POPULARITY
Informations pratiquesSamedi 17 mai :Accès au village: 11h—18hAccès à la mine : 13h—18h/dernier départ pour la mine à 17h Dimanche 18 mai :Accès au village: 10h—17hAccès à la mine : 11h—17h/dernier départ pour la mine à 16hTARIFS : L'accès au village des mineurs, aux ateliers et aux animations qui s'y déroulent est gratuit.Visite de la mine Saint-Louis Eisenthür (1h de visite): Adulte—17€/Enfant (5-12 ans)—10€Les interviews sont également à retrouver sur les plateformes Spotify, Deezer, Apple Podcasts, Podcast Addict ou encore Amazon Music.Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Connecting education and industry is vital for preparing students for real-world careers. Organizations such as UNITE LA bridge school-to-career pathways, focusing on equitable transitions for marginalized communities. Central to this is a strong commitment to equity and anti-racism, integrating these values into daily practices. Alysia Bell, President of UNITE LA, champions these efforts by promoting programs to combat racism, creating internal workgroups for race equity, and emphasizing collaboration, strong frameworks, and quality work-based learning. Technology and healthcare businesses are key partners with UNITE LA, contributing to industry-focused learning models that prepare students for high-demand careers. By working together toward inclusivity, we can build a more just society where everyone has the opportunity to thrive and pursue fulfilling, successful careers. You'll learn: How businesses can collaborate with institutions to tailor a curriculum that meets both student interests and industry needs. What strategies ensure seamless transitions from high school to college and into the workforce. How organizations can combat systemic racism. What approaches can be used to design industry-focused, work-based learning models that prepare students for high-quality careers. About the Guest: Alysia Bell serves as President of UNITE-LA, joining the organization in 2011. In her years with the organization, she has led national work in partnership with the Association of Chamber of Commerce Executives (ACCE). This partnership has raised more than $13 million, which resulted in sub-granting more than $700 thousand to chambers across the country. This led to promising practices in higher education attainment and graduated nearly 200 business organization leaders from the Fellowship for Education Attainment. Together, UNITE-LA and ACCE designed and engaged more than 600 chamber professionals in the Education and Talent Development Division, which UNITE-LA and ACCE co-launched in 2011. Engage with us: LinkedIn, Instagram & Facebook: @PasadenaCityCollegeEWD Join our newsletter for more on this topic: ewdpulse.com Visit: PCC EWD website More from Alysia Bell and UNITE LA: LinkedIn: @alysia-bell Website: https://www.unitela.com/ Instagram & Twitter/X: @letsunitela LinkedIn: @unite-la Facebook: @unitela1 Partner with us! Contact our host Salvatrice Cummo directly: scummo@pasadena.edu Want to be a guest on the show? Click HERE to inquire about booking Find the transcript of this episode here Please rate us and leave us your thoughts and comments on Apple Podcasts, we'd love to hear from you!
Kevin Acee Our Padres Insider From The UT Previews Rockies Padres And More.
Kevin Acee Our Padres Insider From The UT Previews Rockies Padres And More.
An update on Michael King. Our Padres Insider From The UT Kevin Acee On The Return Of Tatis And More. Jims Backpage.
An update on Michael King. Our Padres Insider From The UT Kevin Acee On The Return Of Tatis And More. Jims Backpage.
➜ La Croissance de l'Entreprise est propulsée - et limitée - par la Croissance de son Leader.La meilleure des stratégies ne sert à rien dans les mains du Leader qui se cogne à son plafond de verre mindset. Comme le disait Henry Ford: "Que vous pensiez être capable ou ne pas être capable, dans les deux cas, vous avez raison". Mettre de la conscience et comprendre son propre fonctionnement (et ses limitations) n'est pas une option. ➜ Je suis Fabien Matte, coach de Dirigeant.e.s, et j'ai acquis cette conviction au travers des +200 Leaders Entrepreneurs que j'ai accompagné.e.s dans leur développement pro & perso.Entre deux coachings, je partage ici mes réflexions et des outils que tu peux utiliser pour accélérer ta croissance, et donc celle de ton business.▬▬▬▬ ME CONTACTER ▬▬▬▬Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/fabien.matte/Linkedin : https://www.linkedin.com/in/fabienmatte/RDV 30mn : https://calendly.com/fabien-matte/30-minutes▬▬▬▬ MES CONTENUS VIDEOS ▬▬▬▬https://linktr.ee/fabien_matte Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
➜ La Croissance de l'Entreprise est propulsée - et limitée - par la Croissance de son Leader.La meilleure des stratégies ne sert à rien dans les mains de l'Entrepreneur qui se cogne à son plafond de verre mindset. Comme le disait Henry Ford: "Que vous pensiez être capable ou ne pas être capable, dans les deux cas, vous avez raison". Mettre de la conscience et comprendre son propre fonctionnement (et ses limitations) n'est pas une option. ➜ Je suis Fabien Matte, coach de Dirigeant.e.s, et j'ai acquis cette conviction au travers des +200 leaders que j'ai accompagnés dans leur développement pro & perso.Entre deux coachings, je partage ici mes réflexions et des outils que tu peux utiliser pour accélérer ta croissance, et donc celle de ton business.▬▬▬▬ ME CONTACTER ▬▬▬▬Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/fabien.matte/Linkedin : https://www.linkedin.com/in/fabienmatte/RDV 30mn : https://calendly.com/fabien-matte/30-minutes▬▬▬▬ MES CONTENUS VIDEOS ▬▬▬▬https://linktr.ee/fabien_matte Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
In this episode of Lessons I Learned in Law, Scott meets with Maria Barros, Chief Legal and Public Affairs Officer at Booking.com. Maria is a true Citizen of the World. Born in London, from a Brazilian family, Maria loves travelling (passion and profession have collided at Booking.com) and has lived in the UK, US, Brazil, Mexico, Belgium and is now based in the Netherlands, where, in addition to her role as Chief Legal & Public Affairs Officer, she is a member of the Management Board of Booking.com and Board member of ACC Europe, the largest global association of in-house counsel. Before that, Maria was General Counsel Europe and Middle East of AB-InBev, the global brewer.Maria shares her insights on how she has built a best in class integrated legal and public affairs function at Booking.com with a strong focus on developing talent.We also discuss the importance of developing a strong reliable network and hear how the ACC has been a "home away from home" and a fantastic support network for in-house lawyers.A really interesting story with a unique International legal career at some huge global brands!----------------------------------------------------To find out more information on the ACC and how to get involved see the links below:- How to learn more about the ACC – More information on the ACCE website: Europe | Association of Corporate Counsel (ACC)- How to become an ACC member - individual and group – see this link: Membership | Association of Corporate Counsel (ACC)- How to register for the May conference – see this link: Registration - ACC (acceurope.com)
On Wednesday, February 14, 2024, AFSCME 3299 and ACCE both held a rally on campus to push for UCSB to divest from Blackstone, with similar efforts occurring across UC campuses. KCSB's Zoha Malik has the story.
Pourquoi tout le monde sort du cadre quand on en vient au processus de vente, trust the process si tu veux t'éviter bcp de maux de tête ! On t'explique pourquoi c'est important d'avoir un processus de vente dans cet épisode du H2H Academy Podcast. Rejoins-nous dans le groupe Facebook 100% GRATUIT https://www.facebook.com/groups/lestopsclosersSite web: https://www.h2hacademy.ca/Pour les vendeurs, entrepreneurs et travailleurs autonomes qui souhaitent développer leurs compétences en ventes, obtenir un maximum d'outils, participer à des FB live, des Sales Bootcamp et recevoir plus de conseils sur la vente.https://linktr.ee/h2hacademy
Podcast du 8 février 2024
Tune into Art Movez with Toni Williams and Eli Kulsanksy as we talk with Harrison Tyler as he opens Cooper Union's new Digital Fabrication Lab, which augments experimentation, innovation and collaboration amongst faculty and students at Cooper Union. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/toni-williams72/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/toni-williams72/support
Katherine Harrington is a ballerina turned executive and is the President & CEO of the West Des Moines Chamber of Commerce. Katherine started in this role on April 1, 2022. During her tenue at the Chamber, she has built an award-winning team that enjoys many accomplishments. Some of them include, in 2022 the WDM Chamber was honored with the ACCE Chamber of the Year USA as one of three finalists. Over the last three years, she created several groundbreaking new programs and committees including the Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion committee who produces the international, award-winning Athene Black & Brown Business Summit & Pitch Competition, Diversity Week, and Diversity Fundraiser. She also helped to create the DEI Workplace Excellence Awards that has been nationally recognized by ACCE as an event other Chambers around the country should adopt, the Best of the West Awards, the award-winning Racoon River Rally, WDM Newsletter, WDM Edge events, Business Survival Toolkit Covid events, Talent Attraction Partnerships and more. With Katherine and her team's efforts, they have been able to give back more than $150,000 to a wide variety of non-profit organizations, entrepreneurs and Black & Brown Businesses in the State of Iowa and across the U.S. Katherine has an extensive background in public speaking, media sales, revenue stream creation, event development, innovation, and leadership with organizations including US Magazine in New York City, Crain's Chicago Business, San Diego Business Journal, DSM Magazine and the Des Moines Business Record. She also bootstrapped and ran her own glossy technology magazine, events, and digital news organization serving leaders in the booming tech and internet industries in San Diego called The T Sector with 23 employees. At the Des Moines Business Record, she was Director of Innovation, was the number one sales producer, and started the lucrative innovationIOWA Magazine, weekly e-newsletter, and yearly awards event. Katherine has a passion for helping others and is on the board for the West Des Moines Community Foundation, Racoon River Pedestrian Bridge Advisory Council, Cystic Fibroses, City of WDM DR. MLK Jr. Celebration Committee Member, American Heart Association Heart Ball Executive Leadership Committee, and is a Big Brothers Big Sisters ‘I am Enough' Champion. In 2023 she will co-lead the regional Greater Des Moines Partnership Inclusion Summit. Past board work includes WDM Historic Valley Junction Commission, President of the board for Ballet Des Moines, South Central Board Chair for the Iowa Governors' STEM Advisory Council, founding committee for the Blood Sweat & Beers Race, and more. Between 2022 – 2022, Katherine and the Chamber were honored with the WDM Chamber MLK Jr. Community Organization Leadership Award, The Greater Des Moines Partnership's Equity Innovation Award, was winner of the Great Outdoors Foundation Most Valuable Philanthropist Award, was awarded with the PRSA Iowa Chapter Iowa Advocate Award, was a Finalist of the Inspiring Women of Iowa Award, and was voted one of the Most Likable by Cityview Magazine. Katherine lives in beautiful West Des Moines with her husband Craig who is a science teacher at Valley High School. They have three successful children Allie, Kaitlyn, and Nick. She and her daughters have a side gig and podcast called “What the FAM” and can be found wherever you get your podcasts. Katherine can be reached at 515-689-4447 / katherine@wdmchamber.org Producer: Northgate Marketing, Inc.Connect w David:InstagramLinkedinwww.davidallentracy.com
Today on the Take on Board podcast I'm speaking with Madeleine Babiolakis about building leadership skills in a new world of work. Plus, Madeleine is pro adding voluntary boards earlier in your board career and shares the benefits of a career portfolio. Balancing it all is possible!Madeline is on the boards of ACCE and Women's Leadership Institute Australia (WLIA). She was formerly on the board of IABC Victoria.Madeleine is the Founder and Director of Shape & Impact, a consulting and advisory practice helping purpose led organisations achieve strategic impact. A former journalist and press secretary, Madeleine has advised Ministers, CEOs and heads of large organisations and now helps stakeholders across government, technology and education sectors around the world navigate disruptive change. She is a passionate advocate of building leadership skills through a career portfolio, which has seen her join three boards in as many years.Links and ResourcesMadeleine on LinkedIn'An article on setbacks, rejection & resilience' by Madeleine BabiolakisThe Daily Motivation with Lewis Howes BlinkistUpcoming TOB EventsAll eventsYou might want to:Join the Take on Board Facebook communityJoin the Take on Board LinkedIn communityFollow along on TwitterWork with meJoin the Take on Board: Kickstarter group programJoin the Take on Board: Accelerator group programFind out more about meContact me Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
GDP Script/ Top Stories for Sunday Aug. 13 Publish Date: Friday Aug. 11 From the Henssler Financial Studio Welcome to the Gwinnett Daily Post Podcast Today is Sunday August 11th , and happy heavenly birthday to singer Isaac Hayes ****Hayes**** I'm Bruce Jenkins and here are your top stories presented by Mall of Georgia Chrysler Dodge Jeep 1. Gwinnett investigators looking for man who drove van through gate at police precinct and hit cars on I-85 2. Gwinnett police renew calls for information on Hispanic woman missing since last fall 3. And Former Lilburn Mayor Johnny Crist will run to reclaim old office All of this and more is coming up on the Gwinnett Daily Post podcast, and if you are looking for community news, we encourage you to listen daily and subscribe! Break 1 : M.O.G. Story 1. looking Gwinnett County police are searching for a man who allegedly stole a work van and crashed it through a gate at the Gwinnett Department's West Precinct on July 16. After plowing through the gates, the suspect drove south, causing further damage, and ultimately drove onto Interstate 85, striking multiple vehicles. The van was later found in DeKalb County, abandoned by a Hispanic male who fled on foot. The van belonged to Vortex Heating and Cooling, and the owner stated that it wasn't supposed to be driven due to maintenance needs. Police are urging anyone with information about the suspect's identity to come forward. Read more about this, plus see pictures of the suspect, the van, as well as the damaged gate at gwinnettdailypost.com. F.……………. read more on this at gwinnettdailypost.com STORY 2: missing Gwinnett County police are seeking public assistance in finding Selena Garcia, a 25-year-old Hispanic woman from Lilburn who went missing in October. Despite a previous call for tips in March, no progress has been made, leading authorities to renew their plea for information. Selena Garcia's disappearance has sparked concerns within the Hispanic community regarding the police department's handling of crimes against their community. Her case is among a series of incidents, including the murder of Susana Morales and the death of Rodrigo Floriano Mayen, which have drawn attention to the perceived lack of police responsiveness to the concerns of the Hispanic community. Police are urging anyone with information about Selena Garcia's whereabouts to come forward. Story 3: office Former Lilburn Mayor Johnny Crist has announced his candidacy for the upcoming mayoral election in November. Crist, who served as mayor from 2012 to 2020, aims to reclaim his former position. He emphasized his dedication to the community and his desire to work on issues such as public safety, controlling loud mufflers, and enhancing local amenities. The mayoral election is one of several upcoming local elections in Lilburn, with City Council Posts 1 and 2 also up for contention. Qualifying for these positions will take place from August 21 to August 23 at Lilburn City Hall. We have opportunities for sponsors to get great engagement on these shows. Call 770.874.3200 for more info. We'll be right back Break 2: Slappey- Tom Wages - Obits Story 4: tax Gwinnett County property owners are receiving their property tax bills in the mail. Tax Commissioner Denise Mitchell announced that the bills would be mailed out, and property owners can also access their bills online and make payments through various methods. The deadline for payment is October 15. Mitchell encourages online payment via e-check for its convenience and security. Those who recently sold or bought property this year will each receive a bill. There's a $3.95 fee for debit card payments and a 2.25% fee for credit card or PayPal payments. For questions, property owners can contact the Property Tax Customer Service or visit the tax office in Lawrenceville. Story 5: chamber Nick Masino, President and CEO of Gwinnett Chamber and Partnership Gwinnett, has been elected to the board of directors for the Association of Chamber of Commerce Executives (ACCE). ACCE is an international organization that works with chambers of commerce worldwide. Masino's election was announced during ACCE's annual conference, where Gwinnett Chamber was also recognized as a Chamber of the Year. The ACCE board includes representatives from influential chambers of commerce globally. Masino expressed his honor to serve the chamber industry and praised ACCE's innovative leadership. Other Georgia figures, including Katie Kirkpatrick and representatives from Douglas Chamber and Sumter County Chamber, also joined the ACCE board. Story 6: study Georgia Gwinnett College (GGC) contributed over $521 million to Gwinnett County and the Atlanta metropolitan area's economy in fiscal year 2022, as per a study by the University System of Georgia. This marks an increase of more than $8.8 million from the previous year. Including construction projects, GGC's cumulative economic impact has exceeded $5.8 billion since its inclusion in the study. The college generated 3,798 jobs, with 808 on campus and 2,990 in the community. The study was conducted by the University of Georgia's Selig Center for Economic Growth and analyzed data from July 1, 2021, to June 30, 2022. We'll be back in a moment Break 3: ESOG – Ingles 6 - Lawrenceville Story 7: premiums Georgia state employees, public school teachers, and retirees will experience an average 5% increase in health insurance premiums starting January 1st of next year. This decision, approved by the Georgia Board of Community Health, marks only the second premium increase in the past six years. For those covered through individual plans, the average monthly increase will be $7.25, while families will see an average increase of $23.61 per month. The increase comes in response to rising healthcare costs following the COVID-19 pandemic, as individuals resume deferred medical appointments and screenings. The State Health Benefit Plan will also begin offering full coverage for diagnostic mammograms, colonoscopies, and retinal eye exams for diabetes to enhance preventative care and manage costs. Open enrollment for 2024 coverage is set to begin on October 16 and run through November 3. Story 8: soccer After a 27-year coaching career in Gwinnett County, Danny Klinect, head boys soccer coach at Parkview High School, has announced that the 2024 spring season will be his last as a high school coach. Although he will continue teaching, Klinect has decided to step down due to the toll of soccer injuries from his playing days. Throughout his coaching journey, Klinect has achieved considerable success, including winning state titles at three different Gwinnett high schools. With a career high school coaching record of 290-125-18, Klinect aspires to reach the 300-win mark in his final season. He plans to dedicate time to his family and daughter's soccer pursuits as he bids farewell to high school coaching. Story 9: home runs In the Rumble At The Ridge softball tournament hosted by Peachtree Ridge, Buford started their season with a strong performance, winning 14-0 against South Forsyth. Madison Pickens had a standout game, going 2-for-3 with a grand slam, a double, four RBIs, two runs, and a stolen base. Mackenzie Pickens also contributed with a home run, two RBIs, and two runs, while Kadyn Gabrels hit her first varsity home run. Caroline Stanton pitched four scoreless innings with nine strikeouts for the win. Collins Hill defeated Lanier with a score of 14-6, and Dacula secured their first win of the season by defeating Jackson County 9-4. We'll have final thoughts after this. ****LEAH**** Break 4: Henssler 60 Thanks again for hanging out with us on today's Marietta Daily Journal podcast. If you enjoy these shows, we encourage you to check out our other offerings, like the Cherokee Tribune Ledger Podcast, the Marietta Daily Journal, the Community Podcast for Rockdale Newton and Morgan Counties, or the Paulding County News Podcast. Read more about all our stories, and get other great content at Gwinnettdailypost.com. Did you know over 50% of Americans listen to podcasts weekly? Giving you important news about our community and telling great stories are what we do. Make sure you join us for our next episode and be sure to share this podcast on social media with your friends and family. Add us to your Alexa Flash Briefing or your Google Home Briefing and be sure to like, follow, and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. www.wagesfuneralhome.com www.psponline.com www.mallofgeorgiachryslerdodgejeep.com www.esogrepair.com www.henssler.com www.ingles-markets.com www.downtownlawrencevillega.com www.esogrepair.com See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Jodie Perry shares the two programs from the Richland Area Chamber's application for Chamber of the Year. Full show notes are at: chamberchatpodcast.com/episode234 Please support this podcast by supporting our sponsors. Community Matters, Inc. chamberchatpodcast.com/podcast App My Community appmycommunity.com/chamberchat Chamber Nation chambernation.com Yiftee yiftee.com Swypit chamberchatpodcast.com/cc Izzy West, LLC theizzywest.com
Roy Nascimento shares the two programs from the North Central Massachusetts Chamber's application for Chamber of the Year. Full show notes are at: chamberchatpodcast.com/episode233 Please support this podcast by supporting our sponsors. Community Matters, Inc. chamberchatpodcast.com/podcast App My Community appmycommunity.com/chamberchat Chamber Nation chambernation.com Yiftee yiftee.com Swypit chamberchatpodcast.com/cc Izzy West, LLC theizzywest.com
Maureen Carpenter shares the two program that Barren Inc. submitted on their Chamber of the Year application. One programs was addressing housing needs and the other was about their leadership program. Full show notes are at: chamberchatpodcast.com/episode231 Please support this podcast by supporting our sponsors. Community Matters, Inc. chamberchatpodcast.com/podcast App My Community appmycommunity.com/chamberchat Chamber Nation chambernation.com Yiftee yiftee.com Swypit chamberchatpodcast.com/cc Izzy West, LLC theizzywest.com
Hope Kennedy and the North Tampa Bay Chamber have been selected as 2023 Chamber of the Year Finalists by ACCE. Hope shares about the two programs they submitted on their application. Full show notes are at: chamberchatpodcast.com/episode230 Please support this podcast by supporting our sponsors. Community Matters, Inc. chamberchatpodcast.com/podcast App My Community appmycommunity.com/chamberchat Chamber Nation chambernation.com Yiftee yiftee.com Swypit chamberchatpodcast.com/cc Izzy West, LLC theizzywest.com
GDP Script/ Top Stories for Tuesday June 13th Publish Date: Monday June 12 From the Henssler Financial Studio Welcome to the Gwinnett Daily Post Podcast Today is Tuesday June 13th , and happy 82nd birthday to longtime broadcaster Marv Albert ***Marv Albert Call**** I'm Bruce Jenkins and here are your top stories presented by Mall of Georgia Chrysler Dodge Jeep Snellville police ID man who was shot and killed earlier this month Gwinnett Chamber of Commerce is a finalist for Chamber of the Year recognition And the Daily Post hosting Generations Expo event June 17 at Gwinnett County Fairgrounds Plus All of this and more is coming up on the Gwinnett Daily Post podcast. Break 1 : M.O.G. Story 1. ID In a story we had here last week, The victim of a fatal shooting in Snellville has been identified as David Curtis Jaillett, a 54-year-old man. The shooting occurred on June 2 at a residence on Summit Pond Circle. Chevaune Vanover has been arrested and is facing charges of malice murder and felony murder in connection with the incident. The police have not disclosed any information about the motive behind the shooting, as the investigation is still ongoing....stay up to date on this story at gwinnettdailypost.com STORY 2: Chamber The Gwinnett Chamber has been named a finalist for the Chamber of the Year award by the Association of Chamber of Commerce Executives (ACCE). The ACCE is an organization that works with chambers of commerce across the United States. Finalists are grouped into categories based on various factors, and the winners will be announced at an awards ceremony in August. If Gwinnett wins, it will be the second consecutive year that a Georgia chamber of commerce receives the honor. The Gwinnett Chamber highlighted its efforts to support small businesses, promote economic development, and engage with members as reasons for its nomination.....read more on this story at gwinnettdailypost.com Story 3: Generations You've heard the promo announcements here on our show. The ninth annual Generations Expo 50+ Boomers & Seniors event will be held on June 17 at the Gwinnett County Fairgrounds Exhibition Center in Lawrenceville. The event, presented by the Gwinnett Daily Post and sponsors Northeast Georgia Health System, Publix, and Clover Health, is free to attend. Attendees will have access to about 60 vendors offering services, health screenings, and giveaways. Presentations by notable speakers and BINGO games for prizes will also be featured. Attendees are encouraged to bring non-perishable food items for donation to the Lawrenceville Co-op. More information and registration details can be found at www.GenerationsExpo.com. we'll be right back Break 2: Slappey - Tom Wages - then Obits STORY 4: SPLOST Gwinnett County commissioners have approved a project list worth $759.8 million, funded by the special purpose local option sales tax (SPLOST) that was approved by voters last year. The county will receive three-quarters of the expected $1.35 billion generated by the SPLOST over six years. The majority of the funds will be allocated to transportation projects, with $97.2 million dedicated to parks. Key transportation projects include the extension of Sugarloaf Parkway, improvements to Interstate 85 crossings, a new interchange at I-985 and Thompson Mill Road, pedestrian bridges, and capacity improvements at various locations. These projects aim to address infrastructure demands and support the county's growing population. Get more detail on these projects at gwinnettdailypost.com Story 5: rentals Gwinnett County commissioners have approved an amendment to the Property Maintenance Ordinance, aiming to hold landlords accountable for the proper upkeep of rental properties. The amendment establishes minimum standards for interior conditions and grants code enforcement officers more power to enforce violations. The changes, effective from July 31, align the ordinance with the International Property Maintenance Code, addressing structural maintenance, lighting, ventilation, plumbing, fire safety, and more. The county also made updates to improve safety standards for swimming pools, lighting at various properties, and the maintenance of buildings and structures. The revisions aim to ensure that residents have safe and comfortable living conditions. Story 6: honors The Gwinnett Daily Post has received two first-place honors in the Georgia Press Association's 2022 Better Newspaper Contest. They were awarded top honors for Page One design and the best Sports section. In total, the Daily Post won eight awards, including second place for education reporting and best sports feature. The awards were presented during the GPA's annual convention held at Jekyll Island. The Daily Post competes in Division A, for papers with a circulation of 8,000 or more. Other winners included The Brunswick News, Valdosta Daily Times, Walton Tribune, and Elberton Star. The Emerging Journalist Award went to Hunter Riggall of the Marietta Daily Journal and Liz Wright of The Augusta Press. we'll have more in a moment Break 3: Lawrenceville - Ingles 1 - GCPS Story 7: camp Kary Alicea, inspired by her father's woodworking, volunteered to lead the woodworking class at the Girl Scout Lilburn Day Camp. She wanted to offer girls the same sense of accomplishment she felt. As the camp co-director this year, Alicea guided volunteers and 200 Girl Scouts through a week of activities, fostering a sense of community that has lasted for 42 years. The girls engage in outdoor cooking, nature study, and leadership training. The camp emphasizes growth, empowerment, and the development of skills. Former camp leaders and parents remain involved, creating a sense of family. Service projects and gratitude toward Lilburn City Park are also part of the camp's values. The camp holds a special place in the hearts of those involved, providing a unique and cherished experience. Story 8: Roby NFL cornerback Bradley Roby, an alumnus of Peachtree Ridge High School, will be hosting his fifth annual Football FUNdamentals Camp on July 15 at his former school. The free camp is open to children aged 8 to 17 and aims to develop their skills through non-contact drills. The event will take place from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., with registration starting at 9 a.m. Interested participants can register online at www.robynflskillscamp.com. Back with final thoughts after this Break 4: Gen Expo - Henssler 60 Thanks again for listening to today's Gwinnett Daily Post podcast. Giving you important news about our community and telling great stories are what we do. Did you know over 50% of Americans listen to podcasts weekly? Make sure you join us for our next episode and be sure to share this podcast on social media with your friends and family. Add us to your Alexa Flash Briefing or your Google Home Briefing and be sure to like, follow, and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. Get more news about your community at GwinnettDailyPost.com www.henssler.com www.mallofgeorgiachryslerdodgejeep.com www.psponline.com www.wagesfuneralhome.com www.laqwrencevillega.org www.ingles-markets.com www.gcpsk12.org www.generationsexpo.com See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode, we talk to Cathi Hight, president of Hight Performance Group, and membership guru. She joins our hosts Steven Stout, FASAE, CAE, and Katy Markert for an engaging conversation about taking care of members throughout the member journey, attracting the next generation of members, the importance of telling your organization's story, membership marketing, and four core ways your members will engage with your association. This episode is sponsored by Visit College Station. Better By Association is produced by Association Briefings. Show notes Cathi Hight has more than 25 years' experience in the association industry. She is passionate about helping member-based organizations evolve and thrive. Considered as a Membership Guru, Cathi is the developer of The Member Retention Kit and A New Approach to Tiered Membership. She helps associations meet the changing expectations of members and to effectively communicate the value of membership. Cathi's top five StrengthFinder® talents are Strategic, Maximizer, Significance, Focus and Deliberate and she leverages these talents to facilitate scenario and strategic planning, develop foresight for boards of directors, and implement strategic recruitment and retention initiatives for associations of all size and industry. Cathi is a frequent speaker for national and regional associations, including the Great Ideas event for ASAE (American Society of Association Executives), Association of Chamber of Commerce Executives (ACCE) conventions, and state conferences. She has been an instructor for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's Institute for Organization Management (association management certification program) since 2004. Cathi is a member of ASAE, ACCE and TSAE (Texas Society of Association Executives). Cathi has a diverse career experience serving in leadership roles for association, manufacturing, finance, training and development, and nonprofit sectors. She was a Motorola University Instructor for six sigma, cycle time reduction and benchmarking. Her multi-industry background allows her to share best practices as a speaker, trainer, consultant, and author. Cathi holds a B.S. in Human Development from the University of Hawaii at Manoa.
In this episode, we focus on our neighbors without secure housing as covid-oriented eviction protections begin to dissolve. Our guest is Leah Simon-Weisberg, Legal Director of The Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment (ACCE) Action. ACCE is a grassroots, member-led, statewide community organization working with more than 15,000 members across California. Check out the ACCE Oakland website: https://www.acceaction.org/oakland —- Subscribe to this podcast: https://plinkhq.com/i/1637968343?to=page Get in touch: lawanddisorder@kpfa.org Follow us on socials @LawAndDis: https://twitter.com/LawAndDis; https://www.instagram.com/lawanddis/ The post Covid-Oriented Eviction Protections Dissolve w/ Leah Simon-Weisberg appeared first on KPFA.
Mick Fleming, the past President of ACCE joins us for a discussion about the importance for chambers to focus on their purpose and mission. Full show notes are at: chamberchatpodcast.com/episode213 Please support this podcast by supporting our sponsors. Holman Brother Memberships Sales Solutions holmanbros.com App My Community appmycommunity.com/chamberchat Chamber Nation chambernation.com Community Matters, Inc. chamberchatpodcast.com/cmi Swypit chamberchatpodcast.com/cc Izzy West, LLC theizzywest.com
Je vous parle de mon livre (Le monde change et on n'y comprend rien) et je lis quelques extraits. Accélération technologique, secousses écologiques, économiques, sociétales, folies politiques et géopolitiques... Dans ce livre qui est le fruit de six ans d'enquête, Julien Devaureix propose d'appréhender les profondes mutations de notre époque à travers une approche systémique des dynamiques actuelles: il envisage le monde comme un jeu dont il faudrait comprendre les règles, et invite à lier les sujets entre eux pour être en mesure de faire de meilleurs choix pour l'avenir. Socrate, Spinoza, Montaigne... Julien Devaureix convoque les penseurs pour nourrir sa réflexion, aux côtés de personnalités marquantes de notre époque: Trump, Musk, Xi Jinping. Considérant les règles du vivant, les promesses de croissance éternelle ou notre désir de puissance et de rédemption, la question qui se pose est la suivante:Peux-t-on réellement changer le monde ou bien est-ce le monde qui nous change ? Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Les moyens utilisés par Satan pour accéder au cœur Les astuces de Satan - Episode 3 Replay de l'émission live du mardi 27 janvier 2023 _________________________________________________________ Suivez-nous sur nos réseaux sociaux : Facebook : Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/MosqueeMirailToulouse Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/mosqueemirail TikTok : https://www.tiktok.com/@mosqueemirailtoulouse Twitter : https://twitter.com/Mosquee_Mirail Youtube : https://www.youtube.com/@MosqueeMirailToulouse Et notre site internet : https://www.mosquee-mirail-toulouse.fr
Les portes d‘accès de Satan au cœur Les astuces de Satan - Episode 2 Replay de l'émission live du mardi 17 janvier 2023 _________________________________________________________ Suivez-nous sur nos réseaux sociaux : Facebook : Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/MosqueeMirailToulouse Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/mosqueemirail TikTok : https://www.tiktok.com/@mosqueemirailtoulouse Twitter : https://twitter.com/Mosquee_Mirail Youtube : https://www.youtube.com/@MosqueeMirailToulouse Et notre site internet : https://www.mosquee-mirail-toulouse.fr
In this episode of Black Work Talk, Steven Pitts and his co-host Lauren Jacobs talk with Carroll Fife. Carroll Fife is a Councilmember at the City of Oakland. Carroll was formerly director of the Oakland chapter of the Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment (ACCE). Given Carroll's previous position with ACCE, we started the episode discussing what it meant to bring a Movement perspective to an elected position. We continued to discuss the distinction between the power that Carroll and her colleagues have as policy makers and the power that certain elites have to dictate the terrain upon which policies are decided. We concluded by talking about what democratic governance looks like and the step Carroll is taking to ensure that voices that are not usual heard have an impact.Here are links to Carroll Fife's official city website and her campaign website.
If you're anxious and nervous about how to handle your student loans fromn physical therapy school, stay tuned for this episode On this episode of The Healthcare Education Transformation Podcast, we have on Dr. Madeline Ratoza, where we talk about the student loan debt crisis, her story, advocacy for alternative paths for a physical therapy education, various means for earning additional income, and advocacy for financial literacy as well as for the physical therapy profession. Dr. Madeline Ratoza, PT, DPT, PhD(c) graduated with her from UCSF/SFSU. She has worked across the healthcare system in outpatient, inpatient, home health, general practice, geriatrics and pediatrics. She now serves as an instructor and ACCE at the University of St. Augustine and is a PhD candidate at Texas Woman's University. Her research interests include financial literacy, debt within the field of physical therapy, and health services research with an emphasis on social determinants of health and access. If you would like to reach out to Dr. Ratoza, please feel free to do so on Instagram. Special thanks to our sponsor, The NPTE Final Frontier, www.NPTEFF.com, and if you are taking the NPTE or are teaching those about to take the NPTE, use code "HET" for 10% off all purchases at the website...and BREAKING NEWS!!!! They now have an OCS review option as well... You're welcome! You can also reach out to them on Instagram Feel free to reach out to us at: Website | Facebook | Twitter | Youtube Instagram: HET Podcast | Dawn Brown | F Scott Feil | Dawn Magnusson | Farley Schweighart | Mahlon Stewart | Lisa Vanhoose For more information on how we can optimize and standardize healthcare education and delivery, subscribe to the Healthcare Education Transformation Podcast on Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Decatur native John Joseph IV is a national Truman Scholar who has been named a “Mover and Shaper” by the statewide Business Alabama magazine. He has also been named Decatur-Morgan County Chamber of Commerce Young Professional of the Year. John is a graduate of the Alabama Leadership Initiative. After accepting an academic scholarship to the University of Mississippi, where he served as student body president and was inducted into the University Hall of Fame, John received a fellowship to the Eagle Rock School and Professional Development Center in Colorado and worked for the American Youth Policy Forum in Washington, DC. He attended law school at the University of Alabama, earned his law degree and license, and later completed the Birmingham Venture Club's Entrepreneur Accelerator Program which led to various startup roles. As director of Decatur Corridor Development, John led creation of the first comprehensive incentive package in the country for STEM young professionals, the nationally recognized Best and Brightest Initiative. Currently Executive Director of the Decatur-Morgan County Entrepreneurial Center business incubator, which has been ranked #1 overall in the state for number of graduated companies, John leads implementation of a long-term strategic vision to diversify the area's economy. John also serves as chair of the Entrepreneurship Pillar of Launch 2035, a regional organization promoting joint projects between North Alabama counties. He serves on various boards including Decatur Heritage Christian Academy, GeneCapture Inc. of Huntsville, and a Nashville company in the healthcare space in addition to serving on a Decatur City Schools advisory group. He has also been a board member of Kiwanis Club of Decatur and the Princess Theatre Center for the Performing Arts. John's presentations include the national TVA Economic Development Forum, national Chamber of Commerce convention (ACCE), Fortune 500 companies, and the Tennessee Valley Corridor National Summit. He has written a book, contributed to another, and had his writing included in a Kauffman Foundation publication. John and his wife, Annah, live in Decatur with their two children, a cat, and a spoiled puppy. Host/Interviewer: M. Troy Bye, Owner, Our Town Podcast a brand of the Our Town Company, LLC Website: www.ourtownpodcast.net Audio available on all platforms. Just search for "Our Town Podcast" Video available on Spotify and YouTube 0:00 Start 01:36 Intro and Pandas 10:05 E-Center Overview 16:44 Types of Entrepreneurs 25:41 North Alabama Coopetition 37:54 John's Family Roots 44:45 Feelings of Loneliness 51:19 John's Beloved Mother 59:00 Receiving Constructive Criticism 01:02:49 Working in Colorado 01:19:45 Why study Law? 01:27:31 Launch 2035 01:39:31 Plea for Investor Funding 01:51:25 Launch Tank Event 02:08:18 Solo Retreats 02:13:18 The Pic 6 02:27:30 Closing Comments
Dale Petroskey shares the two programs from the Chamber of the Year application for the Dallas Regional Chamber. Full show notes are at: chamberchatpodcast.com/episode187 Please support this podcast by supporting our sponsors. Holman Brother Memberships Sales Solutions holmanbros.com App My Community appmycommunity.com/chamberchat Chamber Nation chambernation.com Community Matters, Inc. chamberchatpodcast.com/cmi Swypit chamberchatpodcast.com/cc Izzy West, LLC theizzywest.com
Charlie Clark shares the two programs from the Chamber of the Year application for the Hilton Head Island-Bluffton Chamber. Full show notes are at: chamberchatpodcast.com/episode186 Please support this podcast by supporting our sponsors. Holman Brother Memberships Sales Solutions holmanbros.com App My Community appmycommunity.com/chamberchat Chamber Nation chambernation.com Community Matters, Inc. chamberchatpodcast.com/cmi Swypit chamberchatpodcast.com/cc Izzy West, LLC theizzywest.com
Andrew Hoan discusses the two programs on the Chamber of the Year application for the Portland Business Alliance. Full show notes are at: chamberchatpodcast.com/episode185 Please support this podcast by supporting our sponsors. Holman Brother Memberships Sales Solutions holmanbros.com App My Community appmycommunity.com/chamberchat Chamber Nation chambernation.com Community Matters, Inc. chamberchatpodcast.com/cmi Swypit chamberchatpodcast.com/cc Izzy West, LLC theizzywest.com
Brittany Quick-Warner shares the two programs submitted on the Chamber of the Year application for the Eugene Area Chamber. Full show notes are at: chamberchatpodcast.com/episode184 Please support this podcast by supporting our sponsors. Holman Brother Memberships Sales Solutions holmanbros.com App My Community appmycommunity.com/chamberchat Chamber Nation chambernation.com Community Matters, Inc. chamberchatpodcast.com/cmi Swypit chamberchatpodcast.com/cc Izzy West, LLC theizzywest.com
Brad Lacy shares the two programs from the Chamber of the Year application for the Conway Area Chamber. Full show notes are at: chamberchatpodcast.com/episode183 Please support this podcast by supporting our sponsors. Holman Brother Memberships Sales Solutions holmanbros.com App My Community appmycommunity.com/chamberchat Chamber Nation chambernation.com Community Matters, Inc. chamberchatpodcast.com/cmi Swypit chamberchatpodcast.com/cc Izzy West, LLC theizzywest.com
Ron Bunch shares the two programs from the Chamber of the Year application for the Bowling Green Area Chamber. Full show notes are at: chamberchatpodcast.com/episode182 Please support this podcast by supporting our sponsors. Holman Brother Memberships Sales Solutions holmanbros.com App My Community appmycommunity.com/chamberchat Chamber Nation chambernation.com Community Matters, Inc. chamberchatpodcast.com/cmi Swypit chamberchatpodcast.com/cc Izzy West, LLC theizzywest.com
Joe Henning joins for this episode as he represents the Henry County Chamber as a 2022 Chamber of the Year Finalist. Full show notes are at: chamberchatpodcast.com/episode181 Please support this podcast by supporting our sponsors. Holman Brother Memberships Sales Solutions holmanbros.com App My Community appmycommunity.com/chamberchat Chamber Nation chambernation.com Community Matters, Inc. chamberchatpodcast.com/cmi Swypit chamberchatpodcast.com/cc Izzy West, LLC theizzywest.com
Katherine Harrington discusses the two programs the West Des Moines Chamber submitted on their Chambe of the Year application. Full show notes are at: chamberchatpodcast.com/episode180 Please support this podcast by supporting our sponsors. Holman Brother Memberships Sales Solutions holmanbros.com App My Community appmycommunity.com/chamberchat Chamber Nation chambernation.com Community Matters, Inc. chamberchatpodcast.com/cmi Swypit chamberchatpodcast.com/cc Izzy West, LLC theizzywest.com
Sandra Wilson shares the two programs from the Chamber of the Year application for the Paducah Area Chamber. Full show notes are at: chamberchatpodcast.com/episode179 Please support this podcast by supporting our sponsors. Holman Brother Memberships Sales Solutions holmanbros.com App My Community appmycommunity.com/chamberchat Chamber Nation chambernation.com Community Matters, Inc. chamberchatpodcast.com/cmi Swypit chamberchatpodcast.com/cc Izzy West, LLC theizzywest.com
Hope Kennedy shares the two programs from the Chamber of the Year application for the North Tampa Bay Chamber. Full show notes are at: chamberchatpodcast.com/episode178 Please support this podcast by supporting our sponsors. Holman Brother Memberships Sales Solutions holmanbros.com App My Community appmycommunity.com/chamberchat Chamber Nation chambernation.com Community Matters, Inc. chamberchatpodcast.com/cmi Swypit chamberchatpodcast.com/cc Izzy West, LLC theizzywest.com
Allyson Gutwein shares the two programs from their Chamber of the Year application for the Zionsville Chamber. Full show notes are at: chamberchatpodcast.com/episode177 Please support this podcast by supporting our sponsors. Holman Brother Memberships Sales Solutions holmanbros.com App My Community appmycommunity.com/chamberchat Chamber Nation chambernation.com Community Matters, Inc. chamberchatpodcast.com/cmi Swypit chamberchatpodcast.com/cc Izzy West, LLC theizzywest.com
El Foro ACCE, es un Congreso que lleva muchos años celebrándose que realiza Ana Francisca Garcia Trelles con un equipo de colaboradores, y que trata de Arte, Cultura, Ciencia y Espiritualidad, en el han estado presentes destacados profesionales de estos ámbitos. Este año se celebra en Nerja, del 1 al 3 de julio. Para ver el programa de actividades puede visitar: https://www.foroacce.com/foro-acce-unidad/
Theme: Centralization often cited as crucial differentiator How does KYC fit into distinction? In many cases, “decentralized” orgs have a controlling number of tokens held by a small number of people Wallet as authentication vs login/social as authentication. But discord still the main avenue of comms. Affordable project: Rug Radio - Genesis NFT - Collection | OpenSea NFT NewsRantum NFT Market Data, Cryptoslam.io NFT Headlines: Yuga Labs Shares Important 'Otherside' Metaverse Launch Plans Bored Ape NFT Instagram Hack Cost Token Owners $3 Million - Bloomberg Days After $66M NFT Drop, Moonbirds Executive Unveils Fund - Crypto Briefing Rough Transcript [00:00:00] Today on all about affordable NFTs. We're talking about what the difference is between web three and web two applications. It sounds pretty obvious, but there's some nuance and some important differences. That'll be fun to tease out. Also a quick, thanks to our discord for letting me know that I accidentally uploaded a blank episode, just get air. [00:00:23] So I appreciate that. And [00:00:26] again, if someone is listening, I thought it was maybe a little test and you know, it's good people, somebody did check and get back back to us. So yeah. You passed the test listeners. Thank you. Or congratulate. It's [00:00:43] good to know that we're not just talking to each other, although I probably just did it because it forces me to do research and pay attention and kind of put things out there. [00:00:52] So what's going on in the news. [00:00:55] Yeah. We've had some awesome big news dropping recently. So the rumored other side launch coming from UGA labs, which is yugas land minting. So there's a hundred thousand. Plots they've released some more details about this. Previously, there had been some details leaked from a pitch deck, but some more details confirm now, so this sale will happen on our let's see, by the time we're listening to this, let's see. [00:01:24] I think this may have just happened in my rate, George. [00:01:27] Well, we go, this'll be, there'll be listening to this on for [00:01:30] ride. Okay. I'm sorry. This is, this is coming up on Saturday the 30th. So it depends when you listen to this, but it is on April 30th and it's a hundred thousand. Land's going to be praised in ape. [00:01:42] There's no specific. Announced yet, but it is a Dutch auction. There's rumors that it may start around one eith worth, although I've heard two or three eith worth of Abe token. So we've seen the praise of ape climbing recently. I think it's up near 18 or so last I checked. And I think it will have a big impact on the on the NFT market as a whole. [00:02:05] You know, it's, it's one interesting part to this is that. To be on the wait list for this, you must have filled out eight or completed a KYC know your customer application. And this was something that wasn't clarified when they released that. There were a lot of rumors that may be holding other projects, such as a world of women and crypt codes and some of these other projects that were shown in their other side video that those might give white lists opportunities, but instead it's actually for people. [00:02:37] Are filled out the KYC form successfully seems that they are really trying to limit this to one per person, you know, much harder to to fake a person when they've got to go through a KYC process. [00:02:50] And for KYC, just to be clear, that also means that they are obliged to report on any tax. Information or it's [00:03:00] unclear what it's unclear, how they're doing that. [00:03:03] Because one interesting thing here is that if you're a board, eight member board, a holder or a mutant NAPE holder, you don't have to do the KYC process. So you don't have to go through this thing. So I'm not sure that it's going to be. Necessarily reported, but you know, they will have that information. [00:03:20] And, you know, we've seen countless situations in both, you know, web two and web three, as we're getting to have plenty of hacks and data leaks. So, you know, there is some concern and, you know, some, some pushback from a lot of people in the NFT community that prioritize more of the decentralized maybe anonymous way that a lot of people, our age, or a lot of collections are able to allow people to get involved. [00:03:45] I feel like there's a future episode where we talk about the like pro-con KYC ethos versus like, let's just be honest. This is a $5 billion company operating in large part in the United States with people that should be maybe paying taxes on massive gains given. Board , you know, like, I mean, not saying that they aren't by any means, but I could imagine a legislative body looking at a $5 billion valued company with that type of lens. [00:04:13] Interesting. Are you going to be, you need to line it up for the Lakeland [00:04:17] or what, what are you thinking? No, you know, I don't, I did not go through that KYC process. So I'm not on that white list. I do have some ape token and you know, I think that that's still could climb a little higher there. [00:04:29] There's a lot of excitement and you know, it's hard to hard for people to really bet against you to go at this point. They have, they have yet to miss on any of their mints. And while it seems like a lot of land and I'm not a N I'd be hesitant, even if I were on the wait list. I not ready to bet against them. [00:04:45] Yeah. I will. I'll I'll be sitting this one out, as I said on discord, I, I missed the UGA train and I try not to jump on trains that have left the station. Cause there's one leaving. Every month, it seems. But I agree with that summary speaking [00:05:01] of [00:05:01] this one was a big one. They, they had. Instagram account hacked. And there were, they, someone released an announcement that they had started the other side meant early and looks like how much was taken here, [00:05:17] $3 million. And this is like, this is all, it took a couple of quick posts on Instagram to trick people into a fake site, hook them and rip them. [00:05:28] Uh that's that's it right? Like the, the costs of. Social media security. Speaking of web two has a, has a different level at this point because of the quick access to capital hidden in wallets, locked in wallets, easily accessed. Once you sign a con. [00:05:46] Yeah, it doesn't seem like there's many, many NFTE projects doing much on Instagram. [00:05:51] So I would be at this point, be wary of any links there, especially things that seem a little too good to be true, but you know, it's hard because that is the The culture that we're breeding to, to jump and then ask questions. Right. And it can be difficult at times you have [00:06:07] 10 minutes to sign this thing. [00:06:09] Oh, you missed it. Oh, too bad. Oh, you have, if you see the sweet, you have to act now. Okay. Now look what's to say that, that Twitter account, like something just Instagram what's to say that Twitter account isn't hacked or the discord I'm actually in the land of a peg ACCE. I really respect the team. Cause one of the things that they do. [00:06:27] I think every other month or so they literally post in their announcements channel, something designed to like fake hack or white hat hack their audience. So recently are coming out with this, like download for a for racing the actual Pega on your mobile app. So it's like a mobile app download and they just created a spoof site and then they just announced it. [00:06:47] And then they come back and say like, if you went to this, you were just hacked by us. You weren't hacked. You could have. Never follow links that don't make sense, pay attention. Right? Like they did that, [00:06:57] Amanda with a bag of bones or something. Right. We've seen that way back. [00:07:02] Oh boy. The bones. Yeah. Right. [00:07:05] But I think there, I think that it's something that I think some of these projects should start. Sort of steel Manning should white hat hack themselves should really protect their audience in a, in a deeper way. And I think overall it might even lead to deeper trust and a smarter community because we are still in the beginning of new people, learning what it means to run around with a, with a hot wallet on. [00:07:26] Yeah, absolutely. So we've got another big, big money story here after a big mint. And I don't know you want to walk us through this one, George. So the [00:07:37] title coming out of crypto briefing is days after $66 million NFT drop moon birds, executive unveils, a fund. And I guess that's like a nice way of framing it. [00:07:47] Different way to say it. I mean, it is a factual thing of what has happened here. Not much opinion there. So this is the COO of the proof collective who, and they just had the, the mega successful moon birds drop went up to close to 40. I think it's now a floor of about 28 or something last I looked, but yeah. [00:08:10] And we talked about it a bit, how much money they brought in right away and over 15 million just in secondary royalty fees. And that was after this. As we mentioned here, $66 million drop. Oh, boy, I have to [00:08:23] say we were hanging out and talking unrecorded and believe it or not, we speak to each other on recorded and I have to hand it to you. [00:08:29] Andrew, you literally told me this. You literally said, look at the history of both of these guys while they have incredible, you know, knock it out of the park home runs. They also start and stop and start and stop things. They're serial entrepreneurs doing a lot of things and you kind of like question the long-term conviction of them. [00:08:46] And I was like, yeah, yeah, sure, sure. As like a risk factor when we were talking about. You know, should we jump in at an absurd price when, when it launched? I just can't believe how quickly that sort of premonition came true as Ryan Carson is now moving on to launch his NFT focused fund called 121 gigawatts, not a bad nod to back to the future, not a bad nod, but like immediately leave as like there's a reason they saw two power players working together on a project, part of the perceived value. [00:09:17] That fact that, you know, his name was involved with it. Now it's still, Kevin Rose is still an awesome, it's still very strong project, [00:09:23] but to be fair, I think more people were interested in Kevin Rose. Then more people were aware of Kevin Rose passed and then Ryan Carson's, he's been kind of put into the spotlight by Kevin Rose and by this, the success of the proof project, I would say It's still, you know, it's still just, it's not great to see a team split up that quickly to see someone. [00:09:46] I mean, the fun sounds like it's very going to be doing very similar things to what proof and to what moon birds is already promising. So, you know, it's, it's also a competitor in that sense and, you know, it's, it's I don't know. I think he said that they're already 80 people in interested, but there were also required 25 each for four consecutive quarters. [00:10:08] So that's a hundred eith you know, this is that's huge, even compared to the floor of the moon birds, you know, and you know, not a great look at the very least not great timing. You know, it was also interesting that he had put a quote or a tweet out asking for someone to put together a one-page website for him about seven hours before he announced this fund. [00:10:28] I'm impressed. He was able to get it done that quickly, but generally speaking, not I wouldn't say that's a whole lot of forethought to launching that project, so I'm sure there was a little bit more going on behind the scenes, but I don't know. I it's it's we'll see what happens to move birds here. [00:10:44] It's definitely going to be a challenge for them at the, in the short-term. [00:10:49] Yeah. I feel like I'm as we talk, I just have other themes. I would love to talk about like the, that just spin off of this, the number of people that were already like quasi calling moon birds, a blue chip, anything you're like, we got to redefine that. [00:11:06] So I'm going to parking lot. What blue chip actually means how it's being missed freaking used and how it definitely shouldn't be applied to something that has been live for seven days. [00:11:16] Absolutely. Yeah. Yeah. I think price is often too too much correlated with what makes a blue chip collect, writing it down right now. [00:11:25] That's a good one. George. We'll come back to that. All right. Let's move on to our affordable project while you write that down. I've got one there this week and you know, it's one that I wish. Recommended a couple of days ago. Cause it has, the price has moved a bit on it. But this is rugged. Radio is a Genesis NFT there. [00:11:43] I believe the floor is sitting a little above 0.3. It's been hovering around a bit. It had been down under point. Under 0.2, five a couple of days ago. So it's picked up a bit. Although it's still down a lot from where it once was. So rug radio is a decentralized media company, essentially that is producing very NFTs, but it's mostly. [00:12:08] Focused content. They do a lot of Twitter spaces in various topics at various hosts that do different shows and let the users produce the content. You can get these Genesis NFTs, and then they have a membership NFT, a different collection. Of course the Genesis is is the higher priced one and it yields a rug token each day that you hold it. [00:12:33] There are various levels in there. So you get different amounts. If you, I can't remember the exact amount, but once you get enough of the rug token, you can exchange it for a rug, Dow tokens. You can become a member of that Dow. They do have some big names that are involved with this. Keith Keith Grossman from time magazine is he has a number. [00:12:54] He hold a number of them and is also on. They're thinking what they call it. The council there, a few, other of the big NFT collectors and investors are involved in the project as well. I, I listened to one of the shows, almost every weekday, and I think that they are live shows, [00:13:14] right. You can't listen to it. [00:13:15] Exactly. That's, that's a, that is a not great right now. They do have plans to change that. So they want, they are, you know, they, they are changing that around. I don't know exactly how they are going to do it. If they're going to do a podcast or what they're going to do, but they're going to have more recordings because the Twitter space. [00:13:31] It's not great for listening to a recording. They do record some of them, but it's still a pain. You can't even set a, you have to set like a reminder for each one. It's not great. They still get a lot of people listening to it. They're showing up daily and there's a lot of people showing up daily and doing the work. [00:13:46] And I think that they are going to continue to do that. And I think they'll be able to, to grow the listenership over time by making it a lot easier to act. At least I hope so, because if they can't do that, then Twitter space. Well, who knows, maybe Twitter space has improves. There is that possibility. [00:14:02] There's [00:14:03] great tweet at Elon Musk and he'll handle [00:14:05] it. He's yeah, I'm sure he'll get his features. And if you have anything to get a problem with your Tesla's same thing. Yes. Just tweet them. I'll put Twitter thread. He'll he'll get right on it. So full disclosure. Do you have [00:14:18] any of these? I do. I have one of these and yeah, that's it right now. [00:14:23] I am still looking to maybe pick up another price, definitely moved a little faster than I anticipated, you know, it's, it feels like that's been happening to me and some of these projects recently, but that's a good thing. I'd say if you're yeah, it [00:14:37] looks like there are a standard scare scarce, one rare to rare one. [00:14:42] So there's. Places. I have no clue what these things mean. The art's cool. It looks like a rug with images on it. It's a. I will also say I actually own rug radio pass the membership pass. I picked up one of those for fun. I was like, yeah. Why not press on that is 0.059 as I'm talking about it. Now that [00:15:00] is another affordable option here to look at. [00:15:03] I don't know. Count that as the same project or not, but I think it's worth looking at both these and I wouldn't jump immediately necessarily you know, look for a good one. So the, some of the differences in the scarce and rare attributes there, they will, they will yield different or. The more rare ones will yield more of the rug tokens each day. [00:15:26] So there is that if you think that you will be holding these longer, you know, I, you know, getting more 10, 20% more per day would be worth it. But you know, that's the biggest difference I believe other than the rarity itself. [00:15:40] So it's kind of funny. I picked up the. The membership pass. Cause I was going to potentially fill out a info for submitting our podcasts, like as a feed to syndicate there. [00:15:50] And then I was like, oh no, we're not doing this live. And I was like, oh, I just want to syndicate episodes. We'll do a different intro outro. Would you be up for that? [00:15:56] Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. All right. [00:15:59] Well, if you're listening in the future on rock radio, here's, here's where it happened. All right. So I'll put that on the list, but I I'm not alive person. [00:16:07] I just want to talk about what I wanna talk. [00:16:08] All right. Should we move on to our topic? So the [00:16:12] topic web three verse web two, just to set the stage web two, we're essentially talking about the macro social layer of the internet. Web one was the like, Hey, let's put up a bunch of brochures that can be accessed on line that map over IP addresses and that whole like initial web. [00:16:31] And then we get the social layer of the web is at least how. Kind of looked at web two as a, as a macro idea. And then web three is the property layer applied to all things on the interweb with essentially the blockchain running to oversimplify it in, in the background as opposed to the social layer. [00:16:50] So when we talk about apps, applications, like it is any, and all things that you're interacting with through that kind of web interface. And that's kind of where I'd sort of start the main high-level. If I can climb up to the ceiling. Social layer versus property layer. [00:17:07] Where do you take it? That's a good way of putting it. [00:17:10] You know, I've always thought of web two as basically giving users the option to, to interact in some way, you know, it gave users the option to comment, to, to post, to do all these things. And before that, as you said, it was mostly reading brochures. And I think now we've got that property level, you know, maybe another aspect of it is the potential to earn. [00:17:30] In this, in this, you know, as we've talked about it in kind of the metaverse, as opposed to just earning online in a digital fashion, I think this is a different thing you're earning from in a digital economy. That's that is more natively, digital, digital than just something that has been sort of ported over from maybe shopping in the real world to shopping online. [00:17:52] Now that's a much more. To sort of usage of of the web, I think, or of, of the internet. Although, you know, because the shopping is basically the user interacting with it in some way, but it's never, you know, you're not owning anything digital. You're not you're not really caring about digital property in any way there. [00:18:11] Yeah. You have a note in here, a big difference being central is. Usually cited as a crucial differentiator, which is like, it kind of makes me smile a little bit, because I would say for the majority of web three applications, they aspire toward decentralization. It's certainly in their roadmap, but make no mistake at all. [00:18:36] They aren't there yet. That's not to say that they're not going there and then direction. Whereas web two is inextricably locked into. To a centralized governing board of acts, a CEO that owns this, a founder that owns this many shares of public market. You name it, but you know, you can follow the money. [00:18:55] So to speak back to a deciding body like MRX Zuckerberg, or now, and Elon Musk, who's going to own [00:19:02] Twitter. Yeah. Well I think maybe this is used too much as a differentiator. I think it may be a separate issue because, you know, if you look at something like, I mean, you'd certainly say email is, I don't know, it's maybe it's a protocol, but it's, it's nobody owns this and it's this, you know, this is certainly decentralized and it's not web three at all. [00:19:24] It's a very old. Idea. And I don't think anyone would even would ever call it web three. And it's still certainly more decentralized than almost anything that we have in web three Bisa maybe even more so than, than Ethereum itself. I mean, there's that, there's more ways to, to always set email, to access email then, and I think even run on the run, the Ethereum network. [00:19:47] So, you know, there's most of the companies that he said that. Yeah. Using in this web three world are centralized. They're using their private servers. There's a lot of off-chain transactions that are happening that are private to an app or that network. I mean, you know, the biggest, the biggest marketplace in NFTs is open C by a long shot. [00:20:11] And that is a private company based in New York. You know, that. They abide by us laws. They are a very centralized company. And you know, at the same time they allow you to come and bring your wallet there and bring all your assets. And you don't have to fill out any account registration form to be able to just use the platform itself. [00:20:32] You can come bring all your property there, use all of their services and not have to have purchased anything on. You don't have to purchase them from open sea itself. You can purchase, you could have purchased them from, from known origin, from a websites, from an artist's website. You could, you know, you could have created it yourself somewhere else and still use the same the same marketplace there. [00:20:56] And I think that's a real, that's a real differentiator to me is that you can take your assets and move them somewhere else and have the, have them accessible on that. [00:21:05] It's huge. I mean, there's two pieces there and I'll just start with that first one, which is the, the right to your assets, right? GDPR, the largest, I'd say data, privacy regulations rolled out predominantly through the EU, but having ripple effects does have a clause that lets you legally demand from a company like Facebook to export or right to your data, export your data. [00:21:29] Now. You can go on and do that and fill out the form. And you're going to get the dumbest shittiest, little XML dump of your stuff that is just wildly unusable. Same thing for Google. Where are you taking that in that proprietarily coded, you know, set up just freaking nowhere. Now, juxtapose that with me, jumping from open C over to looks rare. [00:21:54] It's instant. There you go. Here. All your NFTs. That's what we see. There you go. Because it's an associated with my wallet in a unique way. They are forced to render it to the universal standard versus the universal standard or the local, I'd say, standard of data architecture. And what have you being owned by that centralized or more of that authority. [00:22:14] So that is the difference. However, There's a lot of similarities here too, when you're talking about, oh, well, email is open except Gmail has like, you know, X percent of the market search is open except, you know, Google has 80% of the market when you've had these gatekeepers, which look a lot like web two companies, by the way, sometimes it ends up going right back to some of those web two elements. [00:22:36] I think. [00:22:37] Yeah. There's certainly some of those elements that, that come through here. I don't know. And, you know, I think a big part of this is there's not as clear a distinction as everyone's maybe making it out to be. Most of these companies are going to be a blend of web to web three. We certainly aren't anywhere close to having a completely. [00:22:55] Decentralized ability to access the internet. You know, there's ISP or internet service providers are very centralized and, you know, we've got, that's certainly an issue and we've seen that, you know, you can get your access can just be cut off. So, you know, I think we, you know, we're nowhere close to make a fully decentralized internet. [00:23:15] You're always going to have to use centralized technology of some sort to access these things. And until there's more, I don't see how. We have three to go completely decentralized. You know, we've got, I don't know. We've got a very, we've talked about. A few you know, just a few key players can really bring down almost everything. [00:23:36] You know, there was a inferior API outage just recently and saw a gas get down to, I think it was about 12 away at the time. So, you know, it's you see how just nothing happens when, when this inferior API goes down because of. Everything and website, you realize upon that that mask included most, most NFTA APIs have it in some way. [00:23:57] So, you know, we are, I mean, in some ways maybe we're even more centralized at this point because there are, there's so few apps and so few choices of what to use compared to web two, which really has spawned, you know, a number of options and redundancies in the technologies that are used every day. [00:24:15] Yeah. I mean, you can look at the Apache bug that happened not too long ago where, you know, we, we are all built on like layers and layers and layers stacks of, you know, code API APIs that, that run in the background. A big one that I'd say as far as a difference, and this may seem weird, but it's like more of this like point of entry and authentication where I, in my mind, see web three apps using the wallet as the authentication, you signed something to sort of then render. [00:24:46] However, they're going to view your assets in their ecosystem. Either look at your permissions for something. Show you what you have access to, to merge or race. In my case, a lot of your, a lot of your assets versus web two, which is, you know, log in, you know, you sort of standard user password or social authentication, Google authentication type of pieces that like log in and verify via social pieces. [00:25:12] But the funny thing is where it's like, well, wait a minute. Almost every single web three project uses. By the way. Okay. So that's like very much dependent on what to social, but a platform that literally hates its NFT users so much that it reverted the ability for something as basic as a functional check on whether or not you're holding a certain type of NFT. [00:25:34] So not there yet, right? [00:25:37] No, definitely not. There. I don't know, you know, I think it's hard to get there. I'm not sure if that is, if it's just a dream that everything can really be fully decentralized. I think it's great to have options and the option to bring your assets to another app when, when, and if you need to. [00:25:56] And hopefully that it's, it's not they're viable options. It's not just, well, you can take it like you can export your data from Facebook. You can take this in an actual, use it somewhere else. I would say that's the most exciting piece, the idea of the property layer being at the individual at the individual contract layer that I know that I have a wallet address with these assets in it that I can hold and protect and move I'll be at they only are rendered, right? [00:26:23] Like I can only raise my horses that said, there's nobody else being like, and take your ponies out for a trot here. I'm like, oh, don't mind if. [00:26:30] So, you know, that [00:26:33] may and can change. There are many projects looking at what that transportability can look like and how you can partner with these assets and play with them together. [00:26:41] And it's still very new, but it'll, it'll be, it'll be very interesting, you know, it's like, what would it have looked like in the early days of, you know, the video game world, if you could have brought Mario into battle, you are Sonic the head. And we'll get the, we'll get to find that out, [00:27:00] maybe. All right. [00:27:01] We'll see. All right, Andrew. [00:27:03] Good topic. Good theme. I think we did it afforded project, some news, a little banter, and maybe, maybe we'll even include the audio on this episode. Maybe not. People will test you. All right, we'll get dark and.
Gh0stlyGh0sts is first omnichain NFT, which means pieces can be moved across Ethereum and Layer 2 networks. Gh0stly Gh0sts - Collection | OpenSea Multi-Chain: Many projects using multiple chains for their projects to gain credibility then move to less gas-intensive layers, eg. start on Ethereum, then introduce an aspect on Polygon (Red Village) Users must change network in wallet, hold various currencies in order to transact Meebits DAO had to issue small amount of Matic to all members in order to delegate votes - which required a vote Cross-chain will enable users to forget about the backend - ie what network the assets are on. May require projects/platforms to pay for fees for the sake of providing a better user experience Affordable project:Gh0stly Gh0sts - Collection | OpenSea NFT NewsRantum NFT Market Data, Cryptoslam.io NFT Headlines: VaynerSports Pass Is Sold Out! What We Know About It So Far VaynerSports Mint: Gas Fees Generate Three Times the Creator's Profit Britain announces plans to mint its own NFT as it looks to 'lead the way' in crypto Hack steals $625 million from NFT game Axie Infinity's Ronin blockchain - The Verge Transcript [00:00:00] today on all about affordable and FTEs Unchained, my NFT Omni chains, verse multi chain. We're excited to be talking about this topic. The first Andrew, what are we seeing in. [00:00:12] Yeah. It's it's been a little longer than usual since we are recording here. So we've got some, some news to catch up on George. [00:00:20] Yeah, we both took a little break. We took a break for two seconds and then we're like, well, maybe [00:00:24] well, you know, it was a, you know, an extra day or two and whew. There's a lot that happens. So yes, some big news here. We've got a big time act. [00:00:34] One of the biggest crypto history, 625 million. And this is very NFT related because it was on the Ronin network, the network that backs ACCE infinity. So 625 million. Taken this was from users' accounts essentially where they had parked their Eve using it on them, using it on the road in network. [00:00:56] So they, the Pronin team has come out and said that they will reimburse all users here. So that's good, but it is a, you know, it's worrisome that that this can happen apparently five of the nine I'm sorry, the five, five of the nine. I'm forgetting the name now. The [00:01:15] We're taken over. [00:01:16] So they put some, they put some extra provisions in there for extra security. But yeah, that is big time. They're going to take 150 million or so from Binance to help reimburse people. But I assume they have the rest of it available that is still going to hurt. One part that is sort of funny about this is the hackers. [00:01:38] Shorted the ACCE token R I'm sorry. Yeah, I think it was the ACCE token on before the news of this came out in the news did not actually tank the value as they expected. So they did get stopped out of those positions. So that is kind of funny of flow. They are doing quite well with what they were able to get away with. [00:01:59] Well, I mean, yes and no. What, what they got away with, as I understand, was moved to FTX, which was, and is a control bank for crypto, Right. That's not a decentralized movement wherever. So I'm not quite sure what the plan is because that stuff could get frozen pretty quick. I think it is pretty remarkable that that amount of sort of, you know, theft doesn't really impact the price. [00:02:25] Yes. There was a drop in, in Ronan, but it like spikes back up on April 5th and it's, you know, back down, but it doesn't, it wasn't a collapse. Right. It might as well have been an Elon Musk tweet and things kind of kept rolling. [00:02:38] Yeah. Yeah. I guess it was the Ronin network. You're right on that one. Yeah. And it was surprising. I've spent a year. At least it has been a pretty bullish crypto and NFD market as of late. And I think it's, you know, in that, in this kind of environment people are willing to overlook even a major hack, like. [00:02:55] Yeah. And it's the question of how do you calculate that sort of unpriced risk of a centralized network? Decentralized, right. You're just mentioned there were nine tees that controlled this thing, as opposed to a decentralized network where it would be millions of keys or millions of nodes. And it would be very [00:03:14] There we go. [00:03:15] very difficult to do a sort of whatever 51% takeover, you know, it's scary. [00:03:20] It's a wake up call for, for these other side chains and another sort of plus one to a theory based and layer two. Based pieces built on a theory. I'm not saying that they can't be hacked, but this was a brutal one. [00:03:33] we'll get into one of the problems with Ethereum and FTS and just a second here, because we've got Vayner sports was just minted yesterday. Surprise, mint and gas. These spiked to insane levels. They have a little. What's it called widget on my, on my browser. And all of a sudden I noticed it was up near 3000 at one point yesterday when it's been, you know, in the fifties and two digits for the most part as of late. [00:04:01] And so there was over three times the amount spent on just the gas fees then as the mint fees and this one just failed transactions all over the place. So a pretty terrible drop here. That is, you know, that's the beauty of Ethereum. So. You know this, I don't know why people are willing to put it through. [00:04:19] At that point. It's got to be, you've gotta be thinking it's tough to make a profit when it's a 0.1, five eith drop and you're spending four or five you know, many times that on, on the price of gas. [00:04:32] Yeah. So the total take-home numbers, just to put it in perspective, they made about call it 10 million on the mint of 15,000 NFTs about at that point. Five five Ethan amount. And the total gas. [00:04:46] was estimated to be at around 25 million. [00:04:49] Yeah. Well, I had heard, I had heard some, some significant figures that I'd heard even a little bit higher than that. That is. Wow. No matter what it is. 27, 20 5 million on gas. So there are problems with drops on Ethereum. It's, it's not perfect, you know, layer twos definitely solve that issue for the most part. [00:05:10] You know, and, and it's still not, it's not where most people are. Most projects are willing to launch. What's sort of interesting is the Vayner, some of the teams behind Vayner sports have. They've done drops on. I believe on a mutable in the past, which is a essentially gas lists of layer two. And you know, for this, they, again, chose to go with Ethereum, you know, perhaps they thought that the the surprise aspect of it may reduce gas fees. [00:05:39] But I think in general, those we've seen that those often spike gas fees and, you know, getting into. It's been a bull market and people have been much more willing to jump into projects then maybe a couple of weeks ago. [00:05:52] Yeah. I'm pretty surprised by this too, because I feel like Gary Vaynerchuk and the, you know, the Vayner Vayner media network is trying to position themselves as the expert in all things, brand sport and NFTs. He even launched his own of course, very popular V friends, as well as a number of other things. [00:06:13] And this is, this is a sort of unforced. That hurts and erodes brand trust in a way that I think is like antithetical. You know, I know a lot of his work is antithetical from the way he does business, but you can't just sort of say, oh, we'll make everybody whole. I mean, maybe they can and just eat it, but even still remember, they only made 10 million people spent two to three X more on the transactions and. [00:06:42] You know that's a problem and it's a problem in the architecture. [00:06:45] Yeah. And I know that there's, you know, I know Dutch auctions. Aren't perfect. And there's been, there's been a lot of talk about what the real Dutch auction should mean. You know, I think there's, there's been a push for. For that to mean that everybody ends up paying the same price, being the final price, which would be, make it much more fair than I think most of them are handled right now. [00:07:05] But the one thing that does do is give people a chance to spend more on the price of the mint, rather than just spending it on gas. And if someone is willing to put in. A ridiculously high gas fee to get a mint throw. And I think there was a max of four pieces on this. So, you know, maybe, I mean, I would at least prefer that to be going towards the project that I'm investing in than to just gas fees. [00:07:30] You know, I I'd rather see that that ease is captured and use towards adding value to the project then than just wasted on gas fees to jump in line ahead of somebody else. [00:07:39] Pretty clearly pretty clearly it has to be done in a different way. And you know, I'm sure there going to be more articles out about how they're dealing with it, but. You know, pretty, pretty ridiculous, and also just kind of stinks, right? Like burning that, you know, goes to, where does that money go? It goes to minors and it just goes into the ether ether. [00:07:59] Right. It actually disappears. And I think when it moves to proof of stake, it'll actually be a little more interesting and actually make an aggregate help. I think the larger Ethereum network more than it frankly does now, which feels like it goes into a black hole of say, [00:08:14] Yeah, one note about this it's I believe the project is led by AIJ Vaynerchuk, which is a. Which is Gary's brother. I'm sure Gary is involved in, in many ways as well though. [00:08:26] Yeah, fair fair. I assume with the brand and association, but Yeah. good point. Good. Now. All right. You have Britain [00:08:34] Yeah. One word. [00:08:34] to mint. Oh. [00:08:36] Yeah. Oh, no, just about this or go on yet. So we've got Britain, they've announced plans to Benton NFT by this summer. So they want to become a crypto hub. They announced this all in say at the same time, if they want to become more of a crypto hub and have released an NFT, I'm sure they're getting backlash for this. [00:08:56] You know, anytime a major public entity announces NFP plans. Always a lot of controversy around it. So I can't imagine that this will be accepted without pushback as well. But it is, you know, it's interesting. I think it's a, it's interesting that they're trying to get into crypto and I think there's been a lot, a much wider acceptance by regulatory bodies to look at crypto as not this thing to keep out, but rather, how are we going to work with it? [00:09:25] How are we going to embrace this? You know, I, I certainly am not recommending anyone to go mint this NFC, as soon as it comes out or [00:09:32] the affordable project of the [00:09:34] But but I, I think it is, I think it's great to see that that governments are more welcomed towards being more welcome towards crypto at this point. [00:09:42] Yeah, it's a good sign. I'd say overall for the NFT market and acceptance and more predictable that's I think the big word, like a predictable future for regulation rather than, you know, wait a minute, we're going to take away all the, you know, potential here. We're going to ban it outright. It seems to be much more on the adoption curve along the way. [00:10:04] All right. Well, let's get into, well, I think we can, we've got a bit of a cross between our affordable [00:10:12] We murdered them. Cause sometimes we forget, [00:10:14] This week. So we're talking about Omni chambers, multi chain. And one of the reasons we're talking about that is the new project that has launched those sleep ghost ghosts being spelled with a zero instead of an O in both words there, this has just launched. [00:10:29] It is claiming to be the first Omni chain NFT and by Omni chain, it means that it can be transferred across from Ethereum to layer twos, to optimism, to polygon, to And there's a couple others that it works with a kid, sorry, like an off the top of my head. But so you can actually move this across. [00:10:49] So if you want to, if there's a future where you could maybe play a game with us on polygon, you can put it there. If you want to verify your profile on Twitter, you can put it on Ethereum. So you can, there can be different use cases for it on different networks. As far as I know it is the first Omni chain. [00:11:06] It's the first NFP that can do this. In the past we've seen. Projects, primarily mint PR on different chains to have interoperability between them. So this is a little different in that the NFD itself is moving, is moving between these chains. So essentially you're still parking it. It's a bit of a bridge for the NFT to do this. [00:11:28] So this. It's a bit pricey right now for an affordable project. I believe the floor is around 0.4 as we speak. Let me take a look at that. 0.4 [00:11:39] Point for too. So it's, it's come down a little bit. It had gotten I believe up over 0.5 at one point. But I have seen it talked about a lot and I don't know that this will necessarily be the project that takes, takes hold of this Omni chain or cross chain sort of narrative that, that I think could become prevalent in, in NFTs and crypto for a while here. [00:12:03] But I think that. It's at least worth watching to see how this does and see if, if this does catch on, if you know, before it continues to fall, you know, maybe this, this is a narrative that isn't that important to people. However, I think that with the rise of all these layer twos, we're looking for ways to, to work between them rather than have them as as, as so prominent within the project. [00:12:28] I don't think that it shouldn't necessarily. The change should dictate so much of the project. The project can move between these. So if that does catch on, I could see this project doing quite well. Same time. I, I, I could see ghostly ghost just paving a path for other projects to to do the same thing. [00:12:46] So I be on the lookout for other projects that are following this bottle. They certainly won't be the only one as we've seen when new trends catch on. Spread quickly. And and it's not always the first mover that does succeed, I would say as we've seen in many projects or the past year, [00:13:06] Yeah, this is interesting. So the discord I just popped in, it's got about 3000 members, 1000 active, and the number of men contracts that you can kind of chase it down on, goes from like Binance, avalanche, Arbitron polygon chance and optimism right now is pretty darn impressive. And then there's like, [00:13:26] Okay. That actually, I think I misunderstood that it's not just layer twos, then there are even other layer [00:13:31] Yeah, no, no. It's it's Omni chain. Given the fact that you can get to avalanche, which is a different layer, one yet Binance, [00:13:38] Binance. Okay. That's yeah. That's, that's interesting. And an important note there, I would say that it can go across not just a theory and base change, but to other chains. [00:13:47] Yeah. And they, they talk about it being different than currently. You can use NFT, a tool called wormhole, apparently that will sort of like, hold your NFC and like a lockbox, call it in a contract and then give you a synthetic replica and the destination chain. And you know, this may be a risk of hacking there as we've seen with bridges before. [00:14:09] But this, you know, they're, you know, they're claiming their white paper to be the the first true. Omni chain and Ft and moving it back and forth. So actually, if you were to buy it and you wanted less gas, I would buy it on, let's say polygon, right? Like you can check calling on for, it is going to make it kind of like, I don't even know what the floor is then. [00:14:27] Right. Because I [00:14:28] That's true. [00:14:29] looking at an Ethereum floor, so I don't know. [00:14:32] That's true. Yeah. I'm looking forward to more tools that do work across these networks do, because this is going to become a bigger, bigger issue that, you know, there's going to be braces that are on different, different marketplaces, different platforms. And you're gonna have all over all sorts of places to check, to find a real floor price. [00:14:51] I'm going to, I'm going to full disclosure. I don't own any of these. I think it's gonna take me some research to do it. Also I'll note that like their white paper and the website is technically a post on medium. So I, I want to see a little bit. About, you know, the, the team of what's going on behind the curtain, I think before I pull the trigger, but I think it's I think it's interesting to do your own homework and. [00:15:11] Yeah, I think that's important. We're not 100% recommending this, especially at this price, but I think it is worth keeping an eye on and is not. It could be an indicator of, of, of what is to come for other projects as well. [00:15:25] So when we're talking about multi chain to this like theme of Unchained, my NFT, there is a not too distant future because it's already kind of. Where many projects are going to be able to move across multiple chains. And maybe that's from sort of inception that we just talked about to the, you know, the tools I just mentioned like warm hole, but in effect, we just talked about how that Vayner sports lost an incredible. [00:15:55] Of gas for its customers because they chose a very expensive platform to mentor. Now, hypothetically, let's say you had chosen a polygon, right? When you met there and say, look, you can bridge it here. We built a tool to Bridget, go on. Now it's on Ethereum and you have the cachet of being on Ethereum. [00:16:13] You know, what that looks like is, is going to open up a lot of potential and maybe decrease the prevalence or. Importance of Ethereum as, as a full network. If you can move between chains potentially. [00:16:26] Yeah, I think that's it's definitely possible that maybe we don't care as much about Ethereum. And I think one of the, something that I'm looking forward to is the user not needing to care quite as much about which network it on a project is on and have to switch between it. You know, I think there's a lot of. [00:16:43] A lot of technical aspects that the user's exposed to right now that seem unnecessary. You know, not, I'm not just talking about the fact that you'd need to use a wallet and all this, but then you've got to switch between it and have, have a currency on the right network and make sure that you have enough of the currency to keep transacting, because otherwise you're just going to be stuck without it being able to move anything on. [00:17:04] There's just a lot of issues that come up and you know, I think this is, this should be pushed to the back end. So I'm looking forward to when, when it it's, there's not so many hurdles to just trying to use another network. It's, it's already difficult enough to use it, to get it in FDS as it is. And, and putting it on the user to, to to figure out how each of these different networks is a lot to ask. [00:17:30] Yeah. [00:17:30] it's tough to move to. I mean, Yeah, absolutely. We're we're only at a fraction of total people owning. And FTE something like 1.4 ish million. I mean, it depends on what stats you're looking at, but if you were talking about what gets mass acceptance, it's saying that like, well, wait a minute, you know, I bought this, you know, this non fungible element and why does it matter what, what chain is on? [00:17:53] And I think those, those pieces are going to get better. I think there are security risks with sort of the, you know, when you're bridging with a tool like Warhol, If you are also considering the platform you want and the, like the overall security, we just talked about the Ronin hack. Let's say you'd move it onto a alternate layer one. [00:18:13] And I dunno, say all of the Ethereum bank accounts get, you know, its underlying cash gets taken. What does that mean for your asset? Well, I don't know. You can, you can move that back. What does it mean for did that technically have a pricing event or a repricing event? Does that have a tax implication? [00:18:28] I have probably more questions than answers when it comes to it. But I do think the, the future of NFT ownership is one where moving it across as an asset is made easier. I also believe that it will increase the potential value of based and FTS when they can come into the highest liquidity pool, which is, if you're in minutes, I had a topic we'll get to. [00:18:54] Later. So I think that may open up a door for additional value in terms of overall marketplace purchase power for these alternate layer one projects. [00:19:07] Yeah, that's true. I mean, it is, it is still the biggest liquidity bullets where most people are trading NFTs. You know, I know that there's some other networks. Have growing NFT marketplaces, but at there I am still the biggest. And you know, that's the reason that I think we're seeing projects still launched there, despite the gas fees. [00:19:26] It's, it's where most people are. And if they're willing to, they're willing to spend the gas, you know, it's, it's where you want to go. I think one of the reasons is that it's relative, there's still a lot of hurdles to using layer twos. There's a lot of people that don't quite understand what it means to use layer cues, to use other networks, you know, Once, I dunno, I hope that once those issues are maybe not completely resolved, but they're made easier to overcome. [00:19:52] You know, I think we'll also start seeing people get into these, you know, I think that could be, you know, if it's just using, if you can use the same tools that you're already using and access more of these other networks and not have to go through and kind of figure out the technical side. I think that there's a very easy avenue for new people to start coming into these other projects. [00:20:11] And like you said, that can add value to the products that were at least originally on other genes. [00:20:17] Yeah. Well, there's also another aspect, which is the strategy that red village, the red village took with and dropping their initial sort of token access path. Called the blood portal and then they're, you know, their bones collection and then saying like, all right, now these will give you access to the drop or the mint on polygon. [00:20:38] Right? So they have the sort of high level, a theory I'm based to add that credibility. And then they move to the, the low gas gas lists, a polygon or secondary chain. And, you know, maybe that's stretching. Goes away, maybe it doesn't, but that seems to be the most logical if you're trying to like, have your cake and eat it too in that sense, but you're still changing wallets and networks and it's a bit of a headache. [00:21:02] Yeah. Yeah, absolutely. I mean, it's not, that is the way we've seen it done a lot. I don't know that it's I don't think it's the way it's going to persist over time. I think people are going to want to be able to move the actual asset and not have kind of a key on one chain and the asset on another. [00:21:19] Yeah. that makes sense to me. And then you have a mention here that me Bitstamp also had to issue a small amount of MADEC to all members, to delegate votes, to require a vote. [00:21:28] Yeah. So they've used Maddick for voting, you know, which is interesting, but you know, they did have to actually distribute Maddix. So it didn't cost much. And as I mentioned, when you go on these other networks, you've got to have enough of the token that the you know, that they charge fees in two people to do any transaction. [00:21:45] So while it doesn't cost a whole lot, you still need something. So, you know, you need a little bit of, of MADEC there. So that is one of the things that you have to keep in mind when you are on other networks. So if you're asking your users to go do it, you know, that either means that they, you need them to go. [00:22:00] Moved some funds over to both to this other network and then two with the, the right the right asset you know, being MADEC on polygon anyway that it can be, you know, there's, it's different on different networks, which can be confusing. So, you know, I think that that needs to, you know, that sort of thing is the. [00:22:18] Overcome that, you know, I think that's too much to ask people to always figure out and for projects to to expect users to take on upon themselves. [00:22:27] Awesome. Well, I think there is definitely some element that we're going to be looking for in terms of saying as their alternative layer, one NFTs out there that we can find. And in what it means when we begin to merge these like very disparate systems. Cause like, look, let's be honest, we've given you pretty much, I'd say 95% Ethereum based NFTs. [00:22:47] Cause it's where things that we trust are minted and made, but that may be changing. And I'm, I'm kind of excited for that. Although we have branch to like layer two polygon a bunch, but yeah, for the most part, that's where we play. [00:22:59] Yeah, that's true. Yeah. We've mostly stuck on Ethereum, but you know, maybe we'll branch out a little bit more. As we see things developing.
hello, vitality seekers. This is your host, Caroline Schafer. Please help me welcome Jenn. Jenn is a registered holistic nutritionist, a functional diagnostic nutritionist and a medical exercise specialist. She specializes in women's health and hormones and is a best-selling author as well. Her book is called the simplicity project. She is the founder of the global and revolutionary women's health programs. The hormone project. And these programs that are dedicated to teaching women all about their bodies. She also, has a YouTube channel called simplicity and she sits on the advisory board for numerous magazines and TV programs. Welcome, Jen, how are you today? I'm good. Thanks so much for having me. Absolutely. Give us just a little backstory about how you got involved in this whole health arena, especially like in more in the hormone part of it. Well, when I started off, I've been active. My whole life, been in a, in a gym environment, my whole life, you know, with my dad growing up. And, I worked with athletes in the beginning. So I worked with a lot of men. I worked with a lot of teams, so there was already this built in support and network of like, you need the nutritionist, you need the chiropractor you need, like, we got it for you. And at the same time, I was ppersonal training women in a gym I lived at or live near at home. And I was just so much more interested in what was happening with the women. I was training because they did not have this support in this community. And they went over, carving out the time they were raising kids, they were working jobs. And, you know, there was, we would get to a certain point with movement and with nutrition. But then we would always hit these roadblocks where it was like they would get results. They changed their body composition, their health, their energy, but their hair was falling out. They weren't sleeping. Well, there were all these different, you know, notes that were showing up about hormones. And I was like, I need to go deeper. I need to understand more of this. And I didn't have children at the time. And so, um, you know, I went back to school again and started to dive deeper and had a greater understanding of some of the diagnostic pieces. I'm looking at blood work and different functional testing. And then I became a mom with my first child. And that for me was just. I knew that we weren't being told the whole story as young girls and women, what was going on in our body. But when I became a mother for the first time, I felt ripped off in the education department and I was like, I went to school for this and I still, I still was not prepared to know and understand the changes I would feel. Not just physically, but mentally and emotionally and on my nervous system and the guilt and the shame and expectations, and that lit a fire under my ass. And I just, you know, I decided to stop working with the athletes. I dedicated my career to working with women. And, you know, I went on to have another child. I opened up a brick and mortar business. I started to run and create these programs. And in 2015, I sold my in-person studio and clinic and I transitioned everything online. And now I work, oh my gosh. You know, I have said a little prayer of gratitude because I wouldn't have been open for a lot of reasons. I would have been one of the businesses that didn't survive. Uh, and just because of who I am as an individual, not fully because of the circumstances, but I just wouldn't have been able to make some of the decisions. And so I am very grateful that I am online. But now I work with women all over the world and I have a team of all functional medicine coaches and we specialize in women's health and hormones, digestion, inflammation. And ultimately what we specialize in is educate. That's so awesome. Like I said, I have thyroid condition, since I got pregnant with my first, so that's twenties almost seven years, so she's going to be 26 and they're all telling me I was tired because I was pregnant and I'm like, I can't keep my head up, like at all. And that was so scary to me when I learned that. It could affect her limbs being made with the, thyroid being way off. And I'm like, I don't have six weeks to regulate this. I mean, it was a very scary time. So I welcome all this information, because I am also at the age where my hormones are going a bit wacky. So this just perfect timing being totally selfish. One of the things that I saw that you are more inclined to talk about is female cycles. What can you just explain what you mean by a female cycle? So for those of us as women, We are still menstruating. We still have a bleed, a period. We go through four very distinct phases that lead up to the period. So as women and girls, we were taught that your period was the main event and that's all you had to focus on is like, when is it coming, survive it, get through it and get to the other side. It's actually a build up the period is the end result of the three other phases. Our body goes through to prepare for this. We have a follicular phase, which is where hormones are on the rise again, where the follicles are ripening and getting ready to release an egg, which is the second phase, which is oblation. Hopefully we all relate. That's how we produce our progesterone. That's what supports us for the third phase, which is our luteal phase. And there's all different energy, energetics, nutrition, movement, lifestyle support for each of these phases as a woman that then lead us into our periods. So we're not, you know, saying things like, I don't know who I am the five days before I bleed. My PMs is so bad. My mood is all over my cravings. I'm retaining water. My boobs are so sore. Like I'm not sleeping. All of those things happening. They've become ubiquitous of being a woman and like that's normal. It's very common. Nothing is normal about any of those symptoms and especially the swinging severity now for women who are in that transition of going into menopause. So they're, peri-menopausal, the cycle is not regular. The timing of it, the type of it, the mood of the other hormones. So thyroid and ovaries and adrenals, like they, they are part of a system they're part of an ACCE that's communicating. And so when one of those areas. Is being stressed or as being, uh, you know, over asked to over-deliver and to show up in a way that it doesn't have the support you talked about, you know, your thyroid starts to show up in pregnancy. It is one of the most common times for women because a lot of women, there are things going on behind the scenes, in their. That they dismiss that they're like, I can do this. I can get through it. And then you either get pregnant. And one of two things happens where you feel worse or you feel a whole lot better because you have this surge of all these incredible hormones and then you give birth and it's like, as soon as you birth the baby and the placenta. It's like the rug has been pulled out from underneath you. And there is postpartum thyroiditis, which is on the rise. A lot of women are having major thyroid issues after baby. And again, just get told if you have a new baby, you're tired, you're stressed do that. And yes, that can be true, but she deserves better care than that. And she deserves to be taught how to take care of herself. So. You know, thyroid can impact the peri-menopause, uh, just as much as it can when you've been pregnant, but that perimenopausal transition for women, they might be listing and go, well, I don't understand these phases because I don't have, you know, I can get a period 25 days from today, but then I can get 1 35 days from then, or I could go months without one, because that is really that runway towards menopause where it's been a full year without a bleed. I just learned. Yeah. And it's, this is like, and again, we're not broken. This is by design it menopause is our second puberty. When we go into puberty as a young girl, there's lots of signs and symptoms we have in our body that many of us aren't taught about cervical mucus, showing up in our underwear shape of our body, changing, smell, hair, mood, emotions, all of that. And that's as that, the hormones are coming on the scene and they're hyper trying to figure out how to regulate. How do we start to. The pituitary gland to signal to those ovaries, they need to release an egg. How do we do this, that or the other? Well, in menopause, it's the puberty in reverse. The OBS are like, I am taking the final bow. I'll do some shows, but not every single month. I will obviate sometimes, but not every single month. And now you're starting to get disruption in how much progesterone, how much estrogen, how much testosterone, how well your body produces cortisol, DHA. Regulates these hormones, our blood sugar going into menopause also takes us on a wicked ride because we become more insulin resistant. So we don't manage the same dietary principles, the same food, the way we did years ago, which is why women get into menopause. And they oftentimes find themselves over dieting, which is a huge no-no over fasting, which can be a huge no-no or trying to go back to the old tricks of the trade that they used to do to drop those couple of pounds, get their tummy feeling good again, and it doesn't work. So there's a lot that can happen. And I was, I was teaching a live class yesterday and I was asked the question that I get it, why women asked, but they're like, okay. So what do we do to balance our hormones? And I'm like, I could spend the next year teaching you because it's not one thing. And then everybody's different. Everyone is different. And to understand how you can best support a woman, like you talking to me and saying, I had an underactive thyroid now I've got Hasimoto's, I'm going through menopause. Okay. So that's where you're at today, but we need to understand the decades that led up to today. We need to understand, like, tell me more about the lineage and the history of what your body has experienced, stress, nutrition, sickness, medication, pregnancies, whatever it may be. This is where the functional piece. We are really detectives, honestly. That's what I feel like I do. I feel like I'm a detective that is doing triage when I'm working with women. Because you're trying to get them to a place where they feel a difference fairly soon in terms of like, okay, I can take a breath now I can see the light, but it's complicated. It is very complicated. I know I'm just from the thyroid. It is like just trying to get blood out of a stone to get straight answers with the endocrinologist. They're still doing just like the one test and there's like six of them that really are helpful It's just such a grueling experience to try to get answers. So that's what I love about the functional health part of it. Yeah, because it shouldn't be that way. It is actually, it is, it is the bane of my existence when women are not given the appropriate blood work, when they have. They sign and symptom of thyroid test TSH is a signaling mechanism. All that is telling us is how well your pituitary gland in the brain is communicating and tapping into the thyroid. If we aren't measuring free T4 and free T3, we don't know from the perspective of the gland, how well you are producing those hormones and then the next step. So it goes. Production then what has to happen is the thyroid is like, I got the message. I produced the free T4 and some T3, but I'm going to need a whole lot more of that T3 because that's a metabolically active thyroid hormone. I don't think for a lot of women that they understand these are hormones we are talking about that are chemical messengers and where that conversion happens is in your liver and your. So, if you have a woman who has gas, bloating, constipation, chronic digestive issues, liver is not functioning all that. Well, she doesn't have a gallbladder and that makes things more difficult. She's really going to struggle with her thyroid unless someone teaches her that in the case of Hasimoto's well, we have to look at what is your immune system's response, and the only way that you can actually get a of Hasimoto's is you have to test thyroid peroxide and thyroglobulin, and I like to see reverse T3 as well. Your family doctor is going to say, no, they're going to say, we're going to test TSH. If it's normal, I'm not running any more tests. This is where you havetwo choices. You become more educated, you become more empowered and you say, look, I'll pay out of pocket for these tests or you say, thank you very much. And you now go work with a functional practitioner who can actually give you the blood work that you need, and you're still going to pay out of pocket for it. But now you're going to get answers and answers to the cause that does treat the symptoms. And that's a huge thing in mind. Because I've spent so much time just trying to fight the system, trying to educate myself. I had one doctor kind of get aggressive with me because I was asking questions is if one of my kids, my body, it's like, I need to know these things and I want to test it for them. So I have better answers, but they're getting defensive and angry because here's the thing at the end of the day. So I have a huge. A lot of network, my network RMDs, they are medically trained doctors or they're their functional medicine doctors who were medically trained and they will be the first to tell you, they are not taught all of these tests. They don't know what to do with the results. They're also, they're handcuffed by their governing bodies and they're colleges. And the healthcare system that they work in as to what they're allowed to test. And I truly do believe that a physical, every year, every human being should have the ability to get all of these things tested because how do we know what is starting to become an issue? I don't want to wait to help a woman when her hair is falling out, she's exhausted. She's cold all the time. She can't poop. She's not sleeping. Like we have done her a disservice. When, if she's at that point, the medical system has totally couldn't concur more. Absolutely. I'm just curious, what's your go-to remedy? I'm a big foodie, so I always think food and environments and excellent resource to remedy things. But what do you think about, um, my hormone replacement? What are your thoughts on. I think it's great for some women, but you have to start by doing the foundational things first. So if you have a lot of digestive issues, if you're not eating a very healthy diet, if you're not eating enough at all, if you're not hydrated, you aren't sleeping. Bio-identical hormone replacement therapy, Western medicine, hormone replacement therapy. It's going to give you this short-term window of feeling like things have changed, but, but they're not. If we're going to start to take any hormones, we want to make sure that the body as a whole is healthy and can actually use those to the best advantage. So you want to start on gut health. You want to start making sure you're eating whole food. Please balance your blood sugar before you get on hormone replacement therapy. And then yes, it can literally be. Change women's lives. When you are working with a practitioner who is testing your levels to see what you need, not just throwing you on the run of the mill. So I really do like bio-identical hormone therapy because you're working with a compounding pharmacy that is working with your practitioner And then what is actually needed for your Mount. So, yeah, I think it's when used responsibly, it can make a big difference. And then Dutch testing. Is that something you also recommend to try to give, give headway of what your numbers are, where you're at? I recommend Dutch and blood work for those types of things, because we do want to see certain serum levels. Like we want to see testosterone in your, in your blood. We may want to test things like your sex hormone, binding globulin, DHA, before it's been sulfated, but what's so great about the Dutch test ,we're going to see the hormone levels from a different lens, and we're going to see how you are breaking them down and that's the missing piece. Blood work is a snapshot. It's like a selfie in that moment. What we have available circulating it is time-sensitive. So depending on what you're testing as a woman, the day that you test month matters, if you're a woman that's testing for progesterone versus a woman who's testing for follicular stimulating hormone. You're testing on like day three progesterone. You're testing five to seven days after you've ovulated. So if you don't test on the right day of the month, now your results are not going to get certain recommendations based off that. So it's really important. Yeah. It's misleading. If you're not doing it the right way. It's. It's kind of almost irrelevant information. The other thing I would say on, yeah. The other thing I would say in that too, is that it's all great to go get all the testing done, but please make sure you're working with people who understand the test. Right, right. Because they're there translation is everything, right. A hundred percent. I was tested for Hashimoto's years ago. And I only discovered it since my records went online, like a couple of years ago. Um, and I was looking back and they put all the records online and they actually tested me and I had no clue. I was just walking around going. Okay. I know if I had a frigging nickel for every woman who was told she was fine. And then we asked to see her blood work and it is literally identified. Sometimes it is literally bolded in black or red marked LO for low or H I for a high or A for Abnormal. And no one has told her. It's a very frustrating condition. I feel like a lot of people understand it. I think a lot of the understanding is very old school. It's not very functional minded. And so it is, it is very hard to get answers. So, tell our audience where they can contact you. Yeah. So Instagram is where I spend most of my time. I don't know when this is going to air, but our whole month in February, it's 28 days of hormone education every single day. Um, and so. Jenn pike, it's Jenn with two NS. So Instagram is great. my website, Jenn pike.com. And then we have a team of wellness advisors where we actually offer complimentary calls to any women where they're just like, I, I think this is what's going on. I'm not sure. Or this is what my experience has been, um, because I really liked to make sure the women that we're bringing into our practice are women. are women we can help. Right. And, and we're not like doers of everything. We have a very specialized focus on, on women's hormones and digestion, so they can always slide into our DMS, ask about how they can book a call. I think what you're doing is so important. I wish I knew that you were a long time ago. I will definitely become a patron of your podcast. I didn't even know that a menopause means a year without periods. And why don't you start with. You have to wait a hundred the whole year, like I had. And I'm like, I've had my body a long time. I know it's a crazy thought. Um, okay. Last question. Um, if there was one thing in this world that you could eliminate, what would it be and why? Oh, just one. I know there's a million of, and especially right now with the side, that's it, you know, there's really, there's really two for me actually at this time in the world. one is divisiveness. Uh, it's like, it's heartbreaking as an individual to witness just how much division has happened in the last couple of years. I'm in Canada. There's been a lot of it. And so. Division would be something that I would really just I'd love to, to not have. Um, the other thing is I would love for there to be this end of women being dismissed by the medical system and being dismissed by their primary care practitioners. I really, I am on a huge mission to spread as much education and empowerment for women for them, but so that they can also help their girls, their daughters, their granddaughters, and, you know, We don't have the village and the communities that we used to in the way that we used to, but it doesn't mean they can't still exist. So those of you listening, those of you who feel like you've learned something, you've had an experience, please commit to being an ambassador of sharing that information with other women. You know, it's, we, I want to move out of this era of like clinking our wine glasses over the complaints of our life and our body. And instead coming together on a walk or whatever it may be and sharing. You know, like, this is what I learned. Did, you know, this happens in our body, this is a thing. And so, yeah, that's my answer. That's that's perfect. It's so true. I felt dismissed a lot, with the Hashimoto's, especially, and with even thyroid is you have to get that checked all the time. It's just kind of a grueling experience, but I am so happy and I feel privileged to have met you today. So I thank you for coming on because I think what you're doing is spectacular out there. So I just want all of our listeners to remember that life has no remote get up and change it yourself.
Episode 14: "ACCE$$": Tiger Woods, The Williams Sisters, Simone Biles,....when you think of athletes of color, these athletes come to mind. But did you ever consider what it took for them to get there in these elite (and sometimes "elitist") sports?? Sit back and listen as 3 The Hardway dive into the more expensive sports for children to get into and how their lack of financial access prevents many from getting into them. 3 The Hard Way pulls no punches as they discuss their personal experience getting their kids into these sports and the struggles they've faced.
Are you a PT student gearing up to start your first clinical rotation? Do you feel nervous or unprepared? Listen as Matt and Allie talk to Ken Rusche, Co-founding partner and ACCE for Oxford PT and everything he has to share about giving students all the information they'll need to feel confident walking into their first clinical. Also- stay tuned to hear from Lauren, a current PT student from North Carolina ending her clinical rotation at Oxford PT, and her experience with learning the ropes at our West Chester center. Did you know that you don't need a doctor's prescription to receive physical therapy? The laws of Direct Access allow you to receive physical therapy without a referral and still use your insurance benefits! Learn more on how Direct Access can help YOU!Our website: https://www.oxfordphysicaltherapy.com/
Jeff Heggie www.JeffHeggie.com Heidi Anderson www.ecisecurepay.com Wendi Caplan-Carroll Wendi Caplan-Carroll has been working with companies looking to drive revenue to the SMB marketplace through them for almost three decades. Wendi founded Sound Business in 2020 to help SMB marketers connect to their prospects and customers more authentically. She is a business growth expert and has substantial experience and success building out partner channels. Wendi worked for almost 10 years as a leader of the Field Sales and Solution Provider program at Constant Contact. She learned there that bringing people together generates success. Her team of over 300 generated substantial success for the company as well as the individual contributors. Wendi ‘s background includes marketing /sales management, business development, channel development, strategic partnerships, executive coaching and public speaking She has created programs with hundreds of national and local business organizations including SCORE, ACCE, NJMEP, NJBIA, NAM as well as created strategic partnerships with (partial list) Google, Facebook, Microsoft, Wells Fargo, Bank of America, and US Trust. As a thought leader, Wendi estimates that she has presented to over 50,000 attendees at events such Inbound Marketing Conference, NY Times Small Business Summit, 1010 WINS Small Business Breakfast, CBS-AM Small Business Breakfast, and NY Enterprise Report Sales and Marketing Conferences. She has worked with hundreds of small business associations and chambers and their members as well. She has written articles for NYreport.com and has been quoted by Fortune Magazine, Crain's, Newark Star-Ledger and New York Enterprise Report. Before Constant Contact, she spent more than 15 years in sales and marketing management at broadcast companies including CBS Radio, Infinity Radio, and Emmis Communications. Wendi received a BA from Temple University. She also is a Certified Executive Coach, DISC analyst, Certified Master Creative Facilitator. Constant Contact Certified Email Marketing Partner and recently earned a certificate from Hub Spot for expertise in Inbound Marketing Practices. She received a certificate from NYU Continuing Education for Internet Marketing. Additionally, Wendi was a President Club Winner at Constant Contact and won awards from SCORE for her partnership and dedication to Small Businesses. Wendi's professional mission is to help small business marketers increase activity and productivity translating into deeper relationships with their customers and prospects. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Front entrance to Oakland Technical High School. Oakland Unified School District reopened on Monday without an agreement with the union OEA on how to safely reopen schools. On this show: 0:08 – Oakland Unified School District reopened, virtually, on Monday — but without a union agreement. So what does this mean for teachers and academic instruction? We're joined by Chaz Garcia, an OUSD teacher and 2nd Vice President of the Oakland Education Association, and Roseann Torres, who represents District 5 on the Oakland Unified School Board. 0:35 – Attorneys for the family of Sean Monterrosa have filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the Vallejo Police Department and the officer who killed the 22-year-old man. They're calling the fatal police shooting “flat out murder.” KPFA's Chris Lee (@chrislee_xyz) reports. 0:40 – John Burris is a civil rights attorney representing the family of Sean Monterrosa, shot and killed by Vallejo Police on June 2. He says this case, in which the police union has destroyed evidence to avoid repercussions, is just one example of the Vallejo Police acting “out of control.” 0:54 – In the final installment of our series “Taken From Us,” we remember Oscar Grant. In 2009, a BART police officer shot and killed 22-year-old Grant at Fruitvale BART Station, prompting mass protests in Oakland. KPFA's Chris Lee (@chrislee_xyz) spoke to Wanda Johnson, Oscar's mother, for the latest story in our series “Taken From Us” about the lives of those killed by police violence. This story was edited by Lucy Kang (@ThisIsLucyKang). 1:08 – Last week, a massive explosion caused by the detonation of unsafely stored ammonium nitrate decimated about a quarter of Lebanon's capital city, Beirut, killing more than 200 people and destroying three hospitals, the city's port, and the homes of an estimated 200,000 people.We're joined by Rania Masri (@rania_masri), a Lebanese-American academic, activist, human rights advocate and professor of environmental science, currently in Beirut. She calls for political responsibility and asks, “What kind of a political system is it that allows for this level of incompetence?” 1:20 – Four million Californians may be at risk of COVID evictions by September, and homelessness is expected to increase by 20% in just one month. Melvin Willis, an organizer for ACCE in Contra Costa County and member of Richmond City Council, joins us for a conversation about these looming evictions and ACCE organizing for AB 1436, which would strengthen eviction protections while creating a way for landlords to still get paid. 1:41 – Los Angeles District Attorney Jackie Lacey's husband, David Lacey, is facing charges for pulling a gun on Black Lives Matter protester Melina Abdullah (@DocMellyMel) and saying “I will shoot you.” Melina joins us to discuss the incident. She is the chair of Pan-African Studies at Cal State-LA and the co-founder of the LA chapter of Black Lives Matter. 1:50 – Wealthy Democratic donor Ed Buck is facing four new felony charges. For more, we're joined by Jasmyne Cannick (@Jasmyne), a strategist and political commentator based in Los Angeles. She's a lead organizer in the movement for justice for Timothy Dean and Gemmel Moore, two Black gay men found dead at the home of Ed Buck. The post OUSD reopens without union agreement; attorney representing Sean Monterrosa's family says Vallejo PD is “out of control”; and Lebanese activist calls for political responsibility in wake of explosion appeared first on KPFA.