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durée : 02:40:02 - Les Matins - par : Guillaume Erner, Isabelle de Gaulmyn - - réalisation : Félicie Faugère - invités : Thomas Fraise politiste, post-doctorant à l'Université de Copenhague au Danemark, associé au programme Savoirs Nucléaires de Sciences Po ; Jean-Marc Bonmatin Chargé de recherche au Centre de biophysique moléculaire du CNRS à Orléans, spécialiste de l'action des neurotoxiques chez les insectes et plus particulièrement chez les abeilles; Clément Therme Chargé d'enseignement à l'Université Paul Valéry de Montpellier; Azadeh Kian Professeure de sociologie, directrice du département de sciences sociales et du CEDREF à l'Université de Paris
La semana más intensa y vertiginosa del año. La Corte Suprema rechazó el recurso de queja de Cristina Fernández de Kirchner y confirmó la sentencia del Tribunal Oral que la condenó a seis años de prisión y la inhabilitó de por vida a ocupar cargos públicos. No podrá ser candidata a diputada por la tercera sección electoral de la Provincia de buenos Aires. La decisión judicial genera una multiplicidad de consecuencias jurídicas y políticas que analizamos en este episodio de Micro Mundos. Recomendamos: Kun por Agüero (Disney +)El trailer lo podés ver acá https://bit.ly/3HHH9IyGRACIAS POR TU DONACIONSi querés y podes ayudarnos a financiar Micro Mundos. Es muy fácil, sólo te pedimos que nos invites un cafecito..o también varios. Esa es tu decisión. Tus donaciones son muy importantes para que podamos seguir creciendo y mejorando. Micro Mundos seguirá siendo gratis e independiente por eso tu colaboración es indispensable. Si querés colaborar con Micro Mundos podés invitarnos un cafecito desde este link https://bit.ly/4ckPD2rTu apoyo significa mucho, nos ayuda a crecer y a mejorar.¡Muchas gracias!SUSCRIBITE A MICRO MUNDOSSuscribite a Micro Mundos en SpotifySuscribite a Micro Mundos en ApplepodcastSuscribite al canal de Youtube Mis Redes SocialesSeguime en X: @martinpittonSeguime en Instagram @pittonmartin Seguime en Facebook
Magazine lúdic cultural amb Jaume Serra, Tota la informació de les activitats sardanistes, el Temps i un repàs a la nostra agenda ludic cultural, i molt bona mùsica per gaudir del cap de setmana. podcast recorded with enacast.com
durée : 00:14:47 - Journal de 8 h - On parle de deux morts à Tel Aviv, 78 à Téhéran. Dans ce contexte, quel avenir pour les négociations sur le nucléaire iranien et quelle position adopter pour l'Occident face à l'embrasement du conflit ?
durée : 00:14:47 - Journal de 8 h - On parle de deux morts à Tel Aviv, 78 à Téhéran. Dans ce contexte, quel avenir pour les négociations sur le nucléaire iranien et quelle position adopter pour l'Occident face à l'embrasement du conflit ?
Cantar tangos de Gardel no es cualquier cosa, hay que tener buena voz, originalidad y estilo, para no caer en comparaciones. Si hubo alguien que destacó interpretando sus temas fue El Varón del Tango, Julio Sosa, uno de los pocos cantantes de fuerte personalidad que pudo entonar temas del zorzal con calidad y frescura. Tenía una garganta privilegiada y una forma de ‘conversar el tango' que lo diferenciaban del resto, como alguien que sentía la presencia de Gardel en cada tema. Lo hizo con piezas inolvidables del zorzal y hasta se animó a cantar con guitarras, aquellas canciones camperas que estremecen por sus relatos y nos llevan a la cuna de nuestra música Río Platense. Julio se nos fue más joven que Gardel, su corta y exitosa carrera dieron muestra acabada de su calidad a la hora de cantar y actuar en un escenario. Los dos fueron grandes ídolos en distintos momentos del Tango, por eso en esta ocasión, queremos homenajear a nuestro ‘morocho del abasto', con un uruguayo de pura cepa, que supo dejar bien alto el nombre de nuestro inolvidable Carlos Gardel.
Programa de radio dedicat a promocionar, disfondre i gaudir de la música celta. Presentat per Federico Salvador, Juan Armando Salvador, Lola Sánchez i Javier González. podcast recorded with enacast.com
durée : 00:06:19 - La Revue de presse internationale - par : Catherine Duthu - Israël mène des frappes contre l'Iran, soupçonné de vouloir se doter de l'arme atomique. L'armée israélienne a notamment visé un site d'enrichissement d'uranium et tué de hauts responsables militaires de la République islamique qui a promis de riposter à ces centaines de frappes.
C dans l'air du 13 juin 2025 - Israël frappe l'Iran … et ses sites nucléaires« Il est crucial d'œuvrer à la désescalade ». Mark Rutte, le secrétaire général de l'Otan, n'a pas caché son inquiétude au lendemain des bombardements d'Israël sur des installations nucléaires iraniennes. L'État hébreu, qui soupçonne l'Iran de vouloir se doter de l'arme atomique, a de surcroît tué des figures fortes du régime de Téhéran. Parmi eux : le chef d'état-major iranien, Mohammed Bagheri, puissant chef du corps des Gardiens de la Révolution.L'Iran considère cette attaque comme une « déclaration de guerre ». Sa réplique ne s'est pas fait attendre avec une centaine de drones envoyés sur Israël. À Washington, Trump, lui, appelle l'Iran à signer un accord sur son programme nucléaire, avertissant sinon d'"attaques encore plus brutales" par Israël. Le président américain semble toutefois rester à l'écart au vu de ses négociations avec la République islamique.Celle-ci ne cesse en tout cas de s'affaiblir : Chute de Bachar al-Assad, retour de Donald Trump, Israël, contestations populaires, crise économique… Les mollahs sont sous pression. L'économie inquiète notamment le régime, car si le pays reste à flot grâce à sa production d'hydrocarbures et le soutien de la Russie et de la Chine, les sanctions occidentales entravent son activité économique.Pendant ce temps, en France, l'eurodéputée insoumise a été acclamée par ses partisans, quatre jours après son arrestation en mer par l'armée israélienne. À Gaza, l'horreur continue, les yeux sont donc tournés vers Emmanuel Macron pour la reconnaissance d'un état palestinien.Alors, comment œuvrer à une désescalade entre Israël et l'Iran ? Le régime des mollahs est-il au bord du gouffre ? Emmanuel Macron va-t-il reconnaître un état palestinien ?LES EXPERTS :Agnès LEVALLOIS - Spécialiste du Moyen-Orient et vice-présidente de l'IREMMO (Institut de Recherche et d'Études Méditerranée Moyen-Orient)Alexandra SCHWARTZBROD - Directrice adjointe de la rédaction de LibérationGuillaume LAGANE - Spécialiste des questions de défense, maître de conférences à Sciences PoHéloïse FAYET - Chercheuse au centre des études de sécurité de l'Ifri –Responsable du programme de recherche Dissuasion et prolifération
C dans l'air du 13 juin 2025 - Israël frappe l'Iran … et ses sites nucléairesLES EXPERTS :Agnès LEVALLOIS - Spécialiste du Moyen-Orient et vice-présidente de l'IREMMO (Institut de Recherche et d'Études Méditerranée Moyen-Orient)Alexandra SCHWARTZBROD - Directrice adjointe de la rédaction de LibérationGuillaume LAGANE - Spécialiste des questions de défense, maître de conférences à Sciences PoHéloïse FAYET - Chercheuse au centre des études de sécurité de l'Ifri –Responsable du programme de recherche Dissuasion et prolifération
durée : 00:13:48 - Journal de 7 h - Le spectre d'une nouvelle guerre est désormais en vue. Washington était prévenu mais désapprouve.
Meta lo hizo otra vez. Ahora con América Móvil. Ambas compañías acordaron buscar el modo de optimizar el tráfico de las aplicaciones de Meta por las redes móviles del gigante latinoamericano. ¿Mejor alternativa a pretender un fair share? Pareciera que sí porque si hay algo que está cambiando en la industria es el comportamiento de los usuarios. Y ninguna empresa, ni siquiera las big tech, están dispuestas a invertir de más. Este viernes de podcast ponemos la lupa sobre estos ¿nuevos vientos del sector?
Vanir Ramos de Azevedo participa do programa Direto ao Ponto para falar sobre a correção do limite entre os municípios de Santa Cruz do Sul e Venâncio Aires, além de apresentar soluções para o trânsito.
Viernes 13 de junio y presentamos la Pastilla de Gamera
Programa de NovaOnda Albacete: Aires Latinos – (13/06/2025)
Vanir Ramos de Azevedo participa do programa Direto ao Ponto para falar sobre a correção do limite entre os municípios de Santa Cruz do Sul e Venâncio Aires, além de apresentar soluções para o trânsito.
Programa de radio dedicat a promocionar, disfondre i gaudir de la música celta. Presentat per Federico Salvador, Juan Armando Salvador, Lola Sánchez i Javier González. podcast recorded with enacast.com
Des de fa més de 60 anys fem sonar sardanes cada dijous a les 15h. podcast recorded with enacast.com
Dra. Raquel Vargas, gastropediatra, Dra. Clarissa Aires Roza, pediatra e Dra. Aline Campos, pneumopediatra, participam do programa Direto ao Ponto no quadro Infância em Foco. O tema desta edição é infecções respiratórias, com orientações sobre prevenção, sintomas e tratamento em crianças.
Dra. Raquel Vargas, gastropediatra, Dra. Clarissa Aires Roza, pediatra e Dra. Aline Campos, pneumopediatra, participam do programa Direto ao Ponto no quadro Infância em Foco. O tema desta edição é infecções respiratórias, com orientações sobre prevenção, sintomas e tratamento em crianças.
El Almería viaja a Oviedo con la necesidad de ganar y, para ello, sirven de ejemplos muchas ocasiones en las que lo que parecía hecho, acaba por no cumplirse. El equipo rojiblanco necesita ganar por más de un gol de diferencia y en este programa conoceremos distintos análisis tanto desde Oviedo como desde Almería
La France accueille cette semaine la troisième Conférence des Nations unies sur l'océan, à Nice. Le pays a une grande responsabilité dans la protection des mers : grâce à ses territoires d'outre-mer, il compte la deuxième plus grande zone économique exclusive, après les États-Unis. Le gouvernement se targue d'être un modèle en la matière, et soutient que plus de 30% de ses eaux sont protégées. Or, dans la pratique, cela est loin d'être le cas. Sébastien Farcis est parti en reportage dans la région des Hauts-de-France, au bord de la Manche, où d'énormes chalutiers pêchent sans limites dans les aires marines protégées françaises. De notre envoyé spécial à Boulogne-sur-MerLaetitia Bisiaux avance sur le quai de Boulogne-sur-Mer, le plus important port de pêche de France. Et grâce à une application de téléphone, cette spécialiste de l'association environnementale Bloom, identifie les chalutiers présents au large. Y compris ceux qui ne devraient pas être là.« Le Zeeland qui mesure 115 mètres, qui est dans l'aire marine, protégée des Bancs de Flandres. Vous avez aussi un bateau qui s'appelle l'Africa, qui mesure 126 mètres avec une vitesse assez faible. Ce n'est pas du transit, c'est vraiment de la pêche. Donc, rien que l'aire marine protégée des Bancs de Flandres, on peut compter le nombre de points bleus : ils sont une quinzaine dans une toute petite zone qui est censée être protégée pour l'habitat. Et on a des navires de pêche qui pêchent vraiment le fond, qui sont conçus pour racler le fond marin. »Cette région des Hauts-de-France compte trois aires marines protégées. En tout cas sur le papier. Car beaucoup de pêcheurs, eux, n'en connaissent pas l'existence, à l'instar de Pierre Leprêtre, il est propriétaire du chalutier Le Marmouset III. Et il est en train de débarquer une cargaison de deux tonnes d'encornet et de merlan. « Et en face de Calais, dans les eaux anglaises, les Anglais ont mis une grande aire marine protégée et là, on ne peut plus aller dedans. Normalement, il y a du poisson. » Et du côté français, n'y a-t-il pas d'aires marines protégées ? « Il n'y en a pas encore. Après, c'est en pourparlers, mais bon... »Raréfaction du poissonL'association Bloom a calculé qu'en 2023, les navires de plus de 15 mètres ont pêché autant à l'intérieur des aires marines protégées françaises qu'en dehors. Un paradoxe. Dans les Hauts-de-France, certaines techniques destructrices, comme la senne démersale, qui déploie des filets de 2 km², empirent la situation. Et ceci achève les pêcheurs artisanaux plus respectueux de cette faune marine, comme Laurent Merlin : « Il n'y a plus rien le long de nos côtes, tout est rasé, on ne pêche plus un poisson. Et du coup, pour pêcher un peu de sole, on doit partir loin. Et là, c'est de pire en pire. Regardez, j'ai deux collègues, ils ont fait 37 miles de route aller pour pêcher un peu de sole. Ils n'avaient même pas 100 kilos avec la marée de face, ils ont mis cinq heures pour y aller, alors qu'avant, on mettait une demi-heure, une heure, on sortait, on pêchait la sole quoi. »Le Comité régional des pêches affirme avoir fait installer des rondelles en caoutchouc sur les filets pour réduire l'impact sur les fonds marins de ces zones. Mais le résultat de cette technique n'a pas été mesuré, et selon les standards internationaux, elle demeure incompatible avec la protection d'une aire marine.À lire aussiConférence de Nice: en quoi les océans sont importants?
En este mes de junio, el día 24 se conmemora un año más de la muerte de nuestro máximo ídolo del Tango de todos los tiempos. Noventa años han pasado desde aquel trágico accidente de Medellín y aún su inspiración, sus cuerdas y su voz maravillosa, siguen tan vigentes como en aquel 1935, para transformarse e instalarse como ‘un clásico'. Son muy pocos cantantes y compositores que puedan soportar el paso de más de un siglo de permanencia. Los temas de su autoría musical y las exquisitas letras de poetas de alta gama que lo acompañaron, siguen sonando fuerte en algún ámbito musical del mundo. Obras de teatro actuales y de éxito, películas quién no recuerda al inmenso Al Pacino bailando ‘por una cabeza'-, más versiones renovadas de sus piezas, hasta en distintos ritmos, suenan con la misma intensidad y recordación maravillosa de antaño. Carlos Gardel representa la imagen viva del Tango, por esa y otras muchas razones que lo atesoran como máximo ídolo, nuestro programa dedicará cuatro emisiones en este ‘mes del Zorzal' para recordarlo como se merece, no sólo repasando su vasta historia musical, sino recreándonos, en distintos programas, con otros grandes cantantes que le grabaron sus exitosas composiciones. Si 20 años no eran nada nada para él, 90 son muy pocos como para olvidarnos de su enorme figura artística y el rico legado que nos dejó.
O De Olho no Agro deste sábado conversou com Rogério Palhares, uma das lideranças do movimento que vem realizando mobilizações e protestos em Venâncio Aires.
O De Olho no Agro deste sábado conversou com Rogério Palhares, uma das lideranças do movimento que vem realizando mobilizações e protestos em Venâncio Aires.
Programa de NovaOnda Albacete: Aires Latinos – (06/06/2025)
Découvrez dans cet épisode à quoi servent les Aires Marines Protégées, comment elles sont mises en place mais aussi les limites de cet outil de conservation.Regards croisés entre François Chartier, chargé de campagne océan à Greenpeace et Martin Alessandrini, chargé de plaidoyer à la Fondation Tara Océan. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
▶️ Empezamos repasando el calendario que viene en las próximas semanas. Un Major y el P2 más especial del año ya están a la vista.▶️ Carlos y Antonio analizan todo lo que ha ocurrido en el P1 de Buenos Aires, en el que hemos tenido de todo. ¿Qué te ha parecido el nivel en la capital argentina?▶️ Y terminamos con un repaso a nuestros pronósticos. ¿Quién está por delante en el particular duelo entre Carlos y Antonio? ¡Hasta la semana que viene! NO OLVIDES SUSCRIBIRTE PARA MÁS VIDEOS. #TeamNox --------------------------------------------------------------------------------SÍGUENOS TAMBIÉN EN: ▶️ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/padeluptv/▶️ Telegram: https://t.me/+wDhKGUxEsK1lMjE8▶️ Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/1h7rTgHe2YS7T7dDftsDkH▶️ TIKTOK: https://www.tiktok.com/@padeluptvContacto:
A Associação de Turismo Rota do Chimarrão (Aturrchim), gestora da rota turística oficial de Venâncio Aires, anuncia o adiamento da terceira edição do passeio que estava previsto para domingo (1º). A medida foi tomada em solidariedade ao falecimento de mãe de dois dos integrantes da entidade. Com isso, a nova edição da Rota do Chimarrão Dominical será realizada no dia 8 de junho.
A Associação de Turismo Rota do Chimarrão (Aturrchim), gestora da rota turística oficial de Venâncio Aires, anuncia o adiamento da terceira edição do passeio que estava previsto para domingo (1º). A medida foi tomada em solidariedade ao falecimento de mãe de dois dos integrantes da entidade. Com isso, a nova edição da Rota do Chimarrão Dominical será realizada no dia 8 de junho.
Un attentat dans le Cachemire indien en avril dernier a ravivé les tensions entre l'Inde et le Pakistan. Les deux puissances nucléaires sont en conflit depuis la partition des Indes en 1947, particulièrement dans la région du Cachemire.
Magazine lúdic cultural amb Jaume Serra, Tota la informació de les activitats sardanistes, el Temps i un repàs a la nostra agenda ludic cultural, i molt bona mùsica per gaudir del cap de setmana. podcast recorded with enacast.com
Fue una figura de larga trayectoria artística, que cubrió exitosamente su función como cantante y además brilló en el teatro, cine y televisión. Tenía el carácter de la fuertes, su propia vida plagada de dificultades al principio, resultó su mejor escuela. Se incorporó a labores comunicativas, coronando con éxito sus intervenciones como guía para muchas mujeres argentinas, su nombre lo dice todo; trabajo y dedicación intensa hasta el final de sus días. Alguien que el público nunca abandonó y la sigue recordando con amor como ‘Tita de Buenos Aires'. La gran Tita Merello!
Diego Morant té orígens familiars a Provença de part de mare i al País Valencià de part de pare. Va anar a l'escola la Bressola de Prada i en té un record carinyós. La seva primera passió és la música ens proposa escoltar un dels seus grups preferit Deadly Vipers i també d'un del qual és protagonista com a guitarrista: Pacific Emperor. També s'interessa molt al patrimoni va ser guia a Polilles a Serrabona un lloc on l'hi agrada relaxar-se.Amb les nostres cròniques i reportatge continuem a parlar del Seneci del Cap amb l'Albert Mallol i us proposem elreportatge sobre la Primavera del Cinema Català a Prada.
Diego Morant té orígens familiars a Provença de part de mare i al País Valencià de part de pare. Va anar a l'escola la Bressola de Prada i en té un record carinyós. La seva primera passió és la música ens proposa escoltar un dels seus grups preferit Deadly Vipers i també d'un del qual és protagonista com a guitarrista: Pacific Emperor. També s'interessa molt al patrimoni va ser guia a Polilles a Serrabona un lloc on l'hi agrada relaxar-se.Amb les nostres cròniques i reportatge continuem a parlar del Seneci del Cap amb l'Albert Mallol i us proposem elreportatge sobre la Primavera del Cinema Català a Prada.
Diego Morant té orígens familiars a Provença de part de mare i al País Valencià de part de pare. Va anar a l'escola la Bressola de Prada i en té un record carinyós. La seva primera passió és la música ens proposa escoltar un dels seus grups preferit Deadly Vipers i també d'un del qual és protagonista com a guitarrista: Pacific Emperor. També s'interessa molt al patrimoni va ser guia a Polilles a Serrabona un lloc on l'hi agrada relaxar-se.Amb les nostres cròniques i reportatge continuem a parlar del Seneci del Cap amb l'Albert Mallol i us proposem elreportatge sobre la Primavera del Cinema Català a Prada.
Diego Morant té orígens familiars a Provença de part de mare i al País Valencià de part de pare. Va anar a l'escola la Bressola de Prada i en té un record carinyós. La seva primera passió és la música ens proposa escoltar un dels seus grup preferit Deadly Vipers i també d'un del qual és protagonista com a guitarrista Pacific Emperor. També s'interessa molt al patrimoni va ser guia a Polilles a Serrabona un lloc on l'hi agrada relaxar-se.Amb les nostres cròniques i reportatge continuema parlar del Seneci del Cap amb l'Albert Mallol i us proposem elreportatge sobre la Primavera del Cinema Català a Prada.
Diego Morant té orígens familiars a Provença de part de mare i al País Valencià de part de pare. Va anar a l'escola la Bressola dePrada i en té un record carinyós
Remesas, vitales para economías estatales del sur del país Microferia de Empleo en Coyoacán este 27 de mayoIsrael dispara contra delegación diplomática en CisjordaniaMás información en nuestro podcast
Hoy, en nuestro programa, nos dedicamos a resaltar músicos talentosos de nuestra música y es el turno de un gran compositor y director de orquesta, cuya maestría quedó demostrada en su espléndida carrera. Un hombre de éxitos, respetado pero no del todo reconocido por el gran público, quizás porque en ese entonces, las más famosas orquestas brillaban en el universo tanguero. Sin embargo, sí fue ampliamente aceptado por los otros directores reconocidos de aquel Buenos Aires de antaño, a tal grado que sus grabaciones pasaron a la historia con buen nombre, a través de los años. Fue un excelente intérprete, que además paseó el Tango por España, la tierra de sus padres, con un rotundo suceso, sus giras se hicieron famosas en la principales capitales de la madre patria. Las variadas piezas de su autoría superaron con creces el correr de los años y hoy seguimos deleitándonos con ellas, algunas de gran renombre internacional.
Brugada anuncia instalación del Gabinete de Diversidad SexualLa Biciescuela te espera en el Parque TezozómocEvacuan a más de mil personas por inundaciones en Buenos Aires Más información en nuestro Podca
Le black-out soudain qui a plongé l'Espagne et le Portugal dans l'obscurité en avril dernier nous rappelle une chose essentielle : même en Europe, aucun pays n'est à l'abri d'une crise majeure. Un accident nucléaire, une attaque chimique, une épidémie foudroyante ou un incident radiologiques : ces catastrophes, lorsqu'elles surviennent, ne laissent que très peu de temps pour réagir. Alors, comment aider les populations à s'y préparer sans les effrayer ? Et quels sont les mécanismes de coordination et de réponse déjà présents à l'échelle européenne ?Dans cet épisode, deux spécialistes nous éclairent sur les coulisses de la réponse européenne aux situations extrêmes :- Dr Antonella Cavallo, chargée de programme au Centre de coordination de la réaction d'urgence de l'UE,- Dr Jan-Cedric Hansen, médecin et vice-président du Global Health Security Alliance.Cet épisode a été produit en partenariat avec le service de la Commission européenne à la protection civile et aux opérations d'aide humanitaire (DG ECHO).Crédits :Cet épisode est un hors-série Programme B de Anton Stolper, réalisé par Théo Boulenger, en partenariat avec la DG ECHO. Production et édition : Camille Khodor. Rédaction en chef : Thomas Rozec. Direction des programmes : Joël Ronez.Distribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
En muchos de nuestros Tangos más recordados está presente mamá, la vieja, la patrona u otra identificación cuando la nombramos. Músicos y poetas de la música ciudadana les dedicaron sus líneas y melodías más sentidas. Desde el zorzal Carlos Gardel hasta los cantantes de otras épocas, le han dedicado un tema a la madre, o la nombraron en algún pasaje de las letras, hubo quienes le manifestaban sus dudas, algunos a manera de pedirle un consejo y otros para hacerle una confesión íntima por sentirla siempre tan cercana al corazón de un hijo. Compositores que nos recordaron que ‘hay una sola' y que había que cantarles un vals puro con música de Dios. O aquellos que estaban a punto de ir a la cárcel y le dejaban el pibe encargado a la vieja. Otros que le juraban “mamita, mamita, ganaré dinero” cuando el club lo citara para jugar al fútbol en primera. Los más sentidos y con culpas encima, cantaban ‘pobre mi madre querida, cuántos disgustos le daba”. No faltó quien en una estrofa definía a la mamá como consentidora al decir ‘la vieja como un juguete decía prestáselo'. Tampoco se le olvidó a otro autor que la medallita de la suerte estaba bendecida por la viejita. Y aquel que nos decía, refiriéndose a la madre: “No hay cariño más sublime ni más santo para mi”. En fin, la madre, siempre la madre, presente de alguna forma u otra en nuestra música Ríoplatense. Tango Sensei, les rinde un merecido y sentido homenaje, desde este lugar de América en que las celebramos en mayo. Feliz día mamá.
Today's episode walks you through this week's astrology + practical and magical tactics to help you harness and navigate the energetics May 5th - 11th 2025. Last week was full of goodies...with heat. Did you do the things to help cool you down? Did you hydrate? Drink peppermint tea? Eat green or white foods? Did you make time alone sacred? Last week did you: Get on the mat 2 - 4xs? Listen to 2 NEW episodes on The Magic Spark? Cast a spell for your career or money by EOD Wednesday? This week is an interesting swim as we head towards a full moon next Monday. Use the space to ground. It will serve illumination next week. This week: Get on the mat 2 - 4xs Listen to 2 NEW episode on The Magic Spark Watch your Full Moon Tarot Reading on UWS Monday, May 5th: - Happy Mo(o)nday. Pluto just stationed retrograde yesterday so we're juuuust beginning to feel this shift. And though Pluto is our farthest known planet, this community will feel the pull. Subtle as it may be, it seeks cathartic change. It bears repeating that Pluto is god of the Underworld and asks for shadow work. It will call us to process our thoughts and feelings from deep unconscious places. It's quite a week for a full moon in Scorpio...since Pluto rules Scorpio...Scorpio is the underworld. There is important healing here. What are you willing to let die within you for your next rebirth? Think May - October 2025. Pluto's retrograde is in Aquarius asks for the non conventional path that puts emotions aside and says "What will move me/us into the future? I have no emotional attachment to the solve...but I am deeply attached to solving." You might just ask these direct questions of the Tarot. Pull two cards. Let them lead you. This healing is soft and subtle but has incredible depth. The small shift this week adjusts our elemental count in the cosmos and it's a helpful thing. Here's the breakdown of where the primary celestial bodies are sitting this week: Earth - 2 Fire - 4 (3 of which are in Aries. This takes down some of the heat! But it's still high territory for anger and frustration, impatience, burnout, or an increase in creativity and fuel to begin or continue). Water - 1 (+ the North Node. Both in Pisces). Air - 2 (holding at the same place). The shift is subtle this week but helpful with Mercury finally scooting out of Aries. Grounding is far more accessible but still needed because the fire is high and the water is intense with our North Node in Pisces. Stick to your practices. They will serve you in 2025 like never before. This week is more calm by 2025 standards, so again, utilize it and give gratitude for it as it aims to heal, uplift, strengthen, and boost our wisdom. Tuesday, May 6th: - Watch our Full Moon Tarot Reading. Something will be revealed and will have you approaching something very differently, because you understand more. It's a delightful reading for this cycle. Don't skip it. find it in the monthly meditation and tarot reading section of your Unicorn Wellness Studio member library. - Watch Zodiac Basics: Scorpio if you're seeking more understanding for next week's full moon in Scorpio. You'll find it in the astrology section of your Unicorn Wellness Studio member library. Wednesday, May 7th: -EP 133 on The Magic Spark This audio is from an offering created for Magical Mentees in 2024. This is a question expansion about the multiple levels of the Mother Wound. This is an offering for support and healing as in U.S. this weekend we experience Mother's Day and it isn't Hallmark perfection for many. We all come from a womb, therefore this is for everyone. - Day 1 of Stable Foundation - No props needed for this movement series! We start on all fours for stability and core focus. This whole video is core heavy so enjoy the signature magic of Pilates. We've got peaks to planks, classical series of five, plus mermaid crunches, side leg series and spinal articulation. We're detoxing energetics and priming our manifestation capacity through our solar plexus energetic center. Thursday, May 8th: - Unicorn Wellness Studio Member Private Community It's been a little quiet over here lately. But fair is fair, I'm your host and I've been a little inconsistent on the dailies. But I am there and I would love to hear how your practices and energy are going. Community is the literal heartbeat of everything here. I love you and miss you. Click directly through from your member library or use the Kajabi Communities app on iOS or Android. Friday, May 9th: - Full Moon Energy Begins. Our micro full moon in Scorpio energy begins today. Based on our community reading she's a pretty one, offering more softness than you'd expect. The energy builds like a dimmer switch today through May 15th. It will either fuel you to finish up, launch, or complete something or...it'll drain you with its high frequency. As always, listen to your vessel. - Aphrodite's Day. It's time to ask: What does my inner goddess need in order to remember she is sacred, divine, and designed to receive? Make the effort today to release, relax, indulge, heal, shine, glow, thrive, or rest. Goddess Bath is always top of my list. Saturday, May 10th: - Day 1 of Stable Full Moon #1 - You'll need a set of yoga blocks for this workout. This is our first of two full moon workouts. They push us past our comfort zone in order for growth. We use one of my favorite 'tricks' of placing a yoga block between the inner thighs to activate them and the pelvic floor plus release the low back. It's a huge low back healer that helps the helper muscles kick on. We've got kneeling hundreds, gallbladder meridian stretch, dead bug reverse plank, camel, mountain climbers, triangle, and serving. This video is so fun! - Mercury Moves into Taurus. Mercury is finally out of Aires. Welcome grounded, problem solving communications. Taurus' stubborn quality can be so gorgeous of knowing where the line of integrity is and knowing when not to abandon ourselves, goals, or principals. Lean into this one. Sunday, May 11th: - Your weekly mantra: I trust the unconscious. I have faith in the unseen. I pray to the goddesses. I prescribe to my higher self. I am in co-creatorship with my benevolent ancestors. I invoke all my good karma. I allow deeper understanding for healing, growth, expansion, and rebirth. I am willing to be bolstered, healed, empowered, confident, and strong. I am willing to be the highest unfoldment of my soul in this lifetime. Now. Additional Resources: Activate 30 - days Guest Access on UnicornWellnessStudio.com Offering 30-min classical Pilates workouts in alignment to the astrological season and lunar cycles and Tandy's 41-day food reset at this link here in preparation of the astrological new year. Subscribe to Tandy's weekly newsletter for the astrology insights in your inbox Follow and DM on Instagram @tandy_gutierrez Additional Episodes You Might Enjoy: EP 130 : Weekly Astrology and Energy Forecast April 28th - May 4th EP 131: The Uranian Current: Awakening to Revolutionary Change EP 128: Taurus Season Tarot Forecast EP 127: Taurus Season Deep Dive and Astrology Forecast EP 77: Goddess Kali Divine Mother, Fierce Protector, Ultimate Transformer Master Class
In this episode of Welcome to Cloudlandia, I chat with Dan about his recent journey to Buenos Aires for stem cell therapy on his knee. After living with an injury since 1975, he shares how advancements in medical technology are providing new solutions for pain and mobility. We discuss the challenges of recovery and the impressive potential of these therapies, along with vivid stories from his experience in this vibrant city. We also touch on the role of AI in our modern landscape, questioning its reliability and pondering whether it enhances creativity or simply recycles existing ideas. As we explore the implications of AI, we consider how it can assist in achieving desired outcomes without requiring individuals to develop new skills themselves. Sullivan emphasizes the importance of meaningful work and the balance between utilizing technology and fostering genuine human creativity. Our conversation wraps up by highlighting the ongoing journey of personal growth and the need for continuous improvement in an ever-evolving world. SHOW HIGHLIGHTS Dan shares his personal journey to Buenos Aires for stem cell therapy to rejuvenate his knee cartilage, highlighting advancements in medical technology and the promising future of these treatments. We explore the historical significance of technological revolutions, from steam power to the creation of the alphabet and Arabic numbers, and their impact on communication and societal progress. The discussion delves into the rapid advancements in AI technology, questioning its role in creativity and entrepreneurship, and examining its potential for convenience and efficiency. Dan and I consider the distinction between ability and capability, reflecting on how current technological advancements like AI have amplified capabilities while individual aspirations may lag. We discuss the integration of AI in creative processes, highlighting how it can enhance productivity and creativity without diminishing human input. The conversation touches on the importance of efficiency and prioritization in personal growth, exploring strategies for optimizing tasks and delegating effectively. We conclude by reflecting on the ongoing nature of personal and technological growth, emphasizing the value of continuous improvement and collaboration in achieving success. Links: WelcomeToCloudlandia.com StrategicCoach.com DeanJackson.com ListingAgentLifestyle.com TRANSCRIPT (AI transcript provided as supporting material and may contain errors) Dean: Mr. Sullivan. Dan: Mr Jackson, it's been a while, it's been a while. Dean: And yet here we are. Like no time has passed. Dan: Yes. Dean: Because it's now. Dan: But I've put on a lot of bear miles since I saw you last. Dean: Yeah, tell me about your journeys. Dan: Yeah well, buenos Aires. Yep Just got back yesterday and am in considerable pain. Oh really what happened. Well, they give you new stem cells. So now, they're going after. They're going still on the knee, but now they're going after tendons and ligaments, yeah, and so this may seem contrarian, but if you're in pain, it means that they're working. Dean: Oh, okay. Dan: How's that? For a compelling offer If you feel really bad about this, it means that what I'm offering you is a great solution. Dean: Yeah, with a name like Smuckers, it's got to be good, right yeah? What was that cough syrup that was known to taste so bad? Buckley's, buckley's. Dan: Tastes so bad. Tastes awful Works great. Dean: Yeah, that's right. That's the perfect thing. Tastes awful, works great. So were they completely pleased with your progress. Dan: it's, yeah, I think that the from what I can tell from they. They show you pictures of other complete cartridges. You know, okay, with other people and my left this is my left knee an injury from 1975. 1975, uh-huh, so 50 years, and it progressively wore down. It was a meniscus tear and in those days they would remove the torn part of the meniscus, which they don't do anymore. They have new surgical glue and they just glue it back together again. But this is the. This is one of the cost of living in over a period of history where things get better and so, as a result, I have a cartilage today which is equal and capability as it was before I tore it in 1975. However, all the adjustments my left leg and my head to make, 50-year period of adjusting to a deteriorating capability in my left there was a lot of calcification and stresses and strains on the tendons. So now that they can see the complete cartilage back, they can know exactly what they have to do with the otherons. So now that they can see the complete cartilage back, they can know exactly what they have to do with the other things. So they still reinforce it. So I get new stem cells for the cartilage because it has to be reinforced and so it's a good thing. I'm planning to live another 75 years because I think every quarter over that period I'm going to be going to Argentina. Dean: Oh boy, this is great. Dan: Or Argentina, is coming to me. They're going through their FDA phases right now and he's getting the doctor scientist who created this is getting his permanent resident card in the United States. So I think probably five years five years it'll be available to others. You know they don't have to make the trip. Dean: Well, that's great so now you've got the knee cartilage of a preteen Swedish boy. We were bouncing around the mountains. Dan: Yeah, something like that, yeah, something like that, something like that it's interesting that it wasn't 1975 when the $6 million man started out. Dean: That's what you're going to end up as the $6 million man. We can rebuild. We'll see. Dan: Yeah, but I had. While we were there, we had a longtime client from Phoenix was down. He was working on knees and rotator cuffs in his shoulders. Dean: And. Dan: I was able to say does it hurt? And he says yes, it does, and I said that means it's working. Dean: That means it's working. Dan: Yeah, and I said. He said you didn't tell me about the pain part before you encouraged me to come down here and I said, well, why? You know? Why, pull around with a clear message. Dean: And I said well, why, you know why fool around with a clear message, Right, I remember when Dave Astry had he had, like you know, a hundred thousand dollars worth of all of it done, all the joints, all the like full body stuff, and he was just in such pain afterwards for a little while. But how long does the pain last? Dan: Imagine it's like getting well, if I go by the previous trips, which were not equal in intensity to this one, there was about three or four days. Three or four days and then you know, you're, you're up and around. Yeah, as a result of this, I'm not going to be able to make my Arizona trip, because this week for genius Right, because? I'm going to have to be in wheelchairs and everything. And if there's one place in the world you don't want to be not able to walk around, it's Phoenix. Because, it's all walking. That's the truth. Yeah, up and down. So we're calling that off for now, and yeah, so anyway, and anyway. But they're really thriving down there. They're building a new clinic in a different part of the city, which is a huge city. I never realized how big Buenos Aires is. It's along the same size as London, you know London. Dean: England. Yeah right, you know how big London is. How long are you go on each trip? How long are you there? Dan: We arrive on a Sunday morning and we leave on a Friday night. Okay, so the whole week. Yeah, yeah, it's about eight days, eight travel days, because on Saturday we have to go to Atlanta to catch the next plane. Dean: Yeah. Dan: That's either a dog or a monkey. Which do you have there? Dean: That was a dog, my neighbor's. I'm sitting out in my courtyard. That was my neighbor's dog. It's an absolutely beautiful Florida morning today, I mean it is room temperature with a slight breeze. It's just so peaceful out here in my courtyard aside from working out Well. Dan: you're close to the Fountain of Youth. That's exactly right. How many? 100 miles? 100 miles to the north, st Augustine, that's right. That's exactly right. Dean: Yeah, this whole. Just look at. Dan: The De Leon. That's right yeah. Dean: This whole just look at the day. Leon, yeah, I know my I think we're going to look back at this time. You know like what? You are on the leading edge of big advantage of these treatments. You know the things that are available medically, medical science wise to us, and you realize how. I was having a conversation with Charlotte this morning about the I want to layer in you know the benchmarks technologically around the things that we've been talking about in terms of text and pictures and audio and video and seeing them as capabilities where it all started. You know, and it's amazing that really all of it, aside from the printing press with gutenberg, is really less than 150 years old, all of it, because she asked about the benchmarks along the way and if you went from Gutenberg to different evolutions of the press, to the typewriter, to the word processors in personal computing and digital, you know PDFs and all of that stuff and distribution has really only started. You know full scale in 150 years, along with the phonograph in the mid-1800s, the, you know, photography and moving pictures all kind of happened in that one 1850 to 1900 period. You know, but the big change of course, yeah, 1900 to 1950. Dan: Well, you know it's interesting because it's built like the question of what are the tallest mountains on the planet, and the answer is not Mount Everest. The tallest mountains on the planet are the Hawaiian Islands. Dean: Oh, okay. Dan: You know, the big one, the big island, I think the top peak there, Mauna Loa. I think Mauna Loa is a name of it and it's about 30,. Everest is 20, 29,000 and change, but Mauna Loa is around 32,000. Dean: Is that right yeah? Dan: but it's. You know that's an island that goes right down to the ocean floor and I think the same thing with technology is that we look back and we just take it back to sea level. We take technology back but we don't see the massive, you know, the mass amount of growth that was. That was over tens of thousands of years. That was before you could actual changing technology. I think probably have the perception maybe you know 150 or 200 years where we can see changes in technology over a decade. You know it would be a tremendous thing. It's the perception of change that I think has suddenly appeared on the planet. You know, and I think that the big one, there were three right in a row it was steam power, it was electricity and it was internal combustion. You had those three multiplier technologies Steam 18, no 1770s, 17,. You know it was fully developed probably right at the time of the American Revolution 1776. You had really, dependably, certain steam power right around then. You had to have that multiplier. You had to have that multiplier for there to be significant, frequent technological jumps. You had to have this. Before that, it was slavery. It was animals and slavery that got you, and that didn't change. Dean: Yeah, I mean because the steam. That's what really was. The next big revolution in the printing press was the steam powered printing Steam powered presses. Dan: Yeah, steam presses. Dean: That allowed the newspapers to really take off then yeah. Dan: Yeah, it's fascinating. Dean: You know that you have Charlotte in my who knows all of that. Dan: You better explain that, you better explain that. Dean: I think all of our for the new listeners. Well, there may be new people. There may be new people today. Dan: You know, yes, I don't want my reputation. Dean: That's so funny. Well, even that you know having an AI that we have named Charlotte, my chat GPT buddy, to be able to bounce these ideas off and she gets it. I mean, she sees the thing, ideas off and she gets it. I mean, she sees the thing. But you know, it's really what you said about the islands. You know the sea floor right, the bedrock, the level all the way down is where that is. And I think if you look at, even before Gutenberg, the platform that was built on, for there to be movable type, there had to be type, that had to be the alphabet, the alphabet had to be. And it's just amazing when you think about what would have been the distribution method and the agreement that this was the alphabet. This is what this, this is what we're all gonna do and these are the words. Dan: And I'm fascinated by that whole, that whole development, because all that, yeah, yeah, it's really interesting because, as far as we can tell, it's it's roughly about 3 000 years ago. The alphabet eastern mediterranean is basically, but where it really took on that we notice a historical impact is with the Greeks. Their alphabet and ours isn't all that different. I think it's got a few letters different using our set of ABC. It's like 80%, 80%, 85% similarity between that and the. Greek alphabet. And the other thing is did the culture, or did the country, if you will, that? Had it, did they have any other powers? I mean, were they military powers, were they? Maritime powers and the Greeks had it. The Greeks were, they had military power. They had, you know, they were you know they weren't an island, but they had a lot of ports to the Mediterranean. And did they have ideas to go along with the alphabet? Did they have significant, significant ideas? Powerful because they were that's where the spotlight was for new thinking about things at the same time that the alphabet appeared. So they could, you know, they could get this out to a lot of different people and but it's not. It's not very old in terms of time on the planet. Right when you think about the big picture, yeah, yeah, and you could see how the countries that the civilizations, countries, cultures that did not have the alphabet, how they didn't make the same kind of progress. Dean: Yeah, that's. Dan: I mean, it's really and then the Arabic numbering system was huge, where you had zero, you had nine, one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, and you had zero, and zero made all this. Nothing made all the difference in the world. Nothing made all the difference. Dean: oh, that's funny, I heard a comedian talking about the Greek salad. It was such a. It gave us so much so early. But really all we've gotten in the last few hundred years is the salad, the Greek salad they've kind of been resting on their laurels, you know. Dan: Yeah, don't forget souvlaki. Dean: Oh yes, souvlaki, Exactly. Dan: Souvlaki is a very big contribution to human progress. Dean: Uh-huh and baklava, Baklava yeah. Yes, that's so funny. I had an interesting thought the other day. I was talking with someone about where does this go? You start to see now the proliferation of AI being used in content creation poll. You know 82% of people don't trust any content that's created to be. You know whether it's authentic or whatever, or real compared to. Dan: AI created and yeah, of course I don't trust that poll. Dean: Right, exactly. Dan: None of that. How could you possibly get a poll? Dean: I know. Dan: I mean how you know your hundred closest friends. Dean: I mean, is that what I mean exactly? Dan: I think that whole thing 82 out of my hundred closest friends who's? Got a hundred close. Who's got a hundred closest friends? You know, like that yeah and you know I mean so. It's ridiculous. What we know is that it's pervasive and it's growing. Dean: Yes, that's true, I can tell. Dan: And you know I was really struck by it, like if I go back two years, let's say, you know the spring of 23. Dean: Yeah. Dan: And yeah, and I'm having my connector calls, especially with the raise owners, and you know so maybe there's 15 people on the call two years ago and maybe one of them is one of these lead scouts. He does things technological, you know, it could be Lior Weinstein or Chad Jenkins, like that, or Mike Koenigs might be Mike Koenigs, and of course they're into it and they're into it and they're making very confident predictions about where this is all going, and I go to three weeks ago, when I had two FreeZone podcasts day after each other, tuesday and Wednesday, and there might have been a combined 23 different people. A couple of people appeared twice, so 23 people and every one of them was involved in some way with AI. That had happened over a two-year period and there wasn't any, what I would say, wonder about this. There wasn't any sense. Of you know, this is amazing or anything. They're just talking about it as if it's a normal thing. So fundamental capability has gotten into the entrepreneurial marketplace and is now considered normal. Dean: Yeah, Just the way like yeah. And Wi-Fi is, you know, internet. We take that for granted. Yeah, I worry, though, that I think like, generationally, where does this head? I'm saying that it just seems like a proliferation of intellectual incest is where we're headed with that, that if all the new you know, generative ai are just regurgitating, assembling stuff that already exists, who's creating the new thoughts in there? Dan: you know, well you say you're worried I'm not worried. Dean: I don't, I mean you're not worried, I'm not worried, I'm just, you're like one of those people who says they're curious, but they actually don't care. I don't, I don't really care. You're right, they want to be seen as caring. Dan: You want to be seen as worrying. Dean: Yeah, thanks for calling me out. Dan: You're not worried at all. Dean: Yeah, that's it. I need you to keep me in check. Dan: Actually, you're luxuriating in your inequality. Dean: Yes, exactly Because I know I'm coming up with original ideas. That's right. Well, has it changed at all? No, I think that's the thing. I'm just observing it. I'm really starting to see. I think I mentioned years ago, probably when we first started the Joy of Procrastination podcast I read an article about the tyranny of convenience and I thought that was really interesting. Right, that convenience is kind of an unrated driver of things. We're like on the, you know, at the we're on the exponential curve of convenience now that there's very little need to do anything other than decide that's what you want, you know, and I think, riding on that level, I just see, like, where things are going now, like, if you think about it, the beginning of the 1900s we were, if you wanted to go anywhere, it was with a horse right. And we're at a situation now I've had it my the new tesla self-driving, they've got the full self-driving thing is, I was, I went to meet with Ilko in Vero Beach, which is about an hour and a half away, hour and 15 minutes away, and I pulled out of my driveway not even out of my driveway, I just pulled out of my garage and I said you know, navigate to the restaurant where we were meeting in Vero Beach, and then I, literally, dan, did not touch the wheel as we pulled into the restaurant All the way. The entire drive was done by Tesla and to me. You know, you see now that we're literally one step away from hopping in the backseat and just waking up when you get there, kind of thing. We're inches away from that now because functionally, it's already happening and I have 100% confidence in it. It's you, it's. It's an amazing advancement and I just think about every single thing, like you know, every possible thing that could be done for you is that's where we're moving towards. Do you know, dan Martell? Have you met dan? Dan: no, I heard his name, so he's a really cool guy. Dean: He wrote a book recently called buy back your time, but his, you know, he's made his name with sas companies, he had a sas academy and he's a investor and creates that. But he said the modern, the new modern definition is, you know, instead of software as a service, it's we're moving into success as a service, that it's delivering the result to people, as opposed to the tool that you can use to create the result. And I think that's where we're going with AI more than I don't think people learn how to use the tool as much as people organizing the tool to deliver popular results that people are going to want. And I think that that's really what you know. Electricity, if you go all the way back, like if you think about that's probably on the magnitude of the impact, right, but even way beyond that. But if you think about it, wasn't just electricity, it was what that capability, the capability of electricity, opened up, the possibility for the ability to have constant refrigeration. You know some of the application of that core capability and lighting, and lighting exactly. Dan: Lighting, lighting, yeah. Dean: So I think that's where we're yeah, looking back you know you know. Dan: The thing that strikes me, though, is it all depends on the aspirations of the individual who has these things available and my sense is, I don't see any increase, relatively speaking, in people's aspiration you don't see any increase in people's aspiration. I don't think people are any more ambitious now than when I started coaching, so they have I'll just quote you back a distinction which you made, which I think is an incredibly important distinction the ability, the difference between an ability and a capability. People have enormous capability, exponential capability, but I don't see their abilities getting any better. Right, I agree. Yes. So it doesn't mean that everybody can do anything. Actually only a very small few of people can do anything yeah. And so I think people's ability to be in the gap has gone up exponentially because they're not taking advantage of the capabilities that are there. So they feel actually, as things improve, they're getting worse. That's why the drug addiction is so high. Drug addiction is so high and addiction is so high is that people have a profound sense that, even though the world around them is getting better, they're not. Dean: Yeah, I just thought. As you're saying, all that you know is thinking about that capability and ability. That's a profound distinction. I think so, yeah. Dan: But also the the thing I'll write it down, and I'll write it down and send to you to know that. Dean: I'm serious about it, okay, but the thing people's desire for the things that ability can provide, you know, is I think there's a opportunity there in if you have the capability to, if you have the ability to apply a capability to get somebody a result that they want and value without having to go and develop the ability to create it, I think there's an opportunity there. That's kind of along the lines of that success as a service. Dan: No on an individual basis yes. But nothing's changed between the inequality of certain individuals and other individuals. Dean: Nothing's changed there. No, I think you're right, it's still distribution. Dan: Except that I think people are feeling it's still distribution, Except that the people who I think people are feeling more unequal. Dean: Yeah, yeah, but the ability to and I think AI gives people, you know, the ability to do create content at scale that they wouldn't have the ability to do otherwise. You know, even though it's mediocre, I think that's really the thing we're going to be able to have a, you know, an onslaught of no, I think it magnifies who you are to begin with. Dan: If you're mediocre, I think you get exponential mediocrity I guess. Dean: Thank you, I don't think. Dan: I don't think it takes a poor writer and makes them into a great writer. No, it does not. Dean: That's what I'm saying. Dan: Because they don't have the discernment between what's good writing and bad writing to start with. Well, how would they know when to get the AI back? I mean grammatically, I mean if they're bad at grammar, correct spelling, but that's not meaning, that doesn't have anything to do with meaning. So, yeah, so you know, I'm noticing. I mean I've normalized it already. I mean I put everything through perplexity. I read a whole paragraph and I run it through and then I'll add context to it, I'll add dimensions to it and I think but I'm the one coming up with the prompts, I doing the prompts, it's not prompting. It doesn't prompt me at all right you know, yeah, it doesn't impress me. Till the day I start in the morning, says Dan, while you were sleeping, while you were having, you know, reading and everything else. I've been doing some thinking on your behalf and I've thought this through. Now I'm impressed. Dean: I wonder how far we are away from that. Dan: I mean infinity away, uh-huh right, because that's not what it does. That's what we do. Yeah, yeah. Where do you think the desire comes from? Where do you think the desire because I see it almost as a desire is that we're completely replaceable? Where do you think that desire comes from? Dean: The desire for that people have. I think if you go down to the that technology can completely replace me. Dan: I mean, it seems to me to be an odd aspiration. Dean: I wonder what the I heard. I saw somebody let me see if I get the words right saying that I don't want to. I don't want AI to create art and writing so that I can do the dishes. I want AI to do the dishes and cook so that I can create art and music. Which is so yeah, I mean, when you look at the fundamental things like why does anybody do anything? What drives desire? I think, if you go back to the core thing, like the life that we live right now is so far removed from the life of ancestors. You know, in terms of the daily, you know, if you just look at what even going to Maslow's needs right of the if everybody we want to have a nice house, we want to have a car to drive around in, we want to have food, meals that are plentiful and delicious, and money to do the things that we want to do, but I think that most people would be content with those things. I think it's a very rarefied exception of people that are ambitious beyond their comfort requirements. Like you look at, why does somebody who you know you look at those things that once somebody reaches economic freedom kind of thing or whatever, it's very it's not uncommon that the people who don't need to continue doing stuff continue to do stuff. You know that can, like you're baked in ambition and I think score right if you look at the things that you're beyond, you don't need that at 80. Dan: I like being fully occupied with meaningful work. Dean: Right. Dan: In other words, I like working, I really do like working. Yeah, and there's no difference between the amount of time working at age. I am 80, almost 81. Dean: Yeah. Dan: At age. I am 80, almost 81. And there's no difference between the amount of hours. If you measure me by a day a week, there's no difference in the number of hours that I'm working which qualifies under work. You know it's a focus day kind of work. There's no difference now than when I was 50. How I'm going about it is very different. What I'm surrounded by in terms of other capabilities, other people's capabilities, is very different. I'm surrounded with it by. Technology is very different, okay, but it's still the same. I have sort of a measure of quality. You know that the work is. I like doing the work I'm good at. The work is meaningful. I like doing the work I'm good at. The work is meaningful, I find the work energizing, I find the work rewarding stays exactly the same and that's what I'm always. So when ai comes along, I said does it affect the amount of meaningful work that I do? And so far it hasn't changed anything and it's actually increased it. It's like I would say it. Actually I find and I can just measure it in projects that I'll start and continue work through until the project is completed. It's gone up considerably since I've had perplexity yeah, oh, that's interesting. Dean: So what would you say, like, what are the top few ways that you like? Integrate perplexity to an advantage like that for you, then? Because? Dan: you're basically, you're an observer of what you know and you're thinking about your thinking that hiring with Jeff Madoff and Jeff is working on the part of the book that involves interviews with people in show business and people who really understand the concept of casting rather than hiring, and the people who've built their businesses on a theater approach. So Jeff's doing that and we have our team supporting him. They're setting up the interviews, we're recording the interviews and we're putting them into print form for him. But the interesting thing about it is that I'm just working on the tool part of the book, the four-by-four casting tool, which is actually going to be five chapters. It's actually five chapters of the book Because the entire psychology of having people create their own roles inside your company is the essence of what casting, not hiring, really means is that you're not giving people job descriptions. You're what a completed project looks like, what a completed process looks like and everything else, but how they go about it they create for themselves. They actually create it. So they're not automatons. We're not creating robots here. We're creating people and we want them to be alert, curious, responsive and resourceful. What does? that mean we want things to happen faster, easier, bigger and better. What does that mean? We want them to create projects with a sense of commitment, courage and capability and confidence. So we're laying this out, so it's like a human being's brain manual, basically, as we're putting together that when you're involved in teamwork, what it looks like like. So what I'll do is I'll write a paragraph on my own time, just on word. I write in maybe a hundred word paragraph and what's going to be the context of this, and then I'll immediately go to perplexity and I said now I want you to take the this hundred word paragraph and I want you to come. I want you to divide it into three 50 word paragraphs and stressing these, and have one distinct idea for each paragraph. But I want the meaning of the three paragraphs to integrate with each other and reinforce each other. But there's a distinctly new thought. So I just give it all directions, I press the button and out it comes. So I said okay now looking at the essence of each of the three paragraphs, I'd like you to give each one of them a really great punchy subhead thing. I got my subheads, but I'm really engaged with, I'm sort of in real teamwork. I'm teamwork with this other intelligence and that feels yeah, really terrific, that feels really terrific. Dean: That feels really terrific, that's great. So you're using it to, you're the. You know I heard somebody talk about that the 10, 80, 10 situation where you're the beginning 10% of something, then let it create, expand that, create the 80%, and then you're the final 10 on weaving, yeah, together and except I would have about five, ten, eighty tens for the complete right. Dan: You know, yeah, and, like in perplexity, you just have the ask me line. I'll go through five or six of those and right in the course of producing what I you know, and I end up totally. I'll probably end up with about 200 words and you know it's broken down and some of them are bullet points and some of them are main paragraphs and everything, but I enjoy that. And then at the end I say now rewrite all of this in the concise, factual, axiomatic style of strategic coach Dan Sullivan. Use a maximum of Anglo-Saxon words, a maximum of active passive verbs, everything in the second person singular. You voice Helvetica and then Helvetica, please, Helvetica new standard Helvetica. Dean: New standard Exactly yes so funny, right, yeah I love that. Dan: But here's the thing, the whole question, I think, in all human experience, when you experience something new, how long is it that before amazing becomes normal and expected? Dean: yeah, yeah, and not long, no, not long. Once we get the hang of something, I think what you've had three expectations that's a good way to think about it. Actually, the way you're using it is very that's very useful yeah, and I don't keep my prompts either. Dan: I don't keep my prompts because then I'm becoming a bit of an automaton, right? So every time I start I go through the prompt, you know. And you know, I kind of have it in my head what the prompts are, but I want to see each time. Maybe I'll make a change this time and I don't want to cut myself out from the change, right, yeah, but my sense is that you went back and you could actually observe yourself learning the alphabet, you know first grade for me or learning the numbering system first grade for me. I bet the Dan who's going through this AI experience at 80 isn't much different from the. Dan at six years old, going through learning how to read and write and doing arithmetic. I bet I'm following pretty much the same pattern and that's a capability, that's a yeah, that is a really capability. Dean: Isn't that funny. It's like I remember I still remember like vividly being in kindergarten in january of 1972 and learning that something happened over the Christmas break there that we switched to, we had a new year and now it's not 1971, it's 1972. I remember just. I'm just. It's so funny how that made such an impression on me that now I knew something new. You know this is. Dan: I don't, you know how you just have total unawareness of something. Dean: And then all of a sudden now I know it's 1972, I know my place in time here yeah, yeah, I used to, I, when I was coaching. Dan: You know the first year of strategic coach program and I would talk about how long things took to get a result. You know. Dean: Yeah. Dan: So I said you know you know. I said the big difference that you're going to find being a coach is that you're essentially you're going from a time and effort economy to get a result just getting a result and shortening the amount of time it takes you to get a result. I said that's the big change that's going to take in the program. And I said, for example, I've noticed because I had a lot of really top life insurance agents in the program in the 1970s and 1980s insurance agents in the program in the 1970s and 1980s and they would talk about the big cases. You know the big cases, you know where they would get paid in those days. They get paid $100,000 for life insurance policy and they say you know those big cases, they can take two or three years. You know, take two or three years before them. And I said, actually, I said they were instantaneous. Actually, you got the sale instantaneously. And they said well, what do you mean? No, I put two. No, I said it took two or three years not getting Getting the case was actually instantaneous. It's just that you spend a lot of time not getting the case. What? if you just eliminated the amount of time not getting the case. What if you just eliminated the amount of time not getting the case and just got the case? Then the results would be instantaneous. I think that's really what we're after. Dean: Yes, I agree. I was just talking with somebody about that today. I didn't use those words, but the way you describe it is. You know that people spend a long time talking about realtors in specific. You know that they're getting the listing happens right away, but they do spend a lot of time not getting the listing here. Dan: Yeah, yeah, I remember. First I think it was certainly in the first five years I had a guy from Alberta who was apparently the top residential real estate. You know he was the top agent for the year. He had 240 sales in one year. And people say how does he do that? You can't do that number of presentations in a year, you just can't do that. I said, well, he doesn't do any presentations, he's got trained actors who do presentations. Right, he said a lot of actors spend 90% of their career unemployed. They've got to be waiters or they've got to do this and that. And he just found really great presenters who put on a great theatrical performance and they would do five or six of five or six of them a day, and he had a limousine driver. He had a limousine service that picked them up he would even have the limousine pick up the people to come for the presentation and they said yeah, but look at the cost. I said what cost? what cost indeed, but there you find the divide line between a mediocre person is the cost. He didn't think it was the cost at all. It was just an investment in him not doing presentations. And then he had an accountant who did all the you know he had a trained accountant who did all the. You know the paperwork. Dean: Yes, yeah, I think that's amazing Duplicating. Somebody has the capability to do a presentation, an actor. They're armed with the right script. They have the ability now to further somebody's goal. I meant to mention Dan. You've got a big day in Ohio this weekend. You got Shadur Sanders, went to the Browns in the NFL draft. Dan: I think they've made some bad moves, but I think that one's going to turn out to be one of their good ones. Dean: Yeah, I think so too. Dan: Especially for the coach he's getting. If you're a pocket quarterback, you do Stefanski, you know. I mean, yeah, he's a good coach. Dean: I forget whether are you a Browns or Bengals. Bengals. Cincinnati they're part of the Confederacy. Dan: They're part of the Confederacy, you know we don't yeah. They're a little bit too south. You know Cleveland. Actually, the first game I ever saw was with Jim Brown breaking the rushing record. His rookie year he broke one game rushing record. That was the first year. Dean: I ever saw a game. Dan: Yeah and yeah, yeah. It's in the blood, can't get rid of it. You know everything. Dean: Yeah, but anyway, but I rid of it, you know everything. Dan: Yeah, but anyway. But I think this is. You know we're zeroing in on something neat here. It's not getting anything you want. It's the result you want. How long does it take you to get it? I think that's really the issue. Dean: Yeah, yeah and people are vastly different in terms of the results that they were but I think that there's a difference too, that you mentioned that there's a lot of room for the gap, and I think there's a big gap between people's desires and what they're able to actually achieve. You know that I think people would love to have six-pack abs if they didn't have to go through the work of getting them. You know if there's a bypass to that, if you could just have somebody else do the sit-ups and you get the six-pack. That's what I think that AI and I mean the new, that amplified kind of capability multiplier is, but it requires vision to attach to it. It's almost like the software, yeah. Dan: Yeah, Meaning, making meaning, actually creating meaning. One of my quarterly books was you Are Not a Computer you know where. I just argue against the case that the human brain is just an information processor and therefore machines that can process information faster than human beings, then they're smarter. Dean: And. Dan: I said, if human beings were information processors. Actually I don't think we're very good information processors from the standpoint of accuracy and efficiency. I think we're terrible. Actually, I think we're terrible. We want to change things like repeat this sentence. It's got 10 words in it. We get about two words, seven or eight. We said yeah, I think I'm gonna go change one of the words right, you know very easy see what happens here, and I think what we're looking for is new, interesting combinations of experiences. I think we really like that. I think we like putting things together in a new way that gives us a little, gives us a little jolt of dopamine. Dean: I think that's true. That's like music, you know. It's like every. All the notes have already been created, but yet we still make new songs, some combination of the same eight notes in an octave, you know, yeah I think it would be. Dan: Uh, what was that song for that celine dion's name from the titanic? You know they were. The two lovers were in front of the boat and then yes, the wind blowing them in there. Seeing the sun interesting song the first time you heard it. But you're in a cell by yourself and there it plays every three minutes, 24 hours a day. You'd hang yourself. Dean: Absolutely yeah. Dan: That's the truth. Yeah, what'd you get? What's a pickup from the day. Dean: I like your approach of you know, of using the way you're using perplexity. I think that's a big planting for me to think about over the next week. Here is this using capabilities to create an ability bypass for people that they don't need to have the ability to get the result that they want. You know, because that's kind of the thing, even though people they would have the capability to create a result but they don't have an ability, comes in many different ways. You know, I think that the technical know-how, the creative ability, the executive function, the discipline, the patience, all those things are application things and if we can bypass all of that, I the that kind of blends with this idea of results but it's being in the process of constantly being in the action and the activity of making something faster and easier. Dan: I don't think. I think it's the activity of making things easier and faster, and bigger and better. I think that's what we love. We love that experience of doing that. And once we've done it once, we're not too interested in doing it the next time. Dean: We're looking for something else to do it with, I think who, not how, fits in that way right of doing you see what, you see what you want, and not having that awareness, even your, you know your checklist of can I get this without doing anything? Yeah, you know, or what's the least that I mean and the answer is never. Dan: No, right, almost never. Dean: Never, yes, right. Dan: Yeah, what happens is I identify just the one thing I have to do. I just have to do this one thing. Then the next question is what's the least I can do to get it? And I say this one thing Can I get it faster or easier? Okay, and then the third thing is then who's somebody else who can do that faster, easier thing for you? And then you're on to the next thing. But I think it's a continual activity. It isn't. It's never a being there you know, because then you're in the gap that's right yeah, yeah, anyway, always delightful dan another, uh, one hour of sunday morning well spent. Dean: Yeah, absolutely that's exactly right, always enjoyable. Are we on next week? Dan: yes, I believe yes, we are perfect, all right, okay here, okay, thank you thanks dan bye okay, bye.
Corría el año 1996 cuando se juntaron para grabar un larga duración que pasó a ser emblema tanguero, un concierto íntimo y extraordinario que perdurará por muchos años más, quizás hasta pase un siglo, como alguna de la piezas que ejecutan con maestría. Uno de ellos, que no vive en Argentina, tuvo que recorrer muchos kilómetros para encontrarse con los otros dos virtuosos y así conformar este trío de magníficos músicos. Este LP refrescó el aire porteño de los noventa, con temas cuidadosamente seleccionados para nuestro deleite y admiración. Cada una de las composiciones supera ampliamente cualquier expectativa exigente, porque los tres, pusieron su talento enorme en esta producción espectacular. Hicieron un mixer cuidadoso entre tangos de ayer y de hoy, cada uno de ellos guardan la nostalgia de quienes saben que nuestra música siempre tiene algo más para dar, porque los años pasan y estas melodías quedan grabadas en la memoria. Nos vestimos de gala en Tango Sensei para recibir, una vez más y para beneplácito de todos, a los maestros Daniel Barenboim, Rodolfo Mederos y Héctor Console que nos regalaron este Mi Buenos Aires querido!
durée : 00:03:20 - Géopolitique - par : Pierre Haski - En quelques jours, l'assassinat mardi de 26 touristes au Cachemire sous contrôle indien a placé l'Inde et le Pakistan au bord de la guerre. S'agissant de deux puissances nucléaires, le risque est énorme, même si les deux voisins ont jusqu'ici toujours évité de pousser l'escalade trop loin.
durée : 00:03:20 - Géopolitique - par : Pierre Haski - En quelques jours, l'assassinat mardi de 26 touristes au Cachemire sous contrôle indien a placé l'Inde et le Pakistan au bord de la guerre. S'agissant de deux puissances nucléaires, le risque est énorme, même si les deux voisins ont jusqu'ici toujours évité de pousser l'escalade trop loin.
durée : 00:04:39 - Le Reportage de la rédaction - Comment protéger les ressources naturelles sans mettre en péril brusquement la filière pêche? Le débat est vif entre les pêcheurs et les associations environnementales qui veulent l'interdiction du chalutage de fond dans les aires marines protégées. Reportage dans le Finistère.