35 Burst results for "Two Thousand Thirteen"

Climate Cast
Climate Change Presents Challenges for Watershed Managers
"I'm standing here with tiffany shuffler. She's the project and land manager for the mini ha ha creek watershed district. Hi tiffany paul. Thanks for having me. So tell us where we're standing today. We are standing at what we call the divide of our upper watershed in lower watershed. So were standing at the on. Top of the grays bay dam which is where lake minnetonka ends to the east and then we are at the headwaters of miniature creek so given climate change in minnesota and in your watershed which basically includes a lot of the western and southwestern twin cities what new challenges does climate change present for watershed management. Here you know as water managers were tasked with trying to Reduce flooding and reduce pollution. And that's what you're tasked with what you're giving is how much rainfall from the sky. And also you're given a landscape that developed over a century ago so a lot of these homes were developed during the dust bowl when it was the dryness of times. And now we're coming out of the wettest of times so now there's this conflict with you know homes infrastructure of Whether it's surface water groundwater flooding happening and people you know being like. I understand climate change but my basements flooding or my front yard flooding. Who's going to do something about it. What kind of extreme lake and creek flow levels have you observed in the past decade or two on the lake and the creek. You know two thousand thirteen two thousand nineteen where the wettest seven years on record so wet in fact that we had an extra year's worth of rain squeezed in there but then there's also been these drastic swings to dry and we've had them very close together so for example twenty twelve was really dry year. Last time we in in real drought and then twenty fourteen. Just two years later. We had record flooding.

Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney
Ryan Braun Announces Retirement, Leaves Behind a Complicated Legacy
"Ryan braun The the brewers formally announced his retirement. Yesterday he announced. Its milwaukee brewers. And i gotta say this. Because i i think of ryan braun is being Like lance armstrong of of baseball Not only did he use pd's but he also attacked people leading up to that most notably the sample collector specifically went after him Publicly accused him of being anti semitic He called other players when he was a i. You know. I had the first positive drug tests. He told them look this. This collector was coming after me. he's an anti semite. And i thought it was just despicable. And so i give mark at nausea. The brewers credit for his loyalty that braun. I'd say this. He's a better person than i am. A given that. If i were mark grad nausea after bron lied about you being a pd user and then accepted a sixty game suspension. What was it a half year suspension. I would have never forgiven him after giving him that. Huge contract mark attanasio did no in from afar. That's my viewpoint to. I can't get passed it. He tried to destroy. Somebody's life yup and he lied. You know that was. He gave that speech in february of two thousand twelve. It wasn't until two thousand thirteen that he finally got caught up in the biogenesis investigation and got his suspension. I get it in milwaukee they the fans there for gave them gave them standing ovations. You know on the field is the third greatest brewer of all time. You know buying rodney out in honor for me. I just can't get past. His initial reaction is. Denial is lies. And you know great player. No doubt thirty thirty. Mvp all that. But you know. I think i would hope. He looks back in wishes he had done at all differently.

Sway
Dave Eggers: Is Limitless Choice a Good Thing?
"So let's start talking about this book the every so it's a sequel to your two thousand thirteen book the circle which is about a search company that bears its will essentially or possibly facebook. Tell me why you decided to write. This sequel in which the circle gobbles up in ecommerce company named after south american jungle so basically amazon and creates the every Which one character called the most monopolistic control hungry corporation ever to plague the world. So why do the sequel tell me how you thought about this. Well i think you know. When when i was done with the circle i had never thought about a sequel never written a sequel to anything and But i kept taking notes. And i sort of you know would jot things down over time and i remember at one point A friend of mine who She treats students at a college. She's that she was on campus psychologist and She was saying that the thing that her students came in with more than anything. The thing that problem that plagued them was choice. There were anxious about a lot of things but more and more students needed how more and more students were plagued with like unlimited choices unlimited. Input too much to think about on a given day and too many choices to make on a given day. And i thought that was really interesting because we would think you know at this sort of apex point of human evolution. We would want all these choices and sort of that would be some sort of glorious now plays to arrive at that we could order anything and have it arrive at our doorstep the next morning but these kids were far more anxious than they had been ten years before in fifteen years before and i thought well that's an interesting starting point and what if there were a monopoly that would not only sort of tell you which choices are correct which ones are the most You know beneficial to the environment and progressive in different ways and they would help you given your preferences and algorithm ick sort of determined personality. They'd help you become a better version of yourself and the ultimate version of yourself as a personal person and a member of the broader

Geek News Central
Apple Watch Executive Takes Over Secretive Car Project
"Apples always pushing the edge. And i thought apple kind of watched walked away from from cars but the apple watch executive is taking over secretive car project now. Just two days before hideaway. Doug field ahead of apple secretive car project that tech china's tap apple watch exact former adobe. Co kevin lynch to take his place so in the latest changing of the guard for the project known as project titan which is rotated leaders about as much as reporting shifted focused They replace individual so he's been working on this since july when he was brought in to help develop the vehicle software. He's been with apple since two thousand thirteen. Curiously bloomberg rights at lynch still reports to apple's cheap chief operating officer jeff williams and not to john daria the company's head of ai. So we'll keep a watch on what's apple doing anything apple build some apple bands will

Awards Chatter
Remembering Michael K. Williams & His Legacy
"Today's episode. We remember the magnificent character actor. Michael kenneth williams. Who was found dead on monday of a suspected drug overdose at the age of fifty. Four williams was a five time emmy nominee for best supporting actor in a limited series or tv movie for bessie in two thousand fifteen. The night of in two thousand sixteen and when they see us in two thousand nineteen for best informational series or special for vice in two thousand eighteen. He was an executive producer of the show. And for best supporting actor in a drama series this year for hbo's lovecraft country indeed. Even before his tragic passing he was the favourite to take home. His first statuette on september nineteenth williams also appeared on the sopranos alias. Boston legal happened. Leonard and many other acclaimed. Tv shows as well as in films. Such as two thousand seven's gone baby gone two thousand nine the road and two thousand thirteen twelve years a slave which won the best picture oscar but he was best known for his work on to other. Hbo drama series for which he criminally never was even for an emmy the wire on which he played omar little and boardwalk empire on which he played chalky white the wire which was created by david. Simon is considered by many including me to be the greatest show in the history of television. And he the greatest character on it a gay shotgun-wielding stick up man who terrified even baltimore's most hardened criminals whistling hunting. We will go as he stopped the streets and famously warning one challenger you come at the king you best not miss. The new york times described the character quote one of primetime preeminent anti heroes in a tv era defined by them close quote

Awards Chatter
Remembering Michael K. Williams & His Legacy
"Today's episode. We remember the magnificent character actor. Michael kenneth williams. Who was found dead on monday of a suspected drug overdose at the age of fifty. Four williams was a five time emmy nominee for best supporting actor in a limited series or tv movie for bessie in two thousand fifteen. The night of in two thousand sixteen and when they see us in two thousand nineteen for best informational series or special for vice in two thousand eighteen. He was an executive producer of the show. And for best supporting actor in a drama series this year for hbo's lovecraft country indeed. Even before his tragic passing he was the favourite to take home. His first statuette on september nineteenth williams also appeared on the sopranos alias. Boston legal happened. Leonard and many other acclaimed. Tv shows as well as in films. Such as two thousand seven's gone baby gone two thousand nine the road and two thousand thirteen twelve years a slave which won the best picture oscar but he was best known for his work on to other. Hbo drama series for which he criminally never was even for an emmy the wire on which he played omar little and boardwalk empire on which he played chalky white the wire which was created by david. Simon is considered by many including me to be the greatest show in the history of television. And he the greatest character on it a gay shotgun-wielding stick up man who terrified even baltimore's most hardened criminals whistling hunting. We will go as he stopped the streets and famously warning one challenger you come at the king you best not miss. The new york times described the character quote one of primetime preeminent anti heroes in a tv era defined by them close quote given this week. Sad news i thought i would resurface an interview that i recorded with williams just over a decade ago. Shortly after the first season of boardwalk empire

Skip and Shannon: Undisputed
New England Patriots Cut Cam Newton; Mac Jones to Start
"Speaking with our breaking news at foxborough. The patriots are releasing cam newton. And we'll move forward with as their quarterback pro football focus posted this week that the alabama rookie has the best preseason rookie passing rate since two thousand thirteen and now look to do with him. Couldn't do last year. Get new england back to the playoffs. Oh shannon what will be the patriots record with mac as a start of the season trying to look as you mentioned. I've tried to schedule and looking at it I say this is gonna make the playoffs. And so i believe it's gonna take ten wins for them to make the playoffs. So i'm gonna go ten ten and seven at the bare minimum possibly lebanon states. But i'll be conservative. I'll say ten and seven I think mayfield play well. I know they're not going to rely olmec as much as maybe some of the other quarterbacks but they're going to run the football i believe they're going to be a top five running team and everything they do is going to be predded gonna be set up the running game so they're gonna be heavy play action. They went to the to tidy. As they went and got a hindrance free agency got john newsouth upgraded the wide receiver position. I think decide nelson born. Yeah so they got some weapons. I man i still like jacoby. Myers i like here tomorrow. Watching the better he gets. I really liked jacoby. Myers in so with that being said skipped. I'm gonna say they go tunas seven and they make the playoffs.

Short Wave
The Fight to Save Sunflower Sea Stars
"Going to be talking about a veracious sea creature that can have up to twenty four arms and the person will be talking to is. Npr science correspondent. Now greenfieldboyce hainault. Hey there emily. I have only two arms. But i am nonetheless here to tell you about these things. I want all your arms around this story. Tell us about this. Many armed briny beast. Well it's a sea star it. It's one of the biggest in the world. It can be the size of a trash can lid or a manhole cover or something like that. It's called the sunflower see star. Yeah so these things used to be common all along the west coast from alaska. All the way down to baja california in northern mexico. Yeah i've heard of these. I've seen pictures. They're beautiful though used to be. I mean those are some ominous words. It is a grim grim situation. This species is critically endangered. It seems to be dying off. it's just disappearing from lots of places. Some people think it's completely extinct in california and this is a big deal because the sunflower see star is a top predator. It eats animals like muscles and sea urchins and keeps their numbers in check. I didn't realize that the sunflower see stars. A top predator. I know that sea stars though have for years been plagued by disease off. The west coast is that. What's killing sunflower stars to. Yes so this is a wasting syndrome. And scientists can't agree on what's causing it it's hitting more than twenty sea star species since the big die off in two thousand thirteen on both the east and the west coast but a researcher named jason hodan told me that sunflowers he stars seem to be particularly susceptible. Really do kind of like dissolve into a pile of goo. It's why he agreed to try raising them in

Nonprofits Are Messy: Lessons in Leadership | Fundraising | Board Development | Communications
How to Attract, Develop, and Retain Top Nonprofit Talent
"Great to have you and thank you so much for all the work. you do. Thanks so much for having me here. I'm a huge fan of your leadership in this field john. Well thank you The feeling is mutual so galley. Clearly you get the challenge in the sector and this is what your organization is about. Why don't you tell folks a little bit about leading edge and its origin story. And i'm also curious about the thinking about your organization being focused specifically on jewish organizations. Sure let me take this in two parts. The first is genesis origin story. So it was a dark and stormy night noticed. it was Twenty thirteen Toward the end in two thousand thirteen when an informal group of ceo's of foundations and major jewish organizations have been meeting informally for some time and The purpose of these meetings was talking about some of the major issues of major challenges facing the community in thinking about collaborative approach or shared warnings. Those types of almost like informal networking kind of conversations and at that time in sort of building up to that time the conversation was all about the leadership pipeline right. There were a lot of folks in those rooms. A lot of leaders who admitted. I'm not sure he's taking over for me when i retire in. Fill in the blank years and joan. You've talked about this gap and so in two thousand thirteen. Just like in the general nonprofit non see jared say general society jewish nonprofit sector was talking about a turnover in the c. suite of seventy five percents ninety percent by some estimates and fuelled by generational. You know what the demographics and and so this group of of really investors in the jewish ecosystem understood that there was essentially exposure to our organizations because we know that the marker of a great organization starts with a leader that that transition was going to be precarious so they wanted to do something about it and what

Airplane Geeks Podcast
Duct-Taping on Planes Is Having a Moment
"When passengers are out of control flight attendants reach for last resort and he guesses duct tape well who thought duct tape would become an essential flight attendant tool. But we've seen in the news Duck taping used on unruly passengers. There was a woman on an american airlines flight. In july there was a frontier airlines flight with a man who allegedly groped and flight attendants and then more recently at american airlines cabin crew member had some duct tape during an incident with a young passenger. Although restraint cuffs were us instead The article points out it turns out this has been happening for years if i think they. They went back and looked and news. Reports from the past include united airlines passenger in two thousand three a woman on united in two thousand eight a man on icelandair in two thousand thirteen and a woman on american in twenty eighteen so duct tape as a as a restraint isn't apparently something brand new but we are seeing awful. Lot of it This year rob. What do you think is is this an effective Or advisable even method to subdue an unruly passenger. What do you think it's a funny thing. But when when i was flying for living i mean we. We never worried about this kind of thing because at worst we might have had somebody. That was a little inebriated or and they got a little little loud. Maybe a little mouthy with a flight attendant but but we never had People swinging at cabin crew. And and i. I mean if he i think that of course. I think the story mentioned that The restraints are only used with the permission of the captain. And i'd be the first one to say man tie that man that woman

CNBC's Fast Money
Commodity Stocks Plummet as Climbing COVID Cases Weigh on Market
"Where we start off with. The great commodity collapsed crude oil falling to its lowest level since the end of may goals at its lows of the session was a prices not seen since april of last year. Silver is now down more than eight percent in just the past week. Cobber lumber you know also down. So does this commodity selloff give you cause for concern or is it a sign that inflation will be transitory as the fed says stan. What are your thoughts tells you that they think or at least investors selling off crude who firmed up the dollar firmed out the ten year. Us treasury yield. They're telling you that they think the fed is going to start to taper soon. And if you go back to two thousand thirteen. In the december meeting the fed started to taper bond purchases from eighty five billion a month to seventy five trillion and then each subsequent meeting they started tapering ten billion dollars. Look at those three risk assets that we talked about that would signal that maybe we get it. As soon as jackson hole at the end of this month or the next meeting in september that the fed might really start speaking to now. Obviously i have no idea but when you look at crude oil i'll just tell you what happened. From december two thousand thirteen to december two thousand fourteen when that taper was in full effect crude oil in half okay so just from a technical perspective right now. Crude oil right now is broken that trend. That's been in place since the lows about a year ago or so and so technically it seems in a tough spot especially right now when the world is kind of grappling with delta variant. And maybe we're seeing less demand for your karen. That's what i think it is. i think it's delta variant. I think that you know when you have commodities and just a little bit of pulled back on demand commodities are commodities obviously so a little less demand means prices can really move especially as a commodity producers are gearing up making more. So that's what it seems to me. I'm not sure how to fit together. The very strong jobs number. That's not cover for the fed at all and yet this commodity action that is and the delta varian and the number of cases and the number of that is some cover for the fed.

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Gordon Chang Explains China's Massive Belt and Road Initiative
"Or tributary nations. That will be simply vassals. Is that an over-simplification. How does one belt one road work. What is the global vision for china as it looks at the world coming up to the hundred anniversary of the communist revolution the belton road initiative as it's now called is really started out. As to initiatives there was a belt and these were announced the in september two thousand thirteen there was a belt which was to connect the east coast of china to europe and it was a road which was a water route connecting both locations east coast of china and europe since then Dalton road has been extended around the world and they've added the digital silk road which started out life in two thousand fifteen or so as a separate plan but was incorporated into belt road so belton road is really an attempt to build the infrastructure to tie the world to china now. This gets a little bit complicated. I've never really been too worried about belton road largely because i've tracks long hong kong. I didn't do infrastructure work but my firm did and i can tell you that. All of the economically justifiable projects in the world were being handled by the private sector. What china's doing is building the infrastructure. That nobody else wanted to. Yeah and so and subsidizing it been below market rates. Yes there is a danger. Though and that is we have seen What's called dead trapped diplomacy because these projects are not economically justifiable for the most part but what china has been able to do was to uses position as a creditor to take over control of facilities so for instance it took control of hambantota which is important sri lanka. We know that china has used. Its colombo international container terminal also sri lanka For military purposes djibouti china's really offshore military installation is in a country that has a debt to china that is probably an excess of one hundred percent of its gross domestic product. So that's no coincidence. But the reason why. I've get really worried about belton. Road is because of the bahamas. Yes in the bahamas. Hong kong firm is pouring something like three billion. Maybe a little bit more into the freeport container port. It's also there's a

COVID-19: What You Need to Know
Gun Violence in America: Newark
"For decades newark new jersey was listed among the country's most dangerous large city. Going to begin with that breaking news in newark. Police are confirming. This was a targeted shooting. Deadly shootings in newark. In less than two days the city of about two hundred and seventy thousand six just on the other side of the hudson river from new york and had the nation's third worst murder rate for large cities in two thousand thirteen or almost fifty consecutive years newark had been in the top ten most violent city. List's akilah arouses the president of the newer community street team. A group that works to reduce crime through community outreach cheryl says by the nineteen sixties newark and particularly its communities of color suffered under the weight of poverty discrimination and violence and it was made worse when crack. Cocaine hit the street. In the nineteen eighty. All of us agree that the gravest domestic threat facing our nation today is drug eighties. With the crack epidemic hit urban communities across the country it decimated newark as it decimated most black neighborhoods across country. Trauma was allowed to fester in ripple and and so we saw the impact of of those policies around the world drugs and world violence drugs or menacing our society they're threatening our values and undercutting our institutions how it impacted like kind of young black men and also communities of color all across the country newark was no not excluded from that but starting in two thousand fourteen things began to change newark new jersey tonight. Tatting a big drop in crime and cheryl says with the election of mayor razz baraka. The city took a new approach immediately. Started the work on building out. This complementary strategy to policing the newark community street team as he at the same time started to doing some reform within the police department. The raka broad public safety under one umbrella police fire and other safety groups under a newly created department of public safety. A move to the city says help simplify operations and reduce costs but it would take more than that to see lasting change. There has been progress helped. In part by a legal settlement in two thousand sixteen the city of newark reached an agreement with the department of justice following an investigation into newark. Police

Cyber Security Headlines
Biden Directs Agencies to Develop Cybersecurity Standards for Critical Infrastructure
"Federal agencies directed to develop cybersecurity standards for infrastructure president biden issued this directive to federal agencies which will establish voluntary cybersecurity goals for critical infrastructure companies. The project will be headed by cc and nist which will coordinate with other agencies a preliminary baseline security standard will be due by september with final goals within a year the agencies will also have a year to determine whether additional legal authorities would be beneficial to safeguard critical infrastructure. This comes after a may executive order to establish cybersecurity baselines for federal agencies themselves and last week's cyber security requirements for oil pipeline operators issued by the tsa controversial vulnerability search engine re released at defcon security researchers alejandro cassandra's and jason hopper planned to release an upgraded version of punk spider at defcon. A search engine which constantly crawls the web and automatically publishes hackel vulnerabilities in websites as well as a chrome plug into skin visited sites both ranked sites and a scale of one to five dumpster fires. The search engine will mostly be scanning for low hanging fruit looking for seven kinds of explainable. Bugs repeatedly trying variations of common hacking methods to check if a site vulnerable punks originally launched in two thousand thirteen before lapsing due to lack of funding around two thousand fifteen. Its initial incarnation scant websites. Once a year the most exploit vulnerabilities of the year joint security advisories from the australian cyber security center the uk national cybersecurity center cease and the fbi. This is the most commonly exploited security vulnerabilities from twenty twenty and twenty twenty one across the three countries. Most of these vulnerabilities are recently discovered showing that threat actors can weaponize security flaws increasingly quickly to exploit systems vulnerabilities to microsoft exchange accelerate. Vm ware and ford top. The twenty one list while twenty twenty feature the windows net log on privilege escalation atlassian remote code execution and the citrus netscaler directory transversal.

Advertising Is Dead
Connecting the Dots for Publishers Feat. Kavita Shenoy
"Welcome back to advertising his dead beard. Coweta aiko w we finally doing this And i'm seeing finally because we went through some circles to start off this recording value for you. You had to figure room. Happy valley do the he'd be head of walmart. Divide before we could record. I have had a warm up in more than one. Run up and down. These takings is a be shouting about connected loom. That's not sounding roomy. Because she was upset about the fact that might have f. But i'm also happy doing this. Because i know over the last few months of admin gonna visions space in what's happening with that going to india listener unnoticed. Ingeborg the ghana. Meaning everything else. But there's another huge offered. And i know what you been building really focus on. I i want to start off by asking a The idea for the company come about our the inception and and what can lead you to starting it off so we started out long back we. We broke ground on this company. I wanna save ideo. As i was at google and i was. I wanted to work with above decide. Oh because there was a steam On the youtube side of the business of gruber who was doing a lot of work with publishers. And i happen to go along with them for some meetings and realized that most of these publishers relying heavily on youtube under decision because of that time you know Disposing aren't dando. Content distribution was still a bit expensive proposition for most. Oh more sto- in content creators. it hadn't been democratize as much as it is today. And it wasn't as cheap but they understand that data. They didn't know what do and youtube and actually google as an organization is all about simplifying scanning they don't actually give each publisher. You know very very alert expedience is onto lacrosse required for scheme. And that's davis martin but every publisher like you know has different contents dodgy so they have to use their data differently so when the ida struck me back in two thousand thirteen and then by the time i must have the courage to quit twenty fourteen and i met the founder who then don't duma co-founders Beat the tech Background an illegitimate. Who come with who has offered engineers and we basically decided to tackle the long tail. Initially world'll all of these were publishers. And tell them how to use u.

Techmeme Ride Home
Alphabet's New Moonshot Company: Intrinsic
"Alphabet has a new moonshot. it's called intrinsic a new company to build. Apparently although we're not entirely sure software for industrial robots and so intrinsic will join alphabets portfolio of other bets that includes the likes of waymo wing and verily quoting the verge details on what exactly intrinsic is building or who its customers will be are unclear a blog post from the company's new ceo. Wendy ten white discusses intrinsic ambitions in broad terms saying it will quote unlocked the creative and economic potential of industrial robotics for millions more businesses entrepreneurs and developers and by creating software that will make industrial robots quote easier to use less costly and more flexible and quote. Robotics have been an obsession at google for years. But the company's efforts have been unfocused and have yet to produce any commercial hits in two thousand thirteen. Google went on a shopping spree for robots buying seven companies and roughly six months including shaft a japanese firm known for bipedal robots boughten dali makers of very cool viral videos and boston dynamics which needs no introduction. The effort was named replicant. And headed. By andy rubin and executive who co founded the android mobile operating system over the years though. No news emerged from replicant. And google either sold off or shut down most of its acquisitions. Why partly because robots are hard to make and not very profitable but also because of rubin's departure from the company in two fourteen after being accused of sexual misconduct which google kept secret at the time. Since replicates failure the company has focused more on the software side of things using machine learning to teach robots to manipulate objects without direct supervision. This place into google strengths and will apparently be intrinsic focus. Going

Judaism Unbound
Finding the Meaning in the 2020 Pew Study With Tema Smith
"To some extent the genesis of judaism unbound in a bit of roundabout way as the previous pew study. That came out in two thousand thirteen. Took us a few years to our act together and start the podcast but it was kind of jumping off that understanding of the jewish community as looking different from the way a lot of people thought it did and facing that optimistic way in a lot of people were reading about it and we were whatever. The opposite of fretting is we were. We were ready to embrace this and figure out what it all means and we wanted to have you on starting to talk based on the two thousand twenty p study because he wrote this great piece or put together this great piece to think about how the data of the study could be presented in a way that would give it a different reception. Let's say within the jewish community. So could we start with you just describing a little bit about some of the examples of what you put out there and also like what motivated you to do this. Yes shera so one of the things that really stuck with me. After the last few study was how the data was presented where there was actually what it was showing was actually an increase in for example jewish identification for children of interfaith families and things like that but the data was being presented as doomsday scenario. That you know Children of interfaith families are less likely to be jewish and so when this time around the study came out. That was the first chart i looked for. And guess what it said the same thing but the chart had said intermarried parents much less likely to be raising their children jewish and i looked at it and actually it looks like the numbers had gone up from the previous time and yet we were still telling the doomsday narrative and it was very clear to me. They're the majority of jews who have married somebody of a different background or raising their children. Jewish this is a very different picture than comparing to a jewish jewish couple

Techmeme Ride Home
A New Narrative for Netflix
"Earning season is back for tech companies and for the first time in a while we have a new narrative net flicks reported revenue that beat expectations slightly. They also reported global net additions of paid subscribers which beats slightly with one point five four million new subscribers but the us and canada region actually lost four hundred and thirty three thousand subscribers and that was on a quarter over quarter basis first time that netflix has lost customers in those regions since twenty nineteen now engagement. Which is the time spent per member household per day was actually up seventeen percent versus pre pennock levels from q two of two thousand nineteen and it's worth noting that's with fifty seven and a half million more global subscribers over that time period and that's slightly more per user on a per user basis but as our friend lucas tweeted quote net flicks just recorded. Its worst first half of the year since two thousand thirteen the same year it released house of cards and back then it was available in less than fifty countries. It's now in more than one hundred ninety and quote so the new narrative around netflix is growth is screeching to a

Advance Your Bellydance Podcast
"two thousand thirteen" Discussed on Advance Your Bellydance Podcast
"I started from how to start your first email marketing list to what you actually need on your website and everything in between. Let's get started this week. I'm talking with sheherazade. Sheherazade is a professional dance instructor. An performers in rock sharkey as well as traditional and social dance styles from around north africa and the middle east. In two thousand fifteen chiggers had moved to egypt to live and work fulltime. Innocence made a career as a performer appearing in top nightclubs as well as film and media to supplement her twenty plus years of dance training for. Here's that also holds several fitness certifications including becoming a pma certified pilates instructor in two thousand thirteen. I hope you enjoyed this interview as much as i did. And thanks so much for listening. Welcome ready to another episode of the advanced buildi- podcast. this week. i have another very special interview guest. Welcome sheherazade how're you doing. I'm doing good. Thanks for having me. For taking the time to join. I believe cairo's the same time zone. Though i think as berlin may be. I think it's evening free to seven o'clock ish right. Yes yep okay great. That's always the best in the same time zone that i don't have to think about like waking up someone or staying up too late so that's good so i wanna get right into it I read your at the top of this episode. that people will here but Basically i wanna know all about. At what point did you decide. I need to move to egypt. I know you've been there since. Two thousand fifteen..

BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast
"two thousand thirteen" Discussed on BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast
"This is your place for it in the common section. You can ask questions to pelly there and she'll be able to jump in in response so both those comments. Now let's get into our interview right now. I p welcome to the bigger pockets podcasts. Good to have you here so excited and honoured thanks aloha so you are originally from my side of the world right now. Is that correct. Originally from the big island lived in maui oahu. I miss it so much so so much and you left here to win a new york. Is that what. I left it. There is that was august two thousand and one that was a time that was It was a big. It was a big jump. I had dreams of different dreams of doing theatre for the rest of my life. And i became a bartender. Same thing drama. Either way john no matter how good so walk you got into real estate like what was your very first deal like maybe even before the first deal. Where did the idea even come from that. You wanted to get into real estate. So my husband and i met a long time ago in two thousand and We worked in a bar together forever but it wasn't until around two thousand and twelve that we finally actually saw each other and then you know in two thousand and thirteen. We decided we're going to start a family and two thousand. Oh the date escapes me but hurricane sandy happened and his family is huge into house. Lifting house raising. They actually take a house and lifted up and take it to the new a baseball elevations and and set it down on his new in foundation. And there you have a nice house in the flood zone. So after sandy i can. Actually i could actually use his family right now. One of my say to them i promise. Okay that's cool totally would come to hawaii. It's not cost effective business there. Yeah totally understand. So anyway. So he was so so. That's the construction company. So two thousand thirteen happens. We decided to start our family. Two thousand fourteen. I get pregnant. And i'm like i'm not gonna do. The restaurant. business anymore. Had been bartending for longtime managing restaurants. And the next step was to get into real estate..

The Radio Show
"two thousand thirteen" Discussed on The Radio Show
"That was never going to happen with dr dreyer because people were really waiting on detox white twenty years and when he finds drop competent people thought yet they know big big fan. You know any when he dropped this and it was. You know kind of out okay. I'll say this there's people still ran around to the chronic or were still running around to the chronic for way longer than having lived ranch residents clean. We know we know now. I'm not even saying to the point. Where like now. He's to listen to what i'm saying. Chronic in what was it ninety Dope at ninety two by ninety four ninety five or whatever people listening to it. He dropped compton in two thousand thirteen. Fourteen eighteen whenever whenever straight out accounting came out that album for the movie a year later. Nobody was listening today six muslim. Nobody was listening to you. it gone. yeah that was it when gold. Oh that means they compliment but yeah like you might on street who claim to be a doctorate saying xm right me to songs off company right now with the sixteen quite yet doctors also and they were like women weeden weather that threes all. No that's not even on that album. That's not our kendrick lamar's out there. You go yeah there you go. And this concludes counting talks absolutely. Don't even remember what sounded overcame museum. I have joan and it came on. But it's nothing that's to be like so you had you had to be forced to listen to. Yeah yes i'm not. I'm not going through my playlist. Just like seeking it out. I was listening to a like a song. And then if you'd know spotify. If i listened to the song it megastars radio station became on. It was like okay. all right. that'll do. But i wouldn't like o she'll be going into my with the chronic is if my list in two thousand one is a confidence not asking..

Open Loops: Conversations That Bend
"two thousand thirteen" Discussed on Open Loops: Conversations That Bend
"Not very different. I was yeah. I was gonna ask about this. I know definitely. Because i know you've gone into you and i know you have a recovery movement for people that have been subjected to an k. Ultra procedures and I guess i was curious. Okay well before we go there. Because i know that's going to get very intense than i. I'd really want to go into it. Because i'm fascinated by what you've dug up on this since it's such a i mean you know it's out there and k. Ultra you could look at the cia files. It's out there. But i don't know the extent of eggs and i also don't now how much is Well at necessarily how it fully relates to the et world and especially the hybridization stuff. Which i know you go into But tell me this before. We go there when you had this experience in two thousand thirteen. Was it something that you woke up after and new immediately or did it come back to you. Gradually through regression hypnotherapy that kind of stuff and it all made sense. I want to get that piece before you going to really delve into what this was an an how to look at what this could be for other people experiencing it. Yeah sure this was a fully conscious experience so You know when. I when i became conscious again on my bed i i knew immediately what had happened. I remembered everything. Vividly felt everything vividly. I had the marks on my body that appeared. And i had these activated abilities so and entrust me at the time i mean. I'm also skeptical. You know i. I thought it was that a dream young and i thought you know what just happened. I mean i don't have weeping Problems or any kind of the synonymous you know walks or anything like that so It was just incredible and I knew that something had happened. But i think for me. The confirmation was My activated psychic abilities which affected literally my life and my work for the next three months after that experience..

Mornings With Gail - 1310 KFKA
"two thousand thirteen" Discussed on Mornings With Gail - 1310 KFKA
"So our viewers may not know anything about this. What are cryptocurrencies type of digital money. But instead of being controlled by a central government there decentralizing blockchain technology and lately prices have been soaring for cryptos bitcoin. If there especially those going what is those coin. Well it actually started as a joke based on an internet mean but now it's taken off in a very real way. Okay but what is those coins. Well it was created in two thousand thirteen and has a circulating supply of one hundred seventeen billion coins of which one hundred thirteen billion have already been mined cool. So what does does corey leka said. It's a digital currency okay. For instance does a dollar right. Israel safe sorta. So what is those coins about. Israel is that dollar sensitive. I've actually been reading a lot about it. And trying to diversify my investment portfolio and my question is what is.

STEM-Talk
"two thousand thirteen" Discussed on STEM-Talk
"We were just Saying and a lot of my phd work was in that area. There were people at the nih at the time who are interested in seller. Senescence who were in labs near the lab. That i was working in in the lab. I was working. We noted that fat sole progenitor cells that give rise to new fat souls had a limited number of times that they could divide and then they stop dividing and they didn't die as hey. I had predicted so That led to a long interest in what solar senescence is. And how it might contribute to fundamental aging processes. What really hit home was a very important paper by ned. Charmless norman sharpness. Who's now director of the national cancer institute that he published in two thousand and four in the journal of clinical investigation and what he found was that the abundance of senescence in mice increases with age as shown previously by others but what he noted. Was that if you do something. That extends health span namely caloric restriction that the rate of accumulation of senescence souls was delayed and so that led me and my colleagues who worked with me in boston at the time to ask. Is there more than an association. Between senescence solid cumulation aging might senescent cells be a fundamental cause of some aspects of aging processes and perhaps age related diseases. So we wanted to look for causation. And that led us to try beginning in two thousand and ford develop ways of targeting senescent cells to ask in cell culture systems or tissue culture systems or animals. Could we affect the rate at which age related changes and disorders occur if we could eliminate senescent cells so we started on a long quest to try to develop ways of killing senescent cells. The first approach was to use. Thanks called by a senescence cell and carry a toxic cargo with them. That didn't work then. We tried setting up drug screens comparing senescent to nonsense. It sells to look for compounds. That would kill innocent cells but not the nonce cells in using random libraries of chemicals. And that didn't work because there are problems with the way that you have to set up those kinds of drug screens and so finally that led us to a hypothesis driven approach that we adopted in two thousand thirteen in may two thousand thirteen and that led us to the discovery of similar drugs before we leave back to you after mentioned two thousand fifteen paper. Can you talk about the two senate compounds that you and your colleagues identified and those are the of anchor satin and significant of those well..

Healthcare Business Secrets
"two thousand thirteen" Discussed on Healthcare Business Secrets
"Focused on getting really good at that and really asking myself is if you're going to do anything organic which is like podcast a youtube a blog or you're going to be like a social media person On instagram or tiktok which. I don't even know anything about tiktok. I missed that that age generation. But i would ask. What do i really enjoy because whenever it when i think of like organic content it needs to be something that you enjoy needs to be like a hobby. The best youtubers are actually. They really have a passion for film. Videography more so than they sometimes do the actual content. They're sharing like they truly love there. Like hardware geeks about cameras and they really are into the lighting. All these things that that we don't think about insane with podcasters. A lot of people really enjoy the editing aspect of it. They enjoy talking there. There are social conversations or berry curious about people ca some people launching. Podcast really suck. You know they're not good and they don't actually like they should not be podcasting unless they're going to really go through that journey but like the thing i see most communist people quit with organic contents and organic content can can absolutely work. If you're i believe you really enjoy it like do you think. Joe rogan does not like podcast. And you think he does not like engaging with people like he's doing that back in two thousand six before we even knew what a podcast was way before me when it was still foreign back in two thousand thirteen. If you're going to do anything free you've got it become passionate about it you've gotta enjoy it. Otherwise it's it's going to end like do not blog if you hate writing but if you love writing oh my. Gosh you've unlocked this amazing source of traffic and you can take that and you can you. Can you can blog. you can go on choral and answer questions you can write. Books are owning amazon. Like really whatever. You're gonna do what you love. What can you see yourself doing for free and you happen to get traffic from that. And if you're going to do anything free. If you don't like any of those things you'd like i don't wanna do that. I would ask a question. Which is you have skills like. What would you do. But i would ask out. Follow up with have results like. Do you have winning clients who are raising their hand. And they're saying hey like this guy cured my problem or this guy. Got me results this. I'm now in a relationship because of this guy like i'm now i've lost all this because of working with this guy like..

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
"two thousand thirteen" Discussed on Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
"Says seem to be developing at the same pace all right real quickly. My question about the west is are we looking at just crazy numbers from the dodgers all year long thirteen into at this rate could be looking at a record setting year for the dodgers. We could be on pace to win one hundred forty games. We know that's not going to happen so at some point in time. They're gonna come back to the pack. They've played two very good games against the san diego padres. The serious Caught a bit of a game on saturday night was one nothing going into the top of the ninth turnover. Hits a home run makes it to nothing. Bottom of the ninth. The padres have got ta tighten runs mechanism to look like a straight a real base. Hit drive into ronson. Mookie betts credible catch to save the ballgame so yeah dodgers great team san diego not that far behind them san francisco a surprise. I think it's going to be tight race. It's pretty amazing. The dodgers have done since thirteen. Honestly go take a look at what they've done since two thousand thirteen it's basically and see us and then obviously world series stuff so john is always true. Pleasure will catch up next week. I always say well. We'll chat next week. John boulter professors sports hanging out with us here on the door fox. Sports weekend edition. Mike wilson andy door. We'll be right back by you. Not one suarez ready this year. This.

Paradigm Shift Wrestling
"two thousand thirteen" Discussed on Paradigm Shift Wrestling
"You left wrestling. Was there ever a time. You thought about a combat When i was a teacher i was also coach. Here in middle tennessee. Also assistant wrestling football coach in high mainly would run the weight room. I was a strength and conditioning. Coach and I remember one point me. One of the other coaches at the high school decided we were going to start lifting weights and show the boys out of do it. You know because we were having difficulty getting these guys motivated train. And we're like we're going to show them how to do it. And i started lifting weights and me and this other coach. We started getting into shape real fast. We started getting strong. And i remember thinking like having that weird data crazy little thought. I'm like i'm still young enough. I could probably and then what ended up happening and this is what caused the relapse is my foot. I had an older foot injury from wrestling. When i like wrestled triple h. I would always wearing those high tech magnum's back. Then i would twist my ankles over and over again and So the left foot basically collapsed on me. And i started taking painkillers again and then i was off to the races and things got really bad to the point where in two thousand thirteen Not only did. I get arrested on drug charges but i also had to have left foot amputated because got so bad got infected. So yeah that was. That was pretty much. The last time i ever thought about getting make interesting. That was probably about two thousand. Nine west started lifting weights. Oh what i'm sorry. I'm trying to think how to word this in my head What is one of your most.

Slick Talk: The Hospitality Podcast
"two thousand thirteen" Discussed on Slick Talk: The Hospitality Podcast
"Not be just a management company. We didn't want to be like. Oh yeah somebody just opened a management company today. Oh wow that's new. You know exactly that we won't. We've only got like twelve hundred of them throughout the country. It's like we didn't. We didn't want that concept. We didn't we didn't want to do that. We don't want jobs. Go be all year. Let's go buy a hotel and let's call ourselves a management company and we run our own hotel that we bought you know so i mean we want to. We don't wanna do that. You know so. And that's kind of how we were looking at it but i mean that's that's what i would say is were the technology face did come out and we looked at technology and we were like okay. We're gonna do technology but we're going to do a unique phase of technology. We're going to do something that the industry has never seen. And that's where he human came bell. I was just gonna ask. Can you tell us what this technology is. I'm so excited. I also kind of like before you jump into. Actually that part you tell me like what really got you into the technology back in two thousand thirteen or twelve when you were you know managing or ceo or whatever position. You're out like what was really getting you into technology. Was that something you were trying to solve on your own i was. I figured my vision started twenty. Thirteen with technology was that okay. Why are doing so much when we have technology when we have our smartphones. We have at that time. I think was three and i'm like we have enough speed to do things. Why are our front desk agents filling now logs you know. Why are we calling to guest for a wakeup call. Or why are we calling two guests for a courtesy call or departure call. Mean these are all technology items. These are all items that can be easily done..

Daily Pop
"two thousand thirteen" Discussed on Daily Pop
"Think of the fashion my free. It looks off all of it. I mean every unusually. There's one or two that. I don't like but i love all of those little pants and regina beautiful in that dress but i love the pants blinking but amanda. I mean i loved her at the golden gloves. I love this. It was like i ready for this. Bring it this season also where last night because nobody knows about it because at bridgeview was just so spicy. I know almost nine. Almost i forgot i saw on the guy took a little peek and i was like i got to know all right. Well here's a question. How far would you go to get an interview with a major superstar like. Would you get tattoos. Jump off an airplane. Well that's what one reporter did just to sit down with miley. Cyrus listened to miley end mid on the rock with the rock. This with allison hagan door guests. Cover rolling stone right after the two thousand thirteen. Bma's and i knew the interview is going to be about new on drugs. Bma's why'd you go out and shake your ass evolving dick. I knew they were going to give me. I'm not gonna do an interview unless the doodle jump out of a plane as me. That's the only way that i'm gonna do an interview. It's going to happen on the way to paris. California and on the way home and so i mean. I made him go do a burrito drive-thru eater burrito smoke and a lot of the airplane and get a tattoo. I don't get a tattoo bowling song on the bottom of the feet which that nothing is more painful than getting tattooed on the bottom of feet. I mean i love miley but no way in hell do.

Secrets to Win Big With Arjun Sen
"two thousand thirteen" Discussed on Secrets to Win Big With Arjun Sen
"I learned corporate love. And to me. I think especially the second. One is very important because the world doesn't need another bug. The board needs that. One of one who i did not know exist and to me again i would. I got to know you. I was really fascinated by our conversation. Where on day. One you were kind enough to see my needs and you literally gave me everything of course other than your credit card number and social security number which i'm still waiting for but it was so incredible that you right of saul what i needed and you write to gave that to me and so to me. I truly appreciate you know how you are unique. A giving person. And that's one of the things i think. Even though you talk about getting to know people a lot of the things i have seen in interactions as knowing his knockabout knowing is about giving and i want to from their pivot to the incredible sign. Which is there behind you. Embrace the chaos so to me. You're really committed to that. You'll businesses of all your written a book amazing bestseller about it. So what's the promise of the book. Quinn anybody reads the book. What should be wanting that they do. Not know that niche from bob. They should take away from that. Look i think we're living in times of profound change. Complexity uncertainty and speed origin. And we see. I've been saying this for since the book came out in two thousand thirteen before that i had to blog so obvious hang this for ten years. We're living in these very chaotic times. And then promise of the book is that to recognize that you can't control the chaos. You can't control the world you could only control yourself your words your thoughts actions so the promise of the book is to continue moving forward if i were to summarize it in to where two words move forward keep moving forward because because you must must believe that what is hard and what is difficult which is chaos will make you better. We'll make your business.

Fancy Free Podcast
"two thousand thirteen" Discussed on Fancy Free Podcast
"He's been co located between in los angeles since two thousand thirteen in two thousand nineteen. He was recognized as a distinguished foreign expert by the beijing government and appointed to serve a five-year term as an advisor to the chinese film and tv industry..

Frankenculture Presents
"two thousand thirteen" Discussed on Frankenculture Presents
"Got married. While in prison like there are people and obviously. This isn't new with with manson and stuff. But i mean fucking weird that someone would wanna marry him after everything when he's on trial there are like bitches in the in the courtroom being like like look at him. I'm like first of all. He is haunting he. Looks like somebody who murders people in the middle of the night and rapes them and rapes their children. Which is who he is. What the hell. What are these women thinking. They have lost their damn minds. Yeah do you want to wake up with no is or i mean your madge nation. He'll do it. there is one scene. I don't remember which one. But he put like thumb handcuffs on somebody and they tried to pull them out. They like ripped off their thumbs torture. He is horrible horrible clearly. He was convicted. If anybody who has not watched the full thing he was convicted. He did not. He was so cocky in the courtroom to wearing his wearing his fucking sunglasses and shit like acting like he. He owned the place. Who are you the main the main detail that they figure it out from every victim is he had really really bad teeth and that was when they almost caught him because they went to his dentist all they found out they found out he was getting dental work done or dental like his teeth fixed because i guess he had a lot of pain and his teeth and for some reason the panic button. They had set up in the dentist's office when they were pushing the dentist was pushing. It didn't actually trigger and the dentist called them at the end of the day. Being like why didn't you show up. He was here he was here and that was like one time. They missed him. Yeah and he had really really nasty teeth. That's one detail. I definitely won't forget because i don't know they were just they were like rotted and then like only two in the front and no other teeth. He was missing. He was obviously on drugs and stuff. Not that it makes anything. He did okay but he was definitely drug addict with a horrible past does not make anything he did. Okay i also just think he's mentally mentally a fucked up and a horrible horrible person. Yeah i think that's he was convicted of thirteen counts of murder five counts of attempted murder. Eleven counts of sexual assault. Fourteen counts of berkeley. And he was he was he had nineteen death sentences. Clearly he was sentenced sentenced to death. This is one thing that i don't understand. So he was sentenced to death clearly. What like nineteen. Let's say eighty five or something some way back when and he didn't die until two thousand thirteen and not because of the death penalty..

PRI's The World
"two thousand thirteen" Discussed on PRI's The World
"What <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> <Music> <Speech_Music_Female> we've <Speech_Music_Male> seen is <Speech_Music_Male> The the fish populations <Speech_Music_Male> increasing <Speech_Music_Male> in our waters <Speech_Male> in the thirty <SpeakerChange> years that <Speech_Female> we've been here. <Speech_Female> Being environmentally <Speech_Female> friendly has been a <Speech_Female> priority since <Speech_Female> the establishment of <Speech_Female> the small family <Speech_Female> owned farm <Speech_Female> in nineteen ninety <Speech_Female> in addition <Speech_Female> to having fish <Speech_Female> clean their wasters. <Speech_Female> Komo co was also <Speech_Female> the first farm <Speech_Female> to take their own <Speech_Female> used <Speech_Female> wasters to make <Speech_Female> nuclei the <Speech_Female> small core <Speech_Female> inserted into an oyster <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> to form <Speech_Male> a cultured pearl. <Speech_Male> I don't <Speech_Music_Male> really like the word <Speech_Music_Male> eco-friendly. I <Speech_Music_Male> just feel like it's <Speech_Music_Male> just good <Speech_Music_Male> sense. You know <Speech_Music_Male> it's <Speech_Music_Male> If we work in <Speech_Music_Male> a way that <Speech_Music_Male> they works with the environment <Speech_Music_Male> pearls. <Speech_Music_Male> More beautiful <Speech_Music_Male> than i mean. What's <Speech_Music_Male> for us. <Speech_Music_Male> That's the most <SpeakerChange> important <Speech_Female> thing. Meanwhile <Speech_Female> the small <Speech_Female> crew at the farm <Speech_Female> tries to be as <Speech_Female> non-polluted <Speech_Female> sustainable as possible <Speech_Female> for <Speech_Female> example they catch <Speech_Female> or grow most <Speech_Female> of their own food <Speech_Female> use rain. Water <Speech_Female> to bathe keep <Speech_Female> bees for honey <Speech_Female> and chickens for eggs <Speech_Female> and reuse <Speech_Female> practically everything <Speech_Female> that comes <Speech_Female> in from the outside <Speech_Female> world. <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> Multiple <Speech_Female> scientific studies <Speech_Female> have confirmed <Speech_Female> that a clean environment <Speech_Female> makes wasters <Speech_Female> happy which <Speech_Female> means they produce <Speech_Female> better pearls. <Speech_Female> But that's <Speech_Female> becoming even harder <Speech_Female> with the rapidly. <Speech_Female> Changing climate <Speech_Female> embarrassed <Speech_Female> says their main <Speech_Female> concern right now. Is <Speech_Female> ocean acidification <Speech_Female> increased. <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> Co two <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> in the water because of <Speech_Female> the burning <SpeakerChange> of more fossil <Speech_Music_Male> fuels. <Music> <Music> <Music> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> Ocean become <Speech_Music_Male> more acid <Speech_Music_Male> and so <Speech_Music_Male> correspond <SpeakerChange> road <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> is now. <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> So that's <Speech_Female> k tabu ma <Speech_Female> to ya. Yehuda <Speech_Female> pu an <Speech_Female> oceanographer <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> university of french. <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> Polynesia <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> and a former <SpeakerChange> minister <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> of marine resources <Speech_Music_Male> dots <Speech_Music_Male> more mental to <Speech_Music_Male> acclerates <Speech_Music_Male> for <Speech_Music_Male> us local <Speech_Music_Male> people will <Speech_Music_Male> live on <Speech_Music_Male> reefs. It's <Speech_Music_Female> important <SpeakerChange> for <Speech_Female> us at the <Speech_Female> port in the capital <Speech_Female> pop yet day. <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> He says french. <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> Polynesia is <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> also experiencing <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> coral <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> bleaching sea <Speech_Female> level rise <SpeakerChange> in warming <Speech_Music_Male> of the ocean <Speech_Music_Male> for <Speech_Music_Male> temperature <Speech_Music_Male> goes up to <Speech_Music_Male> two <Speech_Music_Male> hits too high. <Speech_Music_Male> You <SpeakerChange> can't use <Speech_Music_Female> the lagoon anymore. <Speech_Music_Female> Pacific island <Speech_Female> nations and territories <Speech_Female> like french. <Speech_Female> Polynesia are <Speech_Female> at the forefront <Speech_Female> of climate change <Speech_Female> in fact <Speech_Female> two thousand thirteen <Speech_Female> study published in <Speech_Female> the journal nature conservation <Speech_Female> identified <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> the french <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> territory as <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> most at risk <Speech_Female> of having their <Speech_Female> islands become <Speech_Female> completely submerged <Speech_Female> by rising <Speech_Female> seas. <Speech_Female> Multiple studies <Speech_Female> have shown that sustainable <Speech_Female> farming <Speech_Female> plays a big role <Speech_Female> in combating <Speech_Female> and managing the effects <Speech_Female> of climate. Change <Speech_Female> but mama <Speech_Female> a two yard e hookah <Speech_Female> pu says <Speech_Female> the government isn't <Speech_Female> yet paying too <Speech_Female> much attention to <Speech_Music_Male>

The Get Foxy Show
"two thousand thirteen" Discussed on The Get Foxy Show
"Breakthrough system now. Statistics say that eighty five to ninety percent of marriages end when a couple has a child with a life threatening illness in two thousand thirteen. My five year old son was diagnosed with leukemia. And my marriage began to crumble in twenty fifteen. I desperately turned to a relationship coach. Her name is joanna shocked and she taught me how to better relate to myself and to my beloved wife now my son's cancer-free more pray stays that way and emily and i are still married. We beat the statistics. And i credit the grace of god and joanna's ecstatic intimacy program for that. So if you want to improve the level of your dating relating like i did click on the ecstatic intimacy icon on the get fox. You show homepage for your free intimacy jumpstart kit. You'll be glad you did and Loon.

The Unofficial Shopify Podcast
"two thousand thirteen" Discussed on The Unofficial Shopify Podcast
"Someone approaches conversion rate optimization their first instinct is to do what the first instinct to syrup off everyone else. Okay see things that they think work. They think everyone else's smarter than them and so they take these ideas. No doubt looks interesting. They hear about a blogger. Doing something like oh. That's interesting and then or this this worked for this other store our competitor and they they take that and they run with it and it doesn't work for them and they're like line and this work well. There are a lot of reasons why it might not have worked. Main thing is that you didn't think about what really worked for you right. You didn't go back to first principles and think about the customers. That are coming into your store. I think it's a huge problem. So you it's <hes>. it's shiny toy syndrome. It's the grass is always greener. So i go outside. And i see. Oh well this across the street. This other store has this way cooler side than me. And i perceive them as being more successful reality i have no idea what their businesses like it all but i just perceive them as being more successful for whatever reason and i say all right well then i just attribute that to whatever thing i notice unlike yeah and thus we have some shiny toy syndrome action happening and i think that is where people get in trouble yeah. I think that's right like what ends up happening. I had this conversation with a client a few months ago where they were like our biggest competitor is doing this. We should do this. I'm like well. How do you know that they're doing it right. And they were just like just like shocked. And what do you think they're conversations were internally that led them to this decision and then the response to that was they. Didn't yeah exactly right. What you don't realize is that everyone is a group of smart people on a zoom call trying to figure it out in the dark like everyone else. Yes we're all in a cave with a candle and maybe there's eight people with candles. They might do slightly better but we still. It's such a young industry and it evolves so quickly that i literally. I don't think anybody knows what they're doing. No one knows what they're doing right. What i'm doing to go back to as we're firestone at a series. I think he's still has a series. This is called now right. And that's wildly popular because it gives you clarity and safety and a sense of strategy for cheap right like you can. Just go and look at this without works okay. Great and a lot of it actually does work because the problem with conversion rate optimization is that in many ways it's like getting to just basic first principles getting some best practices in place getting something that's familiar for customers and that makes sense to people right but then when it comes to doing something that's more like custom tailored to the specific needs of your customers. Everybody just like. I do what they don't know what to do with it. And that's where i come in <hes>. So what should people be doing instead. So we've established that like the shiny toy syndrome. The grass is always greener. that is problematic. And you're just kind of when you're doing that you are. You're blindly throwing stuff against the wall which there could be. You're gonna get success some of the time but we need a. We need a framework. We need a better approach here. So how should i be approaching it and then we'll get into the most common pitfalls or missed opportunities. Yeah i'll tell of an anecdote that i like to tell my clients especially when they first come in the door if you ran a physical store right assuming those still exist. I don't even know but if you ran a physical store people come in right and there's some about a foot traffic and you. The owner of that store are behind the counter. And you can observe right or you can talk to them. And so the problem is twofold number one. You can't. you aren't observing them and the second is that you can't talk to them necessarily can be like hey. Do you have any questions. And what happens in that. Process of observation conversation in a physical store is that you understand the customer's needs a little bit. Better you may not close the first few sales but eventually understand. Oh people are coming in for this. I should be making a couple changes to the store. Changing the way that i'm marketing myself or putting the this stuff over here or whatever it is right and so there's something that's observable that you can see right now. How do you take that process and apply to e commerce. Well i think that you can actually look at what customers are doing and ask them. What motivates them. I don't think that's difficult the problem that when you're stuck behind a computer all day and your as nerdy as i am you. It's not your default to go out and talk to customers. It's not your default to go out and observe what customers are doing. And when you try to do that you're stuck in an application like google analytics which is bad so the process of understanding what customers say and what customers do is a little bit more slippery and difficult but no less essential right. So how do you go about doing that. Well a lot of the tech industry has figured this out and it's using a lot of unsexy terms like research analytics and data right. I like these things. I'm getting excited. I like these things. Because that's why i get up in the morning i get up to research customers right and you may not. You may be if you're listening to this in your store owner. You're probably waking up to ship product to customers grow. The store grow the business. You might be thinking about stuff. If if i'm lucky and you're my client and i think that for me like the fundamental answer is that you need to go out and understand what your customers are doing. And you need to be a little bit more proactive about it. And it doesn't come naturally in retail as an industry right because normally the people come to you and you can just look at them and that's the research. The research already just happened because people were shopping with you and you understood what made them really light up and buy your stuff and you got that feedback on a daily basis but really all you're getting feedback as people complaining about that where their order is and occasionally anecdotes from your friends about the products. That's like your research process. And maybe if you're lucky you go in and look at g. nathan. Conversion rate is bad today. That's it but nick. I'm my best customer. I know what they want. I don't don don don right. I know what i want in my world view has quickly been wildly warped by being so close to everything. Yes the business owner. Yeah exactly like you are. Actually it gives me no pleasure to report that you are maybe the worst example of a customer. The storm okay. You're yeah and once we accept when you're starting out and you have no customers like you don't have a choice but like at some point you have to move beyond that and then that's where you start you need to start figuring out your customer and you're right online. It is so impersonal divorce that it gets strange. And so you need to go through and do the customer research talked to your customers on the phone. Oh my gosh. Pick up the phone call and try and uncover okay. How do they see themselves. Why do they buy and then also do it at a larger scale through customer surveys and what they have heard you say that i love and because i have found exactly the same thing to be true. Is you do a customer survey and often you could find that like that one magic phrase that suddenly becomes the headline on the website. And that's the thing that really increases conversion rate