10/22/magazin

  17. A bi candidate runs to unseat Ohio House Speaker Matt Huffman in rural Ohio

    Democrat and Lima Pride Alliance Co-Founder Jeff Givan faces an uphill battle in a region that voted overwhelmingly for Trump.

    #candidate #jeff-givan #lgbtq+-candidate #lima #matt-huffman #rural #sub-hb-96
    thebuckeyeflame.com/2026/04/10

  18. ► Otro vídeo que me gusta en YT «This is no joke: the SBC hobby is dying» youtube.com/watch?v=HeX22LnKdFY #youtube #video #Jeff Geerling