19 Burst results for "Jago"

"jago" Discussed on ESPN FC

ESPN FC

02:19 min | Last month

"jago" Discussed on ESPN FC

"Borus Dortmund at taking on Chelsea. If we Dortmund who would beat grandfather's side by one goal to new to nil, and the Emmy with incredible individual goal, which proved to be the difference between the two sides once again, Chelsea had plenty of chances, but failed to find the back of the net. Frank and Jules with us, Frank, it's the same thing. Every time. It is done, and it seems to be that it's impossible to sort out. But I have to say that this may be the best game I've seen just playing for a big while. I would say, and maybe under underground Potter, it was very balanced the first half, but I think Jesse was better at the second half and deserve to win, but as you said, when you have 21 shots on goals and you score goal and I think if Joffrey's was absolutely superb in the game creating the chances it was pretty, let's say unlucky maybe clumsy in front of the goal. Defensively, they were good. I thought I thought could anybody have a great game with jago Silva. I live already worked, worked out very well, but one mistake, corner kick for you, contract a gold bye bye, fantastic run from adeyemi, but I don't think Chelsea is off to lose today. It was I think a very good performance, but as you said, again, same thing, you have chances, you don't score. It was fun. It was a good game to watch. It was end to end, both teams having chances, but the frustrations must be there. So obviously, people are going to continue to question grand Potter. How much can he do to help his team when they're creating chances but they're not converting? Get his number 9 kit on. Get himself. So if you can put the ball in the back of it like how much blame really should he have considering that, well, they're box stops with the manager. I mean, I'll add one eye in this game. It was the left eye. Oh, really? That's your bad. I agree with Frank, the bitch saw, particularly the second half of Chelsea's build up play. Was actually very good. But the finishing killer Bali was a little bit unlucky, keeping me cleared off the line. Joe should have scored. Yeah, but some of his general players really good. I mean, he looks like he's got the sparkle back, but he put two of them over the bar in the first half. So yeah,

borus Dortmund Frank Chelsea jago Silva Dortmund adeyemi Emmy Jules Joffrey Potter Jesse Bali Joe
"jago" Discussed on ESPN FC

ESPN FC

06:15 min | 2 months ago

"jago" Discussed on ESPN FC

"I'm glad you made it. Right enough, much the city and Jesse, what about some quickies done? Yes, let's do it. Let's do a big game in Serie A we said it before Milan had to win against Roma to stay 5 points behind Napoleon. There were two little with ten minutes to go down and then honestly. Call a pelicia, there was a robbery in San Siro. There was an absolute robbery. But then you know that the only thing they're good at is set pieces. Yes. Going on to pieces. So the approach to the game from Roma Salvatore foti was in charge because Jose was suspended for the game. So they went 11 was amazing. The starting 11. And Abraham and Pellegrini. So he went quite strong in terms of the personnel. But minute one, Roma back off, say to Milan in San Siro, you can have the ball. So fast forward to 20 minutes, they sat off, you could have the ball, embarrassing from Roma. Get to 30 minutes, one kneel down. 45, same scenario. So I expected the coach to make a change in terms of their aggression, their attitude in the second half. 46 minutes, just one minute into the second half, defensive, nothing offered nothing. Fast forward to 70 minutes, two nil down. Milan cruisin, closing the gap on Napoli. All of a sudden, nothing really happened, but there was an incident where Roma got a corner. Only thing I really done in the game was to set plays. They got a corner, a Bania scores on 87 minutes, still thinking it might be twitchy, might be nervy for Milan. But still, you would, I would have you just call when I moved to game after, in my life. So I knew the final score. But I still thought, okay, if you go to 1000 Milan. But momentum how to run it to so like you should. Yeah, you should do, but it's a weird thing momentum in football, the momentum went against them because at 2% on 86, 87 has got to two once, you think, and right, you know, 5 minutes, 6, 7 minutes with injury time, they should have enough if they can get her back on the ball. Rome are just launched it. They launched it in the box, they somehow got a wide free kick, which it was a free kick. And they put a delivery in, matter one of the substitutes got ahead, a goal kit would make the same Abraham scored from one yard. In like seconds to go. So it's like Milan not managing the game, but it was, it was not really any fault of Milan that was just the momentum shifted completely away from them. Remember the San antenna game. Before they were in the lab and then you went back to two one and the 83rd or fourth and then the end was a little bit rocky but Roma on a Jersey Roma was horrendous. You could not do three passes together. I ran for the whole game. The whole game for 86 minutes. There approach in their style. Abraham never got a kick, Sonia got taken off, he never got a kick, Deborah struggled in the game. He looked a little bit heavy. But they were terrible. They were approaching closing down was awful and, as I said, it was an absolute robbery. And you know what? Before the game jago Pinto the sporting director who's obviously very close to Marino, which I get, but also said like this and are performances with the ball I start will have to improve in the second half of the season while good luck because Bologna were better than them last week. And Milan were better than them. This, as you said, the point was a smash and grab. It was, I don't know. It was crazy. I mean, I mean, before you even get into the finances, there's a finance report that was published last week about Roma. And they lost I think 220 million in COVID last year, they lost about 290. They need Champions League badly and Jose is going to moan his contracts up in 18 months time. He's going to want to brand new contract. They've got players on big salaries. And they missed an opportunity last I'll say missed they got a point in my mind. I still lost the game because we're terrible. They got a point of the go a little bit closer to who in fourth. But the performance was so worrying and so bad. It has to improve. It was horrendous. A huge game in La Liga deals with 2000 Madrid and Barcelona. Start with it was not a great game, overall technically the first half hour, especially so bad. And balsa They won with Mandelbrot scores. They didn't have many great merch. They didn't it was a very like unlike basa, you know, if you think about bars and the way they play. Forget about that. It was just grifting the wind, which they did. And maybe that's good from them. And I took a while to get into the game and to play better, but then they were there were better in the second half. They had chances, Griezmann could have leveled in the 19 fourth minute, but out of home made a to be fair, really, really good kind of block or deflection. And in the end, while I expected it to be and again, I watched it knowing the score, knowing the result before. Yeah. But I was excited by the game before, and in the end I was just like, that's it. For basa and apart from the Pedro move on the goal and the gavi pass into dembele, that was pretty much it that they did, that was it. So the positive for bossa is just taking the three points on the road. Yeah, exactly. I actually call and then because Madrid lost the day before, then you get that three points gap and this is good psychologically. But footballing wise. They were not good at all. Not good at all. Back to the FA Cup done and Liverpool got away with one against wolves on Saturday night with the two two draw in the end, but I watched this one. I watched it unfold and it was like that third goal for wolves that was disallowed from the air. But even the salad goal. I mean, the salad got the law is ridiculous. Because the war defender tortoise. Yeah, tortilla deflects the ball by trying to play. So yeah, so when the VAR got paused when the ball was played through to mosala, who was standing offside. That then, as we know, is glad to watch the game and play the game. And it has an impact on totty because he knows that south standing behind him. So there's no way in a million years, toddy is going to say, I'll let this ball go to mosala because he's offside, never going to do it because there might be someone who's playing him on, then you look a fool, right? Yeah. So you've got to try and win the ball, then the law is, is he attempts to play the ball, he then plays mosella onsite. It's a ridiculous law. But Liverpool was so complacent, I mean, the mistake from Allison was coming. You know, that wasn't the case of walls pressing it, which is bad technique. Matic was guilty about 50 minutes earlier, you know, making a mistake as well. And then somehow they got themselves too, or not, when you think about what Liverpool

Milan Roma San Siro Roma Salvatore foti Abraham Pellegrini jago Pinto Jose Napoleon Jesse Griezmann Sonia Marino Rome Madrid Bologna Deborah dembele
"jago" Discussed on MEDIA INDIGENA : Indigenous current affairs

MEDIA INDIGENA : Indigenous current affairs

07:46 min | 7 months ago

"jago" Discussed on MEDIA INDIGENA : Indigenous current affairs

"Was writer entrepreneur Robert jago, together with lawyer and international indigenous rights advocate, Danica, Billy little child. Now, if you imagined that a bureaucracy that so ill served First Nations would at the very least look out for its own employees, well, you'd be mighty wrong. How bad could it be? Back to discuss just how bad Robert and Billy, a chat we had in March 2017. Office politics may be a fact of life, but for one section of indigenous and northern affairs, Canada, it appears to have metastasized into a blood sport. According to a recent report in the national post, things got heated a few years ago at IMAX research and policy directorate. Check out this lead sentence. A public service director was told her workers wanted her dead and would eat her liver after a gossip problem in a deeply dysfunctional gatineau Quebec government office descended into threats allegations of tyranny and a teary meeting between senior executives. Now this post account was based on a recent decision by the public service labor relations and employment board. Now, there's obviously lots of sad in salacious details here, but the reason this story caught my eye, I actually had to do with how it peeled back a curtain or a piece of it on at least a subsection of the corporate culture at indigenous and northern affairs, Canada, a work culture, we don't often hear about despite the roughly 4500 people employed there. And the reason I think it matters is because these are the same people who are supposed to be guardians of indigenous interests and the quality of that work environment arguably has an impact on how good of a job its workers do in advancing those interests. But I think what you're really discover from reading that story about what's going on inside the ministry is how they deal with us externally is really mirrored internally in a way. It's a dysfunctional workplace. It's reactive. They try and cover things up and say things are all okay inside. That seems to be how they've treated this person at the center of this big conflict in there. It's a real failure of the department. And I wonder what's wrong in there that it's become so sick. And I actually do have to wonder because I can't find any information. And this is the weird thing. If you think of any other government ministry, you can go to their website and you can pull up just like endless numbers of reports evaluating how they're doing. They do tons of audits, they publish heaps of information about how each of these other ministries work. But then when you get to iMac, it's completely opaque. There's nothing that's almost nothing you can find about how the ministry itself works. What were you looking for specifically? Well, I was curious to look at some of their human resources policies. I was interested in looking at their conflict resolution policy inside. Just basic things to see about how they would normally deal with this sort of complaint. I was looking maybe at statistics for their sick leave or looking at attrition statistics. And there's nothing. I mean, I don't know who they report to. We're essentially their constituency, like native people, this is our government. I mean, we have more information about our band councils than we do about iMac. It's really surprising because I know inac loves reports. They like us to do reports all the time. They want each of our bank councils and no matter how small the band to produce a hundred reports a year. And yet I can find like one on the iMac website talking about them and talking about their performance and talking about their internal culture. It seems like they're not held up as a ministry with 5000 staff to the same standard that they're holding a band council with ten. Where did your mind go reading this story of death threats and liver eating and the like? Although apparently those things were retracted or denied that they were ever said, but be that as it may, it made for some colorful copy. Well, I think where my mind went was just to the dysfunctionality of the department as a whole and to their incompetence when it comes to actually serving the supposed constituents that they are to serve, which is indigenous pupils. I would say that inac is the only department that's pretty consistently and direct conflict with the people it's supposed to serve. One of the places that my mind went was to connect this perception that I have of iMac with the tribunal ruling on indigenous children on reserve. And it called to mind for me the week in 2016 when parliament voted unanimously to force iac to obey the order by the Canadian human rights tribunal, which was one of the supposed low points in the administration of indigenous affairs. And was just one more sort of revealing example of this federal government that considers itself a law unto itself. And what was really funny about thinking about the parliament telling iac to pull up its socks and do something was that on the same day that parliamentary motion happened that parliamentary vote happened. The media reported that inac had lapsed more than $900 million that had been allocated to be spent on indigenous peoples in Canada. And when I dug a little deeper, I found that inac is actually one of the worst offenders when it comes to being what are called serial lapses. iMac is the only one that sort of regularly falls short on their budget. And when I looked at some of the statistics about lapses by iMac, as of 2015, I underspent by an average of $218 million each year. I thought there was a really astute reaction from a new Democrat MP Niki Ashton who said in 2015 when this stat came out, she said, you know, the underspending of millions of dollars is unconscionable given the appalling living conditions on reserve. And I would add to that, you know, the lack of services and by extension the experience of indigenous children on reserve. The other sort of flip side of that is that why would anyone want to work in a place where they are seen as subjects and not partners, where they are seen as clients, not colleagues. I would hate to be in an office where my opinions and thoughts and perceptions and analysis would automatically potentially be systemically denigrated by the corporate culture within which I work. Meaning that perhaps if I were an indigenous person working in iMac, the things that I put forward may not be taken by my colleagues with the same respect and faith and trust in the quality of my work as non indigenous peoples might because we're talking here about a department that has been established on the premise that indigenous peoples are not really peoples that they are not competent that they are not able to make decisions for themselves, ergo. This federal department located sometimes

Robert jago Billy little IMAX research and policy direc gatineau Quebec government public service labor relations inac Canada Danica national post First Nations Billy iac Canadian human rights tribunal administration of indigenous a Robert Niki Ashton parliament
Who Is Dr. Andrei Illarionov, Former Adviser to Vladimir Putin?

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

02:44 min | 1 year ago

Who Is Dr. Andrei Illarionov, Former Adviser to Vladimir Putin?

"He is a former economic adviser to Russia's acting prime minister jago gadar, chief economic adviser to Russian prime minister Viktor Chen midin and chief economic adviser to Vladimir Putin, doctor Andre il lardo hilaria. Welcome to America first. Thank you very much. Sebastian for inviting me. You are very, very welcome. You have an illustrious resume. I have three pages worth of your qualifications in front of me. We do not have many people with your prior access inside the Kremlin speaking out on American media regarding the events occurring in Ukraine. So let's start at the beginning. Will you walk us through our millions of listeners and viewers across the country, your background before you came to the United States, your qualifications, you've studied in the UK and Austria at Stanford University. So may I ask you just to introduce yourself to our listeners? I'm going to buy my training and I spent most of my time at The Economist and studying economic policy inviting on economic policy. You mentioned some of the people whom I advise to. For almost a TSI was economic adviser to current Russian president. And that time Russia was able to have a pretty remarkable economic growth that double GDP of the country and GDP per CAPiTA was in ten years. It was a little economic miracle for the Russian economy. But it was everything in the past. Since 2008, after three years after my departure, a Russian economy went into stagnation and seeing them economic growth of Russia was not more than 1% per year on average. So instead of doubling GDP within ten years, it's a kind of 10% growth. So 7 to 8% per year country was growing about 1%. It wasn't 1% per year. Now definitely it's a crisis and the intentions of the Russian leadership and first of all of mister Putin right now is very opposite to what you have demonstrated in your initial slight when Putin was talking about a little bit about democracy, freedom or whatever. It's definitely wrong. It's Putin does not pursue this goals anymore. He's intentions are imperialistic. His intentions are conquering the neighboring country, establishing a new world

Jago Gadar Russian Prime Minister Viktor Andre Il Lardo Hilaria Russia Vladimir Putin America Sebastian Ukraine Stanford University Austria UK Mister Putin Putin
"jago" Discussed on Our Unicorn Diaries

Our Unicorn Diaries

03:59 min | 1 year ago

"jago" Discussed on Our Unicorn Diaries

"You drink here. Yeah we say win to preserver here. If they win are they allowed to drink the champagne. I don't make the rules crazy. I supplied with everything. They needed. A all right so we say live long and kinky in germany. gosh. I don't redoing cities now because one hundred twenty countries one hundred one hundred and i show jago. Answer we gotta. We gotta do cities. So i didn't say other word that sound like i'm saying the word enough from for you all right so we can say kinky german. Do you remember meghan deer in headlights. Fuck fucking that okay. let's do it. I'm ready germany germany. I've seen adequately in germany. Do you know how to count in german for content nine. That's no right nine. I guess accounting for dinner. Yes to thank all of our listeners. In cologne we love. You appreciate you as we do all of our listeners. Of course but right now we're focusing on you so we're going to say live long and kinky about to punch my husband interface on camera. Oh out do an on camera. we're going to say live longing kinky. Jeremy are you ready loved. Why notes very lee lying on the leib lauren. Liebe lang e on andy blang fervor foreign labeling eve for i'm sure that's wrong but we love you. Please do not hold it against us seriously. Guys thank you. So much for joining us. And keeping his company the in cologne or any other parts of the world. We'd love you to your hoes eyeballs. We love you all in appreciate you as always say in english. Ck thank you all so much for keeping us company. any questions concerns or confessions. Please feel free to drop with the line at new four diary at yahoo dot com or leave a semester at six four three seven four eight seven by aweso for additional says videos in our unit. Bring diaries and if you follow us on twitter at our underscore uniform we will love you for ever and ever live long and kinky..

germany jago leib lauren cologne Liebe lang andy blang Jeremy lee yahoo twitter
"jago" Discussed on Blinkers Off

Blinkers Off

03:24 min | 1 year ago

"jago" Discussed on Blinkers Off

"That alone was the third place in the hall of fame last year. I mean he just it's like not like he's he's rain good races. These courses are coming back to win. And he's dominating those races he's i think he's only loaded again. He just does what he needs to do to win. Yeah i i think that manhattan was just such. A strong race is much stronger than this one from. Top to bottom and like said attributing came back in dominated monmouth and he wasn't even close to domestic spending fo- came back in like really good in a stakes. He wasn't even closer to make his domestic spending. Even if you wanna go back to the fifth place. Finisher rock emperor. This'll give you a good laugh. He won out of that race. He won his next race of got second in the great. Do you know the other day. The bowling green. He's still counts of horses coming out of the race and has been very very good so it almost jago and say i think it's it's really depressing. Domestic spending doesn't win because if he doesn't win here it really shows we're not gonna win any turf races f- readers up friday or saturday you know Needs to win this race For for our american turf forces he need him and frankly chat round. He dominates this race right like he brings his in. They win brick and mortar. he wins. Who was the one couple years back. What was that robert bruce. Bruce won this race may seems like he's won this race. Hey look we can listen. Pulled up here. But yeah i mean this guy. Chad brown and do the same eight. No brian does not does not win this race. Chad brown's one of three years in a row. Bricks and mortar route breezy beach patrol real solution. He wanted fears aiden. Eight o'brien dating back to eleven did win this race. Did into five. Hasn't won it lately. The pizza man. Never forget the pizza in But yeah chat. Brown's wanted three years in. I think he's gonna make it for. How do you play this race. does you just painting. I mean we're talking about the sequence a little bit underneath leading up to this. Do you exciting some prices to be had to possible prices in a couple of those legs. Is he a single. Are you gonna play the to play. I would play both of them in the multi ties for sure. And then i'll put up this comment here Put busy channel third straight. Try domestic over army over busy channel. Whatever you do play it straight whether if you're gonna play a try play it straight if you're gonna play exact played straight so i agree with that. So you know multi-race i'm gonna play them both and then if you're looking race by race type wagers i'd play a big exact a domestic armory or like even michael said big. Try and put those three. Just in that order. I can agree with that logic. Yeah kind of like the idea dislike pounding exact those two or something you know Yep because i just feel like those two are standouts here and if you wanna get creative and play try like michael said do that but i think you have to pound it like you said because when you're going to get if you get to get own domestic arm rain whoever i mean it's still going to. You're going to have to have a pretty high base fit. Descending is in code so domestic spending. He is our shot to win a breeders cup turf. But he's got to do it again here. In the formerly arlington million the stakes were both on number three domestic. Spending.

Chad brown jago monmouth robert bruce manhattan bowling brien aiden Bruce brian Brown michael army arlington
"jago" Discussed on Black Girl Nerds

Black Girl Nerds

01:57 min | 1 year ago

"jago" Discussed on Black Girl Nerds

"I think there are two sides of the same coin because they both want to help. The women in the community are both coming from a background. That is tragic. But they're strong women at money a little bit more diplomatic in some ways little more gangster. Because he had to fight. I think crises just now finding her fight after clinton and being raped in losing her child having her love interest in best friend murdered in front of her. She's just finding the fight so this season has been interesting because i caught this season. Rebirth for tracy's character. Because she's never been able to live for herself. Everybody may decisions for her. So now it's like what is like if i do this. Oh maybe i should okay but okay. It's fine because i'm still learning right. How i love it though like. I love the tease you did. I cannot wait to see these ladies. Because i'm like look i don't know who's i idea. This was like keep going because it's just like when you guys on camera like you saying what the davis ladies when you guys came. I just love it because you just don't know like the facial expression you just don't know what's gonna come their victory row fiery between the two of them. Oh it could go right. So i will tell you may or may not happen but i will say always inter- tape look look. I tried to get out. I tried look let me throw in. Let me a couple more ladies here. What about Drean in jada key. Tt's because you guys had a cool scene off the top key teasing. Well i can say dray and the rock community has become a staple which is awesome. People are like well. What does dr do we get to finally see her. Become you know a community counselor and adding to the rock family Data's always my girl which is funny because people like why not always you know applicants day in you and she and ronnie were almost a thing and i'm like jago relaxing by ronnie. It was fad. I loved her. I love to all all trace the app..

clinton tracy Drean ronnie jago
"jago" Discussed on Bourbon Pursuit

Bourbon Pursuit

07:58 min | 2 years ago

"jago" Discussed on Bourbon Pursuit

"The even within the world of babylon wet prices. A crazy demands craziest. Still the with trying to put some Halo on a what we're doing it. I think you had mentioned their pricing. And that's one thing. I think we should also mention to listeners. Is that no. You're not gonna go find a last drop bottle and think that you're only spending one hundred fifty dollars. That's a very very much difference. I think nine hundred buffalo trace was five thousand dollars thousand six thousand four thousand six hundred and what's a few hundred dollars between energy so i guess one of the things you explained the rationale behind the pricing and everything like that Just our listeners. Have some sort of understanding of how you get to those types of numbers so the pricing is what i would like says. I think the pricing is fair. For what we're doing the what we we would say. Is we bottle anything that you could find the equivalent of elsewhere for much less. They were trying to shake case rare and exceptional quality in a narrow place. away said whatever we presented. Both you're not going to come across it somewhere else. You're not going to be a taste that again and again and again and it is about that experience. It's it's not saying. I'm gonna buy ten of his and i'm here to put we. We have really passionate about people drinking Apps get full thousand four hundred thousand dollars not everybody's going to spend natural the bustle bipin Absolutely understand that. But i hit the people do will drink it and we'll share. It will love doing so in that every drop they drink focused the many many dollars worth of cheshire memories and experienced so so i think what i would say is that i think the price the pricing is fair. And i think. I hope that she's in some way obviates. The need for that secondary mouths inflation and. I'm also very mindful that obviously unit pappy which sits hadn't shoulders above the ultra priced the south acting price. Happy at the price reaches. But i i like to say what we're doing is is acknowledging that there is a price point for the ultra and what It's an. It's not an annuity not get come back in a year's time and say what happened. If you coming out this year we we. We won't ever have regular released any casualty so so. It's the uniqueness just whenever mark brown's message and says hey we've got this other science project that we forgot about forty years ago. Well i hope. I i had some of the some of the experiments that now i hope will find their way into a bus in years to come. But it's that sort of it's the alchemy. I suppose do you think bourbon was overdue. Something like this because scotching obviously other spirits had been priced at such a premium price like that whereas bourbon was more of a you know everyday common folk kinda even now you say like van winkle which is supposedly the best in the world at retails three hundred fifty dollars own. Bourbon is deserving of a price. Point like this you know compared to the other you're working with yes. I tainted up sedately. I mean i. I would not differentiate in terms of rarity in quality. I think taste comes into it. There is a huge appetite for i mean. It is very much driven by north america. But that's not say it's not absolutely exploiting elsewhere and i can see absolutely no reason. Why not there's nothing about bourbon that makes it didn't Spirit to scott cognac. Or anything else. The the artistry in the skill is in is in the distiller in the blender and the way it's matured and and that doesn't that doesn't change from category chemistry. So i'm i'm i'm absolutely Behind the i mean. I'm completing behind the I think it's been a long time coming in. This was your second bourbon. Release it but i'm not mistaken. Yeah it was. The fast one was so small. Forty four bottles that they'll leaky errol very. We didn't talk about it very much because there wasn't very much to talk about. Look it's hard to make a splash. Look forty four bottles. That's for sure you know. Just a re-echo our sentiments earlier. You know we add that sample of nineteen eighty and it really was it was a it was probably one of the highlights of the year ryan said highlights of you know our lifetime being able to try something like that. It really does play into the story that you tell where the history comes from and the mission that you all are trying to accomplish to of being able to find things that are super unique that that speak to a very enthusiastic segment of the category. Absolutely i mean not that that is the huge pleasure in in in what do and the people i speak to. Is this sharing that enthusiasm in that. That's the heart of vision. I think this. I said who mr the top of the coal was. We want people to love what we do. We want people to know that drinking and that not just what they drink the stroke but but every every drink should be a pleasure otherwise. You shouldn't be drinking check box that well we're going gonna go ahead and kind of start rounding this off a little bit. You know rebecca. We always we always like to be able to finish these and talking about like. Oh we'll what's coming up next for you all but it's like who knows. We might not ever have released for this year. I got a great idea though will pitch a. It'll be an remarkable story. One that people will never forget you. Come to kentucky. Hang out kenyan in. We'll do barrel picks and it'll be unless drop absolutely i. I love but it would be a memorable story. We'll make it never bill for sure it would. it would. Yeah i tell you what being able to kind of look and see what other kinds of things are are cooking up over there at saz iraq and be able to try those i would imagine. That's a a very awesome play box. Yeah it really is a sandbox bill to go in for sure. I have had some amazing To buffalo trace. I've been very lucky to to tabuk around warehouse p which. I'm sure you've had about. That's that refrigerated warehouse They have these amazing paul Later on you have to put on before you go in sokoto in that. But just actually i think the whole operation there is is inspirationally. Every single team member is so passionate spot. What they do and i think that eight pervades everything from from the the would to the spirit to the way they communicate and i that makes me i sound like a revenge is not inside but it does make me very proud to be part of pasta fat company while we locally. Look forward to be able to meet you in person here one of these days but rebecca i wanna say thank you again for coming on the show if people want to find out more about you more about the last drop out of the research or follow you all say they can find us at our website which is lost up to this dot com. We are on instagram. At at nostril his will you can email me rebecca at And i will be delighted to reply to everybody. Don't don't you hate your wish on that one to start flooding. Ramon.

Ramon ryan five thousand dollars three hundred fifty dollars mark brown one hundred fifty dollars Forty four bottles forty four bottles north america this year sokoto instagram four hundred thousand dollars forty years ago ten six thousand kentucky nineteen eighty rebecca Both
"jago" Discussed on Bourbon Pursuit

Bourbon Pursuit

07:09 min | 2 years ago

"jago" Discussed on Bourbon Pursuit

"Standard or something when you taste something. Yeah i think that's a really beautiful way Touch day because it really it really resonates with me. I think hoffa Not just wear. But what the whole prince really behind alcohol and the sharing of spirits is. It's about that sense sharing the delight you get not from what senior class but for the moment that you're having with somebody else or group friends where you are actually enjoying something together and i think that very much case back that emotional connection that you have it's watson new class whether it's just a cold beer at the end of the game of golf or really extraordinary bubble at the end of an amazing evening. It's about that moment. In time. And the memories that the spirits make fees based in the discomforting. And i'm been incredibly for missing some of the things i've tasted the stories that come with discovery are very much part of that if you like. A failure of messaging is we. We want to tell you about where we will be found it what we were doing. And how it was how it was uncovered that there's one story that really stands out for me. It's it's it's sort of sums up everything about us what we do. I went to cognac. To meet the team at the size recuperation which is quite newly reestablished in front so the origin soundtrack are actually in france in cognac. The the original founder. Sandra coordinate back in the eighteenth century was a man from connecticut. shipped his cognac. To new orleans. They've now bought the domain and are starting to make cognac again. I went to meet the guy who's running the separation and he said well you looking for and i said well you really anything. I didn't have any preconceptions. Just interested to see what you're doing and if there already exciting parcels than i'd left tastes them the very next day he and said i think i've got something for you could just sorta sense. Send a little movement of excitement. So he picked me up when we drove to a economic domain of vineyards and distillery near the center of the cognac region. And that we matic i. Who is the grandson. Well probably great great grandson. Its founder Eighteenth seventeenth century and he had been doing some renovation. Work one of the bombs in state and it's called a big story and behind the wall in this bond he uncovered two hours one was about cognac. His granddad still did nineteen twenty five and then hid behind a wall when the germans were approaching southwest of france between the wars in probably the late nineteen thirties and it should be left there forgotten. So this is completely. It's very unusual in a number of ways one because it happened to because it was never discovered and that means the spiral of cognac sat that completely untouched for ninety. Three is which is just amazing that it wasn't top topic wilson put into demi johns. Nothing happened to it. I got to taste it and it was just the most astonishing cognac. i ve ever tasted. I haven't tasted lots of nas next. But but i knew i was tasting something really really magical so i stayed in this this little tasting room as a man who who it was almost like. He was showing me his baby Had his arms folded. He had the smile on his face. Said i know you are going to love. And i tasted it and to what i said the top which is about not being an expert. But knowing when you're tasting something special. That's exactly what i had. I tasted it. I've never tasted anything minus four. And i probably never would again and it's just up to the beautiful and i. I had story of the spirit fat that his grandfather still that had been hidden that it was discovered completely by accident and we were being given the opportunity to put this in a bottle and bring it to a hundred and eighty two very lucky owners. I'm that's what we've done for me. It was even more special because it was distilled in the my dad was born and it was puzzled. Yeah he died so that you know to to talk about a place in time in a moment in time. That to me. Sort of sums everything. We're trying to do not all the stories a quite dramatic as that. But there's always a sense of place a sense of story behind what you're doing and i think this comes back to to sharing to to experience an as you were saying ryan that emotion the emotion can come purely from. What's on your lips or from the past new orphan story behind it. But ideally from all of these things. But i just to to slow down the line. I think it still has to be really delicious if you're looking to sell things for thousands dollars which we do and i'm not going to than they they've got to be once in a lifetime nine minutes to show. I mean it's a. It's a lovely story and i think you're you're really putting a new spin on the word orphan barrel that we in we in the bourbon world have been accustomed to that came from diaz. Yo that nobody really knows if they're quote unquote orphan but finding something like this. Because that's a different story because that's done on a much larger scale which what you're doing is really kind of finding like just the smallest segment and and being able to provide a truly unique tasting experience something that you'll never be able to experience ever again. And that's the way we felt when we try that nineteen eighty buffalo trees. Yes and the nine hundred eighteen. That's lovely and a completely different story but equally there's a lot of remands because although it's it's not a forty year old bob. It was distilled in nineteen eighty. And of course the buffet industry in a very very different situation than now. No one can. Bob was not. It's unbelievably hot topic. That it is now but it was all say distilled before south Baffler trace to senator say the still what was then the judge t stacked steadily by gary hart to the master sister that but the lovely thing is because you kentucky bourbon particulars is. It really is an industry where things cost from father to son generations generation but holland. We who is obviously now master. Distiller center was gary apprentice and led his trade from the man who still this. And then it was hauling new actually uncovered this this puzzle autism racket ball both And decided that it would go in stainless.

new orleans eighteenth century Sandra Eighteenth seventeenth century thousands dollars two hours gary hart france connecticut forty year old ninety Three one story nine minutes Bob gary apprentice demi johns five both cognac
"jago" Discussed on In The Slipstream

In The Slipstream

02:13 min | 2 years ago

"jago" Discussed on In The Slipstream

"Add the most value in your firm for sure if yours is a specialist role it may be.

"jago" Discussed on In The Slipstream

In The Slipstream

01:41 min | 2 years ago

"jago" Discussed on In The Slipstream

"Experience and better outcomes arising from having multiple coaches contributing gio coaching journey by role but now and increasingly in the future will be to impel and support the other coaches whereas in the early days are generated one hundred percent of our income. Soon it will be twenty percent and likely declining further in the future. this brings me into the theme. I mentioned achieving through. It's clear that all add move any to more clients by working this way now. Don't get me wrong. I'll still work directly with coaching clients. After all i think it's very important to keep it real. But when i'm not doing this i'll be waiting to recruit an empowered coaches to deliver our programs. An example of this is the detail. Guide compiled last year. Basically in the one place. is everything. One nate snow to be a really great stream coach. So i'm excited about this development and what slipstream chi-ching will become in the future. Now i'd like to say that this was all the grand vision the with That's not the case to be honest. The tie cup of slipstream services has far exceeded initial expectations. The be that as it may the pathway now on his exciting and one way of fully committed to all of this brings me to you and your firm odd like you to treat this conversation as a catalyst to consider your role going forward and way you guide to.

slipstream chi nate ching
"jago" Discussed on In The Slipstream

In The Slipstream

05:37 min | 2 years ago

"jago" Discussed on In The Slipstream

"Scott thank you. So much interview with andrew j slipstream slightest business coach. I hyped it. In his brief conversation that you feel like you've got to know him somewhat and to gain appreciation the wonderful business wisdom and practical knowledge. He brings to the time. Now there are few autumn's andrew touched upon which i thought would be helpful to revisit an elaborate upon so the first item idee profiles early on in the discussion and referred to the id profile which we get prepared on h. Slipstream team member. It's one of the ways we use to improve teamwork across the firm. We've also used this price falling to across many of coaching in the program. I've put a reference to the instinctive drives website in the shy nuts. If you'd like to know more about this second andrew's point about open ended questions. Ask your business clients. Whether you're an accountant or a financial planner you find that clients will just love you. Showing interest in their business activities. And thirdly he touched on the tenant ten past ten retain that we have This is a stand up meeting which we have each day. is attended by old team members. The dentist pretty simple. What's on today. Second ran a question. I you stuck and finally what major autumn me going to get completed before you got home. This meeting is closely aligned with cultivating the old important hustle factor that andrew referred to. If you'd like tonight more about hustle wouldn't have cultivated in your business. You can an article. Which are referenced in the shots. It's quite a big learning curve that andrews on going from being a really good business coach to being a great slipstream touch but clearly. He's a loving his enthusiasm and really looking forward to andrew making a big contribution to the coaching program..

andrew j andrew Scott andrews
"jago" Discussed on In The Slipstream

In The Slipstream

05:36 min | 2 years ago

"jago" Discussed on In The Slipstream

"Yea look And this is an area Again a accountants as well and i mentioned Really good little tool at dm. i The vis midge core of got. Which helps you give look at a snapshot of evaluation of business. It's it's not meant to be a court sanctioned prices better just enables you to very quickly this much ebusiness not not be with and on the signed by the same token financial plan is actually really good at this sort of stuff which is having those open ended conversations with clients around. Hey tell me how much you businesses worth now. Scott you and i know that when somebody says to businesses with a million dollars million dollars and hopefully there's quite a few of you in the ruin that a on. Listen to this in your car or on the bach or something like noting gang year. I and so the challenge for us is to then get. Well let's actually style on this subject rotten now and if we do nothing else inside well why is it. Worth a million dollars is with a million dollars because it's throwing enough free cash. Lie that somebody wanna bought and paid for them. Recent with a million dollars only because the plant equipment is with a million dollars. Wise it worth a million dollars. Yes and spa simply exploring that question and holding accountable to that statement because that million dollars is something. They've printed in their mind. That will be enough for them to retard on what we not million dollars isn't enough but that that's beside the point and so we start that conversation as i will. What are the things that you're doing in your business to make sure we'll to justify that valuation and if it hasn't got their valuation are things that you may be thinking about to you know to to work on the business. Yes and and one of the first things gripe opportunities for accounts and financial planners would bit works in financial plans especially is what's called -able board of a us got you and i and many many people in this spice Advocates of the board of us you know a small business owner gets trusted. External people in made on a regular basis immuno Probably initially you can start with money. But courtly usually pretty good and we'd just do all the on on the business stuff and a bit like the two the two year plan that we come off after breakway works we gotta what are we gonna do in the next three six twelve months and again to be those long horizon things i've in future and once you start process where all you're doing is a as a as a trusted adviser is getting the owner on the business more regularly. Necessarily you know that you're gonna get better outcomes it. It's it's it's not fullest. i. I've always simply getting people more on the business. We talk about this at slipstream. Talk about that in business advisory..

Scott
"jago" Discussed on In The Slipstream

In The Slipstream

03:50 min | 2 years ago

"jago" Discussed on In The Slipstream

"Why don't we have a discussion about that. That's like a level one. You just starting the process now as and that could be as far as you got Or you're not fond of firm has got some significant growth opportunities. You're not sure how to do that. Probably with funny at about what industry does you've got old got the entrepreneurs program for example and they've got many the business vases in the entrepreneurs found a really good and you just make a referral to to industry for few client. Hi you're in a business that tin the in the sweet spot full assistance from os industry. What we have looked at doing that. What comes out of it. Is these business advisers to a free. And it's a really comprehensive business check and they say you need to do this this and this and you look at the outcome of their business. Check many of the services or recommendations they. Making you'll firm can do interesting. Yup so That's that was my life name. Spending a lotta time with ause industry and much of my work came out of that but equally there was a lotta work for the accounts that were involved. And what i found as a business advisory specialist is that necessarily ma maybe being involved in in that process increase the workload for the account interesting. Yep and we eunice back into of minnetonka. It's an necessarily because we're creating more demand for some that services around mention accounting improve systems and processes that what we do. brings for the client and the client's in winning from the account and because my lawf- is an accountant. I was quite happy to explain to the clot that thou going to be paying their can more face because it was a candidate for work in. This was the skype of the work that that would have to do. And you know. I it become a good conversation around that which is everyone. Benefits client gets better outcomes. Business growth and the accountant is that more involved in that process as well. So with a lot of accountants in this spice and it was quenching. Some accounts system referred to me just referred. Yes yes okay. And another guy i know. Yep yep really good at this. We've got a trust relationship with this person. Lucky to talk to him to some odd work with them on it. Yeah hey i come in and and we we do some some some basic sort of what i call. Level one level two once not complex ran accounting and got through yet bit. We can do that. Fantastic and odd work with the the account practitioner And i think the ideal one would obtain to work with accounting finish so they say show us how to do it so we can start doing more it long. Answer scott but it's an area though. Spend a bit of time in. And i think my advice would be just the journey bathing steps. And let's talk a bit about that in february through the from the workshops that we'll be doing then block now to look at things from a financial planning perspective and one of the things that we've discussed over the years and indeed on the last podcast was this aspect of a financial planner. Who has a client who is in a small business and typically we've got some in high mind might Around drinks with a value. And then we've got this great big of blackhall called the business and the item on professor abuse of along the lawns of my businesses. My super and typically a plan is gone. Well there's not much. I can do here but one of the things that i've been mile is was your concept of viewing the private business as a separate asset class and and perhaps tikey more holistic approach rather than disa- To advise on the three dollars fifty this lift lift. Iva would you mind elaborating on that..

minnetonka eunice skype blackhall scott Iva
"jago" Discussed on In The Slipstream

In The Slipstream

04:23 min | 2 years ago

"jago" Discussed on In The Slipstream

"We do financial time. Management accounts will help you with zero. And this that's that's again. That's what we do that sort of do a bit more of why its value two years clot and that that to me is actually kind of. I think. That's if you wanna call it a hobby horse for one of a better term. That's probably one area. Though i'm really keen on saying you know we do better or at grace yet. Now i'm all for that and I look forward to hearing of you are working with your your clients in in that area. Now we've already done a podcast together. That was some time ago in in you'll pass pastoral So in a way. When i'd like to do is pick up some of these points that we we really enjoyed a terrific conversation about and indeed you and obviously discussed over with us we have since two thousand and four scott yes so firstly with accountants in the next issue of how they might do more for their business clients and on a ni- that it can seem to be that the betty you are tax this little paps. The the challenge can be so thinking about doing any anything else. So one in your experiences. Some ways in which accountants can add value to the business clones. But not get in either. They hit absolutely and we are bombarded in proficient which you must do more fun in more advisory work and is software for varda's go to solution for this and that and the rest of it and you mentioned the tax partner the really really good tax partner will ask the really good tax partners to do this You know the It's been good. Attacks is bloody hod constant so then sort of getting into somebody's business a as part of what you're doing really concentrate on working out on the processes and the rest of it will get the best outcome in the most efficient mana for client and then go all bother why..

varda scott
"jago" Discussed on In The Slipstream

In The Slipstream

03:52 min | 2 years ago

"jago" Discussed on In The Slipstream

"With the not a graduate degree or and and own postgraduate qualifications. And and so on It was very much that as is the look forward aspect of financial planning which Where you'd seeking to look beyond the current situation. That was very attractive to me. That's what got me into that that spice as well scope great i came and perhaps a little bit more about your accounting background yet. So often malcolm degree at Cuisine university that many many years ago in fact so long ago that I came up with virtually no hicksville now in in my first year of uni so I have a point in time to again. I'm my father said to me andrew. I'll put you through boarding school And my father owned a regional accounting practice in central queensland and Your apprenticeship is to come and spend a few years Working in my firm and as far as a want to do he went and did some other things and A fan myself and not too long after joining in and and getting my cpa qualifications that pretty well in charge of the business as well. So boy osmosis and The nsa herrmann miley twenties managing a team fifteen people and wondering. What the hell i'm doing here. And and every time. I look at some of the resources In slipstream especially factory diagnostic. Look at that. And i bang my head and go. Oh my lord lord defining nine of this stuff full as he's a guy so and that's how into it was mine small business and And rural focus had quite a few clots And i'm sure we'll get onto this but one of the most amazing experiences in law which completely changed more professional thinking was in the middle of all of this was going to an accountant's camp but i'm sure we can talk about that name during the the rest of the podcast. Indeed so andrew slipstream chi-ching one not just hang out your shingle one of the things to hang up my shingle which i did for wall in sort of between in two thousand four thousand two thousand fifteen. That was great. You know Is sort of talking to my Network and fawning wising which could add value to them and and that was ruining but one of the things. I'll lent fairly quickly. Is it scott. When you're running your own shingle is that you've got a gun. Get the clots. Hunt them down you. Then go to determine the scope of what the engagements to look like an and these are quite different ones and and then you think process and as professionals. We are very scared about processing and must have assigned process appropriately. And then you got to invoice it. Entice up the money and in between we'll in the middle of all of that actually go to do the work through the work. All that's going on you've gotta fond more work. Yes and so joining name in two thousand sixteen. A lot of that was off my plight especially and the administration and And following up the work but always still responsible for powder which is going and getting the work processing it and doing it And one of the things about having your own shingle as you have no leverage on. I've got a lot of professional capability and experience But i'll come in the. I was able to do what they want. Claude at a time yes whereas in this environment in in a pelivan will have eight groups and do the magic for may really is gonna be working not just with ice people. But they'll be working with each other. We'll all benefit from from that collegiate environment..

Cuisine university herrmann miley andrew slipstream malcolm osmosis nsa queensland andrew scott Claude
"jago" Discussed on In The Slipstream

In The Slipstream

05:04 min | 2 years ago

"jago" Discussed on In The Slipstream

"Extensive understanding financial services and shays his views on some topical matters relevant to bite the accountants and financial planners afterwards on gun to share some thoughts about what i say is a very relevant theme for the year ahead that is achieving through his. I'll be explaining how it's relevant to my own situation and challenging you to about how it applies to you at you'll a let's get started andrew festival. What attracts you to coaching. And in particular accountants and financial planners. It's a really good question. Scott and i For coffee is now have been almost like the guy who does not wants to do or can can work at what he's going to do And that particularly led to owning a business From optimal thomas russell and having an amazing experience they of growing a very substantial business avatar and then sort of moving into Business advisory and that was to see how it go in that spice. Having felt as an accountant of financial planner that that was a spice it was very there was a lot of opportunity there and that was an amazing experience as well. But i've got to give credit to one among as it. Nimh goksel richard moss who quite regularly would serve andrew. You'd be really good at coaching and When brin client meetings in song he he did remind me again. That was a hot ima- skill set that Should continue to develop and then in september last year. Scott charlton who of nine a a said dander. We've got a bit happening here. it's upstream. And i said he said no we've done really well and united continues and onwards and upwards. I think that's a scott charlton. Isn't that we all know that particularly picked my interest and we had a long discussion and at the end of that It was very easy decision for me to say yes. Let's do this. Fulltime absolutely said that smog journey fantastic and. I think that will be slipstream guy in that. That's the way it worked out. Thanks got so andrew. What can clients expect from you as a coach. I'm one of the great things about the substrate is they..

andrew festival thomas russell Nimh goksel richard moss Scott charlton Scott brin scott charlton andrew
"jago" Discussed on This Week in Photo

This Week in Photo

05:52 min | 2 years ago

"jago" Discussed on This Week in Photo

"All right maximum. Welcome to the podcast. I'm i'm excited. Chat with you about the conference in particular but also some of the things that you're also involved in the kind of lead you to want to start a conference. Let's start there. Let's start with a little bit of background on you. Know just sort of who maximum jego is and the kind of things that you do and what keeps you sort of interested in engaging in this crazy world of tech that we have going on my word. Well thank you. Thank you for having me first of all of course that's an i. I usually say that. I've been pretending. I know what i'm talking about since the mid eighties and <hes>. And sometimes in the us because the accident people believe me so been pretending to be understanding things and all these people about things you know. When i was really young. I just became a fan of existence. I wanted to know how everything would. I wanted to understand that. Not because i particularly wanted to change it just because i appreciate it and it turns out that would everything you know when you're a kid you think. Well i know that tea and coffee at different things. Therefore i know the universe but then as you get older you realize oh wait. There's a universe of things out there. And so i become a life long lover of learning and every opportunity. I get to understand something and how it works. I take it along the way. I started to detect <hes>. Some patterns that emerge and <hes>. Some some trends some trends in the world thinking is some trends in the way people some trends in important things to to bring it back around to the conference <hes>. Some trends and creativity and i'll be doing in our <hes>. In our keynote the opening of the conference that a creativity and intrinsic quality of the human experience that you don't learn it cannot be told you because it's already there like breathing and as long as you ought changing and causing change you are creative and so once you start with that you realize wow everybody's trying to express themselves will try to coastal agents. They will want to cost shadow. Have their place under the sun footprints in the snow. We all want our existence to mean something and one of the ways that you existence can be meaningful is by having impact and so when we. When i was thinking about the creativity conference the goal originally was to was to create a kind of meeting of minds. And if you'll forgive me taking up the time with the story there's a please do. There's a beautiful concept that was explained to me years ago and i don't claim to have any connection with the tradition <hes>. But i was told that in the native american tradition. The culture is largely shamanic. Shamanism is rooted in a siberian fire. Religion ancient siberian fire religion. But ultimately suppose you'd say that it's <hes>. It's a religion that focuses on nature with a capital n so there is a small end nature which trees and bushes in that kind of thing. And then there's capital nature where which is closer to the concept of aptness. But there's a right way to do things that's appropriate under the circumstances and of course it's natural with a capital n us as a species spend time in nature with a small pen. But i'm going off topic so the when when <hes>. Native american shaman is holding a very large ceremony. There may actually be to shaman the perform the ceremony and the first is the one who performs the ceremony they speak the words. They perform the ritualized aspects of the ceremony. The second shaman will be that to hold the space. It creates an environment in which that's a good work done. Whatever it is. And so. When i had this idea for the creativity conference originally it was intended to be held in reykjavik in iceland on the concept is simple. We get cool people together. Who are passionate about really being alive really participating in this thing called life and give them an opportunity to share ideas and connect and so i described it as a meeting of minds and my goal was never to be a speaker. I was never going to be if you forgive the parallel the shaman holding the actual ceremony. I wanted to be the one holding the space so my goal was to create an environment where everyone felt safe and included and welcome and it was meant to be kind of campfire chat where people say one person says the other person. Oh you do that amazing thing. Don't you tell me about that. Amazing thing the second person would say. Oh well thank you for asking. Actually is the essence of his the heart of the matter. Let me tell you how it really works. And in that safe environment people would learn and grow and connect. I hope and develop projects together and be more impactful in the world and healthier and happier more whole and i think ultimately creativity is about self realization. Our goal is to take whatever is the essence of you in the world. Whatever is truly you not the nurture the nature if you believe that people have a soul soul if you believe that it's the id and the ego and the superego. It's that that ina part of you. The observer that has no opinions and is simply experiencing an existential is. They would call it a passenger but whatever that being is i think. Creativity is an opportunity for that being to to manifest itself in the world

sixty ninety presentations This week seven panels three keynotes one hundred percent seven speakers jay
The Creativity Conference, with Maxim Jago

This Week in Photo

05:52 min | 2 years ago

The Creativity Conference, with Maxim Jago

"All right maximum. Welcome to the podcast. I'm i'm excited. Chat with you about the conference in particular but also some of the things that you're also involved in the kind of lead you to want to start a conference. Let's start there. Let's start with a little bit of background on you. Know just sort of who maximum jego is and the kind of things that you do and what keeps you sort of interested in engaging in this crazy world of tech that we have going on my word. Well thank you. Thank you for having me first of all of course that's an i. I usually say that. I've been pretending. I know what i'm talking about since the mid eighties and And sometimes in the us because the accident people believe me so been pretending to be understanding things and all these people about things you know. When i was really young. I just became a fan of existence. I wanted to know how everything would. I wanted to understand that. Not because i particularly wanted to change it just because i appreciate it and it turns out that would everything you know when you're a kid you think. Well i know that tea and coffee at different things. Therefore i know the universe but then as you get older you realize oh wait. There's a universe of things out there. And so i become a life long lover of learning and every opportunity. I get to understand something and how it works. I take it along the way. I started to detect Some patterns that emerge and Some some trends some trends in the world thinking is some trends in the way people some trends in important things to to bring it back around to the conference Some trends and creativity and i'll be doing in our In our keynote the opening of the conference that a creativity and intrinsic quality of the human experience that you don't learn it cannot be told you because it's already there like breathing and as long as you ought changing and causing change you are creative and so once you start with that you realize wow everybody's trying to express themselves will try to coastal agents. They will want to cost shadow. Have their place under the sun footprints in the snow. We all want our existence to mean something and one of the ways that you existence can be meaningful is by having impact and so when we. When i was thinking about the creativity conference the goal originally was to was to create a kind of meeting of minds. And if you'll forgive me taking up the time with the story there's a please do. There's a beautiful concept that was explained to me years ago and i don't claim to have any connection with the tradition But i was told that in the native american tradition. The culture is largely shamanic. Shamanism is rooted in a siberian fire. Religion ancient siberian fire religion. But ultimately suppose you'd say that it's It's a religion that focuses on nature with a capital n so there is a small end nature which trees and bushes in that kind of thing. And then there's capital nature where which is closer to the concept of aptness. But there's a right way to do things that's appropriate under the circumstances and of course it's natural with a capital n us as a species spend time in nature with a small pen. But i'm going off topic so the when when Native american shaman is holding a very large ceremony. There may actually be to shaman the perform the ceremony and the first is the one who performs the ceremony they speak the words. They perform the ritualized aspects of the ceremony. The second shaman will be that to hold the space. It creates an environment in which that's a good work done. Whatever it is. And so. When i had this idea for the creativity conference originally it was intended to be held in reykjavik in iceland on the concept is simple. We get cool people together. Who are passionate about really being alive really participating in this thing called life and give them an opportunity to share ideas and connect and so i described it as a meeting of minds and my goal was never to be a speaker. I was never going to be if you forgive the parallel the shaman holding the actual ceremony. I wanted to be the one holding the space so my goal was to create an environment where everyone felt safe and included and welcome and it was meant to be kind of campfire chat where people say one person says the other person. Oh you do that amazing thing. Don't you tell me about that. Amazing thing the second person would say. Oh well thank you for asking. Actually is the essence of his the heart of the matter. Let me tell you how it really works. And in that safe environment people would learn and grow and connect. I hope and develop projects together and be more impactful in the world and healthier and happier more whole and i think ultimately creativity is about self realization. Our goal is to take whatever is the essence of you in the world. Whatever is truly you not the nurture the nature if you believe that people have a soul soul if you believe that it's the id and the ego and the superego. It's that that ina part of you. The observer that has no opinions and is simply experiencing an existential is. They would call it a passenger but whatever that being is i think. Creativity is an opportunity for that being to to manifest itself in the world

Jego Reykjavik United States Iceland INA