20 Burst results for "Shaikh"

"shaikh" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

04:27 min | Last month

"shaikh" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"A veteran of the restaurant industry. He is the founder and former CEO of Panera Bread in Oman Pan. He is currently the chairman and chief investor at Kava and Tate. Looking back to the late 1980s when he founded Panera, Shaikh says he saw an opportunity and moved To to fill it, the currencies of fast food were a lot of food for not a lot of money. And we began to say what we could offer something that elevated people's self -esteem for just a few dollars more. And in his new book Know What Matters, Shaikh says finding filling and a need is the key for any would -be entrepreneur. The number one thing in business is trying to understand what drives consumers. Shaikh says other restaurant chains found niches to fill. He has praise for raising canes and Chick -fil -A. As for the next big thing in dining, he sees an opportunity for more vegetarian offerings. 3 % of America is vegetarian but 40 % of people are eating plan -forward. People want craveable wellness. Jeff Bellinger, Bloomberg Radio. And I'm Denise Pellegrini in the Bloomberg Newsroom. Top envoys from the Middle East meeting US Secretary of State Antony Blinken today to discuss the war between Israel and Hamas as we've been reporting yesterday. Hezbollah ominously said all possibilities on the Lebanon -Israel front are open. White House Press Secretary Karine Jean -Pierre downplaying the prospects though that Hezbollah could make this a two front war for Israel. The United States does not want to see this conflict expand into Lebanon, the likely devastation for Lebanon and her people would be unimaginable and unimaginable and is avoidable. Jean -Pierre is speaking there to reporters but William Taylor former ambassador US to Ukraine says the focus needs to be on helping the people of Gaza right now. He says the risk of Hezbollah widens the war is real. We have to be concerned about that. We have to be prepared for that. And Taylor spoke on ABC investors are also looking ahead to earnings from Disney and MGM resorts this coming week Stock surged this past week as bond yields fell. You know this was the best week so far for the year for and the P S 500 and Rafael Bostic president of the Atlanta Fed tells us the Fed may well engineer a soft landing. We're going to be in sort of a slow steady growth that's methodical. It won't be exciting a lot of folks but it will be one that doesn't feature a lot of additional pain and disruption for American families. Bostic there on Bloomberg markets the close heard here on Bloomberg radio but former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers has a different view he calls the celebrating by investors premature. The kind of very dramatic response we've seen in interest rates this week the longer term and in stock prices make me not as certain as many people that the job of containing inflation is over and that the war is done. And you can hear more about why Summers thinks this on the Bloomberg Wall Street week podcast. Reminder the drama in commercial real estate continues to rumble in the background Capital One Financial seeking to sell nearly 200 million dollars in loans including debt backed by New York City offices and apartments according to marketing materials seen by Bloomberg News. And remember that new rail tunnel linking New York and New Jersey will it's alive and well the 16 billion dollar long delayed once canceled effort to build that rail tunnel is officially starting construction. We'll have more on that coming up here on Bloomberg Radio. Global News 24 hours a day and whenever you want it with Bloomberg News Now. I'm Denise Pellegrini and this is Bloomberg. News when you want it. Get the latest headlines with Bloomberg News Now. Israel's war against Hamas militants rages on. Antony Blinken pledged unwavering US support. The top stories from Bloomberg's global reporters at the click of a button. Apple has launched a range of upgraded iPhones. Get the latest news when you want it with Bloomberg News Now. A reversal in policy for President Biden. Listen on Bloomberg .com. The Bloomberg Business App and anywhere you get your podcasts. Bloomberg News Now. Context changes everything. Walking into the building for the. The world is more complex than ever but that complexity pushes me to look at the bigger picture. I'm Emily Chang and I cover tech culture innovation and the future of business for Bloomberg. At Bloomberg reporters like me dig into the context of a story so you understand how it impacts you because context changes how you see things how you change things context changes everything. Start watching my shows and more at Bloomberg .com. The first after time the shooting

"shaikh" Discussed on WCPT 820

WCPT 820

04:09 min | 3 months ago

"shaikh" Discussed on WCPT 820

"Now for details. Toll free at this number. But wait, there's more. If you call right now, you could get a meter upgrade. In addition, we'll give you free a pair of diabetic socks as our special gift to you. Regardless of your age, if you suffer with diabetes and have insurance, you may qualify to get free delivery of your supplies. 800 -442 -0819. 800 -442 -0819. 800 -442 -0819. That's 800 -442 -0819. Chicago's Progressive Talk. WCPT 820. Where facts matter. You and me, if medicine was subsidized and health care was free, join a community. Rich men earning north of a million by Billy Bragg. Bragg released this song in response to Oliver Anthony's song, Rich Men North of Richmond, which has become a viral right -wing anthem and was referenced at last night's Republican presidential debate. This is Democracy Now!, democracynow .org, The War and Peace Report. I'm Amy Goodman. And I'm Nermeen Shaikh. Welcome to our listeners and viewers across the country and around the world. Two months to the day after the private Russian mercenary group, Wagner, staged a failed scrutiny. The group's head, Yevgeny Prigozhin, was apparently killed in a plane crash north of Moscow shortly after six p .m. local time Wednesday. Eyewitness videos posted online show the plane was missing a wing as it spiraled to the ground. The official passenger list said several other senior Wagner members were on board, including Dmitry Utkin, a mercenary commander who allegedly founded the Wagner group in 2014. Also on board was Yevgeny Makarian, who fought with the mercenary group in Syria and long -time Prigozhin ally Valeriy Chikalov, who was in charge of his business empire, including his oil investments in Syria. Last month, the United States imposed sanctions on the operation that Prigozhin and other Wagner leaders were assassinated for leading a failed mutiny in June that saw heavily armed mercenaries advanced within 120 miles of Moscow. Adding to the speculation, Russian media reported Wednesday the Kremlin has fired senior Russian general Sergei Sirovakin chief. The general was known as an ally of the Wagner group and had not been seen in public since the mutiny. Just three days ago, Prigozhin posted one of his first offline videos since leading the failed uprising. He appeared to be somewhere in Africa and spoke with a rifle in his hands with other armed in Russia. We are working. The temperature is 50 plus degrees Celsius. soldiers. Acting as we like, Wagner PMC conducts reconnaissance and search actions, makes Russia even greater on all continents and Africa more free justice and happiness for the African people. We're making life a nightmare for ISIS and Al Qaeda and other bandits. Since Prigozhin was old Wednesday. There's been no official comment from the Kremlin or defense ministry. Russian president shorthand and Vladimir Putin gave a speech about an hour after the plane crashed, but he made no reference to it. Putin to address the BRICS summit remotely and again did not mention the crash. This was President Biden's response when asked to comment on the crash and the I don't know for a fact what happened. I must first believe there's not much that happens. I don't know enough I've been working out for the last hour and a half. For more, we're joined by Kimberly Martin, professor of political science at Barnard College, Columbia University. She's been researching and writing about Wagner Group for years.

"shaikh" Discussed on WCPT 820

WCPT 820

01:39 min | 3 months ago

"shaikh" Discussed on WCPT 820

"Your legacy. Visit ready .gov forward slash plan for the tools and tips you need to start your emergency preparedness plan today. Brought you to by FEMA and the Ad Council. www because facts matter. You are listening to WCPG 820. Take care. Bikra by the Pakistani musician Abdul Hassan. This is Democracy Now! democracynow .org. The War and Peace Report. I'm Amy Goodman with Nermeen Shaikh. We end today's show with a new report by The Intercept. Secret Pakistan cables document U .S. pressure to remove Imran Khan. It follows up on their recent story that begins, quote, U .S. Department State encouraged the Pakistani government in a March 7th, 2022, meeting to remove Imran Khan as minister prime over his position on the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The cable describes a meeting between the Pakistani ambassador to the United States and two State Department officials that Imran Khan has repeatedly cited as leading to his political ouster after a no -confidence vote in parliament believed to have been organized with the backing of Pakistan's powerful military. The meeting came after then prime minister Imran Khan arrived in Russia on eve the of its invasion of Ukraine last February 2022. He could be heard telling a Russian a official, time what I have come, so much excitement as he arrived in Moscow's airport. On the day Russia ordered the invasion, Khan went ahead with his scheduled meeting with President Putin.

"shaikh" Discussed on Papa Phd Podcast

Papa Phd Podcast

01:44 min | 2 years ago

"shaikh" Discussed on Papa Phd Podcast

"A kiss. you poke school. Buddha nisa wounded. I'm not trade. Did session deal. Seek your middle age. Because you hope. Japan's fueled toha who've worked on. The portions are need. Victims was donde foreseen difficulty over. There is in university or sheldon cooper. Apogee weekly john. The tom bang mixie reserves. Maximilian spin. it that it's a a casino converse soon as book leap when the shaikh in do in society swift avoca plan for these. You murielle the cba also also are alive. Live as our son has a survey savvy. They mixed goop. Villa is to report niki. Puppy ashley about punk com not. Don't view it suggestively Career kilometers in the some fat to preserve the pathogen to espionage. Act the new vans. The little supposedly from the book gusts. Don't review the resemblance survey tunes. Which you not fond of schlock itajai timoti connecticut..

Buddha nisa toha sheldon cooper Maximilian Puppy ashley Japan cba niki john Villa connecticut
"shaikh" Discussed on Sounds Profitable

Sounds Profitable

02:40 min | 2 years ago

"shaikh" Discussed on Sounds Profitable

"Can i flip that question back at you. Oh god i would say i recently. I recently just started getting really into tech. M- ride home i don. I hadn't listened to it before. But it's a daily dose attack and it's been really helpful because i just had to start cutting different parts of wildlife out like that things like i just don't have the time to read all the tech news. That's not related to my work anymore. But but it's super interesting hobby-wise that's been really good. I really liking q codes from now. It's a new audio drama. And as brian cox in it who i love him as an actor and his voice like really pulls me into things. So i would say that those are are my current like right now and i q codes from now. Doesn't come out often enough. I guess the last one. That i was pretty like i. I think i heard all of them as soon as they would. Come out with of course michelle obama's podcast to. She's just so great. So many emotions going through each one of those episodes. I'm a fan of those are pretty good great. Well thank you again. So much joining us and i.

brian cox michelle obama
"shaikh" Discussed on Sounds Profitable

Sounds Profitable

14:25 min | 2 years ago

"shaikh" Discussed on Sounds Profitable

"Hop and rap being blocked by certain advertisers in. It's like well. I mean you might just be missing on people who are at the gym trying to like you know amp themselves up or sometimes even early in the morning or before a meeting and i think i think that one of the things you and i talked about before was tone and when i think about this everybody in podcasting for brand. Safety is so focused on turning the spoken word into text and then running it through these processes that exist and you can for meaning and context in tax. But are there tools out there right now for brand safety that take audio and actually can infer tone from the audio or from the video so as far as i know. There's no good tool out there. I think there are some who are trying to build it. It's a complex problem. So when you think about sentiments in tone of voice and things like sarcasm found like oh yeah. I love something and it's like well. You know on text that means you truly do love something. But you can't really offer that at the moment i i would say that. There's no good technology in the space that could truly capture that in an effective manner and one of the things that we think as an industry have to be mindful about again is to be very transparent about that because if there is a solution that's not working effectively ended up penalizing the publisher space or the podcast or just based on inaccurate mis classified information. That again hurting that ecosystem and goes right back to the consumer and we kind of just a a vicious cycle about points and it sounds like we're at a point where we're really prepared for keyword brand safety to be on the chopping block. It sounds like people are starting to recognize how it was what we needed. At the time we passed it. Were using it wrong. And we're hurting people that we need to positively benefit. So i'm actually really excited to see what you guys come up with. Because i think that people are looking for a new standard in a lot of these different things and all you need is a little bit of buy in and then a little bit of money behind it for campaigns looking to use it and then next thing you know we sought moving away from these things that i. I don't think anybody truly really thinks they're working. It's just when you delegate something so down to someone so junior and their job is to make that arrow go up into the right when it comes to that report they present to their boss's boss's boss. It's real easy to just say. I don't want to be around kovic without realizing the negative impact absolutely. And it's also interesting because when we think about brand safety something else that we've been really focusing in on especially for the podcasting space is to ship that narrative from brand safety to brand suitability so that same methodology that we're using the help identified. Is this falling into these categories of the dirty dozen for ib for example. It's also understanding. What are the other categories that show up so this is helping unlock additional podcast inventory and encourage discovery and monetization of additional podcasts. As well and an example. I like to use is for. Let's say an airline from a brand safety standpoint. Sure you don't want to be surrounded around content that has to do with plane. Crashes drunk pilots lost baggage flight delays sure but on the flip side instead of just being able to serve in traditional travel category podcasts. What if we unlock inventory for you. In the tech category podcasts. That is talking about the best gadgets to take with you on vacation or something to do with help or to do with mindfulness or finance. There's so many avenues that you can reach your audiences in much more creative ways so having that ability to also unlock additional inventory through that contextual intelligence will again evolve that ecosystem and give other podcasts and opportunity to also be heard and have this connection with the brand which is the positive impact for both players. i think i'm more keen on contextual targeting than i am on brand safety just i like the additive instead of the the restrictive. Yeah i think that's the truth. Sometimes we get the carrot and the stick. We got to try and get the advertise in here and when we say. Hey it's safe. We can block south sometimes. That's what they need to hear to start. But when we are able to pivot and say hey let's let's focus on where you fit more than where you don't have it. I think that's where we really have a lot of success. We've been talking to a lot of advertisers. Who seem really excited about that idea. And i think it also comes down to the fact and i know i keep going back to this but ultimately we're all consumers at the end of the day we're all listening to podcast. We love content of certain kinds. So there's also this understanding that bears a responsibility everyone has in the ecosystem to make this thing work and in order to do that. They want to be able to continue that monetization of these stories and monetization of podcast but having that level of transparency some level of control when things don't go right but at the same time also understanding that yes. This is something we can move forward with in a more. As you mentioned. Brian additive way instead of extremely restrictive where the impact of that has been seen in a few different in many different ways. Before so i think it's kind of like cyclical at this point on. Hopefully we're headed to words a better part of how to think about brand safety brand suitability for hopeful. Me too and so you know i. I think that brand safety overall is going to go through a lot of improvements But what are your thoughts on what we're going to see in two thousand twenty one from brand safety safety in podcasting specifically so i think In twenty twenty one we are going to see the first few really effective ways. Of doing brown's safety i know there's a few vendors in the space who've already been trying to do it and i'm sure they're methodologies agreed on. It's kind of a collaboration of industry coming together and finding ways to improve improve solutions. But hopefully i do expect there to be a little bit more of an enhancement in the methodology used to do contextual intelligence across podcasts. So that is going back to finding the context and going well beyond simple one to one match with keywords. That's going to be the one to better understand the taxonomy of different publishers inventory than of course building out those solutions to be able to target in some way doing it a little bit more effectively. I don't know if that's will necessarily happen. In twenty twenty one but i would be so keen to see some sort of market research into societal trends based on the contextual intelligence across podcasting so what are terms that we saw pop up in twenty twenty and during different times when we have a very large amount of podcasting files that were ingesting and understanding. What does that translate to to understand what was happening in society and how that impacted the stories that were being told at the time what stories and what category started talking about something else. I think we might be a little bit of a waste from that to maybe twenty twenty one. But it's definitely something the larger podcast players who own so much inventory or have the ability to provide that level of information. They could truly tap into their as well so from a brand safety perspective. I i'm thinking that's going to be the next step and then evolution will continue towards better understanding sentiment and tone of voice. What is the methodology. That can be used for that. We already actually have something that we've been. We already have it in place. We've been refining it right now but also the different languages. There was this article. I think that's right. I think we we've podcasting is if it's not north america or us. If it's not an english people are not paying attention to it. I think that that is a big stake. It's wild and i think you covered this. In one of your one of your. You might have actually covered this about gio in one of your articles. Well where in india they've been thinking about the entire podcasting ecosystem and there's so many people listening podcasts. In the way they're doing it and as you dig deeper there's so many different languages so another thing we've been thinking about and we have been refining. I think we're in a really good spot. Right now is not just the translation. But we've been working with linguistic teams locally to understand context as well so certain terms or certain phrases that i use in. I'm originally from pakistan's if i use them in or do and then i translate the english. They make no sense at all rights just understanding that context as well and also understanding the cultural context around certain words like alcohol or sex a taboo word and certain categories and certain countries. It's really interesting stuff. I mean i'm really excited about that. I guess related to that in diaby has so many different things that they kind of enforce enforcer. They suggest in the up to agree with their suggestions. One of the things that always interests me as they. It's very narrow. Who they who suggest that to to is there any sort of framework from the ib or from any other governing body. That says this is how conceptualization works. This is how brand safety works. Is there an agreed upon framework between all these companies or is there a risk that you know i believe com score is working with ads wiz and i'm very excited to hear in the future who you are working within the podcast space. But is there a framework. That's gonna come out. That makes it a little bit easier for me. As a publisher to try both com score and oracle moat. Or is it is really. Just everybody's kind of an independent right now brian. I feel like this is us everything in our industry right like that standardization and the true framework would be so helpful. But if we're being totally candidate here there's not really a specific guidelines of. This is how we should go about it. Which i think is a great starting point. But there's there's no like business the only way to go about it right now. Which on some aspect is probably good it allows for innovation and like stop stagnancy but in in like just standardizing your processes and workflows sure that can be a little frustrating translating any data. I mean even he right now with ab certification podcasting just because three partners are hy-vee certified doesn't mean the numbers the same doesn't mean when you transfer from one to the next the next it's to be the same but i mean the general guidelines is good. It's a great starting point. It means that we can all agree. On what the basis is are and how to improve and then there can be different competitive advantages. But i think the the biggest thing is that especially in podcasting. We have so little compared to other spaces but it's not a negative because we can do so much with it. And and i'm really excited or truly am excited to see what you come up with your killer product manager and what you're doing oracle mode is going to be really cool to see in podcast thank you. There's actually it's also interesting to think about that whole concept overall. It's well i think brand safety itself will have to evolve in certain ways right so when you have brand safety categories. You don't know what key words are within that category you don't know what's counts as adult content for one vendor versus another and we've kind of seen this across the board outside of audio as well we've seen this display video and either challenges that the industry has to come together and collaborate on. Maybe that's very like idealistic of me. But you know that's it's fine. It's how we stay motivated for it. Then i think this will be one of the areas that podcasting benefits from a more mature organized solution. Because you're already having these conversations for all brands brand safety and all of the areas that you cover an podcasting. Getting brand safety is going to benefit from all that work. That's happening in other channels. Where's a lot of parts of podcasting not only is it new and podcasting but so is the collaborative conversation absolutely and i think there's also i don't know if you feel this brian but there's definitely like a personality type for audio where there's there's this this passion for it right like you have this protective nature around audio like you wanna take all the good things that you've managed to do for displaying video but you also want to be very mindful to not fall into the same traps as you might have four displaying video where reading an article online means i have to x. out of five different ads before it gets my content like you can't do that for audio and it's interesting too because audio is very it's a very intimate platform right. So it's it's finding ways to create that connection with your audience through through music. It can completely alter your emotional state and it can also totally alter your experience an example. We like to use also when you're watching a horror movie. And if i turn off the sound or if i put some goofy music behind you're you're either going to be scared or you're not going to be scared of the image can stay. The same visuals are exactly the same. But that sound can completely impact how you're going to feel about a so. It's interesting i saw. I saw somebody re cut like the shining would like as like a sitcom and it's like. Wow it really is the background music and how you frame certain shots but this is. This is so fantastic. I'm very happy that you came on. And i'm very happy to see you know oracle moat in the podcasting space more. So what i like to do for. When i end off a podcast is i like to ask my guest. What their podcasts of choices right now when you listening to right now that That you wanna share with my audience. I'm a big fan of hidden brain. I think it's so fascinating. I love that podcast. So every new episode of just kind of waiting for it. And i love to listen to that view others that i've also been listening to when i want to just chill and like kind of you know. Break away from everything that's happening in the world. this is an old one but two dope queens is hilarious. It's like the kind where you're walking on the street and the app to stop. 'cause you're laughing at hard it's amazing so those are two that i definitely listen to and then of course dabbling and all the tech podcast as well. There's so many good ones out there. It's really hard to choose brian..

kovic oracle diaby Brian brown north america brian pakistan india
"shaikh" Discussed on Sounds Profitable

Sounds Profitable

02:37 min | 2 years ago

"shaikh" Discussed on Sounds Profitable

"It's like well that's everything. Yeah yeah even podcasts. At the starter. Podcasts i remember when i was a megaphone who got requests to like block that for their megaphone targeted marketplace and it was hard to explain that like goo sure we can read through the show notes but the reality is is any podcast. That is talking about things day in day out. He is going to say something about kobe. Because of the world change. I mean as we're recording this. We just had the insurrection at the white house and like the attempted coup..

kobe white house
"shaikh" Discussed on Sounds Profitable

Sounds Profitable

07:57 min | 2 years ago

"shaikh" Discussed on Sounds Profitable

"Together in in different formats for a long time. But you know. I want to highlight. You hear your from oracle moat your senior product manager on a team that really digs into these features. You're pretty much an expert on it. And i think that what you can explain to the audience here and what we can go over communicate extension because i think a lot of us in the space in podcasting Are kind of brought up from podcasting and into advertising whereas i think a lot of other mediums. Like what i'm realizing is that you could hire an advertiser in another medium and you could from digital display. And then they can move over to digital video or programmatic is transferable between them but podcasting is different and a lot of these base things we take for granted and other advertising channels or either a little bit more nuance to get started or things. That aren't common sense commonsense till out of the space. So let's kick it off by brand safety. I'd love to hear what you define brand safety is. What's really important about it. Yeah absolutely brian. Thank you so much for having me. This is great. I love your newsletter. Thank you okay. So informative and i think it's a really important part of educating the ecosystem overall. The good news is audio is evolving so all the true education we can get out there and somebody to dig through all of the research and actually put stuff together in a digestible format. I think it's going to help though. Full ecosystem like every player across the board. So i'm a fan but yeah brand. Safety is definitely a very important one. I absolutely love audio. And all things audio and i know you and i have spoken about all things from podcast measurement brand safety the opportunity than the dangers of things with within our ecosystem as well which which i think is always really interesting so i think just starting off with what brand safety means. It's interesting because it's oftentimes. It's considered certain key words that should be avoided and certain genres and then you get full categories of things that are completely avoided and what we tend to mess as not just an ecosystem of advertising but more so as society is that when advertising does not fund these stories when you have this short sighted approach towards france safety just blocking key words or refusing to run with publishers. Who might be telling sure thing talking about things which are controversial but really important stories to be told you ultimately hurt journalism so brand safety right now. I think still has a lot of work that can be done and has to be a little bit more thoughtful. We're not quite there yet. And one comment. I will make more about this and we can. Of course keep continuing the conversation as well. But i think for display in video. We've we've definitely had some really neat innovations in the space as an industry. So we've done some really cool stuff but there's no denying but certain things that we've done have actually hurt the consumer experience on. It's really created a trust deficit for online content whether it's social media whether it's reading articles and right now in the podcasting space. There's almost like this loyalty. And trust and most publishers have moved into podcasting to be able to create that connection of trust with their audiences so brand. Safety is a really important one because this is something we can control to make sure that we're protective off the medium and we don't end up ultimately hurting not only journalism but also just the experience of listening to a podcast and so in other mediums. Do they for brand safety do they. Take they take the tax on page or they take the information that they know about the website in the domain and they make decisions based off of it and it is that accurate how it works well. It's it's interesting. There's a few different ways and we brand safety at oracle moat as well but just to kind of keep it a little bit more informative of just what's in the industry right now. There's definitely these keyword block lists that are going around where there's words like knife on there. Which means that all your recipe pages could potentially get blocked as well. There's words like breasts that gets classified as adult content whereas that is so much mom content to and your cg brands if you're not going to be serving around mom content then you know you're missing a key demographic for yourself so there's definitely this level of just throwing out the it's kinda comes from like fear based approach of like. Oh my god. We can't have our ads running against any kind of content. So be more careful. But but i think there's there's a lot to be learned. There's so one of the things that we focus in on just to kind of talk about this from the standpoint of why we care about it so much why we're hopefully being a little bit more mindful about it is that you have to understand the context of the text so not just was the keyword on the page but how frequently did it show up on the page. What were the corresponding words. What other words on the page that can truly tell you what the content is in. The context is as opposed to just did a specific word. Show up one other thing that we've also heard of in the podcasting space is just doing brand safety. Based on the description of the album podcasts. Yet the notes and that's absurd to because it's like okay. So i could write these notes and say like this is a very brand safe podcast and then i could talk about whatever i want. And there's no visibility into that so hopefully the transcriptions of these podcasts and having a really strong algorithm to figure out context will not only provide advertisers with the tools. They need but also publishers with the ability to monetize a much more effective way and not have content. Unfairly blocked or blacklisted or so. A lot of the tools are based around texts. Right like it's you can turn an image text on image into tax. You can take the text from a website. You can take the audio from video the audio from streaming audio podcasting you turn it into tax and then all these tools with great there. Is that equalised. Because that means that there doesn't have to be something unique built free to fill granted as a visual component to some of them an image could have like it could be like by these apples and it could have something pretty vulgar visually on there so there are other tools for that and video but in general. What's cool about this. Is that podcasting by transcribing. It puts it in the same classification the same ability for this already mature technology that exists to be applicable for podcast. The podcast transcript right. So the brand safety technology doesn't have to start from square. One that transcript can be fed into these same types of machines but now we have two big things one you're saying keywords aren't enough right just looking at keywords. You see breast one time on there and you decide that it's adult content. You're missing out on that. Entire mom category or even more. So you don't look at the entire sentence for the sentence before and after and now you're missing out on context and so what you're saying. Is that key. Words are great and maybe keyword density is probably like the bare minimum. Probably shouldn't look for a word once in back out of it completely. But the next part is actual conceptualization and not just calling keyword density contextualisation which is looking at that whole sentence looking at how it's us and applying that is that accurate. Yeah absolutely and then it's also just the frequency with witches shows up. There are so many things that inform the context. I think a starting point sure. We can talk about like higher level genres and categories. But it kind of goes back to what we were talking about earlier to. Brian like completely avoiding news. That's dangerous for us or what happened when kovic started no advertiser wanted to be surrounded around cuvette content. And.

oracle brian france kovic Brian
"shaikh" Discussed on The ChoNilla Podcast

The ChoNilla Podcast

02:52 min | 2 years ago

"shaikh" Discussed on The ChoNilla Podcast

"That you so now. David can see saul and is all like yeah. It's me david. What gives it could throw the spirit. If god's sent you to kill me then. Let's give him a burt offering or something instead. But if it's your ego chasing me and you're doing this for clout than everyone who encourage you will be cursed to lose all their property and worship other gods this david saying so yes so. You'd better not hurt me or try to kill me anymore. Because god will make sure to hunt you down and i got receipts. When you're being sess sir then saw started sobbing again and was on like geez. Croix's ludivine through will not see that happen yet. Okay matter again do sorry. Thanks for not killing me and probably not to try and kill you again. Krakatau tier. I can't believe i've been such an asshole. So then david was alike. Send someone over to get your spear and water. And don't forget that god is making sure i stay alive so you don't wanna keep messing around with that stall solid still sobbing and it was all like david dan. Why are you so awesome in everything issue. But i love you so this point. They both went their separate ways back to their homes to get fall fund bible facts. Attaches mother is david. Sister and her name is which makes shaikh david's nephew. The meaning of shy is father of a gift next time. We'll hear more about david working with the philippines and doing more tennis. High pay genocide was the number of the genocide. Safar seventy sixty eight something like that. I'll i'll try and get free next show. Oh that's and the name that's the that's the.

David saul david dan Croix shaikh david Safar philippines tennis
"shaikh" Discussed on Democracy Now! Audio

Democracy Now! Audio

03:28 min | 2 years ago

"shaikh" Discussed on Democracy Now! Audio

"And wondering is this going to now then, is that access of being able to you know, provide them even with setting up vaccinations appointments, we were the ones who were advocating that farmworkers be put at that top of the list of essential workers with health care workers, you know, to be prioritized for vaccinations. Thank goodness. Governor Bush did listen to us. The governor's am also invested millions of dollars for you know, organizations community-based Grassroots organizations to provide Choice. Direct Outreach regarding open and finally Adam Cohen as the Supreme Court term wraps up what are other cases you're looking at Well, there's a lot of damaging stuff that's in the pipeline. The court accepted a case, which could be the one that they used to overturn Roe v Wade, out of Mississippi and there hasn't been five votes to do that yet. They're maybe now there's also a big Harvard affirmative action case in which Asian American students are challenging Harvard selection procedures, so far, 2 quarts of upheld Harvard's affirmative action plan but there's a very real chance that chief justice Roberts who does not like respace remedies of any kind will use the Harvard case, probably next year, possibly next year to end affirmative action in even private education and maybe even more broadly. So there's a lot of damage that even a six, two three majority is likely to do and expect it to take up a transgender case. Could possibly there is a transgender case that they could take up out of Virginia that could do a lot of damage there as well. Yeah, so again we're seeing what is 6 to 3 Court can do a job? Which would also preserve a conservative majority for many years. Maybe decades can do a lot more damage across our society. Well, I want to thank you all so much for being with us. Adam Cohen, writer and author of supreme and equality, the Supreme Court's 50-year battle for a more unjust America will link to your peace in the Atlantic Justice, Breyer's Legacy defining decision. And I want to thank Camilla Chavez executive director of the Dolores. Huerta Foundation daughter of Dolores Huerta and nice page. Travis that does it for the show. If you'd like to sign up for our daily digest. Send the word democracy. Now one word no space text it to 66866 democracy. Now it's six. Six, eight, six, six democracy Now is produced with Renee felt my birthday in Augusta. Nermeen Shaikh, Maria Torres Santa Carla Wheels. Tell me where enough to rain in a dures. I'm Al Khaimah roster John Hamilton. Road. Karen, honey. I'm a student and Rihanna control. With general manager is Julie Crosby. Happy 5th Birthday to Julie's daughter a heavily. I'm Amy Goodman, please be safe. Thanks so much for joining us..

Julie Crosby Amy Goodman Camilla Chavez Julie Nermeen Shaikh Adam Cohen Karen John Hamilton 50-year next year Mississippi Dolores. Huerta Foundation Rihanna Six Travis Dolores Huerta Harvard Renee Governor 2 quarts
"shaikh" Discussed on The Over 40 Alpha Podcast

The Over 40 Alpha Podcast

08:36 min | 2 years ago

"shaikh" Discussed on The Over 40 Alpha Podcast

"Know. Sorry i just to know please please go. Men aren't getting checked because they're scared about a little pink stink and it's like you need to just take a brass like everybody else you and get checks. No symptoms the symptoms of blood in the urine. The need to urinate frequently. The inability jira the constant pain in lower back pulpits or upper thighs. That already means that you're pretty far. Gone two hundred nine. These symptoms aren't like when this art happenings. Let's get a check it's like no. These are the symptoms that if you've gotten their trump yeah we got. We got to talk to somebody right. And it doesn't mean if you have a family history or no family history it can affect any body right so go even. If you're getting extremely healthy go get checked. And it's men's health month and this is the big prostate cancer month. So let's all get our national level shaikh and we might as well you know. Call okay doc. Coming in for the p the big p c prostate cancer check. Kcm coming over the pcc. Grammy attack service and give you just a little health tip at noticing. What color your. ps. I don't know i'm sure you talk about this with your guys jobs. Hydration levels noticing what color your p. is paying attention is actually important. A pink boll is a red flag lead can be a sign of prostate cancer. Bladder kidney disease you need to find out where the blood is coming from and even at three. Your bowels right. You're seeing a little bit of a little bit of blood once not to be too concerned about. You may just have a little fisher cut or something bose. Has it right especially from my. You know. bowel movements. That weren't actually that passes. Easily rights does happen But if it's a consistent may if it looks like alarming you gotta go talk to them right. Pay attention to your p. Hydration and for anything else. That may be going on in your body. Love all right. This lee cancer the speaking of cancer. Here's the meth men. Don't get breast cancer. While i didn't realize men. God breast cancer but men definitely have breast because a high estrogen level if you have high s if you have man boobs that's because you're estrogen levels are super super high their way out weighing sauce and levels. So we've got to deal with that but do men get breast cancer. Yes the true men. Do get men you get cancer. Goodness why can i say time today. Men have breast tissue. You guys have a chess right your to your tissues. Pretty much like that of pre-pubescent girls okay. But all of you know. Approximately fifteen hundred men in canada get diagnosed each year and four hundred men. Each year die from breast cancer huge of he. I had no clue even even already done this before. And i still had no clue i did. I remember remembering that right and and back in do with a lot of different things breast cancer. You know there's a lot of research around breast cancer. It is around a lot with women because our tissue is a little bit more Evolved than than men's breast tissue. But that doesn't mean that you are not susceptible so things like being sixty years or over. Have a family history of Maternal family history as well so you have like a grandmother or a mother or a sister with breast cancer. You need to be paying attention right. You need to look to see. Look down a lot and go wait a minute. I'm yeah the loves the bumps. The breaths checks right like did not work right obesity. Alcoholism because we all know. Alcohol raises increases. Your estrogen right. Thank you for saying you're welcome. Yeah yeah chronic. Chronic liver diseases right high estrogen levels. And i didn't even like talk about cannabis cannabis affects your liver right. If you're eating edibles rake. Different ways of consuming cannabis cannabis educator and one of the ways. I one of the things i do is talk to men and women especially how degree cannabis into their lives but how to do it in a conscious intentional way. And one of the things that we don't recognize is the difference. Ways that we can consume cannabis which is so wonderful for so many people such a powerful medicine but we have to also be aware that we are supplementing or supporting our bodies to receive that medicine so edibles for example are really hard on our livers right smoking. it k. I mean we're doing science. Not as hard but a little bit harsher on your lungs. Right but edibles are harder on your liver. So are you taking your milk. Thistle alcohol content right doing that stuff. for yeah i mean i mean you know for me when i talk to these guys specifically the ones who come in with with the man boobs they all know who they are. They all know it You know and i you know number one thing. I say it's estrogen. Alcohol is estrogens guys. I tell you that all the you know you guys always ask. What can i drink. I don't drink anything until you reach your goal. Once you hit your goal then you can start to implement alcohol and see where that's going but this is about breast cancer about estrogen. So we want to make sure that you know we lose fat. Wanna make sure that you know We're not drinking alcohol a lot of alcohol or you know we're not over over over indulging. Yeah and yeah the lavender for sure. I mean i talked to angelo like. Don't even bring that lavender even close to me when hamas come on man. Yeah yeah yeah. A little bit isn't too bad. Ride like a little spreads just the big thing smell. Nice is really lovely just like soy right nine so like soy has up. Buckton estrogen in Sweet potatoes as well. But if we're by if you're going to consume tofu for example right by organic suck because there's nothing wrong consuming tofu right and it's about balancing your diet to be able to Not just being tofu base especially for those of you who are beginning vegetarian and doing that. Beautiful life right So paying attention to the different estra janik qualities that you may be absorbing And looking into you know even environmental factors that could be leading to that so paying attention. Sure what what are some of the reality. Check soc- the absent ralph. Yes there's little reality check here so Reality check for those of you. Who are thinking or concerned about breast cancer or you know wanna get started having the regiment as part of your health you can actually do. A self exams is what they recommended women as well doing a self exam every three months. It's really great to be in the shower. All you have to do is just kind of lift your arm up and start to feel in and around your breast tissue area right and as you start to feel in iran you will get to know your body. This is just another way to become aware of your body if you feel under the nipple across the chest using the tips of your fingers and feeling any lumps up mayfield. Like a not or like a p. He size right Noticing any discharge or bleeding from your nipples or any type of it she nipple rash. Consult your doctor immediately. If you're feeling any of those things right okay. So guys the the the bottom line is though is let's decrease that estrogen right. You guys making you know some of the things that you're doing are fine but they're are actually increasing estrogen levels which are blocking and killing your not level. So let's go let's go. Let's get into a little health tip just to help tip. Then here's some great ways to be looking at this loading up on antioxidant foods antioxidants vitamins to see and phytochemicals from plants. Right superfoods can help reverse cell damage and prevent breast cancer okay. Eating berries for breakfast for example pack full of antioxidants anti inflammatory properties. Right we also have to watch..

canada sixty years today each year Each year two hundred nine one four hundred men Approximately fifteen hundred three months Buckton trump angelo things three shaikh
"shaikh" Discussed on They Called This a Movie

They Called This a Movie

05:20 min | 2 years ago

"shaikh" Discussed on They Called This a Movie

"Gye courtney as kaneohe. Yes i made a mistake for the the shanxi movie. The bag looks like john cornyn. I was like oh. This movie looks really good. And then the guy who looks like giant kourtney comes fuck now. I can't see this movie. Because i courtney is in it chrysler. You're okay fighter with an australian accent. Shaikh gordon up to. How do we want this movie to suck. Let's get courtney involved. I hope you. Here's this by the way. Fuck him very. Clint howard on this podcast. And he's a better person than jet. Courtney be so fun loving fuck me. That was my. You tryin since you got. It was okay. I thought it could be better. He's going to take that twenty one hour flight from australia. S get that'd be great shows. Danny de you say on this podcast didn't give a fuck about me. Sitting in janis chairs. Master boyd who assume is johnny san. Say he's reading tabloid suggests that johnny cage is one big phony so he offers him information on the tournament that will prove that he is not a fraud. I would love the audience too. And it's no if master boy. It's somehow in the mortal kombat work because the way they introduce him is. You're supposed to know who that guy is right. Yeah at least you're supposed to know who the actor cameo meatloaf that is. I don't think it's meatloaf no it's not but that when i first saw me thinking it was eric bana. Yeah i know it's not me. Look who that was fun fact that was also supposed to be steven. Spielberg her dual dual characters. They really wanted him in this movie so they just kept offering. You want to be this guy. Be this guy. There's literally no no mention of him ever again in the games in any other movies ever. I don't think he's ever mentioned in the game. He doesn't look like he knows. Martial arts either. No he knows. Tiger schulmann's martial arts. He just like some overweight out of shape guy who may be back in the day was good just like telling kids right kids to you know you know punch each other sounds good and then just kinda smokes a cigarette in in the corner..

john cornyn australia johnny san eric bana Spielberg twenty one hour Shaikh gordon Courtney Danny steven Tiger schulmann Clint howard Gye courtney first kaneohe one big phony johnny cage dual chrysler giant kourtney
"shaikh" Discussed on South Asian Stories

South Asian Stories

05:45 min | 2 years ago

"shaikh" Discussed on South Asian Stories

"Think that we can transform outcomes for future kids. I could not agree more and i. It's funny you have a conversation with your husband. Because my wife and i talked about the to is you know me are who we are because of our parents and right and they're they are who they are their parents but we don't have to be our parents like we like we can be our own version of ourselves like it's wherever i am wherever my wife's are that's the hybrid of two and then we can make those decisions for our kids and our future generations so like that's powerful to me because the buck and stop with you if you wanna make a change if you want to make a pivot of how your view the world how they grew up what sensitive have been apathetic beings. You can make that change right. And sometimes people i think give up. Oh this is how it's always is how my family is. And i think that's kinda short minded it's myopic and and i love that you're taking that with your own kids in your core you know family unit and how that expands out And one of the things i want to ask you about senate is optimism and like you know how wearing thinking on the optimistic side. How do you feel about where education education policy going whether in how you approach it with your kids or outside of it you know of you know in in other communities. What are you optimistic about. The where are going. I think the recent conversations regarding black lives matter has been really hard on because they feel like we're finally kind of at the apex were willing to have difficult conversations truly. I don't think about twenty years ago when we were ten years older eight years old. I don't remember those conversations. Really happy. And i think what's so. What makes me optimistic as you know. We're willing to now see that. There's not just one narrative like we do you know we our strength is our diversity..

two eight years old one narrative twenty years ago one ten years older senate apex
"shaikh" Discussed on South Asian Stories

South Asian Stories

04:36 min | 2 years ago

"shaikh" Discussed on South Asian Stories

"At teach for america. How'd you decide what to do next. After that i think my life is so much about serendipity right i think we think about where we want to be right and we think about where we were going to go. And howard life takes us a completely different route though i had a fellowship working with senator mike austin and denver. It was supposed to be like a two month six to eight week. Type gig at learning about policy getting people together were educational leaders and then them their learnings to back into the classroom and that was what i was aiming to do like i point denver for a few weeks. I'll be back when i was in denver. There was a position that opened up with teach for america to be on staff to help teach and coach core members and literally the job. Valid my lab. I had a friend who was like you know you're going to be great at this. You know you really get energy from coaching and people and i really think she'll look into it. I went and did the job interview. I got the job the next day so my plan of moving back to baltimore never happened. I called my roommate at the time. Neta who's one of my best friends at l. Is just like sorry nutty. Like i'm going back to denver now and i had all my bags. I went back to baltimore all my bags packed. Everything moved to denver the next week. So how is it was crazy. I just think you now to our earlier conversations about life right there. There are so many things outside our life that we can't control. And i think we have this this feeling or thought process. We can control things in our own life to right like if if we work hard. The quintessential deysi mentality if we work hard if we do the right steps if we respect our parents because that is a critical ever If we do internships will get the job and we will be successful eventually get married have kids happily ever after but so many of the factors in our own life. We can't control like we did. We can't we can't so i think a professional journey has just taken me throughout the country in the world and install many moments..

Neta mike austin two month next week next day six teach for america eight week one baltimore senator denver nutty
"shaikh" Discussed on Sounds Profitable

Sounds Profitable

06:12 min | 2 years ago

"shaikh" Discussed on Sounds Profitable

"Thank you so much joining me. Here mama We're going to talk today about brand safety at the article. I wrote a little while ago was brand. Safety is here. let's use it. And you and i have been talking about brand safety and conceptualization all the great things in advertising for a long time. We've been working together in in different formats for a long time. But i wanna highlight you hear your from oracle moat your senior product manager on a team. That really digs into these teachers. You're pretty much an expert on it. And i think that what you can explain to the audience here and what we can go over communicate extension because i think a lot of us in the space in podcasting are kind of brought up from podcasting into advertising whereas i think a lot of other mediums. Like what i'm realizing is that you could hire an advertiser in another medium and you could from digital spy. And then they can move over to digital video or programmatic is transferable between them. Podcasting is different and a lot of these things that we take for granted and other advertising channels are either a little bit more nuance to get started or things that aren't commonsense till out of the space so let's kick it off by brand. I'd love to hear what you define brand safety is like what's really important about it. Yeah absolutely brian. Thank you so much for having me. This is great. I love your newsletter. A so informative and i think it's a really important part of educating the ecosystem over all the good news says audio is evolving so all the true education we can get out there and somebody to dig through all of the research. Nash put stuff together in a digestible format. I think it's gonna help though. Full ecosystem every player across the board. So a i'm a fan but yeah brand. Safety is definitely a very important one. I absolutely love audio. All things audio. And i know you and i have spoken about all things from podcast. Measurement brand safety the opportunity than the dangers of things with within our ecosystem as well which which i think is always really interesting so i think just starting off with what brand safety means. It's interesting because it's oftentimes just considered key words that should be avoided and certain genres many get full categories of things that are completely avoided and what we tend to mess as not just an ecosystem of advertising but more so a society is that when advertising does not fund these stories when you have the short sighted approach towards france safety blocking key words or refusing to run with publishers. Who might be telling sure thing talking about things which are controversial but really important stories to be told you ultimately hurt journalism so brand safety right now. I think still a lot of work that can be done and has to be a little bit more thoughtful. We're not quite there yet. And one comment. I will make more about this and we can. Of course keep continuing the conversation as well. But i think for displaying video. We've we've definitely had some really neat. Innovations in the space is an industry. So we've done some really cool stuff but there's no denying that certain things that we've done have actually hurt the consumer experience and it's really created a trust deficit for online content whether it's social media whether it's reading articles and right now in the podcasting space. There's almost like this loyalty. And trust and most publishers have moved into podcasting to be able to create that connection of trust with their audiences so brand. Safety is a really important one because this is something we can control to make sure that we're protective off the medium and we don't end up ultimately hurting not only journalism but also just the experience of listening to a podcast. Yeah yeah and so in other mediums. Do they Brand safety do they take. They take the tax on a page or they take the information that they know about the website domain and they make decisions based off of it and it is that accurate. How it works. Well it's it's interesting. There's a few different ways and we to brand safety at oracle moat as well but just kind of keep it a little bit more informative of just what's in the industry right now. There's definitely these keyword block lists that are going around where there's words like knife on there. Which means that all recipe pages could potentially get blocked as well. There's words like that gets classified as adult content whereas that is so much mom content to and you're cbj brands. If you're not going to be serving around mom content than you're missing key demographics for yourself. So there's definitely been a level of just throwing out the it's kinda comes from like a fear based approach of like. Oh my god. We can't have our ads running against any kind of content. So be more careful. But but i think there's there's a lot to be learned there so one of the things that we focus in on just to kind of talk about this from the standpoint of why we care about it so much and where we're hopefully being a little bit more mindful about it is that you have to understand the context of the text so not just was the keyword on the page but how frequently did it show up on the page. What were the corresponding words. What other words. We're on the page. That can truly tell you what. The content is in the context of adipose digest. Did a specific word show up. One other thing that we've also heard of in the podcasting space is just doing brand safety based on the description of the yet the no. It's an absurd to because it's like okay. So i could write these notes and say like this is a very brand safe podcast and then i could talk about whatever i want. And there's no visibility into that the hopefully the transcriptions of these podcasts and having a really strong algorithm to figure out will not only provide advertisers with the tools. They need but also publishers with the ability to monetize a much more effective way and not have content unfairly

today brian Nash while ago oracle
How You Should Be Protecting Your Brand with Moomal Shaikh

Sounds Profitable

06:12 min | 2 years ago

How You Should Be Protecting Your Brand with Moomal Shaikh

"Thank you so much joining me. Here mama We're going to talk today about brand safety at the article. I wrote a little while ago was brand. Safety is here. let's use it. And you and i have been talking about brand safety and conceptualization all the great things in advertising for a long time. We've been working together in in different formats for a long time. But i wanna highlight you hear your from oracle moat your senior product manager on a team. That really digs into these teachers. You're pretty much an expert on it. And i think that what you can explain to the audience here and what we can go over communicate extension because i think a lot of us in the space in podcasting are kind of brought up from podcasting into advertising whereas i think a lot of other mediums. Like what i'm realizing is that you could hire an advertiser in another medium and you could from digital spy. And then they can move over to digital video or programmatic is transferable between them. Podcasting is different and a lot of these things that we take for granted and other advertising channels are either a little bit more nuance to get started or things that aren't commonsense till out of the space so let's kick it off by brand. I'd love to hear what you define brand safety is like what's really important about it. Yeah absolutely brian. Thank you so much for having me. This is great. I love your newsletter. A so informative and i think it's a really important part of educating the ecosystem over all the good news says audio is evolving so all the true education we can get out there and somebody to dig through all of the research. Nash put stuff together in a digestible format. I think it's gonna help though. Full ecosystem every player across the board. So a i'm a fan but yeah brand. Safety is definitely a very important one. I absolutely love audio. All things audio. And i know you and i have spoken about all things from podcast. Measurement brand safety the opportunity than the dangers of things with within our ecosystem as well which which i think is always really interesting so i think just starting off with what brand safety means. It's interesting because it's oftentimes just considered key words that should be avoided and certain genres many get full categories of things that are completely avoided and what we tend to mess as not just an ecosystem of advertising but more so a society is that when advertising does not fund these stories when you have the short sighted approach towards france safety blocking key words or refusing to run with publishers. Who might be telling sure thing talking about things which are controversial but really important stories to be told you ultimately hurt journalism so brand safety right now. I think still a lot of work that can be done and has to be a little bit more thoughtful. We're not quite there yet. And one comment. I will make more about this and we can. Of course keep continuing the conversation as well. But i think for displaying video. We've we've definitely had some really neat. Innovations in the space is an industry. So we've done some really cool stuff but there's no denying that certain things that we've done have actually hurt the consumer experience and it's really created a trust deficit for online content whether it's social media whether it's reading articles and right now in the podcasting space. There's almost like this loyalty. And trust and most publishers have moved into podcasting to be able to create that connection of trust with their audiences so brand. Safety is a really important one because this is something we can control to make sure that we're protective off the medium and we don't end up ultimately hurting not only journalism but also just the experience of listening to a podcast. Yeah yeah and so in other mediums. Do they Brand safety do they take. They take the tax on a page or they take the information that they know about the website domain and they make decisions based off of it and it is that accurate. How it works. Well it's it's interesting. There's a few different ways and we to brand safety at oracle moat as well but just kind of keep it a little bit more informative of just what's in the industry right now. There's definitely these keyword block lists that are going around where there's words like knife on there. Which means that all recipe pages could potentially get blocked as well. There's words like that gets classified as adult content whereas that is so much mom content to and you're cbj brands. If you're not going to be serving around mom content than you're missing key demographics for yourself. So there's definitely been a level of just throwing out the it's kinda comes from like a fear based approach of like. Oh my god. We can't have our ads running against any kind of content. So be more careful. But but i think there's there's a lot to be learned there so one of the things that we focus in on just to kind of talk about this from the standpoint of why we care about it so much and where we're hopefully being a little bit more mindful about it is that you have to understand the context of the text so not just was the keyword on the page but how frequently did it show up on the page. What were the corresponding words. What other words. We're on the page. That can truly tell you what. The content is in the context of adipose digest. Did a specific word show up. One other thing that we've also heard of in the podcasting space is just doing brand safety based on the description of the yet the no. It's an absurd to because it's like okay. So i could write these notes and say like this is a very brand safe podcast and then i could talk about whatever i want. And there's no visibility into that the hopefully the transcriptions of these podcasts and having a really strong algorithm to figure out will not only provide advertisers with the tools. They need but also publishers with the ability to monetize a much more effective way and not have content unfairly

Oracle Nash Brian Cbj Brands France
"shaikh" Discussed on PodcastDetroit.com

PodcastDetroit.com

03:50 min | 3 years ago

"shaikh" Discussed on PodcastDetroit.com

"New shaikh awesome welcome. So how helping understand New year's resolutions are are one thing right right it. You can really start a resolution any time in the year though you can right and so folks that you know historically folks would do a new year's resolution at the beginning of the year typically don't keep that resolution because then they have the added stress and pressure of having to keep that resolution at the same time right. Yeah so you know when you're talking to your clients it's like you know what you're here. It's the middle of the year. Who cares right. You're here already. let's dig into. Let's get into this right for a lot of people you know when you start off with an unionist resolution. Sometimes people like you said matt put such prussia on themselves trying to achieve a goal. This is what the way you want to do this. Show set yourself short Realistic goals to get to where you want to be right. So short term realistic goal could be came the next month my goal is to lose four to five pounds and that should be a short term goal right once you achieve that you try and set yourself a goal for the following month. You know when you start off sign. Yeah you know and each lose. Twenty thirty forty pounds A lot of times. That's unrealistic and people expected to happen. You know within a week we were just talking about setting smart goals yesterday. You know smart being specific measurable attainable realistic and time bound. You have an overall goal but then you need to break those goals down into something. That's achievable right. Yep great yep yep and everybody's different right and you know It's important to understand that and you know. Never try not to put too much pressure on yourself But the important thing is to be consistent be consistent with your eating habits or exercise routine and all sale. The cardio is plays a big role here. And it doesn't have to be an hour of cardio it only needs to really be five ten minutes of cardio to get your heart rate up and then you want to go into other things like You know the the left part you'll lifting partisans price strength training so yeah yeah. Yeah yeah excellent. Well thank you for that. I'll get what is what's happening on your next episode. Yes so on our next episode we all going to be introducing One of my trainers At a monday He's going to be joining us and he's going to be talking about the benefits of movement with the medicine skyline movement. Sure adams been with me about five years now. I think phenomenal members staff. Great china He's unique him. What he does in the studio so many clients that he works with you know Really enjoy his training methods and some of the positive things that he's done clients. He's been a huge asset to the chain. Also it folks wanted to find fitness together and your studios Where would they go online help. Helpful to understand so on facebook where a together dot com on instagram. Ft novi and we all located two four two seven six novi road. We are on the northeast side of ten mile. And i wrote looking for to Learning a little bit. What adam does you know. it's interesting i should be. It's going to be interesting right all right so You know folks pay atoms coming in adams gonna be with us and is going to be a great conversation so thank you for your for your information and yet there's just so much to learn always always those watching on facebook stick around Gazeta is gonna come in stream with us live.

Twenty thirty forty pounds five pounds instagram facebook china four yesterday five years ten mile monday next month dot com each One adam five ten minutes two four two seven six novi ro one thing a week New
"shaikh" Discussed on WIBC 93.1FM

WIBC 93.1FM

03:51 min | 3 years ago

"shaikh" Discussed on WIBC 93.1FM

"Know, we're still a full service radio station. You know, giving that kind of information, and we do it every day. And it's just what community radios all about, and TV was important, too. Around the clock. Storm coverage wasn't necessarily how TV did it in 1978, but Bob Gregory, whether man it wthr channel, 13 says they had been telling people about the storm before the blizzard warning came out way. Get on the air and telling people to prepare. We didn't have that much snow. Well, 15.5 inches of snow on that particular storm, So the snow was significant, But the big thing was wind chills that were in the minus 40 and at times 50 categories. People, you know, had someone of a chance to prepare. But there really weren't sure. You know what am I preparing for until the full brunt of this thing hit with the wind in the bitter cold and all the people losing power in the flakes started flying. The wind picked up in blue at over half the force of a hurricane. Al Shaikh left the National Weather Service office and beat the storm home with a pit stop first at Coco's, Like 4 35 in the evening on the 25th and started stones, Flake of Snow here seven o'clock at night, I realized what the buzzard warring men because neighbor next door neighbor for whatever reason, got any star and he was going down the road You couldn't see hardly anything. And I'm nearer my garage stuffing paper in the cracks san. Okay? I know what's gonna happen now for some people. In Indiana. There was little that could be done. Evansville had one snow block. They have fun. They had one snowplow home, so obviously they were not prepared. By the time January 25th ended in January, 26 began, snow was piling up. It was a fierce storm walking home in it was a really interesting experience. It was like the world had come to a stop, and the only sound was the falling snow in the blowing wind. And there were no cars on the street. It was absolutely silent except for the sound of the winter. Jasper Jean Kunz was it w I T Z watching the snow pile up over the cars in the parking lot as the wind howled. He was the only person at the radio station and stayed on as long as he could. Well, I did until like, you know, like one or two o'clock in the morning. Back then we used to sign off at midnight and there was no coverage on you know, from midnight to six. I know it was an emergency, but I stay on the air till about two o'clock. Back in the morning and the phone finally stopped ringing. Then it was time for some sleep. Even if it was just for a couple of hours. Great. I was gonna follow sleep and not wake up. So I called the city Police department in jazz. Burnett said. Hey, can you give me a wake up call about four o'clock or 4? 30? Just in case I fall asleep so that I can get up and get back on the air again. And I woke up about five minutes till five. And all the phone lines were ringing and I just got up and hit the transmitter and away we went, You know snow. Inco, come coming up. What happens when you get 20 ft snowdrifts Locking you in place for days. Do that. We're not gonna be going to school for a couple of days. And whatever gets you through the storm Anything romantic activities was the furthest thing from my mind. You're listening to Indiana and the blizzard of 1978 on 93. W i. B C 2020 brought us a resolutions. Even a thing actually hit the treadmill earn more money than the activity be more healthy, lose weight. Apparently they are. So.

Jasper Jean Kunz Indiana Bob Gregory Evansville Burnett Al Shaikh National Weather Service city Police department Coco
 Military judge sets 2021 trial date for alleged 9/11 plotters

News and Perspective with Taylor Van Cise

00:34 sec | 4 years ago

Military judge sets 2021 trial date for alleged 9/11 plotters

"After years of legal wrangling a military judge has set a trial date for the men charged with plotting the September eleventh attacks Sheik Mohammed and four other men will appear in a court at the US detention facility at Guantanamo bay Cuba on January eleventh twenty twenty one the first time the trial judge has set a start of trial court date in more than five years Khalid Shaikh Mohammed was transferred to Guantanamo in two thousand six after being arrested by the CIA in Pakistan in two thousand three the twenty twenty one court date will mark nearly twenty years since the deadly plane

Cuba Khalid Shaikh Mohammed Guantanamo CIA Pakistan United States Twenty Years Five Years
California, Pasadena And Earthquake discussed on The Takeaway

The Takeaway

01:11 min | 5 years ago

California, Pasadena And Earthquake discussed on The Takeaway

"Despite frequent little earthquakes like the magnitude three point five one that shaikh orange county awake this morning california is overdue for the big one size just degree the state is going through a sort of earthquake drought glenn bio is a seismologist with the u._s. geological survey in pasadena he published a study today on the lack of major activity around three phones the san andreas santa sinto and hayward one of the the simple estimates that a person may is on average we should have three to four quakes in this fall said decides every year or every century pardon me and we've not had any and zero is pretty far from three to four he says the last significant or groundbreaking earthquake in southern california was in nineteen eighteen it was magnitude point seven centered in eastern san diego county along the santa cinta faultline or paper shows that this hundred year hoping period with no ground rupturing earthquakes shouldn't happen the eighteen hundred saw six large quakes on this trio of faults researchers warn californians are at risk of a hidden danger complacency as memories fade about what the big one can

California Pasadena Earthquake San Andreas Santa Sinto San Diego Santa Cinta Faultline Hundred Year