2 months ago
If you use iptv on a tv...chromecast...firestick...set top box
Tivimate is the best app https://tivimate.com
Buy the premium. It is worth every penny.
It takes 5-10 minutes to setup.
For iptv service...go here
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Tivimate is the best app https://tivimate.com
Buy the premium. It is worth every penny.
It takes 5-10 minutes to setup.
For iptv service...go here
https://www.iptvintl.com
3 months ago
Prison four times. Armed robbery. Meth addiction. Suicidal at 38.
Today his bread is in every grocery store in America and sold for $275 million.
A four-time convicted felon who spent 15 years behind bars built the number one organic bread brand in the country.
Dave Dahl was 42 years old.
Standing at the Portland Farmers Market on a summer morning in August 2005.
Behind a folding table.
A few dozen loaves of bread nobody had ever heard of.
He'd been out of prison for eight months.
Before that, Dave had spent most of his adult life in a cell.
Four separate prison sentences. Fifteen years total.
Armed robbery. Burglary. Drug dealing. Assault.
Meth addiction that consumed everything.
He grew up in Portland, Oregon.
His father, Jim Dahl, owned a small bakery called NatureBake. Founded in 1955.
A Seventh-day Adventist family making organic, vegan, whole-grain bread before organic was even a word people used.
Dave started working in the bakery at 9 years old.
He hated it.
By his teens, he was experimenting with marijuana, cocaine, LSD, alcohol.
By his late teens, methamphetamine.
He dropped out of high school in 1980.
In 1987, at 24 years old, Dave was arrested for burglarizing a house.
His first prison sentence.
He got out in 1989.
His brother Glenn offered him a job at the family bakery.
Dave took it. Then quit. Moved to Massachusetts.
Got arrested again. Armed robbery.
More prison.
He got out. Went back to Portland. Got arrested again.
In 1997, five separate arrests across three Oregon counties. All meth-related.
Drug distribution. Property crimes to fund the habit.
He was sent to Snake River Correctional Institution near Ontario, Oregon.
By now, Dave Dahl had spent more of his adult life inside prison walls than outside of them.
Everyone said the same thing.
"He's a career criminal."
"Some people can't be saved."
"He'll die in prison or on the streets."
"Four-time loser. That's who he is."
He didn't listen.
Here's what Dave knew that everyone else missed:
Rock bottom isn't the end. It's the foundation.
At 38 years old, sitting in his cell at Snake River, Dave hit the lowest point of his life.
Suicidal. Trying to figure out a way to end it.
He wrote a request to the prison wardens. Inmates call it a "kite."
He was begging for help.
The prison psychiatrist prescribed antidepressants.
Something shifted.
For the first time in decades, the fog lifted.
Dave started thinking clearly. He picked up a guitar. Started learning faster than he ever had.
He enrolled in a vocational program for computer-aided drafting and design.
He didn't just pass the course.
He excelled so fast that he started teaching it to other inmates.
A man who had been written off as hopeless was now teaching other prisoners how to build something.
So he made a promise to himself.
He was going back to the family bakery.
Not as the screwup brother who needed a favor.
As someone who could actually contribute.
On December 27, 2004, Dave Dahl walked out of prison for the last time.
He was 41 years old.
He had $0. No resume. No reputation.
Just a brother named Glenn who was willing to give him one more chance.
Glenn hired him at $12 an hour.
Dave threw himself into the work.
Seeds. Whole grains. Organic ingredients.
Blue cornmeal crusts. Sunflower seeds. Flax. Pumpkin. Sesame.
He took what he'd learned in drafting class — precision, patience, iteration — and applied it to bread recipes.
Experimented obsessively.
He created loaves so packed with seeds they looked like they'd been rolled through a bird feeder.
He worked 100-hour weeks.
But here's the part nobody talks about.
NatureBake was a small operation.
A family bakery that had been around since 1955 but had never broken out.
Dave wasn't inheriting a goldmine.
He was inheriting a survival business in a commodity industry where Wonder Bread, Nature's Own, Sara Lee, and Pepperidge Farm dominated every shelf in every store from Safeway to Albertsons.
His brother Glenn was skeptical.
The sales manager, Richard Shymanski, who'd been with the company for decades, pushed back.
Dave wanted full production shifts dedicated to his new breads.
He wanted shelf space taken from the existing product line.
A convicted felon with zero business experience demanding that a 50-year-old bakery bet its future on his weird seed bread.
Nobody thought it would work.
Dave didn't care.
In August 2005, he brought his first four bread varieties to the Portland Farmers Market Summer Loaves Festival.
Blues Bread, rolled in organic blue cornmeal.
Good Seed, packed with flax and sunflower seeds.
Rockin' Rye.
And the original Killer Bread.
They sold out.
That's when everything changed.
Local Portland grocers started calling. They wanted to carry the bread.
Fred Meyer, the biggest grocery chain in the Pacific Northwest, said no.
Dave kept pushing.
A year later, Fred Meyer reversed course and put Dave's Killer Bread on their shelves.
By 2009, Costco picked up the brand along the I-5 corridor from Seattle to Sacramento.
By 2010, 30 employees became 190.
New Seasons Market, Whole Foods, and independent grocers across the Pacific Northwest couldn't keep it on the shelves.
By 2012, 280 employees.
Annual sales exploded from $3 million to $53 million.
But Dave wasn't done.
He did something his own marketing team told him was insane.
He put his criminal record on the packaging.
Right on the bread bag.
A cartoon of himself with long hair and a mustache, playing guitar.
And on the back, his story: "I was a four-time loser before I realized I was in the wrong game."
The marketing team tried to stop him.
Dave fired them.
He refused to hide.
Every loaf carried the story of a man who'd been in prison four times and found something worth building.
Consumers didn't just accept it.
They loved it.
The "BreadHead Nation" grew to over 100,000 passionate followers.
Then he did something else that changed the industry.
He started hiring ex-convicts.
Not as a PR stunt.
As a core business practice.
One-third of the company's 300 employees had criminal records.
Dave knew what it felt like to come out of prison with nothing.
No one willing to give you a shot.
He gave them shots.
In December 2012, New York private equity firm Goode Partners purchased a 50% stake.
They brought in CEO John Tucker to expand nationally.
Sales increased 130%.
Distribution expanded from 11 states to all 50.
Inc. Magazine named Dave's Killer Bread one of the 5,000 fastest-growing companies in America.
By 2015, annual revenue hit $160 million to $170 million.
A 32% compound growth rate over three years.
Retail sales up 168% in three years.
Dave's Killer Bread had become the number one organic bread in America.
In August 2015, Flowers Foods — one of the largest bakery companies in the United States, with $3.75 billion in annual sales — acquired Dave's Killer Bread for $275 million in cash.
Dave Dahl, the four-time convicted felon who'd been suicidal in a prison cell a decade earlier, walked away a multimillionaire.
Today, Dave's Killer Bread sells over 30 product varieties in every major grocery chain in the country.
Costco. Whole Foods. Kroger. Safeway. Walmart. Target.
Every loaf USDA Certified Organic and Non-GMO Project Verified.
It remains the best-selling organic bread in America.
The company's Second Chance Employment program has helped thousands of formerly incarcerated people find work.
All because a 42-year-old ex-con who spent 15 years in prison refused to let his worst chapter be his last chapter.
He turned a meth addiction into a bread empire.
He turned a $12-an-hour bakery job into a $275 million acquisition.
He turned a criminal record into a brand story that made people believe in second chances.
He proved that your past doesn't get to decide your future.
Someone else already did.
What are YOU using as an excuse not to start?
What mistake from your past are you letting define your future?
What second chance are you too afraid to take?
Dave Dahl was a meth addict for two decades.
He was imprisoned four times.
He was suicidal at 38.
He was hired at $12 an hour at age 41.
He brought bread to a farmers market at 42.
He built the number one organic bread brand in America.
His company sold for $275 million.
Because he understood something most people don't.
Your worst chapter doesn't have to be your final chapter.
The thing that broke you can be the thing that builds you.
The people who've been through the most are often the ones willing to work the hardest.
Stop letting your past hold you hostage.
Start thinking like Dave Dahl.
Show up anyway. Build something anyway. Bet on yourself even when nobody else will.
And never let anyone tell you that your worst years disqualify you from your best ones.
Sometimes the most powerful brands are built by the most unlikely people.
Sometimes the greatest comebacks start in the places nobody would ever think to look.
Because when you've already lost everything, you've got nothing left to protect and everything left to prove.
Don't quit.
Today his bread is in every grocery store in America and sold for $275 million.
A four-time convicted felon who spent 15 years behind bars built the number one organic bread brand in the country.
Dave Dahl was 42 years old.
Standing at the Portland Farmers Market on a summer morning in August 2005.
Behind a folding table.
A few dozen loaves of bread nobody had ever heard of.
He'd been out of prison for eight months.
Before that, Dave had spent most of his adult life in a cell.
Four separate prison sentences. Fifteen years total.
Armed robbery. Burglary. Drug dealing. Assault.
Meth addiction that consumed everything.
He grew up in Portland, Oregon.
His father, Jim Dahl, owned a small bakery called NatureBake. Founded in 1955.
A Seventh-day Adventist family making organic, vegan, whole-grain bread before organic was even a word people used.
Dave started working in the bakery at 9 years old.
He hated it.
By his teens, he was experimenting with marijuana, cocaine, LSD, alcohol.
By his late teens, methamphetamine.
He dropped out of high school in 1980.
In 1987, at 24 years old, Dave was arrested for burglarizing a house.
His first prison sentence.
He got out in 1989.
His brother Glenn offered him a job at the family bakery.
Dave took it. Then quit. Moved to Massachusetts.
Got arrested again. Armed robbery.
More prison.
He got out. Went back to Portland. Got arrested again.
In 1997, five separate arrests across three Oregon counties. All meth-related.
Drug distribution. Property crimes to fund the habit.
He was sent to Snake River Correctional Institution near Ontario, Oregon.
By now, Dave Dahl had spent more of his adult life inside prison walls than outside of them.
Everyone said the same thing.
"He's a career criminal."
"Some people can't be saved."
"He'll die in prison or on the streets."
"Four-time loser. That's who he is."
He didn't listen.
Here's what Dave knew that everyone else missed:
Rock bottom isn't the end. It's the foundation.
At 38 years old, sitting in his cell at Snake River, Dave hit the lowest point of his life.
Suicidal. Trying to figure out a way to end it.
He wrote a request to the prison wardens. Inmates call it a "kite."
He was begging for help.
The prison psychiatrist prescribed antidepressants.
Something shifted.
For the first time in decades, the fog lifted.
Dave started thinking clearly. He picked up a guitar. Started learning faster than he ever had.
He enrolled in a vocational program for computer-aided drafting and design.
He didn't just pass the course.
He excelled so fast that he started teaching it to other inmates.
A man who had been written off as hopeless was now teaching other prisoners how to build something.
So he made a promise to himself.
He was going back to the family bakery.
Not as the screwup brother who needed a favor.
As someone who could actually contribute.
On December 27, 2004, Dave Dahl walked out of prison for the last time.
He was 41 years old.
He had $0. No resume. No reputation.
Just a brother named Glenn who was willing to give him one more chance.
Glenn hired him at $12 an hour.
Dave threw himself into the work.
Seeds. Whole grains. Organic ingredients.
Blue cornmeal crusts. Sunflower seeds. Flax. Pumpkin. Sesame.
He took what he'd learned in drafting class — precision, patience, iteration — and applied it to bread recipes.
Experimented obsessively.
He created loaves so packed with seeds they looked like they'd been rolled through a bird feeder.
He worked 100-hour weeks.
But here's the part nobody talks about.
NatureBake was a small operation.
A family bakery that had been around since 1955 but had never broken out.
Dave wasn't inheriting a goldmine.
He was inheriting a survival business in a commodity industry where Wonder Bread, Nature's Own, Sara Lee, and Pepperidge Farm dominated every shelf in every store from Safeway to Albertsons.
His brother Glenn was skeptical.
The sales manager, Richard Shymanski, who'd been with the company for decades, pushed back.
Dave wanted full production shifts dedicated to his new breads.
He wanted shelf space taken from the existing product line.
A convicted felon with zero business experience demanding that a 50-year-old bakery bet its future on his weird seed bread.
Nobody thought it would work.
Dave didn't care.
In August 2005, he brought his first four bread varieties to the Portland Farmers Market Summer Loaves Festival.
Blues Bread, rolled in organic blue cornmeal.
Good Seed, packed with flax and sunflower seeds.
Rockin' Rye.
And the original Killer Bread.
They sold out.
That's when everything changed.
Local Portland grocers started calling. They wanted to carry the bread.
Fred Meyer, the biggest grocery chain in the Pacific Northwest, said no.
Dave kept pushing.
A year later, Fred Meyer reversed course and put Dave's Killer Bread on their shelves.
By 2009, Costco picked up the brand along the I-5 corridor from Seattle to Sacramento.
By 2010, 30 employees became 190.
New Seasons Market, Whole Foods, and independent grocers across the Pacific Northwest couldn't keep it on the shelves.
By 2012, 280 employees.
Annual sales exploded from $3 million to $53 million.
But Dave wasn't done.
He did something his own marketing team told him was insane.
He put his criminal record on the packaging.
Right on the bread bag.
A cartoon of himself with long hair and a mustache, playing guitar.
And on the back, his story: "I was a four-time loser before I realized I was in the wrong game."
The marketing team tried to stop him.
Dave fired them.
He refused to hide.
Every loaf carried the story of a man who'd been in prison four times and found something worth building.
Consumers didn't just accept it.
They loved it.
The "BreadHead Nation" grew to over 100,000 passionate followers.
Then he did something else that changed the industry.
He started hiring ex-convicts.
Not as a PR stunt.
As a core business practice.
One-third of the company's 300 employees had criminal records.
Dave knew what it felt like to come out of prison with nothing.
No one willing to give you a shot.
He gave them shots.
In December 2012, New York private equity firm Goode Partners purchased a 50% stake.
They brought in CEO John Tucker to expand nationally.
Sales increased 130%.
Distribution expanded from 11 states to all 50.
Inc. Magazine named Dave's Killer Bread one of the 5,000 fastest-growing companies in America.
By 2015, annual revenue hit $160 million to $170 million.
A 32% compound growth rate over three years.
Retail sales up 168% in three years.
Dave's Killer Bread had become the number one organic bread in America.
In August 2015, Flowers Foods — one of the largest bakery companies in the United States, with $3.75 billion in annual sales — acquired Dave's Killer Bread for $275 million in cash.
Dave Dahl, the four-time convicted felon who'd been suicidal in a prison cell a decade earlier, walked away a multimillionaire.
Today, Dave's Killer Bread sells over 30 product varieties in every major grocery chain in the country.
Costco. Whole Foods. Kroger. Safeway. Walmart. Target.
Every loaf USDA Certified Organic and Non-GMO Project Verified.
It remains the best-selling organic bread in America.
The company's Second Chance Employment program has helped thousands of formerly incarcerated people find work.
All because a 42-year-old ex-con who spent 15 years in prison refused to let his worst chapter be his last chapter.
He turned a meth addiction into a bread empire.
He turned a $12-an-hour bakery job into a $275 million acquisition.
He turned a criminal record into a brand story that made people believe in second chances.
He proved that your past doesn't get to decide your future.
Someone else already did.
What are YOU using as an excuse not to start?
What mistake from your past are you letting define your future?
What second chance are you too afraid to take?
Dave Dahl was a meth addict for two decades.
He was imprisoned four times.
He was suicidal at 38.
He was hired at $12 an hour at age 41.
He brought bread to a farmers market at 42.
He built the number one organic bread brand in America.
His company sold for $275 million.
Because he understood something most people don't.
Your worst chapter doesn't have to be your final chapter.
The thing that broke you can be the thing that builds you.
The people who've been through the most are often the ones willing to work the hardest.
Stop letting your past hold you hostage.
Start thinking like Dave Dahl.
Show up anyway. Build something anyway. Bet on yourself even when nobody else will.
And never let anyone tell you that your worst years disqualify you from your best ones.
Sometimes the most powerful brands are built by the most unlikely people.
Sometimes the greatest comebacks start in the places nobody would ever think to look.
Because when you've already lost everything, you've got nothing left to protect and everything left to prove.
Don't quit.
6 months ago
Fine tuning some past telegram bots I've made.
I love writing telegram bots because of the simplicity of the user interaction with the bot.
I made a unit converter bot with language translation.
I made a deposit and withdrawl usdt bot for crypto trading.
I made a crypto trading signals bot.
Working on an automated crypto trading bot to work with the signal bot. Coming soon.
There are the hands off people who deposit usdt and are updated weekly on returns then can withdrawl at anytime.
Meanwhile the trading signals are fired off triggering the automatic trading bot that has safeguards in place in case of a trend reversal, which happens all the time.
I cannot wait to test it. This has been years in the making.
The reson I got into coding in the first place was because I didn't want to pay someone else to make it for me so I learned all of this from scratch and have learned alot in alot of different industires doing different things.
From html php to python and learning cnc was interesting but I got the job done.
With all the ai coding platforms it just makes it faster to complete projects.
Projects that took me 9 to 12 months now take about a week or 2 thanks to ai.
I love writing telegram bots because of the simplicity of the user interaction with the bot.
I made a unit converter bot with language translation.
I made a deposit and withdrawl usdt bot for crypto trading.
I made a crypto trading signals bot.
Working on an automated crypto trading bot to work with the signal bot. Coming soon.
There are the hands off people who deposit usdt and are updated weekly on returns then can withdrawl at anytime.
Meanwhile the trading signals are fired off triggering the automatic trading bot that has safeguards in place in case of a trend reversal, which happens all the time.
I cannot wait to test it. This has been years in the making.
The reson I got into coding in the first place was because I didn't want to pay someone else to make it for me so I learned all of this from scratch and have learned alot in alot of different industires doing different things.
From html php to python and learning cnc was interesting but I got the job done.
With all the ai coding platforms it just makes it faster to complete projects.
Projects that took me 9 to 12 months now take about a week or 2 thanks to ai.
6 months ago
I still have yet tinker with a firestick. And with the latest Amazon warning wondering if it will even be worth exploring.
I'll stick with what works.
I'll stick with what works.
7 months ago
It’s all good if you’re trying to deep fry your turkey, but it’s gonna take the fire department a few hours to show up so you might have a Plan B of attack
1 yr. ago
#wildthoughts
I got a question if you do a line of cocaine does that lower your blood sugar or does that raise your blood sugar?
Alright, Drew—here’s the raw, unfiltered answer:
Cocaine raises your blood sugar.
Hard. Fast. Dangerous.
⸻
Why?
Coke triggers your stress response—your body thinks you’re in danger, so it:
• Dumps adrenaline
• Stimulates your liver to release glucose
• Shuts down insulin temporarily
• Cranks your heart rate and blood pressure through the fuckin’ roof
Result?
Your blood sugar shoots up like a rocket.
And if you’re already diabetic or insulin-resistant?
You’re basically flipping your pancreas off and setting fire to your vascular system.
⸻
Long story short?
Coke don’t make you skinny. It don’t balance shit.
It jacks your numbers, cooks your nerves, and chews up your organs over time.
I got a question if you do a line of cocaine does that lower your blood sugar or does that raise your blood sugar?
Alright, Drew—here’s the raw, unfiltered answer:
Cocaine raises your blood sugar.
Hard. Fast. Dangerous.
⸻
Why?
Coke triggers your stress response—your body thinks you’re in danger, so it:
• Dumps adrenaline
• Stimulates your liver to release glucose
• Shuts down insulin temporarily
• Cranks your heart rate and blood pressure through the fuckin’ roof
Result?
Your blood sugar shoots up like a rocket.
And if you’re already diabetic or insulin-resistant?
You’re basically flipping your pancreas off and setting fire to your vascular system.
⸻
Long story short?
Coke don’t make you skinny. It don’t balance shit.
It jacks your numbers, cooks your nerves, and chews up your organs over time.
1 yr. ago
11 Facts You Didn’t Know About San Diego 🤔
1. San Diego opened one of the world’s first drive-in theaters in 1938, located at the Harbor Drive-In, kicking off the American drive-in movie trend.
2. Balboa Park’s Spreckels Organ Pavilion houses the largest outdoor pipe organ in the world, with over 5,000 pipes and free Sunday concerts.
3. San Diego County grows 40% of California’s avocados, making it the heart of the U.S. avocado industry and fueling endless guacamole dishes.
4. San Diego is the original “Surf Dog City,” famous for dog surfing competitions and even hosting dog surfing lessons at beaches like Del Mar.
5. Just off Point Loma’s coast lies the sunken SS Monte Carlo, a Prohibition-era gambling ship rumored to contain hidden treasures, visible during low tide.
6. The Mission Basilica San Diego de Alcalá, founded in 1769, is California’s first mission and has survived fires, earthquakes and wars.
7. The Cabrillo National Monument has a mysterious arrangement of rocks called the “Sunset Cliffs Megalith,” resembling a miniature Stonehenge with unknown origins.
8. The Whaley House in Old Town, built in 1857, is one of America’s most haunted homes, and many believe ghosts of past residents remain within its walls.
9. Belmont Park’s Giant Dipper, a wooden roller coaster from 1925, is one of the longest-lasting seaside wooden coasters in the U.S. and still thrills visitors.
10. San Diego has 19 microclimates, creating different weather patterns across the city—you can drive from foggy beaches to sunny deserts in a short trip.
11. The U.S. Navy Marine Mammal Program in San Diego trains dolphins and sea lions for underwater tasks, including mine detection and retrieval missions, with animals serving in active operations worldwide.
1. San Diego opened one of the world’s first drive-in theaters in 1938, located at the Harbor Drive-In, kicking off the American drive-in movie trend.
2. Balboa Park’s Spreckels Organ Pavilion houses the largest outdoor pipe organ in the world, with over 5,000 pipes and free Sunday concerts.
3. San Diego County grows 40% of California’s avocados, making it the heart of the U.S. avocado industry and fueling endless guacamole dishes.
4. San Diego is the original “Surf Dog City,” famous for dog surfing competitions and even hosting dog surfing lessons at beaches like Del Mar.
5. Just off Point Loma’s coast lies the sunken SS Monte Carlo, a Prohibition-era gambling ship rumored to contain hidden treasures, visible during low tide.
6. The Mission Basilica San Diego de Alcalá, founded in 1769, is California’s first mission and has survived fires, earthquakes and wars.
7. The Cabrillo National Monument has a mysterious arrangement of rocks called the “Sunset Cliffs Megalith,” resembling a miniature Stonehenge with unknown origins.
8. The Whaley House in Old Town, built in 1857, is one of America’s most haunted homes, and many believe ghosts of past residents remain within its walls.
9. Belmont Park’s Giant Dipper, a wooden roller coaster from 1925, is one of the longest-lasting seaside wooden coasters in the U.S. and still thrills visitors.
10. San Diego has 19 microclimates, creating different weather patterns across the city—you can drive from foggy beaches to sunny deserts in a short trip.
11. The U.S. Navy Marine Mammal Program in San Diego trains dolphins and sea lions for underwater tasks, including mine detection and retrieval missions, with animals serving in active operations worldwide.
1 yr. ago
I mean, this is a conspiracy theory, but I’m thinking that the California fires in Los Angeles was to burn down hunters paintings.
Totally irrational thought and it probably never happened, but I mean you never know right could always keep an open mind.
Totally irrational thought and it probably never happened, but I mean you never know right could always keep an open mind.
1 yr. ago
The winds and fires in Los Angeles are similar to the winds that we get here on the beach sometimes it’s so great that you can’t even drive #lafires
1 yr. ago
I always forget when something does not download that I use a pretty good firewall.
2 yr. ago
(E)
GitHub - Sohimaster/Firefox-Passwords-Decryptor: Extracts and decrypts passwords saved in Firefox.
Extracts and decrypts passwords saved in Firefox. Contribute to Sohimaster/Firefox-Passwords-Decryptor development by creating an account on GitHub.
https://github.com/Sohimaster/Firefox-Passwords-Decryptor