35 Burst results for "Forty Fifty"

The Dan Bongino Show
Rep. Jim Comer: Biden Associate Received $3M Wire From China
"The cut that isn't for the next whatever the next cut itself for here's jim comer on ted who's his podcast and a follow -up to this explaining how foreign governments paid a business robinson associate walker off the biden's a whole lot of money and he was doing some business with the biden crime family take a listen i'll use the robinson walker account because we subpoena that first was the my account we subpoenaed now who's robinson walker rob walker was one of the associates that they used uh... funnel money from china and then in romania and then down and laundry down to the bike so he's a guy that's doing business with hunter and joe but yeah okay we don't know what that is it is yet they got a three million dollar wire from from china so this so so one wire three million dollars three million dollars now remember this account never had much activity in it over the course of ten years maintained around a forty or fifty thousand dollar balance one day out of the blue they get a three million dollar wire from china oh that's so so the banks holding a balance for this guy of like thirty forty fifty thousand dollars and bam he gets a three million dollar shot in the arm what was it selling what was he what was he said what jim what was he said do you know oh oh oh influence is that a thing is that a sir oh okay products and services hmm this gets better members bank records for all this and i will continue to insist as i say often tattoo this on your brain if any what of jim comer is saying is false and these bank records don't exist why has no one been family yet because it's the truth

The Odd Couple with Chris Broussard & Rob Parker
What Would the 12-Team College Football Playoff Landscape Look Like
"I rob we talked a few. I get it now. I think it was a few months ago at this point about the playoff expansion in college football and at that time it really seemed like the twelve team playoffs was was coming and they have momentum in you know everybody seem or most people seem like they were for at least the people on the committee and it seemed like that was going to be the next phase of college football and now it is being put on hold and very much in jeopardy and as much as i'm for and you know this. I'm for the playoff expansion for the twelve team playoff. But i understand why it's a whole and that's because oklahoma and texas are about to leave the big twelve suit and it. Looks like the sec. Are they creating some type of super conference. And then will you know the pac twelve and the big ten like some of these other big conferences. That are left out. I mean rob. There are people that think we could end up with two. Maybe three super conferences like a almost like a. You know the first division is. maybe. I don't know forty fifty teams because let's face it that's really what it is anyway. Well but forty fifty teams at the top level. Almost like the nfl. So i think with autism. Flux i don't think you can is the to twelve at this point you gotta see the conference play out. I in my opinion. I also think there's distrust amongst these guys like trying to get out because of what's happened chris. Like people sneaking out of their conference in the middle of the night right leaving the other the other ones in the learning tracks in in in effect you know like like like some of them of affected. The tv contracts right out of schools pulled out and then that gives a clause to espn. Or fox's say wait a minute no no no. We didn't sign up for this without these teams. So you know what i mean like. We got a problem and we're good avoid. I mean it is just. It's been insane this past off season. I would college football and where it's headed chris. And you're right. I mean it's going to be the haves and the have not it's a flat out money. Grab by college

The Old Man's Podcast
A highlight from Episode 206; Great moments in Olympic history and remembering the 80s.
"Get off my grass. Welcome to the old mayors podcast another week looking forward to spend some time with young and here we are. How much fun is this gonna be find out. I really don't have a whole lot plan. I'm going to be kind of winging it. That's a sneak behind the curtain for him. Yeah i'm the old man. This is my podcast. So i call it the old man's podcast young people. This is not a podcast for old people. I guess kind of is you see as an old man. I've lived a long long life. And i'm not going anywhere. So kenny ideas. Don't get excited. Just say live. Long life been down this road few times. I like to share those adventures with other people. Like me or people right behind me. We can laugh and joke about some of the things we've seen and how the world's changed but for you young folks. This podcast has a lot of value because of you ever heard the saying if i only knew then what i know now. You're never going to say that in your twenties that's pertinent saying to you and your life. Now it's not going to be until you're in your forties fifties or even more that you're gonna think back to when you were kid the agent you are now and wished you'd have done things differently or just done things. She didn't do based on your life. Experience decades down the road now. I don't want that to happen to you. So that's why one of the reasons why i'm doing this podcast to help. Young people can get the direction that they need now. Listen i know. You're not gonna listen stupid old people when i was your age. I didn't want to listen to stupid old people. Either but i always try to make it entertaining and just kind of thought provoking. Think about this think about doing that. Think about how this could affect your life things. Like that and the stories that i tell may be applicable to you at this point they certainly will be at some point. You is so. That's why called the old man's podcast stunned by old man. But by all means certainly is not for old people young people. You're welcome we're glad to have you here. So what am i going to talk about this week. Well the olympics are finishing up so that would make sense talk about the olympics. Problem is already have like a bunch of podcast back. I did a great sporting moments in olympics. Now it's back on my mind so we're going to do a best of series and i'm going to plug the former topic back in again. See what you think about the best moments. I've experienced i've seen in the olympics. This has been a great olympics. It's a shame it's going down. The wait is that nobody's there a friend of mine. His son is playing on the basketball team. Talking about it today. It just takes something out of it where you're not audiences at their your fans and your family can't share this experience with you. They're playing and they're gonna get their medals in their accolades experienced. But it's i don't know if tarnishes the right word but it's certainly not going to be a great experience olympics have always been but we're having the olympics so i wanna talk about that. I wanna talk to you briefly about a show that i've been binging on stars kind of funny. You're gonna remember this show and probably some of you are never going to have heard of it but this is going to be a little funny. I'm gonna talk to you about the show that i've been binging on on stark's those two topics should take quite a while. So you throw in a little episode engage brain and a quick pep talk that ours look forward to. that's about it. It's going to be plenty on this episode. The old man's pot desk

Marketing Secrets
The Upsell That Made Me Sick To My Stomach...
"Now what do you think about an offer that so good that you feel six or something actually giving it somebody because it's it's such a good deal. I guess probably the right offer right. Make an irresistible one time offer vaco. Here's i of course may some dollars off so defense in bucks. That's that's an offer but it's not an irresistible insane insane offer when you are sick to your stomach because there's no way we can do this this this i can't give all i can't people this and this and all these things for this price because it's not worth it to me like you're sick to your stomach that's when you're close that's when you probably have the right author and for me. It was this big hog just like. Oh my gosh. Like i've been stingy. I've been trying to my e to make sure they offer the things that i want to sell. Not what people actually want and they're looking at it from my okay. If i'm not making an offer. I gotta make something irresistible right. If only gonna make a fifteen twenty percent conversion rate on accelerate to forty fifty percent it has to be irresistible We're in the process right now of purchasing a company. I can't talk about yet. So as we finalize the deal might be finalized. When get back from lake powell. So i'm sure we can. We shouting it from the roofs but the funnel really buying the same because the funnels are so good like someone buys a product through the funnel the average cart value Is like one hundred eighty dollars saying spend one hundred dollars to sell this product which is crazy right. It's so good but you look at the up so flow and it's the same thing it's like the most insane ears this blah for you. Sure when the personal buying the company from his first print together was like six or stomach ache. I could easily sell his thousand bucks or two thousand or more and i'm going to do for ninety seven mike. We what you can't do that like insane right. We spent fifty thousand dollars creating the kate so through for ninety seven dollars. And when you get that the internal dialogue and you had your fighting it because this doesn't make any logical sense that's when you probably have an actual irresistible

Build Your Tribe
How to Price Your Product Service or Offer for Profit
"So let's talk about pricing. This is one of the areas that so many entrepreneurs struggle with i know i myself did the first story i want to share with. You is when. I came to southern california and i decided i wanted to be a personal trainer. What i did was ask around to figure out what everyone else was charging. An i determined what my price would be based on going lower than everybody else not the best pricing strategy and. I'll just tell you. Transparently that. The reason why i did that is because i didn't value what it was. I had to offer a classic case of imposter syndrome now. I was a very confident individual. I was even confident in my own knowledge and ability. But when i thought of other people who did the same thing that i was doing i thought about how much more experienced they were. I thought about how much more well known they were. And that made me feel like. I didn't belong there and that i didn't deserve to charge the same rate that some of my competitors charging so i charged forty dollars an hour when i knew there are other trainers charging a minimum of sixty five dollars an hour. Today i pay my own personal trainer. One hundred eighty five dollars an hour and there are still trainers out. There charging forty dollars an hour and here. We are twenty years later. I would bet that there are trainers out there. Maybe even trainers listening to this episode right now who are charging forty fifty sixty dollars an hour and they're far more knowledgeable and perhaps even more experienced than the trainers who were charging hundred seventy five two hundred dollars five hundred dollars an hour and if that higher priced trainer has a full schedule they also are enjoying a lot more freedom

Tips for Travellers Podcast
Why are Pools on Cruise Ships so Small?
"When i stay in las vegas resort hotels would say five thousand guests have vast pools but not so on a ship of similar passenger numbers at best. The swimming pools on cruise ships are twenty foot by forty foot by five foot deep. And i found out there are three key reasons for that. First of all water is extremely heavy and the water in that modest poor alone ways around two hundred and fifty thousand pounds this making the ship really top heavy and challenging to sail and keep stable when you sailing the seas so size needs to be limited and then the pools have to be in the middle of the ship and dead center the deck to help with the balance the ones at the rear are always much much smaller. That's also why you always see hot tubs. Mirroring each other with one on both sides of the ship in exactly the same position again. It's the balance out the wait. Secondly the more weight at the top of the ship the more counterbalance weight has to be added to the base of the ship to keep it stable. This of course it's more space lower down and as more weight to the ship now to get around this problem. The old cruise liners from the forties fifties in the sixties like cunard's. Qe to they used to have the poor inside the ship and at the very bottom in whose case it was actually a roundabout the waterline. Nowadays passengers expect pools to be out in the sunlight and so they have to be at the top of the ship. This actually magnifies the risk of throwing the ship off balanced in rough away the especially when the water starts moving around. You have all that weight moving around. So that's also. Why pulls her often drained emptied when the seas get

The Doomer Bloomer Podcast
"forty fifty" Discussed on The Doomer Bloomer Podcast
"The things money can bring and i really truly feel like the lord was showing me that if you want those things you can have them just know the unhappiness and loneliness and horrible life that you're going to have doing those things so i actually believe that that the lord was able to like. Give me this. If you will out of body experience or out of life experience and kind of show me down the track where i will be thirty forty fifty years from now had i continued in that patter and i would have had plenty of money. I would have plenty of things. But i would have not been fulfilling my role that i was created for and i would have been terribly unhappy and you know. I'm not saying that. Having money is a bad thing it's not at all you know. This is actually a mindset that we work with with a lot of kingdom entrepreneurs because religion has actually tried to tell people money as bad. It's not money that's bad. It's won't allow money to become the false. God is when we allow the pursuit of money and the things money brings us. That's actually when money becomes bad and it talks about in the bible. The pursuit of the love of the pursuit of money is evil. So money is a very awesome thing. It's very powerful spiritual tool. It just matters what we're worshiping if we let it become a false god in our life and that becomes the thing. We're worshiping is gonna lead down dismal road off the it'd be like the cult the cult of money or the the cult of false riches At at.

Following Harriet
Harriet Tubman, the Ultimate Outdoorswoman
"Everyone knows harriet. Tubman as an activist and freedom fighter. We all learned about her in school. Growing up how she led slaves to freedom on the underground railroad but there was a lot more to her than what you probably remember from history class. She was a daughter a wife an entrepreneur and she was something else too. When you think about it she had to be the ultimate outdoors woman. Do what she did. That's right an outdoors woman. We don't often talk about. Harriet tubman in that light. Or if we do. It's kind of cautionary tale. Her experiences in the outdoors must have been so awful. So why would any sane black person wanna go into the wilderness voluntarily it feeds into the narrative. We often hear that african americans are not outdoorsy. But what if there's more to the story. What was harry. Its relationship with nature. How does that shape. The way african americans with the outdoors today and how might a closer look at harriet. Offer a new perspective on who belongs outdoors victoria. Marin has the story so this story was inspired by a podcast called following. Harriet which is about harriet. Tubman the show pulls back the curtain on harry. It's life giving listeners. A deeper context to her story. A story that i think is more layered and probably more relatable than many people realize most of us enter. Harriet tubman is life when she was in her thirties forties fifties and often times. We don't sort of think about how she came to be. Harriet people of my generation people who grew up in the nineteen seventies. We first met harriet in a photo in the corner of a textbook. She looked old. Her skin was stretched tight on her face. Her mouth was pinched. Her head was wrapped in a dark. Kerchief

Strong By Design Podcast
"forty fifty" Discussed on Strong By Design Podcast
"It's going to cost you in in your mobility it's gonna cost you in Stimulating certain like the hip. Flexor right the hips. You're gonna you're gonna lose all kinds of You know athleticism And in terms of bone Structure and a when you're sitting you're like the said the body is designed for movement. And when you're not stimulating muscles imp stimulate your bone structure. You get these weak fragile bones that will deteriorate over over years. Even if you're looking you might be pretty brittle because you're you're not testing that body moving that body and hitting the body in different ways throughout the day the way it's like a child you know and that's my kids are like rubber right the council back up if they fall because their bodies are just so mckee mechanical li like this the right to to like where we are. When we're thirty forty fifty years old a lot of us of a teenager like trips and falls he just tumbles and right back up like it never happened. They come home all scraped and bruised and like i'm fine. I'm fine how you look like you were in a war exactly sedan. That's just that's just the day the body can handle it. Can it can handle it. But the this active potato thing i you know. Don't let don't be that yeah. Don't be that person that is you know really praising your batting yourself on the back for all your great exercising you at the gym that week but really what the rest of your day look like. What's your lifestyle look like. And so the morning evening walks. The lunch walks to the getting. You know we're going to get to that. Yeah there's there's there's a difference. I think if i'm hearing you. There's a difference between exercising regularly and having an active lifestyle. Huge different people need to understand that difference and the impact. And i want us to get into that. 'cause i know you've got some really good tip. People been listening the following. They're like oh my gosh. I'm that active data. I want to be so what. What did they do. What do we do. What do i do. I have to put an alarm on my phone. I know that. I'll tell you what the alarm and the phone is. Been a good trick for me to to remember to do things in my day. We all are busy busy busy. And you can set little alarms for yourself for all kinds of things Whether it's a meeting whether it's a text your friend or you know right near journal. Read a book you know. Stand up more. So what are ways that you can combat this sedentary life. This active couch potato Living so many of us are guilty. Of and i would include myself in that category certain days including myself. I also want to make sure that we impress upon people. This is not this is not mean that you have to give up hours of like we we all. I mean we understand you especially because you still have a young family minds. my kids are all grown. Now you have responsibilities like do you have family responsibilities. You also.

Horizon Talk Radio's podcast
"forty fifty" Discussed on Horizon Talk Radio's podcast
"The chiefs of police in a all kinds of jurisdictions in the entire province of ontario at all said that they oppose the new restrictions Called on and they will be doing their own balanced policing Yeah yeah perfect. Because they're part of the people guys. I mean you know listen. People are always saying oh defunding. The police defend the police. And we're saying no. That's not the point these people. These police people They have a job to do. They're here to serve and protect. And if somebody joined the forest thirty forty fifty years ago. They were doing the right thing. Most of them are doing the right thing. Everybody has bad apples in the in the basket. And so what we're trying to say. Is this if you take out if a police officer retired today or quits because we tell them to quit then all the sudden a they bring on bring on a recruit a newbie. Somebody who's been trained without empathy. Somebody who's been trained by the new world order to be a little bit less empathetic to the people maybe a little psychopathic me with some tendencies. That are not about community and more about you know just being authority figures. That are a little bit more oppressive and so we don't want that we want the opposite to stay where there we want these people to be You know vision of wisdom that they've seen a lot going on these police officers have family. They've got community. And they don't want we don't want the newbies. We don't want new people that are out there trying to you. Know label themselves. You know to protect the agenda the elitist. We don't want that. We want the opposite. Whether there'd been a part of the community for eons to basically just reform learn the ways of the new. The new way of being with people learned that we are able to stand up for our rights freedoms the canadian charter rights and freedoms mandates that we are allowed to peacefully protest and assemble. And right now these emergency orders. They're trying to convince us that..

The Unstoppable Woman®
"forty fifty" Discussed on The Unstoppable Woman®
"This is your your will use it. Okay with that. I will ask you. How confident are you in your ability to have control over your thoughts. How much control do have over your thoughts. Would you say you have ten percent control. Would you say it was twenty thirty. Forty fifty sixty one hundred percent. Where are you at in that spectrum and again this requires a level of honesty and truthfulness with yourself. I am by no means at one hundred percent. But i am so far beyond where i was when i started. I was probably at five percent. When i started this and i thought i was pretty pretty much all that and more but when i started to really dive in to to using my greatest power my power to choose and using my will to continue to focus on that choice. I realized i didn't have that much control over my thinking. I had to build that muscle..

Free Your Inner Guru
"forty fifty" Discussed on Free Your Inner Guru
"He asked his father for money so he could go buy sheep and then he does and then he completely screws up and then goes all over the place and ends up back. Re started growing up catholic. I heard about god. And jesus never heard about the universe but the universe and universal language in the overtones are undertones or at least a strong as any christian references. It's all told in this allegory. Of and so i think that it really pushes on an addresses all kinds of different archetypes and universal ideas that resonate in some way shape or form as truth or calling to a person's spirit or soul. You get the sense that it. It's an old story. Like what takes place. A are one hundred years ago or so but when you're as you're reading it you don't really know you because they're talking about alchemy shepherds and old kind of antiquated ideas but there are still shepherds these days and so it could. Well have happened last week but it's not really not really positive as to when the story takes place so it's it's timeless thing in that sense in that people can read forty fifty hundred years from now and it would still resonate and the thing about the universe and this universal spirituality. Now that i'm delving into zen those sorts of ideas resonated rather as opposed to a christian or catholic point of view..

Wendell's World & Sports
"forty fifty" Discussed on Wendell's World & Sports
"The society in a positive direction for my generation is far too late to make any type of drastic changes the change some of the ills and change some of the deficiencies and chain some of the the disease which is racism and oppression and discrimination in white privilege and all of those types of things for my generation the generation before me genetic generation even after me. It's too late for making any type of Meaningful impact before the young cats out there for those young cats who are going to be young adults then be parents and then be leaders and be folks are gonna have to interact with everybody and some of those folks my politics. Some of those folks might run for president. Some of those might be community leaders. Some of those folks might be police officers for those folks for that generation. Less start right now doing what we need to do to fill them with truth with unity with love with understanding with common sense with the ability to listen to everybody with their knowledge of privilege with their acknowledgement that. They'll do better with knowledge of being mined so again in twenty thirty forty fifty sixty one hundred years when my generation isn't allowed on that we'll be taking a look in the year twenty eighty seven that the kids will be going to high school. The kids will be going to middle school. The kids will be going to elementary. School will have the understanding of the things that affect the society right now an environment right now with the racism with the oppression with discrimination with misogyny such. We'll all be a thing of the past and we will be able to move to a place where everybody regardless of gender race creed color and such. We'll be able to treat one another with respect. So that's what we hope and Yeah that's part of what i do. Far as windows world is sports. The podcast concern. Bring out that message while ripping folks in sports and talking about those sports in praising votes in sports to giving his opinion about what's happening currently in the world of sports is all about windows. Roll the sports with yours truly window..

Your Retirement Solution Podcast
"forty fifty" Discussed on Your Retirement Solution Podcast
"This is kind of your ability to speak beyond the grave to say. Yes i want. This watched pass to sun specifically without any issue bill. Absolutely all right. What other documents to be need to be aware of so one of the other ones that come into play quite often are guardianship designations. So these are for those individuals Obviously who have kids a lot of times individuals will of think of this as your godfather godmother lots of wills and trusts. Don't incorporate this clause so this is generally something you have to do kind of on the outside to make sure your states all while and encompassing and this really obviously pertains to minor children. Those kids who are not yet of age. Those children are those individuals who are not able to go out and get a time job and work on their own. It's really allowing for you to bring outside individuals into your state to have these to have your son or daughter overlooked and a lot of times. We always are looking for for these individuals who share similar views. Financially sound overall. We just willing to raise children because they're going to be raising your children in your absence absolutely and from what. I understand that i could be wrong. Correct me if i'm wrong but if you don't have something in place the state gets to make that decision and that's that's scary because how often does does the government make positive decisions on our behalf or our children off. You wanna keep them out at all costs. They're processing a lot of information and this information there just seeing for the first time. They're not going to have the well rounded picture of your state or your family dynamics that you've been living through for the last twenty thirty forty fifty years so having these documents put together ahead of time can really alleviate a lot of that stress and then one of the last pieces all mentioned on the estate planning documents are just. You're very simple. Beneficiary designations every investment account.

Bruins Beat
Is Krejci Still a Viable Player for the Bruins?
"Krejci is still going to be David krejci this year. He's still going to have to change plan. A forty Fifty Point Pace over a full season still be good. Still dragged along, whoever whatever Wing is he's got, but you have Charlie Coyle. Who's getting paid like a top-six guy, would you expect him to make that jump up? You expect Jackson eager to really crack through and, you know, people who thought he was going to be up like The Calder or what-have-you or at the very least, be a guy that was going to flash a lot of practice that you could see him getting a full-time job. Next year, obviously that has not panned out either a guide for both coil and Sydney, so I think you look at this team and it's subject. Forecast years from now, what to expect from his team. But you look at the way they're playing right now and the piece that they have in place. It's not out of their own possibility to think that if you co-sign crazy and and Hall again and get a lot of these pieces back, you could run it back with the same group for another year or, or to even and still be a pretty viable Contender just the way they're playing off. So I think that's the only option that brings really have at this point is bringing back David krejci. Now granted

Mango Kush Podcast
"forty fifty" Discussed on Mango Kush Podcast
"Them different price or wholesale price customer now saying like say that by bison bam hawaii injury you know what i'm saying. Whatever bit this are green crack at the got destroyed over here in my cost fifty bucks in the goddamn store. I'm not the damn books. Nick i might pay by fucking thirty five forty fifty bucks short so my listening. I got screen credit. She gives you before you know what i'm saying. Is neil talk newer shipyard for news your brooklyn nets us breaking nation zone. That's really paying attention throughout saying they wake up in the morning. Offbeat at knocking at the door. Are you more brown up my awesome. What business do you have your hands on. The fucking blow operates over operation fucking funny bronx over. Which i'm i hope that they legalize it here. I really hope that. George george act like me. So bible These here we live. Listen case site big lush fed by the old thc or legal wheat with a lower tc grade. You must get stronger.

The Better
"forty fifty" Discussed on The Better
"I was going to see you and talk about this important topic. All right thanks for having me. Well hope you enjoyed that conversation with -til about how you can take this giant somewhat intimidating notion of evidence based practice and apply it in day to day day to day practice. Or if you're like. I said if you're a administrator or manager and your you have a team of clinicians how you can mentor them into making evidence based practice part of their daily routine part of their professional development. If you would because again we're all trying to do what is best for the patient and that means making decisions based off the best available evidence at the time right. I think listening back to our the conversation. It became again really apparent. How much of a multifaceted issue. this is. Not something as simple as Trainings training clinicians on how to look at the evidence or do anything with the research or find the use the key words. there's also the added complication of the time that is involved in doing it. The resources that are available. I mean some of these studies. You know forty fifty bucks a pop to buy a research study to to read it like you do that for every single patient of your day and your you know. Maybe you're looking for one or two articles that adds up really quickly and then it doesn't get any easier. By the fact that there are these predatory open access journals. So it's definitely a tough nut to crack. But i'm very grateful for -til for taking the time just to share with us some of her insights in her Tips and strategies on that just. Because it's again it's a really important a really important topic that has direct impact on the quality of care that we deliver to our to our patients So yeah that's all. I've got to say about that topic. If you like the show head on over to apple leave us a rating and review and help people find the show. If you wanna get notified when we drop new episodes which we drop usually every other wednesday we release a new episode with sometimes a bonus episode in the off weeks. A you can head over to. Www dot better outcomes dot show and you can sign up there for the email lists and we'll shoot you out A copy of the or link to the episode and a little synopsis. About right to your inbox you can..

Planet Money
How Magic: The Gathering Plays for Keeps
"This episode which we originally put up back in two thousand fifteen is all about how the company behind the popular trading card game magic the gathering figured out a way to keep its game from becoming a fat after the show. We have an update about a new way. That they're trying to keep their business bubble free all fads start out the same way with this feeling inside that you just gotta have something that everyone else already has for zach hill in fifth grade. That thing was a tiny plush animal filled with idi beans. The beanie baby was named garcia. It was tied. I'd teddy bear hickory. Ridge mall in memphis tennessee. I think i was trying to impress a girl. Or something. And i bought garcia for like seven bucks with some allowance. Money didn't know that he was at the beginning of a beanie baby bubble because bubbles always seem harmless at the first stage. Just a simple fat. Then someone figures out they can make money by reselling. That thing i ran into my friend. True and drew really wanted. Garcia was swept up in the craze. Like i was. He's i i want that. I want that i want that and i'm like dude. I you know they go to the store so it goes to the store and they weren't selling it and he just telling his mama betty wants it and she says like hey like will you sell me that and i was like yeah like fifteen bucks and she said yeah and i just realized i made like profit on. This sounds like this. You'd probably not be the last time that i do. This was staged two of the bubble. No matter how much you pay there is some chump like drew's mom out there willing to pay more. And so little zach hill fifth. Grader went into business buying up stuffed animals on the internet. Tabasco the bull the pterodactyl and unloading them on desperate schoolmates on parents. He says even did a big business with teachers. Zach was a full-on speculator. I made a lot of money as a fifth grader. Selling beanie babies on ebay we. Did you like forty fifty thousand dollars.

Modern Anabaptist: The Conversations that Shape Us
"forty fifty" Discussed on Modern Anabaptist: The Conversations that Shape Us
"Faith lives things fall apart in and this is a i've seen this kind of faith fall apart over and over and over again i've seen follow part in young people who've grown up in a rigid faith like that. I've seen it. I've seen it an elderly people as well that still dwell on things. That happened a long long time ago during a different time conversations with people that you know that are in wartime trying to survive stealing food and forty fifty sixty years later in hospital there for for a broken arm or concussion or something like that. They're still worried about will the question. We get to heaven. Because i did that that longtime ago. I've asked for forgiveness. And i think goddess forgiven me but i'm just not sure right so so you actually. You grew up without that measure of flexible. Faith where where you can see god as a god of love in a relationship saying well you know. This is already covered under the work that i've done for you in the cross. You know what i mean. I mean we're not doing this whole list thing anymore. You know we. We are living in a relationship. And hey i mean somedays relationship you say something wrong and and you forgive each other sometimes without having to ask for forgiveness because you move on right relationships are like that and then sometimes you do have to ask for forgiveness. It's just you know but if we start to keep lists of all the wrongs we have done to each other we start living a hard life with all our relationships right and yet we talk about that like with god. Now i think certainty or rigidity is is important to certain people especially when they start out in faith. I've seen that over and over again so somebody that starts out and faith later in life or comes back to faith later in life. It's really important for them. As a safety net to have that rigidity in their faith interesting what so to have that rigidity is to help them to have faith. Yeah so to know the black and white things right to know that this is wrong. This is right into this and this and this you know to have almost no area face. Subject kind of uncertainty seems so crucial. Not not just notice it over and over again but where it falls apart is when you can't move on from that i've seen people come into this kind of rigidity. Re thrive in it. But then something else got introduced to the equation because they weren't ready for it. All of faith fell apart again and they're now further away than they were even before they had come back to the of the others. They've associated their faith then with a specific preacher or pastor or author and so whenever they would talk about faith they would talk about faith in tandem with that person because that was the safety net. Right so faith. Put faith number would move on from that eventually. Eventually face falls apart. You can't imagine face without that safety net so then in therapy so what we do to provide that To deal with that rigidity is to provide an open space where people can take off some of that burden pressure from themselves. That's with eight. So how'd you do that in a pastoral context people with A really rigid faith. How do you give them that open space..

The $100 MBA Show
The Perfect First Business
"Your first business can be scary intimidating nerve wracking and frankly just risky. There's so much you don't know yet because you just don't have the experience under your belt so it's really important for you. To mitigate that risk too many first time entrepreneurs shoot for the stars they start like a software company requires a lot of town a lot of engineers a lot of funding or they get into e commerce and they wanna sell physical goods and items in their ecommerce store which requires inventory storage tons of technology and a lot of customer headaches. How do i know this well. I have a software company webinar. Ninjas i mentioned before i had an ecommerce store was in retail. I had my own clothing line Over a decade ago. But i also had another type of business that really allowed me to build my other businesses and that's a service based business services any kind of business that offers a service advice expertise to customers. Let me give you an example of base business and will run with this example throughout the lesson because this is an actual real example. That i did. This is actually a business iran. I had a business business republic and it was a service business. It was a consulting firm. And i helped small businesses build and launch new websites and blogs now the great thing about a service based businesses that. You don't need to be the expert but of course if you choose a service that you are good at let's say for example you are a web developer then you can actually start with your own time and talent but it's not required. I started because i knew how to create websites. Resume were press. And i my first few clients using my own time and skill but after time i needed a scale i couldn't just do all the work myself and i actually found out that it actually makes more business sense for me not to do the work. If i were to do this business all over again. I would do just that. I would not be doing any of the actual skilled labor. So how does this work. Well let's say for example. You are charging two thousand dollars for somebody to create you a brand new blog a brand new website. This is very inexpensive. But let's just say this is where you're starting all you need to do to make a profit is to actually get it done for less. This means you can hire on upward for example people that can do the job. They can create websites in this example for you and you just be the facilitator you pass on the work to them now professionals that know what they're doing can create these things quite quickly if they're given the right information. That's where your job comes in is giving the information from the customer. What are the needs of their wants. What's our business. Lie grabbing their logo garner images Getting the copy so that we can then give it to the developer and they can load it all up and create that website. You can easily find really talented Website developers in this example for like five hundred dollars a website and you can easily charge two thousand or more when i was outsourcing it. I was charging around five thousand dollars a website. I had a full time freelance contractor. Who agreed that. He's going to do each website for five hundred dollars. And i gave plenty of work and he was working on three to four websites at a time. Yes i made a ten x profit on each project. now what's great about. Having a service based business is that you can scale this thing in your own time in your own speed. Meaning that if you don't have that many clients that's okay. You're still making a profit because you're charging somebody else to do the work per project per client and you're making a profit on each transaction and as you get more clients grow you will continue to make more profit and it becomes even more profitable and all you have to do is be the person that markets that cells that takes care of the customer the actual work the service can be outsourced to somebody else and guess what you can this with up cells and sister offerings do that with logos with business cards. I used to get other people to design them for me. Part of my team. And i would even like kind of Approved the designs before we get to the The actual customer and again make a profit on each add on each new service. This requires zero overhead from you. While you really need is a website for you to be able to bring customers into your business you only have to pay for somebody to do the work when you have a customer. There's no inventory to keep. There's no software to build or maintain by developers and you're dealing with higher price points meaning thousands of dollars per project rather than customer spending twenty thirty forty fifty dollars on smaller items like ecommerce and dealing with hundreds of customers that complained that won't refunds that have other issues you have less clients and you're making just as much money if not more as you're scaling. This is a really good business. A start with why because it makes you learn a lot of basic skills. You need to succeed in any other business.

My First Million
"forty fifty" Discussed on My First Million
"Think it's interesting strategy for colleges like. Why are they doing this. Remember the reason. I ended up going to do is because they had this thing called the the tip program which is the talent identification program and you would take the psat's or something like that and then if you scored above a certain thing do could send you this kind of kits goodie bag and he basically was like if felt like getting a full from hogwarts and it's like hey you're twelve and like we want to invite you to this special school for the gifted and talented and it just like you scored high on this. We have identified you as talented person we would love to. Have you come visit our campus and the shit worked went to duke. Eventually i didn't put together. That's why but like if i think about it. That's why i started paying attention to them. And that's why. I started following the basketball teams. That's how i even heard about it. Otherwise a twelve year old kid. You didn't hear about colleges right so that was pretty interesting. And if you think about it you know. These schools are for profit. Schools are trying to get trying to get tuition. They're trying to get people to come in and pay the forty fifty grand to go to school and so these little investments. And you know who doesn't like to be called talented. Who doesn't like to be called kind of like a fee nom what carat doesn't want their kid to be identified as a special that shit works and i'm that more schools don't do this and when i start my school i two. I'm going to do this. Yeah i'm trying to like do some research on right now. We're talking and it's not really effective but you'll have to look up this program when you're done it's just a really interesting thing and it was funny to meet someone who went through and it was just such a silly fun fact about someone by the way my vermeille in college when he got when we got to college guy..

Paul Pickett Podcast
"forty fifty" Discussed on Paul Pickett Podcast
"Repeat that they have to pay to play. so what are they make money advertising. That's why radio stations are selling twenty thirty forty fifty dollars slots you know all day long because they have to pay out royalties in a have to pay their employees and they have to stay afloat so it's nothing personal it's strictly business and yet does a lot of internet radio stations. That might play unsan artist but internet radio doesn't work the same way as online internet. All internet radio stations are not paying out royalties once again. All internet radio stations are not paying out royalties ahead on demand radio station. I know this they are all not paying out royalties so if you don't bring listeners to the station more likely than not going to play you and even when a local radio station does pick up a local artist. It starts playing their music if people don't stop in and requesting that song or they don't get online and start requesting however request are done nowadays probably more online than anything. They're not requesting. Your music dinette. Station has no purpose in a reason to continuously play your music over and over and over again. Because i will tell you this much. Radio ain't playing no songs.

The Unstoppable Woman®
"forty fifty" Discussed on The Unstoppable Woman®
"And i'm happy to say that i was extraordinarily resilient in this case this has never happened to me and so i i don't have a lot of experience with forty fifty percent of your your staff leaving so is a new experience for me and i'm very of the resiliency that i had and how quickly we moved through it and in the leadership that i was able to to provide my team. And it's based on these universal laws. That i teach I also used gratitude to help me raise my vibration. So i mentioned this earlier but i was extraordinarily grateful to the universe in energy. That is god's spirit source as extraordinarily grateful to both the women who decided to resign and i was extraordinarily grateful to the woman who is who we let go of so that was planned and intentional that we let go of who still like doing doing a great job answering questions for the people who were taking on her role so grateful for that. So that's how. I use the law vibration in this case. I made sure that my my thinking which is causative was vibrating at hype positive frequency. I used gratitude. I did not complain even in a joking way about what was happening. And all of this together allowed me to stay unstoppable yet. There's that word again right. Things are going to happen. The waves keep coming. You have to learn to surf. There will be challenges. This is how you grow. And i'm happy to say that even throughout this i stayed unstoppable hiring for a key position that was already in the pipeline before this happened that we started looking for in in december and stayed with that process made it a priority and got someone hired all while this was happening still making sales still showing up in my business now. Some things. i had to pare back on for shirt. I was less on social media than i've been on in the past. But i have a key program. The spirit of wealth masterminded master class. That has its own facebook group and i was in there responding to people i did show up in our facebook group. That's public to the. You don't have to pay to be part of it. The unstoppable group. And i showed up there but i did pare back. I didn't i didn't post much on my personal feeds. I can't sold a sexy boudoir photo. Shoot and i need to reschedule. That there were some things that i just had to pull off the calendar and reorganize my time but all in all this has been an extraordinarily positive experience. And there's so much more to share. I have things running through my head. That i'd love to share with you but this has been a long podcast already. If you have questions about these laws please book a consult with me. I be happy or someone on my team would be happy. We can all help you with with this and help you figure out how to learn the laws okay. We have programs that help you do that so that you can start living them because it's not just hearing them not just reading about them but you must start living them so go ahead and book a consult if this is one of those really interesting concepts to you. You would love to go deeper. I promise you okay with that rocket. Out be unstoppable. And i'll see in.

The Bio Report
Tapping Psychedelics for their Anti-Inflammatory Powers
"Joining us daniel pleasure. We're going to talk about the therapeutic. Potential of psychedelics loose and it's pipelines experimental therapies that extend well beyond mental health indications. There's a growing interest in psychedelics. as medicines what's led to the transformation of this area from one of illicit substances to wonder drugs. Well i think that science has led the way And really it's been clinical research conducted at the top universities around the world Principally johns hopkins to start and now all over imperial college yale university new york university etc Very much led by the science. I i think that When you the question of wonder drugs though is interesting because i think that Silla sabin like ketamine are drugs that have a tremendous amount of promise for the treatment of depression within psychiatry and these drugs have therapeutic potential and other drugs beyond psychiatry but The classification wonder always brings the kind of and probably justifiable skepticism of Is the hype real. And what's really kind of the fundamental Potential and also what are the stumbling blocks for these therapies. And so all of those things are really the focus of the company in in in looking to develop These therapies both within and beyond psychiatry. How restrictive an area is this to work in today. And historically how hampered his research been it has never been more easy to do research in this area You know over the last forty fifty years. Things have dramatically changed. I think that What's what's really notable is the amount of knowledge that the regulators have in this space. The fda ema are very well informed about both the therapeutic potential of these drugs as well as the the risks associated with their development and use. And so i think you have a very informed regulatory audience and you also have increasingly Investors and other sources of capital that are willing to explore and develop these therapies. So i don't see really the limitation being that of a regulatory or legal wine and it's much more about The you know the the aspects of clinical development and really how do you take something with potential and translate that into a solution to address. Unmet needs there's long been interest in the potential of these substances to treat depression and addiction. But you're looking at a broader range of diseases. Among other things you're looking at these substances potential anti inflammatories. What's understood about the potential use of these drugs as anti inflammatories. I think that you know. Our company is is really notable for the fact that we have the the world's leading scientists and clinical developers focused on the full range of potential. Both within and beyond psychiatry. Interestingly when people think about serotonin they think about it in the context of depression they think about it in the context of psychiatry but actually serotonin is a modulator of basic function throughout the body And in fact there's more serotonin in our in our gut than in our brain and in particular the primary target of psychedelics. The new the The primary receptor which mediates the psychedelic effects of serotonin. Two a receptor is ubiquitously expressed throughout the body. It's on all immune cells. It's on all major organ systems and so fundamentally We have been away dazzled and and a bit distracted by the profound psychiatric potential of these drugs and certainly their perceptual effects. But in reality there is a much broader potential because these appear to modulate Stress response in a variety of ways. You know you if you think of it in the context of psychiatry than depression or anxiety or substance abuse are all in a way related to the kind of inappropriate or maladaptive response to stress in the rest of the body. You know whether it's Due to aging whether it's due to an inappropriate immune response we see. Similar type of modulating where the serotonin receptor seems to be implicated in a variety of chronic. Inflammatory diseases the initial discovery of the potent anti inflammatory effects of some psychedelic. Compounds was was. I made by our scientific founder. Professor charles nichols at lsu. The that research That kind of kicked off a long Research campaign in the development of anti of the anti inflammatory potential psychedelics has less through A number of very interesting discovery specifically that some psychedelics are potently anti inflammatory in models of allergic asthma in cardiovascular disease and in a variety of different models of of inflammatory disease associated with ophthalmology related to diabetic. Retinopathy macular degeneration in addition to which there is potential in neuro degeneration and a variety of other conditions and so fundamentally the potential is massive and the key. Question is and really. I think we've addressed this and we're we're very excited to kind of take the next is. How do you bias the psychedelic from its perceptual effects. And make it purely a anti-inflammatory or immunomodulators medicine and that's something that we are

Real Estate Coaching Radio
Have You Given Up On Your Dreams
"Two one and we're back. Juliette is our sunday show. It is the last day of the month the last day of the month of twenty twenty one. We've we've made it through so far one eleven under the belt where to go right so far no new plagues or pandemics or alien visitations or anything else crazy like we experienced last year. I have one thing in articles as bad. I bet you do so. Listen they normal Normal sunday warning still applies. This is not normal podcast. Yes this is real estate coaching radio. Yes you're listening to the number one daily real estate podcast roasted agents the nation. And no. we're not gonna talk about real estate today and the reason that we do our sunday podcast is because we want to help you guys realize the importance of always expanding your thinking always expanding what you think about that way you basically. Don't you know frankly become mentally complacent and the best way to keep your thinking and your ability to think about new concepts. Elastic is to intentionally. Put your way yourself in the way of frankly things you never normally think about. And that's what jillian i've done for years and so we sort of gravitate towards the bizarre facts and figures about life in general and yeah helped its causes. If you do this at least once a week where you're going to maybe just listen to our podcast right. Maybe it's just listing. This sunday podcast. Maybe this is your little reprieve from reality. And that's certainly fine but you'll find when you go back to thinking about the normal things of life that you are you might see lien. Oh things or maybe hiding in the shadows before. Maybe you're going to see a different slight different. Twist on an idea. Some problem that has been lingering longtime time assault it all comes from basically keeping your thinking elastic. Julie i i know you have some articles. I don't have any articles. But i had this happened. Probably i don't know three or four times last week. Were talking to somebody. And they're in their forties fifties and they're using this term in one version of another. And i thought it was fascinating because i'm seeing this frequency of people believing that this is actually a thing and i wanted to address it so that people can realize that This particular topic. That i thought of is not something. That's a sort of mandatory right of growing old and passage of time and the rest of it. And that's this midlife crisis consalvi yes. Yeah and i've seen that happening a lot. And i don't know why i don't know where this is coming from and i think it's probably there's some obviously i bet you. There's some current thing is to do it like a google search search to find out what the current like zeitgeist is. Whether there's a bunch of people that are talking about this or somehow this is in the news or something because that's normally how these types of thought waves happen but this whole concept of a midlife crisis angelina. I've talked about this before. And we've actually searched it for the book that we just published well to june's ago but we didn't end up actually having the content and i don't know do we have anything in there about midlife crisis in mindset and all that on not no. I don't think we did either but we did research we did and i think we got the sleep piece in there but we didn't get the talking. There's a lot of stuff that the publisher didn't want us to put in. Because they thought it was too far out of our wheelhouse edited out and they're probably right but this this topic in particular interest me. Because well i mean i guess age wise. If i'm lucky midlife right and by that. I mean i have another fifty years left. You know if. I think julie's same way right. So but it doesn't interest me for the sake of basically my own self interest in interest me for the sake of the fact that a lot of people are socialized to believe that when they reach a certain age that they have to almost say Almost like a social imperative an expectation that you become complacent and i think that's fascinating. That people aren't introspective enough to realize that's completely volunteering and not even remotely relevant to the the life that we live now and it's all to you up right so i think that there was very you know a physiological thing that was happening the happens naturally all this when we get to the point where we're probably in her forties in our fifties where we do have the sort of lizard brain reaction to reality that. Maybe we don't have the same impetus that we did when we were younger. But i do think that this emotion is rooted in psychology. I'm sorry rooted in physiology right because in in when you research forest is quite fascinating that it wasn't until relatively modern times that humans lived as long as we do. That's right. I mean despite what you guys might believe from all the horrible news Especially regards to pandemic and whatnot. People are living longer and longer but it wasn't that long ago. I i bet you when our grandparents probably even our when our parents were born the twentieth. Probably not what it is. I think close. I wonder how far back in history it was. The average life was like fifty five or something and they had been all may have been sixteen hundred fifteen hundred zero. I mean we'd have more modern. I bet it was like mid eighteen hundreds right and so what we're seeing is a lot of people that like you do. I do believe that your body is Sort of has a trigger in it. That makes it. Think that a certain age or after had so many lifecycles. If you wanna be really nervous about it that it starts to actually feel some sense of l- old software that sort of you know some degradation and some level exactly and but the thing is is with modern medicine and certainly with frankly accessed information like we have now. We don't have to actually allow that sort of innate feeling of irrelevance to dominate the stance was stances. We taken life with regards to anything physicality you know anything.

Pantheon
"forty fifty" Discussed on Pantheon
"A couple of other places they end up at the house of blues She cheese todd wants to go so he's angry that and so she goes and so he's in. The loss lost jobs Salute at this point in terms of companionship. For the night so he so he hits on loan clocks and he was the vip cresa and persuades her to come back to come back to the house with it. Unless you get the call that the the the first thing she says to drive is this'll be quick. It's only one drink and spectrum turn to Say you don't talk to the driver. And yeah so i mean it was very very sad and terrible sort of outcome. But it's an interesting question. To what degrees is that. Is that sort of overshadow. The legacy of of bills music. Can we still listen to music in the knowledge of what happened. Oh i can. I you know i able to make the separation in my mind between the whatever. Whatever crimes and misdemeanors demand may have commissions in the legacy of the and he left behind and you talk about that. Nobody's music been incredible thing about his music. Is that it's it's it's jude. The these weren't just hits for the moment but these hit stood of endured twenty thirty forty fifty years and that sound is incredible and as powerful as impactful touching is moving romantic and is elevating is. They did at the time they were made. Yeah i mean. He gave a lot to the world and and raped several awards and paid a heavy price. And so make thanks so much for coming on the show. The author of mick brown book is tearing down the wall of sound the rise of paulo specter at and i've read several films spectrum biographies i have to say. I think this is the definitive one. Thanks so much for. Chronic line This tragic tale of a very gifted.

KIRO Radio 97.3 FM
"forty fifty" Discussed on KIRO Radio 97.3 FM
"Covered services, which is long term care services. And there's a list of those So on those cash plans, you really kind of have you're supposed to keep track of what you're spending that money on. CRS says. Look, if you're getting $1000 a month, and you're using it to buy a car Well, that's not long term care, so that would be considered income for you, and you'd have to pay taxes on it. Iris isn't quite district of what they do is they give us a per diem limit, or a per day limit of $400, which equates out to about $12,000 a month. So as long as you're under that they will generally leave you alone. But as a general rule You should still keep track of what you're spending that money on pain for the care services on a reimbursement plan. You don't have to worry about any of that. They're just simply paying for those qualified services so you don't have to do any of the book keeping it all Now again, remember, the disability income is just cash. That's just for you to pay your mortgage your bills. You can use the money for whatever So the long term care saying, Hey, were you have this list of qualified service is that it will pay for And so most people think of it as a nursing home. But really, it's vast majority of the care that we pay for with long term care insurance is what we call home care. So going back to the question the Monica has If I have disability insurance do I need long term care insurance? Absolutely, because they're two different things. And if you're young enough, you might very well use both. We have a client who had a stroke at age 42. He did not have long term care insurance. And so he, you know, he had to learn to walk here to go through speech therapy. He had to go through all of these things again. And that would be where long term care insurance would come in and pay. If you have disability insurance, you have the stroke. You can't work. Well, you're just gonna have money to replace your income. But you're still gonna have to pay your mortgage and your car and everything else so you're not gonna have the excess money. Pay for the care that you need to get through the day. So that's really the big difference there. That's the long term care insurance in the disability. I mean, for a younger person in there working years, they'd go out again a horrible car accident. It would be ideal to have bolt because you've got the income coming in now so you can pay the mortgage and And the car payments and feed the kids and oh, by the way. Also have the long term care insurance. So now I can pay for that help to come in and help me through the day and maintain that, so that's how those two would work. So keep that in mind and again. Disability insurance is really on Lee during your working years, and you don't have disability insurance and retirement. So long term care insurance we can get, you know, really, You know, forties fifties is when people mostly start looking into it, but really up to age 75 even 80 my client of weeks this week or almost 80. We're gonna go over that. But that's when you would get along from care insurance to pay for that care that you would need. Should you end up in that extended healthcare situation, So Great question. If you have a question for us always just send it through our website at 5 to 5 long term care dot com and I might bring it on and read on the air and talk about it. So stick around when we get back. I've got a client of the week. Learn to a 78. Mary has 79. So if you're in your seventies going on 80 you gotta listen to this client of.

Think 100%: The Coolest Show
"forty fifty" Discussed on Think 100%: The Coolest Show
"The idea of this is something that is so evil that has gone back for literally. Forty fifty sixty years compounded into the destruction of our communities. The way i process it is in a very patriotic way. I'm sorry viewed. As sort of saving country. I think race is at the heart of the attempted coup that we lived through in this would it was It was an attempted. Coup american sells. It was neat and clean but The president wanted to stay in power and his enablers were in fact driven a.

Unofficial Partner Podcast
"forty fifty" Discussed on Unofficial Partner Podcast
"Of oddity services could look differently. An i would. No kate my budget according not maybe undermine sti base but i will review it and blood coping mechanism. That can be absorbed by the screamers is to promote. They are mighty monthly or annual plants. Much more aggressive so that they don't have long term or long term commitment of the customer. they have to. They want to have long-term knock in. Because if you look at different Rates said has been impoverished by an analyst companies. Also in like sean. Even for companies like Also average is like which doesn't taste this season entity rich. Flex shoes bought stream of faces. Because what is inherently season. Even like company like netflix disentis which is operatives industry leading and heffer much more stable library of content faces like showing rates of sixty to seventy percent under andrew basis. And if you look at the disco on do get for an annual pass which is like more or less twenty percent across the industry. You really see the Actually over priced at the moment. And i could imagine a steady stream. Mouse get even more aggressive in deploying of the passes that you get up to. I don't know forty fifty percent discount off get the long term commitment because in the end stor revenue maximizing compelled to hoping that the customer renews the mandatory basis and requirements on the monthly basis..

Inside the Spa Business | Spa
If Small Business Is 'Too Big To Fail'...Then What Now?
"May recall a few years ago when we had a major financial crisis around the world a number of countries stepped in to save the banks and institutions. I doing that these institutions. Were quite simply too big to fail. If these companies failed then the entire economy of their country would implode but the other thing to think about is that in many of these countries small businesses. Sme's small and medium enterprises mom-and-pop shops essentially to a large degree represent up to thirty forty fifty percent plus of the gdp of these economies and in many cases much more in terms of the percentage of the workforce. So the reality is that it's small business that is actually to defile. And i just think it's worth thinking about the implications of that because there's a number of countries right now around the world where many many small businesses of course are closing down the just going out of business as a result of the various conditions and lockdowns in posed by the covid nineteen pandemic that. We're all going through. And so whilst the number of countries are doing what they can to keep a lot of these industries alive. The comes a limit at some point. It goes away. And i think for many countries in many areas. We're reaching that limiting many as well. So i think it's just worth thinking about if these small businesses file just like when the big banks we're gonna fail then we have potentially going to have our entire economies employed so what you can to support your local businesses and whenever the governments are trying to throw money at supporting local businesses and keeping these industries alive. Just remember that collectively they can sometimes represent fifty percent of gdp and sixty percent. Plus of the overall workforce so small businesses are simply to be defile. What do you

Physical Activity Researcher
Interview With Kriss Akabusi
"Welcome everyone this is the meaningful sport. Podcast and i your host nodong gotten meaningful. Sport is a serious of discussions on the why and how involvement is sport than physical activity can be an important part of a life worth living. If you are interested in the theme you might also want to check out meaningful sport dot com there. You can find podcast. Show notes read a blog and access many resources for further explorations of meaningful sport. I'm very honored to introduce today's guest. He's an olympian motivational speaker. And a business on. He achieved three olympic medals as well as world european and commonwealth titles during his really outstanding athletic career but he's also widely known as a tv personality and inspirational speaker. Mary interestingly for the theme of our podcast today he's drawn to existential philosophy. And how it can help us in making sense of our lives and today he has a to join me for a discussion to explore meaning and meaningfulness of sport again. I'm very delighted to introduce chris. Akabusi nb com. chris. Excited i'm thankful for you to join me for today's discussion. No thank you so much for that women's deduction and i most definitely very happy to be here. I never take any meeting. Wanted all in the grandeur of life and somebody who i didn't know full six weeks ago via talk media with had discloses of such and i really take that encounter really portslade especially when i think of heavily people out his club. Seven point six billion and laws in this moment and picked up stopping to speak to noah and up shoe her own learn more about myself and about what is to be a been. So yeah a a really great to be you. Yeah i think when when we got in touch and we realized that we both have this interest in existential philosophy so we exchanged some thoughts on on nietzsche's philosophy and that would be something that has inspired you to think about life as well. I guess one of the things That would be nice to start out with like in my blog. For example i have some quite critical remarks on elite sport and and pointing out some of the problems in sport and and rightly so you mentioned certainly an elite sport. we also have this life-affirming feature something that need chef. For example would who would certainly see s s valuable things for human life. So let's start exploring these ideas a little bit. So i'd be delighted to hear a little bit about how you are thinking about your athletic career at elite level and a new meaning of sport in in your own life. Yeah so mean. Spokes has been a massive massive impact. Amman experience of being in the world's there are few sections A thing couplets Apple automata souljah in my early twenties From soldiering in the british rb two elite athletics and being an athlete in what i was going to be spectacles evidently special evidence unique the editing window think politics but it is so much in the glare of the public when you become a class athletes old you do is in the clay of the public specifically when you are entering the Compete on a day on an hour determined by somebody else. They tell you to get ready for that day. All the young people. 'cause athetics is a involvement that is provided a performance level by young people. Twenties thirties came for that day. And it's a do or die moment when influence as well. Who are you you got. Can you deliver. And you're gonna cool yourself together and it would've you associate come together in that moment to to deliver and ethically win. Has that laced met garland around their neck that will be people that found Vanquish a maybe forty fifty sixty people constantly below you. You try to make that final old. Who had been anquished and as a matter statement about yourself. and kennedy. You have a sense of self worth and meaning By that can also evacuate.

The 11th Hour with Brian Williams
Anticipating the Logistics of a COVID-19 Vaccination Effort
"You have a highly efficacious vaccine and only a relatively small forty fifty percent of the people get vaccinated. You're not gonna get the herd immunity. You need what we do need is we need to get as many people as possible vaccinated so a lot of work still to be done. As we mentioned astrazeneca today joined pfizer and moderna becoming the third maker now of a highly effective vaccine candidate. Their version said to be cheaper easier to transport one of the that wants the vaccines are fda approved. The next challenge will be actually getting shots into arms across our country and around. The world complicating matters. The trump administration has so far not communicated distribution plans with the incoming biden administration. Back with us again tonight. Is mike oester home. Professor and the director for the center of infectious disease research and policy university of minnesota also happens to be a newly named member of the president-elect's covert nineteen advisory board. Michael i presume this helps that up. Twenty day wait to get your hands on. Everything is better than maybe a forty day weight. And i'm not sure our audience understands you've been forbidden from calling your public health counterparts inside this sitting government before we got actual notification that the transition is underway. So does this help. Thank you brian. It helps a lot. The transition team will immediately begin reaching out to those federal partners. Whether they be at the fda or the nih for the cdc so that we can in fact begin. Planning not just for what's happening now but well after january and so this is a very important development and one that will really help us a lot with the vaccine delivery to the united states. Is it a strange feeling that you're some total efforts are the hit the ground running january twentieth and in some cases you're inheriting wheels. That aren't moving. You're inheriting at administration without as we have this conversation a national plan. Well you know. I think it's really important to remember. We do have a number of really highly talented and skilled scientists within the federal government. I mean tony cheese. A classic example there are many outstanding individuals at the cdc in the fda that have had many many years of career service and really outstanding science development and research and so the fact says that they will still be part of this team. going forward. and i know that The biden harris administration will use that scientific expertise immediately. in addition. is you know the incoming administration is already starting to develop their own plants Whether it be around vaccination testing et cetera. So i think it it will be a good hand off that will occur and i'm excited about the fact that we now collectively all of us can really work together with science as the basic of value that. We're all using to judge what we do. So i think the next several weeks will actually be very positive in terms of what we can do to to move. This administered new administration forward. So that on january twentieth. It does hit the ground running. We have a graphic showing the air traffic currently over the united states. Every icon is an aircraft with people on board all those people leaving somewhere to go visit somewhere to then return home. Is it now predicted in your line of work because of all these people getting together. Despite all the government warnings that we're going to see a bump in hospitalizations and the death toll just in time for christmas. You know brian. This is one of the really sad commentaries about where we're at right now is helping america's understand the seriousness of the situation tonight as we said here we have over. Eight hundred thousand americans hospitals around the country with covid nineteen infections. Many of them critically. Ill are hospitals. Are breaking at the seams right now and so. It's really important that people understand. No one is asking them to sacrifice or to reduce their contact with others. Just for the sake of this is really about human life. it's about maintaining our healthcare systems. So yeah this is a real challenge for us and as you've seen as you know having been on this show a number of times with you you've seen what's happened since labor day. We've gone from twenty six thousand cases a day reported to now we're averaging over one hundred and seventy thousand cases and before long will be well over two hundred thousand cases a day that is going to break our healthcare system so please america understand you know we gotta stop swapping air in. The way we do that is we. Don't do all this. Large crowd related activity. That travel is going to be a problem and I don't wanna see where we're going to be in four or five weeks. It scares me a great deal. Dr michael oester home. Our thanks as always for joining us tonight. Greatly appreciate it. Good luck with your work upcoming

Entrepreneur on FIRE
How to Launch & Grow a Professional Coaching Practice And Career with Eben Pagan
"Ebben say what's up to fire nation and sheer so the interesting about yourself. That most people don't know what's up. Fire nation first of all and Something interesting about the people don't know is that my name isn't eban. It's actually eboni. My first name is ebeneezer. A my dad's favorite story was the christmas carol. Oh and it was about this guy who you know went through his life and he got to see the past and the future and he changed and he kind of woke up and my name's ebeneezer every time. I watched that show from this day four. Which is every christmas. By the way i'm going to think of you and that's really i think you're the only ebeneezer that i know. So you're number one. You're the only and fire nation you know from the introduction. They were talking about how to launch in grow a professional coaching practice. Career ends as you heard from the introduction. There's literally nobody better talk about this then eban pagan or should i say ebeneezer pagan and one thing. I just want to start off with is. Let's just talk about if coaching is really a professional career path. I mean i feel like people come from college and they tell their parents like yeah. I'm going to become a professional coach. And they might be like really like talk. Talk to us about that. Is this a professional career path. Well i think the answer is yes and you know it's yes and no further folks that are just like oh i'm going to be a coach and they you know think idealistically that they're just going to say like okay. I'm a coach. And then everything's gonna work out perfectly and you know but people take it seriously who realize the importance of coaches in life in business people who have the calling. You know they say like coaching is a calling. If it's for you than now is the time and it's never been more of a professional career path. There are something like one hundred thousand professional coaches right now on the planet and that means that it's established it's real. I mean most people by now. Either noah coach have gotten coaching. Maybe you even our coach taken coach training. So you see that. This is a real thing but really. We're going to see over the next several years. This is going to skyrocket. And it's going to go to millions of coaches and yes it's a professional career path. You know what actually one more thing There was an article in harvard. Business review last year is december of twenty nineteen just went by and it talked about how management and leadership in large corporations is literally becoming coaching that. The role of the manager is now being considered the role of the coach. And so it's not just a professional career path all by itself. But if you want to succeed in the corporate world if you want to succeed in the academic world if you want to succeed as a parent you know. I really think that. This is the skill set to learn. We might disagree on my next question evident. I think that'll be fine. It could be a good conversation for sure. But i have to ask you. Don't agree agree. We might agree. We might disagree. That'll be the question. So i wanna know what you think first and then i'll share my thoughts afterwards. Which with a disagreement may come on people that are a twenty one year old life coach or a nineteen year old life coach or a twenty four. Your old life coach. Like what are your thoughts and not even just life course. Employing that word life out of there actually just coaches. What do you think about people at that. Age being professional coaches. Well you know. I think maybe part of what you're asking here. Is you know when you see the couple. That's been together for like two years. And they're in their twenty s on instagram. And they're like we're professional mantra teachers or something like wait a minute. Aren't you supposed to have been meditating for twenty years. I knew bring dabble by the way i knew. What did you nine. I okay okay okay okay oh good one all right okay i agree. I know i disagree okay. So here's the thing. Coaching is this is a. This is a real serious thing. What most people don't realize is that over the last twenty twenty s years. Lots in lots of really brilliant people have been down the rabbit hole of figuring out what coaching is and how it works and developing the models in the skills in the techniques in the exercises in the business models and everything and this is something that anybody can actually learn now most of the people that we work with our most of the come through the virtual coach. Are you know. Thirties forties fifties sixties. A lot of people in in midlife lot lot of younger people too. But you know if you're nineteen this is one of the most important skill sets that you could possibly

Stuck Mic AvCast – An Aviation Podcast About Learning to Fly, Living to Fly, & Loving to Fly
Interview with Curtis Pierce Author of "Pacific on the Right: Two Pilots, One Airplane, a Lifetime of Memories"
"That is the book about flying down at Chile and first of all. I guess the question is why in the world did you fly a one seventy two from where you aren't Phoenix all the way down to Santiago Chile you could have just put it in a crate ship. Well, that's a that's a good question and I guess I'll answer it with a with a quick story I would instructor for several years and loved instructing I love teaching I. Had I don't know forty fifty students that I did sign offs four and countless other students that were you know checkouts and be Afars and and so on. But I especially my private students I always. Trying to instill in them the idea that that this is something that you you're going to do forever you want to get that certificate you WanNa keep it current you wanna find that joy if lying the rest of us have already figured out and one of the ways that I told them to kind of do that or suggested. Is that they avoid the trap of the Hundred Dollar Hamburger in my time as an instructor I saw so many students would you know get their their private and they would fly for a couple years? They'd go have breakfast. You know an hour away couple of hours away and whatever, and just do kind of. You know little runs day trips and stuff and they got bored because you know after a while you've been all the places that are in our way and you know you, you've already had every dish on the menu at your favorite airport restaurant and then you get bored. And so I I always told my students you know You know rent the plane overnight go places take your family you know make it make it kind of a gateway to all these experiences that you can't have with the airlines are or just by road tripping around. And one of my students who really took that to heart and he bought a brand new Cessna one, seventy, two and told me hey I I. WanNa buy this plane and I want to fly it to Chile after I, pick it up and I said. And you know you can just take the wings off and put it in a container and You know in a couple of months it'll be waiting for you. And he laughed he goes well, aren't you the guy that told me I should go fly and have adventures and not just do the hunter dollar hamburger and I said well yeah. And so that was how we came to do it. He he was my private student he bought the airplane delivered. maybe a month or two before he got his private we spent another month or two of getting the equipment we needed and flying off the I fifty hours on the engine. You know to go through the break in period so we could switch to regular oil. And obviously, you know we didn't want to be surprised by any bugs or any any issues with the airplane that we might find. We didn't have any and so we we did that fifty hours and then we on a very cold November morning in Scottsdale Arizona we we took off for Santa Iago. Wow and that's But there's a little bit of planning ahead though before we just jumped on the plane and win so tells us a little bit about that as far as going down because I'm sure it took like a month or a month or whatever to get down there. How did you go about especially with a brand new student planning a trip through multiple countries, different types of aerospace down to Chile well it started out with him saying, how do we do this and me saying you know I've never actually flown out of the country before. The my student who became my very good friend that where we're still very good friends to this day more than twenty years later. He was a very successful businessman from Chile. had businesses all over central and south. America. was very well versed in business and in traveling and kind of negotiating the red tape of doing business in other countries, and so he he didn't know the nation part of it, but but he was already a depth kind of weaving his way through bureaucracy. And what I brought to the table was obviously you had a bad prion, two thousand and fifteen hundred hours at that time. So I've been flying for while. and so I kind of knew the airplane part of it but the actual planning basically started with me saying, Hey, let's just call planning company and be done with it. Just send US everything and we'll send them a check. Well, it turns out that there's not a single planning company that will touch a piston airplane they they only do jets and so we basically did it on her own. We found an F., B. O. and Chile that was willing to help us a little bit while we were on the road this was. Cell phones were around but not too many people had them, and certainly an international plans were not a thing. So. We kind of needed somebody in real time could assist us. But for the most part we we searched out all the permits ourselves just. was basically you know cold calling the various agencies in in all the different countries we plan to land in and just got the permits we had email, and so most of it was done by email I spoke a little bit of Spanish but it wasn't great and so he did most of the communicating and I did kind of logistical planning of okay. We're in a one, seventy two we can go about four hours, and so we mapped out our stops and figured out you know what would be technical stop where we would just get gas and keep on going and then what stops would be overnight stops where we would have to clear customs and Have permission to stay on an overnight basis, and so it it took about six months I kept a journal and I still have all my notes you know phone numbers and email addresses for all these different agencies and when I contacted who and kept tractable of all the permits as they came in But we we kind of had a date set. We wanted to hit the weather so that it wasn't too hot wasn't too cold on either end because obviously the seasons are opposite and in south, America. So we had to kind of thread the needle weather wise So we started pretty early but by. Probably late September early October we had everything lined up that we needed one looking at the at the math here I had to refresh my geography I guess. Just just looking at the root, you'd have to take up the one, seventy two. You'RE NOT GONNA fly over the Pacific Ocean right? Right. Right there. So I mean just down obviously from Arizona through Mexico and. Guatemala Nicaragua to be fifteen countries or something along the way. It was eleven, countries, eleven. Affair yes. And and being a one, seventy two you probably had to stop and most of them I'd imagine. Or Eight. Now we didn't use. We didn't use bladder tanks. The airplane was completely unmodified so like I said, you know that airplane Was a sixty gallon usable airplane or no sorry fifty gallon US airplane. So burning ten gallons and our meant for hours and we we needed a place to land. So we we based. All of our flight planning on that was that we we couldn't go any more than four hours,

The Nice Guys on Business Podcast
Robert Patin On The Business System That Leads to Success
"Nice guys community. So get this I'd love to start off this amazing episode in the words of a fan of today's guest. Rebecca. Patent has created an indispensable guide for how to create not only the business you want, but the life you want. So Robert is an authority on financing creative, Services Agency growth. He's the founder and managing partner of patent and associates a Los Angeles based Business Management and consultancy firm through his Council and coaching his clients have generated more. Than get this thirty, million dollars in additional revenue is the author of the number one international bestseller, the agency blueprint, the business system that leads to success I'm excited to have them here today welcome Robert to the Nice guys on business podcast like you so much. So happy to be here. Happy to have you here man appreciate your your level of expertise is I was reading some of the reviews. Unfortunately we do so many interviews they don't have a chance to really. Dive deep into many people's books, and yours was one that I just kept reading the Amazon like until they wouldn't let me let me take anymore pages. I'm like Oh this is good. This is good stuff. So congrats on right Milia a really good book that that means a lot to those that are in your community. Awesome. Thank you so much a so tell me I, WanNa start with this in case somebody realizing I. don't even know what an agency Is Can I want to start with a real one? I'M GONNA approach is a third grader for a moment and then we'll get into a little deeper conversation but what would be considered an agency for those that are listening in our entrepreneurial based community today. Sure. So I defined agency as a marketing agency that handles creative that handles strategy that handles public relations digital agency that a social media management, facebook ADS SEO graphic design, web design, and video production. Excellent excellent and for those that are in our community, how how would they know like what symptoms are they experiencing? If they know that they are running a business that instead of they're running the business, the business is running them 'cause I'm assuming oftentimes that's why they'll they'll come to talk to you if if they need some help with getting their arms around their agency. So typically, you'll see that the agency owner is working more than forty fifty hours a week They're spending the majority of time doing things that are in client service administrative work where they're not working on things that allow the business to grow. So the primary focus that I work with as far as executive coaching is on getting the business owner to be focused on everything to be on business growth. So, how do you get somebody out of their own way? Because oftentimes it is I'm looking at I have a podcast production business and we have give or take eleven or twelve people depending on the time of the time of the year that we we run our business, and I oftentimes find myself working in the business rather than the big pickers picture strategy because sometimes I'm dealing with the selling side of things or getting into the weeds when it comes to marketing or design of you know of a landing page and that's probably a big. No No, I just don't know how to get myself out of that and get out of the way I'm I'm assuming that many of our people in. Our community, our experience that experiencing that too. So what would be your advice other than? Hey, just kind of stopped doing that what's their first step? What do they need to do the? It's a lot of it is a mind shift shift change ride that you need to be thinking about in is the only person in the world that can do. This particular task, and if not, then it should be going through what I refer to as the threes do delegate or discard rights owed is this something that I should be doing because I'm the only person can if if not in someone else can than it should be delegated and if it's not worth being delegated than it's something that should be discarded. So, when did you discover that? This was your gift. When when you come down to it, weren't you where you one of your biggest offenders before you became the biggest advocate for what you do? Absolutely. So I had at one point in my business and I had reached a position of burnout. Right I was working ninety hours a week and had been doing that for multiple years and got to appoint. was starting to feel trapped in my own business and. I decided one weekend, sit down and actually just. Pen to paper, write down what I wanted my business life to look like what I wanted my life to look like and mapped out a plan to redesign my business to function to provide me with the life that I want still being able to grow the business and be able to have an impact, the same value and impact on the community that I have. But not having the level of stress that I was in and sacrificing my personal life and my personal goals for career.