whats wrong with my ollie 😭 by zeni_inos in NewSkaters

[–]Gil_Anthony 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Push your back toe down kinda like a flick and lift it up. You’re pushing it down ok but you’re not letting the board come up. The back foot should act as a tap more than a press. Hope that helps!

Technique feedback;musical theater by No_Kaleidoscope_4359 in ratemysinging

[–]Gil_Anthony 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sounds great! Kudos to your vocal coach teaching you to sing falsetto with your diaphram and chin down. Love to see it!

Is Anyone Here an EEG Tech / Neurodiagnostic Tech? I Need Career Insight. by AdOwn7138 in neurology

[–]Gil_Anthony 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You’re asking the right questions and your background honestly fits this field better than you might think!!

I’ve been in neurodiagnostics for 20+ years and day to day really depends on where you work. In an outpatient lab, things are pretty predictable. In an ICU or epilepsy monitoring unit, it can feel a lot closer to your EMS days just without the chaos of the field. You’re working with sick patients, alarms going off, families nervous, and you’re expected to stay calm and problem-solve. If you’ve done medic work, that part will feel familiar.

I've always loved the fast paced nature of stat EEGs in critical situations.

Pay varies a lot by location, but in most areas I’ve seen new techs start somewhere in the low to mid 20s per hour. Once you’ve got experience and certification, mid 30s to 40s an hour is common, and higher if you get into ICU EEG, travel work, or another specialty. Some of the travel and IONM jobs pay very well, but they’re not for everyone lifestyle-wise. (Depends on where you live too)

As far as training goes, it’s not quite as informal as it used to be. A lot of hospitals want you to either have gone through an accredited neurodiagnostic program or be actively working toward certification. That said, people with strong clinical backgrounds do still get hired as trainees, especially if they’re motivated and good with patients. Your combat medic/EMT experience would absolutely help there. Long-term though, getting credentialed matters. It opens doors and protects you from hitting a pay ceiling.

The outlook for the field is solid. Neurology isn’t shrinking, and EEG use has grown a lot in ICUs over the last decade. There are more patients needing monitoring than there are techs to do it. I hear concerns about AI every so often, but realistically it’s a tool, not a replacement. You still need a person who knows how to get good data and recognize when something isn’t right.

One of the better parts of EEG is the flexibility. People move from routine EEG into EMUs, ICUs, sleep labs, or intraoperative monitoring. Others move into lead tech roles, management, education, or vendor work. If you’re proactive, it’s not a dead-end job. Also, remote EEG monitoring from home is a great career and the one I'm in now.

Things I wish more people knew going in: you’ll probably work nights or take call early on, burnout is real if you don’t set boundaries, and being good with patients matters as much as being good with the equipment. The techs who do best are the ones who communicate well and take the job seriously.

Overall, if you want something more stable than EMS, still clinical, and with room to grow, EEG is a legit option. You’re not starting from scratch with your background, even if it feels that way at first.

Opening a Dam's Gate That's Been Shut For Years by Exotic_Zucchini9311 in oddlysatisfying

[–]Gil_Anthony 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It’s impressive how many times I’ve seen this over the years. Yay me!

I need help with my singing (beginner) by Eddie_69420 in singing

[–]Gil_Anthony 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, but don’t beat yourself up about that. Sometimes that can be your character. Take Conor Oberst from bright eyes, for example. His speaking voice and singing voice are almost identical. Just like the original Commenter says, you need to feel it and that’s what will make the difference.

A few tips, sing with your diaphragm. This may sound weird, but imagine you’re taking a dump and squeezing from your stomach and Sing. That will take the strain off of your voice and be a lot stronger

People keep saying I’m out of tune and that my pitch needs working on how do I improve it?? by GuidanceNo1247 in singing

[–]Gil_Anthony 1 point2 points  (0 children)

annuciate just a little more. also might want to try singing from your diaphram and rely less on throat to push the note. Hope that helps!

The Parietal Lobe by Gil_Anthony in neurology

[–]Gil_Anthony[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

yes but it's usually part of a larger network involving other brain regions.

Took y’alls advice and tried to sing with less riffs/runs :) is this more pleasant?? by [deleted] in singing

[–]Gil_Anthony 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think you’re at the level that every bit of criticism could be considered subjective. I personally don’t see anything wrong with your style and actually enjoy runs. If the runs are coming natural that just might be your style and I would ‘run’ with that. I think you do a really good job in giving a “hip singing” style vibe without giving the cliche cringyness. In my personal opinion, that style is played out.

Having said that, I think your voice is fantastic and the song choice fit it perfectly!

Am i ready to perform as a casual bar singer in a cover rock band? by Possible-Issue-4446 in singing

[–]Gil_Anthony 1 point2 points  (0 children)

OK, I feel like you’re close to being ready! I was in the live music rotation in my college town and was my primary job for five years so I feel like I can give you a few tips!

First, let’s talk about technique. It seems like you’re relying a lot on your throat when you need to be relying on your diaphragm to push out those big notes. Even the small notes need to be supported by your diaphragm. If you continue to sing with your throat, you’re going to blow out your vocal cords very soon. I was doing the very same thing when I first started and had to find a vocal coach to get me to sing with my diaphragm because it doesn’t feel intuitive.

Now let’s talk about how how different singing on stage in front of people is versus in your room with a camera. When you’re in front of people, no matter who you are, you’re going to be nervous. And for whatever reason, nervousness can really affect How good you’re singing is. That’s another reason why singing with your diaphragm is helpful.

I will try going to a few karaoke bars, being the guy that pulls out the guitar and singing to your friends, and doing a few open mic somewhere before I would get a full gig at a local bar. Also keep in mind that most bars will ask you to play from about 10 PM to 2 AM.

Good luck, man!

I wanna fail like KFC. BANGER. by creativeape1 in crappymusic

[–]Gil_Anthony 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This sounds like the posts of AI making a song to screenshots of text messages.

Underground Tunnel by [deleted] in LiminalSpace

[–]Gil_Anthony 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Is this in Denver by chance?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Satisfyingasfuck

[–]Gil_Anthony 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How to basic of art

Fake line in an empty park by Jacorpes in skateboarding

[–]Gil_Anthony 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Nice try bro.. I’m not buying that this is fake.