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Bundeskanzler Olaf Scholz reist in diesen Tagen bereits zum zweiten Mal seit seinem Amtsantritt nach Afrika. Er setzt damit – verglichen mit Angela Merkel – einen neuen Schwerpunkt in seiner Außenpolitik. Andrea Böhm berichtet für DIE ZEIT aus der Subsahara-Region und ordnet den Besuch des Kanzlers in Äthiopien und Kenia angesichts des Krieges gegen die Ukraine, des Krieges im Sudan und des gerade zur Ruhe gekommenen Konflikts in Äthiopien ein. Außerdem sehen die Österreicherinnen und Österreicher gerade rot: Bei der Landtagswahl in Salzburg stimmten Ende April rund zwölf Prozent für die Kommunistische Partei, in der zweitgrößten österreichischen Stadt Graz stellt die KPÖ seit 2021 sogar die Bürgermeisterin. Was ist da los? Jonas Vogt lebt als Autor in Wien und erklärt, warum die Partei gerade so gute Ergebnisse einfährt. Und sonst so? Wie die finnische Zeitung Helsingin Sanomat junge Russen über den Krieg gegen die Ukraine aufklären will. Moderation und Produktion: Fabian Scheler Redaktion: Ole Pflüger Mitarbeit: Sarah Vojta und Mathias Peer Fragen, Kritik, Anregungen? Sie erreichen uns unter wasjetzt@zeit.de. Weitere Links zur Folge: Äthiopien: Besuch bei einem Kriegsherrn (https://www.zeit.de/politik/ausland/2023-01/aethiopien-annalena-baerbock-afrika-ernaehrung-frieden) Mohammed Hamdan Daglo: Kleiner Mohammed, der Paramilitär (https://www.zeit.de/politik/ausland/2023-04/mohammed-hamdan-dagalo-sudan-paramilitaers-rsf) Kommunistische Partei Österreich: Und plötzlich sind die Kommunisten wählbar (https://www.zeit.de/politik/ausland/2023-05/oesterreich-landtagswahlen-kommunistische-partei-wahlergebnisse) KPÖ: Auferstanden aus Ruinen (https://www.zeit.de/2023/19/kpoe-erfolg-finanzierung-sowjetunion-graz) The Guardian: Finnish newspaper hides Ukraine news reports for Russians in online game( https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/may/03/finnish-newspaper-hides-news-reports-for-russians-in-online-game) Ihre Stimme für Was Jetzt beim Deutschen Podcastpreis (https://www.deutscher-podcastpreis.de/podcasts/was-jetzt-2/) Als Hörerin oder Hörer von Was Jetzt? können Sie Die ZEIT vier Wochen lang gratis testen.(https://abo.zeit.de/wasjetzt)
Comedian Corinne Fisher is back talking the problematic Karl Lagerfeld homages at the Met Gala, another "family friend" who murdered his teenage neighbors, Nazis masking up like little babies at a protest, a trans runner whose victory may not be as shocking as the news is making it out to be, and so much more!Original Air Date: 5/2/23Support Our Sponsors!Yo Delta - https://yodelta.com/ - Use promo code GAS for 25% off your order!You can watch Without A Country LIVE for FREE every Tuesday at 7:00pm at GaSDigitalNetwork.com/live. Once you're there, sign up for GaSDigitalNetwork.com with promo code WAC to receive a 7 Day FREE TRIAL with access to our entire catalog of archived episodes! On top of that, you'll also have the same access to ALL the other shows that GaS Digital Network has to offer!**PLEASE SUBSCRIBE, RATE & REVIEW ON iTUNES & SUBSCRIBE TO OUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL**WHERE YOU CAN ANNOY US:Corinne Fisher:Twitter: https://twitter.com/PhilanthropyGalInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/philanthropygal/Executive Producer: Mike HarringtonInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/themharrington/Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheMHarringtonEngineer: JorgeEditor: Rebecca KaplanInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/rebeccatkaplan/Special Thanks: GaS DigitalInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/gasdigital/Twitter: https://twitter.com/gasdigitalEnemy of the State: Karl LagerfeldFrom The Guardian:The late creative director of Chanel, who died in 2019, was a behemoth in the fashion world. Yet his list of accomplishments was almost as long as his list of controversies. He said he was “fed up” with the #MeToo movement and questioned the claims of victims who came forward during that time. “What shocks me most in all of this are the starlets who have taken 20 years to remember what happened,” Lagerfeld told Numero Magazine. “Not to mention the fact there are no prosecution witnesses.”“One cannot – even if there are decades between them – kill millions of Jews so you can bring millions of their worst enemies in their place,” Lagerfeld, who was German, said in 2017. He had apparently taken issue with then German chancellor Angela Merkel's decision to allow Syrian refugees into Germany at the time. “I know someone in Germany who took a young Syrian and after four days said: ‘The greatest thing Germany invented was the Holocaust,'” he added.As Rachel Tashjian notes in the Washington Post, Wintour has gone out of her way to champion designers who have been embroiled in the worst of scandals. That list includes John Galliano, Balenciaga designer Demna and Alexander Wang, who was accused in late 2020 of drugging and sexually assaulting several victims. Wang has denied the allegations made against him. Wintour dutifully sat in the front row of his comeback show.Some thoughts: https://fashionmagazine.com/style/celebrity-style/karl-lagerfeld-controversy-met-gala-2023/MET GALAhttps://wwd.com/fashion-news/fashion-scoops/met-gala-history-how-it-turned-from-fundraiser-to-fashions-biggest-night-1235167840/Bodies, Bodies, Bodieshttps://www.cnn.com/2023/05/02/us/henryetta-oklahoma-seven-bodies-found-tuesday/index.htmlNazis in Columbus, Ohiohttps://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/neo-nazi-group-protests-columbus-223840382.htmlCongress Pay Scamhttps://nypost.com/2023/04/30/congress-unconstitutional-pay-scam-gets-members-34k-raises/Lois Frankelhttps://www.newsweek.com/democrat-sold-first-republic-stock-bought-jp-morgan-before-collapse-1797676Trans RunnerRIGHThttps://www.foxnews.com/sports/transgender-female-runner-beat-14000-women-london-marathon-offers-give-medal-backLEFThttps://www.advocate.com/media/transgender-woman-runner-london-marathonSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
The 16:9 PODCAST IS SPONSORED BY SCREENFEED – DIGITAL SIGNAGE CONTENT In the early years of digital signage networks - particularly those that were ad-based - operators would often describe how their medium was captive. The proposition was that people stuck doing something - usually waiting - would pass their time looking at a screen. Then smartphones came along, and there went that notion. Except in places like gas stations, where people still needed to be somewhat focused on the task. A company called GSTV has been running a digital signage channel on the screens of fuel dispensers for almost two decades, and is deployed at more than 25,000 locations. The company dominates its category, and the mix of programming on the pump screens has 100 million unique viewers. The pitch to planners is far more sophisticated these days than the captive audience thing - something very obvious in this talk with CEO Sean McCaffrey, who gets into a lot of detail about the benefits for consumer brands and for the gas station and C-store operators who work with GSTV. Subscribe from wherever you pick up new podcasts. TRANSCRIPT Sean, thank you for joining me. It's almost weird to think about, but your company and your medium is actually a pretty mature medium now. Sean McCaffrey: It is. I still look at it as very new. I've been with the business for five and a half years, and when I describe it to people at a backyard barbecue, and they ask what I do, I say: I run a six-year-old startup that happened and have a one-year proof of concept. So to your point, we've been around for 15+ years as a sector, if you will. For people who maybe don't live in the United States, describe what it is that goes on. Sean McCaffrey: Yeah, no problem. So GSTV is a national digital video platform in 205 US markets. Out of 210, we reach about 50% percent of US adults every month, about 116m monthly unique viewers, and we connect with consumers three to five minutes at a time, three to five times a month when they're fueling up their vehicle. So think about it as a very habitual serialized engagement week in and week out when someone stops to fuel up as they're running errands on a road trip, on their way to the ballgame on a Saturday, that sort of thing, and we partner with the fuel and convenience retailers in the US to put in this amenity, provide information, entertainment, that sort of thing, and focus on building value for brands, agencies, retailers, and consumers, and we work with a variety of large chains, small chains middle market, kind of everything in between. And the nut of it is you've got a screen embedded in the fuel dispenser. Sean McCaffrey: Correct. Our screens come embedded in the fuel equipment, which is a long-term hardware purchase decision for fuel retailers. The retailers get it as an amenity, and they get a small amount of promotional time within our show. There are shared economics amongst the parties obviously as well, and then we build a consumer experience that provides value to the retailers, value to consumers, and then brands and agencies can integrate in any number of ways. The way we look at it is we program a show every day. Every station is like an addressable household. The household has more family members, so we could have tens of thousands of different versions of the show on any given day, depending on what content and what advertising is running. Now, we don't go probably down to that level of customization just based on how brands use it. But think about urban, suburban, weekday, weekend, all those lake and beach communities, let's say all summer long, that is a very different population from Thursday to Sunday, let's say in July versus January. So lots of ways to customize the entertainment, content, commercials, advertising, and so on. I have a bit of a past with this stuff going back to the early to mid 2000s when there was a Canadian company also looking at this, and at that time it was extraordinarily challenging to put a piece of electronics on a fuel dispenser that's sitting on top of a reservoir of thousands of gallons of flammable liquid. It was a little nerve-wracking. Is it now a standard piece of kit, so to speak, for the fuel dispenser manufacturers like the Gilbarcos of the world? Sean McCaffrey: It is, and you're right, that era in the early to mid two 2000s, not just in our space, but really in broader digital signage or digital outta home, if you will, in general. There was a lot bigger hardware literally and figuratively, hardware and software challenges to solve. Now, they're not done today, but all of this has come a long way. So for our business today, yes, it's a very standard part of what our great partners at Dover and Gilbarco both produce. The retailer can make a choice on the equipment that they want to buy and everything comes kitted out for them. There's an upgrade opportunity if they have equipment already. There's a new equipment purchase opportunity, so there are obviously several different SKUs of hardware products they can buy, and then it's all IP addressable, and all enabled that our team runs. And we have a network operating center that it's all built on and enabled programmatically in terms of scheduling as well. So it's really come a long way. Anyone that is involved in digital signage or the digital out-of-home space knows that mid two 2000s era, call it 15-20 years ago, there were lots and lots of networks trying to put signage out there in hopes of I think advertising would follow. A lot of it was probably a solution in search of a problem, as they say, and today, we're very focused on our place in the value proposition, so to speak. So our retail partners really care about that 20-foot consumer journey. Someone fueling up and then going in the store and buying anything. The hardware partners, they want a great product and to be able to offer this as an amenity, and then for consumers, our time is precious today While it's not a channel selection, you're not gonna binge watch hours and hours of our programming, let's say, in the way you might Netflix or Peacock. It is an opportunity to provide value to consumers, entertainment information, and that sort of thing. So come a long way in all regards, I think, and not just hardware. And so you can retrofit an existing fuel dispenser, right? Sean McCaffrey: They're some of the old SKUs of hardware, not necessarily, but yes, for the most part, it's generally an upgrade available. And is that something you put on top of it, or you replace the screen that's in there? Sean McCaffrey: It replaces the equipment that's already in there. One of the reasons that the businesses came together in a joint venture in early 2017 was first of all to provide some scale in the space. But second, there was a push from the credit card companies for a payment processing upgrade. So the EMV technology Europay, MasterCard, Visa. There was a requirement from the credit card companies that all the fuel and convenience retailers in the US had to upgrade their credit card technology. So that was an obvious time then for every retailer to decide on a larger upgrade cycle what they wanted to do, and many of them chose to augment it with screens that they didn't have previously. So this is not a build it and they will come thing at all where you're incurring the capital cost to put this in, it's the fuel retailer? Sean McCaffrey: Correct. That was the earlier generation of the business where some of the predecessor companies you probably know, or the company that you mentioned where there were screens that sat on top of the fuel dispensers of various sizes, and you then incurred every challenge you have beyond CapEx, just the installation, the maintenance, that sort of thing. These are all dispenser-integrated units. So the CapEx is built into the economics amongst the various parties. And is the primary motivation to get people into the convenience store, because most few retailers these days seem to have a retail store associated with it, or is it the revenue share that they might see out of it or they do see out of it? Sean McCaffrey: It's primarily to drive people into the stores. A couple of percentage points of growth in soda and snack sales is I think a lot more interesting to most than the advertising revenue. That's not to say the advertising revenue is not substantial or interesting, but there's lots and lots of data that the industry publishes every year here in the US about the volume of consumers that fuel up and just drive away, don't go in store, the volume that does go in store and what they purchase, and so any opportunity to drive sales in-store and raise basket size once somebody is in the store, for example, it gets you to buy a snack instead of just a soda, get you to buy a snack and a soda and a lottery ticket, you name it, is useful, and there's a great deal of sophistication in the space as well. I think most consumers in the US are familiar with the largest brands, the 7-Elevens, the Circle Ks, and that sort of thing. But there are a number of what I'll call major and mid-major regional chains anywhere from 800 to 1000 stores down to maybe 50 to 100 stores where they've got a loyalty app, they've got a promotional program, so very sophisticated folks in the space that I think a lot would be surprised about to learn. I think the difference in fuel and convenience in the US to, let's say, grocery or big box or some of the other large physical retail channels, there isn't consolidated ownership that you see in those spaces. So at times, I don't think consumers really understand the size of the sector, but the fuel and convenience space is more than 3% of the US GDP. So it's a huge economic driver, and so back to the retailer, they care about that 20-foot consumer journey and getting more people to come in and then buy more once they go inside. I'm assuming that in the early days, you were selling the dream that if you do this, people will go into the store, but now the, the, there's analytics, there's the level of sophistication that can give you some data that will prove out that, yeah, this they saw this and then this happened, or how does that work? Sean McCaffrey: Absolutely. It's a great question. So obviously, the retailers have their own first-party data relative to sales. So they have an understanding most directly if something's being advertised out in the forecourt, and then sales go up in the store, they know. But we work with a number of third-party partners, IRI and Catalina, as two examples to measure sales lift both in the store and then nearby, in adjacent grocery stores, big box retailers, pharmacies, that sort of thing. Because there's an old cliche in advertising, right? That half of my advertising works, I just don't know which half, and that's not been good enough for a long time. We had 135, I think the number is, research studies in the field last year with clients from upper funnel analytics, brand favorability, and brand recall, down to much lower funnel direct sales and sales lift metrics. And so we've been at that for 5+ years now, and we start to see to some degree what you would expect, in other words, for CPG products in the fuel and convenience store. For very mature trademark brands and large-scale products, we might see a 1-3% sales lift which is huge for really established, CPG brands. For newer brands, li brand extensions, and things like that, we might see high single-digit, low double-digit sales lift, which is also great, and that's been validated by a number of the CPG brands that we work with as well. Obviously, the larger ones have very sophisticated in-house marketing sciences teams and do all sorts of market mix modeling. So even though we fund studies with IRI and Catalina, which are really well-established partners. The brands also do their own modeling and report good results. It's a lot of what you would expect, I think, in that there's an opportunity to drive someone for an impulse convenience purchase when they're 20 feet away, if they're slightly hungry or slightly thirsty or many of the fuel and convenience retailers have pretty sophisticated food service programs these days and so if somebody's grabbing lunch or dinner, they've got a lot of choices. They can go to a grocery store and get a prepared meal. They can go to a drive-through at a QSR next door, or in some cases, they can go inside the field and convenience retailer and get pizzas and sandwiches and other things. We've got hungry consumers and a big opportunity to influence them but from a measurement standpoint, we've got lots of ways to draw a straighter line between the advertising impression and the business outcome. If you're doing that volume of research that repeatedly suggests that there's still some skepticism among the brands that they go, prove to me that this works. Sean McCaffrey: I wouldn't characterize it as skepticism as much as I think there's a spectrum depending on the category, and for example, an auto brand, the KPIs that they're looking for are dealer visits or site visits or someone going in and starting to build a vehicle. CPG brands obviously look at sales, and financial services brands look at card usage, card signups, and that sort of thing. So depending on the category, we've commercialized research capability with a couple of household names: Foursquare, Axiom, MasterCard, ISI, Catalina, and plenty of others. So our sales and marketing team can simply say “yes” when a client says, can we measure it? Some categories are more mature for us, for sure. Auto, CPG, financial services, insurance, you name it. There are some that are earlier adopters to us. Entertainment's one, for example, where we can show the trailer and tell somebody to tune in tonight, binge-watch it this weekend, et cetera, and so we've got a good diversity amongst categories. So in some cases, it's a newer brand, and they want to test and learn and then measure and grow. In other cases, it's brands where measurement is just a part of every single thing they do. To my earlier point when I came up in advertising, I worked in a legacy radio business, a legacy billboard business where those are classically regarded as more, upper funnel reach media where we weren't typically asked to measure business outcomes or direct results, and I think today, especially in the current economic environment, particularly over the last decade, advertisers are looking to measure every marketing dollar they spend realizing it doesn't all do the same thing, right? The Super Bowl ad is not the same as a buy-it-now ad on social media or something like that. But the research that we do is on some well-established clients and some new clients, but I wouldn't say it relates to skepticism more so just that brands today expect everything to be measured, And you also, I believe in the last two or three years have introduced capabilities to not only push people into 20 feet across the Forecourt, into the C Store there, but to the grocery store that might be five blocks away, that sort of thing is. Why did that happen, and what are you seeing out of that? Sean McCaffrey: So the interesting thing I've learned more than I ever thought I would know about the fuel and convenience space, much less consumer behavior on the day people fuel, so we produced some research about five years ago with MasterCard, and then we did an updated version with a much deeper dive the last year with Affinity Solutions, which has credit card and loyalty card data to basically look at the way people spend money every hour of the day, every day of the week, online, offline, with then one filter, if you will, added: the day people fuel up and is anything different, and it turns out it's really different. Fuel Day is a surrogate for a lot more grocery shopping, a lot more QSR visitation, a lot more pharmacy stops, big box retail, do-it-yourself, that sort of thing. So Fuel Day is a very differentiated day for consumer behavior and consumer spending. So with the rise of retail media as an investment channel over the last couple of years. In other words, with Walmart starting a media network and Kroger starting a media network, we started having more and more of our CPG partners come to us and say, “Hey, we want to apply this sort of thinking, this retail media, commerce media thinking in the fuel and convenient space. But there isn't anyone with consolidated scale and the way there is in grocery and big box.” So as big as the biggest retailers are in our industry, you put the top five together, they have less than 20% of the sector. So we are the largest consolidated network in US fuel and convenience in terms of ad-supported media. We launched a product called GSTV Amplify, which is really a parallel path. Number one, it's about driving sales in the fuel and convenience stores, which is critically important, and then number two, it's recognizing that our consumers are 5-7 times more likely and spending that much more on the same day to go next door to a grocery store, QSR, you name it. So the agencies and brands that are spending money across retail media, in grocery, retail media in the big box, they can leverage that data, they can apply that thinking with us. I had one Head of Investment at an agency say to me, this is basically the last TV ad someone can watch before they go into the grocery store. And I said if that framework helps you, sure, that's one way to look at it. We're in the solutions business. So from a scale standpoint, I mentioned our business. If you took the food and beverage sales at our stores compared to the largest grocery chains, what is the 10th largest grocer in America? If you added fuel to that like Kroger and Albertsons do when they when counting the numbers, we are the fifth largest behind Walmart, Costco, Kroger, and Albertsons. I'm not selling produce, I'm obviously not building physical retail stores, but I say it just to give an example of consumer purchasing power, right? And that's what brands and agencies are trying to find, the proverbial right place, right time, the right moment to find real attention and impact consumer behavior. Is there any kind of an audit trail? So if I'm on my big shop day and I stop at a fuel retailer and use my MasterCard to buy 12 gallons or whatever it is, and then I go to Costco, and then if it's me, I'll probably go to the wine store or something. But is that traceable? Is there a way of saying, okay, Dave got fuel at 11, and at 11:30, he bought stuff at Costco and so on? Sean McCaffrey: So yes and no. Yes, in the sense that yes, we can do what you're describing. No, we're not tracking Dave specifically, right? We do not collect first-party data. So often, a question I get is if people are swiping their credit card at the field dispenser, so you know it's me. We do not collect and track that credit card data or any other data. What we have is a naturally data-rich environment. There is that credit card swipe, there is a device ID typically in the vehicle or on the person, and device IDs and credit cards are well-worn ways to connect to household identity graphs, loyalty card data, and other ways. So yes, so what you described, we do with partners. So depending on the category, CPG brand, or auto brand, we can do that walk back to impact to show sales lift, brand lift, or any other KPIs. We do some direct surveys. There are companies, obviously, that do mobile location surveys that push advertisers for different things. But we work with well-established privacy-compliant industry partners to track that. As well as work with many of our brand and agency partners directly. Because the big agencies all have their own data operations these days, most of the big brands have an in-house marketing sciences team tracking all this. So what we decided to do when we were launching our approach to data analytics and research is not to build another black box that nobody was asking for, or nobody needed. What the big agencies and brands said to us is that we just need input. We need to be able to input the GSV exposure into our tools the same way we input a CTV impression or a YouTube impression or you name it, so they can understand the impact on the campaign because it's obviously never one thing. All of these ad impressions combined to provide impact to the brand and agency. But one of the things that were interesting to me when I consider joining the business is that it is much more of a mid to lower-funnel ad exposure opportunity. It's naturally frequency capped, right? We're going to see somebody three to five times a month, not three to five times a day when that banner ad follows you around the internet. So the fact that we do have these data signals that we can use, again, in a privacy-compliant way to track success metrics is important and a differentiator for us. Is it easier to do all that stuff now because of all the API integrations and AI and everything that's come along as opposed to in the past where yes, we have that data, but we're not sharing it with you? Sean McCaffrey: It has, I think for a lot of different reasons, whether it's the rise of retail media, whether it's the acceleration of machine learning, tools, and this sort of stuff, or the big agencies all purchasing their own or building their own data operations, whether it's Epsilon, Axion, Merkel, that sort of thing or others like Omnicom. Everybody understands they need a privacy complaint consumer to opt-in to track this stuff, but then it's also important to have interoperability between all of this to measure. It doesn't do anyone much good to have a bunch increasing. walled gardens, right? So today, whether it's a cooperation-type environment or an industry-standard environment, it's a lot easier. At least in the US market, combined with the changes in the advertising market over the last decade. In other words, the value of the living room wall. Is certainly challenging now compared to when I was a kid, and there were three TV channels, and it was, every night was must see tv. Today we spend our time as consumers quite differently. That change was only accelerated with Covid as far as people splintered viewing habits, and then the disruption in signal loss and digital now with device IDs and other things being sunsetted, the deprecation of cookies. It's moving most advertisers into more, I think, middle-of-the-funnel analysis. In other words, not everything is a buy it now button sort of conversion—the proverbial last-click attribution of a decade ago. So for us, GSTV, is what we hear often from our advertising partners anyway. If we have the scale of broadcast, which they like because of most categories, you just still need a lot of people. We've got some level of digital muscle memory for targeting attribution. Then it is this real-world consumer opportunity, which is what people generally get excited about around mobile and out-of-homes. So it has the sort of DNA of several interesting things to advertisers, and we've built a team around the business on the sales and marketing side that comes from various big firms in the digital and video space. On our retail success team. I have a great team that literally helped build the network going back 10 years plus, and those two teams really parallel paths are commercial relationships and client service. So we have a retail success team that is just as focused on our commercial relationships with our retailers and our hardware partners. As is, our sales and marketing teams focus on the brands and agencies. The retail success team that's nurturing the footprint that you already have, are you still building that footprint, or is it built out? Sean McCaffrey: Yes, we continue to build it. So a natural upgrade cycle still happens every month, every quarter, and every year, where we have retailers deciding to upgrade their equipment and add new sites. And then we have a very high 95+ percent renewal rate from retailers that have us already, and so the network is about a third of the fuel and convenience sector in the US today. At some point, it'll probably get north of half, and then beyond that, there's a point where we've probably ended up getting every retailer who's wanted this as an amenity because it is a different retailer. It's a retailer that is generally a little more focused on the customer experience, a little more focused on Forecourt conversion, a little more focused on end-to-end sort of promotional comms, and so on. So there's no mission here to get every fuel and convenience retailer in the US just due to the nature of the space. But yeah, we continue to grow every month, every quarter, every year. It's a case where it sounds like you have most of the markets that you'd want to be in any way so once you get to all that number, I forget what you said, it was 240 or something like that, at that point, adding more screens maybe doesn't matter all that much, right? Sean McCaffrey: Yes, you're right. It's one way to look at it. But I wouldn't say we'll be happy once we feel we've partnered with every fuel and convenience retail in the US who like us, I think their business continues to change. So as they think about forecourt-to-store conversion, integration with their loyalty apps, and promotions, we're talking to some commerce partners, some loyalty partners, and different people like that where can we potentially provide a service and another service and amenity to the retailers? Not everyone has the wherewithal or the financial structure to build that on their own. Can we go into parallel and adjacent spaces? We've typically not gone inside the store. We've not wanted to compete with our retailers in a way. But several have come to us lately wondering about their own sort of digital consumer experience journey, and there is an opportunity to partner together. So we're talking about that, and then the actual incorporation of the company. We do business with GSTV, but the actual incorporation of the company is destination media. And there's some thought to that in the sense that. We are a national digital video platform consumer, the literal consumer journey. There might be other places and spaces, high dwell time environments where it's somewhat similar to what we do today, where there's a premium audience we can define an entertainment and information amenity, and so are there opportunities to continue diversifying our consumer touchpoints, Channels within a platform-type environment where we can provide some additional value to the people we think about today, which is a long way of saying we're not going to build more screens or buy more screens just to get more screens. But I think there's some natural one plus one equals three or four or five with other potentially parallel channels or spaces beyond the fuel and convenience store. Yeah, you would think that. My experience is that end-user customers are not looking for more technology vendors. They'd like to slim out the number that they have. So if you have enabling technology that could do the video marketing inside the stores they'd probably be pretty motivated to go that way as opposed to sourcing some other vendor. Sean McCaffrey: We agree. I think there's a moment in time right now that to me feels a bit like that era you referenced earlier. In other words, in the mid 2000s where I think there are a lot of people, at least at this moment in time, running around suggesting hang screens anywhere you can hang screens, create experiences, sell ads and there's almost a suggestion that it's just that simple or just that easy, and anybody that's done it knows it's not, and it's really hard. And also, it needs to be there for a reason. In the mid two 2000s, there were a lot of networks that were well-funded and had great management. And, 2008's, recession aside, never really got off the ground because they were building a solution that really no one was looking for, vs. today, I think whether you're building a commercial real estate project and you're considering digital signage or you're doing something like we are, you have to think about how are you providing value? And for us, we're doing something that would otherwise be overhead for the retailers and difficult to do at scale, and it was challenging when five or six companies were doing what we're doing, and they all were pretty small. It was tough to get the attention of larger brands and agencies. So yeah, whether it's the hardware and software capability, or the sales and marketing engine, or the combination thereof, we're happy with what we've built so far. By no means do we think we're done, but we're looking to be a solutions provider to partners and if somebody has a network or is considering building a network and we think we can provide value, we're certainly going to talk to them. Do you have competition? Sean McCaffrey: There is one small provider in our space that I believe has a couple of hundred locations right now. They work with a different hardware provider that we're contractually unable to work with. We're very focused on the fuel and convenience space from a retail partner standpoint, but from an advertising standpoint, I often get, who's your competition? Is it people in the movie theaters, or is it people in the airport or the malls? And no, we don't sell screens. We don't charge $100 a screen or $200 a location. We sell an audience, and you can slice and dice that audience in several different ways. So when we talk to advertising partners, it might be a major national CPG this morning, and they're launching a new product in the southeast this summer, and we're talking about that. We might have lunch with a television team at a big agency that's trying to find people who buy reach curves and things like that. And then late afternoon, it might be a digital auto home team at an agency looking for proximity to a QSR, and they want everything within five miles of a particular QSR. We're competing for ad dollars in the television space, the digital video space, the retail media space, and the digital out-of-home space. And we don't have the luxury to say we're only one of those things, but I think we've got the opportunity to compete and take share across that spectrum, and that's really how we've grown. So the business has more than doubled in size in the last couple of years, both in employees and revenue. And it's mostly because our sources of advertising revenue have come from just a wider and wider part of the advertising landscape. Does the business runway have an end to it because of the rise of EVs and EV charging stations and so on? I would imagine it does, but I think it's probably like 15-20 years out. Sean McCaffrey: We don't think of it as an end as much as an evolution, right? No one is debating the emergence of EV vehicles, no one is debating the eventual roadmap of electric vehicle charging. I think everyone, at least in the US anyway, is debating how long it's going to take, number one and number two. Number two, perhaps most importantly, is how's it gonna be paid for. There's never going to be enough tax subsidies to support all of it. So there we announced last year, we announced a partnership with our labs in ChargePoint to build an ad supporter network with ChargePoint, who's currently the largest large provider by a long stretch by probably a factor of five, the largest EV charging infrastructure provider where just like our business today, we think there's an opportunity for an ad-supported amenity to build out that infrastructure, and there's a bunch of advertising-supported models that have helped build out critical infrastructure going back to the early days of television and radio and everything since. Ad supported models help build us out. So we're excited about the relationship with ChargePoint and a number of their partners, and we think the journey for consumer behavior is going to be a long time, still a multi-decade transition, and as I alluded to earlier, the way we think about our business and the broader destination media sense is the platform and foundation we built in fuel and convenience is hugely important and hugely critical infrastructure today. But whether it's the EV platform, that's really our second network or a third, fourth, and fifth one to follow. We think time spent outside the home is going to continue to grow and add supported opportunities to identify those consumers, and serve them something relevant, measuring the success on the campaign is going to continue to be critical. So we remain pretty excited about the future, both the business we have today and the evolution it can drive for us. That was super interesting, and time just flew by. I had many other questions to ask, but we'll have to do this again if you're willing. Sean McCaffrey: Yeah, I'd be happy to. I really enjoyed the conversation. Thank you for having me.
Vom 2. bis zum 24. Mai findet das German Film Fesitval statt. Dieses Jahr haben die Kuratoren ein so großes Programm wie noch nie zuvor zusammengestellt, nämlich über 30 Filme. Da kann die Wahl schwer fallen. Darum haben wir die Filmwissenschaftlerin Claudia Sandberg ins Studio eingeladen und einige Perlen des Festivals herausgepickt. Heute sprechen wir über die Dokumentation Merkel. Macht der Freiheit.
Jill Merkel is an anti-diet, weight-inclusive Registered Dietitian specializing in disordered eating, Intuitive Eating, and sports nutrition. She's been in private practice since January 2017 helping women find freedom from diet rules and restriction and helping athletes and active individuals fuel their bodies without obsession.The team dietitian for the NFL Tennessee Titans for 5 seasons (2017-2021), she previously worked for several colleges, serving their student athletes. In Jill's free time, you'll find her reading, running, or traveling. Her goal is to run a race in all 50 states.Connect with Jillwebsite: https://jillmerkelrd.com/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/JillMerkelRD/IG: https://www.instagram.com/jillmerkelrd/Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/JillMerkelRD/Blog: https://jillmerkelrd.com/blogLinks/ResourceBody image with BriMore Than a Body by Lexie and Lindsay KiteReady to heal your relationship with food, exercise, and your body?
Die Themen: Corona-Warn-App wird heute abgeschaltet; Heiz-Hammer fünfmal teurer als angenommen; Bundesregierung prüft Asylverfahren außerhalb der EU; Die Russland-Bilanz von Angela Merkel; Til Schweiger soll nach schweren Vorwürfen nach Mallorca geflogen sein; Demo-Taktik Langsamgehen; Durstlöscher:in ; Smokey Robinson über Liebe, Freude, Drogen, Motown Du möchtest mehr über unsere Werbepartner erfahren? Hier findest du alle Infos & Rabatte: https://linktr.ee/ApokalypseundFilterkaffee
In ihrer langen Karriere hat Angela Merkel einiges erlebt. Als Kanzlerin wurde sie mehrfach getestet und entpuppte sich dabei immer wieder als intelligente Problemlöserin. Aber wer ist die Person Merkel eigentlich? Eine neue Dokumentation gibt Einblicke in das Leben der ehemaligen Kanzlerin. Der Film „Merkel“ wird in Australien als Teil des German Film Festivals ab kommenden Dienstag in ausgewählten Kinos gezeigt. Wir haben mit den Macherinnen der Dokumentation gesprochen.
A new documentary about her life, "Merkel", will be screened around Australia as part of the German Film Festival.
Timothy Garton Ash, a distinguished historian, is Professor of European Studies at Oxford University. His latest book is Homelands: A Personal History of Europe. In this week's conversation, Yascha Mounk and Timothy Garton Ash discuss the hopes and delusions of the “post-Wall” era; a critical analysis of two of Europe's most influential politicians, Emmanuel Macron and Angela Merkel; and what a Europe guided by “European values” would look like. This transcript has been condensed and lightly edited for clarity. Please do listen and spread the word about The Good Fight. If you have not yet signed up for our podcast, please do so now by following this link on your phone. Email: podcast@persuasion.community Website: http://www.persuasion.community Podcast production by John Taylor Williams, and Brendan Ruberry Connect with us! Spotify | Apple | Google Twitter: @Yascha_Mounk & @joinpersuasion Youtube: Yascha Mounk LinkedIn: Persuasion Community Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Onkel Fisch mit der ersten Zugabe Pur ganz ohne Atomstrom: Der höchste Orden der Republik für Angie - verliehen ausgerechnet von ihrem Ex-Außenminister? Da verleihen sich die beiden Hosts gleich mal gegenseitig den Purpur-Fisch an Angelschnur für humoristische Bestleistungen. Lauterbach eröffnet die Bundes-Hanf-Schau und wer danach noch wach ist, der bekommt einen Grundkurs zur Geschichte des Boulevardjournalismus. Von Onkel Fisch.
Nach Adenauer und Kohl: Höchstes Bundesverdienstkreuz für Angela Merkel. Nach dem Gründungskanzler des Separatstaats BRD, Konrad Adenauer, und dem Wiedervereinigungskanzler, Helmut Kohl, hat nun Angela Merkel die höchste Auszeichnung des deutschen Staates verliehen bekommen: Großkreuz des Verdienstordens. Nur CDU-Kanzler werden so geehrt. Sozialdemokratische Kanzler wie Willy Brandt gelten als Abweichler: Sie dürfen nicht geehrt werden.Weiterlesen
durée : 00:02:59 - Les histoires du monde - par : Anthony BELLANGER - Angela Merkel vient de recevoir la plus haute distinction allemande pour ses 16 années de mandature... Même si son bilan est encore difficile à mesurer.
Las últimas tres centrales nucleares alemanas que quedaban en operación cerraron el sábado pasado. La desconexión de los reactores de Emsland, Isar 2 y Neckarwestheim supuso el punto final de un capítulo histórico que se ha extendido durante más de medio siglo. Era, cierto es, una muerte anunciada. La energía nuclear ha sido desde hace décadas muy polémica en Alemania. Para muchos alemanes este tipo de generación eléctrica es insostenible y peligrosa, para otros se trata de una fuente de energía fiable, limpia y barata. El debate lo ganaron hace tiempo los antinucleares que desde los años setenta presionan para que el país prescinda de este tipo de generación eléctrica. En la década de los ochenta el movimiento antinuclear adquirió mucha fuerza tras la catástrofe de Chernóbil. La radiación alcanzó Alemania y eso provocó que los Gobiernos de la época se replanteasen su estrategia nuclear. A finales de los ochenta se dejaron de construir nuevas centrales, pero no había todavía planes de cerrarlas. Fue en 2011, coincidiendo con la fusión de tres reactores de la central japonesa de Fukushima, cuando la entonces canciller Angela Merkel decidió dar el paso e implementar un plan de cierre gradual de todos los reactores. Ese plan tenía como fecha tope el pasado 1 de enero, pero el Gobierno de Olaf Scholz decidió prorrogar unos meses la vida de las tres centrales que quedaban abiertas para amortiguar el impacto energético de la guerra de Ucrania. Esta vez sí se ha cumplido el calendario para disgusto de los que creen que será muy difícil sustituir a los reactores nucleares. El Gobierno quiere que la generación eléctrica se realice en el futuro sólo por medios renovables, pero aún falta mucho para eso. A corto y medio plazo serán los combustibles fósiles quienes llenen el vacío que deja la nuclear. Desde que empezaron a cerrarse centrales nucleares hace doce años Alemania ha incrementado su consumo de gas natural y ha vuelto a quemar carbón en grandes cantidades. El Gobierno asegura que esto es temporal, que para el año 2038 todas las térmicas de carbón habrán cerrado también y la mayor parte de la electricidad generada será de origen renovable. Entretanto el país no sólo quema carbón, también lo extrae a cielo abierto, algo que no gusta nada a los movimientos ecologistas, pero hoy por hoy no existe otra opción si quieren mantener el suministro eléctrico. Se están construyendo entretanto plantas de regasificación en la costa y se ha disparado la inversión en nuevas plantas eólicas y fotovoltaicas. El debate sobre la energía nuclear no se limita a Alemania. En unas partes de Europa se está siguiendo el camino señalado por los alemanes, mientras que en otras se apuesta firmemente por las centrales nucleares. Ese es el caso del Reino Unido, que está construyendo una nueva planta, en Finlandia, que acaba de inaugurar la mayor central nuclear de Europa y, por supuesto en Francia, que obtiene en torno al 70% de la electricidad que consume de una cincuentena de reactores nucleares. Para los alemanes ya no hay vuelta atrás. Tienen ahora que demostrar que lo que aportaban sus reactores es fácilmente sustituible por otras fuentes limpias y baratas en un periodo de tiempo relativamente corto. No todos lo tienen tan claro. De no conseguirlo la electricidad no escaseará, pero se encarecerá notablemente, algo que un país industrial como Alemania no puede permitirse. En La ContraRéplica: - Las razones de Jack Teixeira - Libertad de expresión - Desbarajuste legislativo · Canal de Telegram: https://t.me/lacontracronica · “Hispanos. Breve historia de los pueblos de habla hispana”… https://amzn.to/428js1G · “La ContraHistoria de España. Auge, caída y vuelta a empezar de un país en 28 episodios”… https://amzn.to/3kXcZ6i · “Lutero, Calvino y Trento, la Reforma que no fue”… https://amzn.to/3shKOlK · “La ContraHistoria del comunismo”… https://amzn.to/39QP2KE Apoya La Contra en: · Patreon... https://www.patreon.com/diazvillanueva · iVoox... https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-contracronica_sq_f1267769_1.html · Paypal... https://www.paypal.me/diazvillanueva Sígueme en: · Web... https://diazvillanueva.com · Twitter... https://twitter.com/diazvillanueva · Facebook... https://www.facebook.com/fernandodiazvillanueva1/ · Instagram... https://www.instagram.com/diazvillanueva · Linkedin… https://www.linkedin.com/in/fernando-d%C3%ADaz-villanueva-7303865/ · Flickr... https://www.flickr.com/photos/147276463@N05/?/ · Pinterest... https://www.pinterest.com/fernandodiazvillanueva Encuentra mis libros en: · Amazon... https://www.amazon.es/Fernando-Diaz-Villanueva/e/B00J2ASBXM #FernandoDiazVillanueva #nuclear #alemania Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
Thủ tướng Angela Merkel hay được công chúng gọi với biệt danh “người đàn bà thép”, không chỉ vì bà là nữ thủ tướng duy nhất của Đức cho tới hiện tại. Trong 16 năm cầm quyền, bà Merkel đã đưa quốc gia vượt qua 4 thách thức lớn nhất trong nhiệm kỳ của mình: cuộc khủng hoảng tài chính toàn cầu, cuộc khủng hoảng nợ của châu Âu, khủng hoảng nhập cư vào châu Âu năm 2015 - 2016, và đại dịch Covid. Vậy thủ tướng Đức Angela Merkel đã vượt qua những khó khăn ấy như thế nào? ______________ Tập 2 của cuốn sách "Người trong muôn nghề: Ngành kinh tế có gì?" đã ra mắt, tìm hiểu tại đây: https://shope.ee/7UjJCLv9dc Ghé Nhà sách Spiderum trên SHOPEE ngay thôi các bạn ơi: https://shorten.asia/RFfT4NVT ______________ Cùng Spiderum hóng các cuộc hội thoại thú vị, nhiều kiến thức bổ ích trên kênh Talk Sâu tại đây nhé: https://bit.ly/3JxF9RM ______________ Bài viết: Angela Merkel - Bà đầm thép của nước Đức Được viết bởi: Minh HD Link bài viết: https://spiderum.com/bai-dang/Angela-Merkel-Ba-dam-thep-cua-nuoc-Duc-CAMXinOgws6z ______________ Giọng đọc: Linh Vetter Editor: Khang ______________ --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/spiderum/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/spiderum/support
Deutschland ist raus aus der Atomkraft. Am Wochenende sind die letzten Atomkraftwerke vom Netz gegangen — zur Verwunderung vieler europäischer Nachbarstaaten. Neben diesem Thema diskutieren wir den Bundesverdienstorden für Angela Merkel und geben Tipps zur Aussprache und zum aktiven Sprechen. Außerdem: Ein wichtiges Update aus Caris Leben! Transkript und Vokabelhilfe Werde ein Easy German Mitglied und du bekommst unsere Vokabelhilfe, ein interaktives Transkript und Bonusmaterial zu jeder Episode: easygerman.org/membership Sponsoren Hier findet ihr unsere Sponsoren und exklusive Angebote: easygerman.org/sponsors Hausmitteilung: Livestream am 26.4. um 19 Uhr Am 26. April 2023 um 19 Uhr (CET) sind wir live aus unserem Büro auf unserem YouTube-Kanal. (Uhrzeit in anderen Zeitzonen) Follow-up: Unfallversicherung Unfallversicherung (Wikipedia) Darüber redet Deutschland: Ende der Atomkraft in Deutschland Ende der Atomkraft-Ära in Deutschland: Die letzten Meiler gehen vom Netz (tagesschau) Deutschland schaltet ab – Ist der Atom-Ausstieg die richtige Entscheidung? (Anne Will) Forderung an den Bund: Söder für AKW-Weiterbetrieb in Länderregie (tagesschau) Das Merkel-Update: Bundesverdienstorden für Angela Merkel Warum Merkel den Bundesverdienstorden ablehnen sollte (Spiegel) Eure Fragen Kata fragt: Wie kann ich mein Sprechen und meine Aussprache verbessern? Marshall aus den USA fragt: Wie sollte man eine Sprache als Jugendlicher lernen? Und: Sollte man beim Bücherlesen alle Wörter nachschlagen? Hast du eine Frage an uns? Auf easygerman.fm kannst du uns eine Sprachnachricht schicken. Wichtige Vokabeln in dieser Episode die Unfallversicherung: Versicherung, die für bestimmte Schäden und gesundheitliche Behandlungen bezahlt, wenn man einen Unfall hatte der Lendenwirbelbruch: Verletzung oder Fraktur eines Wirbelknochens im unteren Teil der Wirbelsäule das Endlager: Ort, an dem radioaktive Abfälle sicher eingeschlossen werden das Kopfschütteln: den Kopf schütteln als Ausdruck der Verwunderung oder des Unverständnisses der Ausstieg: etwas verlassen, etwas beenden die Zungenspitze: vorderster Teil der Zunge Support Easy German and get interactive transcripts, live vocabulary and bonus content: easygerman.org/membership
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durée : 00:02:59 - Les histoires du monde - par : Anthony BELLANGER - Angela Merkel vient de recevoir la plus haute distinction allemande pour ses 16 années de mandature... Même si son bilan est encore difficile à mesurer.
We're only a quarter of the way through 2023, and already we've seen a number of unexpected images go viral. Examples include Pope Francis wearing a white Balenciaga puffer jacket, Donald Trump being arrested at the foot of the Trump Tower in New York, and Barack Obama and Angela Merkel sharing an ice cream on the beach. So what do these viral images all have in common? Well of course they weren't real! They were all generated by AI apps, which as you may know are now able to create images based on text prompts in a matter of seconds. So how can I tell fake from real then? What about clues in the images themselves? What about clues in the images themselves? In under 3 minutes, we answer your questions! To listen to the last episodes, you can click here : Would you be more likely to go to work if you could bring in your pet? Why are most people right-handed? Is eating bread actually bad for you? A Bababam Originals podcast.A podcast written and realised by Joseph Chance. In partnership with upday UK. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Vor der Verleihung des höchsten Verdienstordens gibt es auch aus der CDU Kritik an Altkanzlerin Merkel. Linnemann nannte den Atomausstieg und ihr Agieren in der Flüchtlingskrise. Web: https://www.epochtimes.de Probeabo der Epoch Times Wochenzeitung: https://bit.ly/EpochProbeabo Twitter: https://twitter.com/EpochTimesDE YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC81ACRSbWNgmnVSK6M1p_Ug Telegram: https://t.me/epochtimesde Gettr: https://gettr.com/user/epochtimesde Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/EpochTimesWelt/ Unseren Podcast finden Sie unter anderem auch hier: iTunes: https://podcasts.apple.com/at/podcast/etdpodcast/id1496589910 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/277zmVduHgYooQyFIxPH97 Unterstützen Sie unabhängigen Journalismus: Per Paypal: http://bit.ly/SpendenEpochTimesDeutsch Per Banküberweisung (Epoch Times Europe GmbH, IBAN: DE 2110 0700 2405 2550 5400, BIC/SWIFT: DEUTDEDBBER, Verwendungszweck: Spenden) Vielen Dank! (c) 2023 Epoch Times
Im Schloss Bellevue findet heute ein Termin für große Kinder statt. In Russland steht ein ruchloser Prozess an. Und: Baerbock stellt sich ins Lager von der Leyens. Das ist die Lage am Montagmorgen. Die Artikel zum Nachlesen: Großkreuzverleihung: Lorbeeren für Merkel Neues Rekrutierungsgesetz in Russland: Putins digitaler Gulag »De-Risking«: Wie wir vor China bestehen können Kohleausstieg, Heizungstausch, Verbrenner-Aus: Das halten die Deutschen vom Klimaschutz Mehr Hintergründe zum Thema erhalten Sie bei SPIEGEL+. Jetzt für nur € 1,– im ersten Monat testen unter spiegel.de/abonnieren. +++ Alle Rabattcodes und Infos zu unseren Werbepartnern finden Sie hier: https://linktr.ee/spiegellage +++ Die SPIEGEL-Gruppe ist nicht für den Inhalt dieser Webseite verantwortlich.Mehr Hintergründe zum Thema erhalten Sie bei SPIEGEL+. Jetzt für nur € 1,– im ersten Monat testen unter spiegel.de/abonnieren Informationen zu unserer Datenschutzerklärung
Die Themen: Scholz eröffnet die Hannover-Messe; Lula will zwischen Russland und Ukraine vermitteln; Die Atomdebatte ist in Bayern angekommen; Höchstmöglicher Verdienstorden wird an Merkel verliehen; Eine kleine Entschuldigung von Mathias Döpfner; Waffenbesitz und Waffengewalt in den USA; Fans in der eigenen Familie und ein Wutbürger mit Geld Du möchtest mehr über unsere Werbepartner erfahren? Hier findest du alle Infos & Rabatte: https://linktr.ee/ApokalypseundFilterkaffee
Alemania pone punto final a su uso de energía nuclear con el cese definitivo de actividades, este sábado 14 de abril, de las tres últimas centrales en funcionamiento. Con el cierre de estos reactores, el objetivo del gobierno alemán es aumentar la proporción de energías renovables, con un objetivo de 80% de fuentes solares y eólicas de aquí a 2030. Los últimos tres reactores nucleares de Alemania se apagan este sábado. ¿Con ellos se cierra un largo capítulo de su historia energética? “Ha sido una batalla de más de 40 años y este es el último paso”, explica a RFI Sebastián Rötters, miembro de la ONG ambientalista alemana Urgewald. “Es el resultado de una decisión tomada en 2011”, destaca. Alemania decidió cortar sus fuentes nucleares en 2002. Un proceso que en 2011 Angela Merkel aceleró, tras la catástrofe de Fukushima en Japón, hasta reducir su porcentaje a 6% de la energía del país en 2023. “La producción energética de Alemania es de unos 50 gigavatios de energía que necesitamos, y las plantas nucleares producían menos de tres gigavatios”. El cierre de estos reactores ya había sido aplazado seis meses debido a la guerra en Ucrania. 80% de renovables en 2030 El carbón, por su parte, produce un tercio de la energía. Según Rötters, se debe a que las fuentes renovables se desarrollaron de forma muy lenta en Europa, por lo que ésta sigue siendo muy dependiente de las energías fósiles. Aunque esté en declive desde hace varios años, el uso del carbón aumentó en un 8% en 2022 debido a temores de escasez por la guerra en Ucrania. El objetivo del gobierno alemán es reducir esta proporción para que en 2030 el 80% de la energía provenga de sistemas eólicos y solares. Pero, ¿qué tan realista es este proyecto? "Si miramos las declaraciones de diferentes empresas energéticas, dicen que quieren abandonar el carbón de aquí a 2028 o 2030”, opina Rötters. “No es el Partido Verde o los ecologistas los que expresan este deseo. Es la decisión tomada por las mismas empresas. Además, hay que fomentar el ahorro de energía. Pienso que un 80% de energía renovable en 2030 sí es factible”, agrega. Contaminación y guerras Ahora, el desafío es desmantelar por completo las plantas. La central de Lubmin, ubicada en el noreste del país, dejó de funcionar en 1995 y aún no se ha descontaminado del todo. Siguen trabajando en la planta unas 900 personas. “Esto va a tomar muchos años. Los empleados de las plantas nucleares no van a perder su trabajo rapidamente”, explica Rötters. “Lo que no tenemos claro es qué vamos a hacer con los residuos nucleares que quedan para las futuras generaciones por cientos o miles de años”. Alemania tiene un largo historial de rechazo de la energía nuclear, que se considera contaminante, insegura y costosa. “Si hay gente que piensa que la energía nuclear es algo seguro, tienen que mirar lo que ocurre en Ucrania, en especial la planta de Zaporiyia. Está en manos de gente que está cometiendo crímenes de guerra y poniendo a Europa al borde de una catástrofe nuclear”, recalca el especialista de la ONG ambientalista alemana Urgewald.
Alemania pone punto final a su uso de energía nuclear con el cese definitivo de actividades, este sábado 14 de abril, de las tres últimas centrales en funcionamiento. Con el cierre de estos reactores, el objetivo del gobierno alemán es aumentar la proporción de energías renovables, con un objetivo de 80% de fuentes solares y eólicas de aquí a 2030. Los últimos tres reactores nucleares de Alemania se apagan este sábado. ¿Con ellos se cierra un largo capítulo de su historia energética? “Ha sido una batalla de más de 40 años y este es el último paso”, explica a RFI Sebastián Rötters, miembro de la ONG ambientalista alemana Urgewald. “Es el resultado de una decisión tomada en 2011”, destaca. Alemania decidió cortar sus fuentes nucleares en 2002. Un proceso que en 2011 Angela Merkel aceleró, tras la catástrofe de Fukushima en Japón, hasta reducir su porcentaje a 6% de la energía del país en 2023. “La producción energética de Alemania es de unos 50 gigavatios de energía que necesitamos, y las plantas nucleares producían menos de tres gigavatios”. El cierre de estos reactores ya había sido aplazado seis meses debido a la guerra en Ucrania. 80% de renovables en 2030 El carbón, por su parte, produce un tercio de la energía. Según Rötters, se debe a que las fuentes renovables se desarrollaron de forma muy lenta en Europa, por lo que ésta sigue siendo muy dependiente de las energías fósiles. Aunque esté en declive desde hace varios años, el uso del carbón aumentó en un 8% en 2022 debido a temores de escasez por la guerra en Ucrania. El objetivo del gobierno alemán es reducir esta proporción para que en 2030 el 80% de la energía provenga de sistemas eólicos y solares. Pero, ¿qué tan realista es este proyecto? "Si miramos las declaraciones de diferentes empresas energéticas, dicen que quieren abandonar el carbón de aquí a 2028 o 2030”, opina Rötters. “No es el Partido Verde o los ecologistas los que expresan este deseo. Es la decisión tomada por las mismas empresas. Además, hay que fomentar el ahorro de energía. Pienso que un 80% de energía renovable en 2030 sí es factible”, agrega. Contaminación y guerras Ahora, el desafío es desmantelar por completo las plantas. La central de Lubmin, ubicada en el noreste del país, dejó de funcionar en 1995 y aún no se ha descontaminado del todo. Siguen trabajando en la planta unas 900 personas. “Esto va a tomar muchos años. Los empleados de las plantas nucleares no van a perder su trabajo rapidamente”, explica Rötters. “Lo que no tenemos claro es qué vamos a hacer con los residuos nucleares que quedan para las futuras generaciones por cientos o miles de años”. Alemania tiene un largo historial de rechazo de la energía nuclear, que se considera contaminante, insegura y costosa. “Si hay gente que piensa que la energía nuclear es algo seguro, tienen que mirar lo que ocurre en Ucrania, en especial la planta de Zaporiyia. Está en manos de gente que está cometiendo crímenes de guerra y poniendo a Europa al borde de una catástrofe nuclear”, recalca el especialista de la ONG ambientalista alemana Urgewald.
Le nucléaire touche à sa fin en Allemagne où, après six décennies, les trois derniers réacteurs sont débranchés ce 15 avril. Un abandon décidé il y a plus de vingt ans et accéléré après la catastrophe de Fukushima en 2011. Reportage dans l'un des trois sites à Lingen près de la frontière avec les Pays-Bas. De notre envoyé spécial à Lingen, « Pour moi, ça n'est pas une césure, parce que c'est prévu depuis longtemps. Cette fermeture de la centrale, c'est juste pour des raisons idéologiques. Cette centrale est sûr. Et en France où on en construit des nouveaux comme ailleurs, on doit bien rigoler » Ce monsieur d'un certain âge ne prévoit pas de faire la fête ce samedi 15 avril. Beaucoup d'habitants de Lingen voient la fermeture du réacteur sans grande passion. La centrale aux portes de la ville fait partie du décor depuis 35 ans. Il n'y a jamais eu de grandes manifestations anti-nucléaire sur place. « L'acceptance pour cette centrale a toujours été très élevée dans cette région rurale conservatrice où le mouvement antinucléaire n'a jamais été très populaire », rappelle le directeur du musée régional Andreas Eiynck. ► À lire aussi : L'Allemagne dit au revoir au nucléaire avec la mise à l'arrêt de ses trois derniers réacteurs L'inquiétude des conséquences sur la crise énergétique actuelle Beaucoup d'habitants de Lingen, comme près des deux tiers des Allemands, estiment que les trois dernières centrales auraient pu fonctionner un peu plus longtemps. C'est aussi le cas de cet étudiant qui comme d'autres s'inquiète des conséquences de l'actuelle crise énergétique. « L'Allemagne a déjà les prix de l'électricité les plus élevés en Europe, surtout par rapport à la France. Si les dernières centrales ferment, ça ne va pas s'arranger », craint un étudiant. À Lingen comme à Berlin, les chrétiens-démocrates plaident pour une poursuite de l'utilisation du nucléaire. C'est pourtant une certaine Angela Merkel qui, après la catastrophe de Fukushima en 2011, avait accéléré l'abandon de cette source d'énergie. « On aurait dû utiliser ces réacteurs pendant quelques mois, voire jusqu'en 2025. Mais abandonner d'un coup le nucléaire pour recourir encore plus à des centrales polluantes au charbon, c'est irresponsable », juge Albert Stegemann, député CDU au Parlement fédéral pour la circonscription de Lingen. Une étape historique pour les militants anti-nucléaire Pour ceux qui depuis longtemps rejettent le nucléaire, ce samedi constitue une étape historique. Cela vaut pour les Verts bien sûr aujourd'hui au pouvoir à Berlin, comme pour l'activiste Alexander Vent à Lingen. « La fermeture de ces centrales, c'est absolument essentiel et nous l'attendons depuis longtemps. Pour les militants anti-nucléaire qui se battent depuis des décennies, c'est un succès historique », souligne-t-il. À Lingen, où la centrale représente 1% des emplois de ville, la morosité n'est pas à l'ordre du jour. La ville a préparé sa transition énergétique et attend des milliards d'investissements dans l'hydrogène vert.
Er lästert über Ostdeutsche, lobt Donald Trump und bezeichnet Angela Merkel als Sargnagel der Demokratie. Interne Dokumente, die die ZEIT einsehen konnte, geben detaillierte Einblicke in die Gedankenwelt von Axel-Springer-Chef Mathias Döpfner – und wie er mit "Bild" Politik machte. Cathrin Gilbert, Leiterin des Ressorts Unterhaltung der ZEIT, war an den Recherchen beteiligt und erzählt im Podcast, was sie daran am meisten überrascht hat. Die "Washington Post" hat herausgefunden, wer die Quelle des US-Geheimdienstleaks ist: Wohl ein Anfang bis Mitte 20-jähriger Discord-Nutzer namens "OG" soll rund 100 Fotos von Dokumenten in einer geschlossenen Gruppe veröffentlicht haben, die brisante Informationen zum russischen Angriffskrieg in der Ukraine enthalten. Polen will der Ukraine Kampfjets aus DDR-Altbeständen liefern. Bundesverteidigungsminister Boris Pistorius (SPD) versprach, noch an diesem Donnerstag über einen entsprechenden Antrag zu entscheiden. Was noch? In Pompeji werden Schafe zur Denkmalpflege eingesetzt. (https://www.sueddeutsche.de/panorama/schafe-pompeji-rasenmaeher-italien-denkmalpflege-ausgrabung-1.5767205) Moderation und Produktion: Azadê Peşmen (https://www.zeit.de/autoren/P/Azade_Pesmen/index) Redaktion: Constanze Kainz (https://www.zeit.de/autoren/K/Constanze_Kainz/index) Mitarbeit: Clara Löffler (https://www.zeit.de/autoren/L/Clara_Loeffler/index) Fragen, Kritik, Anregungen? Sie erreichen uns unter wasjetzt@zeit.de. Weitere Links zur Folge: Mathias Döpfner: "Aber das ist dennoch die einzige Chance, um den endgültigen Niedergang des Landes zu vermeiden" (https://www.zeit.de/2023/16/mathias-doepfner-axel-springer-interne-dokumente) Geheimdokumente: Das steht in den geleakten Militärdokumenten zum Ukraine-Krieg (https://www.zeit.de/politik/ausland/2023-04/militaer-dokumente-leaks-usa-ukraine-krieg-russland-faq) MiG-Kampfflugzeuge: Polen beantragt bei Bundesregierung Genehmigung von Kampfjetlieferung (https://www.zeit.de/politik/2023-04/polen-beantragt-genehmigung-von-kampfjet-lieferung-an-ukraine) Waffenlieferungen: Polen kündigt Lieferung erster Kampfflugzeuge an Ukraine an (https://www.zeit.de/politik/ausland/2023-03/kampfjets-polen-ukraine-waffenlieferungen-andrzej-duda)
Tonight my guest is Tony Merkel from The Confessionals Podcast. Tony talks about his recent film that is soon to be released called The Shape of Shadows. Tony talks about a new film he is working on focused on Sasquatch and his experiences while here in the Pacific NW. Check out The Confessionals here: https://www.theconfessionalspodcast.com/ The Shape of Shadows: They want you to believe the paranormal ends at the gates of a ranch in Utah. But what if it doesn't? Tony Merkel and his crew go on a road trip outside the boundaries of corporate TV to show you Skinwalkers and UFOs in a way you've never seen before. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oc2FMfky2VU
EXPERTS PHILIPPE DESSERTINE Directeur de l'Institut de Haute Finance GASPARD KOENIG Philosophe, écrivain Auteur de « La fin de l'individu » LAURENCE DEVILLERS Professeure en intelligence artificielle – Université La Sorbonne Auteure de « Les robots émotionnels » NICOLAS BERROD Journaliste au service futurs – « Le Parisien – Aujourd'hui en France » Transports, santé, éducation, sécurité, téléphonie, Internet… Alors que l'intelligence artificielle s'impose de plus en plus dans nos vies, des centaines d'experts mondiaux et patrons de la tech appellent à une pause dans son développement, évoquant "des risques majeurs pour l'humanité". Dans une pétition parue sur le site futureoflife.org la semaine dernière, ils réclament un moratoire jusqu'à la mise en place de systèmes de sécurité, dont notamment de nouvelles autorités réglementaires, la surveillance des systèmes d'IA, des techniques pour aider à distinguer le réel de l'artificiel et des institutions capables de gérer les "perturbations économiques et politiques dramatiques (en particulier pour la démocratie) que l'IA provoquera". Cette pétition réunit le cofondateur d'Apple, de nombreux universitaires, des ingénieurs de Microsoft et Elon Musk, propriétaire de Twitter et fondateur de SpaceX et de Tesla. Également signataire, Yoshua Bengio, pionnier canadien de l'IA, a exprimé ses inquiétudes, lors d'une conférence de presse à Montréal : "Je ne pense pas que la société est prête à faire face à cette puissance-là, au potentiel de manipulation par exemple des populations qui pourrait mettre en danger les démocraties". "Il faut donc prendre le temps de ralentir cette course commerciale qui est en route", a-t-il ajouté, appelant à discuter de ces enjeux au niveau mondial, "comme nous l'avons fait pour l'énergie et les armes nucléaires". Mais de quoi parle-t-on ? Le secteur de la tech traverse une révolution profonde, avec l'avènement de nouvelles formes d'intelligence artificielle. Mais en quelques mois, la vague de l'IA dite "générative", emmenée par ChatGPT (texte) et par Midjourney (image) a fait vaciller bien des certitudes, tant par exemple les images produites par les IA ont atteint un niveau de réalisme sans précédent. Ainsi on a pu voir ces dernières semaines sur les réseaux sociaux des images d'Emmanuel Macron en train de ramasser des déchets, le pape François emmitouflé dans une longue doudoune blanche façon rappeur américain, Barack Obama et Angela Merkel bâtir des châteaux de sable... Dans ce boom de l'IA, les deepfakes, cette technologie permettant de plaquer, le visage d'une personne sur celui d'une autre déjà présente dans une vidéo, sont également de la partie. Dans ce contexte, le Commissaire européen Thierry Breton qui prépare actuellement la règlementation européenne sur l'intelligence artificielle (Artificial Intelligence Act) a déclaré que celle-ci devrait inclure une réponse aux préoccupations concernant les risques liés à ChatGPT. "Les solutions d'IA peuvent offrir de grandes opportunités aux entreprises et aux citoyens, mais peuvent aussi présenter des risques. Les gens devraient être informés qu'ils ont affaire à un chatbot et non à un être humain. La transparence est également importante au regard du risque de partialité et de fausses informations", a-t-il expliqué. Alors face à la révolution technologique en cours, sommes-nous prêts ? Quels sont les risques ou les opportunités pour nos démocraties et nos économies ? L'Intelligence artificielle (IA) est déjà bien présente dans nos vies sans que nous nous en doutions. Où s'applique-t-elle ? Quels sont les domaines où tout pourrait changer ? Enfin alors que selon l'INSEE l'illectronisme, l'incapacité à utiliser des appareils numériques, touchait 17 % de la population en 2019, comment lutter contre la fracture numérique ? DIFFUSION : du lundi au samedi à 17h45 FORMAT : 65 minutes PRÉSENTATION : Caroline Roux - Axel de Tarlé REDIFFUSION : du lundi au vendredi vers 23h40 RÉALISATION : Nicolas Ferraro, Bruno Piney, Franck Broqua, Alexandre Langeard, Corentin Son, Benoît Lemoine PRODUCTION : France Télévisions / Maximal Productions Retrouvez C DANS L'AIR sur internet & les réseaux : INTERNET : francetv.fr FACEBOOK : https://www.facebook.com/Cdanslairf5 TWITTER : https://twitter.com/cdanslair INSTAGRAM : https://www.instagram.com/cdanslair/
Photo: No known restrictions on publication. @Batchelorshow Pyrenees #Macron in trouble, 2023: 2/4: RévolutionFrançaise, by Sophie Pedder. @PedderSophie https://www.amazon.com/Revolution-Française-Emmanuel-Macron-reinvent/dp/1472948602 The extraordinary story of how an outsider candidate—an unknown technocrat and economics minister on the fringes of French politics—made his way to the Élysée palace, with expert analysis of his first year in office. Two years after Emmanuel Macron came from nowhere to seize the French presidency, Sophie Pedder, The Economist's Paris bureau chief, tells the story of his remarkable rise and time in office so far. In this paperback edition, published with a new foreword by the author, Pedder reflects on Macron's troubles and triumphs: his dwindling popularity: the 'gilets jaunes' protests and resulting civil unrest: his efforts to transform France and lead the global fight against climate change: the Benalla affair; his erratic relationships with Angela Merkel, Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin and Theresa May, and the future of the European project.
Photo: No known restrictions on publication. @Batchelorshow 1920 Pyrenees #Macron in trouble: 4/4: RévolutionFrançaise, by Sophie Pedder. @PedderSophie https://www.amazon.com/Revolution-Française-Emmanuel-Macron-reinvent/dp/1472948602 The extraordinary story of how an outsider candidate—an unknown technocrat and economics minister on the fringes of French politics—made his way to the Élysée palace, with expert analysis of his first year in office. Two years after Emmanuel Macron came from nowhere to seize the French presidency, Sophie Pedder, The Economist's Paris bureau chief, tells the story of his remarkable rise and time in office so far. In this paperback edition, published with a new foreword by the author, Pedder reflects on Macron's troubles and triumphs: his dwindling popularity: the 'gilets jaunes' protests and resulting civil unrest: his efforts to transform France and lead the global fight against climate change: the Benalla affair; his erratic relationships with Angela Merkel, Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin and Theresa May, and the future of the European project.
Photo: No known restrictions on publication. @Batchelorshow 1905 Pyrenees #Macron in trouble, 2023: 1/4: RévolutionFrançaise, by Sophie Pedder. @PedderSophie https://www.amazon.com/Revolution-Française-Emmanuel-Macron-reinvent/dp/1472948602 The extraordinary story of how an outsider candidate—an unknown technocrat and economics minister on the fringes of French politics—made his way to the Élysée palace, with expert analysis of his first year in office. Two years after Emmanuel Macron came from nowhere to seize the French presidency, Sophie Pedder, The Economist's Paris bureau chief, tells the story of his remarkable rise and time in office so far. In this paperback edition, published with a new foreword by the author, Pedder reflects on Macron's troubles and triumphs: his dwindling popularity: the 'gilets jaunes' protests and resulting civil unrest: his efforts to transform France and lead the global fight against climate change: the Benalla affair; his erratic relationships with Angela Merkel, Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin and Theresa May, and the future of the European project.
Photo: No known restrictions on publication. @Batchelorshow 1929 Pyrenees #Macron in trouble, 2023: 3/4: RévolutionFrançaise, by Sophie Pedder. @PedderSophie https://www.amazon.com/Revolution-Française-Emmanuel-Macron-reinvent/dp/1472948602 The extraordinary story of how an outsider candidate—an unknown technocrat and economics minister on the fringes of French politics—made his way to the Élysée palace, with expert analysis of his first year in office. Two years after Emmanuel Macron came from nowhere to seize the French presidency, Sophie Pedder, The Economist's Paris bureau chief, tells the story of his remarkable rise and time in office so far. In this paperback edition, published with a new foreword by the author, Pedder reflects on Macron's troubles and triumphs: his dwindling popularity: the 'gilets jaunes' protests and resulting civil unrest: his efforts to transform France and lead the global fight against climate change: the Benalla affair; his erratic relationships with Angela Merkel, Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin and Theresa May, and the future of the European project.
Die Themen: König Charles und Camilla in Deutschland; Ampel-Krisengipfel beendet; USA wollen Netanjahu doch noch ins Weiße Haus einladen; "Großkreuz" für Angela Merkel; Fechter:innen fordern Ausschluss für Russland und Belarus vom Weltsport; Frauen in der EU beim ersten Kind immer älter; Elon Musk gibt rund 35 VIPs mehr Reichweite als normalen Nutzer:innen Du möchtest mehr über unsere Werbepartner erfahren? Hier findest du alle Infos & Rabatte: https://linktr.ee/ApokalypseundFilterkaffee
durée : 00:02:02 - Le vrai du faux - Plusieurs images mettant en scène des leaders politiques ont circulé sur les réseaux sociaux ces derniers jours, semant parlant la confusion et faisant craindre la propagation de fausses informations.
Merkel Media is heading to Washington state in a couple weeks to shoot our next fill investigating bigfoot encounter locations! While we are out there we are going to do an advanced screening of our next film "The Shape of Shadows" at Battle Ground Cinema on April 6th at 6:30pm PST! After the advanced screening, we will be doing a town hall where bigfoot experiencers can share with everyone in attendance. Lastly, after the town hall, we will wrap up the night with a Q&A section hosted by Wes Germer and Tony Merkel. If you are interested in this event then get your tickets now because they are going to sell out fast! GET TICKETS HERE: theshapeofshadows.com DATE: April 6th, 2023 TIME: 6:30PM to 9:30PM PST LOCATION: Battle Ground Cinema 1700 SW 9th Avenue Battle Ground, WA 98604
On Today's Quiz there will be lots of Trivia Time for 20 new questions on this trivia podcast! Enjoy our trivia questions: On which continent would you find the region of Patagonia? Name either the predeccesor or the successor of chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany. What is the common name given for repetivie spasms in the diaphragm? In what game would you use a squidger? How many of the solar system's planets have rings? What game show host is featured in the lyrics of Weird Al's “I lost on jeopardy”? Which king of France was the husband of Catherine de' Medici? Who wrote A Brief History of Time in 1988? Which company first produced gummy bears? What is a heteronym? Which movement in painting is associated with Van Gogh, Cezanne and Gauguin? What name is given to a coral reef surrounding a lagoon? If you liked this episode, check out our last trivia episode! Music Hot Swing, Fast Talkin, Bass Walker, Dances and Dames by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Don't forget to follow us on social media for more trivia: Patreon - patreon.com/quizbang - Please consider supporting us on Patreon. Check out our fun extras for patrons and help us keep this podcast going. We appreciate any level of support! Website - quizbangpod.com Check out our website, it will have all the links for social media that you need and while you're there, why not go to the contact us page and submit a question! Facebook - @quizbangpodcast - we post episode links and silly lego pictures to go with our trivia questions. Enjoy the silly picture and give your best guess, we will respond to your answer the next day to give everyone a chance to guess. Instagram - Quiz Quiz Bang Bang (quizquizbangbang), we post silly lego pictures to go with our trivia questions. Enjoy the silly picture and give your best guess, we will respond to your answer the next day to give everyone a chance to guess. Twitter - @quizbangpod We want to start a fun community for our fellow trivia lovers. If you hear/think of a fun or challenging trivia question, post it to our twitter feed and we will repost it so everyone can take a stab it. Come for the trivia - stay for the trivia. Ko-Fi - ko-fi.com/quizbangpod - Keep that sweet caffeine running through our body with a Ko-Fi, power us through a late night of fact checking and editing!
Con Sufjan Stevens de banda sonora recordamos el año 2005 de la mano de Rafa Panadero y el amigo secreto de Pino. Ese año hubo elecciones en varios países y salieron elegidos entre otros: Mahmud Ahmadineyad, Mahmud Abbas o Angela Merkel. En ese año también murió el papa Juan Pablo II, y su posterior elección por el Cónclave del nuevo Papa Benedicto XVI.
This week, Mark Leonard welcomes Christoph Heusgen, longstanding foreign policy chief during the Merkel years and now chair of the Munich Security Conference. They discuss Western and non-Western reactions to the war in Ukraine – and, in particular, the role of Germany. Should Berlin have taken a harder line against Russia after 2014? How can Scholz realise his vision for the Zeitenwende? And what is stopping Germany from engaging more in developing countries? This podcast was recorded on 13 March 2023. Bookshelf: The Age of Unpeace: How Connectivity Causes Conflict by Mark Leonard Führung und Verantwortung: Angela Merkels Außenpolitik und Deutschlands künftige Rolle in der Welt by Christoph Heusgen
durée : 00:42:00 - Les Nuits de France Culture - par : Albane Penaranda - Marion Van Ranterghem : "Angela Merkel est une grande artiste politique"
Welcome to episode 59 of the Eat for Endurance podcast! Today, I am welcoming fellow sports dietitian Jill Merkel, MS RD CSSD onto the show. Jill is an anti-diet, weight-inclusive Registered Dietitian, Certified Intuitive Eating Counselor, and a runner. Jill has worked in a variety of collegiate sport settings, and was the Team Sports Dietitian for the NFL Tennessee Titans for five seasons (2017-2021). She now has a private practice specializing in body image, chronic dieting, disordered eating, and sports nutrition.Jill is passionate about Intuitive Eating and anti-diet nutrition for athletes, which is the main topic of our discussion today. Within this framework, we cover a large number of key sports nutrition topics, including:What is intuitive eating and anti-diet nutrition, and how do these definitions differ when applied specifically to the athlete population?How do we handle the topics of weight and body composition in athletes and esp in sports like running, cycling, etc, from an intuitive eating standpoint?How do we guide athletes to eat adequately, and as a result, avoid chronic underfueling and eventually RED-S, using intuitive eating principles?Jill's experience as an intuitive eating dietitian while also the Team Sports Dietitian for the NFL Tennessee TitansAssessing a hypothetical client and how we would address her nutrition, training and health challengesMaintaining a healthy iron status / FerritinGI issues especially as they relate to underfuelingThank you Jill for a great discussion on so many important topics! I hope you all enjoy our episode together.Links : Jill's Website: https://jillmerkelrd.com/ Follow Jill on InstagramOther Announcements: Please show your support by leaving a rating and/or review on Apple Podcasts Music Credit: Joseph McDadeHave nutrition questions, a guest or topic request, or any other feedback? Email me - eatforendurance@gmail.com.Disclaimer – all information provided is for educational and entertainment purposes only and is in no way meant to replace individual medical and nutrition recommendationsSupport the showThanks for listening! Follow me on Instagram and Facebook @eatforendurance.
Tue, 21 Feb 2023 04:35:30 +0000 https://www.thepioneer.de/originals/thepioneer-briefing-economy-edition/podcasts/ratiopharm-ceo-andreas-burkhardt-zu-medikamentenknappheit-in-deutschland f780017a162f097fc7c0908604b05865 Gabor Steingart präsentiert das Pioneer Briefing. Sie möchten Teil unserer Mission werden und unabhängigen und werbefreien Journalismus unterstützen? Dann werden Sie jetzt Pioneer Inhalt der heutigen Folge: Im Interview: Andreas Burkhardt, Geschäftsführer von ratiopharm, erklärt im Interview mit Michael Bröcker, warum es in Deutschland zu Medikamenten-Lieferengpässen kommt und was die Politik dagegen unternehmen kann. (00:05:16) Börsenreporterin Anne Schwedt über neue Einnahmequellen bei Meta und über gute Prognosen für chinesische Aktien. (00:16:32) Telefonstreich bei Angela Merkel und sie fällt nicht darauf rein. (00:19:42) James Cameron überholt sich selbst: Avatar 2 stößt Titanic von Platz drei der weltweiten Umsatztabelle. (00:22:00) Sie haben Feedback oder Fragen? Melden Sie sich gerne beim Pioneer Support. 1977 full Gabor Steingart präsentiert das Pioneer Briefing. no Gabor Ste
On the eve of the anniversary of the onset of last year's February 24 Russian invasion of Ukraine along with worries about a new offensive, a conversation with Iuliia Mendel, award winning international journalist and former press secretary for Ukraine's President Zelenskyy.Mendel speculates about the spring offensive. She also describes the early days when Zelenskyy was gaining sea legs in democracy, and her impressions of the 2019 Paris talks between Zelenskyy, Russian President Putin, French President Macron and German Chancellor Merkel. She also speaks about Russian weaponization of language and the struggle for self-determination experienced by post-soviet countries. Throughout her interview, Mendel positions Ukraine as the vanguard of resistance and self-determination in the region in the struggle between old and new ways, and gives voice to Ukrainians' strong will, together with sadness and dread felt in her country over the violence and death they continue to experience and anticipate.Iuliia Mendel was press secretary in the administration of Ukrainian President Zelenskyy from 2019 until 2021. She worked as a journalist for ICTV, Espreso TV, 112 Ukraine and Inter TV channels. Mendel became the first Ukrainian journalist to win the World Press Institute program.She had previously worked as a Communications Consultant at the World Bank and had contributed journalistic reporting for The New York Times. Mendel had worked as a journalist for several other media outlets including Politico Europe, the Atlantic Council, Vice, Spiegel Online and Forbes. In April 2016, she was the producer of the first documentary about post-traumatic stress disorder, Shell-Shocked: Ukraine's Trauma. In October 2019, she was included in the rating of the 100 most influential women in Ukraine by Focus magazine.
Wenn Wahlen nicht ordnungsgsgemäß durchgeführt wurden, dann haben wir in den letzten Jahrzehnten immer auf andere Länder zeigen können und uns vielleicht auch ein wenig lustig gemacht. Bananen-Republik! Bei uns ist es nicht das ganze Land, aber ausgerechnet in der Haupstadt lief es im Herbst 2021 so unrund, dass jetzt erneut die Wahl des Berliner Abgeordnetenhauses ansteht. Die Begründung: zu viele Pannen. Teilweise gab es zu wenige Stimmzettel, anderswo wurden falsche abgegeben. Politologe Wolfgang Merkel hat das alles hautnah mitbekommen, lehrt er doch an der Humboldt-Universität in Berlin. Fachgebiet ist unter anderem die Demokratieforschung. Und sich einbringen, das lebt Wolfgang Merkel auch vor. So war er etwa Erstunterzeichner eines offenen Briefes an Bundeskanzler Olaf Scholz, der sich gegen die Lieferung weiterer schwerer Waffen an die Ukraine aussprach. Moderation: Jens Wolters