Podcasts about Americanos

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Best podcasts about Americanos

Show all podcasts related to americanos

Latest podcast episodes about Americanos

Timeline Gaúcha
O caso de traição no interior do RS que ganhou o Brasil e uma entrevista com a Tia Carmen sobre decisão de taxar norte-americanos 

Timeline Gaúcha

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2025 44:50


Potter, Kelly e PG trazem as principais informações do dia sobre comportamento, cultura, humor, futebol, cotidiano, política e opinião. O Timeline Gaúcha vai ao ar de segunda a sexta-feira, das 10h às 11h, com transmissão simultânea no YouTube

Shutdown - Tecnologia e Negócios
Novo TikTok US e Grok 4

Shutdown - Tecnologia e Negócios

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2025 31:37


Nesta semana falamos sobre a nova app que o TikTok está a desenvolver para o mercado Americano e a razão por trás disso. Falamos sobre o lançamento do Grok 4, o novo modelo da xAI de Elon Musk e dos problemas que assolaram a empresa nos últimos dias.Links: Grok problemas: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c4g8r34nxenoTikTok M2: https://www.reuters.com/world/china/tiktok-prepares-us-app-with-its-own-algorithm-user-data-2025-07-09/Scaling Team: https://www.wired.com/story/openai-new-hires-scaling/

Análise do Dia - Um Podcast do Sicredi
Análise do Dia - 10/07/2025 – Mercado brasileiro ainda digere efeito das tarifas | Lula ameaça com Lei da reciprocidade | Mercado americano segue otimista com possível corte de juros

Análise do Dia - Um Podcast do Sicredi

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2025 7:27


opiordobrasileiro
A Guilhotina e a Guerra Ricos vs. Pobres e um Americano Deslumbrado

opiordobrasileiro

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2025 72:11


Neste episódio do podcast "O Pior do Brasileiro", mergulhe em uma discussão profunda sobre a "Guilhotina" e a polarização entre ricos e pobres. Explore a perspectiva de um "americano deslumbrado" diante desses conflitos sociais e econômicos. Uma análise instigante sobre as tensões de classe e as realidades do Brasil.

WhatCulture Wrestling
WWE Raw Review - Seth Rollins' Vision DOMINATE! Goldberg & Gunther Face-Off! The Kabuki Warriors REUNITE! The El Grande Americano Mystery Continues?!

WhatCulture Wrestling

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2025 95:42


The Dadley Boyz chat about what happened on this week's episode of Monday Night RAW, including...Seth Rollins' Vision DOMINATE!Goldberg & Gunther face-off!The Kabuki Warriors REUNITE!A pre-Evolution BRAWL!The El Grande Americano mystery continues?!ENJOY!Follow us on Twitter:@AdamWilbourn@MichaelHamflett@MSidgwick@WhatCultureWWEFor more awesome content, check out: whatculture.com/wwe Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Gridiron Japan
Which International League is the Best Replay

Gridiron Japan

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2025 97:06


From the archives. In summer 2024, Greg and John welcomed back quarterback and co-host ⁠Aaron Ellis⁠, then of ⁠Japan's X-League's⁠ ⁠Dentsu Caterpillars⁠, to talk about his experiences in playing in Japan, Europe, and Mexico. He compares the X-League with the ⁠European League of Football⁠ and ⁠Mexico's Liga-de Fútbol Americano⁠, where has played, and in doing so holds the distinction of being the only professional football player to have played in all three major international leagues outside of Canada and the United States.Gridiron Japan livestreams over at Gridiron Japan Television on YouTube at ⁠www.gridironjapantv.net⁠, on Facebook at ⁠www.facebook.com/GridironJapan.jp⁠, As well as on X, at www.x.com/GridironJapan.

Editorial - Gazeta do Povo
Editorial: O amigo dos corruptos sul-americanos

Editorial - Gazeta do Povo

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2025 5:34


Editorial: O amigo dos corruptos sul-americanos.

Hablemos de Football: NFL y mas en español
5 entrenadores en la silla caliente

Hablemos de Football: NFL y mas en español

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2025 10:11


Estos son los cinco entrenadores que arrancan la temporada en la cuerda floja, con el riesgo de ser despedidos durante o al terminar el año.

Spectator Radio
Americano: Victor Davis Hanson on left-wing rage, Musk's grudge, & America's identity crisis

Spectator Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2025 47:00


Victor Davis Hanson, classicist, historian, and author of The End of Everything, joins Freddy Gray to discuss Zoran Mamdani's shock candidacy win, the future of the Democratic Party, and rising class tensions in American politics. They also explore third-party prospects, Trump's economic policies, and shifting global dynamics.

Oasis Geek

En este episodio hablamos de todo lo ocurrido en el Monday Night RAW del 30 de junio de 2025:♦️ The Judgment Day conquista los campeonatos en pareja

WRESTLING SOUP
THE AMERICANO AFFAIR or STEM SELLING (Wrestling Soup 7.3.25)

WRESTLING SOUP

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2025 101:34


In this episode of Wrestling Soup, the hosts delve into various topics within the wrestling world. They discuss comedic wrestling characters and the struggle to balance humor with in-ring performance. The episode also covers WWE's current strategy of scouting AEW talents, including Private Party and Britt Baker, and the surprising potential of comedic gimmicks like Grande Americano. The podcast transitions into a heartfelt segment featuring Randy Orton's emotional revelations on Stephanie McMahon's new podcast, where he opens up about mental health, family, and his career. Additionally, the hosts touch on the potential return of Goldberg, speculating about his health and his future in wrestling, along with the quirky possibility of signing Boogeyman. The show wraps up with updates on Chad Gable's injury and the upcoming vacation plans for the 4th of July.00:00 Introduction and Casual Banter00:33 Critique of a Music Video and Band06:58 Fireworks and Fourth of July Plans18:03 WWE's Potential Move to Las Vegas30:05 Talent Signings and Future Plans31:10 Nakamura's Uncertain Future31:24 Darren Young's AEW BOUND...?31:43 Tony's Interest in Isla Dawn34:33 The Trend of Viral Moments in Wrestling37:53 Britt Baker's Future in AEW/WWE59:03 WWE's Tag Team Division Challenges01:04:19 The Boogeyman's Potential Return?01:08:16 Chad Gable's Shoulder Injury Update01:10:10 Ludwig Kaiser and the Grande Americano Gimmick01:19:47 Goldberg's Health and Future in Wrestling01:28:14 Randy Orton's Deepest Interview01:40:18 Podcast Recommendations and Sign-OffBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/wrestling-soup--1425249/support.

Americano
Did Condé Nast shape the world?

Americano

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2025 34:33


In this episode of Americano, Freddy Gray speaks with New York Times writer and debut author Michael Grynbaum about his new book Empire of the Elite, a sweeping history of Condé Nast – the media empire that once dictated American taste, fashion, and celebrity. From Anna Wintour's carefully staged exit to the vanished world of glossy magazine grandeur, Grynbaum charts how the institution that once crowned cultural royalty is struggling to stay relevant in an era of TikTok stars and Substack columnists.On the podcast they explore the rise of celebrity culture, the influence of British identity on Condé's editorial direction, and the complex relationship between Donald Trump and the house that built (and later disowned) him.

Mercado Abierto
Análisis de sesión con Roberto Moro

Mercado Abierto

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2025 2:59


Análisis de la Lateralidad en los Índices Europeos y Americanos

Hablemos de Football: NFL y mas en español
Actualización TJ Watt con los Steelers

Hablemos de Football: NFL y mas en español

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2025 7:10


¿Qué pasa entre TJ Watt y los Steelers? Analizamos las posibilidades de un intercambio del defensivo estrella, una posible extensión de contrato y más.

La Precopa - El Podcast
►#129 - El SUEÑO AMERICANO del Cannabis: De Vender en la Calle a Tener 3 Dispensarios Millonarios ✨

La Precopa - El Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2025 63:54


Hablemos de Football: NFL y mas en español
Análisis Jalen Ramsey a Steelers, Minkah Fitzpatrick a Dolphins

Hablemos de Football: NFL y mas en español

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2025 8:39


Comentamos el más reciente intercambio de la NFL entre Steelers y Dolphins, que involucra a Jalen Ramsey, Minkah Fitzpatrick, Jonnu Smith y selecciones del Draft.

Capital
El bono americano es refugio, pero no está exento a vaivenes, según Vontobel

Capital

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2025 15:03


Vontobel defiende al Treasury a 10 años, el bono americano, como activo refugio para el medio-largo plazo, pese a las sacudidas y los temores que le han envuelto en los últimos tiempos. Tras un primer semestre en el hemos vivido la histórica huida de los Treasuries de EE.UU., Ricardo Comín, Director Comercial en Vontobel para Iberia ha destacado en Escuela de Finanzas en Capital Intereconomía, su relevancia y lo que importa a los mercados. Su dimensión es tal que ha recordado las palabras de un asesor del expresidente de EE.UU., Bill Clinton, para apuntar que “el mercado de bonos es lo que más asusta del mundo”. Trump no es el único que se asustó por los bonos La renta variable impacta en la economía pero la deuda es más radical porque al fin y al cabo financia sanidad, pensiones, motivo por el cual ha llegado a poner en jaque y hacer recular al mismo Donald Trump. Comín ha recordado cómo en el inIcio de este segundo mandato de Trump asistimos a un un hito que pilló a la mayoría desprevenidos: “En una situación que todo el mundo preveía, con la renta variable a la baja y las perspectivas de crecimiento corrigiendo a la baja, Trump apretaba con aranceles y se podía pensar que el flujo de dinero fuera a los bonos, pero no fue así, salió de los bonos americanos. Bajaron los precios y se ampliaron diferenciales, en un comportamiento contrario a lo que ha pasado en los últimos 45 años y dejó bastante fuera de juego a los mercados y a Trump que tuvo que parar los aranceles 90 días”. En “Escuela de Negocios”, el experto de Vontobel recordaba cómo Trump no ha sido el único que se asustó por los bonos; y que en Reino Unido, Liz Truss tuvo que dimitir cuando se peleó con el mercado de bonos” Ante la estampida de la RF y los largos plazos, la mirada se ha centrado en el sello de activo refugio del Treasury 10 años y para Vontobel está claro, el bono americano es refugio en el medio-largo plazo, sobre todo cuando todo vaya más a la normalidad y el presidente sea más predecible. El Treasury es un activo refugio Desde 1980 hasta ahora, son 45 años en los que se ha demostrado, ya fuera en 1987, cuando el S&P perdió un 31% en un día la rentabilidad pasó del 10,25 al 8,8%; o el estallido de las puntocom el bono estaba con rentabilidad del 6,78% y cuando remontaron los mercados en 2003, con la invasión de Irak en marzo, terminó el bono con rentabilidad del 3%, con lo que había perdido más de un 3% de rentabilidad. Efectivamente te indica que era refugio. Comín ha señalado que el bono americano que no es otra cosa que la deuda del mercado americano mueve cantidades espectaculares.Se dice que se mueven 900.000 millones de dólares en bonos a diario en compraventa de bonos americanos y en momentos punteros, 1,5 billones de los europeos, que es más que el PIB español. A lo que hay que añadir los futuros. Explica así como “gracias al bono americano no pagan tantos los impuestos los americanos”. Vontobel ve interesante comprar ahora el bono americano El mandato de la FED es controlar la inflación y desde Vontobel, en medio de la amenaza arancelaria que puede consolidar inflación, no espera gran reacción de la FED y esperan que lo hará cuando haya que empujar la economía. No somos proclives a pensar que pueda haber grandes movimientos en los tipos y ahora vemos interesante comprar ahora el bono americano. “A 3,20% es mucho y más con lo que viene por delante. COmpra interesante, pero no exenta de vaivenes, dependiendo de las cuestiones arancelarias”.

Spectator Radio
Americano: how did Zohran Mamdani win?

Spectator Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2025 23:52


Against all odds, Zohran Mamdani, the 33-year-old state assemblyman and proud 'Muslim democratic socialist' won as as the Democratic nominee for New York City mayor. Aidan McLaughlin wrote about this for Spectator World. On this episode of Americano, Freddy Gray speaks to Aidan about how Mamdani defeated the favourite Andrew Cuomo, whether his success is attributed to TikTok and whether Zohran is really the voice of the 'oppressed'.

Venezuela en Crisis - RadioTelevisionMarti.com
Las Noticias Como Son | Viernes, 27 de junio del 2025 - junio 27, 2025

Venezuela en Crisis - RadioTelevisionMarti.com

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2025 54:28


Discusión a fondo de las principales noticias del acontecer diario de Cuba y el mundo, con la conducción de los periodistas Amado Gil y José Luis Ramos. Especial sobre las elecciones de la Comisión Interamericana de Derechos Humanos de la OEA donde Rosa María Paya es candidata para representar EEUU.

Gabinete de Guerra
"A Trump só interessa a gestão dos interesses americanos"

Gabinete de Guerra

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2025 12:20


Bruno Cardoso Reis afirma que decisão de Trump de cortar verbas para investigar crimes de guerra acabará por afetar conflito na Ucrânia. Classifica como "inaceitável" disparos israelitas contra civis.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Cupcloud
Ep19: Moka Pot: The Original Coffee Maker

Cupcloud

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2025 42:36


This episode includes a short discussion on the original stovetop espresso maker -  the moka pot.  Invented in 1933 by Alonso Bialetti, this simplistic coffee maker has been gracing Italian kitchens for almost a century. Coffee lovers and enthusiasts love brewing their daily espresso in the moka pot.  It's original design makes it easy to get a perfect brew each and every time. So, listen in, as we talk about the moka pot along with a few tips and tricks to get a great tasting espresso. And, maybe you'll be inspired enough to experiment and create the perfect espresso for traditional coffee, Americanos, or iced coffee.Buzzsprout: cupcloud.buzzsprout.com Instagram: @cupcloud Twitter: @cupcloudpodcast E-mail: cupcloudpodcast@gmail.com

Venezuela en Crisis - RadioTelevisionMarti.com
Noticiero Martí Noticias | Jueves, 26 de junio del 2025 - junio 26, 2025

Venezuela en Crisis - RadioTelevisionMarti.com

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2025 29:20


Noticiero de Martí Noticias presenta un resumen de las noticias más importantes de Cuba y el mundo. Titulares: | La violencia machista continúa en Cuba. La víctima se recupera en un hospital | Se declara culpable de narcoterrorismo y narcotráfico ex jefe de Inteligencia de Venezuela preso en Estados Unidos | Washington respalda a Rosa María Paya a la Comisión Interamericana de Derechos Humanos ante la Asamblea general de la OEA | El relevista zurdo cubano, Adrián Morejón, logra su segundo rescate en triunfo del San Diego sobre Washington, entre otras noticias.

Genial Podcast

IPCA-15 e dados americanos animam os investidores globais. Prepare-se para a segunda metade do dia sabendo de tudo que mexeu com o mercado nas primeiras horas do pregão. Informação e análise com Roberto Motta. O Resumo da Manhã é transmitido de segunda a sexta, às 13h. Ative as notificações do programa e acompanhe ao vivo!

Americano
How did Zohran Mamdani win?

Americano

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2025 23:52


Against all odds, Zohran Mamdani, the 33-year-old state assemblyman and proud 'Muslim democratic socialist' won as as the Democratic nominee for New York City mayor. Aidan McLaughlin wrote about this for Spectator World. On this episode of Americano, Freddy Gray speaks to Aidan about how Mamdani defeated the favourite Andrew Cuomo, whether his success is attributed to TikTok and whether Zohran is really the voice of the 'oppressed'.

Hablemos de Football: NFL y mas en español
¿Quién será el QB titular de los Browns?

Hablemos de Football: NFL y mas en español

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2025 11:29


Analizamos la situación de QB de los Browns, la oportunidad de los Lions en esta temporada de ganar un Super Bowl y más, en una nueva edición de preguntas y respuestas.

O Antagonista
Cortes do Papo - A derrota do Irã e do governo Lula

O Antagonista

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2025 52:52


O presidente americano, Donald Trump, afirmou no sábado, 21, que os Estados Unidos concluíram um “ataque bem-sucedido” contra as instalações nucleares de Natanz, Fordow e Esfahan, no Irã.O primeiro-ministro de Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu, elogiou a decisão do presidente dos Estados Unidos, Donald Trump, de bombardear instalações nucleares do Irã.Em pronunciamento divulgado nas redes sociais no fim de semana, Netanyahu agradeceu ao republicano e disse que a ação representa um ponto de inflexão no conflito.O governo Lula condenou no domingo, 22, os ataques realizados pelos Estados Unidos e por Israel contra instalações nucleares no Irã. Trump anunciou nesta segunda-feira, 23, um acordo de cessar-fogo “completo e total” entre Israel e Irã, com duração de 12 horas.Segundo o presidente americano, os termos do acordo entrarão em vigor em aproximadamente “seis horas a partir de agora“, quando ambos os países deverão encerrar as operações militares em andamento.Felipe Moura Brasil e Ricardo Kertzman comentam:Papo Antagonista é o programa que explica e debate os principais acontecimentos do   dia com análises críticas e aprofundadas sobre a política brasileira e seus bastidores.     Apresentado por Felipe Moura Brasil, o programa traz contexto e opinião sobre os temas mais quentes da atualidade.     Com foco em jornalismo, eleições e debate, é um espaço essencial para quem busca informação de qualidade.     Ao vivo de segunda a sexta-feira às 18h.    Apoie o jornalismo Vigilante: 10% de desconto para audiência do Papo Antagonista  https://bit.ly/papoantagonista  Siga O Antagonista no X:  https://x.com/o_antagonista   Acompanhe O Antagonista no canal do WhatsApp. Boletins diários, conteúdos exclusivos em vídeo e muito mais.  https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Va2SurQHLHQbI5yJN344  Leia mais em www.oantagonista.com.br | www.crusoe.com.br 

24 Mattino - Le interviste
Le conseguenze dell'attacco americano

24 Mattino - Le interviste

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2025


In apertura gli spunti di riflessione di Paolo Mieli, giornalista e storico, con la sua lettura critica dei quotidiani in edicola.Nella notte il presidente americano è tornato a ribadire il successo dell'operazione di bombardamento dei siti nucleari iraniani. Ma gli analisti e gli osservatori dicono che ci vorrà tempo per valutare i danni, mentre da Teheran fanno sapere di aver spostato l'uranio arricchito in previsione di un attacco. Cosa succederà e come reagiranno gli Aytaollah? Con noi Stefano Stefanini, senior advisor di Ispi ed ex ambasciatore italiano alla Nato.Le misure di sicurezza restano ai massimi livelli intorno agli obiettivi sensibili, sedi diplomatiche, basi militari e luoghi simbolici dei Paesi coinvolti nel conflitto, sia negli Stati Uniti che in Italia. Sentiamo Marco Mancini, ex militare ed ex agente dei Servizi Segreti, per capire cosa cosa rischia l'Italia e l'Europa dopo gli attacchi.

Actualidade - Renascença V+ - Videocast
Irão pede esclarecimentos a Portugal sobre autorização de aviões americanos nas Lajes

Actualidade - Renascença V+ - Videocast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2025 1:35


Irão pede esclarecimentos a Portugal sobre autorização de aviões americanos nas Lajesd1

Sportskeeda Wrestling
Konann on WWE purchasing AAA, Grande Americano | Apter Chat

Sportskeeda Wrestling

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2025 15:28


Join Sportskeeda Wrestling Senior Editor Bill Apter as he chats with AAA booker Konnan about WWE sensation El Grande Americano. The talk of the wrestling community was how outraged the WWE Universe was that such a gimmick would offend Lucha Libre culture. Konnan clarifies this and says that being offended by El Grande Americano is fake outrage. Timestamps:-00:00 - Introduction04:26 - Mexican wrestling in the USA before Lucha Libre08:05 - What made Lucha Libre stand out? 09:15 - What Lucha Libre means13:07 - Thoughts on El Grande Americano#WWE #Konnan #elgrandeamericano Please backlink to https://www.sportskeeda.com/wwe if you carry this exclusive on your platformSubscribe to our channel, WrestleBinge by Sportskeeda: https://bit.ly/SportskeedaWrestleBinge-------You can also visit our site: https://www.sportskeeda.com/wweFor more updates on Wrestling, follow us on:Patreon (Backstage Pass): https://bit.ly/4dcg6z4Sportskeeda Wrestling:    / sportskeedawrestling  Facebook:   / skwrestling  Twitter:   / skwrestling_  Instagram:   / skwrestling_  TikTok:   / sportskeedawrestling  

SBS Italian - SBS in Italiano
Conflitto Israele-Iran, Donald Trump snobba Anthony Albanese e lascia il G7

SBS Italian - SBS in Italiano

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2025 10:18


Il presidente Americano ha deciso di lasciare il G7 per l'aggravarsi del conflitto tra Israele e Iran, cancellando diversi incontri previsti alla vigilia, tra cui quello con il primo ministro australiano.

Spectator Radio
Americano: will Trump get dragged into the Israel-Iran conflict?

Spectator Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2025 32:03


Relations between Iran and Israel are deteriorating rapidly, with comparisons being drawn to Israel's 1981 strike on Iraq's Osirak nuclear reactor. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu appears to be advocating for regime change in Tehran, reportedly encouraging the United States to take military action. Donald Trump, who previously came close to authorising a strike, is now said to be more cautious – mindful of the risks of exposing American forces abroad and being drawn into another protracted conflict, contrary to the non-interventionist platform on which he was elected. The Iranian regime, built on a foundation of resistance, is responding to Israel's attacks while also expanding its network of regional proxies, which now extends as far as South America and east Africa. Iran is believed to be only weeks away from producing weapons-grade uranium, meaning that failure to institute regime change may lead Tehran to accelerate its nuclear ambitions – particularly if tensions are eased while the current regime remains in power.Russia, meanwhile, has positioned itself as a strategic disruptor. By maintaining dialogue with both Tehran and Jerusalem, Moscow retains influence over developments without aligning itself fully with either side. Although it has refrained from supplying Iran with its most advanced military technology, its ambiguous stance offers it significant leverage. While global energy prices have thus far remained stable, the possibility of disruption cannot be discounted. Cautious but alert, the Gulf states are keen to avoid direct involvement. The broader question now facing the international community is whether diplomacy can contain the crisis – or whether the region is edging closer to a far more serious and destabilising confrontation.To discuss the conflict, Freddy Gray speaks to Owen Matthews and Charlie Gammell. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Welcome to Cloudlandia
Ep156: Convenience Versus Tradition

Welcome to Cloudlandia

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2025 53:14


In this episode of Welcome to Cloudlandia, Dan and I talk about how much AI is reshaping everyday life. I share how new tools like Google's Flow V3 are making it easier than ever to create video content, while Dan explores how AI could tackle complexity—like managing city traffic or enhancing productivity—when it's applied intentionally. We also look at how people are adapting to the massive increase in content creation. I ran some numbers: Americans spend around 450 minutes per day on screens, but YouTube alone sees 500 hours of content uploaded every minute. So while AI makes it easier to create, attention remains limited—and we're all competing for it. Another theme is “agency.” We discuss how autonomous vehicles, digital payments, and convenience tools reduce friction, but can also make people feel like they're giving up control. Dan points out that even if the technology works, not everyone wants to let go of driving, or of how they interact with money. Lastly, we reflect on what it really means for tools to be “democratized.” I talk about Hailey Bieber's billion-dollar skincare brand and the importance of vision, capability, and reach. The tools might be available to everyone, but outcomes still depend on how you use them. We end with thoughts on tangibility and meaning in a world that's becoming more digital by the day. SHOW HIGHLIGHTS In this episode, we delve into Canada's evolving identity, sparked by significant events such as the King's visit and U.S. tariffs, which have prompted provinces to reevaluate internal trade barriers. Dan explores the challenges and comparisons between Canada and the U.S., particularly in areas like cannabis legalization and its broader implications on issues such as prison reform. We discuss the health concerns surrounding the rise of vaping, particularly its impact on youth, and how it is becoming a focal point in societal discussions. We navigate the transformative role of energy innovation and artificial intelligence, examining their impact on industries and economic power, particularly in the context of U.S. energy consumption. Dean shares personal experiences to illustrate AI's capabilities in reshaping information consumption, emphasizing technology as a powerful change agent. The intersection of technology and consumer behavior is dissected, with a focus on convenience trends, including the selective demand for electric vehicles and limousine services in luxurious locales. We conclude with a humorous anecdote about students using tape-recorded lectures, reflecting on the broader implications of convenience and technology in education. Links: WelcomeToCloudlandia.com StrategicCoach.com DeanJackson.com ListingAgentLifestyle.com TRANSCRIPT (AI transcript provided as supporting material and may contain errors) Dean: Mr Sullivan. Dan: How are things in Florida Hot? Dean: Hot, it's hot. Dan: It's hot. Dean: They're heated up. Dan: It's normal. Dean: Yeah, no, this is like it's unusual. It went from perfect to summer, All just overnight. I'm looking forward to coming to. I'm looking forward to coming to Toronto, to coming to. I'm looking forward to coming to Toronto Two weeks right, Two weeks here. Dan: Friday. I'm actually uh, You're going to spend a week. Dean: Yeah, I'm in. Dan: Chicago. I'm in Chicago next week. Dean: Yeah, I'm in. So I'm. Yeah, I'm coming for three weeks. Dan: You're holding court. You're holding court. Dean: I'm holding court every which way I arrive on Friday, the 6th, and I leave on the 29th, so there. So you are going to be in Chicago next Saturday. Dan: Next Saturday you're in Chicago, yeah, until the Friday and then back home and we'll have our. Whether it's table 9 or not, it's going to be table 9. Let's just call it table 1, because it'll be at restaurant one. Dean: That's exactly right. Dan: It'll probably be nice to maybe even sit outside, which is a very good restaurant. Yes, on the patio. Yeah, yeah, that's great. Well, canada is going through profound changes. Dean: That's what I hear, so prepare me. I'm already prepared that I will be ordering Canadians with breakfast instead of Americanos. Dan: They've already conditioned me for that. I've been here 54 years in Toronto 54 years and over 54 years I've never gotten a good answer about what a Canadian is. Dean: Okay. Dan: Okay, except that we're not Americans. We're not Americans. And to prove it, and to prove it, they brought the King of England over to tell them Okay, ah that's funny. Dean: I didn't see anything about that. Is that just that yeah? Dan: we came over. They have a thing called the throne speech. When parliament resumes after an election, it's called the throne speech. Dean: Okay, just a reminder. Dan: Yeah, and so just to tell you that we're an independent, completely independent country, we got the King of England to come over and talk to his subjects. Dean: And. Dan: I guess that's what caused the division in the first place, wasn't it? Dean: was the King of. Dan: England. So nothing's changed in 236 years. It's all been. You know the royalty. They brought the royalty over to put some muscle into the Canadian identity, anyway. But there is a profound change and I don't know if you knew this, but there's tremendous trade barriers between the provinces in Canada. Dean: Yeah, it's funny how Canada has really always sort of been more divisive kind of thing, with the West and the Maritimes and Quebec and Ontario. Dan: But they have trade barriers. Like they're separate countries, they have trade barriers and Trump's pressure putting tariff on has caused all the provinces to start talking to each other. Maybe we ought to get rid of all the trade barriers between the provinces it's just that pressure from the south that is causing them to do that, and they would never do this voluntarily. Yeah, but it's putting such pressure on the canadian economy, in the economy of the individual provinces, that they're now having to sit down and actually maybe we shouldn't have barriers between you know and the. US has never had this. You know the US straight from the beginning was a trade free country. You know the states don't have trade barriers. Dean: Right right. Dan: I mean they have laws that have not been entirely in sync with each other, for example, alcohol, you know, Some of the states were dry, and so it wasn't that we won't allow you to compete with our alcohol. We don't have any alcohol and we won't allow you to bring your alcohol in Fireworks. You couldn't have fireworks. Some states you could have Citizens could buy fireworks. I remember Ohio. You could never buy fireworks but you had to go to Michigan to buy them. Dean: Is cannabis now nationally legal in Canada? Dan: What's that fireworks? Dean: No cannabis. Dan: Fireworks, no, just the opposite. Cannabis, yeah, exactly. Yeah, yeah, it's national, and that's another thing. The US, generally, when there's a contentious subject, they don't. Well, they did do it. They did it with Roe versus Wade, and then, of course, roe versus Wade got reversed. The way that American tradition is one state does it, then another state does it, and that gets to a point where it's like 50% of the states are doing, and then it elevates itself to a national level where the Congress and the Supreme Court they start, you know. Dean: Florida. Florida just rejected it again. Every time it's on the ballot it gets rejected in Florida. Dan: What's that? Dean: Cannabis. Oh yeah, it's a state issue. Yeah. Dan: Yeah, and I don't think it's ever going to be national, because there's enough bad news about cannabis that probably they won't go for it. I mean the impact. Dean: Well, think about all the people that they would have to release from prison that are in prison right now for cannabis violations. You know it's interesting. That's one of the things that has been the discussion here. Dan: You know is you can't legalize it, and then all of a sudden yeah. They'd have to get a whole new workforce for the license plates Right. Dean: Well, the robot. Dan: Yeah, robots. Dean: Well, the robots, the robots. Dan: The robots can smoke the cannabis, yeah, yeah, but it's. I don't see it ever being national in the US, because there's as much argument there is for it, there's as much argument that there is against it. And you know, especially with young people, especially with you know it's a gateway drug. They know that if someone in their teens starts smoking cannabis, they'll go on to higher-grade drugs. Dean: That's interesting. Dan: That's pretty well established Actually smoking is the first. Tobacco, first then cannabis. The big issue down here now is vaping. Dean: Vaping. Dan: I've never quite understood. What is it exactly? I see that we have some stories here yeah, what is vaping? Dean: what is vaping? It's just like a chemical you know way of getting nicotine, you know and it's pure chemicals that people are sucking into their lungs. It's crazy no smoke no smoke. It's because in most cases you know you can vape in places that would be otherwise smoke free. This is just vapor, you know, so it's not intrusive, you know? Dan: what's funny is, I haven't tell you how up to tells you how up to date I am right I'm getting my news about vaping from dean jackson. Yeah, that tells you how up to date I am right. Oh yeah, I'm getting my news about vaping from. Dean: Dean Jackson. Yeah, exactly. Dan: That tells you how out of touch I am. Dean: That's right, I stay in touch with what the kids are doing. Dan, I'll tell you. I keep you up to date. Dan: That's so funny. Kids, yeah, how much less than 80 does childhood start? Dean: I don't know I'm hanging in there. I just turned 40, 19. So let's see Keep that. We'll keep it going, keep it alive. Dan: Yeah. Dean: So it's been an interesting week. Now we're coming up on like 10 days of the new VO3, the Google Flow video processing that we talked about last week, and it's just getting. You know, there's more and more like everybody's tripping over themselves to show all the capability that it has. You know, I had an interesting conversation with Eben Pagan I was talking about because this new capability I mean certainly it's at the stage now what Peter Diamandis would say that you know, the execution of video has really been democratized. Now the cost is nearing zero in terms of, you know, the ability to just use prompts to create realistic things, and every time I show these videos they just keep getting better and better in terms of the news desk and the man on the street type of things and all the dramatic, the dramatizations there's really like it's gonna be very difficult. It's already difficult. It's going to be impossible to tell the difference between real and virtual, but my thought is that this is going to lead to more and more content being created, and I did the latest numbers For the same amount of attention that is exactly it, dan. I looked at the thing, so I looked it up. Well, certainly, our attention capacity has remained and will remain constant at. If we had 100 of somebody's available attention, we would have a maximum of a thousand minutes of their attention available every day, but on average, americans spend 400 to 450 minutes a day consuming content on a screen. So that's what the real availability is. And I asked Charlotte about the current rate of uploading to YouTube, and right now there are 500 hours per minute loaded to YouTube every single minute of the day. 500 hours per minute, it's getting crowded minute getting, it's getting crowded and that is piled on top of over 1 billion available hours of content that's currently on youtube, because you can access any of it, right and so just? Dan: that you can't even. Dean: You can't even sit down no, and I thought know, the thing is that the content that's being created for that it's novelty right now. That's driving and everybody's watching it going holy cow. Can you believe this? Oh man, we're never going to be able to tell. That's the conversation. It's like a peak level interest in it right now and it's pretty amazing. But I just finished the second season of Severance on Netflix which is a great show. And I read that the budget for that show is $20 million per episode. So they spend $200 million creating that content, that season, for you to watch, and so you're competing for that 450 minutes of available attention with the greatest minds in Hollywood, you know, in the world, you know creating this mega it's not Hollywood. Dan: It's not Hollywood, no Right, I mean Actually a lot of. I bet. If you put Hollywood against London, England, London would win in terms of yeah, you're probably right. Interesting content, I bet. Yeah, I bet the skills of British people just in the geographic area of London outcompetes Hollywood. Dean: Yeah, but it's really kind of interesting to me that I don't know to what end this creation Well, there is no end. Dan: Yeah, surprise, there's no end. You thought you were getting close to the end. Dean: Nope, nope. Dan: No, I was thinking about that because I was preparing myself for my weekly call with Dean. And I said you really bright technology guy. And he said that it's called the bottomless. Well, and he said actually. He said do you know what most of the energy in the world is used for? This is a really interesting question. It caught me by surprise. That's why I'm asking you the question. Dean: I don't know. Dan: Most of the energy in the world is used to refine even higher intensity energy. Oh everything that's where most of the energy in the world is used is to actually take energy from a raw stage and put it into power. He says it's not energy we're getting. You know, when we switch on light, it's power we're getting. He says power is the game not energy. Dean: Energy is just a raw material. Dan: It's the constant human ingenuity of taking raw energy and making it into eventually like a laser, which is one of the most intense, dense, focused forms of energy. Is a laser? I noticed the Israelis three days ago for the first time shot down a rocket coming from not a rocket, a drone that was coming in from I don't know, the Houd know, one of those raggedy bunches over there, and they were comparing the cost that, basically that if they send a rocket to knock down a rocket it's about $50,000 minimum a shot. You know if they shoot one of the rockets, it's $50,000. But the laser is $10, basically $10. Dean: Oh, my goodness Wow yeah. Dan: And you know it just prices you know, and everything else, but what they don't take into account is just the incredible amount of money it takes to create the laser. Yeah right, right, right you know, and he said that the way progress is made in the world, he says, is basically by wasting enormous amounts of energy, what you would consider waste. And he says, the more energy we waste, the more power we get. And it's an interesting set of thoughts that he can he said? by far. The united states waste the most energy in the world, far beyond anyone else. We just waste enormous energy. But we also have an economy that's powered by the highest forms of energy. So he says that's the game, and he says the whole notion of conserving energy. He says why would you conserve energy? You want to waste energy. He says the more energy you waste, the more you find new ways to focus energy. Anyway maybe AI is actually a form of energy. It's not actually. You know, I mean everybody's just from this latest breakthrough that you spoke about last week and you're speaking about this week. Maybe it isn't what anyone is doing with this new thing. It's just that a new capability has been created, and whether anybody gets any value out of it doesn't really matter. It's a brand new thing. So there's probably some people who are really going to utilize this and are going to make a bundle of money, but I bet 99% of the humans are using that, are doing that for their own you know, their own entertainment. It's going to have actually a economic impact. It's not going to. Dean: That's my point. Dan: That's what I was saying about the thing about the what I was saying about the thing about the, what it's another way of. It's another way of keeping, another way of keeping humans from being a danger to their fellow human beings you know, he's been down the basement now for a week. He hasn't come back up, there's a harmless human. Yeah, yeah. I was you know, but if you think about AI as not a form of communication. It's a form of energy. It's a form of power yeah, and everybody's competing for the latest use of it. Dean: Yes. Dan: But like for example, I've never gone beyond perplexity, I've never Right, right. You know, like people say oh, you should use Grok and I said, no, no, I'm getting a lot of value, but I'm creating these really great articles. I have a discussion group. Every quarter we have about a dozen coach clients that get together and for 23 years we've been sending in articles and now this last issue, which just went out I think it goes out tomorrow you know, it's got about 40 articles in it and former mine and their perplexity searches to you and yeah, and. I'm just looking for the reaction because you know I had a prompt and then the I put it into perplexity and I got back. I always use ten things. You know ten things is my prompt. Ten things about why Americans really like gas-powered, gas-powered cars and why they always will. That's, that was my prompt and it came back. You know 10 really great things. And then I took each of the answers and it's a numbered, sort of a numbered paragraph and I said now break this out into three subheads that get further supporting evidence to it automatically. So I got 30 and you know, and I do some style changes, you know to yeah, make the language part. Thing you know it's about six pages. It's about six pages when you put it into word wow, I put it into work. I put it into word and then do a pdf you know, pdf and I send it out. But they're really interesting articles. You know I said but if you look at the sources, there are probably one of the articles has 30 different sources. You know that it's found. You know, when you ask the question, it goes out and finds 30 different articles. Dean: Pulls an idea about it. Dan: So I'm just checking this out to see if people find this kind of article better than just one person has an opinion and they're writing an article. Dean: Here. Dan: I just asked a question and I got back a ton of information. You know I said so, but that's where I am with perplexity. After using it for a year you know I'm using it for a year I've got to the point where I can write a really good article that other people find interesting. Dean: Oh, I would love to see that. Dan: I mean that's I'll interesting. Oh yeah, I would love to see that. I mean that's. Yeah, I'll send them out this afternoon. I'll send them out to you. Dean: Okay. Dan: They're interesting. Dean: Yeah, huh. Well, that's and I think that's certainly a great thing Like I assist, but it's like a single use, Like I'm interested in a single use. Dan: And I get better at it, it gets better and I get better, you know. And yeah, so that, and my sense is that what AI is a year from now is what you were a year ago. Dean: I'm saying more about that. Dan: Well, whatever you were good at last year, at this time you're probably a lot better at it next year because you have the use of ai oh exactly I'm amazed. Dean: You know like I. I'm like your charlotte experiment. Dan: You're a lot better with charlotte now than when you first started with charlotte. Dean: Yeah, and she's a lot better a lot better, charlotte's a lot better. Yeah, I had a conversation with her yesterday because I got another entry for the VCR files where Justin Bieber's wife, hailey Bieber, just sold her skincare line for a billion dollars and she started it in 2023. So from yeah, from nothing, she built up this skincare line, started with a vision I want to do a skincare line partnered with a capability, and her 55 million Instagram followers were the reach to launch this into the stratosphere. I just think that's so. I think that's pretty amazing. You know that it took Elizabeth Arden, who was a she may be Canadian actually cosmetic, almost 40 years to get to a billion dollars in Different dollars, different dollars in value than you know. Here comes Hailey Bieber in two and a half years. Yeah, I mean, it's crazy. Yeah, this is but that's the power of reach as a multiplier. I mean it's really you got access to. You know, instant access, zero friction for things to spread now. Yeah. Dan: Yeah, I mean the big thing that you know. I want to go back to your comment about democratization. It's only democratic in the sense that it doesn't cost very much. Dean: That's what I mean. Yeah, it's available to everybody. Dan: But that isn't to me. That's not the question is do you have any capability whatsoever? It's not that. The question is do you have any capability whatsoever? I mean, you know that tells me that if the person who waits next to the liquor store to open every he got enough money from panhandling the day before to get liquor, he can now use the new Google thing that's open to him. I mean, if he gets a computer or he's got a buddy who's got a computer, he can do it. But he has absolutely no capability, he has absolutely no vision, he has absolutely no reach to do it. So I think it's the combination of VCR that's not democratized. Actually it's less democratized. It's less democratized. It's either the same barriers to democratization as it was before or it's still really expensive. It's not the vision, not the capability, it's not the reach, it's the combination of the three, and my sense is very few people can pull that like this. Yeah well, while she was doing it, 99,000 other people weren't doing that. Dean: That's exactly right. Yeah, yeah. Dan: That's really that distinction. My sense is, the VTR is not democratized whatsoever. Dean: I really am seeing that distinction between capability and ability. Yeah, seeing that distinction between capability and ability. Dan: That's every the capabilities are what are being democratized, but not the ability. Dean: Ability, yeah, ability is always more than pianists yeah, and that's the thing ability, will, is and will remain a meritocracy thing that you can earn, you can earn, and concentrated effort in developing your abilities, focusing on your unique abilities that's really what the magic is. Dan: Yeah yeah, yeah, as'm going like. My sense is that you know where we're probably going to be seeing tremendous gains over, let's say, the next 10 years. Is that a lot of complexity? Issues are, for example, the traffic system in Toronto is just bizarre. The traffic system in New York City and Manhattan makes a lot of sense, and I'll give you an example. There's probably not a road or a street in Toronto where you can go more than three intersections without having to stop. Dean: Ok, but in. Dan: New York City on Sixth Avenue, because I know Sixth Avenue, which goes north, I've been in a cab that went 60 blocks without stopping for a red light. Wow, Because they have the lights coordinated and if you go at a certain speed you are you'll never hit a red light. Ok, yeah, so why can't Toronto do that? I mean, why can't Toronto do that? Because they're not smart enough. They're not smart enough. Whoever does the traffic system in Toronto isn't smart enough. My sense is that probably if you had AI at every intersection in the city and they were talking to each other, you would have a constant variation of when the lights go red and green and traffic would probably be instantly 30 or 40 percent better. How interesting. And that's where I see you're gonna. You're gonna have big complexity issues. You know big complexity there are. There are lots of complexity issues. I mean, you know people said well, you know, a Tesla is much, much better than a. You know the gasoline car and. I said well, not, you know, a Tesla is much, much better than you know a gasoline car. And I said well, not when you're driving in Toronto. You can't go any faster in a Tesla than you can go, than traffic goes you know it's not going any, so you know it's not. You're not getting any real. You know a real superior. It's not 10 times better superior. Dean: It's not 10 times better. I don't know, Dan. I'll tell you. You guys activated the full self-drive? Dan: No, because it's illegal. No, it's illegal. It's illegal in Canada. Dean: Let me just tell you my experience. Yesterday I was meeting somebody at the Tampa Edition Hotel right downtown and there's sort of coming into Tampa. There's lots of like complexity in off ramps and juncture you know they call it malfunction junction where all of these highways kind of converge and it's kind of difficult to, even if you know what you're doing to make all of these things. Well, I pulled out of my garage yesterday and I said navigate to the Tampa edition. And then bloop, bloop, it came up. I pushed the button, the car left my driveway, went out of my neighborhood through the gate, all the turns, all the things merged onto the highway, merged off and pulled me right into the front entrance of the Tampa Edition and I did not touch the steering wheel the entire time. Dan: I did the same thing on Friday with Wayne, exactly. Dean: I've been saying that to people forever, Dan. I said, you know, Dan Sullivan's had full self-drive, autonomous driving since 1998. You know, yeah, yeah, boy, yeah, and you know You're always two steps ahead, but that you know. Dan: Well, no, I totally understand the value of having to do that. Yeah, it's just that it's available. It's available in another form as well. Dean: Yes, yeah, yeah, the outcome is available. Right, that's the thing. Dan: Yeah, yeah, yeah, but I enjoy chatting with him. You know like. Dean: I enjoy chatting. Dan: He's you know he. You know he. He's got lots of questions about. You know current affairs. He's got. He's got things to you know what's going about in London? It's the cab drivers. I would never take a limousine in London because cab drivers have their own app now. The black cab drivers have their own app and plus they have the knowledge of the city and everything. But if you're getting close to an election, if you just take about 10 cab drives and you talk to them, what's it looking like? They're pretty accurate. They're pretty accurate. Because they're listening constantly to what people are talking about when they're in the taxi cabs and they can get adrift. They get a feel about it. Yeah, I mean, I like being around people. So being alone with myself in a car, it doesn't, you know, it's not really part of my, it's not really part of my style anyway, but it makes a lot of sense for a lot of people. Probably the world is safer if certain people aren't driving oh, I think that's going to be true. Dean: You know as it's funny. You know now that. So elon is about to launch their robo taxi in Austin, texas this month, and you know now whenever a. Tesla Google right Google. Yeah, I think it is, you're right. Dan: Yeah. Dean: So yeah, whenever a Tesla on autopilot, you know, has an accident or it steers into something or it has a malfunction of some way or some outlier event kind of happens, it's national news. You know, it's always that thing and you know you said that about the safety. I kind of do believe that it's going to get to a point where the robots are safer than humans driving the car and but the path to get there is going to have to not like as soon as if there ever was a fatality in a robo taxi will be a. That'll be big news. Yeah, well, there was one in phoenix with waymo there was a fatality. Dan: I didn't know that yeah, I was actually a pedestrian. She was crossing the street and it was very shaded and the Waymo didn't pick up on the change of light and didn't see her. She was killed. She was killed, yeah well you know, it's like flying cars. You know, the capability of a flying car has been with us since 1947. There's been cars that actually work, but you know, usually you know, I mean we all are in cars far more of our life than we're in the air, but your notion of an accident being an accident. I've only been in one in my life. It was a rear end when I was maybe about 10 years old, and that was the only time that I've ever been in an accident. And you know, and it happened real fast is one of the things that's the thing is how fast it happens. And spun our car around and you know we ended up in a ditch and nobody was hurt and you know that was my only one. So my assessment of the odds of being in an accident are gauged on that. I've been in hundreds of thousands of car rides that seems like that and I had one thing. So my chances of you know, and it was okay, it was okay. If you have an accident at a thousand feet above the earth, it's not okay, it's not okay, and that's the problem, it's not okay, it's not okay, yeah, this is, and that's the problem. That's the problem. That's the real problem. It's an emotional thing that you know it's death If you have an accident you know, it's death. Yeah, and I think that makes the difference just emotionally and psychologically, that this it might be a weird thing one out of a thousand, one out of a thousand, one out of a million you know, chance that I could get killed. When it's a hundred percent, it has a different impact. Yeah, well, I was thinking that when, or the power goes out, the power goes out. Yeah, I mean, I've flown in that jet. You know there's that jet that has the parachute. Do you know the? Jet yes, yeah, and I've flown in the jets I've flown in the cirrus, I think yeah anyway, it's a very nice jet and it's very quiet and it's you know, it's very speedy and everything else. But if something happens to the pilot, you as a passenger can hit a button and air traffic control takes over, or you can pull a lever and it pulls out the cargo chute. Everything like that, and I think that they're heading in the right direction with that. Dean: Yes. Dan: I think it's called VeriJet is the name of it, but they're very nice and they're very roomy. They're very roomy. I flew from Boston to New York and I flew from San Francisco to San Diego. Dean: Yes. Dan: I've been in it twice. They're very nice. Dean: Yeah, Nice jets. Maybe you that'd be nice to go from Toronto to Chicago. Dan: Well, they have them now, but it only makes sense if you have four people and they don't have much cargoes. They don't have much space. You're treating it like a taxi really. Dean: Yes, yeah, true, I was going to say about the self-driving, like the autonomous robo taxis or cars that are out driving around, that if it starts getting at large scale, I think it's only going to be fair to show a comparison tally of if somebody dies because of a robo taxi or a self-driving car that the day or week or year to date tally of. You know one person died in a autonomous car accident this week and you know however many 3,000, 2,000 people died in human-driven cars this week. I think, to put that in context, is going to have to be a valuable thing, you know. Dan: Yeah, yeah, I mean. The other thing that a lot of people you know and it's a completely separate issue is that you're being asked to give up agency. Yes that's the thing. Dean: You hit it on the head. Dan: And I think that's the bigger issue. I think you know a lot of people. You know I'm not one of them, so I have to take it from other people saying they love driving and they love being in control of the car. They love being in control and you're being asked because if you are in an accident, then there's a liability issue. Is it you, is it the car, is it the car maker? Is it you know what? Who's? It's a very complicated liability issue that happens, you know happens, you know, and it's really. Dean: You know. What's funny, dan, is if you and I were having this conversation 122 years ago, we'd be talking about well, you know, I really like the horse being in control of the horses here, these horseless carriages, I don't know that's. You know who needs to go 30 miles per hour? That's that. That sounds dangerous, you know. But I love that picture that Peter used to show at the Abundance 360. That showed that Manhattan intersection in 1908. And then in 1913, you know, in that five year period from horses to no horses, I think we're pretty close to that transition from 2025 to 2030, you know. Dan: Yeah, it'll be interesting because you know the thing that I'm finding more and more and it's really reinforced with this book. I'm reading the Bottomless Well, and this is a 20-year-old book, you know and everything, but all cars are now electric cars. In other words, the replacement of mechanical parts inside cars with electronics has been nonstop, and actually I found the Toyota story the most interesting one. Toyota decided to stop making electric cars. Did you know that? Dean: Oh, I just saw a Prius, but is that not electric? No, it's a hybrid. Dan: They have both, and for me it makes total sense that you would have two fuels rather than one fuel. Dean: Right. Dan: Yeah, and there's just so much problems with you know the electric generation of getting the. I mean, for example, it tells you what happened under the Biden administration that they were going to put in I don't know 100,000 charging stations. Dean: Yeah. Dan: And it was 12. They got 12 built Wow, 12. They got 12 built Wow. And the reason is because there's not a demand for it. First of all it's a very select group of people who are buying these things. Dean: Yeah. Dan: And a lot of it has to do with where, for example, in California, I think the majority of them come out of a certain number of postal zones. Dean: Oh, really yeah Like. Dan: Hollywood would have a lot of them Like Hollywood would have a lot of them, beverly Hills would have a lot of them, but others wouldn't have any at all because there's no charging stations unless you have one at home. But the other thing is just the sheer amount of energy you have to use to make a Tesla is way more than the energy that's required to make a gas car. Gas cars are much cheaper to make. Dean: So there's some economics there. Dan: But the other thing is this thing of agency living in a technological world. More and more technology is taking over and you're not in control. And I think there's a point where people say, okay, I've given up enough agency, I'm not going to give up anymore. And I think you're fighting that when you're trying to get that across. I mean, I know Joe is wild about this, you know about Joe Polish, about self-driving and everything like that, but I don't know when I would ever do it. Dean: Well, especially because it's not a problem you need solved. You've solved the problem since 1998. You've got you've you know one of the things, Dan, when you and I first started having lunches together or getting together like that, I remember very vividly the first time that we did that, we went to Marche. In the yeah, downtown Hockey Hall of Fame is yeah, exactly yeah. We went to Marche and we sat there. We were there for you know, two hours or so and then when we left, we walked out, we went out the side door and there was your car, like two paces outside of the exit of the building. Your car was there waiting for you and you just got in and off you go. And I always thought, you know, that was like way ahead of. Even your Tesla can't do that, you know, I just thought that was fun thing, but you've been doing that 25 years you know just wherever you are, it's knows where to get you. You walk out and there it is, and that's this is before Uber was ever a thing for, before any of it you know, yeah, yeah, well, it's just, you know, I think we're on exactly the same path. Dan: It's just something that I don't want to think about. Dean: Right. Dan: I just don't want to have all the where did I park? And you know, and the whole thing. And the cars are always completely, you know, clean. Dean: They're completely you know clean they're, you know they're fully fueled up all the insurance has been paid for that they check them out. Dan: I think they have to check them out every couple weeks. They have to go into their yeah, their garage and make sure everything's tuned up. Dean: They have to pass yeah, most people think that would be a, that's an extravagance or something you know if you think about that, but do you know approximately how much you spend per month for rides or whatever your service is for that? Just to compare it to having a luxury car, of course I have no idea to having a luxury car? Dan: Of course, I have no idea, Of course. Dean: I love that Of course you don't. That's even better. Dan: Right, I know it's about half the cost of having a second car. Dean: Right, exactly. Dan: It's so, it's pretty. You know, that's pretty easy, it doesn't use up any space, I mean. Dean: Right. Dan: Yeah, yeah and yeah, yeah, yeah, it's an interesting. Dean: I like simple and I like you know, I I just like having a simple life and I don't like that friction freedom, friction freedom, yeah yeah, yeah and but our limousine company is really great and it's called Bennington and they are affiliated with 300 other limousine companies around the world. Dan: They're in a network, and so when we're going to Chicago, for example, the affiliate picks us up at the airport. When we go to Dallas, the affiliate picks us up at the airport. The only thing we do differently when we go to London, for example, is that the hotel Firmdale Hotel, they get the cab and they pick us up and they pay everything ahead of time. It goes on our bill. But it's just nice that we're in a worldwide network where it's the same way. If I were going to Tokyo, it would be the Tokyo right. Dean: So yeah, that's. That's really good thing in in Buenos. Dan: Aires. Yeah, yeah, it's the way, it's the of, no, it's the four seasons, of course it all actually does it. Yeah, so it's the hotels, so that's it. But it's interesting stuff what it is. But the democratize. I think that the I mean the definition of capitalism is producing for the masses. You know, that's basically the difference between other systems and capitalism, the difference between other systems and capitalism. Capitalism is getting always getting the cost down, so the greatest proportion of people can you utilize the thing that you're doing? You? know, yeah, and I think it's democratizing in that effect. But it all depends upon what you're looking for. It all depends upon what kind of life you want to have. You know, and there's no democracy with that Some people just know what they want more than other people know what they want. Yeah right, exactly. Dean: Yeah, I think that we're. You know, I keep remembering about that article that I read, you know, probably 2016 about the tyranny of convenience. You know that's certainly an underestimated driver, that we are always moving in the direction of convenience, which is in the same vein as that friction freedom. I've noticed now that other friction freedom. I've noticed now that other. I just look at even the micro things of like Apple Pay on my phone. You know, just having the phone as your, you know, gateway to everything, you just click and do it, it's just comes, it's just handled, you know. Know you don't have any sense of connection to what things cost or the transaction of it. The transaction itself is really effortless float your phone over over the thing, I got cash all over the place. Yeah, exactly I know, like a little, like a squirrel, I got little ATMs all over the house. Yeah, exactly. Dan: I got shoeboxes with cash. I've got winter coats with cash I mean Babsoe Cup. She says you got any cash? I said yes, just stay here, because I don't want you to see where I'm going. What do you want? Yeah, yeah. And I find a lot of entrepreneurs I think more than other folks have this thing about cash, because you can remember a day way back in the past where you didn't have enough money for lunch. You know. Dean: Yeah. Dan: I always, I'm always flush with cash, yeah. Dean: Every time I go to the airport. Dan: You know the airport in toronto or where I'm landing. I always go and I get. You know, I get a lot of cash I just like currency. Dean: Yeah, I love the. The funny thing is the. What was I thinking about? Dan: you were talking about. Dean: Oh, I had a friend who had he used to have a file like file folders or file cabinets sort of thing. But he had a file like when file folders or file cabinets were a thing, but he had a file called cash and he would just have cash in the cash folder, yeah, yeah, or nobody would ever think to look for it. You know, filed under cash there's a thousand dollars right there. Dan: Yeah. We had a changeover a year ago with housekeepers? Dean: Yeah, we had a changeover a year ago with housekeepers, so previous housekeeper we had for years and years. Dan: She retired and we got a new one and she's really great. But there was a period where the credit card that our previous. We had to change credit cards because she makes a lot of purchases during the week. And then Babs said, Dan, do you have any cash for mary? And I said, sure, wait right here. And I said I brought him. I had five hundred dollars. And she said I said well, that'd be good. And she said where do you have five hundred dollars. I said not for you to know mary, you can ask, but you cannot find that's funny, I think there's something to that, dan. Dean: I remember, even as a kid I used to. To me it was something to have these stacks of $1 bills. You had $40 as a 10-year-old. That's a big stack. You were a push, oh yeah, and I used to have an envelope that I would put it in and I had a secret. I just had a secret hiding place for the money. Yeah, yeah, so funny. I remember one time I got my mom worked at a bank and I had her, you know, bring me. I gave my money and had her bring like brand new $1 bills. You know, like the things. And I saw this little. I saw a thing in a book where you could make what like a little check book with one dollar bill. So I took a little cardboard for the base thing, same, cut it out, same size as the dollar bills, and then took a glue stick and many layers on the end of the thing so that they would stick together. But I had this little checkbook of $1 bills and I thought that was the coolest thing ever. Dan: It's tangible, yeah, yeah. Dean: It's like agency. Dan: I think we like tangibility too. I think that's the value that we hold on to, and you can push things where they disappear. You know, digital things sort of disappear. And it's not tangible. So I think a lot of people get in the money problem because the money they're spending is not tangible money. You know, and I think there's we're. You know we're sensory creatures and there's a point where you've disconnected people so much from tangible things that they lose its meaning after a while. I'll send you one of my articles, but it's on how universities are in tremendous trouble right now. Trump going after Harvard is just, it's just the sign of the times. It's not a particular, it's actually we don't even know what Harvard is for anymore. They're so far removed from tangible everyday life. We don't even know. So you can have the president of the United States just cutting off all their and so somebody says oh, I didn't even know they got funding. You know, I didn't even know they got funding. You know, I didn't even know the government gave harvard money and there's no problem now because they've lost touch. They it's hard for them to prove why they should get any tax money and they've gotten so disconnected in their theoretical worlds from the way people live. It's a. It's an interesting thing. There's a tangibility border. If you cross too far over the tangibility border, I heard a comedian. Dean: Jimmy Carr was on Joe Rogan's podcast and he was saying you know, the joke is that the students are using AI to do their homework. The tutors, the teachers, are using AI to grade the homework and in three years the AI will get the job. Dan: Teaching other AIs? Yeah, exactly. Dean: Yeah, well, I mean you can go too far in a particular direction. Yeah, that's where it's headed. Dan: That's exactly right, yeah, yeah, apparently Henry Kissinger taught at Harvard and you know he was on the faculty but he was busy, so in some of his classes he just put a tape recording of him, you know, and he had a really boring voice. It was this German monotonic voice you know and everything like that. And so he would just put a teaching assistant would come and turn on the tape recorder. Dean: And then he asked one day. Dan: He was. He was just in the building and he walked in and there were as a class of 40. And he walked in and there was one tape recorder in the front of the room and there were 40 tape recorders on the 40 desk. He was oh no, yeah, they were just recording his recording. That's funny, yeah, and they would have shown up. I mean, they would have had standing room only if it was him. Dean: Yeah, right, right, right. Dan: So it's lost tangibility and it doesn't have any meaning after a while. Yeah, that's funny. Yeah, Okay, got to jump. Dean: Okay, so next week are we on yeah, chicago. Dan: Yeah, we are an hour. Dean: Okay, perfect. Dan: It'll be an hour, the same hour for you, but a different hour for me. Dean: Perfect, I will see you then. Okay, thanks, dan, bye.

Hablemos de Derecho Internacional (HDI)
#138: Dr. Hector Olásolo - Instituto Ibero-Americano de La Haya para la Paz, los Derechos Humanos y la Justicia Internacional

Hablemos de Derecho Internacional (HDI)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2025 69:43


En este episodio, Edgardo Sobenes conversa con el Dr. Héctor Olásolo sobre el Instituto Ibero-Americano de La Haya para la Paz, los Derechos Humanos y la Justicia Internacional (IIH).A lo largo de la conversación, el Dr. Olásolo comparte cómo surgió la idea de crear el Instituto, quiénes estuvieron involucrados en su fundación y cuál fue el contexto que dio origen a esta iniciativa. Además, analiza los objetivos fundamentales del IIH y su estrecha vinculación con la labor de los tribunales internacionales con sede en La Haya.El episodio también ofrece un recorrido por las principales actividades del Instituto, con especial atención a la Semana Ibero-Americana de la Justicia Internacional; el impacto formativo del Concurso de Simulación Judicial en español ante la Corte Penal Internacional; la labor de la Clínica Jurídica Internacional; y el papel de redes académicas como “Perspectivas Iberoamericanas sobre la Justicia” y la red sobre “Corrupción y Crimen Organizado Transnacional”.Finalmente, el Dr. Olásolo reflexiona sobre las publicaciones académicas promovidas por el Instituto, sus principales líneas de investigación, los logros alcanzados en estos 15 años y los retos y proyecciones hacia el futuro.Sobre el Prof. Dr. Héctor OlásoloEl Prof. Héctor Olasolo (España) es Licenciado y Doctor en Derecho por la Universidad de Salamanca (España), Licenciado en Teología por la Universidad Santo Tomás (Colombia) y tiene una Maestría en Derecho por la Universidad de Columbia (EE. UU). Preside desde 2011 el Instituto Iberoamericano de la Haya para la Paz, los Derechos Humanos y la Justicia Internacional (IIH) (Países Bajos). Se desempeña desde 2013 como Profesor Titular de Carrera en la Facultad de Jurisprudencia de la Universidad del Rosario (Colombia), donde dirige el Programa de Maestría en Derecho Internacional, la Clínica Jurídica Internacional, el Anuario Iberoamericano de Derecho Internacional Penal (ANIDIP), el International Law Clinic Reports (ILCR) y es el Investigador Principal de las Redes Perspectivas Ibero-Americanas sobre la Justicia y Respuestas a la Corrupción asociada al Crimen Organizado transnacional. Es además Miembro del Colegio de Abogados de Madrid (España), Investigador Senior del Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología de Colombia (Minciencias), Miembro del Comité Científico de la Editorial Tirant lo Blanch (España), Miembro de los Comités Científicos y Editoriales de numerosas publicaciones en español e inglés, y Director del ANIDIP y, junto con la Prof. Carol Proner, de la Colección Perspectivas Iberoamericanas sobre la Justicia.Finalmente, el Prof. Olasolo ha sido también miembro de la Delegación Española en la Comisión Preparatoria de la Corte Penal Internacional (1999-2002), asesor jurídico de la Fiscalía del Tribunal Penal Internacional para la ex Yugoslavia (2002-2004) y letrado de Sala de Corte Penal Internacional (2004-2010). Objetivos del IIH: https://www.iberoamericaninstituteofthehague.org/mision/objetivos Estructura IIH: https://www.iberoamericaninstituteofthehague.org/organization/estructura Aliados del IIH: https://www.iberoamericaninstituteofthehague.org/organizaSupport the showAdquiere aquí el nuevo libro " Hablemos de Derecho Internacional Volumen II" https://www.hablemosdi.com/libros

El Show De Chiquibaby
“ Cual es el nuevo sueño americano para la generación Z”

El Show De Chiquibaby

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2025 49:23


“Lady Chile” Se negó a pagar una quesadilla porque estaba muy picosa

Hablemos de Football: NFL y mas en español
La franquicia más tacaña de la NFL

Hablemos de Football: NFL y mas en español

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2025 12:54


Hablemos de Football: NFL y mas en español
¿Cuál será el peor equipo de la NFL en 2025?

Hablemos de Football: NFL y mas en español

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2025 13:26


Los contendientes a la primera selección global del próximo Draft, las consecuencias del dinero que reciben ya los jugadores en colegial y más, en esta nueva edición de preguntas y respuestas.

Spectator Radio
Americano: left-wing violence is being normalised

Spectator Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2025 18:39


In the new edition of Spectator World, author and anthropologist Max Horder argues that the US is experiencing a change in its psyche, and left-wing violence is being normalised. He joins Freddy Gray on the Americano podcast to discuss the various examples attached to this, and what the dereliction of democratic disagreement means for us all.This episode is also available to watch on Spectator TV: https://youtu.be/MPQ-BDTjRDo Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Americano
Left-wing violence is being normalised

Americano

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2025 18:39


In the new edition of Spectator World, author and anthropologist Max Horder argues that the US is experiencing a change in its psyche, and left-wing violence is being normalised. He joins Freddy Gray on the Americano podcast to discuss the various examples attached to this, and what the dereliction of democratic disagreement means for us all. This episode is also available to watch on Spectator TV: https://youtu.be/MPQ-BDTjRDo Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Bring Me The Axe! Horror Podcast
99CR 36: Cruising

Bring Me The Axe! Horror Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2025 156:42


As our Pride series continues we drop the first 99 Cent Rental episode looking at the extremely complicated history of William Friedkin's gay leather giallo Americano, Cruising (1980), starring Al Pacino. Dave's research and history expertise about this period of urban gay culture comes in handy as we contrast Friedkin's attempt to provoke and shock against the reality of gay night life at leather bars, BDSM bars, and the cruising scene in the days before apps and the internet made casual encounters in the park obsolete. We also look at the organized movements to protest Cruising and convince theaters not to show the movie, explore whether or not Friedkin was exploiting the gay BDSM scene for cheap shocks, and whether or not this is a good movie. Did Cruising do more harm than good? Does it get anything right? The answer, as always, is: it's complicated.Join the Bring Me The Axe Discord: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://discord.gg/snkxuxzJ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Support Bring Me The Axe! on Patreon: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://patreon.com/bringmetheaxepod⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Buy Bring Me The Axe merch here:⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.bonfire.com/store/bring-me-the-axe-podcast/⁠⁠

Spectator Radio
Americano: did the swamp drain Elon Musk?

Spectator Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2025 22:41


Billionaire Elon Musk and US President Donald Trump have had a very public falling out. Musk, whose time running the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) came to an end last month, publicly criticised Trump's spending bill (the ‘One Big Beautiful Bill Act'). The row then erupted onto social media with Trump expressing his disappointment with Musk, Musk accusing Trump of ‘ingratitude' – and even making insinuations about Trump's relationship with Jeffrey Epstein. Tesla's stock has taken a hit, Trump and Musk are yet to speak and there could be implications for the government contracts that Musk's companies have, but the full consequences are yet to be understood.What do this tell us about Trump 2.0, and American politics more generally? Freddy Gray and Kate Andrews discuss.Produced by Patrick Gibbons and Megan McElroy. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

WhatCulture Wrestling
WWE Raw Review - CHAOS Ahead Of Money In The Bank! Stephanie Vaquer SHINES On Raw Debut! The Judgment Day Vs. The War Raiders! El Grande Americano Qualifies For MITB?!

WhatCulture Wrestling

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2025 102:59


The Dadley Boyz chat about what happened on this week's episode of Monday Night RAW, including...CHAOS ahead of Money In The Bank!Stephanie Vaquer SHINES on Raw debut!The Judgment Day vs. The War Raiders!Michael Cole loses a bet!El Grande Americano qualifies for MITB?!ENJOY!Follow us on Twitter:@AdamWilbourn@MichaelHamflett@MSidgwick@WhatCultureWWEFor more awesome content, check out: whatculture.com/wwe Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Spectator Radio
Americano: America's white guilt hangover

Spectator Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2025 35:43


From the decline of meritocracy to the rise of anti-Western ideology, author Heather Mac Donald joins Freddy Gray to discuss race, merit, and victim hierarchy. Why is the West so desperate to self-cancel? And is now a moment of reckoning considering we're five years on from the BLM protests? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Overly Sarcastic Podcast
OSPod Episode 120: Speedsters, MCU Phase One, and Deceptive Americanos!

Overly Sarcastic Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2025 56:29


After a bit of travel Red and Blue are back and ready to unpack the most recent videos! From Phase One of the MCU to Speedsters this OSPod has it all. Plus, forget the Conclave, we have the read on how to pick the one true Pope Fights winner! Our podcast, like our videos, sometimes touches on the violence, assaults, and murders your English required reading list loves (also we curse sometimes). Treat us like a TV-14 show.Preorder your copy of Aurora today:https://comicaurora.com/books/OSP has new videos every Friday:https://www.youtube.com/c/OverlySarcasticProductionsChannelQuestion for the Podcast? Head to the #ask-ospod discord channel:https://discord.gg/OSPMerch:https://overlysarcastic.shopFollow Us:Patreon.com/OSPTwitter.com/OSPyoutubeTwitter.com/sophie_kay_Music By OSP Magenta ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

Spectator Radio
Americano: what does Sam Altman want?

Spectator Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2025 28:05


Freddy Gray speaks to writer and author Karen Hao, whose new book Empire of AI looks at a new, ominous age of empire with OpenAI. On the podcast they discuss the impacts of artificial intelligence on society and democracy and how Open AI founder Sam Altman has become a controversial figure. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Dedicated with Doug Brunt
Chris Pavone

Dedicated with Doug Brunt

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2025 75:28


Chris Pavone: Americano (Campari, sweet vermouth, club soda, orange twist)Chris discusses his early career experiences in publishing meetings with Jaqueline Kennedy Onassis and what her work meant to him and other colleagues, the gifts his wife possesses that made her a great CEO for Penguin Random House and that also guided him to a writing career upon recognizing he did not possess those gifts, how his life as an expat inspired his debut novel THE EXPAT, how the first drafts of his novels might end personal friendships unless his wife makes some edits, the importance of writing down the flap copy of your life.