Oregon
MUST WATCH: Dan Lanning voices incredible Super Regional hype video for Oregon baseball
Ahead of the 2024 College Station Super Regional between the Oregon baseball team and the Texas A&M Aggies, the head coach of the Oregon Ducks has publicly put his voice out there in clear support of his team. Well, almost his team. His colleague’s team is more precise.
It shouldn’t shock anybody that Dan Lanning, the head coach of the Oregon football team, would be pretty supportive of the Oregon baseball team. And as it turns out, he’s pretty good at speaking in things like highlight videos and promotional content.
So, the Oregon athletics department was more than wise to get him to lend his voice for an Oregon baseball hype video.
Because this is the perfect hype video ahead of the College Station Super Regional.
I mean, this is just a must watch video for Oregon Ducks fans ahead of the 2024 Bryan-College Station Super Regional.
The video isn’t just great because of Lanning’s participation (though it is always great to see collaboration across different parts of a university’s athletics department). You could probably get Mickey Mouse to do the narration here and it would still be a phenomenal watch (and that would honestly be a lot of fun, someone with some AI voice editing skills should get on that and send the video to me).
It’s great cinematography. Just really solid video work that highlights how hard the Ducks have worked to get to this point.
Whoever did the script writing for this did a great job as well.
Hearing Lanning say things like “When a Duck is pushed, it pushes back” or “the road to Omaha is a journey and to get there it takes everyone competing for the same goal: a championship” over the backdrop of perfectly placed melodramatic music? Well, that’s good sports marketing work.
Shoutout to the Oregon athletics department for dropping this video ahead of the College Station Super Regional. More universities should craft content that is this good.
Oregon
Watch: Cops follow black bear through town
WILSONVILLE, Ore. (CNN) – Under the cover of the night sky, a bear took a jaunt around an Oregon town. Its presumed search for a snack was interrupted by a police officer’s bright spotlight.
For the next few minutes, the officer followed the bear as it sauntered down the road, even making sure the animal didn’t dart into the road.
Eventually, video shows the officer corralled the black bear and escorted it to a nearby river where it would be safer.
Copyright 2026 CNN Newsource. All rights reserved.
Oregon
We’re burning daylight! Oregon will lose about 50 minute of daytime by the end of July
PORTLAND, Ore. (KATU) — The summer solstice, which marks the astronomical beginning of Summer, is also considered the longest day of the year– meaning daytime hours are longer while nighttime hours are shorter.
WEATHER | Latest Storm Tracker 2 Forecast
This is because the summer solstice marks when the Northern Hemisphere is closest to the sun.
In Washington and Oregon, we will lose about 50 minutes by the end of July. But in the southern United States, that change is reduced.
For example, in Florida, they will lose about 20 minutes by the end of the month.
As Earth continues to orbit around the sun while rotating on its axis, the Northern Hemisphere will eventually be faced away from the sun as we approach winter solstice on December 21, 2026.
While we are losing daylight, we will not be losing any sunshine. High temperatures on Sunday will end in the lower 80s and Tuesday’s high could be closer to 90.
Oregon
Wildfire Fact Sheet – (Incident #0383) | Central Oregon Fire Information
Start Date: July 4, 1628
Location: Approximately 1 mile West of Hole in the Ground Vista Point
Jurisdiction: Deschutes Forest Service
Fire Size: 10 acres
Cause: Under investigation
Fuels: Mixed timber and sage
Containment: 0%
Structures at risk: Nearest structure is 1/4 mile
Fire Crews/Resources: Interagency resources are suppressing fire with 2 engines, 1 dozer, 1 water tender, and one air attack.
The BLM is working with the newly established U.S. Wildland Fire Service to coordinate with Central Oregon Fire Management Service (COFMS). Visitors and locals may notice multiple agency logos posted and interagency COFMS prevention patrols by federal wildland fire apparatus throughout Central Oregon, reflecting a unified effort to suppress wildland fires.
Visit the official source for wildfire information in Central Oregon at centraloregonfire.org for wildfire updates or follow fire information on X/Twitter @CentralORfire. Call 9-1-1 to report a wildfire. For smoke and air quality information visit fire.airnow.gov.
Discover more from Central Oregon Fire Information
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