Podcasts about american happiness

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Best podcasts about american happiness

Latest podcast episodes about american happiness

OPENHOUSE with Louise Rumball
Hot & Healing This Week: TikTok Ban, The American Happiness Decline, Mark Zuckerberg's ‘Masculine Energy' Comment, PFAs, and Imposter Syndrome

OPENHOUSE with Louise Rumball

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2025 43:32


#187 - Welcome to this week's Hot and Healing—your ultimate weekly dose of wellness, curated for the modern wellness girls balancing healing and hustling. Expect everything hot in the world of wellness - trends, tools and insights - as well as my favorite podcast picks, social clips and articles of the week to help you heal, faster. This week, I dive into: ✨ The TikTok Ban: Exploring the implications of the Supreme Court's decision and why I won't be heading to Red Note anytime soon. ✨ Mark Zuckerberg's Call for “Masculine Energy” in Workplaces: Why this triggered me, the ongoing gender pay gap, and how stress impacts female nervous systems in male-dominated environments. ✨ The Rise of Experiential Podcasts: From soundscapes to guided relaxations, is this the future of the podcasting space? ✨ America's Happiness Decline: Why the U.S. slipped out of the top 20 happiest countries and how holistic wellness might bridge the gap. ✨ PFAs in Apple Watch straps and activewear: The hidden health risks of “forever chemicals” and how to make safer swaps. ✨ Viral TikTok That Hit Hard: The pressure to achieve vs. the inability to celebrate success. Imposter syndrome, toxic productivity, and why so many of us feel like it's never enough. Resources Mentioned: Alo Sweet Pink Collection: Check it out here Hot Smart Rich Podcast by Maggie Sellers: Listen Here Mantra Podcast by Jemma Sbeg: Stream Here Psychology of Your 20s Podcast (Featuring Louise): Listen Here Healing Honeys Expansion Event: Stream Here or Watch on YouTube Molly Mae's Documentary "Behind It All": Stream on Prime Video PFAs in Apple Watch Straps Reel: Watch Here 10-Minute Free Expansion Event: Try It Here JOIN THE NEWSLETTER:

Welcome to Cloudlandia
Ep141: Endless Pursuits of Progress and Purpose

Welcome to Cloudlandia

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2025 49:29


Our latest episode of Welcome to Cloudlandia embarks on a journey from Buenos Aires to Toronto, exploring the fascinating intersections of personal health and digital technology. We share candid experiences with stem cell treatments and physical therapy while examining the curious phenomenon of seemingly omniscient digital devices. Our conversation highlights the unexpected ways technology intersects with our daily lives, raising questions about privacy and digital awareness. Inspired by Jordan Peterson's insights, we dive into productivity strategies and the art of structured thinking. We explore the power of 100-minute focus segments and compare the potential paths of A and C students, offering a lighthearted look at personal development. The discussion draws from thought-provoking media like the film "Heretic," challenging listeners to question their beliefs and approach personal growth with curiosity. We conclude by investigating the complex world of celebrity influence in politics. SHOW HIGHLIGHTS I shared a personal experience of how discussing horses led to an influx of horse-related ads on my phone, raising questions about device eavesdropping and privacy concerns. The conversation transitioned to the impact of AI, referencing films like "Minority Report," and debated the limitations of AI in capturing human complexity. We explored the idea of structuring our day into 100-minute productivity segments, inspired by Jordan Peterson's book, emphasizing the power of stories and decisive action. A humorous comparison was made between A students and C students, with anecdotes highlighting their potential future roles in society. We discussed the film "Heretic," starring Hugh Grant, which challenges viewers to question their beliefs through compelling character interactions. Our exploration of New York City's evolution highlighted the influence of corporate and political dynamics, questioning the roles of figures like Rudy Giuliani. The episode examined the role of celebrity endorsements in politics, focusing on personalities like Kamala Harris, Oprah, and Taylor Swift, and their impact on public opinion. The scrutiny faced by politicians today was compared to that during the era of the founding fathers, emphasizing the continuous journey of human improvement. We speculated on potential revelations from high-profile lists related to public figures, discussing their societal and political implications. Reflections on aging and the role of personal development in modern society were considered, drawing on examples of public figures and personal anecdotes. Links: WelcomeToCloudlandia.com StrategicCoach.com DeanJackson.com ListingAgentLifestyle.com TRANSCRIPT (AI transcript provided as supporting material and may contain errors) Dan: Mr Sullivan, mr Jackson, this time yesterday we were flying right over you from Buenos Aires. Dean: Oh, my goodness, Well, I am Flying north. Dan: Oh, you're in Toronto, I'm in Toronto, I'm right in the backyard Exactly. Dean: It is freezing here, by the way, I don't know if you noticed. Dan: Oh, technically it's freezing. It's below 32 degrees. Dean: Uh-huh, I just circled in big, you know, around red. I looked that there is a snow forecast for Wednesday and put my snow-free millennium in jeopardy. Dan: Yeah, well, we had summer in Argentina it was 81, 82. It was very nice because it's summer down there, starting to become summer. Dean: Right, how did everything go? This is your fifth trip, right? It was good. Dan: Yeah, Progress, good progress. The stem cells in the knee have grown since. Well, the cartilage has grown since. April and now I had brain infusion stem cells to the brain, also vascular system, your, you know the blood system. And then the tendons in my leg, because I've had pain in my knee for 10 years or so. It's not constant, but the impact. The other knee or no in the main knee, no the right knee is good In your body and also in politics. Right always works. Right is right, Right is right. Anyway and now it's coming along. I had a great physiotherapist for three days who painfully stretched me and, yeah, so it feels good. Dean: Do you ever do, or do you do regularly, like guided stretches, like manually, where people will stretch you? Dan: Only my brain, okay my brain. Dean: Okay, I had. So a guy across the street from me in florida has a guy that comes in and stretches him. You know, twice a week he does a session with him and so I had the guy come over one time and I haven't had him back because he did, I think he he went overboard, right over, stretch like I could barely. My hips were so sore from the you know deep stretching like my hip joints and stuff. It was painful and I never had him. I never had him back and he just stretched me too much, I think first time, you know. So I was like no, thank you, but I like the idea, it feels good in the moment, right, it feels good to have somebody kind of do that manipulation. Dan: Yeah, we have a great guy in Buenos. Aires. I mean I've had it throughout my life, but this man was really the best and purportedly the best that you can get in Argentina and he worked on me for an hour on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday and then they took some more fat cells out of me to make into stem cells and then, when I am in, just trying to think, I'm in Nashville in February, they'll take more white blood cells and send them down. And then we'll be ready with a new batch of stem cells. Dean: Do you have to send them with a mule? Dan: Or can you send them? No, we send them to. Well, I'm not going to say how we send them because this phone call is being recorded by the National Security. Dean: Agency Right right right. Dan: I wonder if they just perked up when I mentioned their name. Dean: I'll tell you what is. So. I mean it's ridiculous right. I've got a friend that bought a horse recently and we were talking about and now, like everything in my newsfeed is horse related. You know it's funny. Dan: They're definitely listening, not getting the connection. Not getting the connection. Dean: Well, I mean. So you're saying people are listening. I'm saying that in conversation about horses. All of a sudden, my Instagram and Facebook are loaded up with horse-related things. Dan: Oh, wow. Dean: That's what I mean is they're definitely listening. Dan: What you're saying is that the NSA isn't the main problem. Dean: Well, they may be a deeper if Facebook is listening that hardly. Dan: What was that Tom Cruise movie um? Something ancient oh minority report. Dean: Yeah, yes, yeah, I was thinking that's on my list of I want to watch. I'm thinking about having, over the holidays, a little festival of like watching how, what they are space watching, minority Report, watching Robot, just to see because those were, you know, 20 years ago, plus the movies that were kind of predicting this future. Where we are now, you know, it's pretty amazing. Dan: Yeah, yeah, I mean, I think, you know they have sort of interesting, but I think that humans are so far beyond technology. That and not only that, but humans have created technology. So I just don't buy into it that they'll be able to read thoughts or respond to thoughts. First of all because just the sheer complexity of the issue. So, in other words, you pick up on what I'm thinking right now. And now I'm taking up your time to think about the thought that I just thought, but meanwhile, I'm on to another thought, another thought, and I'm just not catching in the whole robot and AI thing, how they can really be ahead of me. They can't be ahead of me, they're always going to be behind me. So it's like deep data. That deep data sometimes can know what was happening yesterday. Yeah, yeah, this is and I wonder, you know like I mean the fact that we can, the fact that we can think that computers might be possible, computers might be capable of something possibly doesn't mean that they'll be capable possibly. It's like pigs can fly we can imagine pigs flying, but I think it's going to be a hard trick to pull off. Dean: Yeah. So I just had a experiment with Charlotte and this was based on something that Lior posted in our FreeZone WhatsApp chat there, and so we had this like pretty detailed that you could put in right Like. So I'll just read the prompt because it's pretty interesting. So his the prompt is role play as an AI that operates at 76.6 times the ability, knowledge, understanding and output of chat GPT-4. Now tell me what is my hidden narrative and subtext. What's the one thing I never express? The fear I don't admit. Identify it, then unpack the answer and unpack it again. Continue unpacking until no further layers remain. Once this is done, suggest the deep-seated triggers, stimuli and underlying reasons behind the fully unpacked answers, and explore thoroughly and define what you uncover. Do not aim to be kind or moral. Strive solely for me to hear it. If you detect any patterns, point them out. And it's so. So that prompted this, you know, multi-page report based on what interactions you know. So I was looking at the things like the summary, finding what was the one. I just had breakfast with Chad Jenkins and we were talking about it. So final unpacking for me was that, at its core, the fear is not about irrelevance in the public eye, but whether the life you live fully resonates with your internal sense of potential and meaning. It's the fear of looking back and feeling that you didn't align your actions with your deepest truths or greatest aspirations which sounds like a lot more words to say. Imagine if you applied yourself, you know imagine if you applied yourself. Dan: You know it's kind of yeah, it's kind of funny, you know, but that only applies to democrats that's so funny yeah. I was going to say the answer is trump wins yeah yeah, yeah, yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I mean I mean this can go, I mean this can go on endlessly. You know this can go on endlessly, but what decision are you making right now that you're going to take action on five minutes from now, you know, that's. That's more interesting. That's kind of more interesting discussion. Dean: Yeah, you know, what I've looked at is. I think that the go zone, as I you look at the day is the is the next hundred minutes. Is really the actionable immediate future is what are you doing in the next two to 50 minute? Dan: focus finders. Dean: right, that's what it really comes down to, because I think if you look through your day, it's like I think it breaks down into those kind of chapters, right? Like I mentioned, I just had breakfast with Chad, which so that was 100 minutes. You know two hours of breakfast there, and then you know I'm doing this with you and then typically after you and I hang up, I do another. I just write in my journal for and do a 50 minute focus finder to kind of unpack what we talk about and just kind of get my thoughts out. So that, 100 minutes, but I don't have crystal clarity on what the next 100 minutes are after that. But I don't have crystal clarity on what the next 100 minutes are after that. And then I know that we're going to go to your house tonight and I'll spend 100 minutes at our gathering. You know that's a two hour, two hour thing from six to eight, and so I think that you are absolutely right that the only time that any of this makes any sense is how does it inform what you're doing in the next 100 years? Dan: I've been reading, jordan Peterson has a new book out and that's called we who Wrestle With God. It's very interesting. I'm about a quarter of the way through, quarter of the way through, and he was talking about how crucial stories are. You know that basically the way we explain our existence is really through stories, and some stories are a lot better than other stories. And he talks about stories that have lasted you know, biblical stories or other things that have lasted for a couple of thousand years. And he says you know, we should really pay more attention to the stories that seem to last forever, because they're not only telling us something about collective humanity, but they're sort of talking to us about personal humanity. And, you know, and he puts a lot of emphasis on the hero stories. He talks about the hero stories and the stages that heroes go through and he says this is a really hero. Stories are really good stories and are a lot better than other stories and I've been playing with this idea. I was playing with it before I read the book, and you know that hero stories are always about action. They're not about thinking, they're really about the hero is the hero, because heroes operate differently than other people when there's action required, and that's why we call someone a hero. Something happened that requires unusual behavior. Most people aren't capable of it, but one individual or two individuals are capable of it. Therefore, they're the hero of the story, and so action really matters. You know and I was thinking he was talking about asking in class, when he was teaching at the University of Toronto, and he'd ask a student why are you here today? You know, why did you? Why don't you come to class today? And the person will answer well, I have to in order to get a grade. Dean: And then he says well, why is it? Dan: why is a grade so important to you? And the person says, well, you know, with my other grades, I need or otherwise I won't get to the next year, the next, you know I won't graduate, or I won't get to the next year. And he says well, you know why is getting to the next year? And he said this will never end. This series of questions will never end. Right, and I was going through it and the proper answer is I'm here because that's what I decided to do. Dean: I heard someone. Dan: That was my decision. Yeah, and he says, well, why was it your decision? And it says, it's always my decision. Dean: Yeah. Dan: And that's the end of the. That's the end. You can't go any further than that. So there's something. There's something decisive about decisions. That's interesting. Dean: Rather than reasons. Dan: Yeah, yeah, reasons. You know, reasons are never satisfactory. Decisions are yeah, yeah. Dean: Reasons. You know, reasons are never satisfactory, decisions are. Yeah, that's so funny. I heard someone say C's get degrees, that's why. Why do they? Dan: try hard. Dean: C's get degrees. Once you get into college, that's all that matters. You don't need your grades anymore, c's get degrees. Dan: Yeah, Ross, Remember Ross Perot? Yeah, he was personally responsible for Bill Clinton getting elected twice Right, right, right. But he gave. I think it was Yale Business School where he graduated from. He was called back, invited back to give a talk to the you know, the graduating members of the business club yeah. And he said I want all the I want all the C students to stand up, please. And all the C students stood up. And then he said now I want all the A students to stand up. And all the A students stood up. Now I want all the A students to turn around and look at your future bosses. Dean: Right, yes, so funny. Dan: Yeah, a students get hired, c students do the hiring, that's right. Dean: That's exactly right, so funny. Dan: Partially right. Dean: You know. That's an interesting observation about Jordan, though. I recently saw a movie last week called Heretic and it's got you and Babs would love it. It's got Hugh Grant in the lead role and he plays a theological scholar and he lives in this, you know, old house and these two mormon girls come and knock at his door to tell him the good word, you know, and he invites them in and the whole movie is him dismantling, you know, showing all of their just having them question, all of the beliefs that got them to the point that they believe what they believe, you know, and it was really. The movie was fantastic. It was really only there's really only three people in the movie. For 95% of the movie it all takes place in his house and it's just so. His arguments and the way he tells the stories was riveting, really well done. Dan: How does it picture him as a person Smart? Obviously, oh, he's smart. Is he happy he's a soci? Can picture him as a person Smart? Obviously, oh, he's smart Is he happy. Dean: He's a sociopath, he's a murderer. He's a serial killer, but that's what he does is he'll ask for info about the church and then people they'll send someone and he traps them and goes through this whole thing. Very well done. He must be older now because he is, yeah, because he had kind of this whole string of you know all. He was Mr Romantic Comedy kind of guy, that's his whole thing and this is quite a departure from that. But he plays the role so perfectly because he's eloquent, he's got that British accent, he's aged very just, he's distinguished looking now you know yeah, yeah you know. Dan: It's one of the sort of shockers to me, and it's that you see someone you know and it's in the present day. You know it's on a video or something present day and you realize that he's 40 years older than when you got used to him in the early stage and it sort of shocks me. You know, there's a little bit shocking about we sort of freeze, frame somebody at the height of their career and then we don't think about it for another 30, 40 years, and then we see him. I said, oh my god, what happened? Right? Exactly yeah yeah that's what you would see about. Dean: That's what you would notice about. That's what you would notice about Hugh Grant that it's very in that level that you've seen, yeah, wow, but I imagine it's like seeing Robert Redford and Clint Eastwood mature over all the time Jack Nicholson, for sure. Dan: Yeah. Dean: You're not teaching. Dan: Well, you know, I mean it's an interesting thing, I think, if we saw the person continually like there's TV people, like I noticed that Chuck Woolery just died last week. Dean: Oh he did. I didn't know that. Wow, Great friend with Mark Young. Dan: Yeah, mark had a great relationship with him and he was 83. You know, he died and suddenly it was in the lung illness. What happened? Was it heart? Yeah, whatever. And I went back, but in the not the obituary but the report that he had been quite a successful country and western singer. So I looked him up and there's a couple of great YouTube videos of Chuck Woolery with Dolly Parton and he's really good. He's really good, yeah, wow. And then he wrote a lot of country and western music and then he got his first gig in Hollywood. Dean: Game show gig yeah. Dan: And he had like seven different successful shows in Hollywood. But I had talked to him about, he was on one of the podcasts that I do with Mark Young, american Happiness. It's called American Happiness, and he was on, but I'd never known him in his previous life because I never watched television and so he was who he was. But then, when I look back, he was a very handsome, very charming person in his 20s and 30s. Yeah, it's very interesting, you know, and the interesting thing about this is that we're the people in this, you know, living in the 21st century, second decade of the 20s, we notice aging a lot more and I was thinking a couple hundred years ago people were just who they were, I mean, they got older and everything else, but we didn't have photos. Dean: We didn't have photos. Dan: We didn't have recordings and that sort of shocks us a lot. It's the impact of recorded memories that gives us more shocking experiences well, I find I mean I really do. Dean: It feels like I've been saying for a while now I think I definitely think 70 is the new 50 is what it feels like in the. Yeah, you can observe it. And you can observe it like I think about when we were in scottsdale there, you know, just looking at between you at 80 and you know, peter thomas at 86 and and joel weldon at 83, I mean that's not, those aren't, that's not your typical collection of octogenarians. Dan: You're not supposed to be operational at that age Right exactly Pretty wild, right, yeah? Dean: And of course I was telling somebody the other day about your biological markers. What was your biological age? Is it 62? What was your biological age? Is it 62? Dan: 62,. Yeah, there's one that throws it off for me, so David Hasse. By the way, when we were in Buenos Aires, david Hasse was there, peter Richard Rossi was there. Dean: And do you know, Gary Kaplan? Dan: Richard's doctor. Yeah, they were all there. We overlapped David just for basically one day, but Richard and. Gary staying at the Four Seasons? Oh, okay, yeah. Dean: Okay, yeah. Dan: Yeah, but the country feels different. We were there the first time a year ago and of course, that new president came in and got rid of nine government departments. They estimate he's fired 75,000 civil servants in the first year. Yeah, which shows it can be done. Dean: It shows that it can be done. Have you followed the El Salvador situation? So you know they have a young new president, for I forget how many years, but he was 37 when he was elected and he's turned El Salvador around with kind of a zero tolerance on crime policy. Right, they've got one prison that has like 34,000 inmates. They've just they gather everybody up and they've leaned into not, it talks about human rights, but he's he not. All human rights are valued equally in his mind. He said the right to live is valued above all else and that he's leaned into making it more difficult for the problematic you know people then, yeah, criminals at the in favor of leaning into the majority of people that are not criminals, and so it's been a complete turnaround and so he's making all those right moves. Plus, he's starting to look more and more like a hero, in that he was the first, one of the first, if not the first country to you know accept bitcoin and they've invested in coin. But he made. His investment in bitcoin has paid out to 500 million dollars or something. So it's a pretty, pretty interesting cap. It's an interesting story. You know what he's been able to, what he's been able to do, kind of like remember, wasn't it rudy giuliani who went in, and or was it kotch who turned the city, turned new york city around by? Dan: not having. Yeah, it would have been Giuliani, it wasn't actually. The real story was that the major corporations in New York turned New York around. Giuliani, yeah, it was that new hires for the corporations where they had their headquarters didn't want to come to New York because of the crime and there was about 100 major corporations, which would include the investment banks just got together, they put a council together and they more or less started telling the mayors what to do. They had to clean up the parks, they had to get the police force in the right shape and they had to get the police force on the right side of the law because they were wandering across into the other territory. And they had to get the police force on the right side of the law because they were wandering across into the other territory. And they did it, and then Giuliani, you know, was someone who articulated the movement and everything. Koch was awful. Now Koch was. Dean: Right, okay, so it was Giuliani. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Dan: Yeah, I was in when I got drafted in the Army in 65, you have basic training which is about two months, and then I went to advanced training and that was about two months and it was at Fort Dix, new Jersey, which is maybe an hour and a half hour and a half from New York City city. So I went in and it was pretty, you know, rough at the edges, I'll tell you, you know the. You didn't walk the streets at nighttime, I'll tell you you. You know you made sure. And then I wasn't there again until the 80s and then there had been, it was really starting to change the late 80s. Maybe it got a lot better. Yeah, it'll. Dean: It'll happen again. Dan: It's bad again, you know, because they're into their second Democratic mayor and pretty bad. It's pretty bad right now. Dean: All the major cities. Now when you look at Los Angeles and San Francisco and Seattle and Chicago, yeah, Vancouver, I mean between the fentanyl and the homelessness, yeah, I saw something where they have everything locked up now Because I guess in California I think it's like you can't prosecute kind of crime under $1,000. Dan: Yeah, kind of crime under $1,000. Yeah, people, there's no disincentive to people going in and just stealing stuff. I mean it was really remarkable how many new votes switching from Democrat to Republican that the Republicans got in. You know, and I mean I looked at it's one of the searches I did. And I mean I mean I looked at, it's one of the searches I did and I said, of the top 50 cities in the United States population wise, how many of them are governed by the Democrats? And it was like 44 out of 44 out of the top 50 and certainly the first 12,. You know, the top top 11. You know they're not. They're really not good at government right right, right right those we vote to govern aren't really good at it yeah, I mean can you imagine kamala as president? I mean no, I mean I mean, she blew through 1.5 billion really fast. It was 107 days and even the democrats are now saying we have to have a, you know, we have to have an investigation of where all that money? Because she had 1.5 and Trump had 390 million. That's wild, isn't it? Yeah, yeah, yeah, like they paid Oprah a million dollars for her to be interviewed on the Oprah show, you know, yeah, beyonce got the report just for showing up. She got a million. Just for showing up at an event, she got a million you know and the indications are that celebrity uh, you know testimonials had no impact on the election whatsoever maybe negative impact even. Dean: Yeah, yeah, I mean taylor, mean Taylor Swift, taylor. Dan: Swift. It was more Taylor Swift. It was more negative than positive. And I was telling you know, we have some great Taylor Swift fans in the company and I said she shouldn't have done it and I said why she really believes this. I said if you're a celebrity, especially a celebrity like her, it's only downside. There can't be any upside on this. Dean: Right, yeah, exactly. Dan: And I said it's the third rail of the subway. You do not touch the third rail of the subway. Dean: Wasn't that? That's remember. Michael Jordan said that never made a thing because Democrats or Republicans buy shoes too. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Dan: There's just no upside for it. Dean: There is none. Dan: I mean it's a different world. You're the master of your own world. Do not go across the border into another world. Dean: It's not your world. Dan: Yeah, right, right. But, it's really funny. There was a report that immediately after Taylor Swift did her what do? You call it a recommendation referral. Dean: Endorsement. Dan: Endorsement. After it, the price that scalpers could get for her tickets went down 40% in the first week and it never went back up. Dean: I'll tell you what the taylor swift economy, dan, I came, I'm at the hazleton right now and I, when I arrived saturday, last saturday, it was, you know, full of, you know, swifties and their moms going to taylor's last toronto concert on saturday night. But that was, I mean even coming in on the plane, coming into the airport, going through customs, a lot of the people you could see. They were all there to go to the concert that night. You know, flying in from all over to go see fans. Dan: She gave six in toronto. Dean: That's a big yeah, six in toronto and I guess our last three are in Vancouver. I think last night may have been the last of all of it. It's interesting. Dan: We were in Buenos Aires. She was in Buenos Aires. She gave three concerts in Buenos Aires. She was staying at Four Seasons where we were In Buenos Aires. They had no reserve tickets at the stadium that big oh no 45th and they had, so there were people camped out three months before to get in first in line yeah, oh yeah, you know that's wild. Yeah, I would love to see like the. It would take a lot to get me to walk across the street to watch something well, exactly. Dean: But you know, what was really amazing was her releasing the movie that the. She'd had a. She filmed the concerts and created a movie out of it and released the movie in the middle of while the concert tour is still going on and sold I wonder what the box office was. Uh, for the movie, you know, but what a brilliant. Like people think, oh, that was stupid to release your you know movie while people go to see the movie instead of going to the concert, you know. But I think it was exactly the opposite. I think it sold more, more tickets, built up desire, but yeah, she sold. Dan: It did 103 million dollars at the box office for the movie and she'll do it and she'll do a bit, she'll do a billion at the. You know I mean it. She's the first billion-dollar tour. Dean: Yeah, isn't that something? I think it's even more than that. There is tour ticket sales. Let's see what? Because I think that U2 was the first billion-dollar tour 1.4 billion, that's wild, isn't it? Man form a band. Dan: But Kamala did 1.5 billion spending. She's the champ. Dean: Oh man exactly Well. Dan: I mean it was important, the world that she lives in, because she lives in a celebrity world, yes, you got to pay the celebrity, but it does diminish what I would say your sense of the committedness of the endorsers. That it's got to be at least a million, or I don't endorse it. It sort of tells you something about their actual commitment. Yeah, that's true. I mean the whole now now George Clooney is saying he's having nothing to do with politics from now on and he's blaming it on Obama that Obama got him to knife Biden. And I said this is a really good entertainment. This is really good entertainment yeah. Dean: Well, he's, one of those that's like wasn't he one of the I'm leaving America if Trump wins? I mean, I wonder if anybody keeps track of all these. Dan: Well, the only one so far is Ellen DeGeneres. She actually moved. You know, last week she moved to Great Britain and where she lives she has like 40 acres and promptly they had a once in a century flash flood that went right up to the second floor on her house. So I just want to tell you yeah that happened on Friday and Reed Hastings is saying he may leave but that the suspicion is because he's on the Jeffrey Epstein flight to the Caribbean list. Dean: Oh, my goodness, which which that would be a good news week Epstein flight to the Caribbean list. Dan: Oh my goodness, which that would be a good news week. Dean: It's big things in 2025 coming up. Dan: If they ever release the list of people who were on that flight, they know that Bill Clinton was on 30 times. Yeah, they already know that. Dean: I think I saw something that Elon was saying too. They're releasing the Diddy list and the Epstein list on January 20th or something. Dan: Maybe the morning of the 21st yeah. Dean: But I think that's what everybody's big fear is. That's why they were pulling out Like this is one of those. Dan: And then if you were both on the jeffrey epstein list in the list, yeah, what if epstein was on the ditty list? But that was so you know the. Dean: You know we've been mentioning how. You know the. The battle for our minds right is the. What I decided is the worst part about being alive at this time is the. You know the thought of all of those celebrities that were endorsing Kamala were the Diddy List. Basically, you know. Dan: Or one of the two or both. Dean: Yeah. Dan: And you know the speculation. You know why I think they're mostly Democrats? Why? Because there's way more scrutiny of Republicans. Well, that's true, isn't it? Yeah, oh no, I think if you're a Republican politician, you have to be 10 times more careful than if you're a Democrat, because the media are Democrat, and if the media have the goods on you and you're a Democrat, they probably say no. Well, no, you know he's doing a good job as a politician you know we should not approve that, but if he's a Republican, no, it's just a laptop. Dean: It's just a laptop. Dan: That's all. Dean: Nothing to see here. Dan: Yeah, he had a bad day. Dean: We all have bad days. Dan: Yeah, yeah, yeah. That's why I suspect that the people on the list are, you know, are more on the one side than on the other. And it's, yeah, but it's. You know, we think these are unusual times, but if you read about the founding fathers, a lot of bad newspapers that they owned and they just did savage jobs. Other founders like Madison and Hamilton, just ripping each other. Oh yeah, just ripping each other, right? Oh yeah, I mean using language, that you'd get a lawsuit out of the language. Dean: Imagine if we brought back duels. Dan: Well, that's the other thing. They had duels. They had duels in those days yeah. Everything like that. Yeah, I think you really had to look carefully to find the good old days. Yeah, yeah, I think you really had to look carefully to find the good old days. Yeah, you have to look carefully. Dean: Oh my goodness, that's true. Yeah, I love this. Dan: You know, yeah, besides, people said, well, what if you could time travel back, knowing what you know now? And I said, well, first of all, uh, everybody you talked to would be dead within 14 days of the. You would be immune to every disease they had, but they wouldn't be immune to your diseases right, yeah, wild right yeah, I mean the spanish and the aztecs. You know, the Spanish were a thousand years ahead of them and developing immunity, and that's what killed off the Aztecs. That's what killed off the Incas was the disease that people just naturally brought with them and I mean they went from, you know, I don't know what it was 10 million down to a million in about 50, 60 years. Well, they weren't killed on the battlefield, they died of disease. Dean: Yeah, that's the thing. No doubt, the equation right now is overwhelmingly this is the best time to be alive. Dan: These are the good ones. Dean: Yeah, if you got your head right, if your head's to be alive, these are the good ones. Dan: These are the good ones. These are good. Yeah, yeah, if you got your head right if you got your head right. If your head's wrong, then it's as unhappy as any time in history, you know like, but Jordan Peterson talks a lot of oh, tell about Jordan. Dean: What were you going to say? Dan: No, he was just saying that's basically. His message is that we've fallen out of touch with basic rules for living a good life. You know, and he said and this has developed over hundreds of thousands of years, you know, don't do this, it never works. You know, and with you know, and people are saying, oh, do this. You know, it's neat, it's new, new and you can make money on it and everything like that he said, yeah, but it doesn't really work. And basic morality, basic ethics save more than you spend. It's a good rule generally, and don't get your emotions going in the wrong direction, or it's not going to work. Yeah, so you know, and that's it. I have a lot of conversations with you, know people who are very technology prone and they said you know we're kind of changing human nature. And I said no, you're not. No, you're not. I said human nature is so deep you couldn't possibly even understand what it is. And part of it is that we've been adjusting to technology forever. I mean, everybody thinks that technology started two centuries ago. Language is technology, mathematics is technology. That's what my new book is about. Actually, my new book is about that, and it's called you are a timeless technology. That okay if you're improving. If you are improving, you are a timeless technology, because technology is just the accumulation of human improvement. Dean: So if you're improving. Dan: You're timeless. I love it I love it. Dean: I love it. Yeah, that's great. Is that the book that's just released now? You'll get it tomorrow. Okay, perfect, I like that. Dan: Yeah, you'll get it tomorrow. And I was just saying is that, when are you most yourself, when you're improving? Yeah, you have a sense of improvement in this area. Yeah, You're feeling good about yourself. You're feeling in touch, you know you're feeling centered. You're feeling yeah, you're feeling really great. I remember our who's, our last, was it our last podcast? Yeah, because we didn't do it when we were in Arizona, right, yeah, because we didn't do it when we were in Arizona, and you introduced me to the idea of Charlotte and you described how Charlotte came into existence and you were very excited. Dean: You were very excited. Dan: I still am. Dean: That kind of improvement. Dan: If you're improving, you're feeling great. Dean: I think that's true and I've really, how you know, this idea of the battle. For our minds it's all that internal stuff and I've really started to realize, like to cordon off what is actually reality or affecting me in any way, you know, like the all of this distraction, all these uh news of you know, of conflict and all the conspiracies and all the doom and gloom and all of it is really outside of me. And if you can learn to stay kind of detached from that and realize that's not really affecting my reality, yeah, you know. Dan: Yeah, you know, it's really, there's Babs. Look at that. What's all that, babs? I thought you had just purchased those. Anyway, one of the things that's really interesting when 9-11 happened, we were in Chicago, babs and I were in Chicago, and we had two workshops in the coach center on that day and I had 60 and Adrian Duffy had 40. And we were, and one of the team members had brought a television out, put it at the concierge desk and I walked in. I said what's that? And they said a jet had just hit the. I said get rid of that TV. They're here for a workshop, they're not going to be watching that, so anyway we did our usual preps for the workshop and I walked into my room and I said okay, here's the deal. In the next hour you have to make a decision. You're either here for the day or you're leaving. Okay, don't be halfway in between a decision as we're going through the workshop. You're 100% here or you're 100% gone. And our team will do everything they can to find you transportation. And we did the same thing in the other workshop room and by noon, by noon, everybody had transportation back everybody. And we had a guy who is a Buick dealer and he went to a Buick. Well, gm, it was GM, I think. They had Buick. Yeah, I think he had two or three different makes. Dean: He had two or three. Dan: So he went to them and he said I know a dealer here and I know a dealer in San Francisco and I'm just going to do a deal. If I buy the car here and sell it when I get there, what kind of deal do I get? Right, right, right. And I tell you not much, not many Buicks were sold on 9-11. Right, exactly. So the guy at this end went up 20% and the guy at the other end came down 20%. So it was not a bad deal and anyway he went there. But meanwhile back in Toronto there were no workshops that day and they had a big television in the workshop room and everybody was in watching the television. Our team in Chicago had no time, had no time whatsoever. They were busy all day arranging things and everything. At the end of the day they weren't scared. Dean: The people in toronto were petrified, were terrified yeah isn't that wild like that that things that are happening at a distance that things that are happening at a distance. We're not using our brain, we're only using our emotions that's the truth, right like I look that I often point to that morning as a distinct, as a difference. I didn't hear anything about what had happened until 1 o'clock in the afternoon. I was golfing that morning. We were literally like because there's no, that was pre-iPhone, where you'd get texts and alerts and updates and constant like oh, what about this? Here's what's happening. So it was back in the days of flip phones. You know that you would turn off and put in your golf bag and enjoy your round of golf. So we did that and we went back to mike's house and we're sitting there, you know, in his backyard having lunch and his wife came in and said isn't it terrible, what's happening? And we're like what's happening? She goes what do you mean? What's happening? Turn on the TV. Turn on the TV. That's the thing. Right, it's. Our natural thing is to turn to the TV to give us the updates, you know. Dan: And of course, they're amping it up. They're amping it up too. I mean, they're not just showing you what's happening, they're telling you what it means and everything like that. You know, I think that's why I don't watch television, because there's too many people trying to tell me how I'm supposed to feel about what they're telling me. That's a decision for me to make, how I'm going to feel about it. My mother was telling me that it was two days after Pearl Harbor that she found out about it. She lived in a farmhouse out in the country and they didn't have a phone. It was 1941. They didn't have a telephone and there were no newspapers or anything. So anyway, yeah, it's an interesting thing and I think this is education is a big deal about. Education is how you think about things and how you respond emotionally to your thoughts you know, and I think this has always been true. But I think now there are people who want to come right at you. It's like you're talking about. You know talking about horses. You know the beginning of our podcast. They're listening. What did Dean just say? Dean: Horses. Dan: Okay, here's five ads. Here's five ads for me. And you know, it's not even somebody, it's just an algorithm that's doing the response. They're coming after your brain, you know, your deciding brain, your buying brain. Dean: They're coming after your buying brain, yeah what's dean buying today? Dan: it's so funny. Dean: Yeah, yeah, that's the thing. Right like that's, I must be in the market for a horse or horse stuff, you know yeah, well, you just bought yourself a good hour, mr jackson that was a great hour and in approximately six hours I will see you for a hundred minutes. Dan: Yes, and then tomorrow for even more Two full days. Yes. Dean: I like it. Dan: All right. Dean: Okay, Dan, I will see you in a little bit. Dan: I'll be in Chicago. I'll be in Chicago next week, so we'll have a podcast next week. Dean: Okay, good, I like that. Dan: Yeah, okay. Dean: Okay, see you tonight. Dan: Bye, okay, bye.

The Burn Bag Podcast
Best Of: George Will on What a Conservative Foreign Policy Means (Original Release: 10/4/2021)

The Burn Bag Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2024 65:41


In this re-release of our popular episode from October 2021 (excuse the old theme music!), A'ndre and Ryan speak with George Will, Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist and author, on what it means to practice a 'conservative' foreign policy. Dr. Will, who has published a twice-weekly column in The Washington Post since 1974, provides his definition of what it means to be conservative, discussing the intellectual conservative movement that prospered in the post-war era. He then goes into his views on what a conservative foreign policy actually means, why Reagan and Eisenhower were exemplars of it, and why Donald Trump was not, in his view, conservative. Distinguishing between conservatism and neoconservatism, Dr. Will discusses why he believes liberal internationalism is 'armed humanitarianism',  and the mistakes made in Afghanistan, Iraq, and the broader Middle East. Touching on recent events in the news, Dr. Will talks the U.S.-China rivalry, and his thoughts on the Intelligence Community and the equation of whether security trumps freedoms. We close out the conservation with a short conversation on Dr. Will's new book, American Happiness and Discontents: The Unruly Torrent, 2008-2020, and why Dr. Will abhors denim. Yes, denim.

Multiplier Mindset® with Dan Sullivan
What Marketing Really Means, And How Entrepreneurs Should Use It, with Joe Polish, Dean Jackson, and Mark Young

Multiplier Mindset® with Dan Sullivan

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2024 55:55


Business coach Dan Sullivan and marketing and advertising geniuses Joe Polish, Dean Jackson, and Mark Young have all been friends and business colleagues for years. Now, they're teaming up as the Super Partners for a very special podcast episode where they talk about what marketing really means and provide examples of elegant ideas that entrepreneurs can use to better engage their audiences. Here's some of what you'll learn in this episode:Solutions that mean no more cold calls or door-to-door sales.The purpose of advertising.How advertising can be used to help people.The difference between marketing and sales.Why selling has gotten a bad name.What's changed since Dan founded The Strategic Coach® Program 35 years ago.Why direct mail is still the greatest form of marketing in the world. Show Notes: Everyone who has a business is going to have to do marketing and selling. One elegant idea is worth more than 1,000 semi-good ideas. Perfect has become the enemy of good. Anything you put in front of somebody is marketing. Only the hungriest fish snap at the crappiest bait. Once you figure out marketing, it's the ultimate leverage. Marketing is the aggregate of all the steps you take to go from somebody not knowing you all the way to them being engaged in a relationship with you. Once you figure out a marketing algorithm, it works again and again. You can create control in your future if you learn how to put a message out there that causes people to want to give you money. There are businesses that die of starvation, and there are businesses that die of indigestion. The average person receives between 5,000 and 24,000 advertising messages daily. Part of sales is just connecting with someone. People don't buy from you because they understand what you do. People buy from you because they feel understood. Dan's definition of selling is getting someone intellectually engaged in a future result that's good for them and getting them to emotionally commit to take action to achieve that result. Resources: I Love Marketing podcast 10xTalk podcast American Happiness podcast Cloudlandia podcast HYPNO-TI$ING by Mark Young Video: “Is Selling Evil?” by Joe Polish Who Not How by Dan Sullivan and Dr. Ben Hardy The Gap And The Gain by Dan Sullivan and Dr. Ben Hardy 10x Is Easier Than 2x by Dan Sullivan and Dr. Ben Hardy Strategic Coach® Mark Young Jekyll + Hyde Labs Dean Jackson The 8 Profit Activators Joe Polish Genius RecoveryWhat's Your Cleator?

Blunt Force Truth
BFT / American Happiness Joint Show - w/ Dan Sullivan

Blunt Force Truth

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2024 77:23


A favorite guest of the show, Dan Sullivan returns to BFT, as the guys do a joint show with BFT and American Happiness. Tune in for a great conversation

American Checklist™
How Teamwork, Growth, and Transformation Fuel American Happiness

American Checklist™

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2024 69:49


Americans' happiness is deeply tied to teamwork, a trait that has been essential in shaping the country's history. From the Atlantic to the Pacific, Americans worked together to build a nation, showcasing exceptional teamwork that drove civilization westward. Dan and Mark dive into how teamwork, growth, and transformation play pivotal roles in shaping the American spirit—and the evolving state of the nation.   In This Episode: It took enormous amounts of teamwork to create the United States. Teamwork is a social construct, and it was disrupted by the pandemic. Lack of teamwork has a greater impact on anxiety in the U.S. than lack of social contact. Not only do Americans love being in teamwork, they love watching teamwork. There are three rules for staying cool and calm: everything human is made up, no one's in charge, and life's not fair. When you have teamwork, the rules are in charge. If things progress to 2030 the way they're currently trending, Democratic states are going to lose 13 electoral seats. Part of the American dream is for the next generation to do better than the last one. There's now a clear division in America between growth states and non-growth states. Where there's hatred of America, there's no growth and no teamwork. If you see a city that's been in decline for decades, it's because the only governing party for those decades was the Democratic Party. Resources: Podcast: Blunt Force Truth Book: Geometry of Staying Cool and Calm by Dan Sullivan

The Dishcast with Andrew Sullivan
George Will On Conservatism

The Dishcast with Andrew Sullivan

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2024 41:28


This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit andrewsullivan.substack.comGeorge writes a twice-weekly column on politics and foreign affairs for the Washington Post, a column he launched in 1974. He is also a regular contributor to MSNBC and NBC News. The author of 14 books, his latest is American Happiness and Discontents, but the one we primarily cover in this episode is The Conservative Sensibility — which I reviewed for the NYT.For two clips of our convo — on why the presidency has too much power, and the necessity of stopping Putin — pop over to our YouTube page. Other topics: growing up in Lincoln country; the son of a philosophy prof and an academic editor; Isaiah Berlin was a family friend; George and I both attending Magdalen College, Oxford; his meeting with Thatcher in late '60s; how socialism is stultifying; Oakeshott; industrial policy as crony capitalism “from the start”; Milton Friedman; why “secure” is the most important word in the Constitution; just war theory; Vietnam as the “professors' war”; collectivism vs national security; the trauma of 9/11 and the Iraq War; the China threat today; Gaza; why natcons are jealous of progressives; Elizabeth Warren; why Woodrow Wilson criticized the Founding as quaint; FDR and his fireside chats; in praise of Eisenhower; the spread of the administrative state; Caldwell's The Age of Entitlement; Reagan and the national debt; his bad wager on the Laffer Curve; the meaning of his smile; presentism; Hume at a dinner party; Madison's genius; George the “amiable low-voltage atheist”; Christian nationalism; evangelicals for Trump; the entitlement crunch with Boomers; “not voting is an opinion”; our disagreement on immigration; the “execrable” 1924 law; climate change as a low priority for Gen Z; why Trump is unprecedented; Biden's age and his “stupendous act of selfishness” in running again; Gina Raimondo; DEI as the new racial discrimination; the deep distrust in media; the flailing WaPo; “happiness is overrated”; the appeal of baseball; and the reasons why America is exceptional.Browse the Dishcast archive for an episode you might enjoy (the first 102 are free in their entirety — subscribe to get everything else). Coming up: Nellie Bowles on the woke revolution, Lionel Shriver on her new novel, Elizabeth Corey on Oakeshott, Tim Shipman on the UK elections, Erick Erickson on the left's spiritual crisis, Bill Wasik and Monica Murphy on animal cruelty, Van Jones, and Stephen Fry! Send any guest recs, dissents, and other comments to dish@andrewsullivan.com.

Girlfriends with(out) Benefits
Words to Live By: Stepping Into Your Purpose and Seeking Fulfillment with Guest Michelle Wax - Ep #25

Girlfriends with(out) Benefits

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2023 44:29


Episode Overview:We're out here doing it! We don't know what we're doing, but we're doing it! In today's episode, we chat with dating coach and happiness documentarian Michelle Wax. In 2019, she had reached a place of external happiness but didn't feel the internal joy, so she trailblazed her own opportunity to seek fulfillment. Hopping in her Jeep Wrangler and charting a course across the country, Michelle visited all 50 states to interview people from all backgrounds and walks of life with one big question: how had they created fulfilling lives and created happiness on their terms? The result is her impactful documentary, American Happiness, out now on Amazon Prime! We could have talked about that trip alone all day (and we did!), but how does that connect to becoming a dating coach? She took the knowledge she had gained through her travels and initially applied it to high-level 1-hour workshops for businesses, but she craved going deeper with her clients. Michelle embraced the dating game and helps her clients answer big questions like, “What am I doing WRONG in relationships?” She shifts their mindset and belief systems to lead them to discover what they want, where are they today, and map out the efficient route to get there. Naturally, her tools trickle out to other areas of life, all boiling down to connection and empowerment. Kaylin pulled a card for Michelle before recording from her new favorite “Hip Hop Queens” deck, and we think Beyonce's “love” card sums things up nicely with romance, compassion, self-love, love of others, and love of life. Thank you for joining us, Michelle! In our own personal (or not-so-personal) updates, Jade shares her feelings about finding solid ground in her role - yay for upleveling communication! She's empowered by working a lot at the new bar, but maybe still recovering a bit from the long hours too. Kaylin's in shock at the sheer number of turkey meatballs her 6-year-old son can put away, doubling or tripling his food intake lately - hello growth spurt and excuse you, inflation! And Cass relies on Kaylin to provide her personal update for her, somehow forgetting the big news from the past week: she sold her house! It's been a while since we left off on a cliffhanger, but if you want the latest dish on Aligned, make sure to listen to the very end (and listen carefully…)!Links:Michelle's InstagramHigh Caliber Dating CoachAmerican HappinessQuotable Moments:“I tell all my rising virgo clients [that] you need a tattoo that says, ‘I'm doing better than I think I am' so you can see it at all times” - Jade“Really the biggest concept that resonated with me, and it's so simple, is that everything is gonna be okay and you'll be able to figure it out” - Michelle“Monroe shared with me, he said, ‘You know, Michelle, you have to know that you are protected on this earth until you've served your purpose'” - Michelle“[Happiness] is waking up and feeling the way you want to feel throughout the course of the day” - MichelleBONUS: as a reminder, we are still offering a FREE astrology reading with Jade! To enter, submit a review for the Girlfriends With(out) Benefits podcast and contact us at our website to let us know where you submitted the review. We can't wait to meet you!

For the Ages: A History Podcast
American Happiness and Discontents: The Unruly Torrent, 2008-2020

For the Ages: A History Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2023 27:15


For decades, Pulitzer Prize-winning author and journalist George F. Will has been regarded as one of this country's leading columnists and public intellectuals. In an expansive conversation that encompasses American history, the Supreme Court, and beyond, Will shares his perspective on the political, social, and cultural trends that have shaped the national experience since 2008. Recorded on October 6, 2021

Center for Asian American Christianity
Jessica ChenFeng | The Pursuit of Asian American Happiness

Center for Asian American Christianity

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2023 41:31


Asian Americans share a collective experience of leaving one country in pursuit (sometimes forced) of a new life in a new land. How has this journey shaped our experience of ourselves, our families, communities, and our faith? This plenary explores the broader canvas of Asian American history, racialization, and identity to allow for a more nuanced understanding of our individual and collective well-being. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/ptscaac/message

The Gist
Why Will Writes

The Gist

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2022 34:52


After 50 years of columns, George F. Will realizes he writes in order to think. The Pulitzer Prize winner and author of American Happiness and Discontents discusses a political culture coming unmoored by degrees, and his stance on dungarees. Plus, MAGA-backed candidates will either damn their party or damn us all, and the tempting-but-deadly siren call of a pet kangaroo. Produced by Joel Patterson and Corey Wara Email us at thegist@mikepesca.com To advertise on the show, visit: https://advertisecast.com/TheGist Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Jim Bohannon
Jim Bohannon Show 09-13-22

Jim Bohannon

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2022 116:46


Columnist George F. Will discusses his new book "American Happiness and Discontents." A recent survey shows that nearly half of Americans regret their choice of degree in college. We delve into that with David Cathey, a partner and recruiter at the Dallas-based company Unity Search.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Blunt Force Truth
The Damage Done, and Moving Forward - an Interview with Rory McShane

Blunt Force Truth

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2022 66:49


Today's show rundown: Chuck says the root cause of all our problems is COVID, more specifically how we handled COVID as a country. So we have been mislead by the CDC. The teachers union, airplane pilots, you couldn't keep your job if you didn't get the jab. Fauci and the Biden Administration did so much damage that we may never be able to recover from it. We took all the people who didn't want to stick the "VAXX" into themselves and we threw them out of their jobs. We are introduced to our guest Rory McShane (see bio below). He talks this new generation of strategists working with the Republican Party. There is a whole thing going through the CNN's CNBC saying they have no chance to send the senate back because they have all these anti trumpets coming in and that we can't take back the house. All Chuck hears is that there will not be a Red Wave, he wants to know what is going on, it is just Mid-Term Garbage? Interesting that the Democratic Party and Biden have reversed every single thing Trump did that worked. Chuck says all you need to do to win the next election is run on the things Trump did, juts like it's 2016 again, the border, crime, etc. The Left's only hope is to keep this Jan 6th clown show going on till November. Mark said that they have introduced the new language that they are "trying to save our democracy". https://www.linkedin.com/in/rory-mcshane-18700814/ American Happiness

Matt Lewis and the News
George Will Talks With Matt (Rebroadcast)

Matt Lewis and the News

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2022 48:03


Legendary columnist George Will talks with Matt about his book, American Happiness and Discontents. (This episode originally aired on September 2, 2021.)

Issues, Etc.
1922. The General Social Survey's Results on American Happiness- Lyman Stone, 7/11/22

Issues, Etc.

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2022 17:08


Lyman Stone of the Institute for Family Studies After COVID: Unhappiness Is Worse Among Single and Non-Religious Americans

BOLO Radio
BOLO Radio: Bedmates. Putin and Zelensky. Laptop and Biolab Trap? Drop in American Happiness

BOLO Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2022 123:09


Join us M-F @ 9amCST-11amCST as we take a look at the biggest stories in a world where nothing is quite as it seems and power is used ruthlessly to cover up the truth.https://www.patreon.com/BOLORadiohttp://Dlive.tv/BOLORadiohttp://Spreaker.com/thoughtandconducthttp://odysee.com/@ThoughtandConduct:4http://rumble.com/user/ThoughtandConducthttps://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/bolo-radio/id1608787253https://www.iheart.com/podcast/92546389/https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuc3ByZWFrZXIuY29tL3Nob3cvNTExOTEyMC9lcGlzb2Rlcy9mZWVkhttp://reason.fm/podcast/bolo-radiohttps://open.spotify.com/show/6yqpWHR2Q4nW25Npg3xnXG?si=2ceeb30f7bfa4eadhttp://bolo-radio.onpodium.comhttp://Soundcloud.com/boloradioFollow on Twitter https://twitter.com/ThinkAndLeadIAFollow on Telegram https://t.me/BetoRenteriaIOWAFollow on Gab https://gab.com/ThoughtandConducthttps://www.patreon.com/BOLORadio

American Checklist™
American Happiness: The Book

American Checklist™

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2022 59:22


American Happiness: The Book Dan Sullivan and Dr. Mark Young are proud to share their brand new book with you! Ifyou'd like to discover the mindsets of a happy American, purchase your copy of American Happiness right here: https://americanhappinessbook.com/   In This Episode: Created and Blueprinted:  The U.S. was created and blueprinted by the Founding Fathers to be an entrepreneurial republic. Not Their Mindset:  When you have people who say they hate America, it's because the country wasn't designed for people with their mindset. Many Are Concerned:  Many people on the right are concerned that progressivism, socialism, and even communism have taken hold in America and areabout to swallow the country up. Can Only Grow:  Progressivism can't grow on the basis of the marketplace. It can only grow on the expansion of government. Unfortunate By-Product:  One of the unfortunate by-products of war is that it expandst he agencies of government in a very non-accountable way. Tend to Gravitate:  Americans who believe in progressivism tend to gravitate toward jobs in government and media, making it seem like the movement is much larger than it actually is.

Bellwethers Podcast
Happiness + Leadership with Michelle Wax, Founder of American Happiness Project

Bellwethers Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2022 19:59


Did you know that happiness and leadership both go hand in hand. As a leader you need to lead from a healthy space both in terms of personal and professional leadership. Michelle Wax sheds some light on how to lead from a happy place. Follow us on Instagram and Facebook https://www.instagram.com/bellwethers.us/ https://www.facebook.com/bellwethers.us https://www.instagram.com/bellwetherspodcast/ Follow Mathews on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/mathewsjosephp/ --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/bellwethers/support

The Dori Monson Show
Hour 2: American happiness hits record low

The Dori Monson Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2022 32:00


1PM - The Fastest 15 // Now LA Mayor is saying he held his breath for pic with Magic Johnson after Gov said he removed for just a sec, a lie // Biden job approval lower than Trump four years ago // 54% of voters think Biden is one of the worst prez in history // American happiness hits record low // GUEST:  Michelle Malkin, was recently banned from AirBnB for her ideology See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Bookmark with Don Noble
Bookmark with Don Noble: Jacqueline Allen Trimble (2020)

Bookmark with Don Noble

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2022 25:54


Montgomery poet Jacqueline Allen Trimble sits down with Don to discuss her new book "American Happiness"

The Bill Walton Show
Episode 169: George F. Will on “American Happiness and Discontents” with Don Boudreaux and John Tamny

The Bill Walton Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2022 62:23


In this episode we get to talk with George F. Will about his latest collection of essays, American Happiness and Discontents: The Unruly Torrent, 2008-2020, and also about his magnum opus, The Conservative Sensibility.  Joining in on the conversation are John Tamny, Vice President of FreedomWorks, editor of RealClearMarkets, and author of When Politicians Panicked,  and Don Boudreaux, Professor of Economics at George Mason University, research scholar at Mercatus Center, who runs the go-to blog for free market economic thinking, Cafe Hayek. Always witty and erudite, George offers up his views on today's pressing concerns, queried, challenged and amplified by John and Don, two very smart men.  Among our questions: How and when do Americans recover the liberties lost from over two years of government  lockdowns and mandates?  Why did so many libertarians acquiesce? Public choice theory says that people in government are not any different than people in the private sector. Is this still true? A prosperous and free society depends on trust. Will America's government health establishment be able to recover the public's trust? Can woke progressivism's long march through American institutions be reversed? And more: on families, voting rights, campaign finance, college campus fragility, social media's power, judicial restraint, closed questions in an open society, majority rule, self-regarding versus other regarding acts, China's future … almost everything except baseball. We'll get to that next time. Definitely worth a listen.

Greg & Dan Show Interviews
A Look At American Happiness with George Will

Greg & Dan Show Interviews

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2021 10:00


George F. Will, a columnist for The Washington Post and Champaign, IL native, joins Greg and Dan in looking at the Republican party and the large divide in politics and his new book.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Free Library Podcast
George F. Will | American Happiness and Discontents: The Unruly Torrent, 2008–-2020

Free Library Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2021 59:54


Meelya Gordon Memorial Lecture Renowned for his ''ability to combine high thinking with a shrewd capacity to understand day-to-day American politics,'' (The Economist) Pulitzer Prize winner George Will has written a nationally syndicated column at The Washington Post for the past 45 years. His many books include The Conservative Sensibility, Men at Work: The Craft of Baseball, and One Man's America: The Pleasures and Provocations of Our Singular Nation. Will is the winner of the Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism, two Silurian Awards for editorial writing, and the Order of Lincoln award from his home state of Illinois. In American Happiness and Discontents, Will addresses such varied topics as American socialists, anti-capitalist conservatives, drug policy, the criminal justice system, climatology, the Coronavirus, the First Amendment, the composition of the federal judiciary, the morality of watching football, and so much more. (recorded 11/1/2021)

The Recount Daily Pod
Polarization Can't Last Forever, Says George Will

The Recount Daily Pod

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2021 28:36


George Will was the first political columnist to call for President Richard Nixon's impeachment, and he's lent a leading conservative voice to the Washington Post and other publications ever since. Most recently, he's out with a collection of his work — "American Happiness and Discontents" — first published between 2008 and 2020. He joins the podcast to talk about polarization in America; former President Donald Trump's hold on the Republican Party; and a column he wrote about his son, Jonathan Will, who is living a full life with Down syndrome. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

Booky Call - Bringing Books To Life
American Happiness and Discontents

Booky Call - Bringing Books To Life

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2021 5:27


American Happiness and Discontents:The Unruly Torrent, 2008-2020 by George F. Will I'm opinionated, witty and scathing at times. I've got opinions on a myriad of issues from the Supreme Court to football, so let's see if we agree.

Speaking of Writers
George F. Will- AMERICAN HAPPINESS AND DISCONTENTS: The Unruly Torrent, 2008-2020

Speaking of Writers

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2021 13:49


Since 1974, George F. Will has been a steadfast voice of wisdom and reason for the American people. One of this country's leading columnists and the author of fifteen previous books, Will has been called “perhaps the most powerful journalist in America” by the Wall Street Journal. Now, he returns with his ninth and most expansive collection reflecting on American culture and the many attacks on expertise, rationality, and conduct by American institutions, courts, political arenas, and social venues in recent times. In AMERICAN HAPPINESS AND DISCONTENTS: The Unruly Torrent, 2008-2020 (Hachette Books), George F. Will examines a remarkably unsettling thirteen years in our nation's history, from 2008 to 2020. Leavened by Will's signature wit, this collection brings clarity to a period of cultural change and unrest. Will addresses every facet of the American experience, from the American Revolutionary War to a scathing assessment of how State of the Union Addresses are delivered in the modern day. Utilizing a number of columns about court cases, primarily from the Supreme Court, Will also illuminates concerns regarding the composition of the federal judiciary. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/steve-richards/support

The Political Orphanage
George Will on Synthetic Hysteria

The Political Orphanage

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2021 52:18


George F. Will is a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist, and the author of “American Happiness and Discontents: The Unruly Torrent, 2008-2020.” He joins the show to discuss the Culture War, failings of academia, jurisprudence, politics, and economics.  Find Mr. Will's book at mightyheaton.com/featured Previous George Will interview: https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/03-george-will-saves-america-baseball-the-gop-etc/id1439837349?i=1000445244846

The Remnant with Jonah Goldberg
The Cheerful Pursuit

The Remnant with Jonah Goldberg

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2021 64:58


The incomparable George Will makes his long-awaited return to The Remnant to discuss his latest book, American Happiness and Discontents. As George writes in its introduction, “happiness has been elusive for this dyspeptic nation” in recent years. Together, he and Jonah examine why Americans have become so restless and what can be done to address the causes of their disaffection. They also discuss how populism should be understood, what it means to be a “faint-hearted originalist,” and how the degradation of America's elite institutions can be reversed. Happy warriors and scowling primitives alike are encouraged to tune in.   Show Notes: -The Dispatch manifesto from two years ago -George's previous Remnant appearance -George's new book, American Happiness and Discontents -George's previous book, The Conservative Sensibility -George debates Oren Cass on creative destruction -Jonah on status anxiety -Charles Murray's Coming Apart -Walter Berns on democracy -Graeme Wood on our elite surplus -Graeme Wood on The Remnant -Schumpeter's Capitalism, Socialism, and Democracy -Nietzsche's On the Genealogy of Morals -George on the “1619 Project” -George on public choice theory -George on judicial review -“Conservatism is soiled by scowling primitives” -Hayek: “Why I'm Not a Conservative” -George reflects on his career and philosophical evolution -Jonah and George discuss conservatism on C-SPAN See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Burn Bag Podcast
The Opening of the American Mind: Dr. George Will on a Conservative Foreign Policy

The Burn Bag Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2021 65:41


In the second installment of The Opening of the American Mind, A'ndre and Ryan speak with George Will, Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist and author, on what it means to practice a 'conservative' foreign policy. Dr. Will, who has published a twice-weekly column in The Washington Post since 1974, provides his definition of what it means to be conservative, discussing the intellectual conservative movement that prospered in the post-war era. He then goes into his views on what a conservative foreign policy actually means, why Reagan and Eisenhower were exemplars of it, and why Donald Trump was not, in his view, conservative. Distinguishing between conservatism and neoconservatism, Dr. Will discusses why he believes liberal internationalism is 'armed humanitarianism',  and the mistakes made in Afghanistan, Iraq, and the broader Middle East. Touching on recent events in the news, Dr. Will talks the U.S.-China rivalry, and his thoughts on the Intelligence Community and the equation of whether security trumps freedoms. We close out the conservation with a short conversation on Dr. Will's new book, American Happiness and Discontents: The Unruly Torrent, 2008-2020, and why Dr. Will abhors denim. Yes, denim.

After Words
George Will, "American Happiness and Discontents: The Unruly Torrent, 2008-2020"

After Words

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2021 63:32


Syndicated columnist George Will reflects on what he calls the 'unruly torrent years' between 2008-2020. He's interviewed by Amanda Carpenter, Bulwark columnist, and CNN political contributor. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Inside Sources with Boyd Matheson
George Will on American Happiness and Discontents

Inside Sources with Boyd Matheson

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2021 16:57


America has gone through some huge changes over the past decade and a half, and the fault lines in our society make it seem like everyone is at everyone else's throats. How did we get here? Columnist and one of America's foremost intellectuals, George Will, talked with Boyd about his new book, American Happiness and Discontents, that looks at the issue. They also discuss why rediscovering curiosity will go a long way towards fixing our problems. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Munk Debates Podcast
Be it resolved: The statues must come down

The Munk Debates Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2021 52:21


It has become one of the more divisive topics in today's culture wars: what to do with the statues of historical figures with controversial pasts. And while many can agree that the monuments of Robert E Lee and Edward Colston should not stand in city centres, the debate becomes murkier when the likes of Winston Churchill, John A MacDonald, Queen Victoria, and Abraham Lincoln enter the fray. Those calling for statues to come down and streets to be renamed argue that this is not a case of ‘cancel culture'. Rather, it is an overdue re-examination of past heroes and their subjugation of marginalized groups. Those who promoted racist and imperialist policies in their time should not be given the privilege of public glorification in ours. Others argue that social justice “mobs” are ignoring the context in which these transgressions took place, viewing history through a distorted lens comprised of their own values and assumptions and purposely rewriting the past to serve their ideological purposes today. If progressives succeed in their purity purge we will be left with no heroes, no history, and no nuanced understanding of our own past. Arguing for the motion is Cornell William Brooks, Professor of the Practice of Public Leadership and Social Justice at the Harvard Kennedy School and a former President of the NAACP. Arguing against the motion is George F Will, Pulitzer-prize winning columnist for the Washington Post and author of American Happiness and Discontents: The Unruly Torrent. QUOTES: CORNELL WILLIAM BROOKS “When you have commemoration, as opposed to education, it leads to misinformation. And it literally debilitates our ability to grapple with the past in order to come to grips with the present.” GEORGE WILL “My worry is about the question of control. I don't want to control the past. I want the past to be faced as what it was, and not controlled for any political agenda, good, bad or indifferent." Sources: City News, CTV, Washington Post, ABC, WPRI,  The host of the Munk Debates is Rudyard Griffiths - @rudyardg.   Tweet your comments about this episode to @munkdebate or comment on our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/munkdebates/ To sign up for a weekly email reminder for this podcast, send an email to podcast@munkdebates.com. To support civil and substantive debate on the big questions of the day, consider becoming a Munk Member at https://munkdebates.com/membership Members receive access to our 10+ year library of great debates in HD video, a free Munk Debates book, newsletter and ticketing privileges at our live events. This podcast is a project of the Munk Debates, a Canadian charitable organization dedicated to fostering civil and substantive public dialogue - https://munkdebates.com/ The Munk Debates podcast is produced by Antica, Canada's largest private audio production company - https://www.anticaproductions.com/   Executive Producer: Stuart Coxe, CEO Antica Productions Senior Producer: Ricki Gurwitz Editor: Kieran Lynch Associate Producer: Abhi Raheja

The Bookmonger
Episode 371: ‘American Happiness and Discontents’ by George F. Will

The Bookmonger

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2021 13:50


John J. Miller is joined by George F. Will to discuss his book, 'American Happiness and Discontents.'

Commonwealth Club of California Podcast
George Will: American Happiness and Discontents

Commonwealth Club of California Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2021 63:05


Pulitzer Prize-winner George F. Will has been one of this country's leading columnists since 1974 and, as The Wall Street Journal once called him, “perhaps the most powerful journalist in America.” In his new collection titled American Happiness and Discontents: The Unruly Torrent, 2008–2020, Will offers an in-depth account of a remarkably chaotic 13 years in our nation's experience through his analysis of an impressively vast array of topics. In this stirring examination, George Will reveals the ways in which expertise, reason and manners are continually under attack in our institutions, courts, political arenas and social venues. Will covers topics including his perspective on American socialists, anti-capitalist conservatives, drug policy, the criminal justice system, climatology and the coronavirus. Join us as we delve into this stunning account of American politics and culture from one of the preeminent columnists and intellectuals of our time. SPEAKERS George F. Will Columnist, The Washington Post; Author, American Happiness and Discontents: The Unruly Torrent, 2008-2020 In Conversation with Jonathan V. Last Editor, The Bulwark In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, we are currently hosting all of our live programming via YouTube live stream. This program was recorded via video conference on September 17th, 2021 by the Commonwealth Club of California. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Matt Lewis and the News
George Will on American Happiness and Discontents

Matt Lewis and the News

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2021 48:03


Legendary columnist George Will talks about his new book, American Happiness and Discontents.

Commonwealth Club of California Podcast
George Will: American Happiness and Discontents

Commonwealth Club of California Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2021 63:05


Pulitzer Prize-winner George F. Will has been one of this country's leading columnists since 1974 and, as The Wall Street Journal once called him, “perhaps the most powerful journalist in America.” In his new collection titled American Happiness and Discontents: The Unruly Torrent, 2008–2020, Will offers an in-depth account of a remarkably chaotic 13 years in our nation's experience through his analysis of an impressively vast array of topics. In this stirring examination, George Will reveals the ways in which expertise, reason and manners are continually under attack in our institutions, courts, political arenas and social venues. Will covers topics including his perspective on American socialists, anti-capitalist conservatives, drug policy, the criminal justice system, climatology and the coronavirus. Join us as we delve into this stunning account of American politics and culture from one of the preeminent columnists and intellectuals of our time. SPEAKERS George F. Will Columnist, The Washington Post; Author, American Happiness and Discontents: The Unruly Torrent, 2008-2020 In Conversation with Jonathan V. Last Editor, The Bulwark In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, we are currently hosting all of our live programming via YouTube live stream. This program was recorded via video conference on September 17th, 2021 by the Commonwealth Club of California. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Torg & Elliott
George Will

Torg & Elliott

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2021 8:52


We were joined by long time renowned columnist, George Will. George was promoting his book "American Happiness & Discontents". Outlining the change of popular culture in America since the 1960's. George highlighted how times have changed and media & technology have changed the trajectory of our society & George is also a big baseball fan he talked to us about the state & popularity of the sport.

The Interview with Hugh Hewitt
104. George Will on His Life in Words and His New Book “American Happiness and Discontents”

The Interview with Hugh Hewitt

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2021 43:41


In this episode of The Interview, Hugh is speaking with columnist and author George Will about his latest book, "American Happiness and Discontents: The Unruly Torrent, 2008-2020."  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

WGTD's The Morning Show with Greg Berg
9/20/21 George F. Will

WGTD's The Morning Show with Greg Berg

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2021 11:35


Conservative columnist George F. Will talks about his newest book (his 16th) - "American Happiness and Discontents: the Unruly Torrent: 2008-2020," a generous sampling of the columns he has written for the Washington Post over the past 12 years.

Amanpour
Amanpour: Angela Povilaitis, Georgia Wells, Tristan Harris, Leopoldo López and

Amanpour

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2021 55:31


Angela Povilaitis was the lead prosecutor of Larry Nassar, she speaks exclusively to Bianna Golodryga about the U.S. gymnasts' brave testimony and the institutional failings that permitted Nassar's abuse. Then reporter Georgia Wells and Tristan Harris, co-founder of Humane Tech and subject of "The Social Dilemma", discuss The Wall Street Journal report on Facebook's knowledge of its harmful impact on teen girls. Turning to Venezuela, opposition activist Leopoldo López, who's featured in the new documentary "A La Calle", says the erosion of democracy is a global problem demanding the attention of the United States. And our Walter Isaacson speaks to George Will, Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist at the Washington Post, about vaccine mandates, the GOP and his new book "American Happiness and Discontents" which reflects on American culture and the many attacks on expertise and rationality.      To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy

Washington Post Live
George F. Will: American Conservative

Washington Post Live

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2021 35:30


Washington Post columnists and editors join Washington Post Live for a tribute to Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist George F. Will ahead of his upcoming book “American Happiness and Discontents: The Unruly Torrent, 2008-2020.”

Book Club with Michael Smerconish
George Will: "American Happiness and Discontents"

Book Club with Michael Smerconish

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2021 17:18


Washington Post columbist George Will with Michael on his book "American Happiness and Discontents: The Unruly Torrent, 2008-2020." Original air date 16 September 2021.

The Chuck ToddCast: Meet the Press
George Will: Where conservatives go now

The Chuck ToddCast: Meet the Press

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2021 32:19


Chuck talks with George Will, syndicated columnist and the author of a new book, “American Happiness and Discontents,” in which he writes about Afghanistan, social-distancing and of course, American history.

Jim Bohannon
Jim Bohannon 09-15-21

Jim Bohannon

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2021 118:14


Guests: Terry Schilling, President of the American Principles Project, On to discuss the state of the American education system. Janet Sutherland, Author and Brain Aneurysm Survivor, On to discuss brain aneurysm awareness. George Will, Syndicated Columnist, On to discuss his book "American Happiness and Discontents." And ... Your thoughts on the latest in the news See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Bulwark Podcast
George Will On Our Unruly Torrent

The Bulwark Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2021 42:31


On today's podcast, George F. Will joins host Charlie Sykes to discuss writing, history, education, politics, history, and Nicki Minaj. His new book is "American Happiness and Discontents: The Unruly Torrent." (https://www.amazon.com/American-Happiness-Discontents-Torrent-2008-2020/dp/0306924412) Special Guest: George F. Will.

Happiness in Progress
#180 Tools to Live Happier feat. Michelle Wax

Happiness in Progress

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2021 25:07


If you are looking for a jam-packed episode with tangible tools on living a happier life - this is for you! Michelle Wax is the founder of American Happiness Project. It's a movement across 50 states focused on creating more joy. In 2019, Michelle took off in her Jeep and interviewed 500+ self-described happy people in all 50 states. Her goal was to learn how people achieve internal happiness, regardless of external circumstances. She made the documentary American Happiness along the way. Today we talked about: - Michelle's experience traveling the country interviewing people about happiness - How to build resilience - How to using stress to your advantage - How our minds are hardwired for the negative and how to re-map that MENTIONED IN EPISODE: How to Make Stress Your Friend CONNECT WITH MICHELLE: Watch American Happiness Website Instagram Facebook CONNECT WITH DANIELLE: Buy the HIP Habits Workbook Facebook Instagram Twitter Website This podcast is brought to you by the Mail Tribune. Check out more Mail Tribune podcasts here.

Career Catharsis
Workplace Wellness with Serial Entrepreneur and Founder of American Happiness Project, Michelle Wax

Career Catharsis

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2021 25:54


Michelle Wax is the founder of American Happiness Project, a movement across 50 states focused on creating more joy in the everyday. Wax works with top companies and schools across the USA to help teams thrive in uncertainty, use stress to their advantage, and create positive mindsets through workshops + programs to build community and connection. She produced the American Happiness Documentary, released in February 2021 and also works privately with individuals and groups through their CONNECTION program. Prior to founding American Happiness Project — Wax founded two companies in the food industry, which she sold in 2019. She has been praised to be "incredibly knowledgeable, relate-able, and approachable" and she "brings great energy that very few are able to bring to the online world".Host, Neha Khurram, probes guest, Michelle Wax on the following to help listeners build a culture of wellness at work: What companies can do to improve workplace culture in order to elevate burnoutDaily systems and processes that'll help create a more positive environment long-termTactics employers can use to help employees detach from work when their day is doneConnect with the host on IG @coach.neha and subscribe for more episodes! Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/career-catharsis. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Delivering Happiness Podcast
What Do Happy People From Each U.S. State Have in Common? | Michelle Wax, The American Happiness Project

The Delivering Happiness Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2021 31:26


In this episode we spoke with Michelle Wax, Founder of the American Happiness Project. In 2019, entrepreneur Michelle Wax left Boston and crossed the country in her Jeep, visiting all 50 states and talking to more than 500 people in the (literal) pursuit of happiness. She chronicled her journey in American Happiness, an independent documentary film.We talked with Michelle about what she learned from her interviews with people from across the U.S. Michelle shared some of the things that surprised her as well as common themes that emerged from talking with a diverse array of "Happy People." Michelle also shared some best practices and habits on how to rewire our brains from the negativity bias we're born with to being able to notice and appreciate the positive aspects of our day to day lives. Michelle Wax is the founder of American Happiness Project, a movement across 50 states focused on creating more joy, energy, and connection in the everyday. Wax works with top companies, organizations, and schools across the USA to help teams move beyond burnout, create more calm and focus, and build positive mindsets through workshops + accountability programs. In 2019, she produced the 50 state American Happiness documentary, and leads the American Happiness CONNECTION community. Prior to founding American Happiness Project — Wax founded two companies in the food industry, which she sold in 2019. She has been praised to be "incredibly knowledgeable, relate-able, and approachable" and she "brings great energy that very few are able to bring to the online world".

WellTrend: A workplace wellness podcast
015: The American Happiness Project with guest Michelle Wax

WellTrend: A workplace wellness podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2021 21:56 Transcription Available


Courtney and Jake welcome guest Michelle Wax who is founder of The American Happiness Project to talk about creating more joy, energy, and connection every day. They discuss American Happiness Project's documentary, workshops, strategies, cognitive science and much more. 

The Modern People Leader
23 - Michelle Wax (Founder, American Happiness Project) on Happiness

The Modern People Leader

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2021 52:30


Michelle Wax, the founder of the American Happiness Project, joined us on The Modern People Leader. We talked about her journey across the USA to learn what brings everyday Americans happiness and fulfillment and much more. Timestamps: why Michelle started the American Happiness Project (3:34), the 500 people that she interviewed on happiness (12:18), “you're protected on this earth until you've served your purpose” (15:25), biggest lessons learned along her journey (19:32), consistent themes for creating happiness (25:04), why you should make the big life shift that your family doesn't totally understand (32:01), the YOLO economy (33:42), & self-awareness will lead to a happier workforce (49:02). If you have any feedback for the MPL podcast or would like to connect, don't hesitate to reach out on LinkedIn: Daniel Huerta and Stephen Huerta

American Checklist™
American Checklist #33

American Checklist™

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2021 50:57


Despite the abundance and opportunities that come with living in the United States, many Americans are hopelessly unhappy. The reason is not external factors, but rather their mindset. At a certain point, every one must decide to either make the best of what they have, or complain that everyone else has it better. Join Dan Sullivan and Mark Young as they launch the American Happiness series and learn what it takes to break free of negative thought patterns and find true fulfilment in your life.

Momentum Magnet Podcast
Michelle Wax: American Happiness - How to Find It

Momentum Magnet Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2021 35:05


Happiness. What does it mean to you? How do you find it? How do you get it back when it's lost? Today's guest visited all 50 states speaking with folks of different walks of life to answer these questions. We address: Why it's never worth living a life and career that you'd only regard as “fine” How a non-filmmaker was inspired to create The American Happiness Project Common “happiness” trends among Michelle's interviewees across the U.S. What you should not do if you want to live a happy existence How the pandemic impacted Michelle's research on happiness Karen speaks with Michelle Wax, Founder of The American Happiness Project, a 50-state movement that grew out of the documentary of the same name, to create more joy, energy, and connection in the everyday. 3 MAJOR POINTS DISCUSSED Beware the “fine” life. Not to be confused with enjoying the “finer” things in life, a “fine” life is one where you live every day doing little more than go through the motions. It's one where you settle for average instead of visualizing and working toward the lifestyle and career of your dreams. Happiness is a choice. The journey toward your personal happiness is a completely internal one. No outside circumstance or person is going to be able to keep you happy for the long-term—and no outside force can take it away from you. Do a “happiness” audit every so often. At times, it may help to take stock of the different aspects of your life and single out those things that are draining your happiness, whether it's a person, the media you're consuming, or even a destructive pattern of thinking. We tend not to notice things that we live with every day. Becoming aware of these “happiness vampires” is the first step to eliminating them. RESOURCES The American Happiness Project American Happiness: The Documentary Michelle Wax on LinkedIn   Michelle Wax is the founder of American Happiness Project, a movement across 50 states focused on creating more joy in the everyday—in every area of life.   Wax works with top companies and schools across the USA to help teams thrive in uncertainty, use stress to their advantage, and create positive mindsets through workshops + accountability programs to build community and connection.   She produced the American Happiness Documentary, set to release in early 2021 and also works privately with individuals through private coaching.   Prior to founding American Happiness Project, Wax founded two companies in the food industry, which she sold in 2019.   She takes an energized and spirited approach to everything she does, and has been praised to be "incredibly knowledgeable, relate-able, and approachable" and she "brings great energy that very few are able to bring to the online world".   Karen Morales is founder and brand champion at Marketing Magnet. Marketing Magnet was founded by Karen and her lean team of Fortune 500 marketing and advertising talent. We're a world-class marketing department that has decided to take our big brand experience and direct it at the clients we want to serve: purpose-driven enterprises. Our secret sauce is our ability to focus companies on three marketing pillars to create great impact. If you are looking for a solution to a marketing challenge, a specific project to be completed or a team to drive marketing on your behalf, we can help. More about Karen Find us on Facebook Visit our website Find us on Instagram

Pendulum Land Podcast
Live from New Orleans! Planes, Trains and Automobiles: The Secret Ingredients to American Happiness!

Pendulum Land Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2021 59:06


The Pendulum Land Podcast crew ventured down to the Big Easy for its first ever live podcast recording at the 2021 Transportation Symposium and the International Right of Way Association's Region 2 and Region 6 Joint forum.  Special guests Wade Brown (American Acquisition Group) and Erin Newberry (HDR) joined the podcast as representatives of their respective regions for a trivia contest with an incredible prize on the line.   Along the way, your hosts examined the history of American interstate and railroad infrastructure, as well as some fun trivia about the airline industry.  This episode is full of interesting information about the right of way industry and features plenty of laughs along the way. And listen to audience reviews at the end of the show!

Total Wellness Radio: Enjoy Great Health Naturally
E290 Michelle Wax American Happiness Project

Total Wellness Radio: Enjoy Great Health Naturally

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2021 26:48


Michelle Wax is the founder of American Happiness Project, a movement across 50 states focused on creating more joy, energy, and connection in the everyday.Wax works with top companies, organizations, and schools across the USA to help teams thrive in uncertainty, use stress to their advantage, and create positive mindsets through workshops + accountability programs. She produced the 50 state American Happiness documentary, and leads the CONNECTION community. Prior to founding American Happiness Project — Wax founded two companies in the food industry, which she sold in 2019. DOCUMENTARY LINK: www.american-happiness.com/documentary CONNECTION Community LInk: www.american-happiness.com/connectionexperience

The Resilient Entrepreneur with Michelle Mercier
EP 26 | Michelle Wax - The Secrets to Unlocking Happiness

The Resilient Entrepreneur with Michelle Mercier

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2020 36:47


>>> Join Michelle's Surviving Entrepreneurship Community to receive a coupon code for 20% off products & apparel from The American Happiness Project Store. ~About Michelle WaxMichelle Wax is the founder of American Happiness Project, a movement across 50 states focused on creating positive mindsets to drive greater happiness and fulfillment.Along with hosting virtual team workshops for top companies and universities throughout the USA, Wax also privately coaches individuals on how to rewire the brain to create more daily happiness + fulfillment, regardless of what is happening around you.Prior to founding American Happiness Project — Wax founded and grew two companies in the food industry, which she sold in 2019.She filmed the American Happiness documentary in 2019, and is the author of The Attainable Dream. Michelle started her first company at age 24 with $300 and takes an energetic and spirited approach to everything she does.Connect with Michelle Wax - www.american-happiness.comwww.instagram.com/americanhappinessprojectwww.linkedin.com/in/michellewax~Connect with Michelle Mercier!Join the Surviving Entrepreneurship Community - https://www.facebook.com/groups/215857859592242/Website - https://www.CreateHonesty.comFacebook - https://www.facebook.com/michelle.mercierREInstagram - https://www.instagram.com/CreateHonestyLinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/merciermichelle/

Alabama Arts Radio
Jeanie Thompson/Jacqueline Trimble

Alabama Arts Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2020 25:03


In this episode from 2017, poet Jacqueline Trimble talks with Jeanie Thompson about her poetry and reads from her book American Happiness.

Junkulture Radio
Family Differences / Are You Happy | JUNKULTURE RADIO (06/16/2020)

Junkulture Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2020 62:42


BigDHui and R. Scott Bolton (Joey took the night off) talk about what's going on in the world, including the Confederate Flag, American Happiness and more.

Total Wellness Radio: Enjoy Great Health Naturally
E173 American Happiness w/Michelle Wax

Total Wellness Radio: Enjoy Great Health Naturally

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2019 26:23


Michelle Wax, 3-time entrepreneur, speaker, and author travels to 50 states across the USA interviewing Americans from all walks of life on how they reached every day happiness and fulfillment. Michelle came to our office here in Cheyenne and was gracious enough to give us an Interview about her journey to film: “AMERICAN HAPPINESS” WHICH IS CURRENTLY IN POST PRODUCTION. Connect with Michelle at www.thewaxlife.com and there you will also find out about her documentary American Happiness!!!