40 Burst results for "50 %"

Postcards to the Universe with Melisa
Dr. Raymond Moody & Paul Perry Join Melisa to Discuss What Happens When We Die
"So I have Dr. Raymond Moody and Paul Perry. Raymond A. Moody Jr. MD PhD is the leading authority of near -death experiences and the author of several books, including the seminal Life After Life. The founder of the Life After Life Institute, Moody has lectured on the topic throughout the world and is a counselor in private practice. He has appeared on many programs, including Today and Turning Point. Paul Perry has co -written several New York Times bestsellers, including The Light Beyond and Evidence of the Afterlife. He is also a documentary filmmaker, and for his film and the book about Salvador Dali. He has been knighted in Portugal, oh, that's interesting, a groundbreaking book, this is, that combines nearly 50 years of afterlife and near -death experience research to provide proof of the existence of the soul and life after death from psychiatrist and bestselling author of Life After Life. Dr. Raymond Moody and New York Times bestselling author, Paul Perry, after spending nearly five decades studying near -death experiences, Moody finally has the answer to humanity's most pressing question, what happens when we die? And in this book, Proof of Life After Life, both authors reveal that consciousness survives after the death of the body, featuring in -depth case studies, the latest research, and eye -opening interviews with experts. Proof explores everything from common paranormal signs to shared death experiences and much more. And you can learn more about each of these authors if you go to lifeafterlife .com or paulperryproductions .com. Welcome gentlemen, thank you so much for being with me today. Hi, thank you, nice introduction, appreciate it. Yeah, thank you. Thank you very much. So, first of all, okay, so, Raymond, you've been doing this since the 70s, am I correct in that? I'll just ask you each, you've been doing this work since the 70s? And what got you into wanting to explore near -death experiences? Well, fortunately, I was not exposed to religion when I was a kid, except very minimally. And so, I grew up with no idea of an afterlife. And so, I went to the University of Virginia at age 18 with intending to study astronomy, but took a philosophy course and immediately got hooked. And particular the book was Plato's Republic, which is, oddly, about a near -death experience. It culminates in a near -death experience of a warrior. And not just having no idea that anybody took the notion of an afterlife seriously, I asked my professor and he said that early Greek philosophers knew about cases of people who were believed dead and resuscitated. But had I no idea it still applied, but in 1965, in Charlottesville, I met a man who had such an experience, he was a professor of psychiatry there, and that really got me hooked and subsequent to that time, through my PhD in philosophy and then three years of teaching philosophy at a university, and then going to medical school and ultimately going into forensic psychiatry. But throughout that career, I've interviewed thousands and thousands of people who came to the brink of death and had these astonishing experiences. So that's how I got into it. It's amazing. It's really interesting. I can imagine it is a long process. And Paul, I'm going to ask you the same question. What made you interested in exploring this? Well, I was editing American Health magazine in New York City, this was in 1988, and Raymond and I shared the same agent, same book agent. One day our agent, Nat Sobel, called me and he said, would you like to write a book with Dr. Raymond Moody? And I said, I have no idea who Raymond Moody is. And he said, well, he's a man who named and defined the near -death experience. And I said, I'm sorry, I don't know what that is. And he said, well, you know, for a guy who's the editor of a major health magazine, you really need to get educated on things like the near -death experience, which was an offhand insult for an agent to talk like that. And so I said, sure, OK, I'll go meet Raymond. And Raymond was living in Georgia at the time. And I flew down to meet him and, you know, Raymond is an amazing person from the first time you meet him. And so we started writing this book called The Light Beyond, and I just got entranced by Raymond's account of near -death experiences and the stories we would hear. People would come by his house and tell their stories. And it just got amazing. So anyway, we wrapped up the book, The Light Beyond, and there was, in my estimation, a piece missing. And that was there was nothing in the book about children and near -death experiences. And Raymond said, well, nobody's done much research on that yet, except for one guy, a pediatrician in Seattle, Melvin Morris. And he connected me with Melvin. And I did a book with him called Closer to the Light. And it's all about children and near -death experiences. And after that, I wrote that book and then I thought, well, there's something missing here. There needs to be a larger study about people who have had near -death experiences and how they affect them during their life. So we wrote a book about that and on and on. Every book I would write, I would find a gap that needed to be filled. And that's gone now through, I think, 15 books on near -death experiences.

WTOP 24 Hour News
Fresh "50 %" from WTOP 24 Hour News
"Reports go to commuterconnections .org to sign up or call 800 -745 -RIDE. I'm wtop traffic. Early Friday morning here and temperatures aren't quite as low, not quite as cold out there as it's been the last couple of mornings. We're starting out upper 20s to upper 30s across the area with partly cloudy skies. Clouds quickly on the increase and we'll be dealing with some rain between 11 a .m. and 5 p .m. High temperature today between 45 and 50 degrees. Rain showers move out in your drive for your Friday evening plans. I'm 7news chief meteorologist Veronica Johnson of the First Alert Weather Center. 39 degrees upon circle. You're waking up to 32 in Germantown, 37 Annandale. We are back up to 41 in our nation's capital. Good morning. Welcome to WTOP. Time now is 4 21. It's this Friday morning. You're with Dean Lane on Santa. I hope you are having a good day in the North Pole. Is it cold all the time there? Is that why

Capstone Conversation
Jared Asch Asks Loella Haskew and Cindy Darling: Is "Measure O" Working?
"Let's get local and talk about Walnut Creek for a minute. It's been about a year since we've the people of Walnut Creek have voted in Measure O. Talk to us. It's an additional sales tax to provide benefits for the city. Is it working and what are we doing with the money? What are the priorities? Start Cindy Ann and you can fill in the gaps. Yeah. OK. So the first thing we did to promise the community is to find an oversight group so that they look at what we've done to make sure that we live up to our promises of what we and we were going to do when we started the Measure O process. Interestingly enough, when I first ran in 2012 or 2011, I ran on a half cent sales tax increase and I got the more votes than I ever did since then. I think there were a group of people who knew that we weren't quite we needed a little extra oomph in our spending. We've done some additions at the police department. We've made some spending for attracting more people downtown where we're doing things, a lot of things in and around it. But the biggest project is the one that Cindy Darling is working on. And so I'm going to let her take over. One of the reasons I ran for council is it's important for a community. My kids loved growing up in Walnut Creek. They swam, they played Little League, they played this, they played that, they did this art class. And a lot of the facilities that they were accessing were built back in the 50s and 60s. And we all know things that were built in the 50s and 60s are now starting to fall apart. And we need to pay it forward to the next generation. And that was a big driver on Measure O. The Clark Swim Center and Heather Farm is one bad accident away from its pumps not ever running again. So we are working on a new community center and a new aquatic center to carry on the traditions in Walnut Creek. And that was one of the bigger drivers of Measure O. We are in the planning phase right now and we have a lot of active, robust public input coming into the process. We have a survey out. You can go to the city councils with the city's website and take a survey on what you want out of that community center, what you want out of the aquatics facility. And we're going to be working to get it so it's up and operational by 2027 and it's going to be cool. Yeah. And there's there's some concern over the money from Measure O coming up on the ballot. Do you I don't want to take up too much time going into every detail on it, but can you talk about what is coming up in 2024 and what impact that might have on Measure O as well as a number of other regional measures? There are two things to be addressed by the population. The first one is how many votes do we need to do to get permission to have an additional sales tax? If we go out for a specific purpose right now, you need two thirds of a vote of a community and it's incredibly difficult to get that. If you go out for a general measure, you only need to get 50 % plus one vote. There is a measure being brought forth by a business council that wants to remove so much freedom with what we local people can do with taxes. And so they want to make every vote a sixty thirds vote. And the thing that is most concerning to us because of our position is they can claw back a vote that happened in 2022 and say you have to run it again and get the two thirds vote. So so we're nervous about the business one. And we're also thinking it's 10 % of people will vote no on any thing that has money to do with money. And that's in order to get 65%. You've got to work really hard. And so a lot of cities don't have the capacity to get important things done because they can't get out there and get this full measure of voters to pay attention.

WTOP 24 Hour News
Fresh update on "50 %" discussed on WTOP 24 Hour News
"Showers veronica says mainly falling between 11 this morning and five in the afternoon comfortable high of 50 degrees you're waking up to 37 degrees in our nation's capital good morning to you I'm Dean Lane time now on WTOP is 4 .14 in the morning. This is WTOP News checking out stuff to watch this weekend new on the big the screen shift it's about a man who runs into a stranger with otherworldly powers if you will who banishes him to a parallel earth and he fights to get back to the woman the people here have no hope you still looking for that wife of yours you're clinging to scraps of rumors and then he

Postcards to the Universe with Melisa
What Are Energetic Activations? Photographer Adjanys Marrero Explains
"Talk about like you do these, what do you call them? Energetic activations is your part of what you do, you like to do. What is that? How do you explain how they work? Yeah, absolutely. So during the photo shoot, just because I have done so many throughout the years and each session is an experience, but as I started to work with more people who are in the law of attraction, manifestation, and energetic, I noticed that while we were in session and the way that I directed them through the direction actually created these crazy breakthroughs. So I started to really get these downloads around how when you not only brand your vision and brand it for the world in a very beautiful way, whatever feels beautiful in a line for you, but you're absolutely almost able to break into that frequency into the future because a photo shoot could be quite a pampered experience. It could be like you're leaning back and you're receiving the spotlight and you're allowing yourself to be seen and there's nothing you can do except pose, you know, no matter how uncomfortable you are, you're still being held. And I realized that a lot of people, it's almost like they grabbed that future self and they just literally brought it to this very present moment. And I was like, it's like you meet your future self because you're dressing how she would dress, you're speaking and you're feeling into that. And I'm bringing that energy because I want you to be at your highest calibration because I know that's what's going to get captured in the image. So the reason I do metaphysical branding is because if you're in a negative mood, okay, for example, I'm sure you have a lot of listeners, but I'm a woman who is speaking to women, being in front of the camera is nerve -wracking. Yes, it is. So many body issues, so many issues, you know, it is nerve -wracking. And so when you are scared of how you look, even if you look beautiful, but your hair and your mind is going, I look crazy, I feel ugly, I'm bad, I'm this, I'm that, I don't care how beautiful your images look, the energy that is being emitted is going to put people off. Yeah, I agree with you on that. So what I need to do is to break people out of thinking about themselves and thinking about their clients. In my sessions, you're always constantly thinking about the work and the love that you're giving your clients. So when I capture you, I literally capture you the love you have for those who are going to see these images. So they can like receive something from that. So that's where we have the 50 milliseconds, you know, because we do energy work and we do it very intentionally. So yes, they look gorgeous. Yes, you're having fun. But at every step of the way, we're thinking about how we're serving the collective in the name of the divine. Always, always, always.

WTOP 24 Hour News
Fresh "50 %" from WTOP 24 Hour News
"The gsa's inspector general here at home is going to evaluate how locally maryland was chosen over virginia for the new fbi headquarters keep it here for more in just minutes you are listening to 103 .5 fm and wtop good friday morning december 1st glad you're with us 348 traffic and weather on the eight skin burgers in the wtop traffic center well there's four incidents working all around the Washington area two in virginia including on southbound 95 right lane closed because of the accident activity south of Russell road then the capital beltway in loop between old dominion drive and the george tom pike the right lane is shut down because of the broken down vehicle in maryland for the other two this includes eastbound landover road maryland 202 prior to 75th avenue that's east of us 50 in prince george's county all lanes are closed because of the accident there are localized detours so the delays are kept to a minimum then frederick in county for the accident this is eastbound 70 past masseter road two right lanes are blocked traffic getting by in the open left lane so there are no delays very late volume of traffic there is the work zone only in maryland on the capitol beltway out of loop between georgia avenue and connecticut avenue the two right lanes are blocked because of this work zone also have work zones going on in prince georges county including northbound baltimore washington to between parkway eastern avenue and u .s 50 the two left lanes are blocked because of uh because of this road work connecticut avenue southbound in montgomery county at aspen hill road right lane is closed and also in virginia on southbound 395 right after the 14th street bridge only the far right lane is getting by in that ongoing work zone there are no delays past any of these incidents as we get started for the rush hour this morning i'm ken burger wtop traffic early friday morning here and temperatures and quite as low not quite as cold out there as it's been the last couple of mornings we're starting out upper

The Dan Bongino Show
Gun Confiscation in Biden's America: Will You Be on the List?
"Who have 100 ,000 followers. I'm not even mentioning their names, but just imagine for a second you garner 50 thousand followers. You're Joe Smith. You've got a regular job, living a decent life with your two kids and the dog, whatever it may be. And all of a sudden you start posting about and Biden wins, God forbid, in 2024, you start posting about Hunter Biden's crack problems and his paintings and money laundering. Oh, next thing you know, look, you get a knock at the door. We'd like to talk to you about these Twitter posts, by the way. You have a gun, son of your business. Well, actually it is our business. You have a gun. We'd like to see that. Next thing you know, you get some kind of flag red against you. Your guns are confiscated. look, Oh, they find a gun in your house and all of a sudden they make up some phantom menacing thing. Oh, he lunged for it. Meanwhile, you were seven rooms away while they're in your house. This is what worries me. They will use the gun list as a way to target their political opponents. Not that they're going to confiscate every gun. There's no way. They have no chance. But how would they do that, folks? And now let's play a little interactive game. But, Dan, I've listened to your show before. It's illegal for the federal government to create Yes, correct. It's also illegal for the federal government to use tax dollars to pay off people's student loans. But they do that. There's always a workaround for tyrants. And the workaround for the tyrants is the background check system. The federal government wants to desperately compile a list of everybody that's gone through a background check for a firearm. So they have a list of every firearm and who bought it. The problem, ladies and gentlemen, is the mandatory background check is only for sales from FFLs. It's not for private. So Mike if or I were to give away a firearm to, say, our daughters or sons, and they're not prohibited possessors, the government son of the government's business, your gun, you can give it to whoever you want, as long as it's the law. They want

WTOP 24 Hour News
Fresh update on "50 %" discussed on WTOP 24 Hour News
"Slowest traffic WTOP traffic every 10 minutes on the and when it breaks it's Friday welcome to a new month thanks for starting with us December 1st if you're just joining us here at WTOP this morning prepare for it to grab that umbrella prepare for it to be cloudy with some spotty showers throughout the day today until about five o 'clock somewhere between 11 and 5 is when Veronica's predicting will be a little wetter the high comfortable 50 degrees today you're waking up to 40 degrees straight up in our be back at the station's capital right now. Good morning to you. I'm Dean Lane welcome in 345 on WTOP. This is WTOP News. Holiday festivals are popping up all over the place to talk about that and other ways to have some fun

Daddy Issues Podcast
Chris Reflects on His Incredible Bond With His Daughter
"Now, how is your daughter handling all this? Three years old, is she doing the sleepovers like great? Because I know you've only had a couple. So I just had my first sleepover, not last Wednesday, but the Wednesday before. So I've never had a time in which I haven't seen my daughter except when they withheld her. So it was like a month or two during that time. But no matter what, I was always, always seeing my daughter every Monday, Wednesday, Friday in the middle of the day, and every other Saturday and Sunday consistently. Never missed any time unless they were the ones withholding. And so, you know, the time difference has been difficult because like you're constantly back and forth dropping off. But for the most part, we have an amazing bond. Like I don't know if it's necessarily really affected her because the first overnight, not a single problem. Like she was like in heaven being here with Daddy. Like she has her own bed and I'm like, are you going to go sleep in your own bed? Are you going to sleep in, where do you want to sleep? And it's like, I'm going to sleep in Daddy's bed. I was like, but don't you want to try your bed out? I'll lay down, but I'm going to sleep in Daddy's bed. And like she just like sprawled out and she was like laying horizontal like my dog on the pillows. And it was like just, it was really adorable. But more importantly, like it was that whole day. I had 24 hours with her where like I wasn't in a rush to do anything. I just, I got to go about my normal day and I had her with me and she was so happy. And just spending the day with Daddy and the doggies and just, it was just so much fun. And then she's now looking forward to it because now she knows Wednesday's on my overnights. But then, you know, October is going to come really quick and now I'm going to have every Wednesday and every Friday. So it's really, it really was something else having her just the entire time without having to negotiate a time back and forth. And part of my negotiating now is like, you know, October is going to be an odd month for the other party because I have her every Friday. Which doesn't give her a weekend. And so I even offered, like, you know, here I am, like, I'm like, listen, you don't have a full weekend. If you want, I'll move the weekends that I don't have her and I'll move that Friday to a different day during the week. I'll have her different, a different day during the week for the overnight and then you'll have a full weekend with her. She still hasn't even responded to that. And that's what's crazy because most men, even me, like I talk about that stuff and I'm like, you're not only compromising for your daughter. But you're also compromising for your, your ex to make her life easier and have her be able to have your daughter on the weekends and things like that. It's like, why would you not try to get along and do that stuff? You know, again, it's, it's, and I, and I've always said this, I said this to everybody, it's not necessarily the ex. Her and I, if you take away the family core thing, her and I have always gotten along really well. It's her mother that's controlling her. She is, she is a pretty amazing person if you take away the grandmother. And so it's the grandmother making these decisions and not her. So like her, her option is either listen to the grandmother and just don't communicate at all, which is what, that's been her strategy this whole time. Is she doesn't have to cooperate because the courts have made the least amount of decisions possible until now. Now she knows that the court is like, you know, it was just a huge bombshell. I did not expect a 50 50 physical custody agreement. Like I did not, I was like mind blown. I just, I was like everyone on my side cause I had people there of course it was like crying. They're like, I'm in tears. Everyone's in tears. They're like, what just happened? It's like, what on earth just happened? Like, you know, I, I just, I just finished a criminal accusation which was indicted and you know, the judge, I actually, there was, there was a pretty big bombshell actually that happened. So part of my PTI is I need to get a psychological evaluation. But part of the transcripts that I showed you before is the judge wanted her to get a psychological evaluation, which basically was us like in 2021. But then the judge backpedaled because my attorney at the time was like, well, the burden of proof is on her. So if you want us to do a psychological evaluation, she should pay for it. And the judge completely backpedaled. She's like, Oh, well she doesn't have support. So how do you expect her to pay for it? Well, you're the one who wanted the evaluation. Okay, we're not going to issue the evaluation. But imagine if an evaluation was issued then how much, how, how nothing else possibly would have happened. I probably never would have been wrongfully accused of a crime. Like she would have been forced to co -parent or I would have had more, more parenting rights or more time with my daughter and she would have had, she would have been forced to co -parent.

WTOP 24 Hour News
Fresh "50 %" from WTOP 24 Hour News
"1st. I'm now on WTRP 338. Welcome in. Graphic and weather on the 8th and when it breaks. Let's check in with Ken first Berger in the WTLP traffic center this morning. Thank you, Dean. Good morning everybody on Southbound Westbound 95 down in Virginia. Right lane closed because of the accident south of Russell Road. Also westbound 66 just west of the Prince William Parkway. The accident that was in the right lane and over on the right shoulder has been cleared. So all are lanes now open. Also the work zone westbound 66 between the Beltway and Nutley Street has been cleared. However, westbound 66 just after West Ox Road left lane is still blocked. Actually that is a mobile closure on the 66 eastbound express lanes right at the Beltway. Right lane is a mobile closure and then eastbound 66 after Virginia 28 Sully Road to the left lanes are blocked but the work zone and various locations on southbound Sully Road on the approach to 66 has been cleared. Not so the case on southbound Nutley Street. All lanes are shut down by the work zone. This is on the ramp to eastbound 66. Southbound or the in loop of the Beltway after Connecticut Avenue and Maryland you had two right lanes and the right speed up lane all closed. However that has been clear that was a broken down vehicle now out of the way. However in Prince George's County eastbound Landover Road Maryland 202. This is prior to 75th Avenue between US 50 and Martin Luther King Jr. Highway that is shut down. All lanes are closed because of the accident activity. Also watch out for the broken down vehicle westbound 29 in Montgomery County at Lockwood Drive. I'm Ken Berger WTOP traffic. We're starting our day here dry those early morning still hours partly cloudy but clouds will be on the increase and we'll be looking at some rain showers by 10 to 11 a .m.

The Mason Minute
Clogged Nozzle (MM #4623)
"Over the weekend, I was getting ready to go out and do whatever I was going to do. I don't know what it was. I was taking a shower and was doing my hair and pulled out the hairspray and tried to use it. And the nozzle was clogged and it just frustrated me. I've been using hairspray now, I think for something like 50 years and it always has a clogged nozzle. I wouldn't say always, but I use a big can. So therefore I have to fix the nozzle frequently. Now the easiest way to do it, pry the nozzle off the top, stick it in hot water for a while and it'll loosen up all that sticky gunk that comes out with the hairspray. Wouldn't you think at this point, if I've been using these nozzles for 50 years, there'd be some company that would have figured out a way to make it so the nozzle didn't clog, the nozzle didn't stick, it would get through the entire process of spraying your hair before the can's empty. I have a lot of problem with these spray cans these days too. I have a problem with my spray powder where some of those nozzles don't necessarily clog, they just stop working. I realize it's not high science, it's not big business, but it's still frustrating. We've got a lot of technology, but the nozzle still hasn't been fixed.

The Mason Minute
Clogged Nozzle (MM #4623)
"Over the weekend, I was getting ready to go out and do whatever I was going to do. I don't know what it was. I was taking a shower and was doing my hair and pulled out the hairspray and tried to use it. And the nozzle was clogged and it just frustrated me. I've been using hairspray now, I think for something like 50 years and it always has a clogged nozzle. I wouldn't say always, but I use a big can. So therefore I have to fix the nozzle frequently. Now the easiest way to do it, pry the nozzle off the top, stick it in hot water for a while and it'll loosen up all that sticky gunk that comes out with the hairspray. Wouldn't you think at this point, if I've been using these nozzles for 50 years, there'd be some company that would have figured out a way to make it so the nozzle didn't clog, the nozzle didn't stick, it would get through the entire process of spraying your hair before the can's empty. I have a lot of problem with these spray cans these days too. I have a problem with my spray powder where some of those nozzles don't necessarily clog, they just stop working. I realize it's not high science, it's not big business, but it's still frustrating. We've got a lot of technology, but the nozzle still hasn't been fixed.

The Mason Minute
Clogged Nozzle (MM #4623)
"Over the weekend, I was getting ready to go out and do whatever I was going to do. I don't know what it was. I was taking a shower and was doing my hair and pulled out the hairspray and tried to use it. And the nozzle was clogged and it just frustrated me. I've been using hairspray now, I think for something like 50 years and it always has a clogged nozzle. I wouldn't say always, but I use a big can. So therefore I have to fix the nozzle frequently. Now the easiest way to do it, pry the nozzle off the top, stick it in hot water for a while and it'll loosen up all that sticky gunk that comes out with the hairspray. Wouldn't you think at this point, if I've been using these nozzles for 50 years, there'd be some company that would have figured out a way to make it so the nozzle didn't clog, the nozzle didn't stick, it would get through the entire process of spraying your hair before the can's empty. I have a lot of problem with these spray cans these days too. I have a problem with my spray powder where some of those nozzles don't necessarily clog, they just stop working. I realize it's not high science, it's not big business, but it's still frustrating. We've got a lot of technology, but the nozzle still hasn't been fixed.

The Mason Minute
Clogged Nozzle (MM #4623)
"Over the weekend, I was getting ready to go out and do whatever I was going to do. I don't know what it was. I was taking a shower and was doing my hair and pulled out the hairspray and tried to use it. And the nozzle was clogged and it just frustrated me. I've been using hairspray now, I think for something like 50 years and it always has a clogged nozzle. I wouldn't say always, but I use a big can. So therefore I have to fix the nozzle frequently. Now the easiest way to do it, pry the nozzle off the top, stick it in hot water for a while and it'll loosen up all that sticky gunk that comes out with the hairspray. Wouldn't you think at this point, if I've been using these nozzles for 50 years, there'd be some company that would have figured out a way to make it so the nozzle didn't clog, the nozzle didn't stick, it would get through the entire process of spraying your hair before the can's empty. I have a lot of problem with these spray cans these days too. I have a problem with my spray powder where some of those nozzles don't necessarily clog, they just stop working. I realize it's not high science, it's not big business, but it's still frustrating. We've got a lot of technology, but the nozzle still hasn't been fixed.

The Greg McAfee Show
Mike Agugliaro Talks Jealousy, Envy, and the Dangerous Game of Comparison
"Got a privilege to have Mike Agigliaro here with us today, and Mike owns a few companies. He owns the Food All Group, and he also owns Business Forge, which he'll probably talk a little bit about both as we do our podcast today. But Mike, I know you've been in the business, you've been in the heating and air and plumbing business, and you've purchased a few, you've sold a few, so you've definitely been in the industry quite a while, which we'll talk about. But we were on Facebook the other day, several weeks ago, and something came up about a subject about jealousy and envy. And I mentioned something, and that's kind of how we started talking. But, you know, jealous and envy has been around since Adam and Eve. I mean, that's what happened in the garden. Cain and Abel were jealous of each other, the first two kids from Adam and Eve. And as business owners, it's really easy to get our eyes off what we do every day and start looking at other companies, which I advise not to. But what is your opinion on that? What does it do for the business owner, the company, and everything like that when we start doing that? Yeah, well, I used to tell people the most dangerous thing is Facebook because it created this comparison effect. And the comparison effect is when you think someone else has something that you should have. And I think it's, you know, if people don't know how to control it, what they do is they have this, they live within this fantasy of seeing people, right? You see people, it's back. If I do a post about something about, you know, life by design or compelling your life to go to the next level or connecting deep in your relationship, I get two or three. And I think people have this kind of fascination to what they don't have because they're stuck in this wanting to have this emotional, immediate gratification, right? It's probably like we all have a buddy bought a boat, real excited, tells everybody about the boat. He's buying the boat. He has the boat six months later. No one cares. No one even knows about the boat. No more. It sits, it's growing weeds. He don't clean it no more. And his wife can't wait to get it out of the, out of the backyard and scaling companies. If we go into it, you deal with this, you deal with this a lot with people looking at you and right away, they want to say, you know, if you're a big company, you must be a thief. That's what I dealt with all the time. Right. And it's, and I don't know why, I really don't understand that, but it's human nature a lot of times because when you're achieving and you're making things happen, I often say you're a moving target and you've, but the best way to keep from being shot is to keep moving upward. So, you know, what harm, what harm does jealousy and envy cause for the business owner? Yeah. Well, people become very, you know, first off they become this whole jealousy and, and goes into this world of judgmental, right. And, and, and cast, casting judgments on what they think is true versus not true. And, and when I scaled, I built a company called CEO Warrior. I built that company which was to help the plumbers, HVAC, electricians, pest control people. And I built it to show them a different way, a different way of thinking. I don't know about you, Greg, but like, if I can get people to just change their framing in their mind, I can easily teach them marketing sales and operations. Like that's just a, that's a basic functions of a company, but to get people to think different. So when I started working with, you know, smaller companies now they scaled so many of them scaled, I mean, 50, over 50 companies that I worked with before I exited the company, sold in the last 30 months and became, and 90 % of them became deck of millionaires. I used to tell people, tell me how you, how do you act when you're in the office? And what they do is they, they, and this goes to the point of jealousy. There's oh, so and so around the corner, they got 50 trucks. And the reason they do that is because they charge too much and they, they pressure sales people. And, but it wasn't true. I'm not saying it's not true for any company, but it wasn't true. They just needed to, what is it? They were casting these stones, right? And I said, well, what about this? What about if we shift our framing just a little bit? And instead of looking at them at their, their bad and they're doing things wrong, why don't we ask them what they're doing?

The Dan Bongino Show
Think Things Are Bad Now? We're Not Even Close...
"One person to dictate the whole show but it's more than one probably other people were thinking that the point I'm trying to make about my is it bad enough theory that as bad you intelligent conservatives out there in the audience think things are the border the economy and they are public safety. The story liberals are getting from mouthpieces the in media and their government officials are things aren't that bad. Inflation is down I percent you notice how they phrase everything it is the problem is prices aren't down at all but you see how that the dipsy do flipper ooh how when you flip an argument and you make it about the inflation rate not about the price level people pay all the sudden it sounds like things aren't too bad. That's the point I was making, it's not a critique of the cops I know they've made arrests. I can't imagine the pressure and if the situation were reversed and the victim was a minority and the attackers were white this would be the FBI would be involved and the National Guard would be called in. I can only imagine the pressure they're under but no this was not a knock on the cops at all. This isn't bad enough theory is something you need to understand because it's not a theory it's real. People will not vote until the situation has gotten catastrophic. It doesn't mean we can't win elections folks we won in 2016. I'd argue we won in 2020 with all the shenanigans involved. We won. We can win. It was a rout in 2016. We won seats we had no No business winning. We can win. What I'm suggesting to you with this isn't bad enough theory is in order for a Reagan -esque 40 plus 9 state landslide a Giuliani 18 -point reelection that happened in his reelection effort in a blue state in a 50 -50 country it has to get sadly really really bad

The Mason Minute
Weight Loss Drugs (MM #4620)
"The Mason Minute with Kevin Mason. A lot of talk on the news about drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy and Monjaro and Zepbound being these wonder weight loss drugs. And of course I've had a couple of people ask me if I'm thinking about taking a drug like that. I guess it's almost a slap in the face. It's kind of a reminder telling me, hey, you're fat by the way, which I know I'm fat. Luckily I'm comfortable in who I am. I'm not pleased with my body shape or my body size, but I'm comfortable. I like who I am. And I watch these drugs and well, number one, they're injectables. That means a needle. And I hate needles. The fact that I'm getting flu shots and COVID shots and all sorts of injections, including my allergy shots over the last few years, and I don't want to add any more. And number two, I'm still very nervous with side effects. I keep reading about all the side effects these drugs have and yes, they were maybe meant for other uses, but now being adapted for weight loss. I'd love the idea of losing 50, 100, 150 pounds, but then again, I'm worried about how my body would handle losing that much weight. Well, it sounds great in theory. I just can't imagine a quick fix for this.

The Mason Minute
Weight Loss Drugs (MM #4620)
"The Mason Minute with Kevin Mason. A lot of talk on the news about drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy and Monjaro and Zepbound being these wonder weight loss drugs. And of course I've had a couple of people ask me if I'm thinking about taking a drug like that. I guess it's almost a slap in the face. It's kind of a reminder telling me, hey, you're fat by the way, which I know I'm fat. Luckily I'm comfortable in who I am. I'm not pleased with my body shape or my body size, but I'm comfortable. I like who I am. And I watch these drugs and well, number one, they're injectables. That means a needle. And I hate needles. The fact that I'm getting flu shots and COVID shots and all sorts of injections, including my allergy shots over the last few years, and I don't want to add any more. And number two, I'm still very nervous with side effects. I keep reading about all the side effects these drugs have and yes, they were maybe meant for other uses, but now being adapted for weight loss. I'd love the idea of losing 50, 100, 150 pounds, but then again, I'm worried about how my body would handle losing that much weight. Well, it sounds great in theory. I just can't imagine a quick fix for this.

The Mason Minute
Weight Loss Drugs (MM #4620)
"The Mason Minute with Kevin Mason. A lot of talk on the news about drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy and Monjaro and Zepbound being these wonder weight loss drugs. And of course I've had a couple of people ask me if I'm thinking about taking a drug like that. I guess it's almost a slap in the face. It's kind of a reminder telling me, hey, you're fat by the way, which I know I'm fat. Luckily I'm comfortable in who I am. I'm not pleased with my body shape or my body size, but I'm comfortable. I like who I am. And I watch these drugs and well, number one, they're injectables. That means a needle. And I hate needles. The fact that I'm getting flu shots and COVID shots and all sorts of injections, including my allergy shots over the last few years, and I don't want to add any more. And number two, I'm still very nervous with side effects. I keep reading about all the side effects these drugs have and yes, they were maybe meant for other uses, but now being adapted for weight loss. I'd love the idea of losing 50, 100, 150 pounds, but then again, I'm worried about how my body would handle losing that much weight. Well, it sounds great in theory. I just can't imagine a quick fix for this.

The Mason Minute
Weight Loss Drugs (MM #4620)
"The Mason Minute with Kevin Mason. A lot of talk on the news about drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy and Monjaro and Zepbound being these wonder weight loss drugs. And of course I've had a couple of people ask me if I'm thinking about taking a drug like that. I guess it's almost a slap in the face. It's kind of a reminder telling me, hey, you're fat by the way, which I know I'm fat. Luckily I'm comfortable in who I am. I'm not pleased with my body shape or my body size, but I'm comfortable. I like who I am. And I watch these drugs and well, number one, they're injectables. That means a needle. And I hate needles. The fact that I'm getting flu shots and COVID shots and all sorts of injections, including my allergy shots over the last few years, and I don't want to add any more. And number two, I'm still very nervous with side effects. I keep reading about all the side effects these drugs have and yes, they were maybe meant for other uses, but now being adapted for weight loss. I'd love the idea of losing 50, 100, 150 pounds, but then again, I'm worried about how my body would handle losing that much weight. Well, it sounds great in theory. I just can't imagine a quick fix for this.

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated
A highlight from David Brooks on How To Know A Person
"Turbulent times call for clear -headed insight that's hard to come by these days, especially on TV. That's where we come in. Salem News Channel has the greatest collection of conservative minds all in one place. People you know and trust, like Dennis Prager, Eric Metaxas, Charlie Kirk, and more. Unfiltered, unapologetic truth. Find what you're searching for at snc .tv and on Local Now Channel 525. Welcome to today's podcast, sponsored by Hillsdale College. All things Hillsdale at hillsdale .edu. I encourage you to take advantage of the many free online courses there, and of course, to listen to the Hillsdale Dialogues. All of them at hillsdale .com or just Google Apple, iTunes, and Hillsdale. Welcome back, America. I'm Hugh Hewitt. Inside the Beltway this morning, I'm so glad you joined me. I want to talk with you about this book. David Brooks's brand new How to Know a Person, The Art of Seeing Others Deeply and Being Deeply Seen. David joins me now. Hello, David. How are you? It's good to be with you again. It's good to talk to you. David, I'm used to getting books, and I got yours for free. They get sent to me. I want to tell you I'm going to buy six copies of How to Know a Person, three for my children and their spouses, and three for friends who are no longer friends that I want them to read. I wonder if you've had other people tell you that they're going to be buying your book to give to other people. Yeah, thank you for being generous on Twitter about the book. I appreciate it. Yeah, no, I've had people buy it for all their employees. I've had people buy it for the families. I haven't heard about buying it for ex -friends, but it's a good strategy. It is. We just live in these brutalizing times. It is. And my book is supposed to be a missile directed right at that. It's about the precise skills of how do you get to know someone, how do you make them feel respected, seen, heard. How do you make them feel respected, seen, and heard? I know why my friends are not my friends anymore. It's because of Donald Trump. They thought me insufficiently outraged about Donald Trump, and I can't bridge that gap, right? I can't be other than what I am, which is I voted for him twice, and if he's the nominee, I'll vote for him again. But they don't understand it, and I don't know that they're trying to understand. I don't understand them either, but I think How to Know a Person has assisted me. So, congratulations. Let me also tell you, I told our mutual friend Bob Barnett that I was telling people about your book in Miami as I prepared for the debate, because my wife and I talked about one statistic in particular, one paragraph actually, on page 98. Thirty -six percent of Americans reported they felt lonely frequently or almost all of the time, including 61 percent of young adults, 51 percent of young mothers. The percentage of Americans who said they have no close friends quadrupled between 1990 and 2020. 54 percent of Americans reported that no one knows them well. That is an extraordinary raft of terrible news, David. Yeah, and I found it's hard to build a healthy democracy on top of a rotting society, and so when this people are filled with loneliness and sadness, it turns into meanness, because if you feel yourself unseen, invisible, there's nothing crueler than feeling that people think you don't exist, and you get angry, and you lash out, and we have these school shootings. We have bitter politics. We've got the brutality of what's happening on college campuses right now, where Jewish students are being blockaded out of classrooms or have the recipients of genocidal how to build a friendship, how to make people feel that you're included, and these are basic social skills like the kind you could be taught at like learning carpentry or tennis or something like that. It's how do you listen well, how do you disagree well, how do you sit with someone who's got depression, how do you sit with someone who's contemplating suicide, how do you sit with someone who disagrees with you fundamentally on issues, and I just try to walk through the basic skills, and in my view, there in any group of people, there are two sorts. There's diminishers, the people who stereotype ignore, they don't ask you questions, they just don't care about you, and then there's another sort of person who are illuminators, and they are curious about you, they respect you, they want to know your life story, and they make you feel lit up and heard, and my goal in writing the book was partly social, because we need these skills to be a decent society, and partly personal. I just want to be better at being an illuminator. I think it comes through in the book. I listened to your interview with Katie Couric and her colleague, who I don't know, and they were trying to get at a question a couple of times, I'm gonna try and land that plane. Why did David Brooks write this book? Well, I'll give you the personal reason. You know, some people, if anybody watched Fiddler on the Roof, you know how warm and huggy Jewish families can be. I grew up in the other kind of Jewish family, and our culture was think Yiddish, act British, so we had love in the home. We just didn't express it. We were not a huggy family. We were all cerebral up here, and then when I was 18, the admissions officers at Columbia, Wesleyan, and Brown decided to actually go to the University of Chicago, which was also a super cerebral place. My favorite thing about Chicago, it's a Baptist school where atheist professors teach Jewish students St. Thomas Aquinas, and so I went into the world of journalism where we just Frederick Buechner once put it, if you cut yourself off from true connection with others, you may save yourself a little pain because you won't be betrayed, but you're cutting yourself off from the holy sources of life itself, and so I just wanted to be better at being intimate with other people. I've heard you now three times, read in your book, heard you tell it to Katie, and heard you tell it to me, the anecdote about the University of Chicago, the anecdote about Yiddish and British, but what is new is you brought up Buechner, and I've never read Buechner. I now know his backstory, which is so tragic. You include it in the book. I did not know he had a tragic backstory that illumines his character for me, and maybe I will go and read it, but you're in interview mode. How many different book interviews have you done? Uh, probably 20 or more. I don't know a lot. You're definitely, I know what that's like, where you want to get through an interview, and you want to make sure that people, you land the point, and I want to get a little bit deeper than that. I want to find out if you're with your self -examination. There's been a David Brooks self -examination underway for a long time, but you have not yet written your book about God. Are you going to go there? Yeah, well, at the end of The Second Mountain, I wrote a book about my spiritual journey, and how I grew up, my phrase was religiously bisexual, so I grew up in a Jewish home, but I went to a church school, and I went to a church camp, so I had the story of Jesus in my God. And then when I was 50 or so, reality seemed porous to me. It seemed like we're not just a bunch of physical molecules. You know, I once, I was in subway in New York City in God's ugliest spot on the face of the earth, and I look around the subway car, and I see all these people, and I decide all these people have souls. There's some piece of them that has no size, weight, color, or shape, but gives them infinite value and dignity, and their souls could be soaring, their souls could be hurting, but all of us have them. And once you have the concept of the soul in your head, it doesn't take long before the concept of God is in your head. And so I went off, especially about 10 years ago, and it's still going on a spiritual journey of just trying to figure out what do I believe? And I learned when you're on a journey like that, Christians give you books, and so I got like 700 books sent to me, only 350 of which were different copies of Christianity by C .S. Lewis. And so that was my journey. And it didn't, it was very slow and gradual. There were some dramatic moments, but not a lot. But I realized, oh, I'm not an atheist anymore, and my heart has opened up to something. And I think this book is the extension of that. When your heart opens up to God, and if every person you meet, you think this person was made in the image of God, I'm looking at somebody so important, Jesus was willing to die for that person, then I've got to show them the respect that God would show them. I've got to try to see them with the eyes that Jesus would see them with. And that's a super high standard that I'm not going to meet, but it's a goal. And Jesus says, even in brutal, tough times, He sees people, He sees the poor. And the main thing He does is Jesus is always asking questions. Somebody asks Him a question, He asks them a question back. And that act of questioning, what you do for a living, that's a show of respect. And that's the doorway to seeing someone. And so to me, I think questions are a moral act that we're phenomenal at when we're kids. And then we get a little worse at it. And I come sometimes leave a party and think that whole time nobody asked me a question. And I've come to think like only 30 % of the people in the world are question askers. And so part of the thing I do in the book is just try to say, here are some generous things to do to ask people questions. It is a, that is the key takeaway, how to ask questions. And this is a skill set. I sent a note this morning to my friend, Jan Janur, who has been running a Christian ministry for 30 years called The Wild Adventure. He wrote a book called Turning Small Talk into Big Talk. And I was reminded of it. Yours is a longer, more complicated examination of the art of asking questions and why you want to do so. It's also, it reminded me a lot of C .S. Lewis, The Weight of Glory. You have never met an ordinary human being. Everyone is an eternal horror, an everlasting splendor, and you believe that and you get to it. And I want to talk about how one gets there, but I want to begin, interestingly enough, with a comment Katie Couric made you. And I listened to that yesterday. I'd finished your book last week and I made my notes last night. And then I listened to Katie Couric interview. She spontaneously brought up her interview with Sarah Palin. Why do you think she did that, David? I like Katie a lot. And she's been a guest on my show. I loved her memoir, at least the first two thirds of it, which was about her younger life, which I thought was fascinating. Why do you think she brought up the Sarah Palin interview? I was also struck by that because I don't think she talks about it enough. I know Katie from various things and I don't think she talks about it all that much. I think it was a time when she was asking questions and somebody just wasn't answering. It was a time when she was having a miscommunication. I imagine that's why she wrote up. Do you have another theory? I do. I think it's because she's been misunderstood because of that question and that she wants people who only know Katie Couric because of that question to know that that's not Katie Couric. And that, to me, it was it made perfect sense she used to be known. And that's the central theme of this. People want to be seen. They want to be known. And if you are known for the wrong thing, in this case, the Katie Couric Sarah Palin interview, you want to you want to get that off your cargo ship, right? You want that unloaded. And I thought, wow, you really the book worked on her. Let me tell you also, on page 134, you talk about face experiments with infants. I want them outlawed. David, what did you think when you read it? I think those are cruel and awful. Tell people about them. Yeah, so babies come out of the womb wanting to be seen. Baby's eyes, they see everything 18 inches away in sharpness. Everything else is kind of blurry because they want to see mom's face. And these experiments that you referred to are called still face experiments. The babies send a bid for attention. And the moms are instructed, don't respond, just be still face. And in the beginning, the babies are uncomfortable. And then after a few seconds, they start writhing around. And five within seconds, they're in total agony, because nobody is seeing them. And I really don't think that's that much different as adults. I think when we're unseen, it is just total agony. We're rendered invisible. And that's what I encounter in my daily life as a reporter. I used to go to the Midwest. I live on the East Coast, but I spent a lot of time in the Midwest. And maybe 10, 15 years ago, once a day, somebody would say, you guys think we're flyover country. In the last five years, I hear that like 10 times a day. And so a lot of just people feel they're invisible. And frankly, that's a little on my profession, the media. When I started as a police reporter in Chicago, we had working class folks in the newsroom. Our reporters, they hadn't gone to college. They were just regular people from Chicago, and they covered crime alongside me. Now, if you go to newsrooms, especially in New York, DC, LA, San Francisco, it's not only everybody went to college, everyone went to the same like 15 elite colleges, and a lot of the same prep schools. So if you're not in this little group, and you look at the national media, and you don't see yourself, it's as if they're telling you your voice doesn't matter. You don't exist. And that's a form of dehumanization that we've allowed to fester in this country. And of course, people are going to lash out. Yeah, I just spent two weeks with really wonderful professionals at NBC preparing for this debate. And at one point, I asked one of my colleagues in this exercise, I don't work for NBC, how many people do you think in this room voted for Trump? And taken aback, they did not answer because the answer is obvious. Nobody. And if if your newsroom is full of 100 % people not only didn't vote for Trump, but actually loathe them, you can't cover the country. It's impossible because you're not seeing the other 50%. And what your book is, I hope the newsroom is distributed as well. We are all about seeing people who have long been marginalized, and that is important. But if you don't see people who are supporting Donald Trump, for whatever reason, you can't cover the news. Let me ask you about this Philip Lewis fellow. I love him, because he finally gave me the courage to teach the do the Dormant Commerce Clause in the 11th Amendment with the confidence that even though my students are terribly bored, they have to know this. Where did you meet Philip Lewis? Because he's talking to teachers. Teachers need to read this book too, if only to be comforted in the fact that every teacher has this experience.

Mark Levin
We Can't Diminish Ron DeSantis's Effect on Florida
"In the culture, made a difference in politics, made a difference in the economy, either anything else. I said she's George W. Bush in address, and of course the sycophants got very upset and they posted on it. So I took it and I Because did. that's what it is. So you have George Soros's Media Matters Nikki supporting Haley. What did you think about that? Let's talk about AMAC, the Association of Mature American Citizens. These are very difficult times. Everything is very, very difficult. When you go through a drive through, a fast food drive through, Mr. producer, through have you been one of those lately? You have two kids and a wife. It's almost $50. I don't blame the franchisees or the corporate. The food is unbelievably expensive. In some states, they've massively increased the minimum wage and the benefits you have to order. So the food is fast, but it's not that cheap anymore. And people used to use fast food as a way to get through hard times. So it's tough out there, as

AI Today Podcast: Artificial Intelligence Insights, Experts, and Opinion
A highlight from AI Today Podcast: CPMAI in the Real World, Interview with Dr. Philipp Schlenkhoff, CPMAI
"The AI Today podcast, produced by Cognolytica, cuts through the hype and noise to identify what is really happening now in the world of artificial intelligence. Learn about emerging AI trends, technologies, and use cases from Cognolytica analysts and guest experts. Hello and welcome to the AI Today podcast. I'm your host, Kathleen Mulch. And as you can tell from my voice, I'm a little under the weather today. So I will be on today's podcast, but Ron might be doing a little bit more of the talking than me. Yeah, well, sorry to disappoint you. You're here for Kathleen to hear her more than 50%, but you know, she will still be here. You're going to hear her questions, but you know, I'm going to do my best to channel Kathleen's voice when she's not speaking. So I'm your host, Ron Schmelzer. And if you're listening to AI Today podcast for the first time, you should know that this is the place to go to hear all the great interviews and thoughts about what is happening with AI Today. And for those of you that follow AI, you know that every day is like a millennium. You know, here in AI, things just change so fast. And we have been in the midst of a lot of series of different podcast series on talking about different things about AI. Of course, generative AI is like the hot thing of the moment because it's everywhere and in every product. I think it's in a toothbrush I have now, generative AI. You can talk to your toothbrush. It's going to be everywhere. It is everywhere. So we have a generative AI series, but we also talk about AI failures. We have an AI failure series. We have a use case series. We have a trustworthy AI series. We have our glossary series, which actually is now starting to come to an end. I think we've gone through almost all the terms we can get to. But of course, we also have interviews with thought leaders and especially those who have gone the next level and certified in the CPMI methodology, which is a best practice for running AI projects. And on that note, we are really excited to have with us today Dr. Philip Schlenkopf, who is co -founder of the AI Transformation Institute and is CPMI certified. Welcome, Philip. Philip, thank you so much for joining us on AI Today. Thanks for having me, Ron. Great pleasure and quite an honor for me. We're really excited for today's interview. We'd like to start by having you introduce yourself to our listeners and tell them a little bit about your background and your current role. All right. First of all, sorry for my accent. I'm calling in from Berlin in Germany. And my way, how I found to AI is sort of a bit surprising because in the end, I started with business administration and studied that, went into corporate restructuring, went into consulting or that one, and then shifted further into the part of sales and learned that from the very beginning. And then after, you know, in a role managing director of a medium -sized company for which was owned for private equity, after a couple of years, I felt it was time for something new. So then I got to know via a business angel, Hans Utzgerreit, who is a professor at the German Research Institute for Artificial Intelligence, DFKY. The name might be familiar because his son actually was co -publishing the Google paper, Attention is All You Need, Jacob Utzgerreit. And I got to know him and he had a spin -off out of the German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence, which was called Giants Technologies in the field of natural language understanding, relation extraction. And we were doing at that stage, some kind of corporate intelligence service. So I got to know him. I liked the idea. And so I invested into the company, led the company, and we did a lot of things to scale it, you know, having an architectural frame, which would actually do the job, setting up a sales team and doing sales and getting the first customers on board. And that went quite well. So we could sell the company after something like more or less a year to a strategic investor, which was very, very fortunate and very productive. And then I had to stay on board for the post -merger integration for quite a while, another year. And after that was kind of the question, what do we do now? What's generative AI? We saw early, we saw from the very beginning in our job to understand information that we could use transformers to help to get our precision up and our recall up. So that was actually great. And then, you know, then was the phase it was after November last year. And then was the question, what do we do? Do we build a product? And at that stage, our problem was that, you know, we couldn't find a lake, a market, which was not too big, that the big players would go into that market and crush you. And which wouldn't be too small, which could actually sort of, you know, still have where you can have a reasonably scalable business. And in the end, in the application layer, we didn't find the business case who would do the job because we thought, and we saw that, you know, this application layer was very thin. If it's so easy to set up a product based on API, then the problem is everyone can do it. And then the product actually sort of gets less important than the market access. And then we thought, you know, if the product gets less, export and less important than the market access, the market access in the end is the more important thing. And that for that market access, you don't find a startup because market access as a startup is very expensive. So in the end, our analysis led to the fact that in the end, generative AI and the boom which comes along it and all the transformation and change will be something for the existing companies who can just incorporate the solutions into their current offering. So having said that, our solution to that was, yeah, well, that will lead to a massive need for re -upskilling in the field of, well, actually for all professions, more or less. And that's why we founded the AI Transformation Institute where we do, you know, partly something like you do at Cognalytica, training people to better understand the technology and how to use it. And on the other hand, we do quite a few consulting jobs with customers on sort of helping them in their project to challenge them to go into the project management and eventually even take over some coding paths to help them to actually get their product onto the street. Yeah, in the past, I mean, that's fantastic, by the way, and hard for us to disagree with any of what you said, because you're right, AI is so transformational. And as you said, AI will be a core part of every product, right? Even things you would never have expected in the same way that the Internet and mobile have been so core transitional that just selling something general about we will make the Internet work, we'll make mobile work doesn't do anything for you because it's so core to everything. And I like how you think about market access. That's very, very interesting. But yeah, what you were saying about, you know, really trying to implement these for particular industries and particular applications, I think that's sort of the rub. We always are so surprised sometimes when we talk to people in major companies as we spend time, some of our interviews even here, folks who are unfortunate 1000, some of the biggest companies, and you think to yourself, they surely must be implementing, you know, AI at some advanced level. I mean, these are fortunate 1000 companies represent like what percentage of the global economy, like what 90? I don't even know what the percentage is the vast majority of the global economy. So you'd think that they would be well, well, well ahead. And then when you talk to them, you find it's actually the opposite. They're much farther behind in their AI. They tend they're not the leaders as much as the fast followers and the ones that can figure out how to apply AI to their problems. Those are the ones that get ahead, not just some AI experiment. So I don't want to ramble on and on about that, but it's hard to disagree with everything that you've said to that point and actually really sort of like, you know, my question kind of follows up on that. And that is sort of like the the challenges because people see the promises. They kind of get wrapped up in the hype. Maybe they even do some small AI projects. A lot of them are proof of concept that don't really find their way to any sort of long term use. So something kind of gets in the way. Right. So what do you see as some of these challenges in making AI projects work data, advanced analytics, any of that in that realm? Yeah, thanks for the question, Ron, because well, thank for what you said earlier, because that's something I've always thought that was only the case in German large corporates. Yeah, some of them are quite far ahead, but some of them, there's really not happening anything. And if you say it's the same in the U .S., then I'm a little bit relaxed from the European perspective. Yeah, but that's what we see in companies quite a lot. Yeah. That actually the C level is because of their age. Yeah. They're not that innovative. Yeah. They haven't fully understood the impact of the technology. And then sort of they talk to their CTO and the CTOs are maybe not that open towards the technology either. And they say, you have so many projects already in my pipeline. Yeah, I cannot prioritize that right now. And then you talk to the legal departments and those guys as well say, well, yeah, but there are a lot of and, you know, in Germany, you GDPR, you know, data regulation, we are sort of very cautious about all of that. And then the legal your legal team tells you, well, that's kind of, you know, everything is quite unsure and, you know, there's not real legislation, you know, and then sort of things get postponed and there's no active pressure to change that. I'm not talking about all the companies, but there are a few which go in that direction. And then the problem is sort of the grassroots thing works against it. Yeah. People use it anyway. And then exactly what then is happening, exactly what, you know, legal and the tech department wanted to avoid, you know, all the private and the customer data flowing into sort of some model by sort of the open, by the free version of the tools. And that's kind of a challenge. Yeah. So first of all, valid point, it's a top -down approach. Yeah. There needs to be an AI strategy in the companies and that needs to be sort of carefully thought through, always depending whether it's the core value creation process where which is being transformed or whether it's just a support function like sales or marketing, then you'd rather go for a tool option. But if your core value creation processes are going to be transformed, you need to think about something between using tools or maybe sort of build your own AI and that needs to be understood and then implemented. And as you said, you know, it cannot be some kind of a pilot which never goes into operation because then you don't have a success. And if you don't have a success, you will never really put money on it. So it needs to be, and that's something I really love about CPMI, you know, think big, start small, iterate often. It's so true in the projects, yeah, that you cannot tell that often enough. And I know you guys pronounce it a lot, but it's really true. It cannot be said, you know, enough.

Andrew's Podcast on: 50 WAYS TO SUCCEED AT WORK
"50 %" Discussed on Andrew's Podcast on: 50 WAYS TO SUCCEED AT WORK
"Welcome to 50 Ways to Succeed at Work, where you hear stuff about ways to succeed. Even the most well -intentioned colleagues, advisors, careers officers and HR departments may never get around to mentioning. This episode's called Ask Away. Be sure to ask enough questions and avoid the worst mistakes. When it comes to asking powerful questions, let's start with that pioneer of modern nursing, Florence Nightingale. She showed how just one question could bring about significant change. Nightingale lived and breathed mathematical practice. Statistics drove her actions, and in the 1850s she was sent out to Crimea, where a long and nasty war was in progress. She set about collecting her beloved numerical data. She counted the number of soldiers killed, injured or diseased. She was relentlessly systematic, much like biologists who collect specimens of butterflies and fossils on field trips. When Nightingale returned to London in 1856, her mission was to reach the people who could put her reforms into practice. MPs, government officials and army officers. Few of them had any statistical or scientific training. So Nightingale posed to them her powerful and memorable question. She asked, what do you think causes the most injuries to your soldiers at war? Naturally, they assumed it was from different forms of enemy fire. Using statistics and a clever circular graphic, Nightingale showed convincingly that the worst damage came from infections, poor healthcare and the need to invest in proper medical support. Her questions and statistics worked and led to pioneering changes in how frontline battle staff were treated. It created a revolution in nursing care. Now let's think how this story can connect with your job and you asking questions at work. In my research I've learnt that people have three significant concerns about asking questions at work. The first one is, what are the right questions to ask at work? The second one is, what questions should I ask on my first day at work? And thirdly, what questions should I ask my co -workers? So let's start with the right questions for you to ask at work. There are no stupid questions, no right or wrong ones, only more or less relevant ones. The first issue you might ask concerns your personal growth and development. For example, you might ask your new boss, supervisor or team leader. What projects can I work on to be more involved? Or, can you help me create a personal development plan? Another question you could ask concerns communication. Are there any aspects of our communication here that are not working? Then there are specific challenges, roadblocks and concerns you might uncover, such as asking your senior colleague, What things make your job harder than it should be? How could I make a significant contribution? Who do I need to meet to help make a difference here? You'll also want to ask for feedback on your performance. How am I dealing and how can I improve? When can we meet to discuss this? And then there's company culture and your motivation. How can you help to make me more satisfied at work? What matters in how we work here? What must I absolutely not do here? And lastly you could ask, How could I support you, my manager? What can I do to make your job easier? Now the second question people have when starting work, or with limited work experience is, What should I ask on my very first day at work? You can probably think of scores of things to ask about, especially on your first day or week. But how about some of these? Or see your expectations for my work in the first 90 days? When will I have evaluations and informal check -ins? How can I share my ideas? Can you tell me about the organisation's vision? Is there a company vision statement or a set of core values? What are my main objectives for my first week? And who do I report to? What are my essential daily tasks? And don't miss this one. How do you measure success around here? The metrics. How often do you want me to give you updates? What are the expected work hours around here? Finally, the third concern that I uncovered in my research is, What questions should I ask my co -workers? Your new colleagues may be busy, but most will gladly pause to answer your questions. Just make sure that you do your questioning when they're less busy, or fix a time when you can meet and talk. Your questions to co -workers might include, What do I need to know about the organisation's culture? Can I assist you with anything? What's the organisation's biggest challenge? What do you like best about working here? What should I be reading about my role and the industry? Can I join you for lunch? How does team building happen around here? Naturally, you have to be selective about which questions to ask. But these give you a broad picture of the sort you could ask in the early days of your job. Finally, never forget that one of the most typical failings of people starting a new job, is not asking enough questions, rather than too many. So what action am I proposing that you can take right away? Well, be willing to ask for help. It's not a sign of weakness, so ask away. Prepare your questions so people can more easily offer relevant help, and finally ask your questions when people are likely to be free and relaxed to spend time with you. And the takeaway from all of this? Asking for help is a simple, yet profound, unpredictable way to get what you want at work and in life. Failure to ask questions is all too common for people starting a new job, so be sure not to fall into that trap. Happy questioning. You've been listening to an episode of Andrew's 50 Ways to Succeed at Work. For more episodes, subscribe free to my regular weekly podcasts. You can catch up on past ones of the 50ways .site, where you can also become a Foundation member with access to e -learning units, transcripts, further reading links, and the forum, where you can ask questions, share problems, and join a growing community of people who seriously want to succeed at work. Now there's a new book and an audio version called, you guessed it, 50 Ways to Succeed at Work. Buy it at Amazon or the 50ways .site. Unmissable. Thanks for listening, and bye for now until next week.

Fallen Short Podcast
"50 %" Discussed on Fallen Short Podcast
"I think we'll talk about this a little later on you know when think about being filled with the holy spirit and and what that means and that's you know it means a lot of different things. It's not just like the speaking in tongues part effusions for verse five reads. There's one lord one faith. One baptism god and father of all who is overall in a living through however he has given each one of us a special gift through the generosity of christ that is why the scriptures say when he ascended into the highest he led crowds of captives and gave gifts to his people. So that's kind of just reiterating. What we just read out acts one that when when jesus christ died for us. He ascended on high. He gave the crowd of people gifts he gave him the holy spirit and then in verse eleven. It goes on to read now. These are the gifts christ gifts to the church. He gives the postles the prophets the evangelists and pastors and the teachers. So that's talking about the fivefold ministry that's talking about the five more evident gifts that we see in the church right. I twelve says their responsibility is to equip god's people to do his work and build up the church the body of christ and again. Those are the gifts that chris gave to the church. And we're again. We're not all going to be called to be apostles and prophets and evangelists and pastors and teachers. Were not all going to be called the do that. We're not all called to be a part of the you know. The churches like the entity of being a part of the church. a however. you could argue that we are still called to be a part of the church in not the physical sense but the church family and still called to be. Some of us are called to be evangelist. Even though it's not like the way that you think of an evangelist right you and your everyday life sharing sharing technically right right evangelize. Last i think we get people read that and get wrapped up the terminology like billy graham right just an extreme example of that right we read these passages and we evaluate you know what it means and we have to really think about it and not just take it for face value necessarily because in our society the way that some of these terms have been thrown around. They get this. I don't wanna say stigma but they get this this definition around them that it's like well i i can't be that when you really can right..

Fallen Short Podcast
"50 %" Discussed on Fallen Short Podcast
"First corinthians six nineteen says. Don't you realize that your body is the temple of the holy spirit who lives in new and was given to you by god. You did not belong to yourself for god. Bought you with a high price. See must honor god with your body so the last couple episodes we've been talking about purpose. Two episodes ago it was. We were talking about god. Created you on purpose and kind of setting some groundwork of what we're going to be continuing to talk about. Last time we talked about how how. Jesus redeemed you for a purpose and now on this episode we are talking about how the holy spirit fills you with a purpose. Seventy having listened to the previous episodes. Please go back and do so. Hopefully they'll be a blessing to you but we just want to continue with what we've been talking about. The past two episodes and thaddeus were that scripture that our body is a temple of the holy spirit in acts where tax about how jesus was around for forty days after he conquered the grave and he appeared to the postles and all of that talks about that but what attacks vote in. There is how john baptized with water in john even baptized jesus. But it says that in verse five of x one. It says john baptized with water. But in just a few days you'll be baptized with the holy spirit. And of course the apostles were kind of like well. What does this mean aren't you. Aren't you here to fulfill all these other things like become our king and restore israel. And they're you know. Because they had a lot of preconceived notions of what it meant to have jesus as there savior. And jesus as king. But jesus said to them. The father loan has authority authority to set the dates and the times but they are not free to know and then verse eight says but you'll receive power when the holy spirit comes upon you and you'll be my witnesses telling people about me everywhere in jerusalem throughout judea and samaria and to the ends of the earth. I love that scripture where it talks about how you'll receive power when the holy spirit comes upon.

Hot 50 Countdown
"50 %" Discussed on Hot 50 Countdown
"Occur? I'm not sure. I didn't talk to the please, okay? And you say, so, you know, for sure that show me, okay? And you don't know when it occurred, but it occurred at Bay Beach. Yes. Okay. All right, and you're calling from bertos gas station and you don't have a cell phone. I do not have a phone, okay, moving up. The chart in the top ten from the 13th to the number six spot is Necronomicon by everybody. Let's drink some beer and explore the stories behind some long histories. Most ruthless serial, killers, conspiracy theories alien abductions, Colts. Yes. Sounds like a good time to me. Hanging in number five. Again, this month is Cramer. It's just uncensored with Steve and chest. What was confusing to me? Where I would have respected her more. If she was just like, I respect where you are. I totally get it. Not necessarily something I'm into right now, but, like home. To be friends and meet up in the future. That would have been way better than like this petty shit. Honestly my my response ready this was actually a few minutes keep in mind I'm tired and it's it's 1:15. This is prime nap time at this point, right? Yeah. Not the time to mess with me. What? Between one and three, don't mess with me. I'm a beast. You don't want me. You're a woman. Yeah, I said, wow. Okay? As I said, I don't like, is it? Oh really. And she gave totally opposite. I think that's a a tad presumptuous and immature we haven't even hung out said I'm aware, but that's fine. I'll be presumptuous. And and imagine that then I guess I'm at number for moving up from the number seven spot getting closer and closer to the top position is the marriage V podcast with Alan Sanders & Susan Dell Monica, We are counting down inside the top-10 up three notches into the number three spot from 6 is the Wilder ride with Alan Sanders and Walt Marine. I got the first note I have is this move was not supposed to be produced at 20th Century Fox. That's right. They actually had, I don't know if they had signed papers somewhere else but they were ready to roll with another studio and pull the plug at the last name. Well, part of it was a budgetary issue and part of it was Mel Brooks and Gene Wilder were adamant that this was going to be a black and white film. They were going to do an omage to the original Universal Pictures Frankenstein, which was, of course, Franklin died that it was Bride of Frankenstein that it was the son of Frankenstein and then ghost of Frankenstein. They wanted to shoot in that mode. They wanted it to look like, it was a movie that they discovered out of the thirty. Everything about this film, need to match that kind of temper and tone and they did not want to shoot in color. Well, even if you go as you go through that first minute, and go through the credits, it has the look and feel of the 1931 Frankenstein. And even the the lettering is the same, the overtones of the music are the same and it really does have that same sense of the opening of the original Frankenstein. All right. Who's it going to be the job to holding their own in the number two spot? Again, is certified mama's boy with.

Quizbeard weekly trivia quiz
"50 %" Discussed on Quizbeard weekly trivia quiz
"Tarintino film in which characters enjoy five dollar milkshakes from jackrabbits. Slim's is pulp fiction number to the fictional pub that stands on london's charing cross road and provides that gateway between the non wisdom world and diagonally. Is the leaky cauldron number. Three the futuristic bar where you find whoopi goldberg. Serving drinks is. Guinan is ten forward from star trek. The next generation number four the comedy series featuring mike of the the nag's head is only fools and horses and number five the fictional pub that has landlords called watts. Royal butcher and mitchell. Is the queen. Victoria from eastenders was first timers. The four star general number six four star general who served as the first african american. Us secretary of state was colin. Powell or colin powell depending on how you say number seven the everyday item. That was used the first time in seventy three by martin. Cooper was the mobile phone or cellphone as distinct from a car. Phone number eight hundred ninety. No one schoolteacher. Any at the age of annie edson taylor. At the age of sixty three became the first person to survive going over niagara falls in a barrel nine in sixteen sixty one. The chemists that became the first person did fine chemical elements and their properties was robert boyle a number ten the icelandic sailor and explorer. That's believed to have become the first european to go to north america. Five hundred years before columbus was leif eriksson round three was the general knowledge round. The lesser of the roman alphabet was added. Most recently was j. Number twelve king kong was born on skull island and he died on manhattan island number thirteen. The new york city street closely identified with the appetizing agency is madison avenue. The before fourteen. The british labour party's longest serving prime. Minister is tony blair. And the fifteen the nuclear bomb. That was detonated. Over the japanese city of nega sacchi was cold. Fatman round four was nursery rhymes at number sixteen. The nursery rhyme at thomas edison recited into his phonograph in eighteen. Seventy eight merry huddle it love number seventeen. The actor burying children alive in the foundations of a stone structure to present prevent. Its collapse is sometimes thought to be. The origin of london. bridge is falling down number eighteen. Cock robin was killed by the sparrow with his bow and arrow the mid nineteen in three blind mice. The farmer's wife uses a carving knife to cut off their tails a number twenty four and twenty or twenty. Four blackbirds baked into the pie in sing. A song of sixpence and brown five was the what comes next. Round number twenty one it goes. Washington adams jefferson and then madison near the first four. Us presidents in order number twenty two tinker tailor soldier. I'll give you a point either. Sailor or spy the twenty-three genesis exodus leviticus. The fourth in the series is numbers. These books of the old testament in order twenty four. Osborne hammond javid and the next is soon. These are the surnames of the last four. Uk chancellors are checker a number twenty five montana california texas and the next one there would be alaska these the four. Us states in.

Hot 50 Countdown
"50 %" Discussed on Hot 50 Countdown
"Reliever. Hey, it's Rob access and it is my pleasure to can come down from 52. Number one every single month right here on the hot 50 countdown. Ladies and gentlemen, that's a wrap wage another episode of the hot 50 countdown. The podcast magazine hot 50 is ranked by fan votes received at podcast magazine.com. Fifty votes are audited by members of our staff tallied and verified by the 20th of this month with the final chart being released on the 1st of each subsequent month. For more information, please visit podcast magazine, We would love to hear from you. To us and feedback and podcasts magazine.com. And please be sure to join our Facebook community at facebook.com countdown is presented by Page Jazz magazine executive producer Steve. Oh sure content producer Shelly pelker Production Services provided for the hot 50 Countdown by Action Audio studios off. I'm your host Rob active reminding you take time to breathe. Don't let fear stop you and live a life of inspired action in till next time. Thank you for listening to a hot 50 countdown presented by podcast magazine. He's ready to preview And subscribe to the show on your favorite podcast network name..

Hot 50 Countdown
"50 %" Discussed on Hot 50 Countdown
"Be sure to check out episode number 55 where they wage. Talk about the dad who took his kid into the elephant habitat at the zoo. I am still shaking my head on that one and I have on the line Brian from the commercial break Brian like that's crazy. So this Mensa member this genius decided he wanted to take a selfie in the new elephant exhibit at the San Diego Zoo. He takes his child his two-and-a-half-year-old child into the elephant need to stand next to this huge male elephant tusks at all. And the most shocking part about this is that when the elephant charged the pair the father dropped the child face-first down into the mud. Luckily. The elephant was a better father than this human being because the elephant managed to avoid damaging the child in any kind of meaningful way so that they're both people were safe. But obviously the father was arrested on multitude of charges. It's a great episode. We have lots of fun with it. And of course the kid was okay. It sounds like they have lowered the standards for the Mensa test laid off. Yes that yes they have it's not a match made in heaven. Gaining two spots from number 40 last month the number 38 this month is know your aura by Mystic Michaela discussing all things mystical and practical in Aurora, Colorado. Dropping 27 spots, but still in the hot 50 from number 10 to number 37 this month is dark topic with Jack Luna. Another drop but not too far in the number 36 spot down from number 21 is True Crime couple hosted by.

Hot 50 Countdown
"50 %" Discussed on Hot 50 Countdown
"They can claim to the number 16 spot for the second month in a row is crime. Junkie with Ashley flowers and brown down just a few from number. Nine to number 15 is necronom odd hosted by Dave Keon and Mike everybody. Let's drink some beer and explore the stories behind some of history's most ruthless serial killers conspiracy theories alien abductions off and cults. At 14 we have another newcomer under society and culture. It's Once Upon a gene with Fe Parks as a new parent of a child with a rare genetic syndrome. If he was lost was notified. There was no rulebook. This was not what she had imagined as she navigated her way through this new reality. She realized something that should have been simple but was not a true that it always been there. But so what have been lost sight of for a time is that she wasn't alone and neither are you these are the stories of her family and families like hers. These are the stories of how they've persevered cried bonded and grown. These are the stories of children who have been told that they cannot and that have proved the world wrong. Now that sounds like a very purposeful show and I can see why they jumped down to the hot 50 at number 14 in their first appearance on the chart. Down five spots from number 8 in the number 13 spot is the Box officer podcast hosted by Mel McKay and Derek zemrak in the number 12 spot. We are getting closer and closer to number one in the hot 50 countdown. It's Robert discount him down with you in the number 12 spot dropping from number five is BK on the air with Barry king drop a few spots from number seven to number 11 is life with hula and here we go with the top 10 shows on the hot 50 as I shared with Iran. There's a bit of a shake-up going on in the top ten now, let's see how it all played out for March 2021. At.

Hot 50 Countdown
"50 %" Discussed on Hot 50 Countdown
"Designed to educate Inspire entertain and motivate blue stands for business wife universe and the speakers authors and influencers and take part in blue talks about or the fuel that feeds the blue talks fire. You need to step into all of who you are and so my title came to be knocked knocked because literally I was knocked a couple of times in through accidents and and different ways. I mean literally truth came knocking at my door and said you're living, you know, you're living part of your life. If you're not living the mission of why you came into the world at number 29 also new to the hot 50 this month in the parenting category. It's the rock star. Show with host Josh Reddick and Gary Weisman. Being a rockstar is a lot of hard work but it's got nothing on being a dad just asked your erratic and Gary Weisman. You might know them from Bowling For Soup, but behind the pump Rock sing-alongs wage or just two guys trying to get through bullies vasectomies and everything else that comes with being a dad every week Jared and Gary will invite other Rockstar Dad's on are to talk about the highs and lows in between band practice. Whether you're a dad you have a dad or you just like Dad jokes. The Rockstar dad podcast is about to make Monday. Oh so much better. Hey, I'm a Rockstar Dad. I think I'm going to have to see if I can get a guest appearance on the show. Who knows it could happen? Number.

Gamer's Lounge with Ahman Green
"50 %" Discussed on Gamer's Lounge with Ahman Green
"Together and formed gaming a guidance with gaming guidance is literally on the story of what my grandma gates me and what i'll give it back to the world so when my grandma gave me is giving back to the world through dude the platform of gaming a guidance allowed to take on been down with me for the longest one thing. I wanna say about logitech bro. Is that on. The of narrower right now is pulled to support black gaiters in diversity and inclusion or stuff is cool there. What i can say is the majority of what you see is not genuine. And there's maybe a few percent that is genuine. I noticed because i wanna front end of the industry in the back in the industry. The i'm in every area in the industry does lonesome involved in the up. You know but you're seeing it right now and i played a major role in a lot of stuff on the bathroom. So what i'm trying to say. Is you know before it was cool. Thing to do. Logitech has been downhill years way before you know this stuff so there are certain companies has always been genuine and i noticed because a lot of things that you are seeing today. I'm the one that was telling these companies do because i was the person breaking the barriers the loudest the facing room. You know what i'm saying. We're gonna energy we're going to or basically. Yeah so think about this for a second. 'cause you only see how you say you never got a call back from g four northzone stuff right so think about this second win in. Tom has gi- like especially back then. Has g full gain. Spock talk radio. These companies ever had somebody that was Black or just a person of color overall as their leader for game news never writing the euro. Never were doing very forget you see now so it right so so the thing is what i want to educate people on is on the back end bid certain budgets that companies. Get so. if you don't recieve you don't have anything in motion to support You know Black creators in other minorities and stuff like that. The you lose the money that you is gonna get so a lot of the stuff that you're seeing right now. A lot of is not genuine is a bucket list. There's a checklist cousin. If you're if you're supposed to get two million dollars for your department in They tell you that. If you don't implement these programs be gonna cut your budget to four hundred thousand instead of the two millions. We'll get right now. They're forced to have this. That's why you see collectively as a whole everybody doing the same thing because everybody got bottom lines families to feed so they have to do it right to say so. I just wanna make that real clear because the person i'm the kind of person. I wanna make sure that everything is right. Everything is fair. Because i genuinely love people in are genuinely love. The industry and i want to see grow grow correctly where everybody has a fair shot. These the that's why. Every time i speak until like it is because that's the only way things are going to get better but i don't do it in a whole way. You don't do it in a way outta love and care and understanding but that's kind of journey or what led me to be hip hop gamer. So now on my day to day you know..

Hot 50 Countdown
"50 %" Discussed on Hot 50 Countdown
"The radio. Yeah, I'm drunk. He's drunk. I live off like what like across the way, you know, he's cute. Yeah where he he he like approached me like whatever and this was the first time that I had ever done this and I was like, well, I mean, he barely speaks English. So how bad can it be, you know something that's probably good so it's exotic. So we we hooked up and then in everything's fine, cuz obviously we had been drinking and like waiting up to that was okay the part that was like the worst aside. The whole thing in general that's terrible and that I regret immensely was like after it's done and I literally was like, okay. Thanks. Dropping a spot and number three certified mama's boy was Steve Kramer and Nancy. Did you catch their interview and podcast magazine? It's a good one. And number two spot up from number four is thank God cancer saved our divorce with Denny Amanda, Jamie and Brandon. I'm thinking these folks have their eyes set on the number one spot long. Can they do it next month? Keep listening to the 50 countdown to find out and here they are reigning Champs eight months in a row. They're holding on tight to the number one spot on the hot 50 countdown. It's the upside with Charlie and Jeff dollars. And you were overly responsible if you often act like you don't have any needs and you don't need any help any of those wrong date with you. I know the feeling. So again, no is a complete sentence don't feel guilty about saying it because at the end of the day your own not only protecting yourself and putting up super important boundaries, but you are also helping them grow improve and learn even if they fail, even if there's a failure involved you are still helping them.

Hot 50 Countdown
"50 %" Discussed on Hot 50 Countdown
"More returning to 50 countdown in the number 18 spot is who's driving your car with Matthew Steven and Craig jump it up the charge from number 36 that number 17 is the office ladies with Jenna Fischer and Angela Kinsey. I love this show. I am such a big fan if you haven't seen it. Check it out every week Jenna and Angela will break down an episode of the office and gives exclusive behind-the-scenes stories that only two people who were there can tell you Okay lady, I think now you have some background catches for this episode. I do I'm going to hit you up with them. All right, Christine Byrd said at 12 minutes 11 seconds is Mike sitting in his office holding a bottle of chocolate sauce. Yes. Great catch. I went back to this episode. I went right to that time code. It looks like a bottle of Hershey's chocolate sauce. Like he's got it turned around, You don't see the label. He's holding that in one hand. But then if you look there is the cap of it on his desk was he going to take a big Swig out of it, but then Dwight interrupted him like, oh that's good wage and grabbed it. I'll put it in stories. Countdown number 16 jumped up a few spots from number twenty crime junkie with Ashley flowers and bread. If you can never get enough True Crime modulations, you found your people with this one. dropping down just a bit from number eight to number 15 is weird Darkness with Darren marlar narrating true stories of real paranormal events found True Crime just a little bit of a slide from number 11 to number fourteen in society and culture category is the real Queens of Queens with Kathy Francis and Michelle three women born and raised in the heart of Queens, New York who love to talk about everyday life from family to sex In her pants taking a pressured. Look at this. Look at these. Oh my God. Let me tell you tonight is the night of all nights first. We had a little bit of an issue then I got my brother. Unfortunately. He wants me to zoom in to a chat with him. I just declined him. Sorry Carmine, but I'm doing my podcast. Let's change it up because I did a couple of would you rather's but then I just what the heck deck that's what I'm doing now. So we'll alternate back and forth. So, let's see. What is the scariest sound you can hear in the middle of the night? Hmm up 10 spots. Remember twenty-three and the number 13 spot is WKRP.

Hot 50 Countdown
"50 %" Discussed on Hot 50 Countdown
"By Taya occur. That brings us to number twenty-five the halfway mark here in the hot 50 countdown. Hey, it's Rob accessed. I am down from fifty to number one podcast magazines hot 50 charging. I love it. I love the name of this podcast. It's so cool. It's a paranormal chicks hosted by Donna and carry dropping down from 25 to number 14. Hang on ladies. Thanks, Donna. Sorry I mean Donald Duck born and she does hit a lot of deer. So they hate me she may or may not have a brought that on. You said they hit me knock on wood that they have not hit me and my new car why the fuck would you have said that you just jinxed yourself. Are you talking to see her face off? So it's travel. So sorry. Did your boss? Sorry. I did not mean it that serious that number 24 popping back onto the chart is the corporate competitor podcast hosted by Don Yaeger the business show takes a look at what most fortune five hundred Executives have in common and discuss how Sports shape their professional trajectory off. A number 23. We have a newcomer to the chart and the True Crime category. It's the Ripple podcast hosted by Angela and Rosa who tell you strange and unusual stories and the ripples. They create aka the story after the story. They're podcast recipe house easy a shot of murder a splash of conspiracy a few heavy dashes of paranormal garnished with two Twisted Sisters..

Hot 50 Countdown
"50 %" Discussed on Hot 50 Countdown
"And number 37 is True Crime couple John & K a couple out of the New York City area that is always had a fascination with not just True Crime but human nature in general. What drives a criminal to commit a crime? What makes a person's crimes Escalade? Is evil something one is born with or does it manifest overtime? Hmm on this bi-weekly podcast they want to discuss some of the crimes people have discussed for years number 36 is POD jerky a society and culture podcast hosted by Master impressive and director gave them to podcast buddies serving up entertaining stories commentary and reviews from their daily lives social interactions and observations. They're serving up Tastykake. Audio jerky and every episode. I don't have to pay for any prescriptions whatsoever. Yeah, no don't even get paper. I have a thousand dollars a thousand dollars a year for massages from a registered massage therapist. I have 1700 magic here. You can't do that here. That's yeah do acupuncture 17 via that down $150 worth of coverage for physiotherapy a year. I have or my orthotics are covered three pairs a year. So I didn't know that at $30 or $35 a month that I'm paying all of this is covered for us and the last of this run of newcomers at number 35. We have Rocky Balboa Cheesesteak fun our a sports podcast. Go figure with a name like Rocky Balboa host Jimmy Matt, Nick Dirty. Mike and Sal Hostess weekly podcast covering Philadelphia sports and utter nonsense. They say the name of the show is definitely not sarcastic. Yo, Adrian. I'm thinking we'd better check these guys out, you know? Okay, I'm sorry. That was probably one of the worst Sly Stallone impressions of all times..

Hot 50 Countdown
"50 %" Discussed on Hot 50 Countdown
"I'm at them check this one out for myself dropping from number 34 to number 42 is raw true stories of female infidelity hosted by Rebecca Adams jump it under the chart and staking claim number 41 spot is just Dutra part of the Jets and Kramer Duo on Mix 106. She's created Loki a documentary podcast about her cross-country move starting a new job and moving in with her boyfriend for the first time. Reason why I got so emotional about it is because that's kind of what I had to do this year with covid-19. We have the comedy improv show talk and shares with CJ and Maddox. Looks like they underwent a bit of a name change shorten it up from The Amazing World of talking. She has gotta love these guys. There are huge fans of podcast magazine and while they claim the opinions voiced in their show don't matter the opinions of their fans do and that's why we keep seeing them here on the hot fog. Are we are counting down from fifty two number one at the number 39 spot. We have more comedy with Heather McMahon's absolutely not off by number 38 in the Christianity category. It's trails and testimonies hosted by Kim fits. That brings us a number 37 first time on the chart. It's a society and culture podcast hanging with this Italo's hosted by Edgar show boy and Janet. I'm a Mexican-American married couple with two wonderful young daughters on the show. They fully exposed their life including relationship drama and current events in an uplifting thought-provoking way. It will hopefully fill you with laughter faith and encouragement. We want to encourage you to find your why hm your wise that unconditional reason why you choose to smoke him rather than sink. No matter what you're going through. I love that. And also, how can.

Hot 50 Countdown
"50 %" Discussed on Hot 50 Countdown
"It's so important for a platform like this to Champion in D podcasts that are the heart and soul of the industry invaluable work. Keep it up guys. Thank you Neil C use all the way from the UK. It really is awesome and really makes us feel great to get this kind of feedback from you the listeners. It's validation for us that what we're doing here at podcast magazine the hi 50 chart and of course the hot 50 countdown is serving our mission to introduce podcast fans two shows. They may not have ever heard of but odd Listening to a direct result of that is an increase in listeners for the podcasters who's shows deserve to be heard. It's a win-win-win the third win back in for us. All right, let's get to it. We've got lots of new shows to share with you this month without further Ado. This is the first official countdown of 20 21 jump starting off a number 50. We have the places and travel podcast New England Legends. This show first popped up on October's best of Jorge crime. Now, they're here on the hot 50. Let's see what it's all about. Each week for Cloris author and historian Jeff Ballinger and radio host real eager explore the ghosts monsters folklore history and legends of New England Jeff and re say if you give them about ten minutes, they'll give you something strange to talk about and the bizarre is closer than you think at 49. We have a newcomer to the chart in the self-improvement category Expedition marriage hosted by Chris and Jamie baillie, Chris and Jamie are Christian counselors and marriage coaches. They help listeners to put God in the center of their marriage by sharing some solid Biblical truth along with some practical marriage tips. And so yes, when we don't gain control over them. They are big distractors and disconnect errs here. Let me share some some stats with you here. This is crazy. And this is even from a few years ago, So I would imagine these numbers are even greater, but on average we check our phones 80 times a day. That's like that's great. I can't think of anything else. I do off 80 times a day. You know, what else are we doing? Eighty times a day, you know, there's there's nothing you know and part of that on average being. Oh my gosh, I'd be horrible wage. You're drinking too much water if that's happening. But on average we are on our phones and again few years ago 5.4 hours a day. That's crazy. That's crazy and over an hour is spent on Facebook and over 50 minutes were around 50 minutes is spent on Instagram at number 48 on the hi 50 countdown. Another newcomer in the business category the virtual assistant Advantage hosted by Alyssa event. This is a podcast for new be aspiring an experienced virtual assistants who want to grow their businesses and pursue additional income streams. But let's talk about the second thing that you need to be consistent in order to succeed in your virtual assistant business. Number two is always be learning there is always something to learn in order to continue to be successful in your business. Most likely you're going to have to continue to learn even if it is something that you would know. So even if there is a specific skill that you know, say you are skilled in graphic design. There are always New pieces of your graphic design software to use there is always news updates. There are always always new Styles and this is the case in any particular skill those social media changes. So incredibly fast, you have to Brave practically you're learning on a weekly or daily basis to keep up if you are specializing in social media. Add number 47 drop in from number 35 on second. Watch on second. Watch is a movie Nostalgia podcast hosted by five friends Tim Chris Dana carries, and we can't forget space. Thank you for joining us. We counting down from fifty two. Number one number 46 finds her way back to the hot 50 chart. It's huddle up with gusts. That is dead Gus. Frerotte former NFL quarterback and long time friend Dave Hagar talk with guests about when they fell in love with sports house sports taught them to overcome adversity and help shape their path to success. Tastier than me. He had the ballot, you know, he was a wine nut. He used to Chuck what he fly in California. He would he would fly back with Napa Valley Wines on his plane that team played off one time. We're playing we're playing Chuck Noll. Okay here in a preseason game and before the game. I sent over a box of a variety of Napa Valley high quality wines. Now, I wasn't in the white box, but I could always get what I wanted and I said put it in his locker as a gift because I knew he's a wine nut and we beat the hell out of him the preseason King and by Waka meet him at Midfield. He grabs my hand. He said ramiel don't ever set me up with a case of wine again. That's that's I sent a lot of our Vermeil wine to Chuck before he passed away, even though he had Alzheimer's he still had a he still liked wine in his his wife would work for him at number forty-five dropping from number 28 dead. Is elimination podcast the comedy show from across the pond hosted by Brothers Bob and Mike along with her dad Dave. This is one where the guys make random selections of you, It comes put them head-to-head in a debate and then ultimately eliminate.

Hot 50 Countdown
"50 %" Discussed on Hot 50 Countdown
"Podcast magazine presents yo, 50 count to 15 countdown each month growth factors a podcast magazine counts down the top 50 podcast Wonderland right here long term End by you the podcast in June in each month to see if yours in the books and The countdown years from Addis happy 20-21 podcast bands. It's rubbish your host for the podcast magazines hot 50 Countdown the sure we take the hot 50 chart published each month in podcast magazine and counting down from fifty to number one. The hot 50 chart is the one the boss only fan-voted podcast ranking in the entire podcast industry. That means you the podcast fans created the list and the number of downloads. Well, they simply don't matter a big shout-out and thank you to all have been subscribing rating and reviewing the show. We definitely appreciate you or give a special shout-out to listener Brooks b thanks to five star rating and the awesome review Brooks b rides as an avid podcast listener. This is a great show to learn about other podcasts. They shed light on an array of different shows and yep. We talked about what you might hear their love this forum at the new shows. I've learned about as a result. Thank you so much Brooks b and Neil C use from the UK for his five star rating. I loved his review Neil C use rights. I'm a big fan of podcast magazine and even bigger fan of the hot 50 podcast why in a world obsessed with celebrity and media shows?.